Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 12, 2017

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FBI Just Released Obama's Horrifying Secret Proving He's The Deadliest President In

U.S. History Obama continues to do everything in his power

to destroy Trump's presidency.

He's constantly violating federal law to meet with world leaders in a civilian capacity

to undermine Trump, where he continues to hold fundraisers all over D.C. to stage his

promised "political comeback."

But unfortunately for Obama and his legacy, the FBI has just released a very disturbing

report on the former president that could derail any political plans he might have had

in the near future.

Each year, the FBI releases their annual summary known as the "Law Enforcement Officers Killed

and Assaulted Report."

The report for 2016 was just finalized, where the findings are being sent to the DOJ.

The report revealed an extremely disturbing statistic about how the Obama Administration

was the deadliest in history as there was a 61% INCREASE in murders targeting law enforcement.

Of course we can thank Obama and his hatred for our police officers, where he constantly

voiced his support for Black Lives Matter, who was responsible for the massacre of Dallas

police last year.

The Blacksphere reported:

Monday, the FBI finalized their annual summary known as the "Law Enforcement Officers Killed

and Assaulted Report."

As Sessions put it, the 61% increase in murders targeting law enforcement is both shocking

and unacceptable.

Of course, we knew Obama's Administration painted police as the enemy.

Now it's indisputable.

Breitbart breaks down the numbers even further:

The feloniously killed category is a narrow one.

Sixty-two of those 66 officers died of gunshot wounds, with the last four dying after being

hit by motor vehicles.

The 66 officers feloniously killed in the line of duty in 2016 is the highest single-year

figure since 1997.

The single most common category of officer slaying and the largest increase recorded

was the 17 "ambush" type premeditated killings in 2016, a 142 percent increase over

the seven such attacks in 2015.

Breitbart News has reported extensively on these attacks, the most egregious of which

left five Dallas, Texas, policemen dead after a black nationalist opened fire at a July

2016 Black Lives Matter rally.

An additional 52 officers died in accidents while on duty, for a total of 118 line-of-duty

deaths, a 37 percent increase over 2015.

The number of assaults on officers also increased significantly in 2016, with over 57,000 recorded

nationwide.

This figure represents a 14 percent increase over 2015 and a rate of more than 150 a day

and nearly one assault for every ten police officers in the country."These devastating

deaths on our police officers are directly due to Obama who encouraged his thugs to go

to war with all those who serve and protect.

How many times did we witness Obama making incendiary remarks while sending his race-baiting

minions to hotbeds like Ferguson to drum up the racial discontent and hatred even further?

"Obama spent 8 years stoking the flames of a racial divide that for the most part

had been relegated to the 60's.

Seeing the potential for Leftist profiteering, both politically and financially, Obama encouraged

hatred, particularly against law enforcement," The Blacksphere reported.

The bright side is that President Trump is turning things around for our nation's police.

Just days after taking office, President Trump made it clear that he stood on the side of

America's police with the first executive order that he put into motion.

Trump promised that his administration would serve to "enhance the protection and safety

of Federal, State, tribal, and local law enforcement officers, and thereby all Americans."

President Trump is already delivering on the promise to support our law enforcement and

enhance their ability to do their jobs.

So far, police deaths have already decreased by 20%, but the official numbers won't be

released until sometime next year.

It's so refreshing to have Trump in office now where he fully supports law and order

and constantly has the backs of our brave police who daily defend the "thin blue line"

in this country.

For more infomation >> FBI Released Obama's Horrifying Secret Proving He's The Deadliest President In U.S. History - Duration: 4:43.

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9 Years of Merry Christmas From The President Of The United States - Duration: 0:34.

And Merry Christmas.

Merry Christmas everybody.

I want to wish you all Merry Christmas and happy holidays.

Michelle and I wanted to wish you a Merry Christmas and happy holidays.

We did want to take a moment to wish you all a Merry Christmas from our family to yours.

Merry Christmas everybody.

Merry Christmas everybody.

Merry Christmas everybody.

I just wanted to ah wish everybody a very very Merry Christmas.

We say Christmas again very proudly.

Very, very Merry Christmas.

We're going to have a great year.

It's going to be an incredible year.

For more infomation >> 9 Years of Merry Christmas From The President Of The United States - Duration: 0:34.

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NORTH KOREA WARNS OF WAR WITH U S AND 'PUPPET' SOUTH AS TRUMP MEETS WITH KOREAN LEADER - Duration: 4:04.

NORTH KOREA WARNS OF WAR WITH U.S. AND �PUPPET� SOUTH AS TRUMP MEETS WITH KOREAN LEADER.

North Korea has warned of dire, destructive consequences to the increased collaboration

between its southern rival and the U.S., which received South Korea�s recently elected

leader Thursday in hopes of aligning the two nation�s efforts to dismantle Pyongyang�s

nuclear weapons and missile program.

North Korea�s state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), a daily outlet for the views

of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un�s government, cited Thursday a spokesperson for Pyongyang�s

National Peace Committee of Korea in criticizing �South Korean puppet military warmongers�

who he said were provoking their northern neighbor�s armed forces with a series of

recent military drills conducted alongside U.S. President Donald Trump.

The U.S. has sent two carrier strike groups and bolstered military assets in the region

in order to increase military and political pressure on Kim to abandon his nuclear ambitions.

In another KCNA piece, the agency blasted the U.S.�South Korea exercises as well as

what it considered inflammatory remarks by South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

�This is just a risky and reckless military move driving the already acute situation on

the Korean peninsula to the brink of a nuclear war, and a blatant challenge to all Koreans

and other peace-loving peoples in the world aspiring after peace and security on the peninsula�

the article read, later attacking U.S. military moves in the region.

�The Trump administration should not run riot, thinking twice about the catastrophic

consequences to be entailed by its foolhardy military moves.

It should properly understand the spirit and will of the Korean army and people to annihilate

the enemy and finally conclude the standoff with the U.S.,� KCNA concluded.

North Korea regularly asserts its right to possess nuclear weapons and develop intercontinental

ballistic missiles (ICBM), arguing that these military assets are necessary to prevent foreign

powers like the U.S. from invading and overthrowing Kim�s administration.

The militarized state�s pursuit of these technologies, however, has led the U.S. and

even sympathetic nations such as China and Russia to support U.N. Security Council sanctions

against North Korea.

The U.S. has taken its threats a step farther and has publicly considered taking military

action to prevent its longtime Asian foe from conducting a sixth nuclear weapons test.

Trump first approached Chinese President Xi Jinping in an attempt to convince North Korea�s

greatest ally to exert its leverage and convince its neighbor to disarm its nuclear and ballistic

missile program.

While Trump has acknowledged China�s efforts, following the death of U.S. student Otto Warmbier

shortly after his release from North Korean prison.

the president said last week that �it had not worked out.� Warmbier had reportedly

fallen into a coma not long after his trial and imprisonment for allegedly stealing a

sign bearing a political slogan during a visit to North Korea last year and never woke up.

A senior White House official said Wednesday that China had �had fallen far short of

expectations� in dealing with North Korea.

In the U.S.�s latest attempt to turn up the heat on North Korea, Trump was scheduled

to meet with Moon for the first time Thursday.

Moon, who was elected last month after his predecessor was arrested in a corruption scandal,

distanced himself from the conservative views of the former South Korean administration,

but he has recently embraced a more militant stance toward North Korea, with which his

country has technically remained at war since the 1950s.

While Moon has pushed back on certain measures regarding the installation of the U.S.�s

Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-missile system in his country, which

was expedited before he took office, Moon said only days into his administration that

there was a �high possibility� of conflict with North Korea.

While North Korea is not yet believed to have the capacity to produce an ICBM, much less

fit it with a nuclear warhead, analysts have said that the country could begin testing

such projectiles as soon as the end of this year.

North Korea is estimated to possess up to 20 nuclear weapons and an extensive arsenal

of ballistic missiles, all capable of striking nearby countries.

For more infomation >> NORTH KOREA WARNS OF WAR WITH U S AND 'PUPPET' SOUTH AS TRUMP MEETS WITH KOREAN LEADER - Duration: 4:04.

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The fastest growing state of 207 USA - Duration: 2:03.

The fastest growing state in the nation this year wasn't in a place with year-round warm

weather such as the Sun Belt but further north, according to a census report released Wednesday.

The U.S Census Bureau announced that Idaho had the largest percentage increase in population

of any state in the nation in a recent census, rising by 2.2 percent from July 2016 to July

2017 to 1.7 million residents.

That's about 37,000 more people living in the state.

"Domestic migration drove change in the two fastest-growing states, Idaho and Nevada,

while an excess of births over deaths played a major part in the growth of the third fastest-growing

state, Utah," said Luke Rogers, chief of the Population Estimates Branch.

After Idaho, the states with the largest percentage increases of population were Nevada (2 percent),

Utah (1.9 percent), Washington (1.7 percent) and Florida along with Arizona (1.6 percent).

On the opposite end, eight states lost population in the same time period with Illinois garnering

the title of place with the largest numeric decline, losing 33,703 people.

The U.S. Census Bureau noted this was a "relatively small percentage change" compared to the state's

population of 12.8 million people, but it was enough for the "Land of Lincoln" to

slip to the sixth-largest state in the nation behind Pennsylvania.

In terms of largest percentage decline in 2017, that title went to Wyoming, which dipped

by 1 percent.

Three states that had been losing population in 2016, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Vermont,

all saw slight increases.

Overall, states in the South and West continue to lead population growth, according to the

Census Bureau.

In 2017, 38 percent of the nation's population lived in the South, and 23.8 percent lived

in the West.

The nation as a whole grew by 2.3 million people between July 1, 2016, and July 1, 2017,

representing a 0.72 percent increase to 325.7 million overall.

For more infomation >> The fastest growing state of 207 USA - Duration: 2:03.

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Shades Of U.S.: Tim Okamura's Journey - Duration: 5:51.

>>> Tim Okamura: Who knows how much time we've got left.

I'm almost fifty at this point so there's not a whole

lot of time to screw around. I've got a lot of important

work that I want to make.

Hi my name is Tim Okamura and I'm an artist working in

Bushwick, Brooklyn. I'm originally from Edmonton,

Canada but I've been in New York City about

twenty-six years and been working hard since the day

I got here. I think my style artistically is

something that evolved in a really organic way.

I was always interested in painting the figure and

working on portraiture from the time that I was young.

My interest was really motivated by making paintings of people

that I hadn't seen painted before. Being half Japanese

and not really having other friends that looked like me

or had the same stories shaped my vision of the world.

Everybody can have a different story and a

different background and look different, but we're all,

there's a commonality. My father is Japanese.

My mother is from Newfoundland.

Her heritage is British. In this day in age we all

have these crazy, complex backstories and all these

different influences. And we're really a product of

so many things. It's quite a package but I'm glad to be me.

Living in a very multicultural city like New York has certainly

had an impact on the work, primarily the people that

I encounter and all the stories that are being told.

I was lucky in my experience growing up that I had a very

multicultural little bubble that I kind of lived in with my

friends and the people that I loved. It wasn't a

huge contrast in terms of that diversity but it

certainly was in terms of the edginess of this urban

environment. I think that I moved to New York at the

exact time where my love of graffiti and hip-hop

was really in full bloom. Graffiti started to

develop from simple tags and started to evolve and

get more and more into designing these complex

letter forms. I wanted to find ways to integrate that

into my work and make it a part of what I was doing.

I was still holding it down in terms of painting the figure

in a realistic way. I also wanted to just celebrate the

positive and celebrate beauty. So my search for that took

me down a particular path. I didn't think too much about the

correlation between me painting African American

women and me not being an African American woman.

I just didn't consider it as being an issue. I think more of

like what's inside this person? What's their spirit about?

What's their energy about? And that's what I try to

connect with. I think that it's interesting though in this

day and age where people want to define you first of all.

I feel very connected to the Japanese side but I also

understand the British side and the Newfoundlander

in my mother and that kind of very rustic sort of aspect

of how she grew up too. It's fun for me to think

about how much of an unusual formula that is

and then the work that I have undertaken.

I think that I have always considered the work to be

mostly personal actually. I think that in the past

also maybe I felt that the work was kind of

conservative in terms of messaging and I wasn't

being overtly political. I think that I just was

focusing on the people that I was painting for

the most part and letting them speak for themselves.

As time has gone on and certainly I think we are

going through a cultural revolution right now.

I don't necessarily feel pressure to get more

political with the work, but I think that I'm more

clear now with my message and that's really one of unity.

When it comes to talking about humans and the word

"race" comes up, it's unavoidable but for me

it's a misnomer. There's really only one race.

There's the human race. Race is viewed in

American culture in a very complex way. I think that

the problem is a lot of people have been

programmed. When you're born, your natural state

of being is what they call tabularasa or a blank slate.

You don't think anything bad about somebody that doesn't

look like you until somebody tells you.

Some of those stories and those things

that are being passed down are starting to fade and

dissipate and I think that some of the younger generation

aren't longer telling those stories to their kids.

I don't have children. I hope to have at least one child at

some point. I think that the path that I've been on has

been pretty intense as an artist. In terms of telling

my children about my identity or who I am,

I'm just going to be honest. I'm an amalgamation of

all these different influences. My parents they never

pressured me. They encouraged what they saw

me gravitating towards and helped to grow that,

but they never tried to force me into a box. As far as

an artist you always want to expose your work to

different audiences and to grow your audience and for

me of course it's globally. I think that the

work is also growing in terms of its content and I

think that naturally that's going to find its

own audience as well. As an artist I want to

challenge people too. I think a good artist has to.

We're supposed to create dialogue.

We're supposed to ask questions. It's going to attract

whatever feedback it does. I can only control the

work and try to do the best work I can.

I'm not going to continue doing exactly what I'm doing

now for the next thirty years. There's more people in

this world than you think who are just into love and

celebrating humans and good painting and good

portraiture and the rest doesn't matter to them.

And that's really encouraging for me because

I meet them all the time. This very diverse group of

people that respond to the work and that's so uplifting for me.

For more infomation >> Shades Of U.S.: Tim Okamura's Journey - Duration: 5:51.

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North Korea threatens US with its 'cannons' after Trump announces security strategy - Duration: 1:32.

North Korea threatens US with its �cannons� after Trump announces security strategy.

North Korea lashed out at the U.S. on Friday, days after President Trump put forward his

national security strategy, in which he warned that the U.S. was ready to respond to threats

from Pyongyang with "overwhelming force."

A spokesman for North Korea's foreign ministry accused Trump of openly proclaiming Washington's

intention of taking military action against the isolated Asian country, and threatened

to retaliate with "cannons."

"As the U.S. set its diplomatic and security policy at crushing us militarily and is publicly

aiming a sword at us, we will make the U.S. bitterly regret its strategy with our cannons,"

the spokesman said, according to North Korea's state-run Korean Central News Agency.

A translation was provided by South Korea's Yonhap news agency.

Tensions between the U.S. and North Korea have boiled in Trump's first year in office.

Pyongyang has ramped up its tests of intercontinental ballistic missiles and, in September, tested

what it said was a hydrogen bomb � its most powerful nuclear weapon to date.

Trump has responded to North Korea's weapons tests with threats of military action.

In a speech before the United Nations General Assembly in September, Trump said the U.S.

would "totally destroy" North Korea if necessary.

The president revealed his national security strategy on Monday, taking a hard line on

North Korea and reiterating his claim that military action against the country was still

on the table, though he made no mention of a pre-emptive strike on the North.

For more infomation >> North Korea threatens US with its 'cannons' after Trump announces security strategy - Duration: 1:32.

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US has not made decision to sanction Nigeria yet - Duration: 2:40.

Trump was quoted by the UK's The Guardian newspaper as saying, "Let them (Nigeria and other countries benefitting from the US financial aids) vote against us. We'll save a lot.

"But this isn't like it used to be where they could vote against you (the US) and then you pay them hundreds of millions of dollars. We're not going to be taken advantage of any longer.".

Nigeria and 127 other countries had voted to reject the US's position on Jerusalem in spite of the fact that the country is one of the biggest recipients is aids from the US.

The Punch reports that a US Department of State official, Julia Mason said when asked about whether the US would sanction Nigeria over its Jerusalem vote: "As President Trump said on December 20, it is a factor in the process of making our assistance decisions.

The president's foreign policy team has been empowered to explore various options going forward; however, no decisions have been made.".

"The outcome was not unexpected. It is a non-binding resolution that does nothing to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or advance the cause of peace.".

Nikki Haley who is the US ambassador to the Un had also said: "Unlike some UN member countries, the United States government is answerable to its people; as such, we have an obligation to acknowledge when our political and financial capital is being poorly spent.

"We have an obligation to demand more for our investment, and if our investment fails, we have an obligation to spend our resources in more productive ways.

Those are the thoughts that come to mind when we consider the resolution before us today.".

NAIJ. com gathered that Trump had warned ahead of the vote in the 193-nation assembly that "we're watching" and threatened reprisals against countries that back the measure.

The UN General Assembly held an emergency session at the request of Arab and Muslim states. The UN General Assembly approved a resolution effectively calling on the US to withdraw its recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

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