Thứ Năm, 13 tháng 12, 2018

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The Blue House has denied media reports that the reason why President Moon Jae-in flew

west, stopping in Europe, on his way to Argentina last month for the G20 summit... was because

the South Korean presidential plane is subject to U.S. sanctions and couldn't stop in America.

A spokesperson said Thursday that the reason the president went via the Czech Republic

was because it served as a suitable midway refueling point, and that also flying west

was better in terms of biorhythm.

The route was said to be completely unrelated to the sanctions on North Korea, which ban

any plane that's landed in North Korea from landing in the U.S. without clearance 180

days in advance.

The Blue House said there were no discussions with the U.S. related to that matter.

In September, President Moon's plane did land in North Korea when he went to Pyeongyang

for his third inter-Korean summit.

For more infomation >> Blue House dismisses claims that president's plane was blacklisted by U.S. - Duration: 0:54.

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Cuban officials react to clinical findings of 'sonic' attacks at US embassy - Duration: 2:10.

For more infomation >> Cuban officials react to clinical findings of 'sonic' attacks at US embassy - Duration: 2:10.

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United States House of Representatives passes Farm Bill - Duration: 1:07.

For more infomation >> United States House of Representatives passes Farm Bill - Duration: 1:07.

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UM Doctors Release Findings On 'Sonic Attacks' On US Diplomats - Duration: 2:04.

For more infomation >> UM Doctors Release Findings On 'Sonic Attacks' On US Diplomats - Duration: 2:04.

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Alan Greenspan: Soybeans tell us a lot about US-China relations - Duration: 2:01.

For more infomation >> Alan Greenspan: Soybeans tell us a lot about US-China relations - Duration: 2:01.

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Fox News poll: 47% of Americans approve of US economy - Duration: 6:07.

For more infomation >> Fox News poll: 47% of Americans approve of US economy - Duration: 6:07.

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Why the U.S. is an anomaly among democracies | Eboo Patel - Duration: 4:29.

So there's a great book by Michael Walzer called What It Means to Be an American.

And one of the things that he says is that for centuries, really from the time of the

Greeks, political philosophers believed that the only way to have diversity in a society

was for it to be an empire or a dictatorship.

If you wanted a democracy it had to be homogenous—one ethnic group, one racial group, and especially

one religion.

And then he ends that section and he begins the next section with the line: "…Until

the United States of America."

We are the first mass-scale religiously diverse democracy, and I think that's a remarkable

thing.

And when a religiously diverse democracy works well it's a sight to behold.

You have low levels of prejudice, you have strong social cohesion, you have high levels

of social capital, you have respect for different identity communities, you have the narrative

of a diverse society that binds that society with a sense of unity.

And a lot of what Interfaith Youth Core is about is helping America continue to be a

religiously diverse democracy that we all ought to be proud of.

So, what strikes me most about the founding fathers (and a set of important figures before

the founding fathers, people like Roger Williams and the people who drafted the Flushing Remonstrance,

that's 140 years before the founding fathers), was that this set of characters imagined a

religiously diverse democracy.

And a big part of that is the separation of church and state, and a part of that, of course,

is to protect the state from the church and to protect religious communities from undue

interference by the state.

And it is also, significantly, about the welcoming of contributions from diverse religious communities.

And so it's not like the founding fathers were principally very devout people, but they

recognized the importance of the civic contributions of religious communities and they certainly

wanted those communities to flourish.

Let me give you a couple of examples of this.

So Benjamin Franklin when he lived in Philadelphia made proactive donations to the building funds

of every religious community that he could find in Philadelphia, different communities

of Christians, a Jewish community, and he built a hall so at the pulpit of this hall

would be open to the preaching of anybody.

If the Grand Mufti of Constantinople wants to send somebody preaching about Islam this

pulpit is here for his service.

That's not just freedom of religion, that's welcoming the contributions of diverse religious

communities.

George Washington, when a Jewish leader in the late 18th century says to him, "What's

going to happen to my community, to us Jews now that we have a new nation, a constitution,

and you are the president?"

And George Washington writes, in a famous document in American history called the Letter

to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport Rhode Island, he writes, "This government will

give to bigotry no sanction and to persecution no assistance.

May the children of the stock of Abraham sit in safety under their own vine and fig, and

let there be none to make them afraid."

So where is the sense that these different religious communities are going to help make

up the civil society that is the United States of America.

I think about it as a potluck nation, and of course, that's a play on the term "melting

pot."

And what I don't like about "the melting pot" is obviously this notion that you have

to kind of melt away your identity or your distinctiveness.

I think what makes America strong is not that different communities melt away their identities,

it's that they bring their identities to the common table in the way we think about

a potluck.

And a potluck is boring if everybody brings Wonder Bread and peanut butter.

A potluck is wonderful and nutritious and festive when people bring the various dishes

that are distinctive to their identity.

That's how I think about interfaith: America is a variety of communities, a variety of

orientations around religion, as I said it from Atheists to Zoroastrian, are contributing

the best of who they are for the commons.

If different communities don't contribute, the nation doesn't feast.

For more infomation >> Why the U.S. is an anomaly among democracies | Eboo Patel - Duration: 4:29.

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Is the United States military trolling the private sector? Digital Skills Paperless Post - Duration: 22:30.

so what what what kind of say that again

what I'm interested in technology science technology the internet pardon

Oh science technology engineering math are stuff like that you know networking

the the internet stuffs computers engineering yeah

and in search engine optimization in trends

okay I have listed four hours for search so Teresa we got home computers on

computer engineering computer science computers and technology information

technology and networking well that sounds great right now now I already

have a two-year degree in it's an associate of Applied Science it's a

two-year degree that I took it for multimedia marketing yes an associate of

Applied Science and I I tried to get jobs and I I couldn't find a job nobody

would hire me they would only hire me temp for some reason and and I never

could get on full-time with any company

yes that that's good now can I ask you a question now where are these jobs

located I mean where are these jobs located because I was told that the job

even the two-year degree that what I was going specifically for was paying six

figures a year and higher even even though it's a two-year degree I was told

that that the jobs would be and they and I never did find a job up there in Iowa

when I got my degree at Iowa Central Community College in Fort Dodge Iowa all

I could get after that was temp work and I made less money I mean less than the

people at the college so the college hired me temporary after I got my

college degree and the bank hired me temporary after I got my college degree

through manpower and they didn't hire me full-time or permanent or anything like

that so I had benefit or anything additional so they were

actually paying me less money can I ask you a question I was about 38 or so when

I you know I was a non-traditional student when I got my degree the first

time how many more years how many more college degrees do I have

to get to get the job to get a job that's actually full-time and has

benefits and things like that how many more college degrees do I have

to get to get that job okay but but where where are the jobs at though so

wouldn't it be a wise question to know that the jobs exist or where the jobs

actually at where I could get hired to a job that is going to pay me a living

wage so I can afford to buy a house so I can afford to make ends meet as an

individual woman by myself who's not married how would that happen well what

what this is what I was doing I was actually applying for a job and somehow

it it kind of tricked me into taking me over to applying for school and so there

was a little bit of confusion there so I was actually trying to submit my resume

to a job and then something popped up and just popped up in the middle of

nowhere and took me over to applying for a job

or to applying for college and and so the thing is is that I'm a former

military spouse but I never got any benefits you know even though I

performed a civic duty and all the years I was a former military spouse there's a

bunch of zeros on my contributions to my social security record there's a bunch

of zeros there you know when it goes to Social Security and Medicare all those

years when I was moving in a support role performing the civic duty to the

United States government in that capacity I have a bunch of zeros there

and and so there were there was no contributions but I was raising my

children and it actually cost more to put my children into daycare then it

would have cost for me to go you know to I mean all of my wages that I earned

would have went to daycare it does that make sense and so so I'm wondering how

how how long before a woman can actually make a living wage on her own where she

doesn't have to be married and or she can have a child or two and not be

married or have to rely on anyone else how many more decades and centuries is

this going to take how would I pay for it

can I ask you another question how would I pay for how would I would I pave and

return the money for college if I don't have a job so if I so to me it doesn't

actually make sense for me to pay to pay for a education out of my pocket or to

get a loan if I don't know how I'm going to pay it back so if I'm already living

in poverty how would I pay the money back to a bank or an institution that I

borrowed it from if there's no jobs to actually pay you know if I can't afford

to pay it back then how is that an investment because it's actually me

going in the hole and owing someone and then interest accruing on top

interest for something I can't even afford to pay back well how are they

well where will I get the money from where do I get the money from to pay for

my college well I don't want financial aid

I don't want financial aid okay I don't want fight I'm not interested in

financial aid because if I can't pay it if I don't have a way or if I don't have

money or a job right now to know how to pay it back it doesn't make sense to me

cuz it's just a bunch of people of the American public going in the hole and

and that's involuntary servitude of the 13th amendment but how much of my life

does it take for me to get a job how much school do I have to go to as an old

person as an old decrepit job how long does it take yes you too bye bye bye bye

this this is the this is the runaround it's like this is what it is is every

generation it's the same thing so they're taking the same spiel now when I

was graduating grading when I was graduating from high school I wasn't

actually steered that much to college we had a counselor but we weren't like

really steered to college you know it was you had to get good grades if you

didn't get the good grades then you couldn't go to college because then it

would just be a waste of time that's basically what we were told so

there are some students who are kind of primed and groomed to go to college at

the time and others who weren't and and I'm thinking and if we think back

further - I remember watching a movie this was about four years ago or so

there was a movie about these ladies and you know cuz college wasn't always as

expensive as what it is right now so there is these women who went to college

and so that was just a good faith effort just to get women into college but they

were to go to college and find a husband so they went to college they had their

their college degree and then they found a successful man at college and got

married and had babies and so then they were like the represent representation

of the man and so it's like like how much longer I mean it's interesting to

see the movies I mean I know they're like entertainment and they based on

reality which means that somebody took something from reality and turn it into

a movie and actually you can learn from that too you know I mean so I I don't

completely dismiss all movies you know you know when it comes to based on

reality where it's loosely based on reality and so you take a whole bunch of

different experiences and put it into a movie and then you actually have

entertainment entertainment as an educational type of a situation but I'm

thinking how many more more generations have to go through this

how many more generations have to repeat this over and over and over again to see

that we a failing system that that's that's not

equal for everyone and you know so we have certain people here from school

selected to do do this and then everybody else is just like well you're

supposed to be a working aunt and stay home and have babies and you know like

if but fortunately right now I think you know with things being choked off the

younger generations are seeing that with even with their own parents that it's

not affordable to even have kids you know so you know or even pay for their

cult college education and it's like I I actually think college loans should be

dismissed for you know the Freddie and Fannie and and all the young people who

had to take out these loans another paying interest on interest on interest

that's really unfair you know so it's like even for me as a woman a military

spouse older women I think it would be great to catch up older women you know

into a place because my I'm gonna show you guys I'm gonna show you guys I got

this video going it's already at 13 minutes I emptied my battery out I'm

gonna keep it going cuz there's nothing I showed this on my on my oh my social

security statement and I divided it I divided it up into a hard time saying

that because I don't talk a lot when I'm at home unless I'm talking to you guys

here on the internet I don't have many people to talk to but my earnings

records this is my earnings records and so I divided that up I divided that up

no Social Security benefits no pension that was my first marriage no Medicare

military spouse years raising three kids and and my social security number is not

on here so I can show you guys my wages you can get a good look there and I'm

gonna show you the other side too and I was when I was doing really good on

YouTube and how its declined and then I then there was some years on

there where I was a single mom and then I met my husband I married to now and he

had a really good paying job and he and he told me to keep looking for a job

until I did and that's what he told me but you can still see in the second

marriage there's three years of zeroes there and let me find the other side I

actually printed out oh this is a good example at full retirement age let me

make sure my social security number is not on here at full retirement age this

would be my current benefits 1,700 where's one thousand and seven dollars

now how do you afford to either pay rent or buy a house if you're a single woman

or say that you're in a marriage that is not working how do you afford to live on

that you know or to buy your own house you know when you don't have any

benefits and then factor in the fees the insurance medical all all that other

stuff that people might need every once in a while but this this is a part this

is where it gets interesting I'm gonna show you guys this it looks impressive

which it is your says your estimated taxable earnings for the year 2018 is

nine thousand and one hundred and fifty three dollars and so okay so this paper

does not have my does not have my social security number on the front so I'm

going to show you this so this is my YouTube years back over on this side

right there get a good look there and you can see how it's gone down you can

see how my revenue has gone down I hope that's not blurry so there's the whole

thing and I was doing really really good there for a while and and the thing that

I didn't think about is like in it I think it was 2011 was when I was invited

to go to Washington DC I had fun going there I was kind of shy

though I didn't know what to say or I was really scared now

I wouldn't be scared no no more I'm past that and actually a lot of the things

that have happened oh I've got a diarrhea of the mouth and you know and

and the funny part about it is it makes some people feel really uncomfortable

and and you know it does it make some people feel really uncomfortable when I

talk or you know even other people say things that makes them feel really

really uncomfortable and and so but but that you know but it makes sense you

know the the Board of Education from like a hundred years ago the Rockefeller

Board of Education assimilation you know we have enough doctors lawyers dentists

actors entertainers everyone else we will train in place and they'll just

become good servants to servitude in that place in that place and so that

that's kind of what this is symbolic of when it it is I actually have both and

this to me is that's what it's symbolic of this is this side is symbolic of

living in place even though I was a military spouse and traveling and you

know my marriage wasn't perfect but you know we were taking care of my kids were

taken care of we yelled and screamed at each other a lot we did and you know so

but that's involuntary servitude right there those years and even down that's

involuntary servitude now over here both are throttling though throttling a woman

in in in life in in the physical sense because the truth is is that artificial

intelligence can be taught using intelligence so intelligence is

artificial intelligence Google's a search engine search engine can't

surface anti diversity and it's my opinion that when I crawl back on my

Oh life that's that's what happens here and right here - and so this shows what

happens when when wages are choked off so when we have wages that are choked

off then that becomes income inequality related to freedom of speech so if you

say something someone doesn't like right there and I know the traditional media

always argues well it's their platform well that's bullshit it's not their

platform because the United States government beta tested the alphabetic

beta tested the internet cable TV all that stuff has been beta tested by

government money in some capacity whether it's a grant program whether

it's an earmark of some sort it all comes from the taxpayers and and so

that's the part to me that's really frustrating it comes from the taxpayers

and then these people want to say that it's their company and they put all the

work into it that's just not true it's not it's not true that's the same

thing with the public education system you know either the government is

creating jobs and investing in people but yet there's another set of people

who are being anti diverse and they're discriminating against the broad

spectrum of the American public this is my opinion and I believe it can be

changed it has to start somewhere the book has to stop somewhere and start

somewhere all over again because the truth of the matter is the American

public is the the First Amendment civil rights of the American public is being

violated the majority of the people related to income related to just about

everything in the First Amendment the Thirteenth Amendment involuntary

servitude which is not equal wages and then the Fourteenth Amendment related to

equality and that's you know because if you're a business why do you want why do

you want to prevent anyone from using your business why why do you want to

prevent anyone from using your business can anyone tell me that because it and

that's the same argument that I see with sundar Pichai on Google on the hearings

on TV that they're having up in Washington right now why do you want to

prevent anyone from using your business because the truth is

aren't you gonna make more revenue by letting everyone in aren't you gonna

earn more revenue by letting everyone in and having everyone engaged involved the

conversation so our own government is discriminating against the broad

spectrum of the United States public just like the military is discriminating

when it comes to age health wait I say health wait because when they say you

have to be a certain hot you know health spectrum to be in the military that's

discrimination and demographics so demographics is another fancy word you

know this is related to advertising too so the United States military actually

surfaces anti diversity of of the American public so I and I hate to use

the word trolling but is the United States military trolling the private

sector is the United States military trolling the private sector I and in a

if that's true it's funny it's actually really kind of funny when you think

about it so that's just my question that's that might be a good title is the

United States military trolling the private sector that's what I'm gonna

need this video and I'm gonna end it right there for now too

this is a really good video all right I'll see you guys soon

For more infomation >> Is the United States military trolling the private sector? Digital Skills Paperless Post - Duration: 22:30.

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States sue in Montana federal court to block coal leases - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> States sue in Montana federal court to block coal leases - Duration: 0:43.

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City of Tyler getting ready for U.S. 2020 Census - Duration: 1:33.

For more infomation >> City of Tyler getting ready for U.S. 2020 Census - Duration: 1:33.

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New US Farm Bill Approvedd - Duration: 1:43.

For more infomation >> New US Farm Bill Approvedd - Duration: 1:43.

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United States experiencing Shingles vaccine shortage - Duration: 0:48.

For more infomation >> United States experiencing Shingles vaccine shortage - Duration: 0:48.

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Vigil held in Fells Point for migrants seeking U.S. asylum - Duration: 1:38.

For more infomation >> Vigil held in Fells Point for migrants seeking U.S. asylum - Duration: 1:38.

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US Lawmakers Officially Condemn Russia's Natural Gas Pipeline into Germany - Duration: 3:34.

For more infomation >> US Lawmakers Officially Condemn Russia's Natural Gas Pipeline into Germany - Duration: 3:34.

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Nissan Won't Bring The Terra To The U.S., Cites Safety Standards And Customer Expectations - Duration: 2:19.

Customer expectations and strict safety requirements are keeping the new Nissan Terra away from the United States

These were the words used by the vehicle's lead designer, Masato Takahashi, as quoted by AutoNews when he was asked whether the body-on-frame SUV has any chance of reaching our shores

The Nissan official admitted that the Terra's size "is very nice for the U.S.market"

Nonetheless, it would be very difficult to sell it here, because this is "one of the toughest [markets], not just because of crash tests, but also because of customer expectations", he explained

With this comment, Mr.Takahashi nixed the rumors that Nissan might eventually launch the Terra in North America and other Western markets as a successor to the discontinued XTerra

Thus, the new Terra will remain on sale in Southeast Asia and China, where it's already available for grabs as of earlier this year

Unveiled at the beginning of 2018, the new SUV can be had with up to seven seats.Depending on the market, customers get to choose between the 184 PS (181 hp / 135 kW) and 251 Nm (185 lb-ft) 2.5-liter petrol engine from the Navara,

or a 2.3-liter diesel that puts out 190 PS (187 hp / 140 kW) and 450 Nm (332 lb-ft) of torque

For more infomation >> Nissan Won't Bring The Terra To The U.S., Cites Safety Standards And Customer Expectations - Duration: 2:19.

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Condiment market in the United States | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 3:12.

For more infomation >> Condiment market in the United States | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 3:12.

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Turkey primed to start offensive against US backed Kurds in Syria World news - Duration: 4:33.

Turkey primed to start offensive against US backed Kurds in Syria World news

President Erdogan's planned attack on militias he sees as terrorists risks row with Trump

President Erdogan's planned attack on militias he sees as terrorists risks row with Trump

The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has said that Turkey will launch a military operation against the Kurds in northern Syria within days, in a decision that could signal a shift in Turkish-US relations and have far-reaching consequences for Syria's future.

Long frustrated by US support for Kurdish militias Turkey views as terrorists, Erdogan has threatened to push deeper into north-eastern Syria since sending Turkish forces into the Kurdish enclave of Afrin in February.

The president said during a televised speech in Ankara on Wednesday that the operation was imminent. "We will begin our operation to free the east of the Euphrates [river] from the separatist organisation within a few days," he told MPs.

"Our target is not the American soldiers, it is the terror organisations that are active in the region."

Erdogan also expressed disappointment that US-backed Kurdish fighters in Syria have not left the town of Manbij, as per a US-Turkish agreement brokered earlier this year. "The Americans are not being honest, they are still not removing terrorists [from Manbij]," he said. "Therefore, we will do it."

The threat of a new offensive comes a day after the Pentagon said new observation posts had been set up on the Syrian-Turkish border, further irking Turkish officials.

Ankara has repeatedly said that Turkey will do what is necessary to protect its security, but has not yet attempted to cross the river – where 2,000 US troops are stationed on the eastern bank.

The Kurdish YPG military was the target of February's Operation Olive Branch: the border town of Afrin was emptied of Kurds and Arab proxy forces installed as custodians.

Rojava, the area east of the river, has remained more problematic for Turkish leaders, who have prioritised curbing Kurdish ambitions ahead of all other elements in the Syrian war, including the international campaign against Islamic State.

The YPG and its backers, the militant PKK, or Kurdistan Workers Party, are entrenched in Rojava and have been prominent partners in the US-led fight against Isis, managing to confine the militants to pockets of the frontier with Iraq.

With Isis ousted from much of the north-east, the US's Syria policy has switched focus to other concerns, primarily preventing Iran from capitalising on any power vacuum in a strategically vital corner of the region.

Paramount for Turkey is countering any claims by the Kurds for autonomy and stopping any momentum stemming from their successful Isis campaign, which it fears may amplify the Kurdish insurgency inside its own borders.

Washington and Ankara have been at odds throughout the US partnership with the Kurds, and Erdogan has repeatedly threatened to send his forces to confront its Nato ally.

Ties have been further strained by Donald Trump's firm backing of Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, whom Turkey accuses of ordering the murder of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

The US president has been exploring ways to placate his Turkish counterpart, and Erdogan's claim on Wednesday that US forces in Rojava are not seen as hostile suggests an accommodation may have been reached.

Last month, the US Department of State put bounties on the heads of three senior PKK leaders, despite partnering with the group in Syria. The move was seen as a gesture to Turkey, which has long viewed the organisation as a terrorist group.

Erdogan called on the US on Wednesday not to allow deep disagreements over their Syria policy to impede future cooperation between the two countries.

The state department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Residents of Kurdish towns east of the Euphrates have been bracing themselves for a prospective Turkish attack after several months of shelling and cross-border fire that has killed several civilians.

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