71m² Modern Amenities | A Charming Small Farm House In Tennessee, United States
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Congresswoman and U.S. Senate candidate Kyrsten Sinema talks about the upcoming election with 12 Tod - Duration: 7:02.
For more infomation >> Congresswoman and U.S. Senate candidate Kyrsten Sinema talks about the upcoming election with 12 Tod - Duration: 7:02. -------------------------------------------
Hackers AGAIN Warn U.S. Of Fatal Flaws In Our Voting Systems - Duration: 3:49.
New reports are coming out showing just how vulnerable voting systems and electronic voting
machines are in the United States, with only a few weeks left until the mid-term elections.
Some of the latest reports have actually been put together by hackers here in the United
States.
Now, if you'll recall back in August we talked about the fact that there was a hacking convention
where they actually brought in children, below the age of teenagers, and presented them with
exact replicas of state voting systems.
And 11 year old kids were able to get into these systems, change voting totals, change
voting roles, expunge people's names, add people's names, change the total tallies of
how many votes each candidate got, and get out of the system in under 10 minutes without
every being detected.
Our voting systems here in the United States are so vulnerable that even a child can hack
into them without being detected.
And these new reports coming out from hacking organizations are telling us that it's actually
much, much worse than that.
Voting systems used in 23 different states here in the US have fatal flaws in them that
allow these types of hacks to take place.
And it doesn't have to be coming from a foreign super power trying to influence our election,
it could be the person down the street, it could be the next door neighbor.
It could be the guy in the cubicle at the office next to you, that's how easy it is.
It doesn't take some kind of master hacker to be able to get in there and change our
entire electoral process.
And the problem with these reports other than the fact that they've been coming out for
some time and Republicans refuse to do anything about it, is that the hackers say, we alerted
you of these flaws more than a decade ago and you didn't do anything about it.
Those flaws are literally still there.
So, if somebody who knew how to hack into a voting machine in 2008 where to come along
today, they would still be able to hack into those voting machines the exact same way they
did back then, because nothing changed.
I mean hell, we go to the point more than a decade ago where even Good Morning America
brought in a hacker to show them how easy it was to hack into these voting machines.
So you can't even say that the mainstream news and entertainment programs didn't talk
about this, because they did.
We have a lot of great journalists, investigative journalists here in the United States that
have been warning us of these problems for well over a decade.
And now at least for a decade, hackers have been telling us the same thing.
The only question is, how much longer are we going to ignore their advice and ignore
their warnings?
How many elections have to be screwed up, or hacked into, or invalidated before we finally
start to understand that these electronic voting machines are a big, big problem.
You know what makes it even worse, the fact that some of these companies specifically
ES&S, which is one of the worst companies out there along with Diebold, they said that
we need to stop talking about these kinds of things, because it's just going to embolden
hackers around the world to interfere with our elections.
Now you know what you need to do ES&S, you need to pay attention to these reports instead
of trying to shut them up, because they're the ones telling you and your company that
you screwed up, and you companies like ES&S are the ones putting our entire country at
risk.
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Putin: The US Is The Largest World Power; President Trump Is Not Compromised - Duration: 1:54.
I'll ask this final question on the political front.
In Helsinki, you said that you wanted President Trump to win because he favours better relations with Russia.
But in fact, as Russia itself says all of the time, relations between Russia and the United States seem to get worse every day.
Wouldn't it be better for Russia to have a president in the United States
that is not politically compromised by the widely held perception that this country helped him get into the White House?
Firstly, I do not believe President Trump was compromised.
The people elected him, the people voted for him.
There are those who do not like this; those who do not want to respect the opinion of the American voters.
But this is not our business – this is an internal matter of the United States.
Would we be better off or worse? I cannot say either.
As is known, there are no ifs in politics. Maybe it would have been even worse, how are we to know?
We must derive from what is, and work with that.
Good or bad, there is no other President of the United States; there is no other United States either.
We will work. The US is the largest world power,
a leader in many spheres, our natural partner in a variety of projects,
including global security, the non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism, climate change, as well as the environment.
We have a lot of common problems which overlap that we have to work on together.
We presume that sooner or later the moment will come when we will be able to restore full-fledged relations.
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Tropical Storm Michael: Storm Expected to Hit the United States - Duration: 1:55.
For more infomation >> Tropical Storm Michael: Storm Expected to Hit the United States - Duration: 1:55. -------------------------------------------
Kavanaugh's Nomination Turns Emotions Raw Across The United States | Sunday TODAY - Duration: 3:03.
For more infomation >> Kavanaugh's Nomination Turns Emotions Raw Across The United States | Sunday TODAY - Duration: 3:03. -------------------------------------------
NTSB: NY Limo Crash Marks 'Deadliest Transportation Crash In US Since Feb. 2009' - Duration: 2:00.
For more infomation >> NTSB: NY Limo Crash Marks 'Deadliest Transportation Crash In US Since Feb. 2009' - Duration: 2:00. -------------------------------------------
Somos U.S. Marines - Duration: 1:58.
Hi my name is Amanda Medina,
Ezequiel Chairez,
Johanna Collins,
Camilo Parody,
and I am an United States Marine.
My family is from Puerto Rico. Different
parts of Puerto Rico, but everybody's from Puerto Rico.
Both of my parents are from Zacatecas. It's a state in Mexico.
So my mom's side they're from Puerto Rico and my dad's side is from Mexico.
My family was all born in Colombia.
I went every year to Puerto Rico, I mean, it's awesome...it's a trip.
Mexico, well at least where my parents are from, is very calm. It's nothing but farmland.
There's nice buildings, a lot of mountains. It's a beautiful city.
So, the go to food that we usually use to celebrate...
Chicharrónes!
Always your arroz con gandules, your pasteles is like those are your actual foods that you eat
like every time you would go like by five o'clock in the morning your
grandparents already have that made.
It's gotta be arepas, arepas con chocolate.
Oh I eat arepas at least three times a week.
It influences me as a Marine because I constantly have to deal with situations to where I have to
put myself in other people's shoes to better understand it.
We have to take pride in our own heritage but we also take pride in the fact that we're all
Americans at the end of the day.
Just like anything I think you need that well
round of diversity.
What makes America is the fact that everybody's from somewhere
else. You know we're all a big melting pot of people from different backgrounds.
I definitely think it's important to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month just
like it's a important to celebrate any other culture.
You wanna keep the culture and the influence alive how you were taught.
So it's important to recognize the contributions of everyone that comes from a different place.
I'm here to be an American and be part of the culture and make America better.
It just shows appreciation like, "Hey, you know, thank you for being who you are."
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Hurricane Donald hits the midterm campaign trail � expect a bumpy ride US news - Duration: 3:35.
Hurricane Donald hits the midterm campaign trail – expect a bumpy ride US news
Election rallies are Trump's happy place but for Republican candidates the president's chaotic style can be a mixed blessing
Election rallies are Trump's happy place but for Republican candidates the president's chaotic style can be a mixed blessing
Rochester in Minnesota, Topeka in Kansas, Council Bluffs in Iowa and Erie in Pennsylvania all sound like quiet, uneventful towns. But each is battening down the hatches and bracing for a storm. A category 5 political hurricane, in fact. Hurricane Donald.
These are the next stops on the campaign trail for Donald Trump, hurling himself into the midterm elections with full force in an effort to energize his Republican base. But based on past experience, the US president is equally likely to leave a trail of destruction in his wake.
Last Tuesday in Southhaven, Mississippi, was a case in point. Trump's attempt to boost candidates Cindy Hyde-Smith and Roger Wicker was utterly overshadowed by his mocking impression of Christine Blasey Ford, a California psychology professor who accused his supreme court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual assault. The crowd clapped and cheered, but back in Washington there was sharp condemnation from the very Republicans who will determine Kavanaugh's fate.
Trump's presidential campaign was studded with similarly raucous rallies that thrived off outlandish and outrageous statements and crude insults and chants of "Lock her up!" The spectacle delighted his fans and captivated TV cameras. There is no reason to assume he will alter course now.
Doug Rivers, chief scientist at YouGov, a public opinion and data company, said: "The polling is very clear: the Republican party has become the party of Trump. We did work in Arizona before [Senator] John McCain died and we found McCain was 30 points more popular among Democrats than Republicans, and [Senator] Jeff Flake was at a 15% approval rating among Republicans.
"In terms of mobilising the Republican base, he's probably pretty effective. But in the [marginal] seats they need to win, I think the last thing they want is an endorsement or help from Trump."
Trump has held 39 rallies since winning election in November 2016, according to a running total on Wikipedia. But notably he hits the same safe states over and over again. His rally in Erie on Wednesday will be his 23rd in Pennsylvania since he launched his run for president in June 2015.
There is a little prospect of him staging a rally in politically hostile territory such as Illinois or New York. But in North Dakota, he could prove the difference between victory and defeat for the Republican candidate Kevin Cramer, who is taking on the incumbent Democratic senator Heidi Heitkamp.
Lanhee Chen, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution thinktank and former policy director of the Romney-Ryan presidential campaign in 2012, said: "Whether he's an asset or a liability depends on the race you're talking about. We have to be really careful to distinguish between races where his presence will in fact be quite helpful and races where I don't think it would be.
"I think he'll be very useful at motivating the base and, if that base shows up, then Kevin Cramer's going to be the next senator from North Dakota."
With polls showing Republicans facing an uphill struggle to retain the House of Representatives, and the Senate possibly also in play, Trump in Washington DC has remained relatively disciplined ahead of polling day. Last week he signed a budget bill that will avert a government shutdown despite previous threats to force the issue of funding a wall along the US-Mexico border. He has indicated that he will not fire the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, or the attorney general, Jeff Sessions, before 6 November, defusing another potential landmine.
But as the Kavanaugh affair made clear, sometimes the president cannot help himself out on the road.
For a few days Trump was restrained, even praising Ford's testimony as credible and compelling. Then, feeding off the energy of the crowd in Mississippi, he surrendered to his impulses. No doubt each upcoming rally will have Republican leaders and strategists on the edge of their seats, aware that they are one offensive statement away from losing another swath of independent and moderate voters in swing districts.
Henry Olsen, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center thinktank in Washington, said: "Any time the president goes out, you are creating risk because he likes to be unpredictable and is less guarded with his language than presidents are wont to be."
Campaign rallies are, after all, where he is most himself, a chance to escape the gilded cage of the White House. Michael Steele, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, said: "The president likes this more than being president, more than doing the day-to-day mundane things that a president has to do."
Midterm elections are often described as a referendum on the sitting president and Trump, more than most, will ensure it is all about him. His smash-mouth style is likely to dominate the final stretch of the campaign.
Steele added: "He doesn't have inhibitions. He's not concerned about your feelings or how tired you are or whether or not this is appropriate or presidential. So as long as the playing field is imbalanced the way it is he's going to have the advantage and, until someone stands up and goes, 'You're just full of crap' and goes at him, he's going to continue to create the environment of chaos that he likes to thrive in."
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