Thứ Ba, 6 tháng 6, 2017

Waching daily Jun 7 2017

What You�re Not Being Told About The Paris Climate Agreement

President Trump�s decision to withdraw the United States from the Paris Climate Accord

has thrown the world into a blazing furnace full of weeping and gnashing of teeth�or

the political world, at least, has been thrown into a fiery tizzy.

The front page of the New York Daily News reads �TRUMP TO WORLD: DROP DEAD, Decides

to hell with science, Earth�s future.�

Former President Barack Obama broke his silence, saying, in part, that with this decision the

Trump administration �joins a small handful of nations that reject the future.�

Former Secretary of State John Kerry lambasted Trump�s decision as �an ignorant, cynical

appeal to an anti-science, special-interest faction,� as well as saying, �This choice

will rightly be remembered as one of the most shameful any president has made.�

And the list goes on and on and on.

To hear these people talk, apparently the human race can only progress into the future

and create new industries and technologies if we are flogged into it begrudgingly by

our �wise� government and corporate leaders.

Are we really ready to presume what human society will look like several decades from

now?

Are we seriously expected to believe that government action is the only way to tackle

the problem of climate change?

If we fail to use the heavy hand of government to brave the future, why should we assume

the human race will fail to innovate and adapt to complex challenges on its own?

Imagine, if you will, a world where you cannot turn to governments to solve problems such

as climate change.

How would you achieve your righteous ends?

Would you simply do nothing if you could not turn to government?

I ask because too often, noble goals serve as a Trojan Horse for political control.

Governments often present us with grand solutions as gifts for our real and perceived problems,

but once inside the gates, they proceed to saddle our communities with a slew of regulations,

mandates, taxes, diktats, quotas, subsidies, penalties and the like.

The cursed gift of government, it seems, is always a central plan that conflates voluntary

cooperation, collective action, and even community itself with centralized political control.

But we do not need the trappings of central planning to solve our collective problems.

Society can run itself, thank you very much; it needs no single creator or director.

Society already has great gifts for solving complex human issues�individual liberty,

initiative, and ingenuity, along with the free and open exchange of goods and ideas�and

we need not sacrifice these liberal benefactors of the modern world to dream impossible dreams

and fight unbeatable foes.

The greatest achievements of the human race have not come from government committees and

accords, but from intrepid yet everyday individuals working in concert to tackle the unknown and

implacable through innovation and persuasion.

Yet, rather than allowing people to freely choose and coordinate their own plans in our

common struggle against nature, too many people first brand other people as the problem.

Too many would rather rely on commanding and controlling others to fix humanity�s wicked

problems than freely solve the problem themselves.

Too many conflate the government�s failure to act as society signaling we are resigned

to do nothing�thus, the weeping and gnashing of teeth over Donald Trump�s recent decision.

I find all the hysterics and tears of hubris laughable.

This mindset deserves to be mocked for its lack of imagination and obsequious acceptance

of corporate cronyism and global governance as the only path to the future; it deserves

to be mocked for claiming the singular appearance of �doing something� (without much effect)

is better than actually tackling the problem from many different directions; it deserves

to be mocked even on environmental activist grounds as a list of empty promises and half-measures,

as a perversion of the cause, just as a free trader may mock NAFTA or an anti-war activist

may mock Barack Obama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize; and it deserves to be mocked

for how little it respects the ability of average people to change their station and

adapt to the changing world on their own without the pretentious prodding of government leaders.

I�m willing to bet the existence of the entire human race that without the Paris Climate

Accord, we will rise to meet the challenge of climate change successfully.

Further, if we would shrink government generally�i.e. give average people the freedom to think and

trade as they wish in the energy sector or any other industry�then by the accord�s

own target year of 2100, the market (which is simply free people trading and producing

as they wish based on their own enlightenment) will have reduced carbon emissions and given

us new technologies beyond the wildest dreams of those now bemoaning the U.S. withdrawal

from the Paris Climate Accord.

In fact, the U.S. clean energy sector has grown leaps and bounds in only the last few

years despite the lack of a robust central plan.

Coal is already giving way to cleaner forms of energy and will continue to do so no matter

what Donald Trump promises the miners of West Virginia.

And the fact that there is this burgeoning clean energy industry does not mean we should

engage in crony capitalism and wealth redistribution between nations to �prime the pump.� Picking

winners and losers in the clean energy sector is just as bad as doing so in any other sector

(including the fossil fuels industry.).

Must we really kowtow to corporations and their client states by granting them government

privileges and sweetheart deals to create new technologies they already have enough

incentive to create anyway?

No, if we wish to solve the climate change problem, I suggest we try, first and foremost,

to create products and services that will actually make people�s lives better immediately

rather than imposing immense costs upfront with no clear time horizon wherein we reap

the benefits.

Just as one need not convince people of evolution before they take vaccines or life-saving drugs,

there�s no need to convince people of the science of climate change if you can sell

them a better, cheaper, cleaner, and more practical way to power their lives.

Shaming, lecturing, and trying to control people�s behavior through the political

process for unclear results and opaque benefits is not serving this cause well, as sound as

the science and as noble as the cause may be.

Ironically enough, Trump�s withdrawal from the Paris accord may very well usher in a

new era of initiative absent the federal government.

After Trump�s decision, many industry leaders, mayors, and governors pledged to pursue solutions

to climate change absent the federal government.

As the CEO of General Electric Jeff Immelt tweeted, �Climate change is real.

Industry must now lead and not depend on government.�

That�s the spirit, Jeff, but my only question is: what the hell have you been waiting for?

Industry and the people of the United States should have been saying this long ago.

It�s time to stop looking to central governments and global committees�whether the issue

is climate change or poverty or education or whatever�to make our world a better place.

The time for us to pursue the future ourselves is long overdue, and it would be a shame to

sell ourselves and the future short because we�re too busy bickering over political

power.

For more infomation >> What You're Not Being Told About The Paris Climate Agreement - Duration: 9:04.

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Frame Saw, André Roubo of the 17th century #TOOLMake17 - Duration: 9:08.

Hi, there my name is Augusto Campos

Welcome to "Blog das Madeiras(Timber Blog)"

In this project we will made...

...a Frame saw

Documented by Andre Roubo

in the 17th century.

and this saw is use to divide a board

in it thickness

we use this type of saw

European beech was the wood use in this saw

and stainless steel for the hardware

they was just a L shape and I made a square

And at the end of rivets were used

The blade tension is made by this screw

That make pressure in the steel plate

and moves the square.

the sizes of this saw are...

90cm(35 7⁄16in)

by 80cm(31 1⁄2in)

Blade size is

70cm(27 9⁄16in)

That's all for now

thank you for watching the video

if you like it gives thumbs up

or leave some comment

subscribe the channel

and help us by sharing on social media

Thank You!

until my next video.

For more infomation >> Frame Saw, André Roubo of the 17th century #TOOLMake17 - Duration: 9:08.

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(Liberian Music 2017) Wad Haj Yousif Ft Yung Cutter - Man Of The Year - Duration: 3:22.

Please Like, Comment, Share & Subscribe

For more infomation >> (Liberian Music 2017) Wad Haj Yousif Ft Yung Cutter - Man Of The Year - Duration: 3:22.

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KIC 8462852 Boyajian's Star Update for 06/06/2017 - Duration: 7:21.

This is another update in my continuing coverage of KIC 8462852 or Boyajian's star for June

6, 2017.

For the extensive backstory on this star, check out my other updates on this channel

or the playlist dedicated to the subject.

Links to all of the mentioned papers and websites in this update are in the description below.

Firstly, Dr. Boyajian appeared on the Wow!

Signal podcast yesterday and updated what's known so far from the most recent dip starting

from about May 18 and continuing on, and possibly even still continuing, more on that in a minute.

The most recent major dip, dubbed the Elsie dip, lasted about 4 days, but was preceded

by a period of minor activity.

The Elsie dip seems to have been a pretty drastic drop followed by a sort of sawtooth

return to normal levels.

The good news is that lots of eyes were on this dip as it happened and more data was

collected than what was possible with Kepler.

Most significantly, I suspect, is the color data.

Dr. Boyajian tweeted at the time and mentioned in the podcast that the there was a greater

dip in blue light than red.

This would probably favor dust or gas and that seems to be where the thinking is going.

We'll probably know more about this soon as Dr. Boyajian tweeted a few days ago that

a preliminary paper should be out within a few weeks.

Hopefully that might help clear things up.

She also pointed out that it's premature to conclude that there is periodicity present

in the data, and she also noted that the new dip doesn't fit the dips in the Kepler light

curve exactly, so that essentially means that nothing has really been ruled out yet, including

the interstellar material theory.

Also, she noted that there was nothing extraordinary in the ultraviolet or infrared.

A lack of infrared, if indeed that's what all this means, is also not surprising since

previous research by Dr. Boyajian and her colleagues didn't detect infrared excess

either.

But taken on its own, a lack of infrared is pretty interesting.

It would imply that whatever material is blocking the star is either cold or below the threshold

of what the instrumentation can detect.

That would be a strike against a warm cloud of dust like a debris disc around a young

star, but that's never really been on the table to begin with.

So that's a summary of what was said on the podcast but there are a few other things

going that are of interest.

Bruce Gary, a rather well-equipped private observer, has been taking photometry of KIC

8462852 and posting his data on his website.

While you can't infer too much, observations like this from limited data are not always

accurate and these small dips could just be noise, but his measurements do suggest that

the minor dipping continues.

If this is consistent with the Kepler data, than a major dip may be on the way, perhaps

on level with the 16 and 22 percent dips that Kepler saw.

We shall see.

Another development is a revised version of a paper by Peter Foukal that gives an explanation

intrinsic to the star itself.

Essentially variations in the magnetic and atmospheric conditions of the star could be

responsible for the dips.

It's an interesting paper, and if it were proven to be the case, one wonders why we

only see this magnitude of variation in brightness with this star and, so far, no others.

But, it's worth noting that other anomalous stars do exist, and in some cases are perhaps

just as weird or weirder than KIC 8462852, see my video on this channel about Przybylski's

star for an example.

And finally, as usual, it gets weirder with this star.

I must caveat here in that I personally think that it is overwhelmingly likely that we're

seeing a natural event with this star.

I think it's reasonable to say that it's a very rare natural event, but odds are these

are probably not alien megastructures.

I would also say that given the long-term dimming, if this is an alien civilization,

then they are constructing things so rapidly that it defies practicality and the physical

constraints on engineering structures in space as we understand it.

Even molecular nanotech would have a hard time with this one.

A giant dust cloud around a star would not however, nor would something intrinsic to

the star itself et cetera.

That said, as Arthur Clarke once pointed out, any sufficiently advanced alien civilization's

technology would be indistinguishable from magic, so while I am skeptical, I also recognize

that we have no idea what an alien civilization would look like since we haven't seen one

yet.

All we can really do is speculate from the position of what we know about ourselves and

our civilization and what's hypothetically possible in science.

So while I consider an alien explanation highly unlikely, I report whatever credible information

comes out on this star that I find, be it data or papers, and provide links to that

material so you can draw your own conclusions.

That said, down the rabbit hole we go.

The first bit of oddness, which may mean nothing, is something James Davenport and David Wilson

tweeted.

Studying the Galex data taken of the star a few years ago, there seems to be some kind

of roughly 80 second pattern in that data.

This would normally scream instrument noise, but apparently it wasn't seen in a nearby

star, so it's anyone's guess just what this is if it indeed indicates a real feature

of this star.

We shall see.

The second bit of weirdness has to do with a .88 day fluctuation seen in the Kepler data.

Boyajian and her colleagues advanced that this is indicative of the rotation of the

star itself.

Another take came from Valeri Makarov where it was suggested that this fluctuation is

really just interference from a nearby star.

In a paper by Andrew Collins and Rodney Hale, they offer something else.

I urge caution here, it's interesting, but danger Wil Robinson this is probably just

the star rotating.

Much of the paper deals with the shapes of objects that could produce the dips in the

Kepler light curve.

I've seen a lot of variation in models of this, and there are any number of interpretations,

some of which I've covered in previous videos.

Only more data is going to clear that up but the paper also notes something really odd,

though I personally think it's pure coincidence, and to the credit of the authors they caveat

that they are just suggesting and pointing something odd out that might be worth some

attention.

They state that the .88 day periodicity coincides with numerical aspects of our own solar cycle,

and a further apparent periodicity in the Kepler light curve of 48.4 days coincides

with our solar calendar every 242 days.

Long story short, they state that all of these numbers boil down to multiples of 11.

Again, they are careful to warn that this may just be a coincidence.

And, I must admit, I hope it is coincidence because this would imply that an alien civilization

over 1300 light-years away knows that earth is habitable, has the right atmospheric mix

for intelligent life to develop, have calculated our orbit and are sending a visual message

to us just in case we're here.

I guess that's not all that different from the idea of an alien civilization beaming

a radio signal towards us, one of the things that SETI searches for.

And I really think it's just the star rotating and it's all a coincidence.

But it's interesting nonetheless and a bit creepy.

What a weird star.

Thanks for listening!

I am futurist and science fiction author John Michael Godier and be sure to check out my

books at your favorite online book retailer and subscribe to my channel for regular, in-depth

explorations into the interesting, weird and unknown aspects of this amazing universe in

which we live.

For more infomation >> KIC 8462852 Boyajian's Star Update for 06/06/2017 - Duration: 7:21.

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How to make Flour Slime - DIY 5 Ways To Make Flour Slime! DIY Slime Flour Compilation No Borax! - Duration: 18:51.

For more infomation >> How to make Flour Slime - DIY 5 Ways To Make Flour Slime! DIY Slime Flour Compilation No Borax! - Duration: 18:51.

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The National for Tuesday June 6, 2017 - Duration: 59:52.

For more infomation >> The National for Tuesday June 6, 2017 - Duration: 59:52.

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Blue Sapphire By Simblissity Tiny House | Tiny House Design Ideas | Le Tuan Home Design - Duration: 2:01.

BLUE SAPPHIRE BY SIMBLISSITY TINY HOUSE

For more infomation >> Blue Sapphire By Simblissity Tiny House | Tiny House Design Ideas | Le Tuan Home Design - Duration: 2:01.

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Interview with Akuzawa Minoru, founder of the Aunkai Bujutsu - Duration: 23:25.

I think it was when I was young like 19 or 20 that I joined a Chinese bujutsu association.

This is where I learned basics like posture, etc.

I learned what they call the kihon renko of Chinese bujitsu.

As I practiced those things,

I realized I didn't really like performing kata.

Then I heard of another sport that came from China called Sanda.

It had close combat matches wearing headgear that included striking, kicking, punching, and throwing.

I didn't have any experience at that time,

and I got to know someone who had mastered the combat systems in the Japan Self-Defense Forces.

I learned things like striking, kicking, and throwing from him,

but since it was personal training,

it wasn't like the conventional training at dojo where they would learn the basics together step by step.

We rather picked certain points and concentrated on those.

We also asked for volunteers to practice with us and he told me how to move as we practiced.

He was a really smart person, his training was unique and much more detailed than the conventional training,

including how to use our body, and it was good, it really helped.

It really helped for the competitions such as Sanda.

I think it's good to participate in competitions while you are young.

You might win or lose but it'll be good experience anyway.

Then, there is also a koryu teacher from whom I learned a lot in terms of skills

and regarding the establishment of Aunkai.

He had mastered taijutsu and kenjutsu from his school but now that I think of it,

he didn't have a training manual per se like basic training, kata, kumiuchi, and then taijin.

But he taught me how the human body worked technically, psychologically, and biologically, and about posture,

how I should stand, things like that.

And he told me to take that home and to practice it.

It was like that for 10 months to a year.

It was indeed a short time,

but it constitutes the essence of what we do when I teach since I created the Aunkai.

And when I turned a certain age,

I started asking myself how I would take my power and speed to the next level.

So before I turned 30, I decided to learn from a Sensei known for Daito-ryu Aiki-jujutsu.

It was very helpful too,

He taught me that it wasn't about external forces

He taught me how to be able to use internal forces rather than something external like muscles.

Those practices are reflected in Aunkai as well.

I also learned how to use my body, more of physical technique, from masters of conventional Aikido, Daito-ryu, or Aiki.

In Japanese, we say "Aun no kokyu",

and some think of it as like the Yin/Yang from Chinese Taichi,

the InYo [陰陽], like in taikyoku [太極]

But originally, "A Un" in Sanskrit means the beginning of an event and the end of it

and that continues forever,

In bujutsu, if there is a beginning, there is also an end and there is this feeling that you have until the end, and the movement continues forever.

Through that, we create phenomena in different ways.

That's how I came to name it Aun.

At shrines and temples also,

there are two bodies like komainu, aun or kongo rikishi or nio statues,

there are different names for them but you see two statues in front of shrines or temples.

So deeply in the Japanese history, there is also a meaning, and I think that's why they have those statues.

Well of course, in the history, there is Japanese culture, and there are religious or philosophical aspects.

Having all those meanings, I think it's a wonderful word. That's why I named it Aunkai.

Even though Aunkai is not limited to a specific school or category,

we try to master those simply things taking into account the nature of a human body like two arms and two feet.

We focus on building our body,

including conditioning it externally all over the body like muscles, bones, and so on.

Once we are done with it, we do internally.

This is the most important thing and it takes a lot of time.

We have continuous tanren or training to develop our internal energy.

They call it "naiko" in Chinese bujutsu and I call it "naido".

This tanren is to deeply recognize those techniques and ideas by structuring your training yourself and working hard on it.

I think tanren is absolutely needed in bujitsu if you want to widen your teihen.

And this kind of…I would say correct way of training

including how you breathe and move,

is to learn to move your body from muscle memory,

to maintain that condition when you are relaxed,

and to recognize the condition of your body when you are facing someone.

At Aunkai, from the beginning,

we have given much importance to this recognition training,

to recognize the condition of your body as well as that of your opponent.

This becomes the core and it helps us develop our body

and adapt to other ryuhas such as martial arts, taijutsu, and jujutsu.

As we turn the body, we have different applications and techniques.

We develop those skills through practice with others.

That is the kind of training we mainly do.

We don't really use existing, conventional katas or forms but instead,

we use the logic and mechanisms

that I learned from my past teachers as the basis of training and further analyze it as we practice.

When doing this, the way we move gradually changes as we step up.

and in fact, the way I move and how I am on the inside are completely different from how they were when I was younger.

This I call human experiment, human experiment using your own body.

I guess it's fun and interesting to see how your body changes.

I think that's one of the unique things about Aunkai.

Most of the people who come to Aunkai have various backgrounds and practiced different ryuhas

and they may have found a limit in their previous ways of tanren or training

and they may also have their challenges and questions as to what to choose

and which parts to learn more deeply.

I reflect on those things when I teach.

Well ultimately it's what humans do.

I guess tradition is very important.

But I guess in the process of learning,

we may go through changes and find or notice new things.

Those kinds of things, I get to verify through teaching using my body and telling people.

That kind of free style or thinking I guess is the most interesting thing about Aunkai,

and I think that kind of thinking is very unique to Aunkai.

Conventionally, they have predetermined paths.

But at Aunkai, there are different kinds of people to begin with,

like foreigners.

As I also teach different things abroad,

I deal with people from different cultures and races, with different ways of thinking.

But when they take each other's hands,

well that way that's body to body,

I think they work hard in keiko or training regardless of language.

In japanese, "keiko" is like training, "renshu",

in English, you say "practice".

It can have different meanings but what I mean by keiko

is closer to what it meant in the bujutsu and budo from the time of the Samurai.

"Shosa" [所作, conduct] or "Saho" [作法, etiquette]

Those developed since the age of Samurai all come from the lifestyle aimed to learn those bodily movements through techniques in everyday life.

It enables you to constantly move your body logically and efficiently

without anything preventing and the body to function that way.

So keiko is something that takes into account those techniques

"Training" is usually interpreted as training your body,

your muscles as you have weight training or something training.

And practice is to repeat, like katageiko, repeat the same thing like kata,

I think that practice means to repeat those things.

I guess that training your body is the same across sports, budo, and bujutsu,

but actually I think the most important thing is the way you think,

the way you process what happens around you and a huge amount of information.

What I mean is that we have to think actively and comprehensively

about our nervous system and how our body works psychologically and biologically.

The reason is that as we do training continuously and repeatedly,

sometimes we end up doing it mindlessly without knowing what is important and what is needed.

So in training, in the process of intensely training your body,

there is a need to learn to slow down and relax your mind and body.

Normally, people may think of training as intense training where you challenge your limit like this

but it's not only that,

you also need to take your time to nurture your imagination through slow, quiet training.

This Aunkai way, well my way of thinking is very unique.

And in reality, in a fight, because things keep changing, you have to be able to process information extremely fast.

Of course, to think fast is very important in that kind of situation,

but in training and because it's training,

I think you also need to purposely slow down and to recognize the technique of creating a relation between you and your opponent.

And I think that is also the fundamental technique that we have developed in bujitsu

to avoid a fight when you face your opponent like hyoushi, ma, and timing and all that.

That technique is like something that one learns and obtains as like another sense through hard work and time.

And when your body and your mind match, you will be able to control and use your body as you wish.

This is a very unique method of keiko at Aunkai.

For more infomation >> Interview with Akuzawa Minoru, founder of the Aunkai Bujutsu - Duration: 23:25.

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Eat A Fruit in 3 Days of Unriped Hearts Collapse With Amazing Results Happening To No One - Duration: 4:05.

Ăn Một Quả Ổi Trong 3 Ngày Liên Tục Giật Mình ngã Ngửa Với Kết Quả Kỳ Diệu Xảy Ra Không Ai Ngờ Tới Đã l

For more infomation >> Eat A Fruit in 3 Days of Unriped Hearts Collapse With Amazing Results Happening To No One - Duration: 4:05.

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Mix Media Layout using Distress Oxide Inks techniques- My Creative Scrapbook - Duration: 15:12.

For more infomation >> Mix Media Layout using Distress Oxide Inks techniques- My Creative Scrapbook - Duration: 15:12.

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Activists Trump's Atlantic coast survey is the 'first step to offshore drilling' - Duration: 2:50.

Activists Trump's Atlantic coast survey is the 'first step to offshore drilling'

by John Siciliano

The Commerce Department is proposing to grant five permits to survey the Atlantic coastline's

seabed, a move that activists oppose because they see it as part of President Trump's plan

to expand offshore drilling.

The proposed permits, filed on Monday for publication in the Federal Register, would

allow companies to use high-powered air guns to conduct seismic survey activity.

But environmental groups say the survey technique is harmful to marine mammals and other sea

life and should not be used.

"The threats of seismic airgun blasting alone are bad enough, but it's also the first step

to offshore drilling, which could lead to the industrialization of coastal communities

and the risk of another BP Deepwater Horizon-like disaster," said the large conservation group

Oceana.

"The time to protect our coast is now."

The Commerce Department, however, is warning that any comments submitted to the agency

in opposition to, or suport of, oil and natural gas drilling will not be accepted.

The agency is accepting comments on its proposed permit authorization for 30 days.

"Comments indicating general support for or opposition to hydrocarbon exploration or any

comments relating to hydrocarbon development (e.g., leasing, drilling) are not relevant

to this request for comments and will not be considered," the notice read.

President Trump in an April executive order began the process of reversing the Obama administration's

ban on drilling off the Atlantic Coast.

The proposed survey activity is the first step in opening up oil and natural gas drilling

on the East Coast by assessing what lies beneath the seabed.

Although the survey actions may help in planning future drilling operations, the action being

taken does not allow any actual drilling to take place.

That approval is still being worked out by the Interior Department.

The Commerce Department's fisheries division issues the permits, which allow companies

to incidentally harm whales, seals and other aquatic mammals through conducting their activities.

"An authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if [the National Marine Fisheries

Service] finds that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species," the notice

read.

The survey area will stem from northern Florida to Delaware.

For more infomation >> Activists Trump's Atlantic coast survey is the 'first step to offshore drilling' - Duration: 2:50.

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Tướng Nakroth - Song Đao Hành Quyết - Liên Quân Mobile -Strike of Kings - Duration: 18:12.

For more infomation >> Tướng Nakroth - Song Đao Hành Quyết - Liên Quân Mobile -Strike of Kings - Duration: 18:12.

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INSURANCE BITES: RISK TREATMENT OPTIONS (PART 2) - Duration: 1:58.

For more infomation >> INSURANCE BITES: RISK TREATMENT OPTIONS (PART 2) - Duration: 1:58.

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Trump's grand infrastructure plan will rely on privatization - politics - Duration: 2:17.

Trump�s grand infrastructure plan will rely on privatization

President Donald Trump is beginning what his White House is referring to as �infrastructure

week� with a plan whose goal is to avoid having the federal government actually pay

for the infrastructure in question.

The infrastructure plan will decrease the federal government�s role in funding those

projects and instead place the burden on both private corporations and state and city governments,

according to a report by The New York Times.

His plan will include privatizing America�s air-traffic control system � announced Monday

� which he would also modernize by using a digital satellite-based tracking systems

instead of land-based radar.

Trump�s plan would also come up with methods for repairing America�s bridges, railways,

roads and waterways.

As Director of the National Economic Council Gary Cohn told the Times on Friday, �We

like the template of not using taxpayer dollars to give taxpayers wins.�

Cohn added, �We want to be in the partnership business.

We want to be in the facilitation business, and we�re willing to provide capital wherever

necessary to help certain infrastructure along.�

Many of the infrastructure program�s critics claim that it amounts to little more than

a giveaway to the wealthy.

�Bold, job-creating investments in our crumbling infrastructure system can and should be a

bipartisan priority,� said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi in a statement.

�However, Trump�s �infrastructure week� appears to be little more than a Trojan Horse

for undermining workers� wages and handing massive tax breaks to billionaires and corporations.�

This echoes a criticism made by former labor secretary Robert Reich back in January, who

said, �What Donald Trump is proposing is nothing more than a huge tax giveaway for

the rich.�

For more infomation >> Trump's grand infrastructure plan will rely on privatization - politics - Duration: 2:17.

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FIRST TIME on ETIHAD - Duration: 10:43.

Today's vacation day!

Again

Back at the airport

The flight leaves at around 1:05 am

*1:05 am is BOARDING

Its like an eight hour flight actually

eight hour flight

Oh sorry

Woo Etihad!

This is nice!

Wow

This is nice

Great pillow here

Boarded the Plane at 1:05 am

It's good!

The flight will be exactly

7 hours and 55 minutes

We're landing at around 2:00 pm

We're headed for Paris now

So yeah

Okay and we're in the air

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