Thứ Ba, 5 tháng 2, 2019

Youtube daily but Feb 5 2019

Hazard's comments appeared to imply he'll be heading out of Stamford Bridge this summer.

"I know what I am going to do. I have made a decision," the Belgian told RMC Sport.

But it's now emerged the quotes were from several months ago - and Hazard has since sounded less and less sure about his future.

ESPN reporter Liam Twomey tweeted: "My understanding is the RMC interview with Hazard was done at least two months ago. He's sounded less certain of his future in more recent comments.

"None of this means he hasn't decided, of course. It's not just defenders that Hazard likes to keep guessing... #cfc"

Chelsea boss Maurizio Sarri recently revealed he is not expecting a decision from Hazard over whether to extend his contract or seek a move away until the summer.

Sarri said: "He's not decided yet if he wants to stay here or if he wants a new experience in another club.

"I don't know exactly the situation, but I think Eden at the moment doesn't know the final choice."

Hazard, who joined the Blues from Lille in 2012, has scored 15 goals so far this season.

He'll next be in action on Sunday when Chelsea travel to Manchester City.

The Blues could find themselves out of the Champions League spots by then.

Chelsea are fourth in the table but Manchester United are just two points behind.

United travel to Fulham in Saturday's early kick-off and could leapfrog Sarri's side.

Arsenal could also overtake the Gunners if they thrash Huddersfield.

The Gunners travel to the John Smith's Stadium three points behind Chelsea but with an inferior goal difference of seven.

For more infomation >> Chelsea's Eden Hazard says 'future is decided' - but there's a new twist to please fans - Duration: 1:53.

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Tired But Happy Patriots Fans Return Home Monday - Duration: 2:04.

For more infomation >> Tired But Happy Patriots Fans Return Home Monday - Duration: 2:04.

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Gladys Knight's Nat'l Anthem Was Incredible - But When the Camera Cut Away for 3 Seconds - Duration: 3:35.

For more infomation >> Gladys Knight's Nat'l Anthem Was Incredible - But When the Camera Cut Away for 3 Seconds - Duration: 3:35.

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Patch Adams: "Not a Fancy Hospital, but it was Fun!" - Duration: 1:33.

So, I said that when I graduated nobody gave me a hospital. You know, how inconsiderate. I was ready to serve humanity. Give me a hospital!

Ah, they're very expensive. Okay? So I think what most people do is go: "Well, I'll do what I can."

I couldn't I could not do it their way. So... It was the 60s, I had already visited communes, and I knew I was a communal person, and no one gave me a commune, so...

Twenty adults moved into a large six bedroom house and said we were a hospital. Yay! No one closed us down and we were are open 24/7. So...

It wasn't really fancy like some of the hospitals you saw, but the care was sweet, and it was really fun, which of course wasn't taught in medical school, but...

If you're not making money, and you're working your butts off -- fun is a lot more seductive than money.

For more infomation >> Patch Adams: "Not a Fancy Hospital, but it was Fun!" - Duration: 1:33.

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Moestep animation meme//but i failed - Duration: 0:33.

oh no

cute lil hand moving

AAAAWWWWWW

gucci gucci

CUTENESS OVERLOAD

myst not you again

For more infomation >> Moestep animation meme//but i failed - Duration: 0:33.

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Hollyoaks spoilers: Kiss spells heartbreak for Sinead - but could it end in murder? - Duration: 2:53.

  O'Connor in this week's Hollyoaks when her husband Laurie Shelby takes his sexual harassment campaign against Sienna Blake to a dark new level

 The week starts nicely enough when, to celebrate their one-year anniversary, Laurie (Kyle Pryor) surprises Sinead with breakfast and documents to change her daughter Hannah's surname to his

 Feeling bad because she forgot, Sinead (Stephanie Davis) ropes Tony Hutchinson (Nick Pickard) into helping her make a lavish dinner for Laurie

 But it all goes wrong when he comes home and overhears her tell Tony that he can never 'know about it' - it being their affair

Read More Hollyoaks spoilers for next week - infatuation, a break-up and more baby horror  Instead of coming clean about the 'it', she deflects the situation and accuses Hollyoaks High deputy head Laurie of sleeping with teacher Sienna (Anna Passey)

 In a fit of anger he threatens not to give Hannah his name and storms back to school to confide in Sienna

 Sheinvites him to join her and Brody for pizza, and when Sinead turns up, Brody insists she join too before they all head back to Sienna's flat for a game of dares

 Sienna is left mortified when Laurie dares her and Brody to streak around the village, and feels so uncomfortable that she calls in sick the next day

 But her defences fall the next day when Hannah asks Sienna about her children, and she breaks down in Laurie's arms

Read More Hollyoaks shock as Alfie Nightingale flees village as actor Richard Linnell quits  Convinced they're up to no good, Sinead decides to hack into his emails at school but is forced to hide under his desk when Laurie and Sienna walk in

 The game is up when she accidentally sneezes and gets slung out by her furious husband who threatens to divorce her

 He then kisses Sienna, who runs out in horror.  The development is the latest in the sexual harassment storyline involving Laurie, Sienna and Sinead that is expected to run for months

 However, Sienna isn't a woman to be trifled with, having killed her own serial-killer daughter Nico in self-defence

 How far will she need to be pushed before her dark side resurfaces?   * Hollyoaks airs weekdays at 7pm on E4

Read More More about Stephanie Davis.

For more infomation >> Hollyoaks spoilers: Kiss spells heartbreak for Sinead - but could it end in murder? - Duration: 2:53.

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Gladys Knight's Nat'l Anthem Was Incredible - But When the Camera Cut Away for 3 Seconds - Duration: 3:39.

For more infomation >> Gladys Knight's Nat'l Anthem Was Incredible - But When the Camera Cut Away for 3 Seconds - Duration: 3:39.

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Ava Max - Sweet but Psycho (KriszDj2001 Trap Remix) [Bass Boosted/Magyar Felirat] - Duration: 2:42.

For more infomation >> Ava Max - Sweet but Psycho (KriszDj2001 Trap Remix) [Bass Boosted/Magyar Felirat] - Duration: 2:42.

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Cannabis could help your ailing pet, but here's why your veterinarian won't talk about it - Duration: 2:44.

We see huge potential in the medicinal properties of cannabis not as many people realize that

cannabis can also be used safely and effectively for animals

Throughout the years cannabis enthusiasts have utilized the plants for both medicinal and recreational

purposes but now companies like vet CBD are exploring the use of CBD and THC

as medicine for pets being a veterinarian and being in practice and working with animal patients what I noticed was a lot of

the traditionally prescribed medications had negative side effects and a lot of owners were hesitant to use those medications what I did was

formulated the products for vet CBD so that animals could safely

benefit from medical cannabis that CBD products focus on reducing pain and treating conditions like arthritis

anxiety nausea and seizures and what we've seen with a lot of owners is that

the CBD and small amounts of THC that we put in our product has it's been able to

really help with the pain and the inflammation

In those joints and it's really been able to improve the quality of life and a lot of these senior dogs and cats by law

veterinarians are not allowed to prescribe cannabis products for pets or even

recommend the use of cannabis products from companies like vet CBD however for Californians that changed in January

2019 when a new state law gave veterinarians the ability to discuss cannabis use with their clients

CBD the medicinal compounds in cannabis works with the cannabinoid receptors that animals like humans have throughout their bodies

producing a therapeutic response

combining all compounds of the cannabis plants creates what the industry calls the entourage effect

what that means is when cannabinoids like THC and CBD work together they

amplify each other's effects making full-spectrum

products more effective in treatment we use full-spectrum cannabis which contains more than just CBD it contains other minor

cannabinoids and also contains small amounts of THC for optimal therapeutic effect while some pet owners are still

skeptical many have seen the benefits for their furry companion I did talk to my vet about giving haji

festivity in the very beginning and they said they cannot recommend it but there nothing

no

So it's up to the owners to like research after using a THC blend with the CBD from the CBD he's he's pretty good now

but ultimately what we want to do is to be able to integrate veterinary medicine and cannabis as medicine

so the end goal is for

veterinarians to not just be able to discuss it but ultimately to be able to recommend it and to prescribe it just like they would

any other medication

For more infomation >> Cannabis could help your ailing pet, but here's why your veterinarian won't talk about it - Duration: 2:44.

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Leg found in Lake BV identified as female, but not Baylee Despot - Duration: 2:03.

For more infomation >> Leg found in Lake BV identified as female, but not Baylee Despot - Duration: 2:03.

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Lights Back On at NYC Jail After Hundreds Protest, But Prisoners Still Without Heat in Winter - Duration: 8:14.

This is Democracy Now!

I'm Amy Goodman.

We end today's show here in New York, where more than 1,600 prisoners at a Brooklyn federal

detention center were forced to endure freezing temperatures during last week's polar vortex,

with no heat, no light, no water for showers, no hot meals.

Demonstrators rallied throughout the weekend to protest the conditions at Metropolitan

Detention Center, which is run by the Bureau of Prisons.

Heat issues at the facility have been ongoing.

Officials said the electricity problem was caused in part by a fire the previous week

and that the jail had switched over to emergency power.

Legal Aid Society said it wrote to the jail's warden as early as January 22nd to demand

heat be restored, before temperatures arrive that were, quote, "dangerous to human life."

As the news of the conditions spread, crowds of protesters gathered outside the prison,

known as MDC.

Prisoners communicated with them by banging on the jail windows.

On Sunday afternoon, some of the protesters, including family members of those incarcerated,

were pepper-sprayed by guards.

Democracy Now! was there and spoke to family members, activists, including Women's March

co-chair Linda Sarsour.

Let them know that you are happy that we are here for you.

Bang on those windows!

A group of activists, organizers and family members have actually been out here since

yesterday.

Many of us slept overnight here, on the ground here in front of MDC.

We have been figuring out a communication system that works really well with the incarcerated

brothers that are inside.

And we ask them questions, and they answer by banging on the windows.

And it's been in unison, literally.

Like, yes, yes, everybody's yes.

If it's no, no.

And the fact that they're not in the same cells together and can answer questions makes

us believe that what they are telling us is to be true.

We just watched some incarcerated folks actually recognize their families' voices and started

talking to us through a different area up here.

We have videos of people talking to their moms: "I hear you, Mom.

I see you, Mom."

It was really heartbreaking to watch people have to talk to their family members.

They were not wearing shirts.

It's cold.

And we know they don't have heat inside.

One of the mothers went to confirm that that was her son who was talking to her in there

without a shirt.

She went inside with some folks.

Next thing you know, the CO started beating people up and throwing people on the floor,

pepper-spraying the mom and all the people, the media.

They were—picked up cameras, and they were throwing them out, people falling down the

stairs.

It was really horrible to watch it happen.

And all the mom wanted to do is go in and to confirm if that was her son speaking to

her from this other undesignated area that we don't even know what this area is.

He was climbing up on the gate of the window.

It's horrible.

The warden has been not responsive.

Yesterday, the Mayor's Office delivered trucks of blankets for everyone, generators.

And they—lawyers from Federal Defenders went inside to see their clients, and asked

them, "Did you get blankets?"

No blankets.

None of these people have gotten blankets.

Yesterday, they told us, at 6:00 is when they got their first meal of the day.

They're not getting hot meals.

They don't have hot water.

I mean, this is inhumane.

It's cruel.

There are people in there who have asthma, who are not able to have use nebulizers, people

who have sleep apnea machines, who are not able to have those apnea machines during the

night, which means that they are at high risk of stroke.

There are people with diabetes that are in there.

There are older folks in there, people who need medication, who have not had any access

to medical care.

I mean, this is outrageous.

And the issues with the families is, you don't even know if your family member is alive.

I mean, that's the issue here.

What surprised me the most in there—

New York City Councilmember Jumaane Williams.

—was the blatant disregard of urgency of anything that was going on.

Things happen.

Emergencies happen.

But you have a plan.

They had no plan and didn't seem to care.

We asked them about what's going on to get the heat properly regulated.

The warden said the contractor left and went home.

What are you talking about?

Get another contractor and get this fixed like it was your house.

We asked the warden why he would not receive the blankets and the generator that the Office

of Emergency Management in the city was not accepting.

He had no excuse.

He said, "We didn't.

Maybe we will now," because it was an emergency.

It was an emergency on Sunday when it happened.

What are you talking about?

What's happening there is a microcosm of this country.

That man in the White House and the people who continue to support him, all of them,

don't even know where the kids are that they separated from the border.

Those are melanated children.

That's why they lost them.

The majority of people here are melanated, so they don't care.

Even the ones that aren't are from the poorer communities, so they don't care.

But we care.

And we are going to stay here until this gets resolved.

And if we've got to shut some stuff down, we're going to shut it down.

Name is Elizabeth.

I'm here for my brother Jason, who has been here at MDC for the past five years.

This condition with the heat is not new.

It happened last year.

But fortunately for Jason, he has family that sends him money, and he can buy what he needs

to layer up and have blankets and food and resources.

I'm here because, one, I want my brother to know I love him; two, I do not want this

problem to keep going on.

God forbid if the temperatures plummet again.

You know, I'm really worried about his health.

We contacted his attorney and demanded that he find out what's going on.

You know, this has been an ongoing issue, that the power went out last year for like

three, four days and that the heat went out three, four days last year.

You know, so—and it's disgusting.

And when Nydia Velázquez came out, she was saying that there were wet mattresses from

leaks in the ceiling and crumbling conditions in ceilings and things like that.

It's just—it's disgusting.

And we can only imagine the vermin and the rodents and everything else.

You know, so, again, it's disgusting.

But, you know, this has restored my faith in humanity.

It's really made me very proud to be a New Yorker.

No one wants to see any human beings suffer, especially knowing what we know about sentencing,

extreme sentences and mistreatment of people, you know, especially when so many of these

people here haven't even really been convicted of anything, not that that makes a difference,

but they're just waiting because they're poor, you know, and they can't afford bail.

So, it's unfortunate, but it is what it is.

So, thankfully, everybody showed up for them.

Voices from the protest outside MDC, Metropolitan Detention Center.

Special thanks to Tey-Marie Astudillo and Ariel Boone for that report.

Around 6:30 p.m. Sunday, officials said electricity restored, but many cells still lack heat.

As protesters gathered outside, many lawmakers toured the Metropolitan Detention Center.

One of them, who was standing next to Jumaane Williams, the city councilman who was speaking

outside, was Brad Lander, a New York city councilmember.

He's with us now.

We have very little time.

Has the electricity been restored?

The electricity was restored last night at 6:30, about one full week after it had gone

off.

But people are still reporting they're freezing.

It's cold in that facility.

It's going to take more changes to make it warm enough on the coldest days.

How could there have been no plan, with this polar vortex this week, with people freezing

inside?

The whole thing, no plan for an emergency provision.

And when the power went off a week ago, last Sunday, they did not act with any urgency.

They could have had an emergency plan.

If there had been a round-the-clock contractor in there, power could have been back on by

Tuesday.

This is a federal prison.

Mayor de Blasio sent in hundreds of blankets.

They didn't distribute them?

There was just, from the staff, from the prison officials, from the facilities manager, no

sense of urgency, no sense that there were human beings in those cells who had the right

to talk to their families, who needed light.

You know, they were eating in the dark.

You know, their toilets are in their cells.

They were in there.

They couldn't shower for 48 hours.

It was really a nightmare.

Who is responsible for this?

Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Now, Jerry Nadler is head of House Judiciary Committee.

Yes, he is.

He was in there both days this weekend.

And he was in there with me on Saturday and Sunday.

And he says he is going to have hearings and make sure this gets fixed.

New York City Councilmember Brad Lander, thanks so much.

I'm Amy Goodman.

Thanks for joining us.

For more infomation >> Lights Back On at NYC Jail After Hundreds Protest, But Prisoners Still Without Heat in Winter - Duration: 8:14.

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Why? Pakistan 2nd T20 Lost || But Azman Grate Bating Shoaib Malik || Smart Sports Pk - Duration: 1:53.

For more infomation >> Why? Pakistan 2nd T20 Lost || But Azman Grate Bating Shoaib Malik || Smart Sports Pk - Duration: 1:53.

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Chris Eubank says he won the LOTTERY aged 18 but was conned out of win by grocery store worker - Duration: 4:17.

Chris Eubank has claimed he was conned out of a lottery win in New York when he was 18 and that it helped make him world champion six years later

The former pugilist was middleweight and super middleweight champion in the 1990s and is best known for his epic first bout with Nigel Benn, nicknamed The Dark Destroyer

The 52-year-old, whose son Chris Eubank Jr is also a fighter, is also well known for his eccentric personality and outlandish dress sense

But his life could have turned out a lot differently, with a future outside the squared circle, if he secured the lottery prize he claims he won in the 1980s

Eubank tweeted: 'I won the lottery in 1984 at 18 in NYC, I got 5 of 6 numbers and show have won over $100,000

'The guy in the grocery said it's five numbers and the payout is $25 and naive me took it

'If he didn't cheat me I would have lost my focus to make champion six years later

God is good.' Social media users have mercilessly ridiculed the ex-champion, who can sometimes be seen adorning a monocle

One user said: 'My guy pretending he's won the lottery.' Another said: 'God cheated you out of a lottery win to teach you to keep boxing, a sport you always hated as demeaning? Yep that makes sense

' While others posted a plethora of memes mocking the ex-professional fighter.Online sleuths also doubted the claims and noted that in 1985, just a year after Eubank's supposed win, people who got five of the six numbers on the New York Lotto received a prize of $2,886

50 not $100,000.One person said: 'Well in 1985 a year later for matching 5 numbers it reduced from $100,000 to $2,611

50 it seems.' The charismatic Eubank appeared undeterred by the criticism and posted a follow up tweet

It said: 'I really cannot see what is so difficult to believe about my lottery true story

"If you won't believe the story, look at the wisdom; "When you don't get what you want, it is sometimes for your own good

" Although out of the limelight with his boxing career well in the past, Eubank has most recently been seen guiding his son Chris Eubank Jr's career

The 29-year-old faces Olympic gold medalist James DeGale on February 23 in a key crossroads bout for both fighters

For more infomation >> Chris Eubank says he won the LOTTERY aged 18 but was conned out of win by grocery store worker - Duration: 4:17.

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Questions asked about January failure - but performances the real concern - Duration: 3:37.

 When Bill Shankly was propelling Liverpool to dominance, it became an oft-heard response to selection hints ahead of each game

 "Same team as last season, boys," was the mantra, highlighting the consistency in personnel and performance that was the bedrock of the Reds' return to the pinnacle

 The game, though, has long since changed. Squad strength now rules, and anyone relying on just a starting XI – such as Liverpool in their last Premier League title challenge in 2014 – will ultimately come unstuck

 Jurgen Klopp has built arguably the strongest, most talented group of players at Anfield since the championship was last won in 1990

See how we rated the players against West Ham here Video Loading Video Unavailable Click to play Tap to play The video will start in 8Cancel Play now  So a time would always come when the Reds boss had to turn to the fringe players, names who aren't perhaps massively preferred among sections of the fanbase

 That was here at the grotesque – at least in terms of being a football venue – London Stadium

 Jordan Henderson and Gini Wijnaldum joined Dejan Lovren, Trent Alexander-Arnold, Joe Gomez and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain were all missing, absences almost every team would struggle to properly deal with

 Nevertheless, cue the meltdown when the teamsheet dropped, questions asked about the failure to strengthen in January

 We won't know until the end of the season whether such criticism is accurate. This fitful display at West Ham United, though, was not an encouraging barometer

 Yet this was a Liverpool line-up that should have had legs and energy. Adam Lallana has barely featured this season, Naby Keita has been in and out, Joel Matip is returning to fitness and James Milner sat out the last game through suspension

And the celebrated front three all started.  There'll be the expected mutterings about the Reds losing their nerve in the battle against Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur – and how the pressure is now surely being ramped up on those two – but this was nothing about that

 If so, Liverpool wouldn't have finished the match as strongly as they did, finally discovering some sense of cohesion when it was a bit too late, even if attacking ideas were curiously bereft

 This was instead a matter of a much-changed side simply not playing particularly well, and that will be the greatest concern

Another iffy performance.  Looking at that, this was most certainly a point gained, the gap at the top now stretched to three with another difficult match ticked off

 Thirteen to go. But the wriggle room at the top is now slowly being eroded.

For more infomation >> Questions asked about January failure - but performances the real concern - Duration: 3:37.

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New York Tackled Subway Crime. But Is It Starting to Come Back? The New York Times - Duration: 6:22.

New York Tackled Subway Crime. But Is It Starting to Come Back? The New York Times

By and

[What you need to know to start the day: ]

In January, a sleeping rider was stabbed in the head with a screwdriver on New York Citys subway. A month before that, a police officer fended off five homeless men who attacked him on a train platform. And on Sunday afternoon, a man was , the first murder on the system in more than a year.

The subway has come a long way since the dark days of the 1980s and 1990s when violence was rampant and riders felt constant dread. The system has become very safe, with just one murder on the subway last year compared with 26 in 1990.

But lately, riders are starting to feel less safe on the subway, a belief that is often reinforced by a flood of complaints about the transit system, doled out in real time on social media.

The shooting in Queens on Sunday was captured on Twitter a struggle between several men who had stepped out of a southbound 7 train at the 90th Street Elmhurst Avenue station around 12:45 p.m.

At one point in the video, gunshots can be heard offscreen. The police said the two suspects in the shooting had fled on foot.

Violent incidents like the one today will not be tolerated on our trains, or anywhere in New York City, said Phil Walzak, a police spokesman. The subway system remains incredibly safe, with approximately one crime for every million riders per day.

But data shows crime is heading in the wrong direction: Transit crimes were up 3.8 percent last year, according to the police, part of a slight rise since 2014. Still, there were only about 2,500 major crimes — including murders, rapes and robberies — in the system last year, or about seven per day, compared with nearly 17,500 transit crimes in 1990.

Back then, people were afraid to ride the train and often avoided doing so late at night. Some stayed away from the subway altogether. on the subway in 1990 as he defended his mother during a robbery crystallized fears about crime.

Recent concerns about safety have caused subway riders to once again change their behavior. Some do not take the train after a certain hour or allow children and visiting relatives to travel alone. Others switch cars to avoid menacing passengers.

Ana Smith, 62, of Brooklyn, said she does not let her 10 year old grandson ride the subway alone.

I have to be with him, she said as they waited at a station in Brooklyn on a recent morning. I have to protect him. Its too dangerous. We have too much crime in this train station.

The police insist that the subway is safe and that a few notable incidents captured on social media have skewed perceptions that it is not. The transit police chief, Edward Delatorre, said the rise in transit crimes last year was mainly driven by thefts in Manhattan.

Mr. Delatorre said in an interview that the number of crimes in the subway is so small, that one or two recidivist offenders can enter the system and throw the crime numbers out of whack. Still, he said he was adding more officers to the system as part of a new policing model under Mayor Bill de Blasio.

The subways leader, Andy Byford, said in a statement: I want people to know that despite this beyond horrifying incident which is under active investigation, the subway is remarkably safe, both generally as a public space as well as relative to other modes of transport such as driving.

Subway ridership has exploded over the last quarter century, making it all the more notable that crime has remained low on the system. There were about 1 billion annual subway trips in 1990, compared with 1.7 billion trips in 2017.

But the citys former police commissioner, William J. Bratton, suggested on Twitter recently that disorder on the subway could signal a return to the conditions that led to soaring crime. On Christmas Day, he of the officer fighting off the men and said it was a reminder that the citys descent into violence had begun in the subways. The quality of life declines and warning signs are all there for it to happen once again, he said.

In the 1980s, muggings and violent crime were rife on the subway. The fear was so universal that Bernard Goetz was for shooting four teenagers on a train in 1984 after believing he was being robbed. The 1990 killing of the tourist from Utah, Brian Watkins, was particularly jarring: Mr. Watkins was stabbed in the chest after several young men slashed his fathers pants pocket and hit his mother. The incident represented a breaking point for the city that led to an aggressive police crackdown.

In 1982, a sensing a big sigh of relief from passengers when he would step on to a train. You can actually hear it, he told The Times. People smile at me. Theyre relieved.

Subway riders today are perhaps most concerned about poor service and constant delays. Subway leaders are also worried about — a problem they say drains more than dollar 200 million in revenue from the system each year.

But New Yorkers are increasingly worried about crime, too. In January, at a station in the Bronx, punching her and stealing her headphones.

Ivan Cruz, 20, an architecture student at New York City College of Technology, said he was often harassed on the subway.

I always try to stick around a group of people to feel safer, Mr. Cruz said at the Jay Street MetroTech station, a busy hub in Brooklyn, on a recent afternoon.

Mr. Cruz said he was recently approached by an intoxicated passenger and later by a group of teenagers who bullied him. He worries that someone could try to push him, so he avoids the station at night.

I only see a few officers patrolling here, he said. Id feel safer with more.

The only subway murder last year took place at the Jay Street station, when a 65 year old man died after a and knocked him onto the tracks. Bystanders, who reported that the teen was ranting incoherently, helped the man back onto the platform, but he went into cardiac arrest and died.

New Yorkers regularly encounter agitated people on the subway who yell and threaten other passengers. The city is struggling to cope with a growing homeless population, many of whom have mental health issues. Some of those people .

Chief Delatorre said he does not believe there are more outbursts by people with mental health problems on the subway than in the past.

I believe its more noticeable, he said. The Wi Fi is stronger and now anytime anything happens, its blasted out right away.

The challenge of policing the subway was highlighted by an altercation in January when transit officers asked two men to leave an entrance after riders complained they were smoking. The men had been arrested at the same station in December for attacking officers.

The officers, who were caught on video pummeling the men with their batons, are being investigated for using excessive force. Charges were dropped against one of the men — a move that prompted a rare rebuke from James P. ONeill, the citys police commissioner. The decision had put the safety of officers and the public in jeopardy, Mr. ONeill .

The police say the recent uptick in crime was due in part to several . Under Mr. de Blasio, the police are using a new approach, known as the , on the subway.

Chief Delatorre said he is posting more officers on parts of the subway to develop relationships with M.T.A. workers and riders.

The feedback were getting is positive, he said. Theyre seeing more officers on platforms and on the trains.

Cece Colon, a retired legal secretary, fled an F train recently when a confrontation erupted between two women.

It was too much — I got off and got on another train, Ms. Colon said while waiting at the Jay Street station.

Ms. Colon said she avoids carrying expensive items on the subway.

Nothing in my purse is valuable, she said. I feel more liberated.

Lora Hinds, 47, an M.T.A. dispatcher, said she avoids wearing jewelry.

I try not to travel at night if I dont have to, she said.

The Second Avenue station on the F line in Manhattan has become well known for a group of men who harass riders. On a recent afternoon, about eight men sat on the platform drinking and smoking. A high school student said the men yelled racist things at her.

Now her boyfriend accompanies her on the subway to make sure she is safe.

When we are together, they dont bother us, the teenager said.

For more infomation >> New York Tackled Subway Crime. But Is It Starting to Come Back? The New York Times - Duration: 6:22.

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Jigsaw Puzzle but it's an English cover and I'm bad at singing and mixing and mastering and - Duration: 3:30.

JIGSAW PUZZLE

Original Lyrics/Song/Composition: Mafumafu

Illustrations: Terada Tera

Video: MONO-Devoid

Original Vocals: Kagamine Len English Lyrics/Vocals/Mix: .luna

Scrambling for some semblance that I've still got control

Slowly off my body comes away chips of my soul

There's a hole inside me that is missing just one more

Piece of the puzzle

So that I can feel the warmth of her hand over mine

So I can make sure I'll never be left behind

I snip and I paste but nothing ever fits inside of my

Utterly broken heart

It's not enough (One)

It's not enough (Two)

Nothing's enough, so there's nothing to call my own

Kindness is third (Three)

That one's missing, oh!

Fragments come of a glass façade that's quickly blown

Zigzagging tangled scaffolds of blinding apathy build up my heart

Since always

My crumbling smile falls apart

Oh, why, oh, why, just tell me why!

There's a piece missing from my soul, but no matter where I look it's not

Anywhere

Pieces missing, it just falls apart

I know, it's not enough anymore

JIGSAW

Parallel tangles to defeat

Pay to escape and hit "repeat"

Befriending and seeing eye-to-eye

Bury nuance and wave "goodbye"

A good for nothing quietly waits for

Someone to walk through that door

Waiting for you to return to me

Waiting for you to come touch me

So that everyone would willingly accept me

I tried to paint a hue to which all would agree

In the end, everyone took advantage of me

I am drowning in my own stained-ebony sea

Life and her bittersweet concourse

Love and hate, my passion for...

Envy, a despair-rich encore

(See not, see not, I lie)

Ah, I've done something wrong...

God, I've done something wrong!

Everything spills out and it is not enough?

No, it's still not enough (Two)

Can't even fill a lousy measuring cup

With some kindness (One)

Not even one drop!

There's not enough to form a heart that needs filled up

Zigzagging tangled scaffolds of blinding apathy build up my heart

To this day

A collage of cut and pasted lies

All forming a picture of my pathetic life

Zigzagging-zagging, God, please stop!

Cutting myself into tiny parts

Since always!

I can't pull joy from my blackened heart

Oh, why, oh, why, PLEASE TELL ME WHY!

There's a piece somewhere for my black heart, but no matter where I look it's not

Anywhere

Pieces missing, it just falls apart

I know, I'm not enough anymore

JIGSAW

JIGSAW

A liar's world, so draped in sin

A vague fate I can't believe in

A broken heart, nothing within

Zigzag, cutting, pasting, shaping,

JIGSAW

For more infomation >> Jigsaw Puzzle but it's an English cover and I'm bad at singing and mixing and mastering and - Duration: 3:30.

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HOT | Illinois Catholic bishops oppose marijuana legalization, but proponent says God put pot and a - Duration: 3:46.

HOT | Illinois Catholic bishops oppose marijuana legalization, but proponent says God put pot and a

After years of slow growth and low patient count in Illinois medical cannabis program, cultivators around the state are expanding their growing capabilities.á

The Roman Catholic bishops of Illinois on Monday came out against the legalization of , warning that it will only worsen problems of drug use and addiction.

The six bishops of the Catholic Conference of Illinois, including Cardinal , cited studies showing that cannabis is addictive, and that many people addicted to other drugs started with alcohol and marijuana.

The bishops advisory comes as Illinois lawmakers are considering legislation to authorize recreational cannabis use for adults 21 and older. Sponsors argue that the criminalization of marijuana has led to disproportionate incarceration of minorities, that legalization can generate hundreds of millions of tax dollars, and that regulation will improve public health.

With the support of Gov. J.B. Pritzker and the Democratic controlled General Assembly, the measure is expected to pass this spring and take effect by next year. That follows growing public support for legalization, which has been approved in 10 states so far, though it remains illegal under federal law.

The bishops argue that recent laws to decriminalize possession of less than 10 grams of marijuana should reverse racial disparities in the law, without full legalization. And they worry that the legal market wont eliminate illegal sales, but merely cause pot to sell at lower prices and to underage users.

ů Drug use is rampant in modern society, the bishops wrote in their statement. If marijuana is legalized, it will only add to the problem.

The bishops quoted Pope Francis in 2014 opposing any use of marijuana or other drugs. The pope cautioned that using one drug as a substitute for others, as marijuana has been used in place of narcotics, is to surrender to the problem.

Robert Gilligan, executive director of the Catholic Conference, noted that cannabis impairs memory, coordination and judgment, and that the state will be profiting off an addictive substance.

The bishops only occasionally take stands on public issues, such as against abortion and the death penalty. In this case, Gilligan will be speaking out against legalization at upcoming public hearings in Springfield.

This is an important enough issue that we have the obligation to say something, he said.

Dan Linn, executive director of the Illinois chapter of the pro cannabis group NORML, and general manager of Maribis dispensaries in Chicago and Springfield, said marijuana has proved safer than alcohol, and that prohibition simply doesnt work. By overseeing legal marijuana sales, he said, the state will have a much greater ability to regulate it.

Cannabis is a natural substance, he said. God put it on this planet for a reason. I dont know why the bishops are concerned about undermining Gods credibility.

Twitter @RobertMcCoppin

RELATED COVERAGE:

The Roman Catholic bishops of Illinois on Monday came out against the legalization of recreational marijuana, warning that it will only worsen problems of drug use and addiction.

The six bishops of the Catholic Conference of Illinois, including Archdiocese of Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich, cited...

Yasmin Pena trims excess leaves from marijuana plants at Cresco Labs medical marijuana cultivation facility, August 8, 2018, in Joliet.

Yasmin Pena trims excess leaves from marijuana plants at Cresco Labs medical marijuana cultivation facility, August 8, 2018, in Joliet.

Marijuana plants grow under lights at Cresco Labs medical marijuana cultivation facility, August 8, 2018, in Joliet.

Marijuana plants grow under lights at Cresco Labs medical marijuana cultivation facility, August 8, 2018, in Joliet.

For more infomation >> HOT | Illinois Catholic bishops oppose marijuana legalization, but proponent says God put pot and a - Duration: 3:46.

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Chris Eubank says he won the LOTTERY aged 18 but was conned out of win by grocery store worker - Duration: 4:12.

Chris Eubank has claimed he was conned out of a lottery win in New York when he was 18 and that it helped make him world champion six years later

The former pugilist was middleweight and super middleweight champion in the 1990s and is best known for his epic first bout with Nigel Benn, nicknamed The Dark Destroyer

The 52-year-old, whose son Chris Eubank Jr is also a fighter, is also well known for his eccentric personality and outlandish dress sense

But his life could have turned out a lot differently, with a future outside the squared circle, if he secured the lottery prize he claims he won in the 1980s

Eubank tweeted: 'I won the lottery in 1984 at 18 in NYC, I got 5 of 6 numbers and show have won over $100,000

'The guy in the grocery said it's five numbers and the payout is $25 and naive me took it

'If he didn't cheat me I would have lost my focus to make champion six years later

God is good.' Social media users have mercilessly ridiculed the ex-champion, who can sometimes be seen adorning a monocle

One user said: 'My guy pretending he's won the lottery.' Another said: 'God cheated you out of a lottery win to teach you to keep boxing, a sport you always hated as demeaning? Yep that makes sense

' While others posted a plethora of memes mocking the ex-professional fighter.Online sleuths also doubted the claims and noted that in 1985, just a year after Eubank's supposed win, people who got five of the six numbers on the New York Lotto received a prize of $2,886

50 not $100,000.One person said: 'Well in 1985 a year later for matching 5 numbers it reduced from $100,000 to $2,611

50 it seems.' The charismatic Eubank appeared undeterred by the criticism and posted a follow up tweet

It said: 'I really cannot see what is so difficult to believe about my lottery true story

"If you won't believe the story, look at the wisdom; "When you don't get what you want, it is sometimes for your own good

" Although out of the limelight with his boxing career well in the past, Eubank has most recently been seen guiding his son Chris Eubank Jr's career

The 29-year-old faces Olympic gold medalist James DeGale on February 23 in a key crossroads bout for both fighters

For more infomation >> Chris Eubank says he won the LOTTERY aged 18 but was conned out of win by grocery store worker - Duration: 4:12.

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Unsuccessful but Destructive - Duration: 1:01.

Thankfully,

criminals aren't the brightest among us.

This video shows a group of would-be burglars

who thought they'd clean up by stealing coins from a vacuum cleaner at a Huntington car wash.

They failed to get into the coin box but caused $10,000 in damage.

This crime occurred early morning January 08.

The trio spent three hours working on the vacuum

but managed only to remove it from its mount.

They drove a 1998 to 2000 year model Ford Explorer,

and one suspect,

a thin, shaggy-hair, white male,

walked right up to and looked at a security camera.

If you can identify the burglars,

submit a tip at 639TIPS.com

download Crime Stoppers' app

or call at (936) 639-TIPS

Tips and calls DIRECTLY to Crime Stoppers are anonymous

and anonymous, crime-solving tips are eligible for rewards.

The entire Crime Stoppers process,

from tip to reward,

is handled without identifying the tipster.

No one will know who you are.

For more infomation >> Unsuccessful but Destructive - Duration: 1:01.

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Fear of Cooking | sounds stupid but it's real - Duration: 2:56.

Hi, I'm Alexa. In today's video I'm doing something a bit different.

Before I get started, if you are new to this channel, I do beauty and lifestyle videos.

Some of them are linked in the description box and the cards.

I'd love it if you could check them out. If you like them comment, subscribe and like.

It helps me out a lot.

So, I've always avoided cooking, for some reason it never interested me.

It seemed like a waste of time and effort since I could always consume a meal faster than the time it took to prepare and clean up.

I pushed it back for so long that I began to feel ashamed for not knowing how to do it

and then anxious when I was ever in a situation where I would have to prepare food.

particularly around people. I know this sounds so ridiculous.

When I got into my 20s I would ask my mom to show me a recipe of hers.

Bare in mind, she comes from a Latin background where women basically learn how to cook and clean

as if it were one of their foundational purposes in life, alongside religion and child rearing.

And naturally because of that, she was impatient, frustrated and would make remarks ridiculing my lack of know how in the area,

like, "if you had learned this earlier.." "how do you not know where this goes when you live here too!"

or even worse, "how are you going to take care of yourself and husband…" or whatever.

It pissed me off, hurt my feelings too, but most of all, it perpetuated my insecurity even further.

I had been independent in so many other aspects of my life, particularly financially.

I decided it was time for me to take an initiative in this aspect of my life

because it wasn't feasible to stay reliant on ready-made meals

and I wasn't going to live at home forever either.

No to mention, it is expensive and unhealthy to eat out all the time.

I turned to the internet, because turning to mom just caused friction between us.

I pushed back cooking for years and thought I was the only one who felt anxiety and shame around the topic,

but it turns out it's not crazy uncommon,

as I found out through the internet.

Not everyone is taught how to cook, how to improvise meals with ingredients on hand

how to master recipes and so forth.

All of this takes time and experimenting.

Learning what works best for your taste buds, body and lifestyle - this is just part of the battle.

I'm not sure if anyone is going to relate to this, but if it doesn't hopefully it encourages you to eat in tonight or try a new recipe

because we live in a day and age where we eat out far too much

Don't forget to like this video and subscribe.

I have a cookie recipe linked down below.

Hopefully you enjoyed this, and I will see you in my next video.

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