Chủ Nhật, 30 tháng 12, 2018

Youtube daily US Dec 30 2018

Charming Vintage Franklin Farmhouse in Heart Of Downtown Tennessee, US

For more infomation >> Charming Vintage Franklin Farmhouse in Heart Of Downtown Tennessee, US | Great Small House Design - Duration: 3:11.

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US patient QUARANTINED after being exposed to Ebola during outbreak - Duration: 3:10.

 The medic had been treating patients in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) after they contracted the disease

 But, when it became clear the healthcare worker may have caught the virus, they were sent back to the US and placed in quarantine in Nebraska

 While the medic has not showed signs of Ebola, they will remain under observation for up to two weeks at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) in Omaha, according to a statement

 The medic's name has not been released to the public at this time.    Related Articles AIDS cure? MAJOR breakthrough as scientists succeed in destroying HIV-infected cells Ebola BREAKOUT: 24 patients flee treatment centre sparking emergency search Ebola outbreak could get WORSE – WHO in shock admission  Symptoms such as fever and abdominal pain may appear up to three weeks after contact with the potentially deadly virus, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

 Should symptoms develop, the healthcare worker would be moved to the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit, one of the only a few in the US for treating infectious disease

 The Ebola outbreak in Democratic Republic of Congo is the second worst ever and has killed 356 of the 585 people infected since it began six months ago

 Nebraska Medicine, a network of hospitals, clinics and healthcare colleges, together with academic partner UNMC, are among world leaders in the treatment of Ebola

  Related Articles GRAPHIC PICS: Swine fever OUTBREAK with 50 cases as thousands of pigs 'burned alive' PICTURED: Brit dad-of-two who died of RABIES in Morocco 'got vaccine too late' Worst EVER Ebola outbreak as armed rebels stop health workers battling disease  The virus spreads through contact with bodily fluids and causes haemorrhagic fever with severe vomiting, diarrhoea and bleeding

 Nebraska Medicine cared for three patients with the virus in 2014 and monitored several others for exposure during a 2013-16 outbreak in west Africa that was the worst on record, with more than 28,000 cases confirmed

 World Health Organisation officials admitted earlier, however, that progress in battling the outbreak could be reversed if armed fighting continues near the disease hotspots of Beni and Butembo

 The DRC has suffered 10 Ebola outbreaks since the virus was discovered there in 1976

Related articles HIV Tinder TIMEBOMB: Experts in condom warning as number of new cases skyrocket Fears Chernobyl virus 'SPREADING' across Europe after 'infected' wolves cross borders Ancient PLAGUE strain found in 5,000-year-old tomb 'unleashed first global pandemic'

For more infomation >> US patient QUARANTINED after being exposed to Ebola during outbreak - Duration: 3:10.

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MIGRANT CARETAKER: GOD CALLS US TO HELP OUR BROTHERS AND SISTERS - Duration: 2:06.

O'BRIEN: McALLEN, TEXAS, WAS THE EPICENTER OF PRESIDENT TRUMP'S FAMILY SEPARATION POLICY AT THE BORDER.

IT IS ALSO HOME TO THE LARGEST DETENTION CENTER FOR UNDOCUMENTED MIGRANTS AND ASYLUM SEEKERS.

FAMILY UNITS ARE CLASSIFIED DIFFERENTLY BY BORDER PATROL.

MANY SURRENDER TO CBP, AND IF THEY'RE RELEASED, THEY'RE TAKEN TO TEMPORARY SHELTERS LIKE THE CATHOLIC CHARITIES RESPITE CENTER.

IT SEES UP TO 500 PEOPLE A DAY.

SISTER NORMA PIMENTAL IS THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE RIO GRANDE VALLEY CATHOLIC CHARITIES, AND THIS IS HER STORY IN HER OWN WORDS.

NORMA: WE ARE RECEIVING THE HUNDREDS OF FAMILIES THAT ARE ENTERING OUR COUNTRY RIGHT AT THE BORDER WITH MEXICO AND TEXAS.

AND THESE ARE FAMILIES THAT HAVE ALREADY BEEN PROCESSED AND APPREHENDED WITH BORDER PATROL AND THEN GIVEN PERMISSION TO CONTINUE THEIR DEPORTATION PROCEEDINGS SOMEWHERE ELSE IN

THE UNITED STATES.

[SPEAKING SPANISH] WE CAN HELP THEM MAKE SURE THAT THEY KNOW HOW TO BUY THEIR BUS TICKET, HOW TO CONTACT THEIR FAMILY, HOW TO MAKE SURE THEY'RE SAFE AND GIVE

THEM THE JUST BARE NECESSITIES OF WHAT A HUMAN PERSON NEEDS AFTER BEING IN LONG JOURNEY.

I WORK VERY CLOSELY WITH BORDER PATROL AND ICE.

THEY SEND US A TEXT AND LET US KNOW HOW MANY FAMILIES ARE BEING RELEASED. THIS IS HOW WE WORK TOGETHER BECAUSE THEY WANT TO MAKE SURE THAT THESE FAMILIES AS THEY'RE

RELEASED ARE NOT JUST ABANDONED INTO THE STREETS BUT THAT THEY CONTINUE TO HAVE SOME CARE.

THE MISCONCEPTION OF A LOT OF PEOPLE IN THE UNITED STATES IS THAT THEY'RE ALL CRIMINALS, AND THEY'RE NOT.

IF THEIR LIFE IS IN DANGER, THEY HAVE A RIGHT TO GO TO ANOTHER PLACE WHERE THEY CAN BE SAFE.

[SPEAKING SPANISH] SHE SAID, "THE REASON WHY I LEFT BECAUSE THERE'S A LOT OF DELINQUENCY, A LOT OF GANGS, AND THEREFORE I WANTED TO PROTECT MY CHILD, AND I

THOUGHT THAT I HAD TO LEAVE.

I WISH THAT PEOPLE FROM HERE KNEW THAT THE ONLY REASON WHY WE COME HERE IS BECAUSE WE HAVE A GREAT NEED." OUR FAITH CALLS US TO MAKE SURE THAT WE TAKE CARE OF OUR

BROTHERS AND SISTERS, AND SO THAT'S WHAT WE

For more infomation >> MIGRANT CARETAKER: GOD CALLS US TO HELP OUR BROTHERS AND SISTERS - Duration: 2:06.

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2-year-old, whose mom was granted US visa after lawsuit, dies - Duration: 0:36.

For more infomation >> 2-year-old, whose mom was granted US visa after lawsuit, dies - Duration: 0:36.

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100 People Tell Us a Joke | Keep it 100 | Cut - Duration: 7:11.

- This one's my favorite

and it makes my son giggle like a bitch.

It's fantastic.

What does a 500 pound canary say?

- Here, kitty, kitty. (laughs)

- Man.

- A joke?

- Wait, hold on.

Shit.

- Do I know any good jokes? (laughs)

Actually, no, I don't.

(laughs)

- Okay, so.

- Humpty Dumpty fell on the wall

and did he get back up?

I don't know.

- Oh god!

I'm terrible.

- I like to listen to jokes,

but not to tell jokes

because I don't remember them.

- Your mama so ugly

that she's really your daddy.

Your real mama is his mama.

- Okay, so.

- What's a ghost's favorite car?

- A boo-gati.

- Did you hear the one about the chick

who went swimming with the nine guys?

She came back with a big red snapper.

- Knock, knock.

- Smell mop.

- That's nasty.

- What goes oom-oom?

A cow in reverse.

- What do you call a 98 year old man

who can still masturbate?

Miracle whip.

- My mom tells me there's one weirdo on every bus.

I never see him.

- Knock, knock.

- Anita.

- Anita Dick.

(laughs)

- My credit score.

- My life.

(imitates rim shot)

- What did the five fingers say to the face?

- Slap! (laughs)

- Hmm, okay.

- Why did the bicycle fall over?

He was too tired.

- Why does a hummingbird hum?

'Cause it doesn't know the words.

- My dad used to tell the same joke.

What's the difference between beer nuts and deer nuts?

- Beer nuts are a $1.49 and deer nuts are under a buck.

He would laugh every time.

Not so much us.

- What do you call a cheap circumcision?

- A rip off!

(laughs)

- What did the fish say when he hit the wall?

Damn.

- What do you call a fish without an eye?

Fsh. (giggles)

- What does a fish smoke?

Seaweed.

- Did you hear the one about the constipated mathematician?

- He worked it out with a pencil.

- Did you hear about that new medical condition, ligma?

- Lig-ma balls.

- These.

- These.

- Where do you bury someone with OCD?

In a symmetry.

- What do you call a resting cow?

Ground beef.

- What did the frog do to the piece of paper?

Rip it.

(speaking in a foreign language)

- Wait, should I say in English?

- What did one ant say to the other ant

when he broke up with his girlfriend?

(laughs)

- What is the difference between a snow woman and a snowman?

Snow balls.

- I don't know, it's a knee slapper to me.

- There was a few more.

- What did one book say to the math book?

You got problems.

- What do you call a discordant of songbirds?

A cacophony.

- Do you wanna play the rape game?

- That's the spirit.

- What does Captain Kirk and toilet paper have in common?

They both circle Uranus looking for Klingons.

- So what do they call?

- What do you call?

- A pirate's favorite letter?

You think it's R but it's the C.

- That's so corny, I'm sorry.

- What do you call a lesbian dinosaur?

- I-lick-a-lot-o-puss.

- So this guy and this girl are on a date,

and they walk past a pond.

And the pond's full of swans.

And the woman turns to the man and says,

"I gotta tell ya, did you know I can talk to animals?"

And he's like, "I gotta see this, prove it."

And so she goes, "Hey, swan, fuck you."

- What do you call this?

- I don't know but here it comes again.

(laughs) I just love that.

- Why was the little strawberry crying?

- His mom was in a jam.

- Knock, knock.

- Irish.

- Irish you a merry Christmas. (laughs)

- Guess what?

- Chickenbutt!

- Knock, knock.

- Yo mama.

- Okay, so there's this woman.

- A joke?

- I don't really know jokes.

- No, there better not be.

I'll fuck a mother fucker up over Michael Jackson.

- Why was six scared of seven?

- Because seven ate nine.

(laughs)

- It's a knock knock, but you have to start it.

- Who's there?

- Why did the fat kid drop his ice cream?

- 'Cause he was hit by a bus.

It's called an anti-joke.

It's not supposed to be funny.

- What did the egg say to the boiling water?

- It might take a while for me to get hard,

'cause I just got laid last night.

- How many...

Light bulbs does it take to screw?

- I'm trying to remember which way it goes.

- Knock, knock.

- Orange.

- Oh, I messed it up.

- I'm so good at sleeping I could do it with my eyes closed.

- How do you get a nun pregnant?

You dress her up like an altar boy.

Oh shit.

- Why is Peter Pan always flying?

- He never lands.

- What's the difference between

an oral and a rectal thermometer?

- The taste.

- Why did the boy fall down?

- Because he had no legs.

- What did Batman say to Robin

as Robin was standing outside of the Batmobile?

- Get in the car, Robin.

- Your mama's so.

- Fat,

when she jumped in the Grand Canyon she got stuck.

- What goes in hard and pink and comes out soft and wet?

- Bubblegum.

- That was a good one, honestly.

- Two cannibals are eating a clown,

one turns to the other and says,

"Does this taste funny?"

- Why does Santa Claus have such a big sack?

- 'Cause he only comes once a year.

(laughs)

- What do you call a nun in a wheelchair?

A virgin mobile.

- Did you hear about the claustrophobic astronaut?

He just needed a little space.

- I have one.

- What is brown and has holes in it?

- Swiss shit.

- That came from a Laffy Taffy.

- I don't do, like, a set up and a punchline joke.

- So I was watching the weather channel the other day

and they said it is 78 degrees,

but it feels like 82.

So doesn't that just mean it's 82?

What does feels like mean in weather anyways?

Let me tell another joke.

For more infomation >> 100 People Tell Us a Joke | Keep it 100 | Cut - Duration: 7:11.

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Francis Boyle warns "Keep Assange out of U.S." - Duration: 30:09.

But we're joined now by Francis Boyle. Francis is a professor of

International Law at the University of Illinois

We're speaking to him from his office there in Champaign, Illinois.

He's been an advisor to the Palestine Liberation Organisation

and he's also had experience, amongst many other things, he's had experience

with an extradition request by the United States to Great Britain, and that's why we're welcoming Francis in tonight to talk about that

Welcome Francis. Thank you for joining the online vigil for Julian Assange.

Well thank you very much for having me on Joe.

I simply commend you and

Consortium News for staying on top of

Assange's case. This is

critical for the Freedom of Speech, Freedom of the Press,

journalists all over the world.

I thank you for that Francis. It certainly is. You're absolutely right

So tell us about your experiences

working on a case of an extradition request the United States made to Great Britain.

Well, first off I do have to say I am not

involved in Assange's case. I don't represent Assange.

I'm only speaking for myself here in my

personal capacity as a Professor of International Law, but yes, I was involved

spearheaded the campaigns

to defeat the US-UK

Supplementary Extradition Treaty of 1986

by Maggie Thatcher. And I won't go through all that here

except that we castrated that treaty and

then second after 9/11 2001

The British government re-tendered the original Maggie Thatcher

extradition treaty in

2006 to the Bush Administration

who accepted it. So working with my brother?

who's a lawyer in Chicago

We organized

every Irish-American group

in the country as well as the ACLU

to fight back

Against his treaty and I won't go through all that work here

Because this can be found and documented in my book United Ireland: Human Rights & Int. Law

And I wrote it up especially for lawyers to use

in order to defeat

here in the United States

Requests for extradition by the British government

but especially of Irish

Now to make a long story short we did fight back against the 2006 Supplementary Extradition Treaty

We were unable to castrate it.

We were sold out by Irish American officials

Like Joe Biden and others

In the Senate, but we did get to crawl back

basic human rights, civil rights, civil liberties protections

for Irish and indeed for all people living in the United States.

Regretfully and for whatever reason the same thing was not done in Britain.

I guess because the prime minister at that time was Tony Blair.

He was said to be the

Human Rights prime minister, which as we all know is a joke and fraud.

He controlled Parliament and Parliament enacted

domestic implementing legislation for the 2006 extradition treaty

Exactly the way the British government wrote it.

Which is completely totalitarian.

Under the terms of this treaty

In the event the United States government makes a

request for extradition for Assange it is going to be very difficult for

his lawyers in Britain

to prevent an extradition and

As a matter of fact, my guess is they will probably have to go

and appeal immediately to the European Court of Human Rights

To prevent his extradition.

But under the terms of the treaty itself

It's going to be very difficult and indeed

given the

practices under this treaty which I have followed because we were able to get

commitments in writing from the British

That they were not going to use this treaty

to go after

Irish liberation fighters from our war of national liberation against Britain going back to the

1916 Easter rebellion and so I have followed the

Extradition practices under this treaty. Basically the way it is set up

Here in the United States we've been able to get almost everyone we had asked for

under that extradition treaty though, I recently

sent to you the first major exception to that.

It might be of assistance

to Mr. Assange, but that's it. By comparison

When he and British didn't pointed out that

yeah, well, this is unfair that here that when

a request is made by Britain to here in the United States

under the crawl back protections we got for a everyone here

It's not automatic.

whereas when the United States makes requests to Britain

Up until this latest exception I just sent you

it has been almost automatic

Indeed it's basically a political process under the

treaty if I remember correctly and again understand I'm just going here off the top of my head.

I have not researched this issue with respect to Mr. Assange I'm not involved in this case.

but the decision to extradite is purely political made by the Home Secretary.

Well, we know for a fact that Theresa May's Home Secretary will just turn him over immediately.as soon as she can

to the United States government once the extradition request is filed.

Here in the United States they try to do the same thing to us by saying it would be automatically determined by the

US Secretary of State. We fought back to get that put into

The control of the United States Federal District Judge

where it had been under the

previous treaty that we castrated.

So that's again what is the danger here

facing Assange the moment he steps out of that embassy.

The British lawyers will have to insist to

that Assange not face the death penalty here in the United States.

There'll have to be written guarantees from the United States government to that effect.

the British lawyers will have to insist and get written guarantees from the United States government that

he would not being prosecuted

in the kangaroo courts in Gitmo, which of course they have tried to do

but even if the British government were to give these guarantees

if Assange got here to the United States

and was actually tried [inaudible] court

he would be

subjected to a clear cut kangaroo court proceeding, found guilty, sentenced to life in prison and

probably stuck away in one of these 'supermax' prisons that are designed to

drive the prisoners insane and indeed there's documentation by human rights groups that that's exactly what these

supermax prisons do. So it is a very dangerous

situation for Mr. Assange. I know his legal team there in Britain is first rate.

I don't know all of them.

but the lead counsel Garzón

is the very distinguished Spanish

Investigating Magistrate and they had better have their papers already drafted in advance and if necessary

go ... prepared to go

all the way up immediately to the European Court of Human Rights to get a

stay of extradition which they can do. The European Court of Human Rights will give

provisional measures of protection. The other danger here is this however that

Even if that were to be done the British government could also decide to deport

Assange back to Australia since he is not a British citizen. He's an Australian citizen.

and maybe the Americans could try to get him under the

US Australian Extradition Treaty I haven't read that Treaty. I don't know

what if anything it might say?

But if that were to happen that he would be outside the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights

which Britain is still subject to now

prior to Brexit indeed after Brexit it seems they'll still be

subjected to the European Court of Human Rights.

So there we are today Joe.

He's, in my opinion, in very serious physical, mental danger

even putting aside his de facto incarceration there in the Ecuadorean embassy.

[JL]: Let me ask you a couple of questions about the European Court of Human Rights.

You said that ...are you saying that it is a Superior Court to the highest court in Britain, that it can overrule even

a judgement of the highest court in Britain. [FB]: That is correct.

As I said, I just sent you the first case ever where

now it's called by the Supreme Court in Britain

ruled against an extradition to the United States. That was a major breakthrough.

Assange and his lawyers could very well use that but this has been so highly politicized in Britain too

courts pay attention to what the government's telling them to do

so they very well could lose in the

Supreme Court of Britain. I want to make it clear

I'm not licensed to practice law in England. I can't predict, you know, what the British courts are going to do.

one way or the other. But yes, they can [inaudible]

... need to prepare immediately to take this case to the European Court of Human Rights

get provisional measures of protection to prevent

his extradition to the United States

while the case on the merits

[inaudible] British measures of protection would be a like a temporary restraining order

It does not resolve the issue on the merits.

Now on the merits of the case sure

there are large numbers of arguments that can be made in the European Court of Human Rights

against Assange's extradition that this would violate his

basic human rights under a variety of provisions of the European Convention. Now if you look at the

Memorandum I submitted against this treaty to the Senate for [inaudible]

That was unrebutted by any expert on the side of the British.

I outlined all the objections to the treaty for

violating the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

to which both the United States and Britain are parties to

The United States is not subject to the jurisdiction of European Court of Human Rights

So I certainly was not going to argue that to the United States Senate

but the protections in the

International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights are

pretty much the same protections as

found in the European Convention on Human Rights and I go through article by article, human right by human right there

as a road map for all the rights, his rights that would be violated.

And of course, you know, you have officials in the United States government. They've threatened to kill him.

so tried treason or something like that. Well, he's not a citizen of the United States.

He owes no loyalty to the United States. But again, this is really for his

British lawyers to decide how best to proceed here and then they also have to consider this

deportation to Australia escaping the jurisdiction of European Court and

then you'd be in Australia, and you know right now they have a right-wing government there too so who knows what would happen in Australia.

[JL]: Yeah We see here clearly the relations between the U.S. and

and two of their five eyes partners Britain and Australia, especially when you describe how it doesn't work

In the same way both ways in other words when the U.S.

asks for somebody they almost always get him and when Britain asks for someone they don't necessarily

get who they want. The Lorri Love case I think is the one you ...

[FB]:But again I do want to point out we almost always got everyone we've asked for

even the Brits tried to sell this as anti- terrorism and the Bush people did.

But what happened is we used it to go after

all their of City of London fraudsters

And we got all them not

Even though we said originally we weren't interested in these types of people, we were just into terrorists.

I have no brief for City of London fraudsters. Banksters or

Financial swindlers or anything like that. We got all these people and

The first exception is what I sent you and that's it.

[JL]: But you did mention one case. Where the UK?

denied an extradition request and that was for, I believe, Laurie Love who was a hacker who was wanted in the U.S.

So that was a great victory

But the Assange case of course is far different than that because of all the implications of the many many government secrets

He's revealed and many many very angry

powerful people around the world who want to get him.

[FB]:Right. Let me elaborate. Yes. That's an important precedent

But as you correctly pointed out the political dimensions of this problem do not compare

You know as far as the United States government is concerned

Assange and Snowden are

public enemies number one and two and

you know a hacker is a hacker

regretfully one way or the other but the political implications there are almost nil

So this, you know, the political pressure here

I suspect on the British Supreme Court

Would be you know, authorize the extradition of Assange.

[JL]: I'm a complete layman here so forgive me if this is an obvious question but

does someone have to be actually in custody in order to be extradited to another country what I'm saying is if he's arrested on this

bail skipping charge it's unlikely he can get more than a few months for that

That's really a minor charge. Could his lawyers

wait it out and that he's freed from that and could not be then extradited or would the British authorities

Take that into consideration when sentencing him if indeed, he's convicted? He's not even been charged yet. But if he's convicted for bail skipping.

[FB]: The moment they have custody of him

the U.S. can to file that extradition charge and that will be that

and they'll just waive any prosecution for bail skipping.

Right now it seems to me

Assange's best strategy, again I defer to his British lawyers

is to wait it out in that Ecuadorean embassy.

hopefully, the Tory government will fall

Corbyn will come to power

A Labour government, there will be a Labour Home Secretary and then a campaign

Could be brought to bear

on the Labour Home Secretary

not to extradite Assange.

That might be the best strategy.

[JL]: So you mean when the U.S. files an extradition request he could be held in the UK under

those conditions under a U.S. prosecution he could be held in the UK pending extradition

[FB]: That's right. The moment he

walks out of that embassy, that's correct, and he is actually physically taken into custody by

a British law enforcement authority. Yes.

[JL]: So he could stay there until the this is resolved one way or the other the extradition request

now if they go to Europe, you know, I think that thirty European MPs

last week filed a petition or a statement in support of Julian Assange

So given that there's that's not a lot thirty

But it's more than we have in the UK and certainly in here in the US Congress

is the political atmosphere in Europe sufficiently different in your opinion to give him a chance to win in the European Court Human Rights.

[FB]: You know this is something I

discuss with my students in my international human rights of law course and

today I think you'd get a fairer shot certainly in the European Court of Human Rights

than you would either in the United States Supreme Court or the U.K. Supreme Court.

It wasn't always that way, but I believe it is today

and even if it would first perhaps start on with a panel and

Then they could move for a grand chamber of all the judges

And and at that point certainly when it gets into the European Court of Human Rights. I think you're going to need a

grassroots public relations campaign

not only in the UK, but also

In the EU and in the European Parliament, yeah

in support of Assange because he has been so thoroughly vilified

that Public opinion needs to be educated and turned around

Including the judges. Yes that has to be done, I mean, all judges everywhere in these supreme courts

read the pages of the newspapers and pay attention to public opinion polls.

But right now I believe

he's going to get a much fairer shot in the European Court of Human Rights than he would in the

UK Supreme Court

And certainly not in the US Supreme Court where you know you have five federal society

judges on there the 'Five Horsemen of the Apocalypse' so,

Obviously you have to appeal there, but you're not going to get anywhere. They couldn't get diddly squat about

[inaudible]

let alone Assange's Human Rights.

[JL]: Frances I just want to ask you one more thing before we let you go

I don't know how much expertise you may have in the Espionage Act

But as we probably can assume he's been he has been charged. The US government has admitted that they're not releasing the details yet

That's tied up in a court here in Alexandria, Virginia where I am

so we may or may not get to see what the details of the

Indictment or criminal complaint.

But it's been assumed that it's under the Espionage Act

and my reading of the Act is from the original 1917 Act and the Wilson administration

It made clear that only acts committed on US

Territory or the high seas could be prosecuted that unfortunate changed in 1961 in an amendment that made it global

So this could be anywhere in the world because Assange of course committed acts of publishing outside the United States

And there's also something in the original Act

which says that even mere possession and/or dissemination of classified material is

actionable can be prosecuted. Of course. Julian has never been accused or of stealing the documents himself, but only of

Accepting them and publishing them

but the Espionage Act has never been used against a journalist for political reasons because it would, it appears to

conflict with the sentiment at least of the First Amendment

There were some of course after the Pentagon Papers case the Nixon administration could have gone after

Both the Post, The Times, Senator Mike Ravel who published it in a book. They could not do prior restraint

That's what the Supreme Court decided but after publication

They could have prosecuted but they didn't because politically it would not be the right image for

The administration to go after journalists like that and there have been similar cases like that. So I want to know

am I correct in saying that he can be legally charged under the Espionage Act as

abominable as that Act is the way it's written and

For the political reasons have stopped him but the Trump administration being so anti media

Maybe they would actually do this which the Nixon administration wouldn't do

[FB]: Well, again I, this is speculation what they're going to do

I don't know if they would request his extradition for prosecution under the Espionage Act

for the reasons you have given

and because it then would open up this whole

can of worms to their respect so they might request his extradition

for common ordinary garden-variety crimes

theft misuse of things of this nature and

He in theory then could be

extradited for that type of prosecution

however If I remember correctly under this treaty the British government could waive

the requirement of specialty and the requirement of specialty is that

You can only be prosecuted for the crime for which you are extradited.

So they could get him over here

under a variety of common ordinary

Federal crimes that I'm sure they could concoct without any problem

Uh, and then once he's over here the British government could waive speciality

and then in theory prosecute the violation of the

Espionage Act now

I haven't studied the Espionage Act in a long time because I havn't been involved in cases under but as we all know

It was originally intended to do with spying

during the First World War

Spies conducting themselves

During war time to get secrets. Uh

Well, okay fine. We can agree on that. The First World War fine. The Second World War

It was never intended to go after journalists.

practicing journalism and yet there has been a history of

Administrations using and perverting the

Espionage Act to go after journalists and

to try to use them as a cudgel

over their head and

You know given the Trump administration

That very well might might be what tey decide to do. They would want to set a precedent

to use against

investigative journalists, first-rate journalists

whistleblowers and things of that nature

So we cannot rule this out at all Joe.

but if we get this issue in the United States courts

I'm afraid given the current Supreme Court

the five Federal Society Horsemen of the Apocalypse

We'll probably lose. So there it is

what can I say so I agree with what you're saying, but actually winning these issues in the United States Court will be,

Given the right wing nature of US courts these days

It's going to be very difficult to make progress

with those types of arguments.

[JL]: You know, the Act makes it clear that the death penalty

Penalty can only be imposed in the time of war

So I could see that stretching out that the Afghan war cables and the Iraq

Collateral damage videos was a time of war and that was actually exposing war crimes by the US.

That's correct. And so the British lawyers will have to demand that

The British government get a guarantee in writing

That Assange will not be prosecuted

for

What will will not be sentenced to death. It's that simple that is even if he is convicted

They'll have to get that guarantee and indeed. If not, they can go to the

European Court of Human Rights and get that guarantee

Get the European Court to order

the British government to get that guarantee

yes, but

indeed this treaty so bad that

If you read it that someone can be extradited to face the death penalty

But could not be executed

So, no this this was done deliberately and Imaliciously, Joe.

So they could be over here, you know sitting on death row for the rest of their lives

Right, although even then the European Court of Human Rights

There's a very famous case Soaring[?] saying the death row phenomenon constitutes cruel inhuman degrading treat

So they they could stop that too at the European Court of Human Rights

So these are you know large numbers of issues.

I want to clear I have not

Investigated any of them with respect to Mr. Assange because I am not

working on his case. A good friend of mine Mike Raitner did represent

Assange in this country, and I you know, I told Mike I'd be happy to work on this case if he wanted me to

Unfortunately, Mike is going on to his reward

But I told his successors at the Center for Constitutional Rights. So it's a highly

complicated, highly charged, highly politicized

situation but my best best advice is

keep him out of the United States at all costs and

Tie this thing up over there

at the European Court of Human Rights at least until the

Corbyn administration gets in there and then launch a public relations campaign

with Corbyn and Labour Party

on behalf of Assange, right

Thank you. Very, very much. Francis for spending some time with us tonight.

Well, thank you. I'm sorry. I can't be more enlightening. I'm just sort of giving you off the top of my head

And well, we'll have to see what happens.

I found a very enlightening Thank You Francis.

Thanks, bye-bye now

For more infomation >> Francis Boyle warns "Keep Assange out of U.S." - Duration: 30:09.

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Don't Grab WRONG Mystery NERF Present !!! Who sent so many MYSTERY presents to us ??? - Duration: 18:47.

Got em

door bell

Max can you get the door, please?

No, I'm busy

Okay, fine. I'll get it

What? presents?

Max, come over here we got Christmas presents

what? presents?

Come on, come on, help me get them inside

wow

I wonder who send these to us

There's a note

Okay, let's see what see

I know you guys like Nerf challenges, so here's a challenge for you:

The numbers on mystery present boxes are points you need to get in a Nerf game to get presents inside them

once you get enough points, you can choose to open a mystery box or keep your points for the next round

But, choose your mystery present boxes wisely as there are lucky and unlucky boxes

Good luck

Hmm, there's no signature

WEIRD !!

Guys, can you write down in comments who do you think might have sent so many presents to us?

Santa or Game Master?

We also have some ideas in this card over here, so maybe you can pick one

Okay Max, let's play this game

I'm so curious to see what's in the mystery boxes?

Yes

Wow

Okay, guys we set up our targets over here

We gonna shoot from this firing position

we got a lot of Nerf guns to choose from

and each round we gonna have one magazine with only ten darts

Okay, max. Are you ready? Oh, yeah, I'm gonna win

Okay, who goes first? rock, paper, scissors?

Okay, first round

I'm gonna go for Stryfe

Only three? that's not even enough for the smallest present

Okay, your turn

I will go for Demolisher

ok, next time

out of ammo

it means I got 7 points

Can I get anything for seven points?

I'm gonna save my points for the next round

I really want the most expensive present

I will go for ....

Stryfe

oh, yeah

out of ammo, so fast?

you got 6 points in total

I'm going to get the box for the five points

Okay, let's see what's inside

wow, it's a car !!!

It's a Ferrari

Remote-control car

That's super cool

Okay, you got one point left?

My turn

I will choose .... Rapidstrike

Two, three

four

Now I can get the most expensive present

I'll get the 10 points present

let's see what's inside?

Right here

Modulus Regulator !!!

That's super cool

Oh, Nerf Modulus Regulator ..... wow

guys, look at it

Guys do you think it's an awesome Nerf? Yes, or yes?

Now it's my turn

I'll get the Modulus

Okay

Okay, get ready

Out of ammo so fast?

We only going to count the cups that fell, so it means you got 3 points

OK, I will unbox the this box

Ok, let's see, let's see

Spy gear, ultimate night vision

Wow

Wow, that's a super cool present

that's mine

my turn

I got four in total

I gotta save for the box that costs 8 points

Max, it's your turn

Yeah

come on

You only got three again

I'm gonna have this Stryfe

two points? ok, next time

you got two points

you got 5 points in total

you wanna choose the 5 point box?

ok, I'l get that box

Men, you are getting a bunch of presents

what is inside?

aaa, Nerf Rival

Rival

Nerf Rival Artemis .... wow

Okay my turn, I need to get that giant present

I got zero points left

Okay, I'll choose this Stryfe

I like this Stryfe

Out of ammo, I got four points

Yeah, I got 10 points

I'm gonna go for that big box

wow

what's inside?

what?

it's a box?

ha ha ha

there's something inside

water melon smash !!!

yeah, it's water melon smash challenge

Wait

Does it really cost eight points?

I guess I got one of the unlucky boxes

unlucky boxes

Guys what do you think did I get cheated?

Okay Max never mind, we're gonna play it later

I will go for Stryfe

Yeah

what?

ha?

yeah, come on

you got only 2

But there is no present for 2 points

my turn

I'll get Retaliator

out of ammo

I got 5 points

I got 7 points

Shall I get the 6 point box or save for 8?

I'll get the mystery 6 point box

this one?

This one's heavy, why don't you take that one?

Because I think there's another box wrapped in there

Hot Wheels !!! wow

Hot Wheels crash course

wow

that is very awesome present

wow

Guys, who likes Hot Wheels, hit the like button

I'm gonna go for this Stryfe again

you got 4 points

2+4 = 5 ???

We're interrupting our broadcast for breaking news

oops, 2+4 = == = = =

six, oops, 2+4 = 6, ha ha

I'm gonna go for that 6 point box

what's inside?

I guess, there's another box

Let's see I'm so excited

Yeah, I was right, it's another unlucky box

what's inside?

Minions???

and what is that ?

It's a pistol

Can I open it and try?

May be like that

It's a pop gun

Ok Max, let's continue

Okay, my turn and the last mystery box left

Roman you only have one point

I need seven points to get the box. I'll try my best

four points

Okay

I only need 3 more points

three points

out of ammo

you got three points

oh, one dart left

I can unbox the last mystery box, yeah

Let's see what's inside

Let's see ...

It's the Nerf Rival Hades ..... wow

Wow

60 darts

Whoa

sixty rounds

that is awesome. It's definitely gonna beat your Artemis

okay guys, let's see once again which presets we got

I got Spy Gear Ultimate Night Vision

I got Nerf Modulus Regulator

I got this Ferrari RC car

I got water melon smash challenge

I got Nerf Rival Artemis

I got Hot Wheels Crash Course

I got pop guns

I got the Nerf Rival Hades

I got the Minions

Um

Guys, I'm not sure what just happened

but while we figure this out, why don't you watch another video

we have so many awesome videos for you to watch

and please let us know which one of our presents you liked the most and what did you get for Christmas?

Like and subscribe and I'll see you next video

For more infomation >> Don't Grab WRONG Mystery NERF Present !!! Who sent so many MYSTERY presents to us ??? - Duration: 18:47.

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Peter Webb - 'Wagering' in the USA - US Sportsbooks review - Duration: 13:22.

so when you think of Nevada you think of gambling what place do you immediately

think of well I bet you most of you were thinking Las Vegas but there is also

another place that's considered a bit of a gambling capital and that is Reno

Nevada so what brings me here well it's difficult for somebody who is involved

in gambling not to check out a town that was sort of has a big part of its

history on gambling as well but also I've read loads of books from people

like Ed Thorpe I also read a book called the Newtonian casino where they plied

their trades all around here so you know just curiosity overwhelms me to come

here and actually have a look and see what it's all about but also I'm really

interested to see what they do with their sports betting side of things as

well because it's very different over here from the rest of the world and also

you know they're quite ante online stuff as well so there was a casino along here

somewhere I can remember which one it is off top my head that was fined for

linking to an online sports book so yeah I want to check out and see what the

sports books are like how they're run inside the casinos you know you may find

an opportunity probably not but I think just out of curiosity it's worth having

a look at how they do sports betting over here so here's a little bit of

history about Reno for you it was founded during the gold rush era as a

lot of towns were in California and Nevada and a disillusioned gold worker

gold miner a speculator however you want to call him I was coming back across

from California and from the mountains realized that people needed to cross the

Truckee River which is just behind me here and built a toll bridge and that

was pretty much the start of Reno Nevada now from there he built an inn and the

town started to develop from there and one of the things you realize around

this area is that it's quite remote there isn't much around here especially

you know you've got the mountains in one direction and desert north south east

and west and as a consequence and you tend to find that it's a sort of place

that people would probably stop on a longer journey so it began to establish

itself a little bit further from there now when the state of Nevada legalized

gambling Reno stepped up to the plate I mean you're a sort of a town in the

middle of nowhere you need to attract people in and gambling was illegal in

California so Reno saw the opportunity it's right on the border very near to

California to get a bit of custom over the border as it were and they set up a

number of casinos when the gambling was legalized and that's sort of how Reno

made its name around that particular era because people would travel in from

across the state line and come here to have a little bit of again

so when you visit all of these casinos they're fairly similar in terms of the

structure plenty of bars I was surprised to find that you can actually smoke in

Nevada I wasn't aware of that so that was a bit of a surprise to me but there

are also plenty of other surprises in the casinos as well

so you're trying to make a decision on how you would like to place a bet what's

the best way to do it well have a few beers and then place a bet from there so

remarkably when you look at these casinos you can actually find gambling

machines placed right on the bar to tempt you in a little bit away from the

bar you have a more traditional casino with gaming tables that you'd expect to

find but one of the things I didn't expect to find was the prevalence of

William Hill there were a significant number of William Hill outlets in and

around Reno and particularly as later research would provide in Nevada itself

so yeah obviously geared around the sports book but they had a very

significant presence and if you've never seen a traditional sports book in the US

this is what it looks like not like your typical bookmakers back at home large

screens desks and plenty of information I'm scattered around all over the place

all with the desire to tempt you into a bet but all of the slips you'd pick up

basically from the William Hill counter and then you'd get the odds displayed on

a large screen he may think that's familiar with the UK but of course in

the US and you get them next to a bar so yeah large screen with all of the

sporting action on all of the odds and then you pick up a coupon and go and

place your bet much in the same manner you would with a traditional bookmaker

so outside that wasn't much in the way of shopping however it was very

interesting to see that they had convenient and placed a pawnbroker

when you look at most of these casinos from the outside it's of stark contrasts

to what you find on the inside from the outside a lot of these casinos really

look pretty bland there's not an awful lot going on and you tend to find that

the casino has a lot of activity on the lower floor and then as you go up

through several different tiers there are different forms of entertainment and

available to you so yeah very different when you look from the outside in here

we're looking at downtown Reno and the interesting thing to know here is as we

pan across you can see what looks like a variety of shops and apartments but

ultimately this is all one giant casino they're themed individually into

individual different types of casinos but you can actually walk through on the

top floor between individual casinos into different themed areas so I thought

the move out of downtown and go to pepper mill this is something that was

recommended to me this looks a bit more sort of legacy style in terms of being a

huge hotel a spa and a casino so let's go inside have a look

so peppermint is very similar to all of the large casinos they are probably

familiar with in places like Vegas very very large floors absolutely stuffed

full of gaming machines left right and center and it's always something I've

struggled with because gaming machines I struggle to see the appeal of really

however when you go into those casinos they also have traditional games areas

such as poker and blackjack but also very large restaurants so that if you

wanted to do something other than semi gaming machine you can do that but the

interesting thing is the dominance of gaming machines in these style of

casinos however the thing I was really interested in was having a look that's

the sports book and Peppermill had a very large sports battalion

so there's plenty of information available for people who are wagering at

these sports books but there's you know nothing particularly interesting you can

scan a QR code and look at some more form in greater depth but a lot of these

things are printed out on the individual day I wondered whether there was an

opportunity with the odds that were being printed out to exploit some sort

of form of arbitrage but the fact is the was so large that wasn't really a

distinct possibility but yeah it was interesting to spend a bit of time here

having a look at the markets from this perspective

Oh

so I'm hoping you can hear me but it's actly so wait in here knowing

that these people are the other people on the other side of bands really wait

you come to places like this you see lots people gambling and for me gambling

is about skill and judgment and you against others and if your skill and

judgment is better than that then you would expect to earn money over a period

of time which is exactly what I've done for the last two decades and I get a lot

of pleasure out of that I get a lot of pleasure of trying to solve those

unsolvable problems and trying to really get to grips with how I can overcome

those issues and also do it better than anybody else I you know I get a real

sense of achievement out of doing that you know if I sat on a blackjack table I

would probably enjoy that here because you know there is a demonstrable chance

I could win it's me against the dealer okay the odds aren't fantastic but the

you know it is a potential win there so I'd probably enjoy that I probably even

enjoy sitting at a roulette wheel I know that I would lose money but if I had

some friends there and we're having a drink and a laugh I would probably enjoy

that I'd be willing to pay for that experience but when you look at these

machines down here these slot machines these video games and variants they're

off that we see here I mean these are just out and out of money losers

wouldn't gain any pleasure from sitting down on their I tried to do it earlier

and I just couldn't bring myself to do I couldn't even put $1.00 in any of these

machines because I just thought this is pointless I don't understand why anybody

would do this and yet when I was walking the floor I saw somebody here that was

playing two at the same time and I wanted to jump in and just say stop you

know you're gonna lose money twice as fast what are you doing are you stupid

the more you play them and the longer you play them the more money you're

gonna lose and if you're having a bit of alcohol and you're being sort of

encouraged for want of a better word to sit down for longer then it's just a

one-way street and I don't understand or get pleasure or how understand how

people get pleasure they obviously do the other words they wouldn't do it but

for me I think gambling has always been a case of a game of skill

and trying to be your opponent and being better than your opponent and that's

where you're gonna get your edge that's what I enjoy

I don't enjoy just throwing money away for the sake of it so yeah not for me

but maybe I'll I'll sit down at some of the tables and having previously learned

many many moons ago how to card count I could probably pick up a couple of

decent opportunities on some of the tables but but it then again you know

you could you still can't win over the long term but I would actually enjoy the

challenge of sitting at the table and trying to do the best that I can so as I

mentioned at the beginning of this video Reno was one of the first places in

Nevada to legalize gaming and gambling of all sorts but obviously over time

that sort of declined because not only did you have Vegas rise to prominence

but you also have Indian reservations in other areas where gambling can take

place so you know it sort of went on the decline a little bit but when you come

to places like pepper mill these are much more like the sort of places that

are likely to see in Vegas downtown Reno is a bit old-fashioned it feels a bit

dated to me but pepper mill feels very much like a Vegas style casino but also

there are other benefits to Reno as well so you know if you if you go to Vegas

you can go to the Grand Canyon but if you go to Reno you can go to Lake Tahoe

and the mountains that's around here so great for winter sports or in the summer

you can go hiking I've been up to Lake Tahoe I've done a tour around the lake

have done a bit of hiking been down to the lake up a few mountains and just did

all of those sort of things and in the winter obviously you can go skiing and

snowboarding and stuff and there seem to be an almost infinite number of ski runs

around Lake Tahoe so you know well Reno may not be Vegas in Vegas you go down a

giant hole in the ground the Grand Canyon but in Reno you can go up some

spectacular mountains above a spectacular lake so I think you

know Reno does have its benefits it's may not be as big as Vegas now but

certainly for people in California or a little bit further north in Vegas I

think it's a suitable determine if especially if you're into winter sports

or you're into hiking where you fancy going up some mountains or going on the

lake the lake is big spectacular and I think you know you could probably get

the benefit of doing that and nipping down to Reno or coming into Reno I'm

going up and doing that so a little bit different from Vegas maybe not quite as

spectacular but things like Peppermill are very similar and very familiar with

people who've been to Vegas in terms of this sort of casinos that you're likely

to see there so yeah that is arena Nevada

you

For more infomation >> Peter Webb - 'Wagering' in the USA - US Sportsbooks review - Duration: 13:22.

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Why Was This Unarmed Man Killed By U.S. Park Police? - Duration: 10:23.

United States Park Police shot and killed

an unarmed 25-year-old man during a traffic stop in Fairfax County.

There are so many questions in this case.

One of the only things we know for certain is that a Northern Virginia

family is now left without a son.

[gunshots]

It is over 31 million seconds ago that this happened.

It's just a number. Sounds so far away or so distant.

But at the same time, the memory is so alive, I can feel the shots.

The last time I checked, we live in the United States of America

and it is not appropriate to not give any information for an entire year

when someone's life is taken, by anyone.

We were notified that there was a shootout. We were told to go to the Fairfax hospital.

They said that his body was evidence and that he was under arrest,

which to this day we have no idea why and no one has explained that to us.

Bijan was the pride that I carried in my heart.

I think everywhere we go now, it's a little bit quieter and a little less fun.

Bijan was hit from behind by an Uber driver while he was on the George Washington Memorial Parkway.

From what we know, either the Uber driver or the passenger or both called 911

which was rerouted, and the Park Police picked it up and they found him

minutes later and actually started pursuing him then.

Before I saw this video, I thought maybe one guy panicked and just fired off

his gun and it just kept going off. But that's not what happened.

He was stopped three times.

Every single instance of it they're aggressively approaching him with their guns drawn.

I think in that moment, when someone walked out of their vehicle

and pointed a gun at his head and tried to yank his door open,

that he was in fear for his life, rightfully so.

As far as driving away from the officers,

if anyone walked up to my car with their gun drawn, civilian or law enforcement officer,

after a minor traffic violation, I would be freaking out.

The third time that Bijan stopped at the corner of Fort Hunt and Alexandria Avenue,

the Park Police drove in front of his car and they were perpendicular to him.

The two officers jumped out of their cars and approached directly to his vehicle

and he slowly, I guess, took his foot off the brake

and it looked like he was moving around the officers.

[gunshots]

Clearly my brother was unconscious careening into a ditch and someone felt the need

to take his gun back out, walk up to his window,

as he was unconscious, going into a ditch and shoot him in the head again.

[gunshots]

We want answers for every single one of those nine shots fired at him,

particularly the last two, directly at his driver's side window, execution-style.

There's nothing in the tape that in any way, shape or form, suggests that he was a threat.

He wasn't driving particularly fast. He did stop,

unfortunately, he kept on driving on a few occasions as well

but he's not veering towards the officers.

In the U.S., police shoot to kill, right?

They're not shooting to wound anyone.

It really adds insult to the family who has not only lost their loved one

but in a way that desecrates the body and the person that they loved.

We have someone that has been essentially executed by the Park Police.

We don't know who did it, the name has not been released

and no answers have been given.

Our treatment in the hospital was extremely egregious

and it was extremely uncomfortable for all of us.

They set up all these weird rules for us while we were at the hospital, the Park Police.

There were two Park Police officers at a time outside of his door.

The rule was that one person could go in between me, my husband and my parents,

at a time, at the top of every hour for 10 minutes.

If we were late by one minute, if they were changing any dressings or anything like that,

the nurses, we would lose like a couple of minutes.

We could not touch him at all; no body part, nowhere, under any circumstances.

He was in a coma, his body was decaying.

At some point, he would either have a heart attack, which we didn't want him to die twice,

that just seemed cruel,

or his organs would start shutting down which is what was happening.

November 17, Bijan was shot.

And November 27, ten days later, Bijan left this world.

My son, Bijan, was a manifestation of American dream.

Our parents were extremely supportive and they really were big on making sure

that we understood our roots of being Iranian but also being

extremely proud and patriotic and understanding our American side too.

He was a die-hard football lover.

While he was in college, he was in fraternity

and his fellow brothers, they called him, "Brother of the Year."

Bij was the loudest person in the room.

He had this presence that was like larger than life.

He was very giggly, he was very witty.

When something like this happens, your whole world that you build, falls apart.

Everything you believe in falls apart.

Living is a challenge now. It's a whole lot more difficult than dying.

You wake up and try to make some sense out of this,

which I still haven't been able to make any sense out of it.

When you see Park Police, you should not feel threatened.

And unfortunately, what the Park Police has done, not just by murdering Bijan,

but also by their cover up and their silence, has actually left many people

with a fear of the Park Police rather than seeing them as their protectors.

There is, in my opinion, absolutely no justification for taking someone's life

over a traffic incident, ever, under any circumstance.

There's an over-representation of, especially men, black men who are impacted by police killings.

Eric Garner was killed over four years ago, and just now the officer who's responsible

for putting him in a chokehold is only being considered for disciplinary actions.

Not enough people are outraged about it and people don't become outraged about it

until it happens to someone that they care about, and that's a real problem.

We want names. We want names.

We want justice. We want justice.

We are Bijan. We are Bijan.

He loved the Patriots, he was 25-years-old, he just graduated from undergraduate

he was part of a fraternity.

A lot of the things we know about Bijan are things we know

about people that we know and love, as well.

And that's true of almost all of the people impacted by these killings, to be clear.

They're important members of their community, they're loved by their family

and nobody sees it coming and one day they're just not there.

This cannot stand. There needs to be justice for Bijan

and there needs to be measures to make sure that this never, ever, ever happens again.

We want police to wear body cameras and dash cameras.

We want answers. We want justice for Bijan.

you

For more infomation >> Why Was This Unarmed Man Killed By U.S. Park Police? - Duration: 10:23.

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Come On A Cruise With Us | Deja and Di-V - Duration: 5:20.

For more infomation >> Come On A Cruise With Us | Deja and Di-V - Duration: 5:20.

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WW3 ALERT: US in SHOCK as Putin moves supersonic nuclear bombers to covert Caribbean base - Duration: 3:07.

WW3 ALERT: US in SHOCK as Putin moves supersonic nuclear bombers to covert Caribbean base

US OFFICIALS are on alert after Russian President Vladimir Putin revealed plans to send supersonic

nuclear bombers to its closest military base to the American mainland.

Russia plans to send supersonic nuclear-warhead bombers to a military base it is developing

in the Caribbean.

The Kremlin unveiled plans to establish a covert military base on islands belonging

to Venezuela.

This would mark Russia's first military base involvement that close to the US since

the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

Venezuela's president Nicolas Maduro has confirmed that he accepted the proposals to

host Russian nuclear bombers.

Russia will develop an already existing airstrip at the island of La Orchila into a naval facility

and military airfield.

The Tu-160 supersonic bombers – nicknamed White Swans – are capable of carrying short-range

nuclear missiles and can fly over 7,500 miles without refuelling.

Russian military Colonel Eduard Rodyukov said the move was a response to US president Donald

Trump's threat to scrap nuclear treaties.

He also said that the Kremlin officials were looking to host a "long-time military presence"

in the US backyard.

Washington has recently been seeking to withdraw from key arms control agreements, including

the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF), which bans all short and mid-range

ballistic missiles.

Former Trump State Department senior adviser Christian Whiton said that top figures in

the White House were "concerned" about this decision.

He added that if this base development goes ahead: "We will need to react very firmly

against Venezuela, it would be very unsafe for US security."

Earlier this month, Russia cooldinated a series of military drills alongside Venezuela.

At the time, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blasted the move on Twitter: "Russia's

government has sent bombers halfway around the world to Venezuela."

Russian military expert Colonel Shamil Gareyev said establishing a long-term presence in

Venezuela was an economically sensible decision if more joint exercises are to take place.

He said: "Our strategic bombers will not only not have to return to Russia every time,

but also won't perform aerial refueling while on a patrol mission in the Americas."

It cannot be ruled out that if all the agreements [under the INF Treaty] are disrupted we will

have to take both symmetric and asymmetric steps to ensure stability," Andrey Koshkin,

the head of the chair of sociology and political sciences at the Russian Plekhanov University

of Economics,

For more infomation >> WW3 ALERT: US in SHOCK as Putin moves supersonic nuclear bombers to covert Caribbean base - Duration: 3:07.

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U.S. Foreign Policy 2018: Year in Review | NowThis World - Duration: 7:15.

American foreign policy in 2018 has been called a lot of things.

But as President Donald Trump's second year in office comes to a close,

how exactly has he translated his promise of putting "America First" --

into actionable foreign policy?

And what exactly has it meant for the United State's influence

and standing around the world today?

We're going to recap some of 2018's standout moments in American Foreign policy.

Let's start with the crackdown on immigration.

On April 6th, now former U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions

announced the Justice Department's new "Zero-Tolerance" policy.

[Sessions] I have put in place a zero-tolerance policy for illegal entry on our southwest border

If you are smuggling a child then we will prosecute you

and that child may be separated from you as required by law.

[Host] The policy resulted in the separation of families who migrated to the U.S.

Since it began, at least 3,000 children, many of whom

were toddlers and babies, have been separated from their parents or caregivers.

The policy resulted in the children being held in facilities with cages,

in what some have criticized as "inhumane" conditions.

This was only the first in a series of moves by the administration to crackdown on immigration this year .

Later in the year, the administration slashed its annual refugee quota to just 30,000,

its lowest level ever;

made it harder to seek asylum in the United States;

and deployed thousands of armed soldiers to the southern border,

as a Caravan of asylum seekers and migrants make their way to the U.S.

Then there was, the Iran Nuclear Deal.

On May 8th, Trump withdrew from the landmark agreement,

officially called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or JCPOA.

[Trump] "Therefore, I am announcing today that the United States

will withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal.

[Host] The administration imposed sanctions on Iran,

violating terms of the JCPOA, and thus triggered the withdrawal from the agreement.

Back on July 14th, 2015 under the Obama administration-- Iran and the P5+1,

which includes the permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany --

agreed to the meticulous, 159-page agreement.

The deal lifted harsh sanctions that crippled Iran's economy.

In return, Iran agreed to restrict its nuclear program

and allow international inspectors in to verify its compliance to the agreement.

But in October 2017, President Trump claimed

Iran was violating the "spirit" of the agreement.

He withdrew from the deal six months later.

Months before Trump withdrew, international inspectors said

Iran was in fact complying with the agreement.

[Amano] We've stated that Iran was implementing its nuclear related commitments.

And that we have access to all sites and locations that we needed to have access.

[Host] Despite the US's withdrawal, the remaining P5+1 countries

and Iran all largely continue to adhere to agreement.

By pulling out of the deal, Trump essentially reversed what was seen as

one of President Obama's signature foreign policy achievements during his time in office.

Next, was the moving of the U.S.'s Israeli embassy to Jerusalem.

[Trump] On behalf of the 45th president of the United States on America

we welcome you officially and for the first time to the

Embassy of the United States her in Jerusalem, the capital of Israel. Thank you

[Host] On May 14th -- the administration made an unprecedented,

and controversial move, when it relocated its Israeli embassy

to the disputed city of Jerusalem.

One of the issues at the very core of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The U.S. became the most high-profile country

to open an embassy in Jerusalem, which was then followed

by other countries announcing their intentions to move theirs as well.

Israeli officials praised the U.S. for the move,

while Palestinians condemned it.

Historically, the U.S. has served as a key mediator

in the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

But some Palestinian officials, including president Mahmoud Abbas,

argued this relocation now disqualifies it from being a mediator in peace negotiations.

On to North Korea.

On June 12th -- President Trump met face-to-face with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un.

This marked the first time a U.S. president met with a North Korean head of state.

The historic meeting happened in Singapore.

But Just months before the diplomatic summit,

both leaders appeared to be on collision course.

Calling each other names:

[Trump] Rocket man is on a suicide mission for himself and for his regime

[Host] Kim lashing out at Trump, calling him a quote "mentally deranged...dotard."

And they even threatened all out war:

[Trump] North Korea best not make any more threats to the United States.

They will be met with fire and fury, like the world has never seen.

[Host] But the summit in Singapore ended with both leaders praising each other

and signing onto a joint statement that agreed to the

"complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula" and

promised "security guarantees" for North Korea.

But what was not included in this agreement,

were timeframes to implement these vague promises.

After the summit, president Trump hailed the agreement

as a victory for the United States on Twitter --

going as far as to say that North Korea "no longer posed a nuclear threat to the States."

But satellite images from North Korea paint a very different picture.

They show that the country is actually expanding key nuclear missile sites, not destroying them.

And finally, tariffs on China.

On July 6th -- the U.S. launched a trade war with China.

The Trump administration followed through on previous threats

and imposed tariffs on 34 billion dollars worth of Chinese products.

So things manufactured in China like flat-screen TVs,

medical devices, and aircraft parts --

were immediately subjected to a 25 percent tax when imported into the United States.

And China was pissed.

Beijing quickly responded, saying the U.S.

"launched the biggest trade war in economic history so far."

It then imposed its own tariffs on American products like pork,

soybeans, automobiles, and more.

Officially entering into a trade war between the world's two largest economies.

Earlier this month, Trump and China's leader Xi Jinping

met face to face at the G20 Summit in Argentina.

They both agreed to put the tariffs on hold for a 90-day period

while they negotiate their trade policy.

We'll just have to wait to see what this means for the trade war next year.

Trump's 2nd year in office has been incredibly consequential on the world stage.

He's done things like form new diplomatic relationships with

dictators and authoritarian leaders, isolate the U.S. from some

of its historically strongest allies, and some, like South Korean President Moon Jae-in,

even credit him with improving North and South Korea's relationship.

This all leaves us with one question, what will 2019 hold for American foreign policy?

For more infomation >> U.S. Foreign Policy 2018: Year in Review | NowThis World - Duration: 7:15.

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Suspected Cyberattack From Outside US Hits LA Times - Duration: 0:27.

For more infomation >> Suspected Cyberattack From Outside US Hits LA Times - Duration: 0:27.

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With Denuclearization Efforts Stalled, What's Next For The U.S. And North Korea? | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:13.

For more infomation >> With Denuclearization Efforts Stalled, What's Next For The U.S. And North Korea? | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:13.

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Turkish and Russian defense ministers meet to talk about involvement in Syria: Is the US among their - Duration: 3:48.

For more infomation >> Turkish and Russian defense ministers meet to talk about involvement in Syria: Is the US among their - Duration: 3:48.

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President Trump Blames Democrats For Deaths Of 2 Immigrant Children In U.S. Custody - Duration: 1:05.

For more infomation >> President Trump Blames Democrats For Deaths Of 2 Immigrant Children In U.S. Custody - Duration: 1:05.

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Donald Trump faces AXE: US President WILL be ousted 'in first few months of 2019' - Duration: 7:58.

 Trump has survived another year filled with controversy and historic moments, despite the probe into allegations of collusion with Russia looming over the Oval Office

 Special counsel Mueller has already snared key members of Trump's inner circle, and it looks like the US President is slowly being drawn into his sights

 American political history professor Allan Lichtman – one of the few to correctly predict Trump's shock win – has said 2019 could be the year the Trump regime topples

 He told Daily Star Online he expects Mueller to turn up findings that will push the Democrats into launching impeachment proceedings

 And it comes with Trump's former fixer Michael Cohen due to be jailed next month for covering up the US President's "dirty deeds" – with the lawyer this week saying: "Mueller knows everything

" Related Articles Donald Trump brands Michael Cohen 'WEAK' as lawyer pleads guilty over Russia lies North Korea dictator Kim Jong-un's drinking buddy SNATCHED by cops in China Russia could BULLDOZE to NATO border in just 72 HOURS amid fears Putin ready to invade  Lichtman had previously predicted Mueller could reveal key findings on Trump this year, but while remaining confident the net is closing on the US President he revised his timeline

 He also hit back at claims Trump is "growing into the presidency" after the White House's rollercoaster year which has seen numerous swirling legal battles and numerous resignations

 Trump's year has been capped off by the controversial withdrawal of US troops from Syria, and the shock quitting of General Jim Mattis in protest of the move

 The US President also moaned this week he is "all alone" in the White House as the US Government remains in shutdown in a stand-off of over funding for his "beautiful" border wall with Mexico

 He also then travelled to visit US troops in Iraq along with his wife Melania.      Lichtman, from the American University in Washington, said: "[Trump's impeachment] all depends on what special counsel comes up with

 "I thought he would turn something up sooner – but now it looks like it will be in early 2019

 "If the special counsel's findings are shocking enough the Democratic base will demand an impeachment investigation

 "The Democrats shouldn't shy away from that, it is their constitutional duty, that is why the founders put it in the constitution so we can have a legal, orderly and peaceful means to deal with a rogue president

"   Related Articles Global financial 'HYPER CRASH' coming by 2025 bringing gigantic market meltdown Russian tanks 'just 11 MILES from border amid fears of imminent INVASION' Jacob Rees-Mogg demands Theresa May QUITS as Prime Minister  Trump's second year has president has seen him battle crisis after crisis at home and abroad, all the while with the US President glued to Twitter

 He endured a bruising mid-term elections, which saw Trump lose control of the House of Representatives, before firing attorney general Jeff Sessions

 The billionaire also held key summits with Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un, both of which were seen as controversial despite being sold as historic wins by Trump

 Britain also saw the US President make his first visit, during which he criticised Prime Minister Theresa May before rowing back on his remarks hours later as a giant Trump baby blimp flew over Westminster

     Lichtman told Daily Star Online: ""He hasn't grown into the presidency at all, and usually president's do, they tend to become more of a unifying force

 "They smooth out the rough edges and become more effective at running the machinery of government

 "Trump has actually gone the opposite direction, he has become even more outlandish in his claims

 "He seems now only care about the adulation he gets from his base, and from his rallies

He makes even less than effort than before to dampen down fear, hate and prejudice rather than stoke it up

"    Trump's most shocking moment of his rollercoaster second year was his deployment of the US military to border over the "migrant caravan", Lichtman added

 He said: "The caravan and sending troops to the border to deal with this rag tag group of terribly oppressed people was probably [the most shocking]

 "But it is hard to pick one from Donald Trump. "This was not a military emergency, I cannot recall a more irresponsible or politically motivated use of the American military

"    Lichtman described Trump as a president simply "following his instincts" after realising the "big lie" works

 The TV mogul has made repeated demonstrably false claims, with the Washington Post alleging Trump has made 6,420 false statements since taking the White House

 Trump also seems to "embrace dictators", feeling more comfortable with piling "praise and prestige" on Kim and Putin than improving relations with allies, Lichtman said

 2019 is likely to begin with the US Government still in shutdown, as both sides refuse to budge over funding for Trump's wall – a key campaign promise

Related articles Donald Trump dealt major blow as Defence Secretary quits role with SAVAGE letter Trump orders 7,000 US troops to leave Afghanistan US in CHAOS as government in SHUTDOWN over Mexico border wall deadlock

For more infomation >> Donald Trump faces AXE: US President WILL be ousted 'in first few months of 2019' - Duration: 7:58.

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2-Year-Old Yemeni Boy Whose Mom Sued U.S. To See Him Has Died - News Today - Duration: 2:54.

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — The 2-year-old son of a Yemeni woman who sued the Trump administration to let her into the country to be with the ailing boy has died, the Council on American-Islamic Relations announced.

Abdullah Hassan died Friday in UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital in Oakland, where his father Ali Hassan brought him in the fall to get treatment for a genetic brain disorder.

Ali Hassan is a U.S. citizen who lives in Stockton, California. He and his wife Shaima Swileh moved to Egypt after marrying in war-torn Yemen in 2016. Swileh is not an American citizen and remained in Egypt while fighting for a visa.

"We are heartbroken. We had to say goodbye to our baby, the light of our lives," Ali Hassan was quoted as saying in the statement published by the council.

Swileh held her son for the first time in the hospital 10 days ago.

A funeral is scheduled for Saturday.

Swileh had been trying to get a visa since 2017, so the family could move to the United States.

Citizens from Yemen and four other mostly Muslim countries, along with North Korea and Venezuela, are restricted from coming to the United States under President Donald Trump' s travel ban.

When the boy's health worsened, the father went ahead to California in October to get their son help, and Swileh remained in Egypt hoping for a visa. As the couple fought for a waiver, doctors put Abdullah on life support.

"My wife is calling me every day wanting to kiss and hold her son for the one last time," AliHassan said, choking up at a news conference earlier this month.

He started losing hope and was considering pulling his son off life support to end his suffering. But then a hospital social worker reached out to the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which sued on Dec. 16, said Basim Elkarra, executive director of the group in Sacramento.

The State Department granted Swileh a waiver the next day.

"With their courage, this family has inspired our nation to confront the realities of Donald Trump's Muslim Ban," said Saad Sweilem, a lawyer with the council who represents the family. "In his short life, Abdullah has been a guiding light for all of us in the fight against xenophobia and family separation."

___

This story has been corrected to show that the boy's first name is spelled Abdullah, not Abdallah.

For more infomation >> 2-Year-Old Yemeni Boy Whose Mom Sued U.S. To See Him Has Died - News Today - Duration: 2:54.

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Over 170,000 fires in the US related to cooking: Here's how you can prevent them - Duration: 2:13.

For more infomation >> Over 170,000 fires in the US related to cooking: Here's how you can prevent them - Duration: 2:13.

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Migrant children detained at US border will be given more thorough health exams following two deaths - Duration: 4:18.

Migrant children detained at US border will be given more thorough health exams following two deaths

More thorough initial health screenings for migrants, as well as secondary screenings, will be held for every child in Border Patrol custody following the deaths of two Guatemalan children this month, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen was visiting Yuma, Arizona, on Saturday, a day after her trip to meet border officials and medical staff in El Paso, Texas. It was in El Paso where an 8-year-old died in US government custody.

The system is clearly overwhelmed and we must work together to address this humanitarian crisis and protect vulnerable populations, Nielsen said in a statement. She called on Congress to act with urgency.

Late Friday, El Paso Mayor Dee Margo said he was among those who met with Nielsen, saying they discussed our immigration needs on the border. The statement from Margo, a Republican, did not mention the deaths of migrant children or whether it was discussed.

The trip came days after the death of Felipe Gomez Alonzo. Felipe was the second Guatemalan child to die in government custody in three weeks.

Nielsen has called the death deeply concerning and heartbreaking and requested medical help from other government agencies, including the US Coast Guard. 

As Nielsen made the trip to Texas, New Mexicos Democratic senators, Tom Udall and Martin Heinrich, sent her a letter Friday seeking answers about the boys death.

The timeline, action and factors that led to Felipes death are still developing, but the information that has become public so far is alarming and demands immediate attention and investigation, the letter says.

President Donald Trump blamed Democrats for migrant deaths at the border Saturday. He tweeted the deaths are the fault of their pathetic immigration policies that allow people to make the long trek thinking they can enter our country illegally.

He went on to say: The two children in question were very sick before they were given over to Border Patrol.

US Rep Raul Grijalva, an Arizona Democrat whose district includes Yuma and much of the US-Mexico-border, on Saturday issued a statement saying Nielsen was visiting Yuma under the dark cloud of a Republican-induced government shutdown, the presidents threats to close the border and the tragic deaths of two children in DHS custody.

Felipe and his father, Agustin Gomez, were apprehended by border agents on December 18 near the Paso del Norte bridge connecting El Paso to Juarez, Mexico, according to US Customs and Border Protection. 

The two were detained at the bridges processing center and then the Border Patrol station in El Paso, until being taken at about 1am Sunday to a facility in Alamogordo, New Mexico, about 90 miles (145 kilometers) away.

After an agent noticed Felipe coughing, father and son were taken to an Alamogordo hospital, where Felipe was diagnosed with a common cold and found to have a fever of 103 degrees Fahrenheit (39.4 degrees Celsius), CBP has said.

Felipe was held for observation for 90 minutes, according to CBP, before being released with prescriptions for amoxicillin and ibuprofen.

But the boy fell sick hours later on Monday and was re-admitted to the hospital. He died just before midnight.

New Mexico authorities said late Thursday that an autopsy showed Felipe had the flu, but more tests need to be done before a cause of death can be determined.

Felipes death came three weeks after another migrant child, seven-year-old Jakelin Amei Rosmery Caal Maquin, died from dehydration in Border Patrol Custody. 

Jakelin was pronounced dead in an El Paso hospital on December 8, 27 hours after she was arrested with her father, 29-year-old Nery Caal, and 163 others trying to enter the US at the Antelope Wells Port of Entry in New Mexico. 

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