Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 5, 2017

Youtube daily US May 29 2017

3

TONIGHT A WOMAN IS FIGHTING

FOR HER LIFE IN THE HOSPITAL

AFTER A HIT AND RUN CRASH ON

U-S 131.

3

24 HOUR NEWS 8'S LYNSEY

MUKOMEL IS AT THE LIVE DESK

WITH THE LATEST.

3

LYNSEY:..LEON -- WE KNOW THE

VICTIM IS STILL IN CRITICAL

CONDITION.

3

SHE WAS THE PASSENGER OF A CAR

HIT AROUND 2-15 THIS MORNING

ON SOUTHBOUND 131 NEAR HALL

STREET IN GRAND RAPIDS. RESCUE

CREWS HAD TO USE THE JAWS OF

LIFE TO GET HER OUT OF THE CAR.

HER DRIVER GOT OUT O-K.

MICHIGAN STATE POLICE SAY THE

SUSPECT WHO CAUSED THE CRASH

NEVER STOPPED.TONIGHT THEY'RE

LOOKING FOR A DARK-COLORED

SEDAN WITH LARGE CHROME RIMS.

3

LYNSEY:..THERE SHOULD BE

DAMAGE ON THE FRONT RIGHT SIDE

OF THAT CAR.IF YOU KNOW

ANYTHING CALL MICHIGAN STATE

POLICE.

For more infomation >> MSP: 1 critically injured in US-131 hit-and-run - Duration: 0:55.

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AAkhiri khat Us Bewafa k Naam आखिरी खत उस बेवफा के नाम {मेरी आशिकी} Meri Aashiqui - Duration: 5:09.

Believed to have decided to leave me You compulsions but I really do have your wedding pavilion I You remember how much I

Here I have to prepare to take your course while dying'm so glad you do not remember me eyes cry hither thy groom rounds

But who knows the heart heart I will still be waiting for me today I made with thee: he dreams broken

Just thy doings me how your Rutege thou weep not be found at your Ama will appeal the denial of honor to avoid the

It's made such a big sacrifice you have for your mother Baba, but the sacrifice is being said is true I took my I my life

The last letter of his life come to write your name Pardon my goodness me leave this disloyal world I am coming to you

As long as you get this letter I missed being away you'll be happy to stay Because you do not remember me now, I will not return

They are your'm playing promised thy body is being released to you i

He quickly passed the time Vfaon,

But Abke I was in a hurry to his home,

I Which season does your name at the end,

Here was quick to go through every single season.

Surly bread I also saw other account sharing,

Roadside she turned beggar king.

Let passion came good work your,

Otherwise we would have to explain where over time.

I will leave that it is amazing,

I intend to leave did.

Cable is where photo of water formed,

Incensed Where does fate of dreams

Make friends with someone so sincere,

Because this life then go get.

Languish simply the desire to meet you,

Neither these nor thy wait wait endures heart.

Not yet thirst for hunger me not wealth,

Get to love everyone fairly.

Give what we pay you put your hand that thing for thee, And that love you, that destiny is mine.

For more infomation >> AAkhiri khat Us Bewafa k Naam आखिरी खत उस बेवफा के नाम {मेरी आशिकी} Meri Aashiqui - Duration: 5:09.

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U.S. defense secretary Mattis says war with North Korea would be "catastrophic" - Duration: 1:40.

U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis has warned of grave consequences, if diplomatic

efforts to ease tensions between Washington and Pyongyang fail.

He also expressed concerns over North Korea's growing missile capabilities.

Yu Joonhee has this report.

In an interview that aired on CBS on Sunday, U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis warned,

a potential military conflict with North Korea would be "catastrophic".

Pointing to North Korea's potent arsenal of tube artillery and rocket launchers that have

Seoul within striking range, he said a war on the peninsula, would likely be the "worst

kind of fighting" many people would ever see in their lifetime.

Mattis also expressed concern over North Korea's ICBM capabilities, believing the country's

arsenal was improving with every test, and that it posed a "direct threat" to the United

States.

Mattis refused to comment in detail, when asked if there was a theoretical red line,

or a point of no return for North Korea, that would force the U.S. to intervene militarily.

Pyongyang has already conducted nine ballistic missile tests so far this year, with the latest

one occurring early Monday morning.

The latest launch follows the regime's testing of a KN-06 surface-to-air missile on Sunday,

under the supervision of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

Pyongyang's state-media claimed it was a success, saying the missile's capabilities have been

upgraded since last year.

Kim Jong-un reportedly gave orders that the missile be mass-produced and deployed immediately.

As it prepares for North Korea's growing threat, the Pentagon is scheduled to conduct a test

of its missile defense system on Tuesday, where it will attempt to shoot down a mock

ICBM.

While President Trump has said he prefers a diplomatic solution, he also warned that

a "major, major conflict" was possible between the North Korea and the United States.

Yu Joonhee, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S. defense secretary Mattis says war with North Korea would be "catastrophic" - Duration: 1:40.

-------------------------------------------

tf2: f2p kid tried to roast us lmao (turn subtitles) - Duration: 9:14.

hellu again m8s

today some f2p kid tried to roast us

i will show you

the neo is Nighty_z

you see dat lol

Nighty_z was heavy with chocolate thats why he sayd can i eat

he surrended lol

after a video i sayed that i was recording lol

the rest of the video is gameplay

thats the end of the video bye m8s

For more infomation >> tf2: f2p kid tried to roast us lmao (turn subtitles) - Duration: 9:14.

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California Vietnam veterans honored at State Capitol - Duration: 2:34.

>> THIS IS EXPECTED TO LAST THE

BETTER PART OF THE DAY.

SOLDIERS FROM CALIFORNIA DID NOT

RETURN.

A LIST ALL THE NAMES, AGES,

HOMETOWNS, AND RANKS WHO SERVED

IN VIETNAM.

THERE'S ALSO A BRONZE STATUE

HERE.

EXPECTED TO BE OUT HERE UNTIL

7:00 AS THEY READ THOSE NAMES.

THEY WILL TAKE A BREAK FROM

12:00 TO 1:00 AND THEN RESUME.

IT IS VERY IMPORTANT AND SAY IT

IS AN IMPORTANT REMINDER FOR

THOSE WHO COME OUT HERE TO

WITNESS THIS.

-- 5000 NAMES ARE ON THE SMALL.

-- 5800 NAMES ARE ON THIS WALL.

>> THOSE READING ARE VIETNAM

VETERANS.

THIS BEING AN IMPORTANT PART OF

MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND AND AN

IMPORTANT PART -- REMINDER OF

WHAT THIS HOLIDAY IS ALL ABOUT.

For more infomation >> California Vietnam veterans honored at State Capitol - Duration: 2:34.

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'Don't forget us:' Veterans run 100 miles in 24 hours for fallen soldiers - Duration: 1:43.

Running in honor of their fallen

comrades. That's what some

local veterans are

doing this Memorial Day weekend.

The goal-- to run more than 100

miles

in 24 hours. The journey

started in Greensburg,

Pennsylvania, and finished in

Hermitage. 27 First News

reporter, Cameron

O'Brien picks up the story from

here.

CAMERON O'BRIEN For Marine

veteran Mike Heller, Memorial

Day will never go unnoticed. He

lost 5 fellow marines, who were

killed in action in 2005. That's

why Mike joined with eight other

Marines to start the Memorial

Day 100, back in 2011

MIKE HELLER, MEM DAY 100: IT

KIND OF WEIGHED HEAVY ON OUR

HEARTS.

SO IT WAS A MEMORIAL FOR US TO

ONE REMEMBER THEM.

CAMERON O'BRIEN In the past 8

years- the Memorial Run has

been everywhere. Virginia, DC,

New York.

This year-- is special. Many of

the Marines from this unit-- are

from the Pittsburgh area.

MIKE HELLER, MEM DAY 100: WE

WANTED TO BRING IT HOME TO OUR

OWN COMMUNITY AND GET FOLKS

INVOLVED THAT HAVEN'T BEEN ABLE

TO TRAVEL TO THE VARIOUS PLACES

WE'VE BEEN TO THE PAST COUPLE

OF YEARS. CAMERON O'BRIEN Sean

Naylor came all the way from

Salt Lake City Utah to run with

his fellow

Marines. He's been doing that

for four years.

SEAN NAYLOR, MEM DAY 100: I

SPENT SOME TIME WITH THESE GUYS

IN

2005 AS A FORT AIR CONTROLLER.

THESE ARE MY BROTHERS.

CAMERON O'BRIEN For Sean- this

run...different from the

others. He planned to run the

race with his son.

SEAN NAYLOR, MEM DAY 100: WE

WERE GOING TO COME TOGETHER BUT

HE

PASSED AWAY SIX WEEKS AGO SO I

KNEW I HAD TO BE HERE TO HONOR

HIM. CAMERON O'BRIEN This

group-- more than a bunch of

runners.

It's a family.

MIKE HELLER, MEM DAY 100: ITS

BEEN A VERY LARGE TIGHT KNIT

COMMUNITY

THAT WE'VE ESTABLISHED AS A

RESOURCE TO LEAN ON ONE

ANOTHER. CAMERON O'BRIEN And

they want you to remember one

thing on this holiday.

SEAN NAYLOR, MEM DAY 100: DON'T

FORGET US. AND DON'T FORGET

THOSE THAT WE SERVED WITH. In

Mercer, Cameron O'Brien, WKBN 27

First News [A18]20170528 KIWANIS

113 MEM-TOSS

Memorial Day honors the men and

women who died serving our

For more infomation >> 'Don't forget us:' Veterans run 100 miles in 24 hours for fallen soldiers - Duration: 1:43.

-------------------------------------------

Objectway - About us - Duration: 1:44.

For more infomation >> Objectway - About us - Duration: 1:44.

-------------------------------------------

Pearl Takes Us To Tenerife - Doctor Who: Series 10 - Duration: 1:24.

For more infomation >> Pearl Takes Us To Tenerife - Doctor Who: Series 10 - Duration: 1:24.

-------------------------------------------

How the media's weapons fetish primes us for war - Duration: 6:07.

Cable news loves American weapons.

Whether it's Tomahawk missiles.

Tomahawk missiles.

Tomahawk cruise missiles.

Or the "mother of all bombs."

MOAB, also called the

"mother of all bombs"

The "mother of all bombs"

TV news is saturated with images of American firepower.

They are beautiful pictures of fearsome armaments.

But cable news' fixation on bombs and missiles

isn't just mindless entertainment.

It sanitizes violence

and makes it harder to think critically about

why America uses deadly force,

and what happens when it does.

If you watched even five minutes of cable news last month,

you probably saw this.

It's the Pentagon's footage of Tomahawk missiles

being launched at a Syrian airfield from US destroyers.

You couldn't watch a segment about Syria without seeing them,

even if they were just playing in the background.

They were on Twitter, too, where news networks just

published the Pentagon's footage

unedited and without context.

There's a reason those clips got

so much airtime on news networks.

On a very basic level,

it's about attracting eyeballs and having something to look at.

Would you rather watch Tomahawks taking off,

or would you rather watch Brian Williams?

This is Deborah Jaramillo.

She wrote a book on the way news networks

covered and packaged the Iraq War,

and she argues that cable news' fixation on images of weapons

is essentially about keeping us entertained.

If we have CNN, and MSNBC, and Fox,

and they're all showing the same news,

they need to differentiate their product.

How do you keep viewers watching?

You have a good narrative and you have spectacular visuals.

You saw that happen after the US dropped

the "mother of all bombs," the MOAB, on Afghanistan.

Forget the puny explosion of a single Tomahawk missile,

today, the "mother of all bombs."

Tons of impressive military footage, fancy animations,

and segments explaining how the bomb works.

One study found that CNN aired almost an hour

of MOAB test footage in the six hours after the story broke.

You could almost hear the Team America theme song

playing in the background.

America, fuck yeah!

Coming again to save the-

Jaramillo saw a lot of this kind of thing during the Iraq War,

like when CNN developed special graphics

to teach viewers about different types of weapons.

They called these graphics

Baseball cards!

That's what we call them here, baseball cards.

It's got 120mm cannon, three machine guns.

Now, I know what you're thinking:

A. Anderson Cooper hasn't aged a day.

And B. Who cares?

Of course cable news is going to talk about weapons in war time.

The problem is, when corporate media sees weapons as a product,

they run the risk of sanitizing and even glamorizing tools of violence.

You can see this most clearly from NBC's Brian Williams,

who fawned over the use of Tomahawk missiles

like he was trying to sell them.

We see these beautiful pictures.

I am tempted to quote the great Leonard Cohen,

"I am guided by the beauty of our weapons."

But the truth is,

he wasn't the only one giddy about the use of force.

CNN, a news network, basically ran

an infomercial for Tomahawk missiles.

This is the newest version of the missile.

Tomahawk can fly 1,000-plus miles.

Each Tomahawk weighs about 3,500 pounds,

so when 60 of them are fired toward Syria,

that was about 210,000 pounds of firepower.

So it swims and it flies.

Swims and it flies.

The same thing happened with the MOAB:

segment after segment about how powerful the bomb was

and how it worked.

This is such a heavy bomb, such a large bomb.

Frightening weapon, it makes a lot of noise.

You would want to terrify your enemy, shock and awe.

And Fox News might as well have been doing body shots

the day after the bomb dropped.

That is what freedom looks like:

that's the red, white, and blue.

Well one of my favorite things is watching bombs drop on bad guys.

The problem is compounded when news networks

invite ex-military guests to talk about weapons on air,

framing the discussion around how we engage in violence,

rather than why.

General, walk us through what is this thing

and how much damage can it do.

It will collapse caves, it will blow up things.

And it's guided to the target by GPS.

So it's accurate.

Oh, it's precision accurate.

If you're alive afterwards,

you're going to have perforated eardrums and a lot of trauma.

The use of military analysts to explain the weapons

is a way of giving us the military's point of view

and getting us to think in terms of strategy

rather than in terms of people.

You've probably noticed by now that all these clips

of America's arsenal at work have something in common:

no dead bodies.

You see the Tomahawk's launching,

but not the casualties they caused.

You see the MOAB exploding,

but it's test footage from over a decade ago.

We have video we're showing of the testing of the bomb.

That's not an accident.

Cable news has an incentive to not show

the dead bodies that American weapons create.

They don't want to alienate audiences,

so even when they're dealing with something

that's very uncomfortable, like killing people overseas,

they don't have a financial incentive to show us

really disturbing things when those disturbing things

directly impact us or the way we feel about ourselves.

Which helps explain why networks use graphics and animation

so much when talking about weapons.

Like this 2003 CNN clip showing how a bunker buster bomb works.

You see crates and barrels being destroyed, but

There are no animated figures being blown to bits, right?

Further removing viewers from the actual

lethal consequences of these weapons.

Now, I know by this point, I probably sound like

an anti-war, tree-hugging beta male,

YUP.

But this kind of coverage should worry you

even if you think these specific strikes were justified.

We can't make informed decisions about

if and when to use military force if cable news

is selling us a glamorized version of what violence looks like.

If we're focused on weapons and focused on

how mighty our military is, then we're not thinking

about the consequences.

We're not thinking about what happens when

those weapons actually hit their targets.

When you see someone like Brian Williams

fawning over Tomahawk missiles,

he's not being a monster.

He's showing what happens when tools of violence

become disconnected from their real consequences.

When corporate media treats weapons like

a product to be packaged and sold for higher ratings.

For more infomation >> How the media's weapons fetish primes us for war - Duration: 6:07.

-------------------------------------------

U.S. defense secretary Mattis says war with North Korea would be "catastrophic" - Duration: 1:41.

U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis has warned of grave consequences, if diplomatic

efforts to ease tensions between Washington and Pyongyang fail.

He also expressed concerns over North Korea's growing missile capabilities.

Yu Joonhee has this report.

In an interview that aired on CBS on Sunday, U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis warned,

a potential military conflict with North Korea would be "catastrophic".

Pointing to North Korea's potent arsenal of tube artillery and rocket launchers that have

Seoul within striking range, he said a war on the peninsula, would likely be the "worst

kind of fighting" many people would ever see in their lifetime.

Mattis also expressed concern over North Korea's ICBM capabilities, believing the country's

arsenal was improving with every test, and that it posed a "direct threat" to the United

States.

Mattis refused to comment in detail, when asked if there was a theoretical red line,

or a point of no return for North Korea, that would force the U.S. to intervene militarily.

Pyongyang has already conducted nine ballistic missile tests so far this year, with the latest

one occurring early Monday morning.

The latest launch follows the regime's testing of a KN-06 surface-to-air missile on Sunday,

under the supervision of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.

Pyongyang's state-media claimed it was a success, saying the missile's capabilities have been

upgraded since last year.

Kim Jong-un reportedly gave orders that the missile be mass-produced and deployed immediately.

As it prepares for North Korea's growing threat, the Pentagon is scheduled to conduct a test

of its missile defense system on Tuesday, where it will attempt to shoot down a mock

ICBM.

While President Trump has said he prefers a diplomatic solution, he also warned that

a "major, major conflict" was possible between the North Korea and the United States.

Yu Joonhee, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S. defense secretary Mattis says war with North Korea would be "catastrophic" - Duration: 1:41.

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WW3 update. U.S. sends THIRD carrier to N.Korea - Duration: 4:03.

welcome back these are the latest

developments surrounding the korean

crisis The United States is making an

unprecedented move and sending a third

Carrier Strike Group to the region

around North Korea While it is unusual

to have two super carriers operating in

the same area to have three is almost

unheard of This has led to mass

speculation that President Trump is

preparing for a devastating strike on

North Korea if international pressure

and tighter sanctions don't deter the

chubby dictator from his current course

of developing a nuclear missile capable

of reaching mainland America a very real

possibility if his missile program

continues at its current pace.The USS

nimitz has just undergone 20 months of

maintenance and modernization period

that was completed in october since then

it has been undergoing sea trials and

inspections Commanding officer captain

Kevin Lennox has said the Strike Group

is ready to meet whatever challenges lie

ahead in their upcoming deployment The

Nimitz is one of the world's largest

warships and will lead Carrier Strike

Group 11 this includes the guided

missile destroyers USS Shoup USS Kidd

USS Howard and USS Pinckney as well as

guided missile cruiser USS Princeton and

of course numerous squadrons of aircraft

Due to set sail from the Naval Base

Kitsap Bremerton on Thursday the USS

Nimitz will eventually join both the USS

Carl Vinson and USS Ronald Reagan in the

waters off North Korea A very obvious

show of force President Trump is

apparently making sure the U.S. is well

prepared for any contingency This comes

at the same time as the U.S. is also

testing its ability to

intercept an ICBM or intercontinental

ballistic missile The current system has

been used in several tests but has only

been successful in 9 out of 17

attempts and this will be the first time

it will be tested against a simulated

ICBM Unfortunately there is at present

no solid defense against an ICBM attack

and so a lot is riding on this upcoming

test.

As for North Korea Kim jong-un

has just announced a successful test of

his new anti-aircraft weapon system and

said this will completely spoil the

enemy's dream to command air Releasing

footage of the test the state media said

it is designed to detect and strike

different targets flying from any

location Only one week ago they

successfully tested an

intermediate-range ballistic missile

that has now been ordered to be

mass-produced and just a week before

that a longer range missile was tested

with the potential to reach the US

military base on Guam With Kim obviously

continuing his weapons development and

with a sixth nuclear test possible any

day what will happen over the coming

days and weeks is anybody's guess

Sanctions and international pressure

are seeming to have no effect and tensions

are continuing to increase

Maybe conflict is unfortunately

inevitable Let's hope not Thank you for

watching and subscribe for further

updates The world is watching

so be kind to each other.

For more infomation >> WW3 update. U.S. sends THIRD carrier to N.Korea - Duration: 4:03.

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Defense, foreign ministers of U.S. & Japan plan July '2+2' meeting: Kyodo - Duration: 1:55.

For more infomation >> Defense, foreign ministers of U.S. & Japan plan July '2+2' meeting: Kyodo - Duration: 1:55.

-------------------------------------------

HILALY -WE SPONSORED TERRORISTS FOR 70 YEARS, TODAY NO ONE BELIEVES US ANYMORE ![ENG SUBS] - Duration: 8:56.

After all those proofs we had , India was able to drag us to International Court of Justice,

and get a STAY on KULBUSHAN,

Why cant we take them to ICJ on Kashmir issue ?

These type of Struggle will have to come to a conclusion,

at some point of time.

India will be compelled to provide a solution at some point of time .

See Palastine, Kashmir...

Kashmir's are looking towards us and we have closed our eyes.

We should help them, unfortunately all our strategies have utterly failed.

We are diplomatically, politically weak , No one in the WORLD believes

us anymore. We have to make aware & convince the world.

Not a single muslim Country support us on KASHMIR,

OIC does not support us on KASHMIR.

We have to make one National Policy on Kashmir.

Invite the entire world, tell them.

We all know, our Kashmir policy for 70 years is a failure.

Hilaly, India has a strong lobby, we are very weak.

we do not have any diplomatic strategy.

Actually our PR is very weak, our Popularity is tarnished.

People recognise us a Terrorists.

Since for last 70 years we have sponsored terrorism, extremism.

We sent terrors groups all over the region.

(Immediately he realizes he saying truth, now U turn).

We should appoint Independent people to look after the cause of Kashmir,

We should publicize and popularize again.

Let me give you an example....

In 2001, When i met ITALIAN PRESIDENT for the 1st time, when i tried

to tell our (Farce) strory , ITALIAN President never believed me.

Even in ITALY, we failed to brain wash our story,

no one in the world is ready to believe our version.

We do not know what and where we are going wrong,

Got an adivise from a think tank, we need to work at the

grass root level.

Yes, we need to go down to the grass roots.

We should not intervene in this Indegenious movement.

Some BS arabic, KASHMIR will become Pakistan oneday.

We will hoist Paki flag @ Srinagar one day.

We should believe in what we are doing.

We will hoist Paki flag @ Srinagar one day.

We should do a lot publicity, we have to make it a national agenda,

we have to go to FACEBOOK, TWITTER and take help of Pakistani

Scientists & Doctors(you mean cab drivers ?) and tell the entire world.

We have to do NAMAZ(Pray) 5 times day.

every day 5 messages on facebook, twitter

multiply with no. of pakis, that will be a revolution of tweets.

tomorrow Allah will bring our Govt. Burhan Vani Saheb, has died

but where are those 72 virgins ? LOL !

We have to take help from young people like Hilaly , Mazhar.

OK, OK , i will come back to you.

we have this Kashmir Committe....other than a few press statements,

these people eat tax payer(Actually thats US tax payer )

money and does nothing....

Since its been going on for 70 years no progress,

we should forget KAshmir issue, once and for all.

Unfrtunately Look we do not have any unfortunately national policy.

Unfortunately our dipolomacy is weak.

Unfortunately we need to review our kashmir policy ,

instead of haste we need to act intelligently.

Instead of meagre parliament speeches , we need to appoint

foreign diplomats, and regularly monitor those committe.

Atleast in next 3 years , we should be able to brain wash 2 countries.

That should be the goal. If we fail (we can blame Nawaz Sharif)

Useless Governance, Useless Govt.

For more infomation >> HILALY -WE SPONSORED TERRORISTS FOR 70 YEARS, TODAY NO ONE BELIEVES US ANYMORE ![ENG SUBS] - Duration: 8:56.

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White House mum on new Kushner allegations in Russia probe - Us News - Duration: 4:01.

White House mum on new Kushner allegations in Russia probe - Us News

The White House declined to comment Saturday on a news report that top President Trump adviser Jared Kushner had at least three undisclosed conversations last year with Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak.

Were not going to comment on Jared," Trump economic aide Gary Cohen said at a press conference in Italy, the last stop on the president's nine-day overseas trip.

The story about the alleged phone calls was reported by Reuters, the day after reports about Kushner, Trump's son-in-law, now being part of a federal investigation into Trump associates allegedly colluding with Russia to win the 2016 White House race.

The story also appeared the same day The Washington Post reported that Kislyak told his superiors that he and Kushner discussed setting up a secret communications channel between the Kremlin and the Trump transition team.

At the press conference with Cohen on Saturday, National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster declined to talk directly about Kushner.

But he acknowledged that the United States has back-channel communications with a number of countries that allow officials to "communicate in a discreet manner..

An attorney for Kushner responded late Friday about the alleged conversations with Kislyak, saying his client participated in myriad calls during that time and doesn't recall those being alleged.

"Mr Kushner participated in thousands of calls in this time period," attorney Jamie Gorelick said. "He has no recollection of the calls as described.". Two of the alleged calls took place between April and November of last year.

Gorelick also said he's asked Reuters for more specific dates so that he can review the information and respond.

Kushner's legal counsel said after the reports that Kushner was part of the federal investigation, but not a target, his client will talk to federal investigators and Congress about his contacts and his role in the Trump campaign.

Sources have told Fox News that any discussions about back channels likely would have been about facilitating one between then-NSA Director Michael Flynn and Russian generals to discuss the Syrian conflict and possible co-operation in the war against ISIS because Russian generals would likely not be inclined to speak over an unsecure line about anything substantive.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

For more infomation >> White House mum on new Kushner allegations in Russia probe - Us News - Duration: 4:01.

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"Trump a disgrace for US democracy" - Editorial of German public news (English subtitles) - Duration: 2:45.

That was alright today!

Open words are more honest than pre-written statements.

Now, after all these summits we finally have clarity about the US President: "America

first" and "only"; responsibility for the world - none.

For Trump Solidarity is a good, available only for payment.

He sweet-talks Saudi-Arabia, a country that globally disseminates

a bastardized Islam that justifies the murder of children in Manchester.

Trump sees Yad Vashem as a tourist attraction.

He betrays state secrets and wants the chiefs of his security agencies to cover up

possible evidence for criminal activities, obstructs justice, fires the senior investigator.

Trump lies when he sees fit, and calls his critics liars.

The Leader of the Free World vilifies and threatens journalists and thus strengthens

Putin, Erdogan and the likes to spurn freedom of speech and human rights and dignity.

This president is a disgrace for the American democracy and our values.

Anybody who hopes his cabinet may have a moderating influence on him is utterly mistaken.

They are no reliable partners because Trump degrades them to " useful idiots".

The National Security Advisor was not allowed during talks with the Israeli prime minister,

instead he takes his family.

Trump's ranting in Brussels surprised his cabinet secretaries at home.

However, the anger of his NATO partners is also hypocritical.

Anybody who makes a commitment and wants to change the rules afterwards deserves

a rebuke.

Sometimes the fool speaks the truth.

Only this fool, Donald Trump, isn't wise, but malignant narcissistic.

According to psychology a malignant narcissist only seeks his own advantage.

He is reckless, volatile and obsessively pursues power and wealth.

He strongly believes "might is right".

He is impatient and aggressive, debases and humiliates others, calls them

evil and and dishonest if they threaten is power.

I am no psychologist; I judge as a political scientist and journalist: This

US President is dangerous.

We Europeans cannot do anything about it.

We have to learn to live with it.

But the American people don't.

Their representatives in Congress could impeach Trump.

The cabinet could declare him unfit to be president

per the 25th Amendment.

Whoever bears responsibility in Washington should cope with it, before Trump destroys America's

true greatness once and for all.

For more infomation >> "Trump a disgrace for US democracy" - Editorial of German public news (English subtitles) - Duration: 2:45.

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21 Indicted in US for Sex Trafficking Ring - Duration: 0:52.

For more infomation >> 21 Indicted in US for Sex Trafficking Ring - Duration: 0:52.

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Trump Returns to U.S., and to Berating News Media on Twitter - Us News - Duration: 5:11.

Trump Returns to U.S., and to Berating News Media on Twitter - Us News

President Trump, back from a nine-day overseas trip, wasted little time on Sunday morning turning his Twitter account back into a political weapon as he assailed what he called the "fabricated lies made up by the #FakeNews media.

While Mr Trump largely avoided provocative Twitter posts during his journey through the Middle East and Europe, he returned to social media soon after arriving at the White House on Saturday night, pushing back against a flurry of news reports stemming from investigations into contacts between Russia and his associates, including his son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

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"Whenever you see the words 'sources say' in the fake news media, and they don't mention names," he wroteon Twitter, "it is very possible that those sources don't exist but are made up by fake news writers. #FakeNews is the enemy!".

Mr Trump woke up to find headlines and television talk shows focused on the latest turns in inquiries that he had been able to put to the side for much of his trip.

The freshest developments brought the story into his own family, as news media reported that Mr Kushner had discussed setting up a secret communications channel with the Russians between Mr Trump's election and inauguration.

News articles also focused on efforts by administration aides to develop a damage control plan to handle the controversies.

The plan would seek to wall off questions involving the investigations from day-to-day governing by creating a separate war room in the White House, assembling a high-powered legal team outside the White House and shaking up the president's communications team.

Aides expected Mr Trump to begin meeting with lawyers as early as Sunday to talk about a way forward, but one consensus among White House lawyers and private lawyers consulted by the White House in recent days was that Mr Trump needed to restrain himself on Twitter, rather than create new problems with impulsive or unfiltered messages.

Mr Trump demonstrated during his travels to Saudi Arabia, Israel, the West Bank, the Vatican, Belgium and Italy that he could be disciplined about his use of social media.

Over those nine days, he or his aides used his Twitter account to promote his foreign and domestic policies, thank his hosts and otherwise stay on message.

But he seems to be as aggrieved as ever by what he considers unfair news coverage.

"It is my opinion that many of the leaks coming out of the White House are fabricated lies made up by the #FakeNews media," he wrote on Sunday morning.

He singled out last week's special election in Montana for an open House seat that was won by the Republican candidate, Greg Gianforte, the day after being charged with assault for attacking a reporter.

Mr Trump made no comment about the candidate's actions, but instead complained that Republicans did not get more credit for winning a district that the party has held for 20 years.

"Does anyone notice how the Montana Congressional race was such a big deal to Dems & Fake News until the Republican won?" he wrote.

For more infomation >> Trump Returns to U.S., and to Berating News Media on Twitter - Us News - Duration: 5:11.

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Remember Those Who Fought and Died for Us - Duration: 2:02.

It's Memorial Day and most people think, "OK, Memorial Day."

"OK, that means we've got the Indianapolis 500 and summer is starting."

People lose track of why we have this holiday.

It's to celebrate the people who gave their lives in our armed forces

so that all of us could live in freedom.

You know, I'm sitting in my library in my office and behind me are books.

I collect books, I collect history of Winston Churchill.

And there's pictures back there of a trip we made about a year ago or so to Normandy,

to the beaches where our troops landed on D-Day.

And I would encourage every American, if you ever have the chance, to go and see that,

because you see what real sacrifice is.

You know, a lot of us get caught up in our day-to-day problems

and the little things we have going on in our lives,

and we think they're these insurmountable problems.

And then you go to place like that and you see what real sacrifice is.

So you know, I believe memorial means to remember,

and we need to remember those who fought and died for us,

so that each of us every day can go out and fight for a better life for our families

and fight for more freedom in our lives.

So over this holiday, besides just having a good cookout and kicking off the summer,

take a few minutes to remember those

who gave the ultimate sacrifice to make your life better.

I'll see you at the top, because the bottom sure is crowded.

For more infomation >> Remember Those Who Fought and Died for Us - Duration: 2:02.

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The Madness And Science Behind The Donald Trump Handshake - Us News - Duration: 16:02.

The Madness And Science Behind The Donald Trump Handshake - Us News

Had French President Emmanuel Macron been paying close attention, he would have recognized quickly just how fraught his coming exchange with Donald Trump was to be.

The two leaders had met briefly earlier that day, exchanging a firm, prolonged, "not innocent" handshake that drew attention for its unbound intensity.

Now, hours later, as Macron approached Trump and other world leaders at the opening of NATO's new headquarters in Brussels last week, the U.S. president offered several non-verbal cues indicating his desire to re-establish the global pecking order.

The first came well before he and Macron were face-to-face. Walking toward each other, Trump reached out to King Philippe of Belgium, who stood directly to his right, to offer an impromptu handshake.

The King seemed caught off-guard. No one in their group was making any such gesture.

Trump's offer seemed out of place. But Florin Dolcos, a University of Illinois associate psychology professor and faculty member at the Beckman Institute's Cognitive Neuroscience Group, suggested it was a deliberate. And the intended audience wasn't Philippe but Macron.

"That's a signal Trump was sending: 'This is where you should come first because I'm the alpha here,'" Dolcos said. "'Iinitiated with the other guy.'".

Moments later, another cue. With the two still walking towards each other, Trump looked up at Macron and opened his arms ― a signal typically reserved for family and friends, not two world leaders who'd just met.

Once again, Dolcos suspected Trump was making a nonverbal signal to his French counterpart.

"I think it is a learned behavior. Because typically you don't do that. You do it with people very close to you in natural circumstances. Not people you don't really know," he said.

"In a way it could be seen as a trap.".

Macron didn't fall for it. Instead, he greeted a few others before making his way to Trump.

When he did finally arrive, Trump pounced, taking Macron's hand and pulling it violently away from his body with enough force to turn Macron roughly 50 degrees.

Dolcos again saw a tactical play. Unable to torque his arm, Macron was rendered powerless. He attempted to pull away and Trump refused to let him go.

Macron put his other hand on Trump to pry himself loose. And when he finally freed himself, Trump gave him a pat on the shoulder, ending the exchange squarely on his terms.

Another bizarre, dramatic, uncomfortable handshake with a world leader was in the books, bouncing its way across the Internet to the wonderment of all.

"It goes down to asserting dominance," said Dolcos. "Why he wants to do that? I don't know. It looks, to me, like he is trying too hard….

If you want to better understand Donald Trump ― his presidency, his approach personal diplomacy, even his psyche ― simply follow his hands.

Those hands, and their unexceptional digits, have been the source of immense insecurity, prompting him to lash out at critics and boast about his genitalia.

They give insights into his marriage for the way they search ― ever so subtly and often unsuccessfully ― for his wife's embrace.

They tell us about his comfort in office as he attempts to find his footing on the world stage. And they illustrate his preoccupation with imagery and the role it plays in advancing his agenda.

"I just think the president is very cognizant of the optics of what it looks like at these multilateral meetings with world leaders," said Sam Nunberg, a former Trump aide, "and I even think [the handshake] is symbolic to the America First theme of his presidency and campaign.

The Trump handshake has become most unique greeting in all of politics. Before he nearly tore off Emmanuel Macron's arm, Trump crushed the fingers of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

When he unveiled his Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch during a East Wing ceremony, he followed suit by yanking the Justice's entire body three times in his direction.

Trump memorably refused to shake hands with German Chancellor Angela Merkel when she visited him in a testy Oval Office exchange. And he went grip-to-grip for an uncomfortable length of time with an obviously prepared Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada.

In a short time, the Trump handshake has become so legendary that world leaders have been compelled to prepare in advance. Trudeau seemed to have done his homework and so had Macron during his first interaction with Trump.

Hillary Clinton prepared for a variety of over-the-top Trump gestures in the lead-up to their debates. But her aide, Philippe Reines, who played Trump in debate prep, said the handshake never came up in practice sessions.

"I never tried to rip her arm out of its socket," he told HuffPost.

Trump's approach to the handshake is a combination of brute force and strategic discomfort. He doesn't so much shake the hand as he consumes the very arm of the person he's embracing.

The goal, it appears, is to establish a geographic zone and bring his counterpart into it.

Trump almost always initiates, with a semi-open palm thrust at his counterpart. Often, his eyes dart not to the person across from him but down at his hand itself ― an early hint at where the drama will be.

When the gesture is joined, Trump clasps firmly and tugs violently inward. Sometimes, he motions up and down but frequently he will use a lumberjack approach (back and forth).

Occasionally, he'll twist his counterpart's hand in odd directions or use his free hand fortify the clasp. Rarely does he let go first.

Unexpected recipients often seem stunned. Some, like Abe, show visible relief when it ends. And those who prepare in advance recognize it for what it is: an overt power play.

"It's an intimidation tactic. There are self-preservation strategies and intimidation is one of the main ones," said Frank Bernieri, an associate professor in the psychology department at Oregon State University, who has written on the influence of the handshake.

"This is perfectly consistent with Trump. He pretty much says that's what I do to make a deal.". Handshakes were not invented as vehicles to exhibit dominance. In their earliest depictions, they were seen as means of sealing alliances and exhibiting intimacy.

Research says that handshakes can leave lasting impressions about a person's conscientiousness and that different variables can affect the efficacy of the handshake. What is less agreed upon is the ability of handshakes to assert authority.

The handshake as a power move has been mythologized in film and popularized in the world of business. But some researchers say that as a practical matter, it doesn't actually work.

"Such attempts would usually be ineffective because the main point of a handshake is to establish a sense of mutuality and mutual respect," emailed Howard Friedman, editor-in-chief of the Journal of Nonverbal Behavior and a professor in the psychology department at the University of California, Riverside.

"[S]omeone who uses or attempts to use such a power or intimidation handshake either 1) already has the power and would also simultaneously be employing other status signals like elevated height, invasive touching, higher-status clothing, and other dominance cues from face, voice, gaze, and posture; or 2) is misjudging the likely reactions of the other person and/or the audience," Friedman said.

Trump doesn't abide by this theory. His handshakes are clear attempts to assert alpha dominance.

Take when Trump greeted Tajikistan president Emomali Rahmon. In this incident, Rahmon played the role of the aggressor, grabbing and shaking Trump's hand in the same manner as Trump did with Macron.

What impressed Dolcos is what came next. Instead of pulling away ― which is the natural inclination ― Trump stepped closer in.

Doing so allowed his arm to once again be torqued, which, in turn, allowed him to re-establish physical control and affirm his stature within Rahmon's own orbit. It was a "rebalance of the power play," as Dolcos put it.

"It is a little bit of body rotation so it looks natural.". Those close to Trump say they don't believe he rehearses these moments. But Dolcos suspects that he does.

The patterns are so apparent and the gestures so demonstrable that it seems only natural that Trump has thought them through. That's true even in instances where there is no handshake at all.

At an earlier stop in his trip abroad, Trump met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. After the two sat for the camera, Netanyahu stood up first and offered his hand. Trump ignored the gesture, walking the other way.

Observers assumed that Trump either didn't notice his counterpart or got lost in the moment. Dolcos had a different theory.

"It is another way of establishing rank, which is that he is the one initiating," he said. "'I'm not going in when you initiate.

I'm probably ignoring it and then I'll come back. This is now when we are doing this. Not when you initiate it.'".

The most curious part of Trump's handshake is that he reportedly hates shaking hands. He has called such greetings "barbaric" and "one of the curses of American society." He is a rumored germaphobe who dispenses Purell sanitizer.

And yet, despite those hesitations, Trump entered a field where the handshake is even more fundamental than in the world of business. Politics is built on handshakes.

Neil Makhija was a body man for Joe Sestak when the Democrat ran unsuccessfully in 2010 for the Senate in Pennsylvania.

He recalled how his boss would weave back-and-forth, side to side during July 4th parades instead of walking down the middle of the street. He wanted to shake every hand he could touch.

"There is a tendency among politicians that if you reach a voter they will kind of see the light," Makhija said. "You think the more people you touch, the more likely you will win.".

Makhija went on to become an advance man for Vice President Joe Biden and, once again, handshaking found its way into his portfolio. Whenever Biden would meet a politician or dignitary, his aides would game plan the meeting, including that initial greeting.

"There is no question that when you have an advance team for the White House, every single detail is discussed in terms of where the shake is going to happen, what is the backdrop and what's behind you and all these things," said Makhija.

Unlike Biden or Sestak, Trump doesn't see the handshake as a means of establishing cordiality or mutuality with his counterpart. He doesn't conceive of it as means of winning votes or facilitating diplomacy.

He imagines it as a display of alpha-ness. This makes him unique among U.S. presidents and a marvel for the YouTube age. Then again, what else would one expect from Donald Trump?.

"If we are talking about his handshake, it is kind of analogous to us talking about him when he takes his finger and says, 'You're fired,'" said Nunberg.

"There is nobody who is a better showman and more cognizant of the optics than I've ever worked with than him.". Do you have information you want to share with HuffPost? Here's how.

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