Thứ Hai, 24 tháng 9, 2018

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In the next episode of LWIAY

* 2 memes die

Meme review

A long time ago memes lived together in harmony.

Then everything changed when Europe attacked.

Only the mememaster , master of all the memes

could stop the EU.

But when the world needed him the most he got copystricked.

I'm sorry , I messed up okay.

A hundred years past and my brother and i found the old mememaster back.

It was Pewdiepie.

But can you do this ...

I don't think so!

And although he gets demonitized alot...

I believe that Pewdiepie can stop the EU!

For more infomation >> Pewdiepie will save us from article 13 - Duration: 0:50.

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Disabilities -R-Us Dedication song--- turn on closed captioning (CC) to view lyrics - Duration: 12:03.

But Will They Have Known Me (I Will Always Be With You) Original lyrics and melody by BhindMask

There are many in this great big world So very few that I have learned to trust so many whose deepest dreams are as of yet unfilled so many years that I allowed merely to let rust-- But when this outer shell has left this plane Will they truly know who I once was? Will they choose to not see who I tried so hard to be- How I really was more than who they thought me to be...?

Will they have really known me? All the joy and pain so hidden deep inside? Or will they only have seen with limited senses…. The crusty,goofy,flirty, visible outside? Will they have ever really truly realized-- Just how much I needed and I wanted so to just...live? That when I finally found my purpose in this great universe Was just to love, to be accepted--to be loved and... to GIVE?

Will they ever truly know just how much I loved them? Each being in their own individual, special way Just how IMPORTANT EACH ONE WAS AND HOW SPECIAL-- EACH-- ONE WAS And how they truly brightened my... EVERY SINGLE DAY? Yes, I'll be there in every single song you ever hear Yes, I'll be with you always as you as you shed the cleansing tears Yes, I'll be in every written word that makes you laugh or smile

Yes! I'll be with you EVERYWHERE, WITH EVERY SINGLE MILE. And when my time this life has come and gone… Will they willingly and with love accept my fate Yet truly realize and have no doubt that I AM WITH THEM ALWAYS! Because one's physical death is only a gate? Will this deep passion I have within be my legacy.. One where I can know I've truly tried to give my very best?

That integrity and posi vibes were all hidden behind my mask I used all that I knew to use to be of worth & pass fate's test? This, then-- this is my eternal LEGACY TO ALL... The best I believe I can share with ALL and truly give-- Won't you follow my lead, and be the brightest star THAT YOU CAN BE For that's what its all about and what it really means to LIVE!

When you hear the music-- every lyric, every beat and every note May you always know this being is STILL sharing love with YOU And in the deepest, hidden part of your most inner being... FEEL! The grateful outer love and inner strength of which she wrote…. Yes, I'll be there in every single song you ever hear Yes, I'll be with you always as you as you shed the cleansing tears....

Yes, I'll be in every written word that makes you laugh or smile Yes! I'll be with you EVERYWHERE! EVERY SINGLE MILE! For so much of my life I felt stifled.. Allowed myself to semi-live by just limitations-- But then I drew upon the JOY found in my FELLOW MAN'S STRENGTHS-- And I learned to FEEL and USE their many good vibrations...

A dear friend of mine who was wise did once tell me... Conserve your strength to live the PASSIONS! that you have Let go the bad--live for today-- and hope for tomorrow-- And I gained such strength from those words… and I CHOSE to LET GO! of my demons…. and my inner sorrow! I'll be in every heartfelt song you hear and FEEL! In much of that you hear and read from spoken and printed word

And my spirit will SOAR! and watch over you from above As I finally fly higher... than e'en the birds! There's all sort of people, so many varied emotions deep inside... Some feel the joy, some because of their own anger have tried to bring me down.. But I've learned to gain my personal strength from their raw emotions-- And even as this outer shell weakens, my inner strength has grown!

This, then-- this is my eternal LEGACY to ALL The best I know I believe I can share with ALL and truly GIVE-- Won't you follow my lead, and be the brightest star that YOU can be! For that's what its all about and what it really means to LIVE! I can choose to live my my life in neg-a-tiv-ity Or I can choose to live to my life in attempts...to do my part...

To share the multitude of JOYS that can be found By inviting EVERYONE into this BURSTING, BEATING heart!!!

For more infomation >> Disabilities -R-Us Dedication song--- turn on closed captioning (CC) to view lyrics - Duration: 12:03.

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Haley contradicts Giuliani: US 'not looking to do regime change in Iran' - Duration: 1:47.

For more infomation >> Haley contradicts Giuliani: US 'not looking to do regime change in Iran' - Duration: 1:47.

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【アーカイブ#9】アラサーの夜な夜なLast of Us【VTuber】 - Duration: 2:13:06.

For more infomation >> 【アーカイブ#9】アラサーの夜な夜なLast of Us【VTuber】 - Duration: 2:13:06.

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Gặp Gái Ngành Trong DLC The Last Of Us | Mixigaming Stream Moment - Duration: 20:41.

For more infomation >> Gặp Gái Ngành Trong DLC The Last Of Us | Mixigaming Stream Moment - Duration: 20:41.

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U.S., North Korea having extended conversations about denuclearization: Pompeo - Duration: 0:50.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says the U.S. and North Korea are having "extended

conversations" about denuclearization,... such as particular nuclear facilities and

weapons systems.

Speaking to Fox News on Sunday, Pompeo said the Trump administration is working diligently

to achieve many outcomes regarding denuclearization,…adding negotiations are underway, although the details

have not been provided to the press.

South Korean news outlets are reporting that Pompeo's remarks suggests U.S. and North Korea

are conducting under-the-table negotiations about topics not covered in the Pyeongyang

Joint Declaration that was released during last week's inter-Korean summit.

However, Pompeo stressed that sanctions will remain in effect until denuclearization occurs.

For more infomation >> U.S., North Korea having extended conversations about denuclearization: Pompeo - Duration: 0:50.

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Vicky shows us his cooking, flirting & acting skills | Midnight Misadventures with Mallika Dua | Ep2 - Duration: 24:41.

You are the best, No..You are the best

You are the best... You are the best...

You are the worst

Who is the best then?

they are the best, who is they?

they! the guys who are watching us

You want to say anything to them?

ofcourse

Like and share this video and also subscribe to the channel

Rise by TLC

and take a shower ..Please

you too.. alone?

with me.. okay... bye

For more infomation >> Vicky shows us his cooking, flirting & acting skills | Midnight Misadventures with Mallika Dua | Ep2 - Duration: 24:41.

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Michael Moore Getting Kicked Out Of The US – His Fate Is In Conservatives Hands! - Duration: 5:35.

Michael Moore Getting Kicked Out Of The US – His Fate Is In Conservatives Hands!

Liberal film producer Michael Moore has gotten very wealthy off of bashing President Trump

and Republicans in general.

He has made a number of cringe-worthy documentaries and I am proud to say I have never watched

any of them.

Not a single one and I never, ever will.

I'm actually baffled how someone like Moore ever got wealthy to begin with.

Michael Moore's latest project, "Fahrenheit 11/9," definitely underwhelmed at the box

office.

The leftist said that he planned to flee to Canada if it bombed and there was a right-wing

backlash.

Wonder if he's packing?

Personally, I'd love to see him kicked out of the US.

If his fate is in the hands of conservatives, he's toast.

Moore's film compares President Trump to Adolf Hitler.

So trite and predictable.

What Moore lacks in imagination and talent he makes up for in hot air and girth.

It opened Friday and let's just say it was not a hit out there.

As I understand it, Moore is in Canada currently and was present for the premiere of the film

at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) that attracts the usual Hollywood suspects

every year.

"[Trump] absolutely hates democracy, and he believes in the autocrat, in the authoritarian,"

Moore mouthed off to the Canadian Press Wednesday.

He seems to think his latest so-called masterpiece might provoke a very hostile reaction from

his critics.

And lacking a backbone, stones or any shred of dignity, Moore declared to go north if

the pressure became too intense.

First off, no one cares.

No one.

As for retaliation, the only uprising against this pudgy Marxist would be people demanding

their money back after wasting it on watching his garbage.

"I want us to survive this, but I can't make any guarantees that that's what's

going to happen.

We're in a bad place.

We're on the precipice of some very awful stuff."

What a drama queen.

I think he has Trump and his supporters confused with the left here.

From The Daily Caller:

"Moore did not say whether his plan to move to Canada would entail declaring himself a

refugee at the border.

"Even with its über liberal prime minister, Justin Trudeau, and socialized medicine, Moore

acknowledges "Canada has a lot of problems.

You don't need an American to come here and tell you what your problems are.

But [don't] think for a second that you're anywhere near what we have to take care of

and correct."

"Fahrenheit 11/9" is an Apocalyptic view of America under Trump, depicting the U.S.

as a society sliding into authoritarian rule.

"Moore told the Canadian Press his ties to Canada include having a grandfather who

came from Ontario and his preference for using the Canadian-made Blackberry smartphone."

Snort.

What a maroon.

According to Variety, the documentary is expected to rake in $4 million on 1,700 screens nationwide,

below the anticipated $5 million and nowhere near the $8 million Moore's "Fahrenheit

9/11" pulled.

What I don't get is why it even makes $4 million.

There seem to be an awful lot of masochists out there.

More from The Daily Caller on this:

"Moore lauded Canada for is progressive ways and said his grandfather was born in

the Canadian province of Ontario.

"He told the Toronto Star that he hopes relocation won't be necessary because he

believes all is not lost for the U.S.

"One of the good things about us is we eventually come around.

The problem is we are slow learners.

Look at all these little things you guys [Canadians] do first.

Whether it's gay marriage or marijuana or whatever … we will follow you.

Eventually.

But it's got to be frustrating to look at it from afar, and to see how long it takes

us."

"Moore told the Star that he hopes "Fahrenheit 11/9" will affect voter choices in the upcoming

midterm elections but he is more enthusiastic about defeating Trump in the 2020 presidential

election.

"I think a lot of people came out to vote for Trump because he was different.

And Hillary was not different.

She was the same old thing," Moore told the Star.

"The Democrats are going to have to run a beloved American who is going to inspire

them to get out and vote if they're going to win.'"

I'm sure you've figured out by now that this is all hype on Moore's part.

He knows his tacky little film will never engender an uprising on the right.

He's trying to create drama around his pathetic video scree.

I think conservatives should tell Canada they can keep this guy.

Please, please take Michael Moore.

The Toronto Star says Canada is trying to lure Moore with the clever use of… chocolate

bars:

"Why can't I get some kind of papers?

As a back-up!

Can we get a campaign going in this country to fight on my behalf?

They don't have to give me a passport.

Just give me some kind of thing where I don't have to do a Handmaid's Tale run into this

country!"

"He admits his desire to be at one with Canada isn't entirely motivated by his intense

dislike of U.S. President Donald J. Trump, whose unlikely rise to power is examined and

excoriated in Fahrenheit 11/9, the inflammatory new Moore documentary that opens wide Friday.

"Seems Moore, 64, has long been jealous about our chocolate bars — especially Coffee

Crisp, which he can't obtain stateside.

"Man, what can we do to get Coffee Crisp in the United States?

What is wrong with us that we don't have that yet?

Something's wrong with that.

You also invented the Kit Kat.

When we would go to Canada to visit the relatives, they had these Kit Kats.

You have made contributions to the world!'"

ROFLMAO!

All we have to do is load Moore up with chocolate bars and he will stay away.

Works for me and worth every damn penny!

For more infomation >> Michael Moore Getting Kicked Out Of The US – His Fate Is In Conservatives Hands! - Duration: 5:35.

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Michael Moore Getting Kicked Out Of The US – His Fate Is In Conservatives Hands! - Duration: 6:03.

For more infomation >> Michael Moore Getting Kicked Out Of The US – His Fate Is In Conservatives Hands! - Duration: 6:03.

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Becca Dumps Jason On Fantasy Suite Date! | The Bachelorette US - Duration: 12:25.

There was a brief moment today, we're walking out of the temple

Where I

Said something about the future

and at first I said it just about myself and

Then I felt like I had to chime in and say it about us and when I did

Something felt a little off and

And they don't know what it is, I don't know what it was and

We have my one second, oh sure

I'm just questioning

What the hell's wrong with me? I don't have a great guy in front of me. Who's doing everything. I would want who's telling me?

Everything that I would want to hear

tells me that they love me I

Just want to shake myself and get this is what you've always wanted. What's wrong with you?

Oh my god, I hate myself. Yes, I could see a future with Jason, but I could see it more with carrot and Blake

And I don't think I would be seeing that just worrying

Feel terrible, but I just know what's right for me

It's all in for Jason, but I'm in love with two other men

And it's not fair to keep them around if I don't see us getting there idiot

Becca and I were having a conversation and

felt so awkward and

she

Asked to excuse yourself for a minute and got up. I don't know

What's going on?

and

I'm scared

I'm sorry, okay

Do you ask me how this has been for me and it has been very hard

It's been the most difficult thing I've ever done honestly in my entire life and

For the longest time I could see everything with you and

I

don't know what my problem is because

You have been the most amazing

Open person and he said that you've had your walls up, but I never once saw that I don't

But I can't

Put you through an overnight and me through an overnight if it's not a hundred percent there

I

Don't know I

Feel like part of this experience is

pushing the boundaries with

each relationship to see

What's there and how it's there? Mm-hmm, and that door shouldn't be closed unless you felt

So certain about it

Do I be remissed if I did ask but you're confident that you don't see a future of us

No, I'm not happy

I just I see it more with the other guys

If you still see a potential future with us and you see it more one of the other guys

What would stop you

From seeing what else is there because I would tell you

There's a reason I'm still here is

something behind what we have and I

Can't feel comfortable

Knowing that you say you might see it. But with the other guys right now more

Than what you'd see with us. Well, there's still so much time left to be had

I

Can't I don't even have an answer for you. I truly don't and that's what I hate the most about that. No

Yes, I can't even explain what I'm feeling. I can't

And I know exactly what it feels like to be blindsided

and I hate doing that to you or to anyone I

Just don't think we can get there at the end

Well, I appreciate your honesty they

Sort of understand where you're coming from and

It hurts it's painful it's that easy thing to

Digest but I

Came into this rooting for your happiness. I'll always leave rooting for your happiness. So I

hope

you find

I

Want you to like that too sure, I truly mean that no, I know I believe that

Can I let you know

I don't want you to look at coolest

You can imagine how I could be. All right. No, I know I know

But fine what you deserve shoes are the best, you know

I'm pretty shocked right now

Pretty shocked

I didn't see that coming

Booth sucks tough feeling

Tough feeling

Oh quick

Am I doing

He did not come

And it was so confused

And honestly in the situation all I can give him or anyone isn't even certainly couldn't even do that I

could

Even put in the words live feeling this way

You couldn't do it. I couldn't

Go through an overnight with him

If I know it's not

Then I don't know what is

Doing

And he's such a good good night

And I've dated terrible people in the boat, yes such a good person

Difficult

He's really comprehend I just don't have answers for the way once it ended

I really wish I had more

Long past but I know honestly

That's why I'm wondering like what's wrong with me

Like I literally just did what Ari did to me

Oh

Subscribe to our channel for more of the romance and drama from Becca's season of The Bachelorette!

For more infomation >> Becca Dumps Jason On Fantasy Suite Date! | The Bachelorette US - Duration: 12:25.

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U.S.-China trade war escalates as Trump administration's new tariffs take effect - Duration: 2:32.

Trade tensions are reaching fever pitch between the world's two economic superpowers.

Turning the screw even further on Beijing,... new U.S. tariffs on tens of billions of dollars

of Chinese goods took effect on Monday.

Ko Roon-hee reports.

The Trump administration's trade offensive against China has kicked up a gear,... after

new 10-percent tariffs on 200-billion U.S. dollars worth of Chinese goods came into effect

on Monday.

Combined with the existing 50 billion dollars of tariffs imposed on Beijing,... the move

means the United States now has tariffs on roughly half of the goods it imports from

China.

The new tariffs will directly affect American consumers as they are applied on more than

five-thousand-seven-hundred items,… including daily necessities like food, clothing, furniture,

and electronics.

The two sides remain oceans apart on reaching a resolution… as China announced earlier

its intent to retaliate on the same day… by imposing five to ten percent duties on

60 billion dollars worth of U.S. goods.

More than five-thousand-two-hundred products will be affected,… ranging from food to

liquefied natural gas.

A further escalation is already on the horizon because President Trump has indicated the

new 10-percent duties will rise to 25-percent in January 2019.

Moreover, he stated his administration would impose additional tariffs on approximately

267 billion dollars of additional imports if China chooses to retaliate.

Trade negotiations are also breaking down.

According to Reuters, U.S. officials revealed on Friday that no date has been set for further

trade negotiations with China.

Also, China recently canceled Vice Premier Liu He's visit to Washington,... during which

he was due to talk trade.

This comes as the Chinese government released white paper on Monday to explain its stance

on the intensifying trade friction with the U.S.

According to China's state-run Xinhua News Agency, the white paper said the trade relationship

between the two countries is significant for the world's economy.

It said some level of trade friction is natural….but stressed that enhancing mutual trust and promoting

cooperation is necessary.

Ko Roon-hee, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S.-China trade war escalates as Trump administration's new tariffs take effect - Duration: 2:32.

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U.S., North Korea having extended conversations about denuclearization: Pompeo - Duration: 0:49.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says the U.S. and North Korea are having "extended

conversations" about denuclearization,... such as particular nuclear facilities and

weapons systems.

Speaking to Fox News on Sunday, Pompeo said the Trump administration is working diligently

to achieve many outcomes regarding denuclearization,…adding negotiations are underway, although the details

have not been provided to the press.

South Korean news outlets are reporting that Pompeo's remarks suggests U.S. and North Korea

are conducting under-the-table negotiations about topics not covered in the Pyeongyang

Joint Declaration that was released during last week's inter-Korean summit.

However, Pompeo stressed that sanctions will remain in effect until denuclearization occurs.

For more infomation >> U.S., North Korea having extended conversations about denuclearization: Pompeo - Duration: 0:49.

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McDonnell tells Tories: 'get out of the way and let us get on' with Brexit - Duration: 1:46.

For more infomation >> McDonnell tells Tories: 'get out of the way and let us get on' with Brexit - Duration: 1:46.

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Syria's War: More Bodies of US, SDF Victims Discovered in Northeastern Syria - Duration: 1:39.

nearly a hundred corpses of civilians killed in the u.s. air raids and

offensives of the Washington backed Syrian democratic forces SDF were found

in Raqqa City on Sunday as some of 96 bodies of civilians killed in the US air

attacks and the SDF offensives on residential areas were discovered by the

members of Raqqa civil council team from under debris of ruined buildings near

the old Grand Mosque in Raqqa City the SDF SAR Tillery units had been carrying

out blind shelling of residential areas in Raqqa city when it was under ISIL

drool a field source said adding that a large number of people were killed in

the attacks and many more were injured who later died due to the acute lack of

medicine and medical equipment local sources in Raqqa reported on Wednesday

that nine more bodies of civilians killed in the us-led coalition attacks

were found in algae mili district in Raqqa City on Tuesday meantime the

Kurdish language hawa news quoted an official source in Raqqa Civil Council

team as saying that the corpses of over 2,600 people mostly women and children

have been unearthed in Al Rashid Stadium the city zoo alkyd in Great Mosque and

Alba do districts since the liberation of Raqqa last October who were mostly

buried by the ISIL in mass graves the bodies of civilians killed in the u.s.

airstrikes and the ISIL assaults are everyday discovered in mass graves and

under the ruins of buildings in different parts of Raqqa

For more infomation >> Syria's War: More Bodies of US, SDF Victims Discovered in Northeastern Syria - Duration: 1:39.

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Defense Tech #4: How US Plans To Make Sure the B-21, B-2 & B-52 Can Bomb Russia and China - Duration: 3:58.

For more infomation >> Defense Tech #4: How US Plans To Make Sure the B-21, B-2 & B-52 Can Bomb Russia and China - Duration: 3:58.

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Dollar Outlook Before And After US Midterms - 24 Sep 18 | Gazunda - Duration: 1:42.

For more infomation >> Dollar Outlook Before And After US Midterms - 24 Sep 18 | Gazunda - Duration: 1:42.

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Aston Martin quer superar Ferrari com avaliação de US$ 6,7 bi e SUV de luxo - Duration: 3:47.

For more infomation >> Aston Martin quer superar Ferrari com avaliação de US$ 6,7 bi e SUV de luxo - Duration: 3:47.

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The US Has An Extremely Strong Economy - 24 Sep 18 | Gazunda - Duration: 1:59.

For more infomation >> The US Has An Extremely Strong Economy - 24 Sep 18 | Gazunda - Duration: 1:59.

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The Road to Hollywood- Actress Vlog Across The U.S - Official Trailer - Duration: 1:46.

A year on the road without knowing what's gonna happen.

I am giving up my apartment, I'm selling all my stuff,

and I'm basically gonna be homeless for about a year.

Somebody please tell em who the eff I is.

My name is Maytal Angel. I am a New York City actress.

I am currently filming my acting challenge across the U.S.

From New York to Hollywood, but here's the catch-

I cannot advance to the next city unless I book something first.

I am couch surfing in strangers' apartments

I don't know where I'm gonna sleep next week or in a few days.

I'm documenting the journey, and this is my vlog

I don't know, I'm having a bad day... but I did book it.

I'm at second city now

Today sucked!

So I just went and crashed the audition.

The amazing Gary Grubbs

I see big things in your future.

Working with the awesome Ty Pennington

Ty Pennington

Always not knowing

It's really freaking hard

Life is amazing!

Where am !? where am I?

Who am I? Where am I? What am I? I don't even know...

This is how you do it in Miami, alright?

I'm in the Emergency Room.

We're on set.

OH MY GOD!!!

Constantly have to figure out where I'm gonna stay, how I'm gonna survive, and where to get that acting gig.

and thats a wrap.

I moved six times in two weeks!

I can't believe I'm moving to the Ritz Carlton!

Can't find anybody to host me this weekend.

gonna end up sleeping at the airport.

I'm not gonna sleep at the airport

People are good.

It's an amazing story!

So I'm gonna be on the news here!

Books have been written about this and you're doing it!

What is this all for?

I really don't know what to do next...

Insanity!

Pray for me...

I booked it!

So I booked that too!

I just booked my gig!

I'm in the paper!

Front page!!!

Good Luck on your trip to Hollywood.

You think I can make it to Hollywood?

No, I don't think, I know!

For more infomation >> The Road to Hollywood- Actress Vlog Across The U.S - Official Trailer - Duration: 1:46.

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How data is helping us unravel the mysteries of the brain | Steve McCarroll - Duration: 17:23.

Nine years ago,

my sister discovered lumps in her neck and arm

and was diagnosed with cancer.

From that day, she started to benefit

from the understanding that science has of cancer.

Every time she went to the doctor,

they measured specific molecules

that gave them information about how she was doing

and what to do next.

New medical options became available every few years.

Everyone recognized that she was struggling heroically

with a biological illness.

This spring, she received an innovative new medical treatment

in a clinical trial.

It dramatically knocked back her cancer.

Guess who I'm going to spend this Thanksgiving with?

My vivacious sister,

who gets more exercise than I do,

and who, like perhaps many people in this room,

increasingly talks about a lethal illness

in the past tense.

Science can, in our lifetimes -- even in a decade --

transform what it means to have a specific illness.

But not for all illnesses.

My friend Robert and I were classmates in graduate school.

Robert was smart,

but with each passing month,

his thinking seemed to become more disorganized.

He dropped out of school, got a job in a store ...

But that, too, became too complicated.

Robert became fearful and withdrawn.

A year and a half later, he started hearing voices

and believing that people were following him.

Doctors diagnosed him with schizophrenia,

and they gave him the best drug they could.

That drug makes the voices somewhat quieter,

but it didn't restore his bright mind or his social connectedness.

Robert struggled to remain connected

to the worlds of school and work and friends.

He drifted away,

and today I don't know where to find him.

If he watches this,

I hope he'll find me.

Why does medicine have so much to offer my sister,

and so much less to offer millions of people like Robert?

The need is there.

The World Health Organization estimates that brain illnesses

like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression

are the world's largest cause of lost years of life and work.

That's in part because these illnesses often strike early in life,

in many ways, in the prime of life,

just as people are finishing their educations, starting careers,

forming relationships and families.

These illnesses can result in suicide;

they often compromise one's ability to work at one's full potential;

and they're the cause of so many tragedies harder to measure:

lost relationships and connections,

missed opportunities to pursue dreams and ideas.

These illnesses limit human possibilities

in ways we simply cannot measure.

We live in an era in which there's profound medical progress

on so many other fronts.

My sister's cancer story is a great example,

and we could say the same of heart disease.

Drugs like statins will prevent millions of heart attacks and strokes.

When you look at these areas of profound medical progress

in our lifetimes,

they have a narrative in common:

scientists discovered molecules that matter to an illness,

they developed ways to detect and measure those molecules in the body,

and they developed ways to interfere with those molecules

using other molecules -- medicines.

It's a strategy that has worked again and again and again.

But when it comes to the brain, that strategy has been limited,

because today, we don't know nearly enough, yet,

about how the brain works.

We need to learn which of our cells matter to each illness,

and which molecules in those cells matter to each illness.

And that's the mission I want to tell you about today.

My lab develops technologies with which we try to turn the brain

into a big-data problem.

You see, before I became a biologist, I worked in computers and math,

and I learned this lesson:

wherever you can collect vast amounts of the right kinds of data

about the functioning of a system,

you can use computers in powerful new ways

to make sense of that system and learn how it works.

Today, big-data approaches are transforming

ever-larger sectors of our economy,

and they could do the same in biology and medicine, too.

But you have to have the right kinds of data.

You have to have data about the right things.

And that often requires new technologies and ideas.

And that is the mission that animates the scientists in my lab.

Today, I want to tell you two short stories from our work.

One fundamental obstacle we face

in trying to turn the brain into a big-data problem

is that our brains are composed of and built from billions of cells.

And our cells are not generalists; they're specialists.

Like humans at work,

they specialize into thousands of different cellular careers,

or cell types.

In fact, each of the cell types in our body

could probably give a lively TED Talk

about what it does at work.

But as scientists, we don't even know today

how many cell types there are,

and we don't know what the titles of most of those talks would be.

Now, we know many important things about cell types.

They can differ dramatically in size and shape.

One will respond to a molecule that the other doesn't respond to,

they'll make different molecules.

But science has largely been reaching these insights

in an ad hoc way, one cell type at a time,

one molecule at a time.

We wanted to make it possible to learn all of this quickly and systematically.

Now, until recently, it was the case

that if you wanted to inventory all of the molecules

in a part of the brain or any organ,

you had to first grind it up into a kind of cellular smoothie.

But that's a problem.

As soon as you've ground up the cells,

you can only study the contents of the average cell --

not the individual cells.

Imagine if you were trying to understand how a big city like New York works,

but you could only do so by reviewing some statistics

about the average resident of New York.

Of course, you wouldn't learn very much,

because everything that's interesting and important and exciting

is in all the diversity and the specializations.

And the same thing is true of our cells.

And we wanted to make it possible to study the brain not as a cellular smoothie

but as a cellular fruit salad,

in which one could generate data about and learn from

each individual piece of fruit.

So we developed a technology for doing that.

You're about to see a movie of it.

Here we're packaging tens of thousands of individual cells,

each into its own tiny water droplet

for its own molecular analysis.

When a cell lands in a droplet, it's greeted by a tiny bead,

and that bead delivers millions of DNA bar code molecules.

And each bead delivers a different bar code sequence

to a different cell.

We incorporate the DNA bar codes

into each cell's RNA molecules.

Those are the molecular transcripts it's making

of the specific genes that it's using to do its job.

And then we sequence billions of these combined molecules

and use the sequences to tell us

which cell and which gene

every molecule came from.

We call this approach "Drop-seq," because we use droplets

to separate the cells for analysis,

and we use DNA sequences to tag and inventory

and keep track of everything.

And now, whenever we do an experiment,

we analyze tens of thousands of individual cells.

And today in this area of science,

the challenge is increasingly how to learn as much as we can

as quickly as we can

from these vast data sets.

When we were developing Drop-seq, people used to tell us,

"Oh, this is going to make you guys the go-to for every major brain project."

That's not how we saw it.

Science is best when everyone is generating lots of exciting data.

So we wrote a 25-page instruction book,

with which any scientist could build their own Drop-seq system from scratch.

And that instruction book has been downloaded from our lab website

50,000 times in the past two years.

We wrote software that any scientist could use

to analyze the data from Drop-seq experiments,

and that software is also free,

and it's been downloaded from our website 30,000 times in the past two years.

And hundreds of labs have written us about discoveries that they've made

using this approach.

Today, this technology is being used to make a human cell atlas.

It will be an atlas of all of the cell types in the human body

and the specific genes that each cell type uses to do its job.

Now I want to tell you about a second challenge that we face

in trying to turn the brain into a big data problem.

And that challenge is that we'd like to learn from the brains

of hundreds of thousands of living people.

But our brains are not physically accessible while we're living.

But how can we discover molecular factors if we can't hold the molecules?

An answer comes from the fact that the most informative molecules, proteins,

are encoded in our DNA,

which has the recipes our cells follow to make all of our proteins.

And these recipes vary from person to person to person

in ways that cause the proteins to vary from person to person

in their precise sequence

and in how much each cell type makes of each protein.

It's all encoded in our DNA, and it's all genetics,

but it's not the genetics that we learned about in school.

Do you remember big B, little b?

If you inherit big B, you get brown eyes?

It's simple.

Very few traits are that simple.

Even eye color is shaped by much more than a single pigment molecule.

And something as complex as the function of our brains

is shaped by the interaction of thousands of genes.

And each of these genes varies meaningfully

from person to person to person,

and each of us is a unique combination of that variation.

It's a big data opportunity.

And today, it's increasingly possible to make progress

on a scale that was never possible before.

People are contributing to genetic studies

in record numbers,

and scientists around the world are sharing the data with one another

to speed progress.

I want to tell you a short story about a discovery we recently made

about the genetics of schizophrenia.

It was made possible by 50,000 people from 30 countries,

who contributed their DNA to genetic research on schizophrenia.

It had been known for several years

that the human genome's largest influence on risk of schizophrenia

comes from a part of the genome

that encodes many of the molecules in our immune system.

But it wasn't clear which gene was responsible.

A scientist in my lab developed a new way to analyze DNA with computers,

and he discovered something very surprising.

He found that a gene called "complement component 4" --

it's called "C4" for short --

comes in dozens of different forms in different people's genomes,

and these different forms make different amounts

of C4 protein in our brains.

And he found that the more C4 protein our genes make,

the greater our risk for schizophrenia.

Now, C4 is still just one risk factor in a complex system.

This isn't big B,

but it's an insight about a molecule that matters.

Complement proteins like C4 were known for a long time

for their roles in the immune system,

where they act as a kind of molecular Post-it note

that says, "Eat me."

And that Post-it note gets put on lots of debris

and dead cells in our bodies

and invites immune cells to eliminate them.

But two colleagues of mine found that the C4 Post-it note

also gets put on synapses in the brain

and prompts their elimination.

Now, the creation and elimination of synapses is a normal part

of human development and learning.

Our brains create and eliminate synapses all the time.

But our genetic results suggest that in schizophrenia,

the elimination process may go into overdrive.

Scientists at many drug companies tell me they're excited about this discovery,

because they've been working on complement proteins for years

in the immune system,

and they've learned a lot about how they work.

They've even developed molecules that interfere with complement proteins,

and they're starting to test them in the brain as well as the immune system.

It's potentially a path toward a drug that might address a root cause

rather than an individual symptom,

and we hope very much that this work by many scientists over many years

will be successful.

But C4 is just one example

of the potential for data-driven scientific approaches

to open new fronts on medical problems that are centuries old.

There are hundreds of places in our genomes

that shape risk for brain illnesses,

and any one of them could lead us to the next molecular insight

about a molecule that matters.

And there are hundreds of cell types that use these genes in different combinations.

As we and other scientists work to generate

the rest of the data that's needed

and to learn all that we can from that data,

we hope to open many more new fronts.

Genetics and single-cell analysis are just two ways

of trying to turn the brain into a big data problem.

There is so much more we can do.

Scientists in my lab are creating a technology

for quickly mapping the synaptic connections in the brain

to tell which neurons are talking to which other neurons

and how that conversation changes throughout life and during illness.

And we're developing a way to test in a single tube

how cells with hundreds of different people's genomes

respond differently to the same stimulus.

These projects bring together people with diverse backgrounds

and training and interests --

biology, computers, chemistry, math, statistics, engineering.

But the scientific possibilities rally people with diverse interests

into working intensely together.

What's the future that we could hope to create?

Consider cancer.

We've moved from an era of ignorance about what causes cancer,

in which cancer was commonly ascribed to personal psychological characteristics,

to a modern molecular understanding of the true biological causes of cancer.

That understanding today leads to innovative medicine

after innovative medicine,

and although there's still so much work to do,

we're already surrounded by people who have been cured of cancers

that were considered untreatable a generation ago.

And millions of cancer survivors like my sister

find themselves with years of life that they didn't take for granted

and new opportunities

for work and joy and human connection.

That is the future that we are determined to create around mental illness --

one of real understanding and empathy

and limitless possibility.

Thank you.

(Applause)

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