Thứ Năm, 21 tháng 2, 2019

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North Korea's point man on the United States and his delegation have arrived

in Hanoi for talks on the agenda for the second Kim Trump summit now less than

one week away his American counterpart is set to arrive in the Vietnamese

capital shortly as well with watchers saying working-level talks could start

as soon as Thursday Eastern je reports

sporting a blue dress shirt and tie North Korea's Special Representative for

US affairs of the state affairs Commission kemo char arrived in Hanoi at

6:20 p.m. local time on Wednesday via a plane from Beijing with him where two

other senior North Korean officials Kim song hae the director of the North's

United Front departments tactical office and Qi Gong Yi the acting director

general for the foreign ministry's North American affairs department shortly

after their arrival they were whisked away by car to an undisclosed location

kemo char is expected to meet with this American counterpart Stephen vegan in

the Vietnamese capital to discuss what will be covered during the two-day talks

between the leaders of North Korea and the US next week according to the US

State Department vegan departed from Washington for Hanoi on Tuesday and is

expected to arrive in Vietnam soon during the pre summit negotiations the

two sides will likely drafted joint statement to be issued after the Hanoi

summit which will be called the Hanoi declaration Eason J Arirang news

For more infomation >> N. Korean envoy on U.S. in Hanoi for pre-summit talks - Duration: 1:37.

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Mother detained by ICE still waiting to become U.S. citizen - Duration: 3:02.

For more infomation >> Mother detained by ICE still waiting to become U.S. citizen - Duration: 3:02.

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TRABAJANDO EN ESTADOS UNIDOS!! *WORKING IN THE US* - Duration: 4:13.

Hi guys! Welcome to a new video. I'm Miguel and I'm going to be telling you what it's like to work in the US.

Right now I am working at a greenhouse.

I am realizing that working here is much different than in guatemala

They expect you to mess up - I already have!

In my job I drive a golf cart with 2 or 3 trailers filled with flowers.

It took getting used to, because you have to turn really wide with all the trailers behind you.

With this cart I messed up 10 plants!

I was driving along nicely when I heard something behind me.

When I looked back, the car turned one way and 6 plants fell off!

When I turned back to the other side, I turned really quickly and 4 more plants fell off!

But if you mess up they only say, "just... try to mess up a little less ok?"

And they say it too you so nicely, it's like they're inviting you to keep messing up!

Let's go!

Almost everything here is done with a machine - it's like the job does itself!

There's a machine for everything - so the work isn't too hard. Of course that depends on your job.

In most jobs, there are people from all over the world! In my job most of them are latinos.

But there's also white people, asians, europeans, and african-americans.

It's incredible how many people from around the world you can meet working here!

I personally like working with people from all different countries. It's interesting to learn different cultures.

... their foods, their languages, and their hobbies.

Here it's very common they pay you every week.

In Guatemala, I was used to only being payed twice a month.

But I'm happy I get paid every week!

It's really nice, because I'm not crawling to get by at the end of every 2 weeks.

At work here, you are always being watched. It's not easy to slack off.

But a true slacker knows how to find a way to not have to do anything.

Everything here isn't easy like most people think, especially since I don't know much english.

It's sometimes hard for me to understand what they want me to do. So yeah... I feel kinda dumb sometimes...

sometimes....

And like in any job, there's always that one person you don't get along with.

There's one person in my work who doesn't speak or understand spanish.

So when he tells me something that makes me mad, I say a funny word in spanish.

I told her this was a Guatemalan way of way of saying thank you.

And everytime I say this, he laughs, and sometimes even says thank you!

Another not so great thing.... I had to wait 8 months to get my work permit.

I was so desperate to start working.

When I finally got my green card, I had to wait another month to get a job!

I went to 5 interviews, but since I have no experience working in the US, it's hard to get a first job.

And another thing, I don't have my drivers license yet

Most jobs require you to have reliable transportation.

So yeah, it was hard to find a job!

I got my job because I know someone who works at this greenhouse.

The most likely way to get your first job here is knowing someone who can connect you to a job.

Well guys, this was my first week working in the US!

I'm still learning, so I do make mistakes!

give this video a LIKE and let me know in the comments what is your dream job

Don't forget to subscribe and turn on the notification bell

Follow my social media

See you in the next video!

For more infomation >> TRABAJANDO EN ESTADOS UNIDOS!! *WORKING IN THE US* - Duration: 4:13.

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State of Mind: My Bipolar Disorder - Duration: 2:33.

- I wasn't open about having bipolar

probably up until like, four or five years ago.

I remember as a kid being fascinated by how quickly

the ocean can go from being calm and beautiful

to being potentially dangerous.

I would picture each of the thoughts and feelings

that were coming in as waves.

And some of them I could swim in,

that was fine I could handle that.

And the stronger ones I had to be aware

if I let myself get dragged out,

I could quickly go from being okay to drowning.

And then there are the days when there's just a storm.

(thunder and rain)

There are days where I feel everything, all at once.

I have never felt anything

before discovering the ocean floating on a storm.

This makes me wonder how overwhelming it must have been

for Pinocchio that moment he first became a real boy.

There are days where I feel nothing.

For a moment, I find freedom.

For a moment, I am drowning,

letting myself sink slowly into the numbness.

I am nothing, realizing dead things do not float.

I feel heavy, not real,

Geppetto's first failed attempt at life,

carved from a coffin.

Bipolar is sometimes a struggle

just to keep my head above water.

On the days when I am manic, there is too much energy.

I have so many thoughts,

waking from a gentle lull to find myself riptide.

On the days when I am depressed, there is no energy.

My every thought is a depth I am swallowed by.

The world disappears as I withdraw.

Bipolar is a constant chaotic change in mood and thought,

that I have to acclimate myself to on a daily basis.

(melancholy music)

For more infomation >> State of Mind: My Bipolar Disorder - Duration: 2:33.

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20.02.2019: Market cheers progress in US – China trade talks (USDX, USD/JPY, AUD/USD) - Duration: 2:10.

The US dollar sagged against its peers in the North American trade on Tuesday amid growing

risk appetite.

Today, traders await the minutes of the latest Federal Reserve's policy meeting.

Most experts believe that the US central bank intends to keep the official funds rate steady

for long, citing geopolitical tensions which could derail global economic growth.

Nevertheless, the minutes could contain signals on further monetary policy.

The US dollar index shed almost 50 pips and closed a Wall Street trade at near 96.55.

The US currency has been weighed down amid buoyant demand for riskier assets.

Investors were flocking to riskier assets during the Asian trade.

The dollar/yen pair rose to 110.90.

Earlier, the US dollar gained ground versus the yen as Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko

Kuroda stated that the regulator is ready to ramp up monetary stimulus if the overvalued

currency hurts the domestic economy.

Safe haven assets are losing favor with investors for another reason.

News agencies reported details of the trade talks between the US and China.

Donald Trump noted that the parties are firm on path to strike a trade deal until the deadline

of March 1.

So, investors shrugged off fears.

The Australian dollar found support from such confidence.

Earlier today the AUD/USD pair touched 0.7170 and later settled at 0.7150 after a minor

correctional decline.

The aussie was hurt by data on wage prices as wages eased a pace of growth in the fourth

quarter of 2018.

Today the economic calendar lacks macroeconomic data.

Thus, the US dollar is affected by the cautious mood ahead of the minutes of the US rate-setting.

For more infomation >> 20.02.2019: Market cheers progress in US – China trade talks (USDX, USD/JPY, AUD/USD) - Duration: 2:10.

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State Department: Alabama woman who joined Islamic State isn't a U.S. citizen - Duration: 2:28.

For more infomation >> State Department: Alabama woman who joined Islamic State isn't a U.S. citizen - Duration: 2:28.

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Trump, Abe discuss upcoming N. Korea-U.S. summit over phone - Duration: 0:33.

yes president Donald Trump has spoken with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe

a about the upcoming summit between Pyongyang and Washington according to

Kyodo news agency the two allies during their phone call on Wednesday reaffirmed

their commitment towards achieving North Korea's complete denuclearization they

also asked Trump to raise the issue of Japanese abductees at the upcoming

summit and always said that Trump agreed to do so according to the Japanese

Foreign Ministry the two leaders agreed to have another phone conversation after

the summit

For more infomation >> Trump, Abe discuss upcoming N. Korea-U.S. summit over phone - Duration: 0:33.

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16 States File Lawsuits Against Trump Over His Fake National Emergency - Duration: 3:02.

As of right now, 16 different states have filed a lawsuit against Donald Trump and the

Trump administration over there phoning national emergency declaration that Donald Trump made

last week, and we all expected these lawsuits to happen.

We knew there were coming, people had been threatening to sue since before he even made

the announcement.

If he did make the announcement, and that's what we're seeing now.

Even Trump himself admitted when he gave his little speech, he said, and then they're going

to sue me, and then it's going to go to the ninth circuit and then it's going to go to

the supreme could, and that's exactly what's going to happen.

Everybody knew this was gonna happen, but here's the thing.

Trump already screwed himself over in his potential defense for these lawsuits because

it his announcement, he said, I could do the wall over a longer period of time.

I didn't need to do this, but I'd rather do it much faster.

I'd rather do it much faster.

That little statement that I just read there, which is the exact quote from the president

of the United States.

That quote alone shows that this was not actually an emergency.

The fact that border crossings or a at a near 45 year low also shows that this is not a

national emergency.

Now the only question that this point is, do the courts get to determine what constitutes

a national emergency?

And that's where we're probably gonna run into a little bit of problems.

Cause technically, yes, according to the laws, the president can declare a national emergency

when he wants to.

There's not necessarily any justification that they have to give.

And that is a problem with the law itself.

And hopefully these lawsuits might be able to reign that in.

But nonetheless, Trump's admitted this is not actually a national emergency.

These lawsuits are being filed and we're going to challenge these powers in court.

And if these courts decide to limit the powers of the president of the United States, that

is a good thing.

Not just for Donald Trump, but for anyone who comes after him.

Because we do not need a president trying to abuse the power of their office because

the laws are written so vaguely that they can do whatever the hell they want.

In fact, I believe that's actually why the laws were written so vaguely.

Hopefully we can correct that.

Hopefully most of these right wing courts in this country aren't going to screw us over

and grant dictator like powers to the president of the United States, but unfortunately that's

going to be something that we're going to have to wait and see as these lawsuits make

their way through our court system.

For more infomation >> 16 States File Lawsuits Against Trump Over His Fake National Emergency - Duration: 3:02.

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How have Reagan's policies affected the government? | US Government and Civics | Khan Academy - Duration: 1:48.

For more infomation >> How have Reagan's policies affected the government? | US Government and Civics | Khan Academy - Duration: 1:48.

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Why is the Speaker second in succession? | US Government and Civics | Khan Academy - Duration: 1:36.

For more infomation >> Why is the Speaker second in succession? | US Government and Civics | Khan Academy - Duration: 1:36.

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Putin warns Russia ready to TARGET United States if Europe used as a nuclear base - DAILY NEWS - Duration: 2:36.

Putin warns Russia ready to TARGET United States if Europe used as a nuclear base

VLADIMIR Putin has warned Russia will target the United States if Donald Trump uses European

countries as a nuclear weapons base.

The Russian president said Moscow will respond to any US deployment of short or intermediate-range

nuclear weapons in Europe, in a tough new stance although denying they would take the

first step.

Putin's warning comes after Washington's decision to quit a landmark Cold War-era arms

control treaty this month.

The Kremlin leader warned the US that they should weigh up the risks before they act

as he also threatened to target European countries.

He told Russia's political elite: "It's their right to think how they want but can

they count?

I'm sure they can.

Let them count the speed and the range of the weapons systems we are developing.

"Russia will be forced to create and deploy types of weapons which can be used not only

in respect of those territories from which the direct threat to us originates but also

in respect of those territories where the centres of decision-making are located."

United States officials said they would suspend their obligations under the 1987 nuclear arms

agreement with Russia, that would free them up to develop new missiles.

The pact meant neither side could base short and intermediate-range land-based missiles

in Europe.

Abandoning the treaty has paved the way for a new arms race.

Mr Putin was measured in his speech by not announcing new missile deployments, saying

that money for new systems would come from the existing budget and claiming that Russia

would only act in response to the United States.

He did make it clear that Russia would defend their interests and they would respond if

new US missile bases were put in Europe as that would pose a threat to Russia.

Putin stated that he wanted a good relationship with the United States.

He said: "We know how to do this and we will implement these plans immediately, as

soon as the corresponding threats to us become a reality."

For more infomation >> Putin warns Russia ready to TARGET United States if Europe used as a nuclear base - DAILY NEWS - Duration: 2:36.

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China develops killer ROBOT WARSHIPS in fresh threat to US - tensions escalate - DAILY NEWS - Duration: 3:41.

China develops killer ROBOT WARSHIPS in fresh threat to US - tensions escalate

CHINA is building killer robot warships amid escalating tensions between China and the

United States in the western Pacific.

The race is on to control the western Pacific, with China and the US keen to rule the strategically-vital

trading routes.

China already holds the upper hand in terms of navy numbers in the disputed area.

And with the Chinese fleet about to acquire large numbers of killer robotic warship, this

advantage over the US is about to grow.

The Chinese has revealed a design for an autonomous robot warship that could finally tip the balance

of geopolitical power in their favour.

The unmanned surface vessel, known as JARI, will help extend Beijing's naval advantage

over the United States in the western Pacific.

The US currently employs a network of sensor and shooter drones to penetrate anti-access

environments such as the South China Sea.

JARI is considered to be China's response to this kind of warfare.

JARI is 15 metres long and weighs 20 tons (18,000 kg).

The warship has a sailing range of 500 nautical miles, and the boat is believed to boast a

42 knot top speed.

The vessel comes equipped with eight small vertical launch system cells, a torpedo launcher,

a forward mounted machine gun, and a rocket launcher for counter-surface engagements.

This points to JARI having a similar mission to People's Liberation Army (PLA) Navy's

manned Type -55 destroyer: anti-submarine, anti-surface and anti-air warfare.

JARI also comes complete with cutting-edge radar and sonar devices, capable of detecting

and terminating aerial drones, ships and submarines.

JARI was this week unveiled by the China Shipbuilding and Offshore International Company at Abu

Dhabi's International Defence Exhibition and Conference.

The Chinese navy news arrives as the US Navy is preparing to unveil its own array of next

generation robotic warships.

These will include two unmanned surface vessels (USVs).

The smaller of the two USVs will act as scouts and decoys, and will attempt to interfere

with enemy communications.

The larger USVs are arsenal ships, armed with missile launchers.

The primary attraction of robot warships is they are considerably cheaper to run than

manned vessels.

US Rear Admiral John Neagley said: "Part of the value of having unmanned surface vehicles

is you can get capacity at a lower cost."

The US Navy is also investing in unmanned robotic submarines.

Earlier this month, the US Navy reportedly paid Boeing £33million ($43million) for four

Orca Extra Large Unmanned Undersea Vehicles.

These autonomous submarines are 51 feet long and can travel up to 6,500 nautical miles.

And they could be used for anti-surface warfare and mine countermeasures.

For more infomation >> China develops killer ROBOT WARSHIPS in fresh threat to US - tensions escalate - DAILY NEWS - Duration: 3:41.

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Over 1,000 Hate Groups Are Now Active in United States, Civil Rights Group Says The New York Times - Duration: 4:13.

Over 1,000 Hate Groups Are Now Active in United States, Civil Rights Group Says The New York Times

The number of hate groups in the United States rose for the fourth year in a row in 2018, pushed to a record high by a toxic combination of political polarization, anti immigrant sentiment and technologies that help spread propaganda online, the Southern Poverty Law Center said Wednesday.

The law center said the number of hate groups rose by 7 percent last year to 1,020, a 30 percent jump from 2014. That broadly echoes other worrying developments, including a 30 percent increase in the number of hate crimes reported to the F.B.I. from 2015 through 2017 and a surge of right wing violence that the Anti Defamation League said had killed at least 50 people in 2018.

Were seeing a lot of bad trends, Heidi Beirich, the director of the intelligence project at the Southern Poverty Law Center, said in an interview on Wednesday. There are more hate groups, more hate crimes and more domestic terrorism in that same vein. It is a troubling set of circumstances.

Ms. Beirich said the increase in extremist activity tracked by her team began in earnest in the early days of the 2016 presidential election, when anxieties over immigration helped propel President Trump to the White House. Before that, she said, the number of hate groups had fallen for three straight years.

Trump has made people in the white supremacist movement move back into politics and the public domain, Ms. Beirich said. He is a critical aspect of this dynamic, but he is not the only reason why the ranks of hate groups are growing. The ability to propagate hate in the online space is key.

The center said in a statement that most hate groups in the United States espoused some form of white supremacist ideology, including neo Nazis, the Ku Klux Klan, neo Confederates and white nationalists. It said the number of white nationalist groups jumped by almost 50 percent, to 148 in 2018 from 100.

For the purposes of its study, the center said it considered any organization whose leaders, activities or statement of principles attacks an entire class of people to be a hate group. Violence is not a prerequisite.

The centers findings run parallel to a in the United States that was issued last month by the Anti Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism.

That report said that right wing extremism was linked to every extremist related killing the group tracked in 2018, at least 50, and that jihadist groups were linked to none. It said that made 2018 the deadliest year for right wing extremism since the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.

The law center and the Anti Defamation League both pointed to at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh in October as a symptom of the increasingly combustible mix of anti immigrant sentiment, violence and online conspiracy mongering.

The white supremacist attack in Pittsburgh should serve as a wake up call to everyone about the deadly consequences of hateful rhetoric, Jonathan A. Greenblatt, the president of the Anti Defamation League, said in a statement accompanying its report. Its time for our nations leaders to appropriately recognize the severity of the threat and to devote the necessary resources to address the scourge of right wing extremism.

But the rise in anti immigrant sentiment had also created an equal yet opposite reaction, the Southern Poverty Law Center said. As the number of white supremacist groups rose, so did the number of radical black nationalist groups that espoused anti white, anti Semitic or anti gay and anti transgender views.

The center said the number of those groups had risen to 264 in 2018 from 233 in 2017, but it noted that the influence of black nationalism in mainstream politics was highly limited.

It did, however, point specifically to comments by the Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, who the center said echoed white supremacist myths of a looming white genocide in his rhetoric about President Trump, whom he has accused of planning genocide against African Americans.

Mr. Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam have been connected to a organization, two of whose national leaders have been accused of sympathizing with Mr. Farrakhan and privately expressing anti Semitic opinions.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which is based in Montgomery, Ala., has tracked domestic extremism since 1971, but in recent years conservatives have accused it of politicizing its findings and falsely labeling right leaning organizations as hate groups.

The group paid dollar 3.4 million to Maajid Nawaz, a British campaigner against Islamic extremism who sometimes works with conservative anti Muslim politicians, after it included him on a list of anti Muslim extremists in 2016. Richard Cohen, the centers president, said in a that the inclusion of Mr. Nawaz on the list had been wrong.

For more infomation >> Over 1,000 Hate Groups Are Now Active in United States, Civil Rights Group Says The New York Times - Duration: 4:13.

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Over 1,000 Hate Groups Are Now Active in United States, Civil Rights Group Says The New York Times - Duration: 4:13.

Over 1,000 Hate Groups Are Now Active in United States, Civil Rights Group Says The New York Times

The number of hate groups in the United States rose for the fourth year in a row in 2018, pushed to a record high by a toxic combination of political polarization, anti immigrant sentiment and technologies that help spread propaganda online, the Southern Poverty Law Center said Wednesday.

The law center said the number of hate groups rose by 7 percent last year to 1,020, a 30 percent jump from 2014. That broadly echoes other worrying developments, including a 30 percent increase in the number of hate crimes reported to the F.B.I. from 2015 through 2017 and a surge of right wing violence that the Anti Defamation League said had killed at least 50 people in 2018.

Were seeing a lot of bad trends, Heidi Beirich, the director of the intelligence project at the Southern Poverty Law Center, said in an interview on Wednesday. There are more hate groups, more hate crimes and more domestic terrorism in that same vein. It is a troubling set of circumstances.

Ms. Beirich said the increase in extremist activity tracked by her team began in earnest in the early days of the 2016 presidential election, when anxieties over immigration helped propel President Trump to the White House. Before that, she said, the number of hate groups had fallen for three straight years.

Trump has made people in the white supremacist movement move back into politics and the public domain, Ms. Beirich said. He is a critical aspect of this dynamic, but he is not the only reason why the ranks of hate groups are growing. The ability to propagate hate in the online space is key.

The center said in a statement that most hate groups in the United States espoused some form of white supremacist ideology, including neo Nazis, the Ku Klux Klan, neo Confederates and white nationalists. It said the number of white nationalist groups jumped by almost 50 percent, to 148 in 2018 from 100.

For the purposes of its study, the center said it considered any organization whose leaders, activities or statement of principles attacks an entire class of people to be a hate group. Violence is not a prerequisite.

The centers findings run parallel to a in the United States that was issued last month by the Anti Defamation Leagues Center on Extremism.

That report said that right wing extremism was linked to every extremist related killing the group tracked in 2018, at least 50, and that jihadist groups were linked to none. It said that made 2018 the deadliest year for right wing extremism since the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing.

The law center and the Anti Defamation League both pointed to at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh in October as a symptom of the increasingly combustible mix of anti immigrant sentiment, violence and online conspiracy mongering.

The white supremacist attack in Pittsburgh should serve as a wake up call to everyone about the deadly consequences of hateful rhetoric, Jonathan A. Greenblatt, the president of the Anti Defamation League, said in a statement accompanying its report. Its time for our nations leaders to appropriately recognize the severity of the threat and to devote the necessary resources to address the scourge of right wing extremism.

But the rise in anti immigrant sentiment had also created an equal yet opposite reaction, the Southern Poverty Law Center said. As the number of white supremacist groups rose, so did the number of radical black nationalist groups that espoused anti white, anti Semitic or anti gay and anti transgender views.

The center said the number of those groups had risen to 264 in 2018 from 233 in 2017, but it noted that the influence of black nationalism in mainstream politics was highly limited.

It did, however, point specifically to comments by the Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, who the center said echoed white supremacist myths of a looming white genocide in his rhetoric about President Trump, whom he has accused of planning genocide against African Americans.

Mr. Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam have been connected to a organization, two of whose national leaders have been accused of sympathizing with Mr. Farrakhan and privately expressing anti Semitic opinions.

The Southern Poverty Law Center, which is based in Montgomery, Ala., has tracked domestic extremism since 1971, but in recent years conservatives have accused it of politicizing its findings and falsely labeling right leaning organizations as hate groups.

The group paid dollar 3.4 million to Maajid Nawaz, a British campaigner against Islamic extremism who sometimes works with conservative anti Muslim politicians, after it included him on a list of anti Muslim extremists in 2016. Richard Cohen, the centers president, said in a that the inclusion of Mr. Nawaz on the list had been wrong.

For more infomation >> Over 1,000 Hate Groups Are Now Active in United States, Civil Rights Group Says The New York Times - Duration: 4:13.

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Former Alabama resident cannot return to US - Duration: 0:26.

For more infomation >> Former Alabama resident cannot return to US - Duration: 0:26.

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Steve Stricker Named United States 2020 Ryder Cup Captain at Whistling Straits - Duration: 0:56.

For more infomation >> Steve Stricker Named United States 2020 Ryder Cup Captain at Whistling Straits - Duration: 0:56.

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Trump ISIS wife wont be allowed to return to United States - Duration: 6:01.

Trump ISIS wife wont be allowed to return to United States

USA TODAY NETWORK presents VRtually There, a weekly virtual reality series that delivers amazing adventures, extreme nature, sports fantasies and the worlds most fascinating people. We dont just tell incredible stories, we let you live the experience in fully immersive environments. Use your VR headset, laptop or smart phone to experience in 360u00b0 video and virtual reality. Download the USA TODAY app, now with virtual reality and subscribe to our . Three new thrilling VR experiences each week. Immerse yourself.

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Hoda Muthana was born in New Jersey. She wants to come home and face the U.S. justice system, her familys lawyer tells USA TODAY.

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WASHINGTON ľ President Donald Trump said Wednesday that an American woman who was the bride of an Islamic State fighter and now wants to come home will not be allowed back in the United States.

I have instructed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and he fully agrees, not to allow Hoda Muthana back into the Country! Trump wrote on Twitter.

Muthana traveled to Syria and marriedáand hadáa child with an ISIS fighter and now wants to face the U.S. justice system.

But Pompeo said earlier Wednesday that Muthanaáis not an American citizen and "does not have any legal basis, no valid U.S. passport, no right to a passport," contradictingástatements by her familyáand her Florida based lawyer, who said she was born ináHackensack, New Jersey, in 1994.á

I have instructed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and he fully agrees, not to allow Hoda Muthana back into the Country!

Muthana, who was raised in Alabama, left the United Statesáto join ISISáfour years ago at ageá19. In Syria, she called for Americans to be attacked, and she spread the groupsápropaganda online.á

She is one of aboutá ľ the spouses and children of Islamic State militants ľáheld in a Kurdish run detention camp in northern Syria.á

Muthana is there with her 18 month old son.The childs father is not alive. Two of her previous husbands, both Islamic State militants, are also dead. Muthana is not allowed to leave the camp and has armed guards protecting her from Islamic State sympathizers.áShe is asking to be allowed to return to the U.S. to face due process.á

Start the day smarter:

"The government needs to engage with her, but not just her;áall of these people who joined ISIS" from the West, saidáHassan Shibly,áMuthanas lawyer.á

"If sheábroke the law, then the justice system can deal with her, and if she didnt break the law, she should come back anyway, so it can be determined if she is a threat."

This undated image provided by attorney Hassan Shibly shows Hoda Muthana, an Alabama woman who left home to join the Islamic State after becoming radicalized online. Muthana realized she was wrong and now wants to return to the United States, Shibly, a lawyer for her family said Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2019. Photo11: AP

Shibly said Muthana has realized she made a mistake in movingáto Syria andáwants to return to the USAáto face justice and "pay any debts she has to society." He said she wants to speak out against the Islamic State and help de radicalize other Americans.

Muthana abandoned her family and fled to Syria iná2014, a year after she graduated from high school. She briefly studied at the University of Alabama Birmingham.

Shibly shared a letteráMuthana wrote this week in which she describedáherselfáas "naive, angry and arrogant" when she decided to journey to Syria.á

"During my years in Syria, I would see and experience a way of life and the terrible effects of war, which changed me," Muthana wrote. "Seeing bloodshed up close changed me. Motherhood changed me. Seeing friends, children and the men I married dying changed me. Seeing how different a society could be compared to the beloved America I was born and raised into changed me."

Shibly, executive director of the Florida Council on American Islamic Relationsáin Tampa, said it was not clear from a legal standpoint whetheráMuthanas "marrying into ISIS" could warrant a "material support charge" to Islamic State activities, which range from terroráattacks in the USAáand Europeáto beheadings in Iraq and Syria.á

Alan Dershowitz, a former Harvard law professor, said that if he were advising Muthana, he would tell her that coming back to the USAáwould be "risky."áDershowitzátold the New York Post her case would be a "close call" even if all she did was tweet and send emails.

Muthana claimedáto have had no contact with U.S. authorities, and Shibly said she can leave the camp only if the U.S. government asks for her release. Its not clear if it has.áU.S. immigration authorities were not available to answer questions about her case, including whether a U.S. citizen can be barred from entering his or her own country.á

In a briefing, State Department spokesmanáRobert Palladinoáwould not address Muthanas specific case, but said repatriating foreign terrorist fighters to their countries of origin was theá"best solution to preventing them from returning to the battlefield."

Pompeo subsequently issued theástatement Wednesday in which he claimed that Muthana was not a U.S. citizen and would not be allowed back in.

Shibly, however, provided USA TODAYáwith a copy of Muthanas birth certificate, which lists her place of birth as Hackensack, New Jersey.

A birth certificate provided by Hoda Muthanas attorney lists her place of birth as Hackensack, N.J. Muthana traveled to Syria and married, but now wants to return to the U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says shes not an American citizen. Photo11: Submitted

Steve Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas, said that Pompeo cant just assert that someone born in the U.S.áis not a U.S. citizen.

"I gather that the governments argument is that she was born to a diplomat who was in the United States on official business, and so was not entitled to birthright citizenship. Thats correct as a matter of law if its true, but its not true just because the government says so," he said in a Twitter message to USA TODAY.á

Only six American militants have returned from fighting or training with militant groups in Syria, according to , a Washington based foreign policy research institute.

All were taken into custody. Muthana may be the first American spouse or partner of an Islamic Stateáfighter who has sought to return home. The New York Times has reported that another woman, dual U.S. Canadian nationaláKimberly Gwen Polman, 46, is also in the al hawl refugee camp in Syria. She left Canada in 2015.á

A similar case in , 19, from London, whoágave birth to a baby boy over the weekend in the same camp where Muthana is held.

Begum, who left Britain for Syria at age 15 and married an Islamic Stateáfighter,áwants to return to Britain for the sake of her childs welfare, but British authorities, including the nations interior minister, indicated they might try to block her return. They might find that difficult to do because a British national cant theoretically be prevented from returning home unless that personáis also a national of another country. Begumáisnt.

The womans London based lawyer, Tasnime Akunjee, said Tuesday that the British governmentáinformed him that it is trying to strip Begum of her British citizenship.á

As for Muthana, "whether its a few years in jail, 20 years in jailáor no jail, shes open to the legal process, and shes not asking for a free pass, just due process," Shibly said.á

For more infomation >> Trump ISIS wife wont be allowed to return to United States - Duration: 6:01.

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N. Korean envoy on U.S. in Hanoi for pre-summit talks - Duration: 1:37.

North Korea's point man on the United States and his delegation have arrived

in Hanoi for talks on the agenda for the second Kim Trump summit which is now

less than one week away his American counterpart is set to arrive in the

Vietnamese capital very soon with what you're saying working-level talks could

actually start in the coming hours he's Sanjay with the details

sporting a blue dress shirt and tie North Korea's Special Representative for

US affairs of the state affairs Commission kemo char arrived in Hanoi at

6:20 p.m. local time on Wednesday via a plane from Beijing with him where two

other senior North Korean officials Kim sung-hee the director of the North's

United Front departments tactical office and checking it

the acting director general for the Foreign Ministry's North American

affairs department shortly after their arrival there were whisked away by car

to an undisclosed location kemo char is expected to meet with this American

counterpart Steven vegan in the Vietnamese capital to discuss what will

be covered during the two-day talks between the leaders of North Korea and

the u.s. next week according to the US State Department

vegan departed from Washington for Hanoi on Tuesday and is expected to arrive in

Vietnam soon during the pre summit negotiations the two sides will likely

draft a joint statement to be issued after the Hanoi summit which will be

called the Hanoi declaration isn't a arirang news

For more infomation >> N. Korean envoy on U.S. in Hanoi for pre-summit talks - Duration: 1:37.

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American Model United Nations: Why do you MUN? - Duration: 2:45.

Where are you from?

I'm from the College of Wooster, and I love to #MUN

AMUN is American Model United Nations International. The goal: Bringing Global Perspectives to Future Leaders.

I would absolutely say teamwork, this is a huge learning conference for our delegations.

We like to bring a lot of our young students here because of the philosophy of the conference.

A lot of it is about learning. It's about engagement. It's about making sure that everyone can participate and have those groundbreaking MUN experiences.

I'm from Loyola, and I love to #MUN.

AMUN is held the week before Thanksgiving in Chicago, Illinois.

Chicago is a convenient transit hub, and participants have a free afternoon to explore this extraordinary city.

If you're looking for something free, Millenium Park is hard to beat,

but if you are willing to pay,

Willis Tower has fantastic views.

All of the museums. Chicago has phenomenal museums, from the Art Museum to the Field Museum, Shedd Aquarium,

the Planetarium, there are lots of options

within a pretty close walking distance of the Sheraton. The Sheraton is an excellent location for exploring Chicago.

I'm from Carthage, and I love to #MUN

Some of the skills I feel like I've learned the most from AMUN is a lot with diplomacy,

so it's really helped me in working with other students in order to build collaborative

ideas in regards to addressing a lot of world issues. When I originally started at Carthage,

I actually didn't like to public speak at all.

I was a very quiet individual, and through AMUN specifically

I had the opportunity to really build up my public speaking capabilities

to the point that I'm actually proud to go up and talk and give speeches.

So I feel like those are some of the things I learned the most from AMUN. For example, there's delegates from like other countries and

I find that amazing to get to talk to them and learn from them

I think it was last year

Actually, I was representing Pakistan, and I found out that one of the delegates in my committee was from Pakistan,

and it was so cool to get to talk to them like

get to know more about them and actually learn about their perspective on the whole topic.

I'm from Triton, and I love to #MUN

AMUN conferences attract

1,500 students each year and have impacted the lives of

24,000 students since 1990.

One of the things that I enjoy the most about these conferences is that I get to

meet new people, and I do make new friends, and I keep in contact with them, even people from other countries

I still talk to them and we keep in contact with social media, and it's one of the greatest things that like

I feel like I have gained from like doing Model UN, and so I think that is a great idea.

Where are you from?

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