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For more infomation >> 5 skins from workshop those will be added in cs:go - Duration: 2:56.

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80 Year Study Shows Happiness Is The Driving Force In Our Health - Duration: 13:51.

80-Year Study Shows Happiness Is The Driving Force In Our Health

How people describe both positive and negative events in their lives influences their perception

of their own life.

When scientists began tracking the health of 268 Harvard sophomores in 1938 during the

Great Depression, they hoped the longitudinal study would reveal clues to leading healthy

and happy lives.

They got more than they wanted.

After following the surviving Crimson men for nearly 80 years as part of the Harvard

Study of Adult Development, one of the world�s longest studies of adult life, researchers

have collected a cornucopia of data on their physical and mental health.

Of the original Harvard cohort recruited as part of the Grant Study, only 19 are still

alive, all in their mid-90s.

Among the original recruits were eventual President John F. Kennedy and longtime Washington

Post editor Ben Bradlee.

(Women weren�t in the original study because the College was still all male.)

In addition, scientists eventually expanded their research to include the men�s offspring,

who now number 1,300 and are in their 50s and 60s, to find out how early-life experiences

affect health and aging over time.

Some participants went on to become successful businessmen, doctors, lawyers, while others

ended up as schizophrenics or alcoholics, but not on inevitable tracks.

During the intervening decades, the control groups have expanded.

In the 1970s, 456 Boston inner-city residents were enlisted as part of the Glueck Study,

and 40 of them are still alive.

More than a decade ago, researchers began including wives in the Grant and Glueck studies.

Over the years, researchers have studied the participants� health trajectories and their

broader lives, including their triumphs and failures in careers and marriage, and the

finding have produced startling lessons, and not only for the researchers.

�The surprising finding is that our relationships and how happy we are in our relationships

has a powerful influence on our health,� said Robert Waldinger, director of the study,

a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital and a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical

School.

�Taking care of your body is important, but tending to your relationships is a form

of self-care too.

That, I think, is the revelation.�

Close relationships, more than money or fame, are what keep people happy throughout their

lives, the study revealed.

Those ties protect people from life�s discontents, help to delay mental and physical decline,

and are better predictors of long and happy lives than social class, IQ, or even genes.

That finding proved true across the board among both the Harvard men and the inner-city

participants.

The long-term research has received funding from private foundations, but has been financed

largely by grants from the National Institutes of Health, first through the National Institute

of Mental Health, and more recently through the National Institute on Aging.

Researchers who have pored through data, including vast medical records and hundreds of in-person

interviews and questionnaires, found a strong correlation between men�s flourishing lives

and their relationships with family, friends, and community.

Several studies found that people�s level of satisfaction with their relationships at

age 50 was a better predictor of physical health than their cholesterol levels were.

�When we gathered together everything we knew about them about at age 50, it wasn�t

their middle-age cholesterol levels that predicted how they were going to grow old,� said Waldinger

in a popular TED Talk.

�It was how satisfied they were in their relationships.

The people who were the most satisfied in their relationships at age 50 were the healthiest

at age 80.�

What makes a good life?

Lessons from the longest study on happiness

What keeps us happy and healthy as we go through life?

If you think it�s fame and money, you�re not alone � but, according to psychiatrist

Robert Waldinger, you�re mistaken.

As the director of a 75-year-old study on adult development, Waldinger has unprecedented

access to data on true happiness and satisfaction.

In this talk, he shares three important lessons learned from the study as well as some practical,

old-as-the-hills wisdom on how to build a fulfilling, long life.

He recorded his TED talk, titled �What Makes a Good Life?

Lessons from the Longest Study on Happiness,� in 2015, and it has been viewed 13,000,000

times.

The researchers also found that marital satisfaction has a protective effect on people�s mental

health.

Part of a study found that people who had happy marriages in their 80s reported that

their moods didn�t suffer even on the days when they had more physical pain.

Those who had unhappy marriages felt both more emotional and physical pain.

Those who kept warm relationships got to live longer and happier, said Waldinger, and the

loners often died earlier.

�Loneliness kills,� he said.

�It�s as powerful as smoking or alcoholism.�

According to the study, those who lived longer and enjoyed sound health avoided smoking and

alcohol in excess.

Researchers also found that those with strong social support experienced less mental deterioration

as they aged.

In part of a recent study, researchers found that women who felt securely attached to their

partners were less depressed and more happy in their relationships two-and-a-half years

later, and also had better memory functions than those with frequent marital conflicts.

Loneliness kills.

It�s as powerful as smoking or alcoholism.

� Robert Waldinger �Good relationships don�t just protect

our bodies; they protect our brains,� said Waldinger in his TED talk.

�And those good relationships, they don�t have to be smooth all the time.

Some of our octogenarian couples could bicker with each other day in and day out, but as

long at they felt that they could really count on the other when the going got tough, those

arguments didn�t take a toll on their memories.�

Since aging starts at birth, people should start taking care of themselves at every stage

of life, the researchers say.

�Aging is a continuous process,� Waldinger said.

�You can see how people can start to differ in their health trajectory in their 30s, so

that by taking good care of yourself early in life you can set yourself on a better course

for aging.

The best advice I can give is �Take care of your body as though you were going to need

it for 100 years,� because you might.�

The study, like its remaining original subjects, has had a long life, spanning four directors,

whose tenures reflected their medical interests and views of the time.

Under the first director, Clark Heath, who stayed from 1938 until 1954, the study mirrored

the era�s dominant view of genetics and biological determinism.

Early researchers believed that physical constitution, intellectual ability, and personality traits

determined adult development.

They made detailed anthropometric measurements of skulls, brow bridges, and moles, wrote

in-depth notes on the functioning of major organs, examined brain activity through electroencephalograms,

and even analyzed the men�s handwriting.

Now, researchers draw men�s blood for DNA testing and put them into MRI scanners to

examine organs and tissues in their bodies, procedures that would have sounded like science

fiction back in 1938.

In that sense, the study itself represents a history of the changes that life brings.

Psychiatrist George Vaillant, who joined the team as a researcher in 1966, led the study

from 1972 until 2004.

Trained as a psychoanalyst, Vaillant emphasized the role of relationships, and came to recognize

the crucial role they played in people living long and pleasant lives.

When the study began, nobody cared about empathy or attachment.

But the key to healthy aging is relationships, relationships, relationships.

� George Vaillant In a book called Aging Well, Vaillant wrote

that six factors predicted healthy aging for the Harvard men: physical activity, absence

of alcohol abuse and smoking, having mature mechanisms to cope with life�s ups and downs,

and enjoying both a healthy weight and a stable marriage.

For the inner-city men, education was an additional factor.

�The more education the inner city men obtained,� wrote Vaillant, �the more likely they were

to stop smoking, eat sensibly, and use alcohol in moderation.�

Vaillant�s research highlighted the role of these protective factors in healthy aging.

The more factors the subjects had in place, the better the odds they had for longer, happier

lives.

�When the study began, nobody cared about empathy or attachment,� said Vaillant.

�But the key to healthy aging is relationships, relationships, relationships.�

The study showed that the role of genetics and long-lived ancestors proved less important

to longevity than the level of satisfaction with relationships in midlife, now recognized

as a good predictor of healthy aging.

The research also debunked the idea that people�s personalities �set like plaster� by age

30 and cannot be changed.

�Those who were clearly train wrecks when they were in their 20s or 25s turned out to

be wonderful octogenarians,� he said.

�On the other hand, alcoholism and major depression could take people who started life

as stars and leave them at the end of their lives as train wrecks.�

The study�s fourth director, Waldinger has expanded research to the wives and children

of the original men.

That is the second-generation study, and Waldinger hopes to expand it into the third and fourth

generations.

�It will probably never be replicated,� he said of the lengthy research, adding that

there is yet more to learn.

�We�re trying to see how people manage stress, whether their bodies are in a sort

of chronic �fight or flight� mode,� Waldinger said.

�We want to find out how it is that a difficult childhood reaches across decades to break

down the body in middle age and later.�

Lara Tang �18, a human and evolutionary biology concentrator who recently joined the

team as a research assistant, relishes the opportunity to help find some of those answers.

She joined the effort after coming across Waldinger�s TED talk in one of her classes.

�That motivated me to do more research on adult development,� said Tang.

�I want to see how childhood experiences affect developments of physical health, mental

health, and happiness later in life.�

Asked what lessons he has learned from the study, Waldinger, who is a Zen priest, said

he practices meditation daily and invests time and energy in his relationships, more

than before.

�It�s easy to get isolated, to get caught up in work and not remembering, �Oh, I haven�t

seen these friends in a long time,�� Waldinger said.

�So I try to pay more attention to my relationships than I used to.

For more infomation >> 80 Year Study Shows Happiness Is The Driving Force In Our Health - Duration: 13:51.

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Volkswagen Golf R Line 2018 New Facelift In Depth Review Interior Exterior - Duration: 11:17.

For more infomation >> Volkswagen Golf R Line 2018 New Facelift In Depth Review Interior Exterior - Duration: 11:17.

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Epic race Disney Cars for kids MINI Lightning McQueen, Nigel Gearsley Holley Shiftwell Jeff Gorvette - Duration: 10:14.

Epic race Disney Cars for kids MINI Lightning McQueen, Nigel Gearsley Holley Shiftwell Jeff Gorvette

For more infomation >> Epic race Disney Cars for kids MINI Lightning McQueen, Nigel Gearsley Holley Shiftwell Jeff Gorvette - Duration: 10:14.

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The One Memory I Never Want to Forget | Flora Banks Review (spoiler free) - Duration: 10:30.

Hey guys! It's Trina and today

I'm making a video inspired by the book

The One Memory of Flora Banks by Emily Barr.

This video is being sponsored by Penguin Teen

and they sent me the copy of this book

early in order for me to give an honest

review of it. I'm going to be telling you

what this book is about and what my

review of it is, and then I'm going to

get into sharing the one memory that I

never want to forget. This book actually

was released in the UK in January but it

is coming out in the United States on

May 2nd, so this book will be out by the

time you are seeing this video. This is a

YA contemporary story with kind of a

mystery edge to it about a young girl

named Flora Banks who when she was 10

years old doctors discovered a tumor on

her brain. The procedure that removed the

tumor also caused her to have a form of

amnesia and she can no longer create

memories, so her only memories that she

has are from when she was 10 years old.

She still remembers who she is, who her

parents are, how to do certain things but

she's never been able to make a new

memory since then and now she is 17. One

night she's at a party and she kisses

her best friend's boyfriend and when she

wakes up the next morning she can

remember it. So it's the first new thing

that she's been able to remember in

seven years and Flora thinks that maybe

her memory is finally starting to

improve. Personally, I rated this book

three-and-a-half stars and what that

means on my rating scale is I consider

three stars to be right in the middle. It

is average because I can't rate a book

zero stars, or at least I don't, so between 1

and 5, 3 is the midpoint and 3.5 is

slightly above average. So that basically

just means I had more positive thoughts

about this book than negative thoughts. A

couple of things that I struggled with

in this book were the writing style. It is

very simplistic and very repetitive,

especially at first, and that is

something that I found myself - I would

just stop while reading and start to

like reword the sentences in my head to

be something that I found more appealing.

But honestly I found that the writing

style was actually a character trait of

Flora. It reflects her mental state and

as the book goes on and she gains a

little bit more confidence in herself

and believes that she is healing, you can

see that the writing does grow stronger

and it stops being as choppy and it

stops being quite as repetitive. Although

it is still fairly repetitive because

she has amnesia and she's constantly

like saying things that we already know

about but she's forgotten them. Another

thing that I struggled with it first was

that the idea of kissing this boy has

fixed Flora's memory. Flora definitely

says, "he's cured me. If I can just be with

him again I will start to remember

everything." This is an idea that I think

is probably harmful because it will set

up an unrealistic expectation in your

head, especially if it deals with

something like a mental illness or an

injury or something. Thinking that a love

interest is going to fix that, I can see

how this is a harmful concept and so I

want to mention this because it is

included on the book jacket summary so

you may already know that about this

book. I actually tagged every single time

in the book where it credits this guy

with healing her memory. It was about

eighteen mentions in the book, so if

that's something that you've seen in the

book summary and you're concerned about,

yes it is present, yes it might kind of

bother you, but in the end I don't think

the book reinforces that idea. It

definitely shows that that is not the

case. To talk about the things that I

enjoyed the entire way through, Flora is

a really unreliable narrator and there

are times when like you learn

information that she's known for days

but she didn't know she already knew it. And so

another character will be like, "yeah I told

you that last week," and so it kind of

changes how you perceive things. I did

enjoy the unreliable narrator aspect of

this book because it left a lot of room for surprises.

And then even though I didn't always

love the writing style, even though I came

to appreciate it, I did think that the

writing imparted a really good sense of

urgency and mystery and I just really

wanted to know what was going on. Like,

about a third of the way through the

book I got incredibly gripped by it and

I had to stay up way too late reading.

And when I have books that really just

kidnap me like that, that is part of

the reading experience that I really

highly value. So there was a lot that I

liked about it but really that writing

style and the idea of his love fixing

her and she just being so like

instalove attached to him, those were kind of

the things that I didn't like but I did

enjoy this book a lot more than I

initially thought that I would. So that's

the information about this book and my

review of it, and inspired by the idea of

this book where she only has this one

memory that she's been able to make,

I'm going to talk to you guys about the

one memory that I would never want to

forget. So I'm actually going to cut now

to me and my husband together talking to

you guys about some of our favorite memories.

This is my husband. He's been in

a couple of videos with me before. In the

book Flora Banks, that character was 10

years old when she got amnesia so she

remembered everything before she was 10

so in our scenarios were also going to

act as if we can remember everything

before we were 10 years old. So we still

remember like who our families are, who

we are, and stuff like that. So after 10

what is a memory that we most cherish?

Which, we're a lot older than Flora Banks

was [laughs] so we would be missing like

two-thirds of our life pretty much, so

that's a bit more of a challenge.

Initially, I thought about I wanted to

remember something to do about my mother

because she passed away when I was 12

years old and that has really influenced

and impacted my life. Looking at it a

little bit more practically, like, I don't

know that I would want to relive finding

that out over and over and then

forgetting all the things that I've

learned since then that have made me who

I am, so if I am going to be like

practical about this one memory I can

keep with me I would choose something

doing with my husband because from now

on if I wake up every morning I would

want to remember him, know who he is, so I

would want to remember a day that we

spent together. And I think we have the

same memory and we're just going to kind

of talk about it. We went to Hawaii on

our honeymoon, which was five years ago.

We went to the island of Oahu and I

really wanted to go kayaking, and you

were supposed to get in your kayak in

this canal and then paddle out to the

part where it goes out into the ocean

and then go to this island that was kind

of off the coast. And when we get to the

canal where the little training video

told us this is where you get in at, well

we didn't realize that like the tide was

much lower, but I get in the canoe and

then he gets in the canoe and we just

sink to the bottom [laughs]. Like there's only like

this much water. Enough for the canoe

to float and one person to float but not

[laughing] both of us. So we're like, well I

guess we'll just get out and drag the

canoe through the water, but then there

are all these little crabs [laughs]

running around in the water and I flipped out! [laughing]

[Man:] Yeah pretty much. I ended up pulling her along.

Um. And you know, as you can see I have glasses.

The glasses got like fogged up but

also like waterlogged and I couldn't see anything.

[Trina:] Like I'm in the - in the kayak

sitting there and he's pulling it on a

rope, trudging through this canal because

I'm terrified of all these crabs. [laughing]

And then we get to the end point where it's

supposed to meet up with the beach and

it's literally a sand bar because the

water is not high enough, so we had to

get out anyway and then just like get in

again against the waves and we got

knocked out once and then we get in the

water and we see floating jellyfish that

are dead all around us and I - I just flip

out and we're in the middle of the ocean.

We made it to our Island.

[Man:] It was a bird sanctuary so a lot of people were going

around taking pictures and looking at

birds and stuff but at this point I

can't see anything and I was trying to

take pictures I think on my camera phone

at the time and it had gotten like

fogged up or something so the pictures weren't - [Trina:] The lens was foggy.

[Man:] Yeah. So the pictures weren't

turning out good, we were already tired

and stressed out just from the first half.

[Trina:] We wanted to go to another Beach

that you can only get to by kayak but as

soon as we got done with that island I was

like terrified. We'd already fallen out

once, there were all these jellyfish

around and I was just like, 'I'm going to

fall out of this kayak and have the

jellyfish just drag me under. I'm

never going to see anybody ever again.'

Like I just gotten so terrified [laughing] but I got

like in the zone and I was just like

paddling and we made it back [laughing] to shore.

So there's this little wheel thing that

you attach to your kayak so you can

drag it up and down that street to get

it from the rental place to the beach

and so he didn't put the wheel thing

on in the right position and it make it

like five times harder to pull. And I

just remember [laughing] on our way back he

was struggling pulling this kayak

behind us and he was like

huffing and just like struggling with it. [laughing]

[Man:] I'm the big bad man so - [Trina:] He can't admit it.

[Man:] I can't admit that I'm struggling, I have to

just, you know hey, it's my brand-new wife,

I gotta show her I'm strong.

[Trina:] Like I could tell that something was wrong but neither

one of us really realized what the

problem was until we got back and saw

somebody else had strapped their wheels

onto their kayak right and then he did it and he was like oh

man that was like five times easier! [laughing]

So it was a complete bust but after that,

even though we cut our day of kayaking

really short, there was this little shave

ice place right next to it and so we

went in and I remember after this terrible

day sitting on a bench like in a parking

lot in Hawaii, us eating shave ice

together and that - I can like very

vividly remember that memory and

thinking like, 'it's all going to be okay.

If we can get through this, it's going to

be okay,' which is a really reassuring

thought to have when you're newly

married because it's a big transition in your life.

[Man:] Yep. [Trina:] That's a memory that I

feel like we often reminisce on.

The carrying me down the canal with the crabs. [laughing]

It was just one that we frequently still

talk about. I thought it'd be fun to

share because that would be a good

memory to where if I woke up tomorrow and

couldn't remember anything else at least I would

remember him, know that we are married,

and that yes he is supposed to be in my

house, you know? So that's one of our favorite

memories inspired by the premise that's

going on in Flora Banks and I hope that

this video has told you a little bit

about the book and helped you decide if

you would like this one or not and told

you a little bit about us, I guess? [laughing]

If anyone is looking forward to this book I

would love to hear that, or if you've

already read it we can definitely talk

more about it down below, and if you guys

want to share with me in the comments

what is one memory that you would never

want to forget I would love to hear that.

Thank you so much for watching and I'll

see you in the comments. Bye!

[music only]

For more infomation >> The One Memory I Never Want to Forget | Flora Banks Review (spoiler free) - Duration: 10:30.

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THAAD controversy brings spotlight to relevant agreements - Duration: 2:26.

The question remains -- who's going to pay for the THAAD missile defense system?

A top U.S. official has suggested that should be up for negotiation, meaning possibly Seoul.

Our Kim Jung-soo explains the deal the allies have in place now... and which ways this issue

could go.

As evidence against U.S. claims that South Korea should pay for the THAAD hardware, South

Korea's defence ministry has cited the two countries' Special Measures Agreement, which

specifies what "non-personnel" costs South Korea has to contribute to.

"Under the SMA, South Korea is required to contribute to labor cost-sharing, construction

and logistics.

Weapons acquisition is not part of defense cost-sharing, as you may already be aware."

The SMA was initiated in 1991 to complement the Status of Forces Agreement, and since

then the amount Seoul contributes has risen by more than eight fold.

Under the latest version, Seoul pays around 50 percent of the overall cost of stationing

U.S. forces in South Korea, which last year amounted to roughly 821 million dollars.

Dividing that figure by South Korea's 2016 GDP... shows South Korea is the second-highest

cost-sharer with the U.S, trailing behind Japan but above Germany.

Preliminary talks will take place near the end of this year to negotiate defense contributions

for 2019 through 2023.

But the defense ministry is of the opinion that THAAD, in principle, shouldn't affect

the outcome of those talks too much.

"One specific weapons system cannot play an outsized role in determing defense cost-sharing

contributions.

There are a lot of other variables to account for, and it's too early to speculate on what

the U.S. has in mind."

But, some in the South Korean media have speculated that the U.S. could ask Seoul to increase

its own defense spending relative to its GDP, which is an issue separate from cost sharing.

According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, the U.S spends 3.3 percent

of its GDP on its military, while South Korea spends 2.7 percent.

Meanwhile, there have been rumors that the U.S. will deploy additional missile launchers

for the THAAD battery on Wednesday, but the defense ministry has denied those claims.

Kim Jung-soo, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> THAAD controversy brings spotlight to relevant agreements - Duration: 2:26.

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エアドゥ 帯広-東京 AirDo Obihiro-Tokyo [AirDo ANA Code Share To Haneda エアドゥ全日空共同運行 羽田] - Duration: 6:31.

For more infomation >> エアドゥ 帯広-東京 AirDo Obihiro-Tokyo [AirDo ANA Code Share To Haneda エアドゥ全日空共同運行 羽田] - Duration: 6:31.

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EDC JAPAN 2017! Japanese Music Festival - Duration: 3:42.

yo! natalia natchan here! My hair is a bit messy but...

but so you guys all know... today...

I-

hey

I'm going to EDC!

what is EDC you ask?

it's an event they have in las vegas that's Huge

but it was far, expensive and I was never able to go.

but today it's the first time they'll have it in Japan

I'll be back!

going to get ready nowwww

aint it cute?

woah I look like a girl you'd see at an american music festival

just a normal american

lets go

made some new friends

For more infomation >> EDC JAPAN 2017! Japanese Music Festival - Duration: 3:42.

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ДАТА РОЖДЕНИЯ 15 МАЯ🎂СУДЬБА, ХАРАКТЕР и ЗДОРОВЬЕ ТАЙНА ДНЯ РОЖДЕНИЯ - Duration: 7:18.

For more infomation >> ДАТА РОЖДЕНИЯ 15 МАЯ🎂СУДЬБА, ХАРАКТЕР и ЗДОРОВЬЕ ТАЙНА ДНЯ РОЖДЕНИЯ - Duration: 7:18.

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Космическое Приключение Барби Видео для детей Куклы Барби. Барби Играет в игру. Жизнь Барби - Duration: 10:05.

For more infomation >> Космическое Приключение Барби Видео для детей Куклы Барби. Барби Играет в игру. Жизнь Барби - Duration: 10:05.

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Oğuzhan Koç - Kaç Kadeh Kırıldı - Duration: 4:18.

For more infomation >> Oğuzhan Koç - Kaç Kadeh Kırıldı - Duration: 4:18.

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Как разрулить конфликт по Знаку Зодиака 👾🎭 - Duration: 10:03.

For more infomation >> Как разрулить конфликт по Знаку Зодиака 👾🎭 - Duration: 10:03.

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James Comey Was Just Caught In Massive Lie About Trump…This Is Huge! - Duration: 2:08.

James Comey Was Just Caught In Massive Lie About Trump�This Is Huge!

By Danny Gold

FBI Director James Comey is in really hot water after what just came out about him last

night.

Senator Chuck Grassley, The head of the Senate Judiciary Committee, noticed something very

suspicious about James Comey�s testimony over Chris Steele, the British spy who made

the �dirty dossier� on Trump.

Senator Grassley said Director Comey changed his story.

According to Senator Grassley,

�There appear to be material inconsistencies between the description of the FBI�s relationship

with Mr. Steele that you did provide in your briefing and information contained in Justice

Department documents made available to the Committee only after the briefing.�

Basically, �material inconsistencies� means Director Comey�s stories aren�t

matching up. That�s a pretty good indicator that something is up.

His concerns can best be summed up in this letter showing the link between Comey, Steele,

and�you guessed it�Hillary Clinton:

�The idea that the FBI and associates of the Clinton campaign would pay Mr. Steele

to investigate the Republican nominee for President in the run-up to the election raises

further questions about the FBI�s independence from politics, as well as the Obama administration�s

use of law enforcement and intelligence agencies for political ends.�

So what does this mean for our President? Was the FBI behind PI$$GATE to get Trump impeached?

Were they secretly investigating Steele?

Look, I cannot say any of those for certain, but what I do know is we the People deserve

some answers. Help get this shared everywhere so we can show we are serious and hold them

accountable for once.

For more infomation >> James Comey Was Just Caught In Massive Lie About Trump…This Is Huge! - Duration: 2:08.

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Korean retailer E-mart to close its business in China - Duration: 1:52.

Korea's largest retailer E-mart has decided to pull out of China due to an increasingly

tough business environment.

Park Ji-won has more on this story.

Korea's largest retail chain E-mart has decided to close its operations in China due to a

growing tally of losses.

E-mart started operating in China in 1997... and once had more than 30 outlets in China.

Now, it only has six branches in Shanghai and the surrounding area.

The retailer told Seoul-based Yonhap News Agency that its exact departure date will

depend on whether buyers are willing to acquire the remaining outlets.

If enough buyers are found, E-mart will pull out of China this year.

The retailer suffered about 19-million U.S. dollars in losses last year alone.

China's unofficial retaliatory actions against Korean businesses,... following Seoul's decision

to host the U.S. missile defense system THAAD,... have made the business environment in China

increasingly adverse for Korean firms.

Lotte Mart,... which has taken a direct hit in the THAAD aftermath,... also continues

to suffer.

Eighty-seven of Lotte Mart's 99 branches in China,... or 90 percent,... are closed.

Seventy-four of them were forcibly shut down in February,... on administrative orders from

Beijing,... while the rest have closed voluntarily for the time being.

Lotte Mart entered China back in 2008,... yet it still records an annual deficit of

about tens of millions of U.S. dollars,... in addition to the damage from the unofficial

THAAD sanctions.

Still, the company says it has no intention of leaving,... even though it expects it will

take a long time to recover from the current situation.

Park Ji-won, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Korean retailer E-mart to close its business in China - Duration: 1:52.

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I Feel Alive - Michael Law (Original Song) || LIVE - Duration: 6:50.

I, I see it in your eyes

It's written in the stars, tonight

I, I follow in my dreams

It's all that I can do, for you

One, you and I are one.

We will always be together

Deep, in an endless space

The world is so unkind right now

Yet I feel, I feel, I feel, Alive

And I feel, yes I feel, I feel, Alive

Love, we will have love

It overcomes hate, always

Smile, baby just smile

If only for awhile, it's freedom

Give, honey just give

All you can to others

Sad, whenever I'm sad

I sing that song, we love

And I feel, I feel, I feel, Alive

And I feel, yes I feel, I feel, Alive

Sha la la la we sing

Sha la la la We cry

Sha la la la We learn

Sha la la la We live

We live

We live

And I feel, yes I feel, I feel, Alive

And I feel, yes I feel, I feel, Alive

And I feel, yes I feel, I feel, Alive

And I feel, yes I feel, I feel, Alive

And I feel, And I feel, And I feel, Alive

And I feel, And I feel, And I feel, Alive

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