Plastic Bullet Toy Guns - DESERT EAGLE
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Odia whatsapp status video Kagaj Fula ku mu... Anew sad romantic whatsapp status video from Ds media - Duration: 0:38.
For more infomation >> Odia whatsapp status video Kagaj Fula ku mu... Anew sad romantic whatsapp status video from Ds media - Duration: 0:38. -------------------------------------------
Alphabet Song | A To Z | Learning Videos For Kids - Duration: 1:05:14.
A B C D E F G
H I J K
L M N O P
Q R S
T U V
W X
Y and Z
I just love my ABC...
26 Letters from A to Z
A B C D E F G
H I J K
L M N O P
Q R S
T U V
W X
Y and Z
Now i know my ABC...
Next time want you sing with me
A B C D E F G
H I J K
L M N O P
Q R S
T U V
W X
Y and Z
I just love my ABC...
26 Letters from A to Z
A B C D E F G
H I J K L M N O P
Q R S
T U V
W X
Y and Z
Now i know my ABC...
Next time want you sing with me
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Rebecca Makkai on Why Writing a Book Is Like Getting Dressed in the Dark - Duration: 6:43.
-Congrats on the novel. This is your third novel.
-It is.
-The first two were very well received.
Does that make you feel very confident
before your third novel comes out?
-Oh, sure. -Oh, good.
-No, no, no. No, you can't be.
Because it's -- you know --
You're writing in total isolation.
It's like getting dressed in the dark.
Like, the complete dark.
And then, you have to go out on stage.
-Yeah.
-And you don't know what you've done.
You don't know what anybody's gonna see
until it's too late.
-And not only dress in the dark but, I would guess,
over the period of like three or four years.
-Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. -Yeah, it's four years of...
-Four years of like, "These are the right pants."
-Yeah.
-Do you show it to people over the course of the four years?
Do you -- -I do.
You know, a few trusted readers. And for this one,
because it is about the AIDS epidemic in Chicago,
very sensitive subject, a lot of historical research,
I really needed people to read it who could tell me
where I'd gone wrong... -Oh, that's very helpful.
-...who were there and lived through it.
-There are sort of two parallel stories.
There is, as you mentioned, it's Chicago in the '80s
and the AIDS crisis, and then modern-day Paris.
Characters from both sort of live in both the stories.
Is that something -- With a plotting like that,
do you have to know that when you set out to write the story?
-It might have helped, but I didn't.
-Oh, okay. Got you. -So, yeah, I, um --
I started off writing this story, you know,
eventually, after a few missteps,
about the crest of the AIDS epidemic in Chicago.
It was all set in the '80s.
And as I interviewed people, as I thought about it more,
one of the things that was the most fascinating to me
was the aftermath,
the ripple effect 30 years later.
How were people picking up, going on with their lives,
when they'd been handed a death sentence
or when they'd lost everyone of their generation
and they're the only survivor?
So that was woven in later.
-I was certainly more aware of San Francisco and New York
as cities that were devastated by the AIDS crisis.
And having spent a lot of time in Chicago,
and you, obviously, are from Chicago,
were you aware going into it as how affected Chicago was?
-I knew a bit.
You know, I was a kid when this was going on.
And I was certainly tuned in to what was going on in the news.
You know, you stay home from school,
and you watch "Donahue" or whatever,
and you see some stuff.
But, of course, that was never about Chicago.
Even though I was living in Chicago, I wasn't aware.
-Right.
-Became aware more as an adult, as I met people.
I'm out there in the art world in Chicago,
meeting people who were affected.
Most of what's out there, in book form and film form,
is about New York, San Francisco, maybe L.A.
And I feel like Chicago has been really underrepresented,
which actually made it harder for me to do my research
but blessing in disguise, 'cause I couldn't just
hide behind some books in the library.
I had to get out and actually interview people.
-This is very impressive, 'cause I sometimes think
that our perception of authors
is they just get to make up worlds,
and they don't actually have to lock into the details of it.
But you used Google Calendar and Google Maps extensively
to write this.
How exactly were those tools that were effective for you?
-So the Google thing -- So I --
I've tried all kinds of outlines for my novels.
With this one, the calendar was really tricky,
because I'm moving back and forth between time periods
but also dealing with AIDS.
The amount of time that would elapse between someone
maybe getting the test and getting the results.
You move one thing and your whole plot falls apart.
So I clicked back in my Google Calendar
like five or six years until the days of the week
matched up with the days of the week in 1985.
And then, I would enter all my events into the calendar.
-I noticed that the days matched up.
I checked. I always check.
[ Laughter ]
That's the first thing I do when I read a book.
I'm like, "I'm gonna go on my Google Calendar.
If these don't match up..." -You know what?
Someone does. -Someone does, that's true.
-And we're gonna get the e-mails.
The writers are gonna get the e-mails if we don't do that.
But the funny thing now is, I'll use my Google Calendar,
and I'll try to be looking up something I have to do,
so I'll type in, like, "Wisconsin,"
and it'll come up 15 things about my characters
going to Wisconsin,
but I was just trying to look up the Wisconsin Book Festival.
So I did that.
And then, the Google Maps, there were two things.
I had this amazing intern one summer
who made me an interactive online map
of every gay bar in Chicago in 1986,
which I hope was fun for him. I don't know.
[ Laughter ]
So I could kind of walk around then, with it printed out,
walk around Chicago and see where everything was
and kind of try to picture it.
The other thing is, as I'm researching Paris,
the other part of the book, you know,
you can do that thing where you take the blue dude
and you drop him into the map, and you can walk around
and you can look left and right, which was awesome,
but I was really hoping
I'd have to justify a research trip to Paris.
And this totally supplanted it so...
-You are a child of a Hungarian immigrant, yes?
-Yeah. -And you would have --
When you were growing up, you had immigrants stay with you?
-Yeah, I had this kind of wild childhood.
My parents are both linguistics professors.
And then, we -- we're sort of a hub
of Hungarian immigrants in Chicago.
Yeah, not really a normal childhood.
-Yeah. -It was kind of awesome.
And my dad's a poet. So there was a lot of --
He was writing his poetry in America
but in Hungarian and then smuggling it back into Hungary.
-How do you smuggle poetry? [ Laughter ]
-Funny question. So, what you do,
if it's 1970s, is, you get a box of disposable diapers.
-Yep, that's what I would've done.
[ Laughter ]
-Because disposable diapers were brand-new.
You could get them in America.
You can't get them in Hungary.
So it's a pretty normal gift
to be sending across the ocean to your relatives.
And you cut them open, you take out the filling,
and you put a poetry manuscript in every diaper.
Then you reseal the box, you send it,
they open it, they take it out,
and you have diaper poetry. [ Laughter ]
-That is incredible.
Because every writer I know... [ Applause ]
...would basically, at some point think,
"A baby should [bleep] on this." [ Both laugh ]
And you're a professor in the MFA program at Northwestern.
-Yeah. -Do you like teaching?
-I love teaching, yeah. -That's great.
-You know, it makes you so much better at what you do
to have to articulate it.
You know, 'cause other art forms, you see someone work.
Right? If I were a painter, I could watch someone paint.
If I were a musician, I could watch someone,
you know, compose, make music.
I can't go and stand over my friends' shoulder
when they're writing novels. -Right, yeah.
-That would be super creepy.
But I can work with students as they're writing novels,
as they're writing short stories.
And I'm learning from that in a way
that is not otherwise available to me as a writer.
-That is very cool. [ Applause ]
And thank you so much for being here.
-Thank you. -Congrats on the book.
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Мои полгода на YouTube - Duration: 8:05.
For more infomation >> Мои полгода на YouTube - Duration: 8:05. -------------------------------------------
Eat No Arms Challenge by Katrin Kids Show - Duration: 17:01.
Hi Guys! I am Stivie!And i am Katerina
And Today we do No arms Challenge!
As you can see we are tape our arms
It is gonna be so hard
If you us your mouse it's ok
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The History of Hip Hop Music for Kids Song - Rap Opera for Kids - Duration: 3:54.
Yes, yes, y'all! and it don't stop!
And it won't stop! And it can't stop!
Let's go back to 1973, to a birthday party in the Bronx New York City.
The address - 1520 Sedgwick Avenue.
The DJ selecting the records, Clive Campbell
the birthday girl's brother, now known as DJ Kool Herc
the founding father of Hip Hop.
This is how he put in work.
1955, born and raised in Kingston, Jamaica.
In 1967, Clive emigrated with his family to the
Bronx, New York City where Hip Hop begins.
Herc started selecting the records at parties to spin
between the times his dad's band played while he was a teenager.
Herc imitated the style of Jamaican "selectors," "toasting" on the tracks, letting party
people know what's up, but his importance to Hip Hop is not singing
or rap.
Herc noticed how crowds would react to drum breaks of a track,
dancing where the music's vocals and instruments stopped at.
Herc decided to use two turntables: tools that are able to bring the drum beats
back.
Herc switched back and forth between two copies of the same track,
extending the breaks so crowds had more time to dance and react.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - It didn't start with the beef.
It started with a scratch.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - Real MCs tell it clear.
No mumble on the track.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - No trap in the game.
Broke out with the boom bap.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - Take you back to the days with Kool Herc on
the track.
There were other notable people on the spot like the mother of Hip Hop who organized parties
on the block.
Cindy Campbell, the birthday girl - Herc's younger sister,
she made history as a first ever Hip Hop promoter.
She also helped Herc handle up on the breaks, getting the records together for them to loop
and play.
Another pioneer of the style is Joseph Saddler.
Born 1958 in Barbados.
Later, moved to the same area as Herc and Cindy in the Bronx, New York City.
Attending DJ parties is how he got his start.
He began experimenting with turntable mixing, and later on, he perfected the art known as
"scratching."
This is when a DJ uses the hands to rewind a track
to make a percussive sound as the beat plays back.
So fast with the tracks,
he was called Grandmaster Flash,
but unable to get into discos, he took another path.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - It didn't start with the beef.
It started with a scratch.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - Real MCs tell it clear.
No mumble on the track.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - No trap in the game.
Broke out with the boom bap.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - Take you back to the days - Grandmaster Flash
on the track.
Disco clubs were adults only, and they were not
for Flash and his friends, so they had house parties on the block.
This is how Grandmaster Flash put in work, constantly improving his craft but kept it
down to earth.
Out on the streets making beats for kids that were so po'
they couldn't afford the -or.
Now, in 1977, Flash worked with Kurtis Blow, his first ever rap collaborator.
But it wasn't until he worked with a rap group of five
that he made history his career coming alive.
Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five pioneered a new sound that was all their own
vibe.
Turntables and records became instruments.
The DJ and rapping MCs became a union.
In 1979, they made their first album.
The rest is history while Hip Hop still happens.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - It didn't start with the beef.
It started with a scratch.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - Real MCs tell it clear.
No mumble on the track.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - No trap in the game.
Broke out with the boom bap.
The history of Hip Hop and rap - Take you back to the days - Flash and Herc
on the track.
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ARKADAŞIMIDA KIŞKIRTIM - Duration: 6:53.
For more infomation >> ARKADAŞIMIDA KIŞKIRTIM - Duration: 6:53. -------------------------------------------
Os Vídeos que estão Bombando na Internet - Copilado e tente Não rir - Duration: 5:23.
For more infomation >> Os Vídeos que estão Bombando na Internet - Copilado e tente Não rir - Duration: 5:23. -------------------------------------------
【道明寺ここあ】Rising Hope 歌ってみた【魔法科高校の劣等生OP/LiSA】 - Duration: 4:11.
( This message I held ) ♪ nigitta MESSEEJI ♪
♪ that's rising hope ♪
♪ (hey welcome to message write you) ♪
♪ (can you distance standby) ♪
♪ here we go! ♪
LiSA - Rising Hope (Kokoa Domyoji cover)
Lyrics: LiSA, Tomoya Tabuchi Composition: Tomoya Tabuchi Arrangement: Shouta Horie
( This world that isn't shaking is an abnormal situation ) ♪ yuruganai sekai hijou na genjou ♪
( How multi-layered is that wall that keeps on continuing ) ♪ tsuzuku kabe wa nanjuusou? ♪
( This isn't what I had in mind ) ♪ IMEEJI toori nanka ja nai ♪
( Creating a nuisance quietly is an instinct ) ♪ shizuka ni sawagi dashita honnou ♪
( Like a maze, my life that has come to a standstill ) ♪ meiro mitai ikitomari nanda ♪
( Is an distortion when you further think about it ) ♪ mou shikou wa DISUTOOSHON ♪
( I can't pardon this ) ♪ youshanai ne ♪
( Somehow, the route I've lost sight of starts to act violently ) ♪ itsunomani miushinatta RUUTO, abaredasu ♪
♪ (pay attention!) ♪
♪ (Hey what is it?) ♪
♪ (watch your step now!) ♪
( I don't really need common sense here ) ♪ joushiki nanka iranai ♪
♪ (are you serious!?) ♪
♪ (no no no, don't worry 1,2,3) ♪
( The rhythm of my heart is coming back to life ) ♪ fukikaesu shinzou no RIZUMU ♪
( My vision is still blurry ) ♪ shikai mada kuranderu ♪
( Even so I have to go ) ♪ soredemo ikanakucha ♪
( I can't possibly betray myself ) ♪ kimi ga shinjiteru boku wo ♪
( When you've trusted me so much ) ♪ uragiru wake ni ikanai ♪
( The strong Klaxon sounds rings ) ♪ tsuyoku KURAKUSHON ga naru ♪
( My lonely days have passed ) ♪ kodoku na mama toki ga tattatte ♪
( And I've learned from my cowardice ) ♪ nigeru koto oboetatte ♪
( Though a new day has already arrived ) ♪ atarashii kyou ga kichau kedo ♪
♪ (I believe in anymore) ♪
( Even if this wish, without using magic, ) ♪ kono negai tatoe mahou ga nakutatte ♪
( Must come true ) ♪ kanaenakya ♪
( I've made a vow ) ♪ chikatta ♪
( There is still a future you and me wants to see ) ♪ boku wa kimi to mada mitai mirai arunda yo ♪
♪ ( I seen my hope ) ♪
( Filled with regrets ) ♪ nakisou demo kuyashikute mo ♪
( I feel like crying but I can't stop now ) ♪ tomatte irarenai ♪
( This message I held ) ♪ nigitta MESSEEJI
♪ that's rising hope ♪
♪ (I will go ahead) ♪
( But, however, while pounding non stop ) ♪ DEMO KEDO non stop ♪
( The hard way that presses on ) ♪ de gan gan semaru hard way ♪
♪ where's the solution!? ♪
( Even if it's beating someone up ) ♪ Uchinome sarete mo ♪
♪ get up! (come on!) ♪
♪ and hurry up! (come on!) ♪
( If it's such a waste of time ) ♪ sonna son na jikan nara ♪
( Just throw them into the trash immediately ) ♪ sugusama gomibako ♪
( Regrets are similar to dust ) ♪ koukai nante chirihokori douzen ♪
( Come 2 step OK shouting OK ) ♪ saa 2 step OK shouting OK ♪
( Go ahead and let greed take over ) ♪ yokubari asobase ♪
( Right or wrong, yes or no, they are all mine ) ♪ kahi sanpi mo zenbu boku no mono ♪
( Go ahead and soar ) ♪ tobase ♪
( The algorithm of my heart ) ♪ shinzou no ARUGORIZUMU ♪
( Look, I just wanted to ) ♪ hora mamoritai'n datte ♪
( Protect your transmitted voice ) ♪ boku no koe ga denpa shita ♪
( I accept different opinions and objections ) ♪ iron hanron wa yurusu kedo ♪
( But this desire can't be fulfilled without carelessly using science huh? ) ♪ kono omoi wa fuyoui ni kagaku dekinai deshou? ♪
( Please listen, I have to tell you the correct answer ) ♪ kiite yo tadoritsuita seikai ♪
( I've arrived at ) ♪ iwanakucha ♪
( I can believe all your dreams ) ♪ kimi ga kureru omoi no zenbu wo ♪
( You've entrusted to me ) ♪ shinjite ikeru ♪
( That may somehow be a lie ) ♪ sore ga uso ga douka nante ♪
( It's okay even if you don't understand ) ♪ wakaranakute mo ii ♪
( What is that example someone is showing? ) ♪ dareka ga shimesu mihon tte nandakke ♪
( An ordinary love? What's that? ) ♪ futsuu no ai tte nandakke ♪
( Even today I ask myself this ) ♪ boku wa kyou mo boku ni toikakeru ♪
( Every time I ask this, I've obtained a truth ) ♪ toikakeru tabi te ni ireru no wa ♪
( That will never change ) ♪ kawaranai shinjitsu ♪
( "Without me, there's still a future I want to see" ) ♪ "boku wa iranai mada mitai mirai ga aru kara" ♪
( This loneliness isn't going to disappear ) ♪ kodoku nanka wa kiete naku natte ♪
( And I've grown sick of running away ) ♪ nigeru koto iya ni natte ♪
( I'm going to search for a new day ) ♪ atarashii kyou wo sagasunda yo ♪
♪ ( I believe in anymore ) ♪
( Even if this wish, without using magic, ) ♪ kono negai tatoe mahou ga nakutatte ♪
( Must come true ) ♪ kanaenakya ♪
( I've made a vow ) ♪ chikatta ♪
( If it's the future you and me can create, it's already close ) ♪ Boku to kimi de tsukureru mirai nara mou chikai ♪
♪ (I seen my hope) ♪
( My right hand, your left hand, softly connected to each other ) ♪ Boku no migite kimi no hidarite sotto tsunaide ♪
( This message I held ) ♪ Nigitta MESSEEJI ♪
♪ that's rising hope ♪
( I won't let go ) ♪ Hanasanai kara ♪
♪ that's rising hope ♪
♪ rising hope ♪
♪ (I will really peak in hope) ♪
♪ (hey,choose truth lets write you) ♪
♪ (can you continue all right reply) ♪
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Jacob Soboroff Talks About the Trump Administration's Family Separation Crisis - Duration: 3:34.
-This is now -- We're a few weeks after
he signed the order to stop the family separations.
They gave themselves a deadline of this Thursday
to reunite all the families.
Where are we at right now in that?
-So let's talk about this. There, today, right now,
as we sit here, 2,551 kids were ripped away
from their parents by the Trump administration,
and we should keep saying over and over again,
till every one of these kids is accounted for,
that this is not something that had ever happened before.
It was a policy that was put into place
to systematically take these kids away from their parents.
It's a crisis on the scale of a natural disaster
that was manmade by the Trump administration.
This is a crisis of their own creation.
Thursday is the deadline.
They're now saying that something like 900
of the 2,551 have been reunited,
but they're also saying
over a third may never, ever be reunited,
or, at least, it's gonna be very complicated
to put these people back together.
And we just have to continue
to demand answers from the administration,
because none of these kids should have been separated
in the first place.
-Now, that failure to reunite the children,
is this a byproduct of how terribly planned
this was to begin with? -Yeah, absolutely.
There was never a plan.
First of all, some of the shelters that I went to --
and I went inside some of these places --
It was the most harrowing experience
as a father of a young kid, like you,
that I've ever seen in my life.
The shelters, for the most part, take good care of the kids.
But they didn't know these kids were coming,
separated from their parents.
The thing that disgusts me, and I will never forget,
is that they took these kids away from their parents
and put them in cages.
And I was one of the small group of journalists
that got to go inside the border patrol processing station
in McAllen, Texas, and see these little kids
sitting around under a watch tower,
playing by themselves, because of the idea
that Donald Trump thought it would scare other people
from coming into this country.
And now, because there was no plan
to ever put it back together,
you could have kids that their parents were already deported,
and they may never see them again.
-There's this sense now that,
you know, they're trying to fix it.
Do you think they're trying to fix it
because they realized
how awful an act it was in the first place,
or do you think they're just trying to fix
what has become a PR disaster?
-No. And I'll tell you something.
I saw Sean Spicer in this building.
-Oh, I'm sorry. -Yeah, exactly. Thank you.
[ Laughter ]
I saw him in the building the other day.
And he was -- I asked him.
I said, "What'd you think about it?"
And he said, "It was a mess."
And he was saying it was a mess
just like the Muslim ban was a mess.
Because it wasn't well-thought-through.
Not because this was inhumane
to take kids away from their parents,
not because -- and that's the same thing
with putting them back together.
Not because we feel bad about it
but because we just kind of messed up and it looked bad.
And the President admitted that.
When we were down there, from day one,
when we were in the shelter in Brownsville,
to day seven, I think it was,
that he signed the executive order to put them back together,
he basically said, "I saw you guys on TV.
I saw the writing, I saw the pictures,
and that's sort of why we did this.
It didn't look that good." -Yeah.
You're doing incredible work.
Thank you so much for continuing it.
It's obviously very exciting for me to see you
because I've been following the work you're doing on TV.
Other people are excited to see you
because they think you're someone else.
-Yeah, that's true.
J.J. Abrams. -J.J. Abrams.
[ Laughter ]
Here, why don't you hold that up for us.
Because I will say -- -Yeah, go right over there.
-I'm not, uh... -Yeah.
-I'm not nearly as rich.
In fact, I'm not anywhere close.
"I would love to have the J.J. Abrams money,"
is what I say to when people come up to me on the street.
So, J.J., hit me up.
-Yeah, there you go.
Yeah, thank you very much for being here.
-Can I have this? -Yeah, you can have that.
That's the least we can do. -Thank you very much.
Okay, thank you.
-Hey, thanks for being here, Jacob.
Keep up the great work. I really appreciate it.
-------------------------------------------
Jacob Soboroff Explains Why Trump's Border Wall Wouldn't Solve Any Problems - Duration: 4:30.
-So I want to start with this. You are, obviously, in a very --
reporting on a very difficult story right now.
You're very composed.
And, yet, I heard on your way out here, you were at LAX.
And you lost your composure.
-You heard about this? -Yes.
-So, I ran into Joe Biden. -Right.
-So the backstory is --
first of all, Joe Biden is like sitting by himself at LAX,
by himself, 100% by himself,
wearing the aviators in the corner.
And I'm like, "That's Joe Biden."
-Yeah.
-So, I'm like, "I got to go talk to Joe Biden."
The backstory is my father-in-law in 1987-88
worked on his presidential campaign.
They were close.
My wife told me, "We hung out with the Biden kids a lot,
like, great memories."
So I'm like, "I got to go tell him this."
So I go up to Joe Biden.
I say, "Hey, Mr. Vice President, I'm Jacob Soboroff from MSNBC.
How are you?"
"Hey, great to see you."
So then I got nervous.
And I said to him, "My daughter --"
I don't have a daughter. [ Laughter ]
"i-is my father-in-law's wife."
[ Laughter ]
And I was like -- and then I said it again.
I was like, "My daughter is my father-in-law's wife."
And he wasn't responding.
And he kind of, like, takes the aviators.
And he looks over.
I was like, "Oh, my wife is my wife.
And my father-in-law is my father-in-law."
He's like, "Oh, how are they? Tell them I said hello."
So, I'm sorry, Mr. Vice President,
if you're watching tonight.
I'll never do that again.
-Yeah, that's like you were asking him a riddle.
-It was bad. [ Laughter ]
I was very uncomfortable.
-My wife is my daughter-in-law is my father.
So who's the doctor? -Exactly.
[ Laughter ]
-So you actually had been doing,
even before the family separation policy went in place,
you had been doing a wonderful piece about the border.
-Yeah. -And you've been down there.
And you actually spent time on every mile
of the U.S./Mexico border.
-2,000 miles, yeah.
-Which is incredible.
And you, of course, I think we all have this image of
the border based on the news reporting we see.
You actually went down there and saw a different story
than the sort of outrageous things
we hear every day on the news.
-It really is unbelievable to me to hear about how people,
particularly the President, talk about what is going on
down on the border as if it is just the most lawless crazy area
you have ever been to.
It's some of the most wonderful people I've ever met
in my entire life.
Some of the safest cities in America
are along the southern border.
The idea that drugs are flowing in where there's no wall
is factually incorrect.
If the President took some time to read his own DEA reports,
he would know that violence is not flowing across the border.
He would know that drugs are coming in
through legal ports of entry.
And he would know that MS-13 is a tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny percent
of the people that come through.
And the poli-- I mean, basically they make policies
that rip children away from their families
and are truly ripping apart the fabric of society
based on a nonsense.
-Now, you actually, you mention you met great people.
This was -- This is a true thing that happened.
Explain what happened.
But this is a man who saw you.
-Yeah, that's true.
-He swam across to you to offer you...
-Shrimp. -Shrimp.
-So, this is the Rio Grande,
where the Rio Grande meets the Gulf of Mexico.
And that's the very southeastern most point of the U.S. border.
And this guy calls across to me.
He's like, "Hey, buddy." And I was like, "Hey."
And he's like, "Do you want some shrimp?"
[ Laughter ]
And I said, "Yeah, come across. I'll take some shrimp."
So the guy -- In that cooler also were limes.
And there -- That's the hot sauce right there.
[ Laughter ]
And so for 5 bucks, the whole thing,
with the militarized border
and just all this divisive sort of things,
the guy swam across and just blew my mind about everything
that we -- you know, you think you know about what is going on.
So I thank this man very much. -Yeah.
-It was delicious. -Well, that -- yeah.
[ Cheers and applause ]
Yeah, you never -- I never once heard Trump say,
"They're sending their shrimp."
-No, no shrimp. [ Laughter ]
-So you mentioned that the drugs
are actually coming through the ports of entry that exist.
-Right.
-Based on that, is what you're saying that a wall,
while, you know, sort of as a symbol,
seems like a show of strength,
would not actually fix any of the problems right now
as far as the drug trade goes.
-Yeah, no.
And people shouldn't be surprised when they --
the President knows this.
It's in the DEA reports that he gets.
And he continues to say over and over again.
By the way, it also is not gonna stop the vast majority of people
that are coming to this country illegally.
The majority of people that come into the country illegally
fly here from Asia, for the most part, and overstay their visas.
And no wall is going to stop people flying in, you know,
obviously, from Asia.
-------------------------------------------
Rain Rain Go Away | Luke And Lily Rhymes | Cartoons by Kids ABC Tv - Duration: 3:28.
Ahh!!! Its Raining...
Rain, rain go away Come again another day.
Little Johnny wants to play. Rain, rain go to Spain.
Rain rain go away, Come again another day.
Little Johnny wants to play; Never show your face again!
Rain, rain - go away, Come again another day.
DADDY wants to play. Rain, rain, go to Spain.
Rain, rain - go away, Come again another day.
MOMMY wants to play Rain, rain, go to Spain.
Rain, rain - go away, Come again another day.
BROTHER wants to play. Rain, rain - go to Spain.
Rain, rain - go away, Come again another day.
SISTER wants to play. Rain, rain -go to Spain.
Rain, rain, go away, Come again another day.
BABY wants to play Rain, rain - go to Spain.
Rain, Rain - go away, Come again another day.
ALL THE FAMILY wants to play. Rain, rain - go to Spain.
Rain , rain - go away.
-------------------------------------------
It's Halloween Night | Nursery Rhyme | Scary Rhymes By Jim Jam Club - Duration: 2:15.
It's Halloween Night Not a soul in sight
I hear Footsteps Who's that coming?
I see a ghost!
Oh no!!!
I see a ghost! Run!!!
I see a ghost! Hahahahaha!
It's Halloween Night not a soul in sight
I hear Footsteps Who's that coming?
I see a zombie! Oh no!!!
I see a zombie! Look Out!
I see a zombie! Hahahahaha!
It's Halloween night not a soul in sight
I hear Footsteps Who's that coming?
I see a vampire! Oh no!!!
I see a vampire! Help!
I see a vampire! Hahaha!
It's Halloween night not a soul in sight
I hear Footsteps Who's that coming?
I see a witch! Oh no!!!
I see a witch! save me!
I see a witch! Hahahahaha!
It's Halloween night not a soul in sight
I hear Footsteps Who's that coming?
I see a skeleton! Oh no!!!
I see a skeleton! Hide!!!
I see a skeleton! Hahahahaha!
-------------------------------------------
Happy Birthday Song | Happy Birthday To You | Kids Tv | Junior Squad - Duration: 1:10:02.
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday Happy birthday
Happy birthday to you Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday Happy birthday
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday Happy birthday
Happy birthday to you
Happy birthday to you
To you
To you
Happy birthday Happy birthday
Happy birthday to you Happy birthday to you
-------------------------------------------
Por qué empecé a despertarme a las 5:30 a.m. y cómo esto cambió mi vida - Duration: 3:16.
For more infomation >> Por qué empecé a despertarme a las 5:30 a.m. y cómo esto cambió mi vida - Duration: 3:16. -------------------------------------------
Fartbidden (Subtitles in Youtube ESPAÑOL, ENGLISH) - Duration: 4:37.
Fartbiden
There was a time when it was not acceptable to fart in public. It may sound weird today, but the truth is...
...that nobody wanted to listen to or smell a fart.
Everything began when senator Popoff
proposed the Antifart Law.
Well, the correct term is flatulence.
And in the medical literature it's defined as:
"gas expelled through the anus".
The Antifart law established that
a person who was caught farting in public
should pay a fee.
should pay a fee.
The question was,
how much should a person pay for each fart?
You couldn't eat things you wanted to eat
because it was too dangerous, and...
I'm sorry. It's a bit…
They were using undercover policemen and women
who were equipped with very sophisticated fart detectors.
Senator Popoff had a lot of power in congress
and created the farting police,
which had the right to take farters to custody.
I was caught by the police.
I was eating a salad in the park.
Out of the blue an undercover police woman appears
and arrests me.
It was crazy!
A rehabilitation program was created
by the personal physician of senator Popoff.
The aim was nonsense:
they wanted people to stop farting.
They changed our diets and gave us some weird pills.
And from one day to another, we all stopped farting!
It was insane.
And of course there were side effects.
Animals fart, insects fart,
we also could say: plants fart.
We all expel some sort of gases.
People wanted to have solutions,
and you may have to think about,
that there were families that couldn't feed their children.
We need to understand that farting is healthy and natural.
The senators who tried to abolish the Anti-Fart law, were arrested.
All of them.
But suddenly, a new character appeared.
and he was going to confront the regime.
And he comes with this beautiful idea to fight.
All we know is that he just came from a small city,
but to be honest we don't know much about him,
we just called him Robin Fart.
He was our hero.
His real name was Robert Ferdinand.
He was born in Toronto.
He came to our country hidden in a ship,
and he started working as a cook.
I remember he could not digest well the potatoes,
and sauerkraut, and he had a severe farting problem.
I think the night that everything started,
was a night that he came home really late.
And he was really tired.
He went to the toilet and as always, he turned on the radio.
There was this song on the radio, you all know it.
It was "Wind of Freedom" by Big Furz Jr.
and in that moment he just decided to start a revolution.
He decided to protest openly and went to the congress.
It was crazy, he did not say anything,
he just put a mic on his ass and farted loud…
and long,
and hard,
and intense.
Thank you Robin.
I am really proud.
I am pretty honored, I must say.
When I figured out that Robin used my song.
I felt like I really can do something with my music.
Everybody (singing)
farting together (singing)
Winds of freedom (singing)
Everyone! Winds of Freedom! (singing)
-------------------------------------------
North Korea begins dismantling Sohae Satellite Launching Station: 38 North - Duration: 2:35.
We've not heard of any progress in nuclear disarmament efforts by North Korea... since
the historic summit with Washington.
At last, visible steps are taken.
The regime has begun taking apart key missile facilities.
Lee Ji-won starts us off with the welcome developments.
North Korea seems to be keeping the promise it made to U.S. President Donald Trump last
month about dismantling its missile engine test site.
U.S.-based North Korea monitoring website 38 North said on Monday that... new commercial
satellite images of the Sohae Satellite Launching Station,.. which is the regime's main space
vehicle launch site,... show the North has started dismantling key facilities.
They include,... a rail-mounted processing building, where rocket parts are assembled,
and the rocket engine test stand, used for developing liquid-fuel engines for ballistic
missiles and space launch vehicles.
In the satellite images of the site taken on July 20th and July 22nd, the roof and support
structures of the rail-mounted processing facility have been progressively and partially
taken down.
Cranes were also spotted in the area,... and the test stand superstructure has been completely
dismantled.
Considering that the dismantled facilities were key parts of the regime's Intercontinental
ballistic missile program,.... 38 North says.... such efforts are a significant step by North
Korea.
South Korea's Blue House National Security Office Deputy Director Nam Gwan-pyo also welcomed
the move as a step towards the regime's denuclearization.
But a North Korea expert said while the dismantling of the facility is a positive sign, the U.S.
is likely to wait until the facility is completely dismantled before praising the North's initiative.
"If Pyongyang completely dismantles the facility without any conditions, it has taken the first
step in building trust with the U.S. and can ask the same from Washington.
But if the initial stages of dismantlement are simply being done to receive something
in exchange, it's not strong enough to get the U.S. to move."
But regardless, the expert added that the U.S. is not likely to give North Korea anything
like the much coveted declaration to end the Korean War in exchange.
He also said that this way of 'give one, get one' exchange is not what the U.S. wants,
as it not only gives North Korea the lead but also does not follow the process of declaration,
inspection and verification.
Lee Ji-won, Arirang News.
-------------------------------------------
All Strung Up | Super Car Royce Cartoons For Children - Duration: 1:00:48.
All Strung Up Super Car Royce
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S. Korean Pres. Moon calls on Cabinet to consider prolonged heat wave natural disaster - Duration: 1:54.
And with the intense heat wave expected to stay for quite a bit, President Moon Jae-in
called for measures to deal with what he feels should be considered a natural disaster.
Moon Connyoung shares with us his remarks.
The record breaking heat wave sweeping across the nation also took grip of the Cabinet meeting
on Tuesday as President Moon Jae-in raised the need to include heat wave in the list
of natural disasters under the Act on the Management of Disasters and Safety.
"I urge you to recognize the prolonged heat wave as a form of special disaster and once
again carefully review related measures."
South Korea has been under a hot spell in recent days with day time highs setting records
every day resulting in heat-related illnesses and even deaths.
The South Korean president called on his government to swiftly draw up a crisis management manual
and create basis for damage compensation.
"Just as urgent are measures to counter food poisoning and infectious diseases and to deal
with roads and train tracks damaged in the scorching heat."
The current disasters and safety act defines "natural disasters" as situations caused by
weather conditions such as typhoons, floods, droughts, earthquakes and meteorites, but
not intense heat.
The nation's disaster control center has been maintaining that stance citing reasons that
temperature fluctuations following seasonal changes were predictable.
But, with rising death toll and damages from heat-related causes, the South Korean government
recently decided to support the National Assembly when it reviews revision of the related laws.
President Moon also ordered the nation's energy ministry to disclose its power supply plan,
its forecast and countermeasures as demand for electricity soars on earlier-than-expected
and ever intense heat conditions.
Moon Connyoung, Arirang News, the Blue House.
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