Thứ Bảy, 14 tháng 10, 2017

Youtube daily US Oct 14 2017

*laughing* C: Hi *laughing* hello

P: hello *laughing*

C: okay okay

P: We're doing a haircut vlog/get to know me tag, and I'll just be reading and recording while she's cutting my hair

C: okay. this is how long her hair is right now *shows hair* P: okay yeah

C: And she wants a (together) shoulder length P: why? I'm going through crisis

*laughs*

C: Okay P: okay, and I'm gonna have her cut my bangs shorter because they're a little bit long

C: okay

C: Are you ready

P: uh.. oh also apologise for my bad skin

But yeah, okay, so I'm just gonna be reading random questions. You can just go at it. C: okay i will. hold on

P: here

C: oh i'm so nervous

Okay P: you'll be fine. we'll be fine

P: Okay, well we can introduce ourselves i guess. my name is Priscilla Yang

uh i'm 20. I'm a junior in college

Christine

C: Sorry what, oh, I'm Christine. I'm a sophomore in college

and

as of now I'm studying biochem, but that may change P: I'm doing Japanese but

I'm not the greatest. I'm doing languages. I also did French C: mm-hmm P: and I'm also studying Korean is my head crooked

C: uhhh

no it's kind of uneven but i'll fix it

P: okay I trust you C: okay. P: Where are you putting this hair

P: *C laughing* okay you need to see this. shieetttt

P: Oh, it doesn't look bad

C: I actually really like it

P: yeah other than my huge shoulders, but anyway, let's let's do the get to know me

Are you named after anyone? Me? my dad says

I was named after the Priscilla in the Bible, but I don't believe him because my mom says he named me after his ex-girlfriend, so

C: oh why *p laughing*

P: I don't know, but anyway were you named after anyone Christine? C: uh I was named after my dad his name was Chris

so they add just added the -tine at the end there's nothing like that special (i cut that out on accident whoops)

P: If you were another person would you be a friend of yourself?

I think I would be I don't like to say like to praise myself or whatever

But I think I'm pretty nice. C: I guess it depends like

what mood i'm in you know

P: So, would you or would you not be a friend of yourself? C: um yeah I would

P: Okay

C: Not to sound like cocky or anything P: no I would too - would you do use sarcasm a lot? I do sadly

I need to work on it. C: I do too. I feel like everyone does

P: I think- yeah. where were you born? I was born in California and

Christine? C: I was born in Malaysia. I came here when I was one

P: Do you have any siblings? I have four. I have two sisters and two brothers C: I'm an only child

P: *so sad*

How tall are you?

I am 5'5" C: I'm 5'4" she beat me by one inch

P: I think I'm 5'5". I feel like I'm 5'4" actually. I don't know

C: Just add like a quarter. makes everything better P: i'm 5'4" 3/4

um

How many countries have you visited? only one I've only been to Canada and that was back when I was 10 so 10 years ago

Wow this hair

C: Well since I was born in Malaysia already been in a different country and

I went to Scotland a couple years ago for like Orchestra. *laughs* you look so washed out

P: *laughs* I know it's because of this rain weather

Okay

What was your favorite subject in school, and what was your least favorite? my favorite was band

And my least favorite was math

C: my favorite was

Orchestra and history. my least favorite was math calculus specifically

P: What sports, did you play or do you play?

I peaked in middle school. in middle school, I did basketball and volleyball

When I was a kid I did gymnastics, but now I don't do anything C: like I used to do volleyball and track

But now I- like in high school. I traded it for drama. I like did all that stuff in middle school

P: Yeah, so we're kinda the same. C: yeah

P: Mmm your favorite color

Mine is green C: mine's blue. I used to have blue hair, but P: I also used to have green hair, but now it's on the table

*squeaky laugh*

C: No we should just tie it and give it to Takeru be like "here you go." P: GIFT. thank you for letting us use your scissors

Cats or dogs? dogs

*laughs* cats or dogs? C: dogs. sorry i was concentrating

P: Do you have a favorite book?

C: I used to be obsessed with Twilight when I was younger P: yeah C: but hmm probably

Great Expectations

That was a pretty good book. Yeah. I like read it when I was in English class in high school

P: I also was obsessed with Twilight

C: *laughs* Team Edward? Team Jacob?(whoops didn't hear, but def Team Jacob)

P: But I'm gonna say something cliche and go with Harry Potter C: yeah

wow priscilla keep making that noise

*blows hair off phone*

P: single or taken? P: single C: single

*trying to laugh our loneliness away*

P: Your favorite movie? I don't really watch movies actually C: yeah

P: Do you have favorite movie?

C: ummm

I think "there will be blood" was one of my favorites

When I took film class- it's one of the movies we watched

You guys should check it out if you haven't seen it yet

P: Favorite TV shows?

I.. I don't really watch TV but I watch

I used to watch anime - recently i haven't even been watching anime- but I used to watch it a lot

I would say like Naruto. typical. C: Uh mine would be Breaking Bad

What was another one? Riverdale. I got into that recently P: oh really? C: yeah

Like I told you it was like pretty intense. P: Oh. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, you did

C: Um Ao Haru Ride (Blue Spring Ride). That's anime

C: I need to like section it off

I really like it. P: I like it too actually C: I still need to like work on it, but P: it's okay. I like it

P: Um future plans YouTube wise? we're planning on just being a like an everything channel. C: mhm It's more of a hobby

P: Yeah

Like a hobby

So like we're just going to be doing whatever we want to kind of so we're we're planning to do muk-

Mukbangs also. is that how you pronounce it?

Yeah, and like maybe makeup not tutorials, but just like here's how I do this makeup *because i can't do makeup*

C: yeah stuff like that

P: For myself personally, maybe not so many vlogs just cuz like my life is boring. okay, I guess we'll come back

When she's done

C: okay P: bye bye

we'll work on it yalls haha. subbed by pris. thanks for watching!!

here's the potato-quality before and after through snapchat vids

please bear with me! i'll make a better outro and intro soon

For more infomation >> Get to Know Us Tag + Haircut Vlog - Duration: 8:05.

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Afghan Air Force Receives Black Hawk Helicopters From US - Duration: 0:57.

For more infomation >> Afghan Air Force Receives Black Hawk Helicopters From US - Duration: 0:57.

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Trump reveals US will Decertify Iran Nuclear Deal see cnn news - Duration: 4:56.

Morning president Trump offered a different stance on Puerto Rico I

Went to Puerto Rico, and I met with the president of the Virgin Islands and these are people that are

Incredible people they've suffered

Gravely, and we'll be there. We're gonna be there. We have really it's it's not even a question of a choice

We don't even want a choice. We're going to be there's Americans that we love those people and what they've gone through

What a difference a day makes it was just yesterday

He tweeted we cannot keep FEMA the military and first responders who have been amazing under the most difficult

I'm gonna stop and let's listen to the president

My fellow Americans as

president of the United States

My highest obligation is to ensure the safety and security of the American people

History has shown that the longer we ignore a threat

the more dangerous

That threat becomes for this reason upon taking office

I've ordered a complete strategic review of our policy toward the rogue

regime in Iran

That review is now complete

Today I am announcing our strategy

along with several major steps we are taking to

confront the Iranian regime's

Hostile actions and to ensure that Iran never and I mean never

Acquires a nuclear weapon

Our policy is based on a clear-eyed assessment of the Iranian dictatorship

In

1996 the regime directed another bombing of American military housing in Saudi Arabia

murdering 19 Americans in cold blood

Iranian proxies

provided training to

operatives who were later involved in al-qaeda's bombing

of the American embassies in Kenya

Tanzania and two years later killing 224 people and

wounding more than

4,000 others

the regime harbored high-level terrorists in the wake of the 9/11 attacks

including Osama bin Laden's son

In Iraq and Afghanistan and groups supported by Iran have killed hundreds of what I have said many times

The Iran deal was one of the worst and most one-sided

Transactions the United States has ever entered into

The same mindset that produced this deal is

responsible for years of terrible trade deals that have sacrificed

So many millions was physically loaded onto an airplane and flown into Iran

Just imagine the sight of those huge piles of money being hauled off by the Iranians

waiting at the airport for the cash I

wonder where all

The time as we have seen in North Korea the longer we ignore a threat

the worse that threat becomes

It is why we are

Determined that the world's leading sponsor of terrorism will never obtain

nuclear weapons in this effort we stand in total solidarity with the Iranian regime's

longest suffering victims lizz ation its cooperation

with its neighbors

We hope that these new measures directed at the Iranian dictatorship will compel the government

To re-evaluate its pursuit of terror at the expense of its people we hope that our

actions today will help bring about a future of peace stability and prosperity in the Middle East a

future where sovereign nations respect each other and their own

Citizens we pray for a future. We're young children

American and Iranian

Muslim Christian and Jewish

Can grow up in a world free from violence

hatred and terror and

Until that blessed day comes we will do what we must to keep

America safe

Thank you. God bless you and God bless america. Thank you

Big deal the President of the United States that President Trump

For more infomation >> Trump reveals US will Decertify Iran Nuclear Deal see cnn news - Duration: 4:56.

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U.S. has eyes on North Korea's possible underground facilities near DMZ - Duration: 0:42.

The U.S. Army is checking areas near the heavily-fortified Demilitarized Zone for possible signs of underground

tunnels dug by North Korea.

U.S.-based website, Defense News says... top U.S. military officials who were recently

in South Korea showed great interest in enhancing electronic warfare capabilities both in the

skies and on the ground.

The officials said the U.S. Army is doing its best to analyze North Korea's underground

facilities where the regime stores missiles, artillery and ammunition.

The U.S. hopes to use electronic band waves to paralyze the operation of North Korean

army units.

For more infomation >> U.S. has eyes on North Korea's possible underground facilities near DMZ - Duration: 0:42.

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Trump refers to US Virgin Islands governor as President - Duration: 1:22.

Trump refers to US Virgin Islands governor as President

For more infomation >> Trump refers to US Virgin Islands governor as President - Duration: 1:22.

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The University of Alabama: It's On Us (2017) - Duration: 0:45.

SPEAKER 1: As a member of the University of Alabama

community,

SPEAKER 2: I will pursue knowledge,

SPEAKER 3: act with fairness, integrity, and respect,

SPEAKER 4: promote equity and inclusion,

SPEAKER 5: foster individual and civic responsibility,

SPEAKER 6: and strive for excellence in all I do.

SPEAKER 7: And as a member of the University of Alabama

community,

SPEAKER 8: it's on us,

SPEAKER 9: all of us,

SPEAKER 10: to prevent sexual assault and domestic abuse,

SPEAKER 11: to promote a culture of respect,

SPEAKER 12: to stand up for our friends.

SPEAKERS 3 and 13: It's on us.

SPEAKER 14: We are one team.

One Bama.

SPEAKER 15: It is our responsibility

to be more than a bystander,

SPEAKER 16: to step in to say something, to do something.

SPEAKER 17: It's on us to hold one another accountable.

SPEAKER 18: What happens here affects all of us.

SPEAKER 19: And it's on all of us to stop sexual assault.

SPEAKERS 1, 8, 12 and 15: It's on us.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

For more infomation >> The University of Alabama: It's On Us (2017) - Duration: 0:45.

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kara & mon-el [what about us] - Duration: 1:20.

You know, you look beautiful,

with the weight of all these worlds on your shoulder.

Nothing stopping us.

- Which makes you? - The Prince.

I can't trust you.

No. It's over.

Maybe being Supergirl and having you is enough.

I should've said it before.

I love you.

Just be here with me.

You came after me.

Every time.

Are you okay?

I'm so much better now.

I'm so sorry I lied to you.

I forgive you.

This will keep you safe.

John, I can't lose him.

I love you.

For more infomation >> kara & mon-el [what about us] - Duration: 1:20.

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Earthquake 'takes out' North Korea's biggest nuke site - Duration: 3:12.

Earthquake 'takes out' North Korea's biggest nuke site

Kim So-gu Tremors, landslides and the latest H-bomb blast have destroyed key parts of the region and the Punggye-ri nuclear site may be abandoned, experts claim.

The stunning development comes hours after a 2.7 magnitude quake was detected on Friday near the weapons lab. It was the latest of three shocks to stun the region following the nuke test, which caused a 6.3 magnitude earthquake.

The blast was large enough that residents in China, some 125 miles away, felt the ground shake beneath them. SHAKEN: Kim will be furious at the news.

READY: South Korean marines are ready to take Kim out.

Kim So-gu, head researcher at the Korea Seismological Institute said: "The explosion from the Sept 3 test had such power that the existing tunnels within the underground testing site might have caved in.

"I think the Punggye-ri region is now pretty saturated. If Pyongyang goes ahead with another test in the area, it could risk radioactive pollution." The site was originally chosen as the area rarely felt tremors.

Hong Tae-kyung, a earth science boffin at Yonsei University said: "The reason why Pyunggye-ri has become North Korea's nuclear testing field is because this area was considered stable and rarely saw earthquakes in the past.

"The recent small quakes suggest that the test might have triggered crust deformation.".

PRIMED: The Donald will see the destruction as the site as karma.

CHUFFED: Kim personally watched his previous missile tests. If true the development will be a be major blow to Kim's nuke ambitions and may force him to carry out tests above ground.

The tubster has previously bragged he will launch deadly bombs at the the US and its allies, killing millions.

Arms experts say blowing up a nuclear-tipped missile over the Pacific Ocean, while seen as the logical final step to prove the success of its weapons programme, would be extremely provocative and carry huge risks.

For more infomation >> Earthquake 'takes out' North Korea's biggest nuke site - Duration: 3:12.

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Come Work With Us | Texas Department of Insurance - Duration: 3:06.

I've been here at the agency for 23 years.

15 years.

7 1/2 years.

6 years.

15 years.

If I've been here 25 plus years it's a great place to work.

We hire good people.

Once you're here, you're here to stay.

I know it's kind of cliche to say that the workplace is a family but we kind of are.

You spend so much your time at the office.

We get to hear about what everyone else has going on in their lives.

The friendships that I've developed here has made my job even easier.

I wake up in the morning, and I'm excited to go to work.

I enjoy helping people, and there's plenty of opportunity with that.

My job is ever-evolving. That first time that I log in to my email, it's always like,

"Oh, okay what am I going to see today?"

It's really nice to work with people that are very educated and knowledgeable about what we do here at

the agency. So I have the opportunity to absorb as much as I can.

I think I got the job that was just perfect for me.

I can make a difference in people's lives, which I couldn't do at other places.

Yes, I could have gone to a private sector job but I don't feel like I would have been taken care of

if I was anywhere else. And I am forever grateful for TDI.

An employer that has a heart.

We care about the employee just as much as we care about

the employee doing the work.

Working for the state of Texas is absolutely, in my opinion, the way to go.

Vacation time, your sick time, your insurance.

After ten years you're vested that means you have health insurance for life.

We have a program, right. A "Get Active" program.

And you get the opportunity earn more vacation by

participating in fitness events or challenges.

There are a variety of jobs here at TDI.

There's a ton of jobs out there. There's stuff for us all.

We have jobs in HR, Consumer Protection, the Outreach Program,

State Fire Marshal's office is under us so that's really cool. We have fire marshals here. We have K9 units.

Working with injured workers, attorneys are here, Government Relations,

insurance specialists, teams of Fraud Investigators, inspectors who work in the

Windstorm area along the Gulf Coast.

We have people all over the state.

You can, like I do, travel a lot. You've got opportunities to grow.

It's all up to you it's a great starting point

Come and work for TDI.

You would love working at TDI.

I don't think that you're gonna find a more welcoming, challenging, fun place to

walk in the front door every morning.

This is where I'm gonna end my career. I love it!

For more infomation >> Come Work With Us | Texas Department of Insurance - Duration: 3:06.

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New Audio Reveals What US Diplomats Heard in Cuba - Duration: 0:53.

For more infomation >> New Audio Reveals What US Diplomats Heard in Cuba - Duration: 0:53.

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US develops GLOBAL STRIKE missile system ahead of ultimate WW3 showdown with North Korea - Duration: 3:09.

US develops GLOBAL STRIKE missile system ahead of ultimate WW3 showdown with North Korea

Russian Defence Ministry US supremo Donald Trump approved the massive build-up of the superpower's weaponry as he prepares for a deadly clash with North Korean tyrant Kim Jong-un.

The advanced prompt global strike system works by firing missiles anywhere on earth and would be used to deal mighty blows to enemy military forces. Its speed is similar to existing nuclear forces, which can deal mass destruction within 60 minutes.

SHOW OF FORCE: The Donald is going all-out to Kill Kim.

THAAD: Super weapons have been deployed in South Korea.

But, the move has spooked off-on rival Russia, which declared Trump wanted to "ruin the current balance of power". A Russian Defence Ministry spokesman said it could push other nations to upgrade and build up their own arsenals.

He added: "When not equipped with nuclear weapons, these systems are meant to carry out the same tasks as the strategic nuclear forces.

"If a strike is delivered on the Russian and Chinese strategic nuclear forces' facilities, the efficiency of the US anti-ballistic missile system will improve.

PREPARED TO DIE: Millions of North Koreans would give their lives for the fat tyrant.

HUGE: Kim is ready to take on The Donald with his massive army.

"So the development of prompt global strike systems once again proves Washington's wish to ruin the current balance of power and ensure the US global strategic dominance." The former Cold War enemies have had an uneasy relationship since the late 1980s and have clashed over how best to deal with Pyongyang.

Trump has been keep to supply billions of dollars' worth in military equipment to ally South Korea if war becomes a reality. He has even threatened to "destroy" North Korea if chubby Kim continued to provoke the US.

But hard man Vladimir Putin has argued that both countries should pursue a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

For more infomation >> US develops GLOBAL STRIKE missile system ahead of ultimate WW3 showdown with North Korea - Duration: 3:09.

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US Offering $12M Bounty for 2 Hezbollah Leaders - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> US Offering $12M Bounty for 2 Hezbollah Leaders - Duration: 1:02.

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The Simple Discovery That Let Us Fly Faster Than the Speed of Sound - Duration: 3:48.

Modern day fighter jets can travel faster than the speed of sound without breaking a

sweat, but until, 70 years ago on October 14 of 1947; no human had ever traveled that

fast.

Those who came close saw their aircraft become uncontrollable, or shake themselves to pieces,

leading some to believe that manned flight faster, than the speed of sound, was impossible.

There seemed to be a "sound barrier."

And we wanted to break it.

You may be wondering why the speed of sound is important in aviation at all, and to understand

that you have to remember what sound is in the first place.

Watching a wave travel down a slinky is a good visualization.

In a gas, sound travels as a longitudinal wave, meaning that it propagates when air

molecules bunch together and then space out again.

Watching a wave travel down a slinky is a good visualization.

[pause]

As planes fly through the air, they create sound waves.

But if the planes go fast enough, they start to catch up with their own sound waves.

Air molecules get rammed into each other faster than they can get out of the way, and the

waves pile up to form a powerful shock wave -- that famous sonic boom observers hear when

a supersonic jet goes by.

But, the sudden and extreme air pressure is just the start.

As the air behind the shock wave breaks up in a turbulent wake, it can swirl and violently

slap at different parts of the plane, causing buffeting and increased drag.

For the airplanes of old, this was bad news.

First, there was the problem of the propulsion system.

As a propeller spins, the tips of the blades can actually break the sound barrier.

When that happens, the air starts swirling and increasing drag, and the prop's efficiency

drops.

Maybe these problems could be overcome with a radically different propeller design, but

by the end of WWII, rockets had advanced and the jet engine had been invented, so there

wasn't much point trying to force the poor propeller to do a job it wasn't suited for.

Even with the jet engine replacing old propellers, there was another problem to overcome at speeds

close to the speed of sound: the wings.

Wings on old aircraft were straight as a 2x4 and when we were puttering around at subsonic

speeds, they worked just fine.

But when airplanes are right around that magical sound barrier, at what's known as transonic

speeds, the airflow over straight wings does something you might not expect.

Namely, it actually goes faster than the speed of sound.

This makes sense when you consider how a wing fundamentally works.

They've got that curved shape on top to make the air on that side travel faster.

But if the air on top of the wing goes faster than the speed of sound it'll form, you

guessed it, a shock wave.

And just like before, the air behind that shock wave gets all turbulent as it expands,

increasing drag dramatically and maybe even separating airflow from the wing's surface

altogether.

Which is bad.

So, the solution was as simple as it was genius: sweep the wings back.

By placing the wings at an angle, some of the air travels down the wingspan, and the

rest accelerates across the wing more slowly, so the aircraft can fly faster before running

into the problems of a shock wave on the wing.

That means the fighter jet doesn't have to work as hard to break through the sound

barrier completely, and when it does shock waves that form on top of the wing travel

to the trailing edge where they cause less drag.

With powerful jet engines and swept wings, the sound barrier that once seemed so solid

is now routinely smashed.

It makes you wonder what other things that seem impossible today will be routine in the

future.

For more epic stories of innovation that shaped our future, check out TheAgeOfAerospace.com

If you liked this video I vote you go ahead and subscribe.

Did you know it's possible to create something like a sonic boom but with light waves?

No?

Trace explains how, here.

What's the next big innovation you'd like to see in flight?

Low earth orbit passenger routes?

Affordable supersonic transport?

Wider arm rests?

Let us know in the comments and I'll see you next time on Seeker.

For more infomation >> The Simple Discovery That Let Us Fly Faster Than the Speed of Sound - Duration: 3:48.

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"This Is Us"-Chrissy: Mit Wahnsinns-Stimme haut sie alle um - Duration: 2:10.

For more infomation >> "This Is Us"-Chrissy: Mit Wahnsinns-Stimme haut sie alle um - Duration: 2:10.

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What traveling abroad can teach you about U.S. history - Duration: 3:15.

JUDY WOODRUFF: Journalist Suzy Hansen grew up in a small town in New Jersey, before moving

first to New York City and later to Turkey, where she now works as a foreign correspondent.

What she discovered, as you will hear in tonight's In My Humble Opinion, is how living abroad

forced Hansen to reconsider what she thought she knew about her own country.

SUZY HANSEN, Foreign Correspondent; Ten years ago, I moved to Istanbul to become a foreign

correspondent.

I had only been there a month before someone called me a spy.

He was a young Turkish man.

He had gone to a very good college in the United States, and he was a brilliant person.

So, I was a little surprised that he would repeat that kind of cliche about Americans

abroad.

And he said: "Why not?

Even if you are not technically a spy, no doubt that the information you are sending

back to your country will be used for something terrible."

I didn't understand what he meant by that, really.

But then he said something else that surprised me even more.

He said that he believed the Americans had planned September 11, that there was no way

that the world's most powerful country could have let such a thing happen.

"You have got to be kidding," I said.

"You really believe that conspiracy theory?"

And he said: "You Americans use that phrase so dismissively, but it is the rest of us

who have been victims of your conspiracies."

He was talking about the Cold War.

He was talking about history.

These kinds of exchanges, these conversations kept happening in my first years abroad, in

Turkey, in Greece, in Egypt, or Afghanistan.

In Greece, in 2009, I had been sent to cover the financial crisis, and there, I was interviewing

dozens of people, asking, hey, what happened here?

I always framed my questions to foreigners in the supposedly tough journalist kind of

way: What did you do to your country?

How did you end up in this place?

I realized there was something accusatory in these types of questions.

Essentially, what I was saying was, when will you ever get it together?

When will you become more like us?

And more often than not, the Greeks from all different backgrounds said to me: Well, if

we want to talk about how this crisis happened in Greece, we actually need to start with

1946 or 1949, and the Greek civil war, and the American intervention.

You know.

They always assumed I know what they were talking about, because this history, our shared

history, was part of them, part of their identities and their world views.

What the Greeks considered an American intervention, meanwhile, I had known as the Truman Doctrine.

Other than that, I had never known the United States wielded such heavy influence in Greece.

That history wasn't at all part of me.

It was more than two years before I really felt confident really enough to write for

major publications about Turkey.

I traveled the region.

I had many more conversations with foreigners.

In the process, my world view was changing radically.

It felt sometimes even as if my brain was physically changing.

In those first years abroad, I saw that we Americans were actually engaged in an intimate

relationship with people all over the world, one that we knew very little about, and, even

if we did, it was certainly not at all the whole story.

Before I could write about another country, I realized I first had to understand my own.

For more infomation >> What traveling abroad can teach you about U.S. history - Duration: 3:15.

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Trump Doesn't Know What He's President Of - Duration: 4:10.

>>TODAY DON'T TRUMP SPOKE AT THE VALUES VOTERS SUMMIT, THIS IS

THE FIRST TIME A SITTING PRESIDENT HAS SPOKEN AT IT.

THERE ARE REASONS FOR THAT, SINCE IT'S AN ANTI-GAY AND IN

MANY WAYS ANTIWOMAN GATHERING, YOU WILL LOVE HIS COMMENTARY,

BUT I WANT TO TOUCH ON ONE THING HE SAID FIRST.

HE WAS TALKING

ABOUT THE DISASTER RELIEF EFFORT THAT IS ONGOING, HIM TRAVELING

TO TEXAS AND PUERTO RICO, AND HE ALSO SAID HE TRAVELED TO THE

VIRGIN ISLANDS, WHICH OF COURSE WERE DESTROYED IN A WAY THAT

EVEN OTHER HARD-HIT AREAS WERE NOT, AND HE WENT THERE AND HE

SPOKE TO THEIR LEADER, THE PRESIDENT OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS.

WHICH IS ODD BECAUSE HE'S THE PRESIDENT OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS,

SINCE IT'S AN UNINCORPORATED TERRITORY OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS.

THAT IS WORRYING, THAT HE WENT THERE AND DIDN'T SEEM TO KNOW

WHO HE WAS THAT HE WAS SPEAKING TO, THEY HAVE A GOVERNOR, NOT A

PRESIDENT, THAT'S WHAT PEOPLE ARE JOKING ABOUT, BUT MY FEAR IS

THAT IF HE THINKS THEY HAVE A PRESIDENT, DOES HE NOT KNOW THAT

WE ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR HAPPENS THERE?

CAN YOU REALLY TRUST HIS

DISASTER RELIEF EFFORTS IF HE THINKS THEY HAVE THEIR OWN FULLY

SEPARATE GOVERNMENT AND WE ARE THEIR ALLY OR SOMETHING

LIKE THAT?

>>WHAT DOES HE THINK IT SAYS THE U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS?

>>IT'S PRETTY STRAIGHTFORWARD.

ON THE OTHER HAND, I THINK HE

HAD TO GET WALKED THROUGH THE PUERTO RICO THING.

I'M SURE THEY

DID IT IN A WAY SO AS NOT TO PISS HIM OFF BUT I DON'T THINK

HE FULLY UNDERSTOOD, MR.

PRESIDENT, WE HAVE TO TAKE

CARE OF PUERTO RICO, THIS IS AMERICA.

>>JOHN, DOES HE NOT KNOW THAT THE VIRGIN ISLANDS ARE AN

AMERICAN TERRITORY, UNINCORPORATED -- ARE YOU

KIDDING ME?

OF COURSE HE DOESN'T KNOW.

>>UNLESS THERE IS A TRUMP PROPERTY THERE I DON'T

THINK HE COULD FIND THE VIRGIN ISLANDS.

>>CAN I JUST SAY ONE LAST THING?

DIES, JUST THINK ABOUT, OKAY, HE

DOESN'T KNOW, I KEEP USING THE TWO PROFESSIONS, PLUMBER OR

DENTIST, A PLUMBER IN NORTH CAROLINA, A DENTIST IN

CONNECTICUT, YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT THE CURRENT STATUS OF THE VIRGIN

ISLANDS IS, THAT'S FINE.

YOU ARE THE PRESIDENT, THE VIRGIN

ISLANDS HAVE BEEN AFFECTED, YOU ARE GOING TO TALK ABOUT IT, AND

IF YOU AREN'T SURE CAN YOU JUST DO 10 SECONDS OF HOMEWORK AND

ASK AN AIDE, YOU HAVE THOUSANDS OF THEM, WHAT IS THE DEAL WITH

THE VIRGIN ISLANDS?

HOW SHOULD I REFER TO THEIR LEADER?

MR.

PRESIDENT, YOU ARE THEIR LEADER, THAT'S THE GOVERNOR.

GREAT, THANK GOD YOU TOLD ME BEFORE THE CAMERAS ARRIVED.

HE DOESN'T CARE TO DO 10 SECONDS OF HOMEWORK.

>>MY QUESTION IS, HOW MANY TIMES DID HE REFER TO THE

GOVERNOR AS PRESIDENT AND NOBODY CORRECTED HIM?

>>THAT'S A GREAT POINT, THERE IS A WHOLE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES

THING GOING ON WITH TRUMP AND ONCE IN A WHILE WHEN HE STEPS IN

IT BIG TIME IN TERMS OF A PUBLIC RELATIONS THING, WHEN HE

SAYS SOMETHING THAT'S TOTALLY FUNKY, SHIT, WHAT DO WE DO

WITH THIS, I THINK THAT'S WHEN WE END UP, YOU KNOW --

>>THIS IS SCARY, THE VIRGIN ISLANDS IS DESTROYED, PUERTO

RICO, IT HAS BEEN WEEKS AND IT'S STILL IN HORRIBLE CONDITIONS,

THEY HAD TO PUT OUT A WARNING TO TELL PEOPLE NOT TO DRINK FROM

SEALED CONTAINERS IN SUPERFUND SITES BECAUSE OF THE

CONTAMINATION THROUGH TOXINS AND POTENTIALLY NUCLEAR STUFF, BUT

PEOPLE ARE HAVING TO DO THAT BECAUSE THERE IS NO WATER.

WEEKS

INTO THIS DISASTER AMERICAN CITIZENS ARE HAVING TO DRINK

TOXIC FLUIDS BECAUSE THEY DON'T WANT TO LITERALLY DIE OF

DEHYDRATION, AND WE HAVE A GUY WHO DOESN'T EVEN KNOW WHAT

TERRITORIES HE'S RESPONSIBLE FOR.

THERE ARE MORE CONSEQUENCES

AND HIGHER STANDARDS FOR ROCK STARS WHO SAY THE WRONG CITY

WHEN THEY OPEN A SHOW THAN THE PRESIDENT WHEN HE VISITS THE

GOVERNOR OF U.S. TERRITORY, THAT'S A SCARY STATE FOR US TO

BE IN.

For more infomation >> Trump Doesn't Know What He's President Of - Duration: 4:10.

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Gen. Barry McCaffrey: Donald Trump Could Lead U.S. To War With North Korea | The 11th Hour | MSNBC - Duration: 3:18.

For more infomation >> Gen. Barry McCaffrey: Donald Trump Could Lead U.S. To War With North Korea | The 11th Hour | MSNBC - Duration: 3:18.

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North Korea crisis: NATO allies prepare for ballistic missile attack in US-led naval drill - Duration: 3:28.

North Korea crisis: NATO allies prepare for ballistic missile attack in US-led naval drill

Eight countries trained to defend against ballistic missile attacks in the US-led 'Formidable Shield' exercise.

NATO has revealed 14 ships, 10 aircraft, and roughly 3,300 personnel from the UK, the US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the Netherlands were involved in the test.

It is the first time NATO allies have practised defending against unpredictable ballistic missiles. The exercise comes as the US ambassador to NATO, Kay Bailey, confirmed the to discuss a "collective response" against North Korea.

North Korea's despotic leader Kim Jong-Un has ramped up ballistic missile testing, threatening to destroy the US and telling neighbour Japan "you will never be safe".

Ms Bailey said that talks were in the "very early stages" to trigger Article 5 of the NATO founding treaty. This is the founding principle of the treaty that enshrines the notion of collective defence.

Ms Bailey said: "We believe it is a common threat. If it becomes a successful possibility it will not be just America, it will be a much more problematic situation and I think that is beginning to come to the forefront.

"Talks are in the very early stages.

There are so many steps that would have to be taken before we would get to that point and it would depend on what kind of attack it is, where it is." This is the first time Article 5 has been invoked since the September 11 attacks.

Images of the defensive drills, which aim to prepare allies for the eventuality of a ballistic missile attack, show missile launches designed to intercept enemy fire.

Soldiers watch on as the missiles launch in the Outer Hebrides, while further images show a Sea Hawk helicopter landing on a US vessel, and Scottish tug boats escorting war ships to training.

Britain's Defence Secretary, Sir Michael Fallon, said: "North Korean tests have shown the danger of rogue states developing longer range missiles.

  "By hosting this cutting-edge exercise in anti-missile defence with allied navies, Britain is at the forefront of developing a more effective response to this growing threat. " The exercise will continue until October 18.

For more infomation >> North Korea crisis: NATO allies prepare for ballistic missile attack in US-led naval drill - Duration: 3:28.

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WATCH OUT KIM: World's biggest nuclear submarine from US arrives on North Korea doorstep - Duration: 4:12.

WATCH OUT KIM: World's biggest nuclear submarine from US arrives on North Korea doorstep

The USS Michigan, the worlds biggest nuclear-powered ballistic missile sub, arrived at a naval base in Busan, South Korea carrying 150 Tomahawk cruise missiles.

With a length of 170.6 meters and 18,000-tonnes behind it, the vessel is the second Ohio-class nuclear-powered guided missile submarine in the US Navy.

The Navy said the Ohio-Class guided-missile submarine was making a routine visit during a regularly scheduled deployment to the region, in the second visit of its kind last year.

But the port call comes at a time of escalating tensions between the United States and , which has stepped up the pace of its nuclear weapons program and missile provocations amid fears of.

The 560-foot-long USS Michigan is armed to the teeth with tactical missiles and is capable of launching strikes and supporting missions by special operation forces, a statement said.

Its homeport is Bremerton, Washington, but the submarine is based in the US Pacific island territory of Guam - which has repeatedly been threatened by despot Kim Jong Un.

Brad Cooper, commander of Naval Forces Korea, said: "The US and South Korean navies have always enjoyed a strong relationship. "Today, our relationship is stronger than it has ever been and our ironclad partnership is further reinforced by this visit from Michigan.

"Michigan Sailors were warmly welcomed by the ROK Navy today and I know they'll receive the same wonderful welcome from the local community during their visit to Busan. During the visit sailors will experience the culture and history of South Korea as well as foster outstanding relations between the US Navy, Korean military and the local Busan community.

Captain Gustavo Gutierrez, Michigan's commanding officer, said: "Throughout this deployment, the crew has been extremely professional and dedicated. "Everyone on board is mission ready, and I'm proud of being their commanding officer.".

The smaller USS Tucson, which is capable of firing Tomahawk cruise missiles, made a port call last Saturday at the US base in Chinhae.

The US also has sent Guam-based B-1B bombers over the peninsula twice in recent weeks in a show of force amid speculation the North is preparing to conduct another ballistic-missile test.

And today's sub visit is only likely to stir the pot even more as the war of words between Donald Trump and Kim continues. The US President has threatened to "totally destroy" North Korea if forced to defend the US or its allies.

And Washington has agreed to deploy so-called strategic assets in and around South Korea on a more regular basis to provide better deterrence against the North.

For more infomation >> WATCH OUT KIM: World's biggest nuclear submarine from US arrives on North Korea doorstep - Duration: 4:12.

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US worried about North Korea's 'pretty good nuclear capability' amid World War 3 fears - Duration: 3:39.

US worried about North Korea's 'pretty good nuclear capability' amid World War 3 fears

White House Chief of Staff John Kelly said Americans should be concerned about North Korea's nuclear capability. According to Mr Kelly, Pyongyang.

He said: The American people should be concerned about a state that has developed a pretty good ICBM capability and is developing a pretty good nuclear re-entry vehicle.

I would believe, I think I speak for the administration, that that state simply cannot have the ability to reach the homeland.

For a missile to hit its target successfully it would have to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere without breaking up. The Chief of Staff's comments suggest that North Korea is close to achieving its goal.

Mr Kelly added: "Right now we think the threat is manageable but over time if it grows beyond where it is today, well, lets hope that diplomacy works..

It comes as South Korean and US military officers have spoken on the phone to discuss cooperation. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Jeong Kyeong-doo and his US counterpart, Joseph Dunford, spoke by phone.

Dunford stressed the US-South Korea alliance remains firm and their military relations will advance further, according to Jeong's office.

The phone call marks the third of its kind since Jeong took office in August. It comes following months of tensions with following tests of intercontinental ballistic missiles which were first tested in July.

Last month, the hermit kingdom tested a missile capable of reaching continental US. President Trump met with top defence officials on Tuesday to discuss his options.

In a statement, the White House said: This morning President Donald Trump met with members of his national security team to receive a briefing from Secretary of Defence James Mattis and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Joseph Dunford.

The briefing and discussion focused on a range of options to respond to any form of North Korean aggression or, if necessary, to prevent North Korea from threatening the United States and its allies with nuclear weapons..

After the meeting, the US flew two supersonic bombers over the Korean peninsula. Donald Trump's North Korea meeting was held in the situation room in the White House where US Presidents traditionally hold "war councils" at times of conflict.

The most senior US general recently told the American army to "stand ready" for war with North Korea.

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