Chủ Nhật, 28 tháng 5, 2017

Youtube daily US May 28 2017

ORMS THROUGH 10

PM.

AND THEN OVERNIGHT WE MAY GET A

COUPLE.

AND I WILL DESCRIBE THAT WHEN

WE COME BACK AND JUST HIM

MINUTE.

>>> FORMER SENATORHAS DIED.

89 YEARS OLD.

ARE REPORTERS HERE WITH MORE ON

THE HALL OF FAME PITCH IS

REMEMBERED.

CORMACK IS REMEMBERED ASLARGER-

THAN-LIFE.

HIS PROMINENT LIFE IN BASEBALL

IS JUST A LEAD UP TO HIS

POLITICAL CENTER STAGE

>> HE SPENT 17 YEARS IN THE

MAJOR LEAGUES

MOST OF THOSE YEARS PITCHING

FOR THE PHILLIES AND TIGERS.

INCLUDING 1964 PERCENT--PERFECT

GAMEIN A CENTURY.

>> I HAVE BEEN BOOED BY 60,000

FANS AND IN YANKEE STADIUM

STANDING ALONE ON THE MOUND.

SO I'VE REALLY NEVER CARED IF I

STOOD ALONE HERE ITHE CONGRESS

AS LONG AS I STOOD BY MY

BELIEFS AND MY VALUES.

CORMACK DURING HIS YEARS IN

CONGRESS HE GAINED A REPUTATION

AS A NO NONSENSEFOR POLITICIAN.

SHE I HAV-- >> I HAVE ZERO

SUPPORT FOR DRAFTING

CORMACK CHAIRMAN OF THE

REPUBLICAN PARTY STARTED OUAS

THE INTERN FOR HIM.

SHE SAYS HIS AUTHENTICITY IS

WHAT STANDS OU

>> YOU KNOW EXACTLY WHAT HE WAS

THINKING WHEN HE WAS SAYING IT

AND THAT'S WHAT MADE HIM A GOOD

POLITICIAN TOO.

CORMACK HE HAS NINE CHILDREN

AND 35 GRANDKIDS.

HE GOT HIS NUMBER ONE STARTER

TODAY.

THE LIVES IN THE NATION ARE

BETTER OFF BECAUSE YOUR LOVE

AND DEDICATION TO FAMILY.

CORMACK VISITATION--

For more infomation >> Jim Bunning, former U.S. senator, dies at 85 - Duration: 2:02.

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MEDIA BLACKOUT US Court Finds Obama GUILTY – IT'S HAPPENING - Duration: 14:24.

MEDIA BLACKOUT US Court Finds Obama GUILTY – IT'S HAPPENING

The mainstream media is refusing to report on one of the biggest stories in years as

they continue to try and protect Barack Obama in favor of making Donald Trump look bad.

Mad World News reported that two independent journalists have uncovered secret Foreign

Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA) classified documents just filed at the end of April that

show that Obama is guilty of one thing that vindicates Trump completely.

The documents prove that Obama had the National Security Agency violate the privacy of Americans

by spying on us.

This was so widespread that 5% of Americans were targeted in this.

"More than 5 percent or one out of every 20 searches seeking upstream Internet data

on Americans inside the NSA's so-called Section 702 database violated the safeguards

Obama and his intelligence chiefs vowed to follow in 2011," reported Circa News.

Since Obama knew these violations would be found out by the next administration, he instructed

his lawyers at the DOJ to inform the FISA court and come clean just two weeks before

Trump won the election.

"Did you hear Obama's CIA director, John Brennan, yesterday told a House committee

that he was concerned that the Russians might be able to turn some of Trump's people — in

other words, corrupt them — and convert them into spies for the Russian Federation.

That's why, Brennan said, the CIA and the NSA had to monitor them," conservative radio

host Rush Limbaugh said.

Clearly, Trump was right when he accused Obama of putting him under surveillance.

SHARE this story so we can vindicate Trump!

For more infomation >> MEDIA BLACKOUT US Court Finds Obama GUILTY – IT'S HAPPENING - Duration: 14:24.

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United at War | Canada: The Story of Us, Full Episode 8 - Duration: 44:30.

For more infomation >> United at War | Canada: The Story of Us, Full Episode 8 - Duration: 44:30.

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China Military : Chinese fighter jets conduct unsafe maneuver near US aircraft - Duration: 4:25.

For more infomation >> China Military : Chinese fighter jets conduct unsafe maneuver near US aircraft - Duration: 4:25.

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blue weird kid follows us to the movie theaters - Duration: 8:41.

SORRY for the bad looks

For more infomation >> blue weird kid follows us to the movie theaters - Duration: 8:41.

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Official Trump 'looking at' future of US sanctions on Russia - Duration: 1:49.

Official Trump 'looking at' future of US sanctions on Russia

BY MAX GREENWOOD

President Trump is weighing changes to U.S. sanctions against Russia, National Economic

Council Director Gary Cohn said Wednesday.

"I think the president is looking at it," Cohn told reporters aboard Air Force One when

asked about the president's position on Russian sanctions.

"Right now, we don�t have a position."

Trump arrived in Sicily on Thursday, where he will attend a Group of Seven summit.

Cohn said Russia is likely to be a topic of discussion at the meeting.

Cohn also said that Russian sanctions came up earlier in the day, while Trump was in

Brussels meeting with NATO leaders.

Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), the top Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,

said his panel could take up an effort to slap new sanctions on Russia over the country's

efforts to meddle in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had reportedly asked Corker for an opportunity to demonstrate

that U.S.-Russia relations were improving.

Corker said that unless Tillerson could soon prove to the committee that relations were

changing, he would recommend tougher sanctions.

Former President Barack Obama imposed new sanctions on Moscow in December amid revelations

that Russia had sought to influence the presidential election.

He also expelled dozens of Russian agents from the U.S.

For more infomation >> Official Trump 'looking at' future of US sanctions on Russia - Duration: 1:49.

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BREAKING US Court Finds Obama GUILTY - News - Duration: 1:56.

For more infomation >> BREAKING US Court Finds Obama GUILTY - News - Duration: 1:56.

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EGS Marine and Auto Detailing - What Makes Us Special? - Duration: 1:40.

I like making things shine.

I always have.

I'm Ed Sledge, and I'm the owner of

EGS Marine and Auto Detailing in Omaha, Nebraska.

I don't know...

How do you explain to a customer

that you just like to make things shine...

You like to make things sparkle...

You like to make things look better than they did when they were brand new.

I've been detailing cars and boats for over 25 years in Omaha.

I don't know, I like to polish things.

Why is it exciting?

Just to make something sparkle,

to make something shine to where it makes people's heads turn and say,

"That looks better than it was new."

That's what I like.

That's the reaction I look for.

The one thing I've tried to do over the years that I've been doing this,

is to set packages up for the way people want to take care of their cars.

I want my customers to say

they got a value for their dollar that they spend.

At EGS, we try to give the best customer service we can give.

I try my best

to deliver more than what you're expecting.

It gets difficult when I've been doing the same customers' vehicles for 25 years.

How do you top it every year?

But I do my best

and we'll go bend over backwards to do everything we can

to make sure every customer feels that

they got the best service they could possibly get.

For more infomation >> EGS Marine and Auto Detailing - What Makes Us Special? - Duration: 1:40.

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Being Us: Andrey and Eilish - Duration: 28:26.

(CAR ENGINE STARTS)

(LIGHT GUITAR MUSIC)

EILISH: Despite the fact that neither Andrey or I drive,

one great thing about, in the next couple of weeks is that we're going on a road trip, which'll be fun.

We're going to be moving to Taupo, which is an exciting new adventure for us all.

(HIGH-PITCHED) Hop in. Up you get!

Look, there's lots of room for her to lie down. Yeah.

ANDREY: It will be really fun going down to Taupo.

It's just more friendly. People will say hello to you when you're walking down the street.

See you in Taupo. See you later. Love you.

Bye! See you in Taupo.

Feet and paws in? Yes. Sweet.

(LIGHT GUITAR MUSIC)

We're going to stay with some family of mine in Papamoa.

After that, we're going down to Lake Tarawera.

Then we will finally get settled in Taupo.

(MUSIC CONTINUES)

Does it feel good to be out of Auckland? Oh yeah.

(CHUCKLES) Don't miss the traffic at all. Yeah. (CHUCKLES)

How's Loie doing?

She's fine. She's very cruisy.

She's got her paw on my foot.

I still live with the effects, ongoing effects of my brain tumour,

and to this day, it's still there in my head.

That's what's caused me to be visually impaired.

I was born without all my ribs on my right side.

At about 16 years of age, I had my spine fused,

and I now have tremendous back pain, and I'll get a headache.

But I'm happy with that. Like, I've learned to not strive for comfort.

(GENTLE MUSIC)

- (MAN SPEAKS INDISTINCTLY) - Sorry? (LAUGHS)

It reminds me of that Harry Potter MAN: There's no hurry.

JAMAICAN ACCENT: Yeah, take it away, Ernie! It's gonna be a bumpy ride. (LAUGHS)

(SPEAKS INDISTINCTLY)

I've known Eilish since we were just kids.

Back then, I didn't really understand the complexity of her condition, let alone mine.

It was just, we were two kids playing, and we got along, because when we were sick,

we just, for health reasons, had to be in sanitised areas.

(GENTLE MUSIC)

Here we are. Yeah. Oh, here comes Loie. Cool. (CHUCKLES)

You gonna help, Loie? You gonna help?

'We had a period where we lost touch for about four years,

'and I actually tracked Andrey down, got in touch, and we started catching up again.

'And we just became best mates again, basically.

HIGH PITCHED: Come on, Loie.

EILISH'S MUM: They are so different, and, possibly, that's why they get on so well.

And Andrey was so tolerant of her, because she was bossy with him when she was little.

She was he was bossy. And he was very cynical, you know. (LAUGHS) It was- they were- it's so sweet.

So not a lot's changed. So not a lot's changed, really, no. (LAUGHS)

Nothing's really changed. Nah, we're still the same.

Yeah. Bossy as ever.

(SMACKS LIPS) Well, maybe a little.

I think we're- Um, we have a lot of similarities, we really do.

Yeah, we do. We have a lot of similarities,

but at the same time, I think we have a lot of differences. Yeah.

I suppose one of the ways we do really differ is that, um,

and this is something that's kind of rubbed off on me the more time we've spent together, um, is

he is very sarcastic. He's very sarcastic. (CHUCKLES SOFTLY)

And - I would say no, but I thought I wouldn't.

Bit facetious. Um, and, I dunno, he looks at everything in a very logical way,

which sometimes annoys the hell out of me, um, because, I dunno, I'm

Would we say I'm an optimist? Yes, I would. I'm an optimist.

And this guy over here is a realist. Very much so. Yeah. (WHISPERS) Nah, just

I'm glad you didn't say pessimist, cos I'm not. (LAUGHS)

I'm very snarky, and, um... Um, sometimes. Some things.

I have my moments of sheer brilliance, but very rare.

Some some things we have the same sense of humour.

I think I'm funny. I frequently get reminded that I'm not.

Mm. (WHISPERS) Not really.

But but no, we we do have a similar sense of humour on some things,

but some things, you're just disgusting.

(BOTH CHUCKLE)

You'd say that?

I would. I would. What what male doesn't make the occasional poo joke?

Sure.

(RELAXED MUSIC)

(CHUCKLES)

I think that their friendship was born when they were very small,

and also they've had a lot of shared experiences, shared life experiences, that

that they've had to live in isolation; they've had to learn to live with pain;

they've had to learn to live with being medically fragile.

When I was 2 years old, I was diagnosed with an optic and hypothalamic glioma cancer,

which is a type of brain tumour.

I underwent neurosurgery and a craniotomy.

Not long after that, I underwent 18 months of extensive chemotherapy.

And then, when I was 5, I became very unwell again,

and my tumour started to grow again, very aggressively.

So I had about six months' more chemotherapy.

Then it was sort of a last-ditch effort for me to have radiotherapy,

and that's what finally stopped the tumour from progressing any further.

I was born in the northern parts of Russia.

I was adopted out to my mother here when I was 2 years, 8 months of age.

She raised $500,000 for my first trip to America for that first operation.

I had titanium implants,

and every six months, as I grew, they would need lengthening.

At about 16 years of age, one of my titanium pieces actually got infected.

They ended up taking them out.

There's been about 27 operations on my back.

It's just life, though, for me. I don't know anything else, anything different.

I don't go to hospitals any more, for good reason. Quite sick of them.

(REFLECTIVE MUSIC)

All right. (HAND BRAKE ENGAGES)

(CLATTERING)

Let's roll out.

C'mon, Loie. Out ya hop. Good girl.

Here we go.

(DOOR SLAMS)

I have very limited vision.

I have no depth perception.

I've always struggled with things like steps and colour changing.

That's why Loie's made such a huge difference.

How are you feeling today?

Pretty tired today, yeah.

It is quite daunting moving to a new town, and, sort of, having to start afresh,

particularly after getting established with Loie up in Auckland.

I-It's a bit different for me. I've moved a lot.

But it's hard, because there's just a lot of judgment in the world, especially for someone like me.

Just walking down the street, you know, you get the stares, people looking.

And it is the norm, but at the same time, it does get to me.

You can meet someone for the first time and, automatically,

they've put me lower on their ranking, just because of the way I look.

Here, ducky, ducky, ducky, ducky. (LAUGHS)

But I love it so much when people actually come up and have a conversation, and it's very rare.

I've had lots of people say to me, 'Oh, wow. You're actually intelligent.'

(SEAGULL SQUAWKS, DUCKS QUACK) Don't get it, seagull.

Out of the hundred people that have a look, maybe one will come and say,

'Oh, not to be rude, but what happened to you?'

And I don't mind that. I-I prefer that over just glancing and looking

and pretending that they're not looking, when I know they are.

I find it hard sometimes, because I say, 'How about we go do this?'

Or, 'Can you come with me to do this?' And he says, 'No, I don't really wanna go there.'

And I say, 'Why?' And he'll say, 'Because there's gonna be lots of people.'

And sometimes it just, sort of, slips my mind

that it's because, you know, you don't like having lots of people watching, because I can't see it!

(CHUCKLES SOFTLY)

(RELAXED MUSIC)

Have you seen any cows or anything? I haven't seen any cows. Nah.

Or sheep. Nah. Or sheep, or horses.

You know, animals, in general.

Nah. Nah. How disappointing. (CHUCKLES)

Everything's so lovely and green here, eh? Yeah.

That was pretty funny. What is?

You were saying how green and lovely it is,... Yeah.

...and then cameraman looks over and it's all cut down. (CHUCKLES) He's like, 'No, never mind.'

(BOTH LAUGH) I was sort of meaning more in the distance.

Yeah. (BOTH CHUCKLE) That was brilliant.

(LAUGHS HEARTILY)

How's that for timing?

So, Eilish, when you're driving around, how much can you see around you?

It's always been a fairly challenging thing for me,

like, how much I can actually see when driving in a car.

Yeah. Um, particularly when you're on the open road,

and, um, you know, there's lots of trees and things like that. Things sort of, uh,

almost blend into one a little bit, and that's why I end up getting so carsick.

Could you pop a couple out for me? I think that's safer.

I don't really wanna lose any on the floor of the van.

Due to where my brain tumour is, I've always suffered from car sickness.

Ahhhh...

A lot of that is also just because I can't see.

When you're driving along and trees and things like that are rushing past you,

it actually makes me feel like I'm going to be sick, because your 'fight or flight' instinct kicks in.

That enough? Um, I might have a sip more. Hang on.

The reason why our friendship developed into Andrey becoming my (CHUCKLES) personal assistant,

for want of a better term, when I wanted to learn how to touch-type,

and Andrey said he could teach me how to do that.

And then he became my reader-writer for university. It just became, um, more day-to-day things.

(UPBEAT GUITAR MUSIC)

Having Andrey to help me with things has made a huge difference.

Like lining things up in my scrapbooking,

which I used to have to always ask my mum to help me with, and sometimes she'd be busy.

(CHUCKLES) Little other things, like Andrey cuts my fingernails for me,

cos I can't see to cut my fingernails.

So, like, the other day I said, 'Can you, can you cut my fingernails for me?'

And so, um, you know, the whole risk of chopping off fingers and things like that.

Um, I'm happy to help with whatever. I can't say I'm a good, ther- uh, beauty therapist, but I try.

(BOTH CHUCKLE)

And that one, across the bottom.

Um, just a little Little bit of white space? Yeah, just a little bit.

Lining things up and, um, little details become quite difficult for me to see.

Some of the cards I do, are - They do take a lot more time, for me.

And it does frustrate me a lot, just how much time I have to put into things

in comparison to what a sighted person would have to put into something.

But I think, in some ways, it just means more,

cos I've had to put a lot more into it to get it to that stage.

Most of the cards I make I give away,

but, um, I'm hoping, though, when we move to Taupo,

to expand, um, that into selling my cards at the local markets.

(LIGHT GUITAR MUSIC)

Ever since I was really little, I've always loved telling stories and writing stories.

My first book was published last year. It's called Hospital Happenings,

and, basically, it walks a small child through three basic medical procedures

that most children will experience at some stage in their childhood,

which is a check-up, an X-ray and a blood test.

I've also, more recently, just been volunteering in public-speaking roles,

doing, sort of, inspirational speaking.

So I've worked on a local level with some of my charity work.

I was on the Auckland branch committee of Canteen for a year,

and I did a lot of fundraising and planning events and running events.

I just go at 100mph, and that's just who I am.

I love it. I love doing that. I love being apart of something bigger

that I know will, um, influence and improve the lives of other people.

(ENGINE HUMS)

We're just five minutes away.

Good girl, sweetheart. We're almost there. We're almost there.

Then we're gonna go on a boat!

Get ready for it.

All right. (HAND BRAKE ENGAGES)

No diving. No diving.

Yeah, no swimming.

Nice and steady.

Nice and steady. Kia ora, welcome. I'm David. Hi there. Nice to meet you.

Loie, come on, sweetie. Come on.

She's - I hope she's not too heavy. Here we go. No, she's fine.

There ya go, sweetie pie. It's all right.

There ya go. There ya go. Can you hop down?

There ya go. Good girl.

(ENGINE REVS)

Welcome to Lake Tarawa

It's the most beautiful lake in New Zealand

and the whole world.

This is my wife's great grandmother, Guide Sophia.

And she was a bit like the Kardashians of the time. (LAUGHS)

Can you imagine it? She was famous for being around the famous,

because what she was taking people were to the Pink and White Terraces.

And there was a geyser at the top, and as the water spilled down over a period of 500 years,

left the silica behind and created the beautiful baths here.

So people not only came over here because they were stunningly beautiful,

but in those days they were looking for the cure for arthritis and lumbago and skin diseases.

Lumbago is probably not a word we use nowadays, but everybody had a bad back.

(BOAT ENGINE HUMS)

(EXCLAIMS)

OK, so, the water coming out of the rocks here runs at 86 degrees centigrade,...

Far out. Wow. ...um, and runs into the lake here.

So you have to find the right place to go in without burning your toes.

There you go. Go on. (GRUNTS) There ya go.

And just, maybe, don't don't let her go. No, I won't.

And if you come down, you'll turn around now,... OK, cool.

...and you'll come down backwards. First, there'll be one long step, and then there'só

Keep going down. Keep going down. You're right. You're right. You're right.

And youó There.

And then there's two steps below that. So you've got one...

And then you can step backwards a little bit. So, there's a stool there.

That's the way. And put both feet on there. OK.

And if you put your hand on my shoulder, if you want to.

Yep. All right. And we step off.

Great. Beautiful. Thank you.

Great stuff.

Oh, there's one of those birds coming a bit closer.

Just one of them, though. Where?

It's still really small. I really can't see a thing, eh. I just see water.

She's coming across here,

going down there and carrying on.

Oh yeah, maybe. The little black dot. Yeah.

The little black dot. I see the little black dot.

There's a boat there. Yeah, there is. Yup. See that boat?

Yep. Kinda just pointing it out for you. Thank you.

Don't know what it's called. Don't know what the writing is, but there's a boat

'Sweetwater 3'. Yup.

Nah, I-I can't. I dunno, things like that, if I don't have some kind of memory of something...

Yeah. Like grass well, grass is obviously green.

I know grass is green. So, obviously, I'm gonna look at something

Like, it's the same with memory of, like, what you're wearing. Um... Yeah.

You're wearing blue shorts. I know you're wearing blue shorts.

If you suddenly changed, it would take me a wee bit to register that,

'Hang on, you've changed into red shorts,' or something like that.

Oh, that's easy. One mess.

(SOFT MUSIC)

No, Loie. (CHUCKLES)

Eilish has been pushing herself, which is not out of the ordinary for her,

but she does - she gets very stressed, and then she hits fatigue.

A burnout for me is basically just being in so much pain and being so fatigued and tired

that I can't get out of bed.

I-I've gone through some really tough patches in the past, where that's actually led to depression

and and feeling quite unhappy with how things have been going.

Worry for Eilish would be, just, her letting things get on top of her,

because she does take a lot on-board, and she does fall susceptible to getting stressed.

I think Taupo will be different and help with that.

Come on, sweetie. Come on! Hop in. Up you get. Come on.

Hey, guys. Hiya. Morning.

Did you sleep well? Yeah. Yeah, we slept really well.

(ENGINE TURNS OVER, REVS)

September 2015, I was diagnosed with SMART syndrome,

which stands for 'stroke-like migraines after radiotherapy'.

The blood vessels around my tumour have been damaged.

I get numbness in my face and tingliness going all down one side of me.

Light becomes very painful.

My vision goes all blurry and spotty,

and the pain is just excruciating to the point where I've actually thought I was going to die.

For me, each time she says, 'God, that headache today. I just can't bear that,'

and there's a part of me that thinks, 'God, here we go again. Is that thing gonna get moving again?'

We're in a situation now where if it did, we've run out of ammunition.

There's nothing else we can throw at it, and, yet, it's sat dormant for years.

But as a parent of a child with cancer, I can tell you that every day is the same. You just wonder.

Saying goodbye to my mum was quite difficult.

Um, she was quite emotional. She's happy for me, but at the same time,

this is the first time I've lived more than two, three hours away from her.

Andrey was a bit emotional saying goodbye to his mum.

I think Pam was very emotional saying goodbye to Andrey. I think she'll, um, miss him terribly.

And he does so much for her and supports her so much that I think it will be

challenging for her, in some ways, but I think he'll go up and see her quite often.

So why is there a detour? Are they doing roadworks or something? Yeah.

Yeah, that road going straight to Taupo from the roundabout was closed.

Bugger. I was like, 'OK.'

As they get older, and Eilish is 21 this year, Andrey's 25

he's lived independently, you know, within flats, with friends and things

it would be wonderful if Eilish had that opportunity. It just depends on her health,

and, you know, we never know what's going to happen.

DIRECTOR: Do they ever clash? Oh yes. Yep. They bicker all the time.

They bicker all the time. (LAUGHS) Yes, they do. They bicker over things.

They'll be cooking a meal, and it's really funny to watch, because they will bicker.

Um, but I think that comes from the security of having somebody being your friend your whole life.

MAN: Can we take the harness off too? I don't think it was there before whenó

Oh, it used to be in the back. Just pop it in the back. Yeah, that's where it was before.

It used to be over his nose. No, no, it wasn't. Yeah, it was.

It was behind him. I think it was behind him. Check your camera.

No. Nah, it was behind him. Later, not now. Later.

You'll see, Mark. It was behind him. OK, children.

(LAUGHTER) I'm just saying, I'm just saying, look at the evidence.

I love you guys bickering. I think it's awesome. This is our everyday lives,

and it drives me - And usually it turns out I'm right! (MUMBLES)

You guys are gonna have video evidence. Andrey, Andrey, if we weren't

on camera, you know what I'd be doing right now? You'd be walloping me one.

No, no, I'd be doing something else. Oh. Something quite rude with my

with my hand. Walloping's quite rude. You know, you know, the

Patting me on the back going, 'That's a good sport.' Yeah, nah. You know, no.

LEAH: There's a nasty speed bump coming up. Oh OK.

We'll go very slowly.

(UPBEAT GUITAR MUSIC)

Let's go to Taupo!

(EXCLAIMS) Ahhh! (BOTH LAUGH)

(MUSIC DROWNS OUT CONVERSATION)

(UPBEAT MUSIC)

Whoo-hoo.

Someone paragliding or something up there.

Oh, awesome. Can you see that? No, but I'll take your word for it.

What a day. Have you ever done that before? Yeah, um, countless times(!) No.

Oh.

Well, there ya go.

Oh, I'm so excited.

So excited.

(SQUEALS) I, on the other hand, you know,...

Yeah, I know. ...always just... You're just too chill for me, man.

Yeah. Just too chill.

Where's the? (EXCLAIMS) (HIGH-PITCHED) Excitement. I just don't feel it, eh.

I'm excited on the inside. OK. Inside, you're going (EXCLAIMS).

Sure. Yeah.

(GROWLS)

(UPBEAT MUSIC CONTINUES)

This way. No, this way.

Walk on.

Want a chorizo? (CHUCKLES)

Leather belts.

Auction hammer.

Oh, those are neat.

Wind chime. Look out.

Look out. Yeah. Ooh. Jeez.

Thanks. That's all right.

Hi there. WOMAN: Hello, how are you? Good, thank you.

I'm Monica. This is Eilish and Loie. Hello, Eilish.

Nice to meet you. And who have we got here? This is Loie.

Hello, Loie. Aren't you just gorgeous? Yes, you are.

How can I help you?

We're just, um just moving to Taupo from Auckland,

and we just wanted to come and have a look round the markets

and, uh, talk to you about possibly setting up a stall in the future.

The things you have to decide is how big your stall is going to be. Mm-hm.

It's a really neat little market. Uh, it's a family, so we help each other, which is really good.

We look out for each other if somebody needs to go somewhere, you know.

So, if you fit in here, you'd really, really love it.

Which one do you think she'd like the most? Um, does she like her china?

Yeah. You've seen how many teapots she owns. Yeah, I was just thinking,

like, that's pretty cool.

(SOFT CHIMING)

So, that's 50? Yeah. Thank you.

Thank you.

(CHUCKLES) That bird is so cute. Yeah.

Time to go home, go see Mum and Dad. Yeah.

# I feel love when you're around.

# You pick me up when I'm feeling down.

# The stars align.

# You broke the mould.

# Nothing comes close.

# When you're around, you lift me up.

# My guiding light when things get tough.

# You feel so good, your way so fine.

# Take my hand. I'm yours. You're mine.

Come on. You're home. Come on, honey.

# You are the sun.

# You are the only one. #

HIGH-PITCHED: Come on. Come on. Out you go. Out you go.

(UPLIFTING MUSIC)

Beautiful.

(WHISTLES) Loie. Here, Loie.

(MUSIC DROWNS OUT CONVERSATION)

(SOFT CHIMING)

Attitude was made with funding from NZ On Air.

For more infomation >> Being Us: Andrey and Eilish - Duration: 28:26.

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Breaking , President Trump & Melania Speech to US Military @ NAS Sigonella in Sicily, Italy 5/27/17 - Duration: 27:38.

For more infomation >> Breaking , President Trump & Melania Speech to US Military @ NAS Sigonella in Sicily, Italy 5/27/17 - Duration: 27:38.

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일반주부, 이은택에게 묻는다 팩트어스 FACT US - Duration: 1:09:56.

For more infomation >> 일반주부, 이은택에게 묻는다 팩트어스 FACT US - Duration: 1:09:56.

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Zakharova blasts CNN smear campaign against rumored 'spy' - Russia's envoy to Washington - Duration: 4:29.

Recently, people working for the CNN television network – reporters, commentators and anchors – have

established a kind of tradition in ascribing absolutely absurd actions to Russian Ambassador to the US Sergey Kislyak.

I get a sense that as far as CNN is concerned, a day without Mr Kislyak is a day lost.

CNN reports of March 2, 3 and 4, April 6 and May 10 referred to the Russian ambassador as none other than a "top-notch spy and recruiter."

And this despite our repeated rebuttals at all levels!

Such fake news stories are absolutely unacceptable.

What's more, this bears the hallmarks of a targeted propaganda campaign.

In other words, this is not so much about informing their audience as imposing this concept on other media outlets that look to the network with its broad reach.

Naturally, the Russian position is not represented in any way and has not been cited in this context despite the fact that a lot of rebuttals have been made,

most importantly, accompanied by requests to halt this stream of lies.

I would also like to draw your attention to the fact that, to be on the safe side (the laws of the genre are still in effect),

all these assessments were attributed to alleged comments by former or current US officials.

To reiterate, for our part, we have repeatedly objected to the absurdity and unacceptability of such assertions.

They seem to be designed to discredit the activity of the head of the Russian diplomatic mission and are not conducive to fostering an objective media landscape around our country,

bilateral relations, the international agenda or the improvement of Russian-US relations as a whole.

Sadly, our conversations at the CNN Moscow bureau show that these insinuations – there is no other way to describe them – are the result of the channel's deliberate editorial policy.

I would like to underscore this.

Our contacts show that this is not the result of investigative journalism (because this is absurd),

not journalistic improvisation, not journalistic professionalism.

CNN has a Moscow bureau that could have easily found out all the details of Ambassador Kislyak's career.

This is deliberate editorial policy that is handed down to reporters from above.

Whether it is formulated within the TV network or is handed down from above – that could in fact be a subject of your journalistic investigation.

The impression is that some people in Washington's present political establishment are clearly averse to the idea of the possible improvement of relations between our two countries.

Of course, it is very sad that this respected news network is playing first fiddle in this orchestra.

I am saying "respected" now, but we'll see what happens.

For more infomation >> Zakharova blasts CNN smear campaign against rumored 'spy' - Russia's envoy to Washington - Duration: 4:29.

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Trump Slams Very Bad Germans For Selling Millions Of Cars In US We Will Stop This - Duration: 3:28.

Trump Slams Very Bad Germans For Selling Millions Of Cars In US We Will Stop This

by Tyler Durden

A day after Trump stunned his fellow NATO leaders, shoving one of them out of the way

for a photo-op and demanding that they "must do more" to offset defense costs which are

mostly borne by the US, Trump lobbed another bomb at the European center-right consensus

by renewing his attacks on the German auto industry during a closed door meeting with

two high-ranking European Union officials, according to a report in German magazine Der

Spiegel, that was picked up by Bloomberg and CNBC.

Citing unidentified attendees, Spiegel quoted Trump as saying that �the Germans are bad,

very bad� and adding �look at the millions of cars that they sell in the U.S. Terrible.

We�re going to stop that.� The comments were said to have been made during a closed-door

meeting with the EU President Jean-Claude Juncker and the European Council President

Donald Tusk, who reportedly both stood up for Germany, according to CNBC.

Trump administration officials immediately went into damage-control mode, even as Juncker

said the reports of the comment in question had been exaggerated.

National Economic Council Director and former Goldman Sachs President Gary Cohn clarified

that the US has concerns with the US-German trade balance, not with Germany itself.

"He said they�re very bad on trade, but he doesn�t have a problem with Germany.

He said his dad is from Germany.

He said, �I don�t have a problem Germany, I have a problem with German trade'," according

to Bloomberg.

The German trade surplus rose to a record �235 billion ($284 billion) last year, while

the US trade deficit widened in January to its highest level since March 2012.

Excluding the EU, Germany is the third largest exporter in the world, after China and the

US.

Shares of German automakers were down slightly in Frankfurt trading following Trump�s comments,

which apparently reminded investors of his January threat to slap BMW AG with a 35% tariff.

Trump reportedly tried to negotiate a bilateral trade deal with German Chancellor Angela Merkel

when she visited Washington in March, according to CNBC.

But Merkel insisted that all trade deals with the EU must be made unilaterally.

Following his meeting with Merkel back in March, Trump claimed that the Germans owe

�vast sums of money� to NATO, and that the US �must be paid more� for the defense

services it provides to Germany.

To be sure, Trump wasn't the first U.S. leader to complain that most NATO nations, including

Germany, weren�t meeting the alliance�s goal that members spend 2% of their GDP on

defense.

Germany spends about 1.2% currently.

In fact, none other than President Barack Obama in 2016 said in an interview with The

Atlantic about his foreign policy doctrine that �free riders aggravate me.�

For more infomation >> Trump Slams Very Bad Germans For Selling Millions Of Cars In US We Will Stop This - Duration: 3:28.

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CHINA INTERCEPTS UNARMED U.S PLANES:WHY U.S SHOULD DEPLOY F 22 & F 35? - Duration: 4:14.

China has been very aggressive in it's posturing in recent past.

From threatening its neighbors, to rejecting the decision of Hague tribunal on South China

Sea dispute, its behavior has been outright provocative.

China has reclaimed thousands of acres of land in disputed islands and is building military

infrastructure on them.

China's projects have moved at a brisk pace, with reports of new military installations

appearing every few weeks.

Earlier this month, a state-run Chinese paper said that Beijing had installed 155 mm rocket

launchers on Fiery Cross reef in the Spratlys Island, reportedly to deter combat divers

from Vietnam.

China has also deployed anti-aircraft missiles in Woody Island.

Not only that, China is now starting to intercept unarmed U.S planes in international airspace.

In this video, Defense Updates looks at two such incidents in the first 2 points, and

then analyzes why US should deploy F35 and F 22 Raptor in the vicinity of South China Sea.

The WC-135 Constant Phoenix aircraft is designed to detect radioactive debris and collect other

atmospheric and weather-related data.

One has been deployed in the Asia-Pacific in anticipation of North Korean nuclear test.

Two Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) Su-30 fighters intercepted the

unarmed aircraft over the East China Sea.

The Chinese jets came within 150 feet of the US plane, with one of the Su-30s flying inverted,

or upside down, directly above the American plane.

The incident reportedly took place in international airspace.

The US P-3 Orion surveillance plane was 150 miles (240 km) southeast of Hong Kong in international

airspace when the Chinese aircraft carried out an unsafe intercept.

The Pentagon said that two Chinese aircraft conducted an unprofessional intercept of the

P 3 Orion over the South China Sea, marking the second time in about a week that the U.S

has complained about unsafe Chinese operations in the region.

As per reports, one of the Chinese J-10 fighter jets flew about 200 yards in front of the

US P-3 aircraft and about 100 feet above it, doing slow turns.

The second Chinese fighter remained about 750 yards off the P-3's right wing.

The two interceptions have been made against unarmed

U.S aircrafts in international airspace.

Deploying F35 & F 22 will provide the following strategic paybacks:

1. Clearly signal China that U.S intent of not backing down, and is ready to raise the bar.

F35 and F 22 have state of art technologies, and bringing them into table will show the

resolve of U.S in dealing with China.

2. China's response to the deployment of F35 & F22 will provide insight to U.S about how

far Beijing is willing to take these provocative behaviors further.

Intercepting these frontline fighter jets is a totally different ball game as compared

to intercepting an unarmed aircraft.

3. This will provide much need assurance to countries like Japan, Taiwan about US presence in the

region and its intent in taking on China.

For more infomation >> CHINA INTERCEPTS UNARMED U.S PLANES:WHY U.S SHOULD DEPLOY F 22 & F 35? - Duration: 4:14.

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US-JAPAN joint military exercises challenge hegemony in THE SOUTH CHINA SEA - Duration: 7:46.

For more infomation >> US-JAPAN joint military exercises challenge hegemony in THE SOUTH CHINA SEA - Duration: 7:46.

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Do we want healthcare or health insurance? | Us News - Duration: 12:35.

Do we want healthcare or health insurance? | Us News

The nonpartisan analysts at the Congressional Budget Office have concluded that the House repeal and replace bill would strip healthcare coverage from 23 million Americans in 2026.

That legislation is bizarre as a work of health policy. Instead, it is better understood as a tax cut bill for the most affluent, paid for by removing federally-funded health coverage from the poorest and most defenseless.

But this cynical bill reflects an underlying policy divide between conservatives and progressives, which is whether the federal government should be in the business of promoting a functioning health coverage system, or health insurance markets. The differences are fundamental.

A functioning health coverage system means that every American has access to the full range of medical services necessary for the preservation of life and the promotion of good health, either at nominal cost or at prices commensurate with their incomes.

Because medical care is costly, and those costs rise with age, functioning systems require substantial tax-funded government involvement. But at the same time, privately-paid medical costs are greatly reduced.

Medicaid and Medicare are examples. Ignoring labels, this is the model followed in all other developed countries.

Functioning health insurance markets mean private competitive markets, where supply and demand shape both the nature of the products and the prices at which those products are sold. Pre-ACA major medical policies and the deregulation of insurance markets point in this direction.

Since the passage of the House bill, Americans in town halls across the country have come down squarely on the side that they want low-cost access to healthcare, whatever the label placed on it, not access to health insurance.

Their intuitions are absolutely right. Insurance is ill suited as the model for supporting the health of a country's citizens.

The fundamental role of insurance is to address the financial impact of 'adverse fortuities' through the law of large numbers – random bad outcomes, not correlated with each other, but that are susceptible of statistical modeling when viewed in the aggregate.

Your home or automobile insurance are examples. Insureds shed the financial risk of a very large but improbable loss, and substitute in return a much smaller but certain loss, in the form of insurance premiums.

From an insured's perspective, uncertain risks are shifted; from the perspective of the group, the risk has been pooled and made predictable.

When everyone in the pool faces certain or highly probable costs, true insurance simply cannot exist, because there is no risk shifting. This is why you can buy fire insurance for your home, but not lawn maintenance insurance.

Healthcare is closer to the lawn maintenance case. We all incur regular need for healthcare; delayed maintenance leads only to higher future costs, lost productivity and early death. In turn, all insurance faces two unique problems.

The first is adverse selection: Those who for reasons known to themselves, and not visible to the insurance company, are most in need of insurance will be the first in line to buy it, thereby skewing the aggregate risk profile of the insurance pool.

The other is moral hazard, whereby people with insurance may choose to behave in a riskier manner than those without (not changing the batteries in your smoke alarm, for example, because you know your home is fully insured).

Health insurance in particular is bedeviled by the first, which is what leads insurers to exclude preexisting conditions -- even those unknown to the insured at the time she first is insured.

Moral hazard is a bit more easily addressed, through deductibles and the like.

Health insurance in the form of "major medical" policies that contain very large deductibles and that focus on catastrophic care can more or less function as genuine insurance, subject to the fundamental problem of adverse selection, and with it, carve outs for preexisting conditions.

The problem is that they are simply unaffordable for many, and always will be, so long as healthcare itself is costly and probable -- few live to 90 or even 65 with no significant medical issues.

In response, conservative policymakers often suggest limited government subsidies (through tax credits), and "Health Savings Accounts," to offer taxpayers the ability to set aside income each year tax-free to deal with more predictable health maintenance issues.

But these are solutions that work only for more affluent Americans, because they alone can afford to fund those HSAs or pay the premiums in the first place. Many millions of working Americans simply cannot afford the most routine medical bills.

For example, a poll conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute looking at the economic situations of white working class Americans (as a proxy for Donald Trump's political base) found that one-third of those polled could not afford an unexpected $400 expense.

How does a Health Savings Account benefit them?.

The Affordable Care Act has been responsible for a dramatic decline in the number of personal bankruptcies and debt collection balances precisely because it removed healthcare-related financial crises for millions of Americans without large financial reserves of their own.

The interests of the country are served when the economy prospers, but almost two-thirds of our national income comes through our personal labor.

Rational economic policy thus points to government investment in human capital (through education), but also to maintaining the complex machines that are the drivers of economic growth – which is to say, our physical and emotional selves.

We know that greasy machinery must be maintained to stay in service, and of course the same is true of human machinery.

Meanwhile, pre-ACA experience showed that relying excessively on employer-provided healthcare stunts growth, by trapping employees with preexisting conditions from striking out on their own, or even from switching employers.

The country prospers when government makes healthcare universally available, and funds that through rational tax policy not tied to ones employer.

The only solution to adverse selection in health insurance markets is to throw everybody into the pool. The ACA did this through its mandate.

The House bill actually does this as well, in an even more draconian fashion, by threatening those who allow their health coverage to lapse even for a short time to be banished into 'high-risk pools,' which have been and always will be tremendously underfunded.

Everyone participates in Social Security, like it or not, and that is the obvious direction forward here too.

Most Americans today in fact are enrolled in some sort of government-assisted health coverage program, not true insurance. Medicare and Medicaid are the most obvious examples.

Even before the ACA, many (but not all) private employer-provided health programs also delivered reasonably-priced health services, through broad coverage and modest deductibles.

Surprisingly, these also have always been underwritten by the federal government, to the tune of almost $300 billion every year, through hidden tax subsidies. The remaining employer costs fall largely on the shoulders of employees, in the form of lower cash wages.

Medicare or Medicaid for all -- call it what you will -- divorced from ones employer offers all Americans the assurance of reasonable investment in their health.

What employers today spend on private health plans instead would be collected instead through the payroll tax system, thereby eliminating the distortions attendant on tying coverage to ones specific employer, and introducing more progressive funding of health services.

Private insurance and bespoke medicine can coexist along this for those who can afford it. Health insurance is a luxury item for a few; reasonably priced healthcare services are what most Americans actually want.

Kleinbard is The Ivadelle and Theodore Johnson Professor of Law and Business at the University of Southern Californias Gould School of Law, and a Fellow at The Century Foundation.

Kleinbard was one of four individuals honored as 2016 International Tax Person of the Year by the nonpartisan policy organization Tax Analysts.

He is the author of a book, "We Are Better Than This: How Government Should Spend Our Money," published by Oxford U. Press.

For more infomation >> Do we want healthcare or health insurance? | Us News - Duration: 12:35.

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About Us | Career Change | Career Analysts ✔ 0800 999 777 8 - Duration: 2:02.

hi I'm going to tell you a little about

career analysts and what we do here

we've been in business for more than 50

years now and many of you will know us

from the 45 years we were in Gloucester

Place and Crawford Street near Baker

Street in London you may remember in

those days that you had to come to our

office for 9 a.m. and complete three

hours of aptitude testing like

examinations before returning in the

afternoon for your consultation this has

now changed that the aptitude tests are

now all online this has several

advantages the first is that if you are

traveling from outside London you no

longer need to get the expensive

commuter trains in the morning we can

organise an afternoon appointment for

you also it gives us more preparation

time to research career options for you

before the day having said that the

actual process invented in 1965 by our

founders who were occupational

psychologists is still the same as it

was then the aim is to provide careers

advice targeted to the specific

individual who is our client using

psychometrics we really get to know what

makes you tick

by asking hundreds of questions about

your interests personality values and

beliefs aptitudes and your personal

practical circumstances we then draw all

of this information together do our

research to come up with a series of

possible career options for you and then

sit down with you one-on-one to talk

through these options in detail and help

you to decide what is the best career

path for you this is followed up by a

career report including the results of

the psychometrics a detailed explanation

of what they mean for you and what our

recommendations are for you going

forward if you'd like to talk this

through with us please call us on

For more infomation >> About Us | Career Change | Career Analysts ✔ 0800 999 777 8 - Duration: 2:02.

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CNN 10 - May 28, 2017 | U.S. Secret Service training center round out a commercial-free coverage - Duration: 10:01.

Fridays are awesome. It seems I have said that before.

I`m Carl Azuz for commercial-free CNN STUDENT NEWS.

It is month and one day until the official end of summer in the northern hemisphere.

But scientists say, worldwide, July was the warmest month

since 1880 when researchers started reporting global temperatures. It`s according to U.S.

and Japanese government agencies.

How much warmer? In Fahrenheit, scientists say July 2015 was 0.36 of 1 degree warmer

than the previous record set in July 2011. This was a

worldwide measurement. Summer in the U.S. alone had pretty normal temperatures.

Well, it`s now official -- July 2015 is the warmest month on record.

The biggest driver of this I think is El Nino. It`s always warm when we have an El Nino year.

It`s that warm water that sets off the Pacific coast

of South America, getting blown across the Pacific. It`s warm pool of air and it keeps

the atmosphere warmer because it is so warm.

We also have greenhouse gases, the highest concentrations that we`ve ever measured.

So, where do these measurements come from? Thermometers on land. Satellite measurements,

looking down at the Earth measuring temperatures

remotely. And also, ships at seas taking measurements as they cross the globe.

Now, there are smaller circulations across the globe, too. There are patterns across

the Pacific Northwest. This thing called "The Blob" out

there, an area of warm water that has really drastically change the climate for Seattle

and Portland and for most of California in a very big drought.

All of this part of the warmest month on record.

It`s a mystery that started on March 8th of 2014. After taking off from Kuala Lumpur,

Malaysia, heading to Beijing, China, Malaysia Airlines

Flight 370 vanished with 239 people onboard.

Investigators believe the plane dramatically changed course during its flight and eventually

went down somewhere in the Indian Ocean, far off the

western coast of Australia.

A possible clue emerged late last month on Reunion Island. This is a French territory

located east of Madagascar, in the western Indian Ocean,

where debris from the plane might have drifted.

A beach-cleaning crew found part of an airplane wing. Malaysian officials say it`s from Flight

370, but it`s still being investigated. And

investigators still don`t know what happened to the plane or where any other wreckage might

be.

Veteran oceanographers tell CNN this could be the new front line of the search for

MH370, which is why search teams are now looking off not only Reunion Island but nearby Madagascar,

the Seychelles Islands, Mauritius,

Mozambique, and off the east coast of South Africa.

The reason? A powerful stream of currents circulating in the Indian Ocean, called a

gyre.

It is a permanent circulation pattern in the Indian Ocean that runs counter clockwise starts

off the

coast of Australia and the west of Australian current, moves north and then picks up in

the southern equatorial current, moving east to west across the

Indian Ocean basin before it turns south and then returns.

Former U.S. Navy oceanographer, Van Gurley, says other parts of MH370 that could be found,

seats or other objects with foam inserts or

closed air pockets, characters which could cause something to float.

Experts say that may be why this apparent piece made it to Reunion Island. But Gurley

says if the missing plane is in the area off Australia where

scientists think it went down, objects could also be found in the other direction, on the

other side of Australia.

Looking at the overall current patterns, at the end of 18 to 24 months, the red area,

some debris could end up over here where we`re

talking now, but others could end up down here.

I`ve just thought I have a few days left. But I was surprisingly at ease. You know,

I`ve had a wonderful

life. I`ve had thousands of friends and I`ve had an exciting and adventurous and gratifying

existence. So, I was surprisingly at ease --

much more so than my wife was.

But now I feel, you know, it`s in the hands of God and my worship, and I`ll be prepared

for anything that comes.

Earlier this month, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter was treated for a mass on his

liver. But afterward, an MRI, an internal body scan,

showed the 90-year-old leader has four cancer spots on his brain. Doctors say it`s melanoma,

a type of cancer that usually starts in the skin, though

they`re not sure how it started in this case. Carter started radiation treatment yesterday.

In 1977, Jimmy Carter was sworn in as the 39 president of the United States. A former

peanut farmer and later governor of Georgia, he served

one term as president. After a landslide defeat to Ronald Reagan in 1980, Carter returned

to Georgia, devoted himself to diplomacy and humanitarian

work and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.

When I say "U.S. Secret Service", you probably think of the officers who protect the president.

They do that. The agency was formed in 1865 to

prevent counterfeit currency in the U.S. It`s seen its ups and downs since then.

In the past few years, Secret Service agents have been accused of misconduct in other countries

and some problems in the U.S. One incident

involved the man who jumped over the fence around the White House and made his way inside

the president`s mansion before agents finally stopped him.

The agency is making some major chances.

This is an ambush training drill that they use to train agents and officers who are

protecting the president and the vice president.

This is where they train dozens, sometimes hundreds, of recruits every year. You got

to see the canine dogs.

It was just so incredible to watch these beautiful animals responding to that really kind of

amazing fashion.

It`s an impressive facility, but no question about it, we were invited here for one reason,

and that is to reassure the public that the Secret Service

can do the job of protecting the president.

We are on an upswing, and we are hiring. We hope to have nine classes of officers this

year.

And you can see from walking around the complex today, we`re moving here.

Man!

Joe Clancy worked in the Secret Service for many, many years. He was part of the president`s

protective detail. And even though he`s got a lot of

skeptics up on Capitol Hill, people saying, hey, you know what, you can`t have an insider

fix the Secret Service. You have to have an insider. Joe

Clancy is trying to -- he`s trying to really go against that grain.

The president has said he`s confident in you. Do you feel confident that the Secret Service

is where it needs to be to protect the president of the

United States and his family?

CLANCY: Well, to be honest, I never feel that I turned the corner, and this agency should

never feel that we`ve turned the corner. Every day is a

new day. We`ve got to be prepared.

Our viewership is on a roll. The call of the rolls.

Starting in Namibia, a nation in Southwest Africa, it`s great to see you today at Windhoek

International School. It`s in the Namibian capital.

Marrero, Louisiana, is next. Just outside of New Orleans, we`ve got the Patriots of

John Ehret High School watching.

In just southeast of Arizona`s capital is the city of Casa Grande. Shoutout to the Wildcats

of Casa Grande Middle School.

An animal in northern Vancouver knows how to beat the heat. I guess he decided he just

couldn`t bear it anymore. The owner of this swimming

pool says you see funny things on YouTube. It`s amazing when it happens in your own backyard.

It`s not the first time the bear has been there. It might have been the same one that

stopped by last month and ate from the bird feeder.

If you`re wondering, there is a fence around the pool. The animal just punched a hole in

it, which I guess isn`t really so un-bear-livable. Maybe

the first time he started furtive about his visit, was just roaring to come back, so he

thought, I`ll say next Ursa-day.

It`s terrible. Unbearable. But we hope your weekend is not and than you`ll come back next

Monday for more CNN STUDENT NEWS.

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