Thứ Năm, 4 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 5 2017

Neil Gorsuch Just Set The Supreme Court On Fire Today!

No Wonder Trump Picked Him…

Neil Gorsuch hasn't even been a Supreme Court Justice for a full month now and already

he is setting fires everywhere.

Today the young justice reignited the fire of liberty and broke 40 years of precedent

when he REFUSED to join the SCOTUS "cert pool."

So how big is this "cert pool"?

Well, according to the Dialy Caller,

The cert pool was established in 1973 during the early days of the Burger Court, in order

to efficiently review the near 8,000 petitions received each term.

In practice, the petitions are apportioned among the Court's law clerks, who then circulate

a memo to the justices recommending a grant or denial.

The obvious problem here is that this gives the power in these 8000 cases to the law clerks

instead of the Justices.

It also, in theory, allows 3rd parties to unfairly influence a case through the clerks.

That is NOT how the Supreme Court was designed to operate.

So, to sum it up for ya, Neil Gorsuch just managed to set his foot down in the Supreme

Court and say it is NOT okay to pass off judgments to the discretion of legal clerks.

This right here is the kinda story everyone should be sharing out.

It shows how important our Constitution is and proves Trump does make great decisions.

Will you help him get this to your family and friends?

For more infomation >> Neil Gorsuch Just Set The Supreme Court On Fire Today! No Wonder Trump Picked Him… - Duration: 2:12.

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Uống Loại Trà Này Thường Xuyên Dạ Dày Đau Âm Ỉ Và Viêm Loét Cũng Khỏi Không Cần Đến Bệnh Viện - Duration: 12:30.

For more infomation >> Uống Loại Trà Này Thường Xuyên Dạ Dày Đau Âm Ỉ Và Viêm Loét Cũng Khỏi Không Cần Đến Bệnh Viện - Duration: 12:30.

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VIVA LAS VEGAS 2017 - Retromorrow - Duration: 3:46.

For more infomation >> VIVA LAS VEGAS 2017 - Retromorrow - Duration: 3:46.

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Dr. Peter A. Levine - Stress Relief Simplified Summit - Duration: 44:32.

hi I'm Michael here with my partner

Dannette welcome to the stress relief

simplified summit we're excited to share

with you proven practices to calm your

mind and body in our overstimulated

world each day we will introduce you to

a leading thought experts who will share

resources information and simple

practices to help break the cycle of

stress and here with us today is Peter

A Levine PhD Peter is Dr Levine

is the best-selling author scientists

researchers and clinician he's been

called one of the worlds preeminent

expert on resolving trauma or more

specifically the symptoms of trauma such

as ptsd flashbacks anxiety and other

conditions he has spent close to half a

century understanding the human body and

its response to what he calls accumulated

stress and unresolved trauma the

creator of somatic experiencing approach

to resolving trauma and 1984 dr. Levine

founded the somatic experiencing

training institute an organization that has

trained over 25,000 practitioners and

therapists worldwide in this approach

to healing traumas he's the author of 11

books including the best-selling waking

the tiger in an unspoken voice and

trauma and memory and for the past six

years dr. Levine has been pioneering a new

method for resolving fibromyalgia and

related conditions he cowrote a

book with one of his students Maggie

Phillips titled freedom from pain

discover your body's power to overcome

physical pain this captures dr. Levine's

approach helping people with

conditions like fibromyalgia and

we're lucky enough to have him with us

here today welcome dr. Levine thank

you thank you for the warm welcome

our pleasure so I would love for you to

start off with

just an understanding of what is somatic

experiencing what is somatic and how

the science of how it helps us to

relieve trauma and pain gladly gladly

you know when I first started developing

this was in that 19 in the late 1960s

into the 1970s and at that time the

definition of trauma is PTSD hadn't yet

happened and also the

definition really gave the presented

trauma PTSD as a brain disorder that was

incurable thankfully I didn't know about

that so I had more freedom and what I

discovered is that um that when were

perceived that were threatened our

bodies do things we stiffen we hold our

breath we retract we we tighten our guts

these are all things that the body does

so when we're overwhelmed either by

continuing accumulated stress and or by

trauma when that happens our bodies get

stuck now and this is really important

if the what goes on in the body the map

of what's going on the body is also sent

back from the body into the mind okay so

so when we're we're tight and

we're bracing or when our guts are all

turned that information is going back

into the brain and saying the threat

still exists and so we then tighten even

more and then we get feedback from our

body that is even more and so this is

what I call a positive feedback loop

with negative consequences and and this

I really believe is one of the roots of

conditions like fibro-

myalgia yeah yeah and so the

somatic is that map if i

understand you correctly the map between

the body and the brain and how it

overlaps is that what somatics is

exactly it's what it is is about

changing that feedback loop you see

breaking that that that

perpetuating condition breaking the

loop and so the body can let go and then

have new experiences experiences that

contradict those of trauma which are

feared their overwhelming helplessness

pain yeah yeah my experience in 1996 I

suffered traumatic brain injury and and

you know it as as my brain trauma

started to heal as I was able to find

words again and things like that

the related effect was I developed severe

pain in my body and for me that was

even more troublesome than you know

forgetting words and which is where I

was led to being diagnosed with fibromyalgia

and but so thank you for not

knowing that the research that it sees

things can't be undone so that was

exactly what I found through through

yoga and through some of the practices

we can actually rewire that I

think it's becoming clear that really

the practices that work for trauma and

also for chronic pain fibromyalgia that

they are those that involve the body the

living sensing a live body yes so as it

relates to stress you've said that there

are a couple of ways that we can get

stuck in the trauma stress either it's

you know an acute incident or its

accumulated over time and I think it's similar

to to you know like fibromyalgia

if somebody might have a trauma a car

accident and end up with the symptoms or

it might have been you know 10 years and

in an abusive situation that they then

end up with that so can you say

more about how the stress relates and

and how overlaps these condition yeah

well we have to define stress its a big

its a big subject exactly it's a very very

very big subject but the example you

gave is really a good one somebody who's

in an abusive relationship or in a

family you know as a child where there's

a lot of fighting and and and and lack

of connection with the children and so

forth all of these erode our

resilience to meeting rest and my

approach is really to restore that that

resilience I my work really began in a

strange kind of way because you know I I

realized that animals in the wild were

able to throw off generally the

effects of stress or a predator prey but

if they're you know if they if they're

almost caught but they escape they they

they somehow shake it off so they're

not burdened with the accumulated stress

and trauma and what I believe happens

i'm pretty sure what happens is that

there are there are innate things that

the body does the brain and the body

does to shake off our encounters with

threat because if animals couldn't do

that then the animal wouldn't survive

probably then nor would the species

survive so there has to be built in

some kind of an immunity to stress and

trauma that actually brings us

back to baseline if we can learn not to

interfere with it and i found that was

the difference between the animal

experience in predation and the

human experience is that we're the very

sensations actually that destress us or

take us out of trauma the very

sensations our experience as frightening

because we're unfamiliar with them and

because they also have a high charge but

in somatic experiencing we help people

touch into these experiences one small

piece at a time that's what i call

titration so that the energy that's

compressed the stress and the trauma can

be released slowly yeah I've seen some of

your work where you use a slinky to

demonstrate that that idea oh yay so

let's just take this image of a cheetah

running down a gazelle on the in the

Serengeti and just before the the

cheetah is making the making the

contact with the gazelle or when it has

it down on the ground it was it was

running to escape like this full-out I

mean 65 even 70 miles an hour for this

short sprint and so you have this

tremendous energy that's that's being

used for this it's the same kind of

energy that allows an 80-pound mother a

90-pound mother to lift the car off of

her trapped child and pull the child out

it's incredible amount of energy that

gets locked in the body so if we were to

release this energy all at once we would

have an explosion of the energy and in

doing that we actually would be very

often actually reinforcing the stress

and the trauma so what what I discovered

is that if we have a way that we

very very slowly release that energy and

let it come to equilibrium and then

again release release more and let it come

to equilibrium and release release more so

we're not releasing it all at once and

that's the key I feel to any effective

approach to work with trauma and and

accumulated stress in some ways

accumulated stress is a little bit more

tricky because when you have something

that's the direct cause it's easier to

work with but the principles are really

the same follow-up to that I really

believe in the work i do as a yoga

therapist that the body starts to almost

trust that constricted state that it's

in it's because of the safety that it

apparently in the moment might provide

and that in that undoing and even in

that gentle you know let's have that

little relief like you said there's some fear in that expansion that's right and

so the undoing can often be as

complicated as seen in it so I just want

to know what your thoughts are to that I

know there's a lot of resistance yeah

well yeah again I think Yoga is one of

the things that's now been shown

demonstrated to be a very important

component in working with trauma and

also with chronic pain and again this

has to be done in a very titrated

way in a very gradual gradual way

the key again in in sensing and

coming out of these traps where the body

is reinforcing the minds experience of

fear the trick here is to become aware

that when we are actually able to

experience these sensations while they

may feel worse at first they may feel

even more contracted that they will then

expand and again you might remember the

toy that I have for demonstrating this

because we are always in a state of

either contraction or expansion so in

trauma and in chronic pain we get caught

in this contraction but when we and we

don't want to feel it because it feels

bad many cases it feels horrible but

when we're able to gradually contact it

to just touch into it it may feel worse

for the moment but then it feels better

and then it feels worse contraction and

then feels better expansion contraction

expansion and that's how people come out

of trauma and out of chronic pain that

is my my experience and as I said in

working you know working with this for

over 45 years oh Lord a long time thank

you for that work yes absolutely thank you for that

demonstration that helps a lot those of

us that are visual Peter you're

currently developing a method for

addressing fibromyalgia and related

condition can you tell us about this

work and what are other related

conditions your work will also address

okay well as you you probably know that

fibromyalgia is often accompanied with

other conditions that are related to the

fibromyalgia and I actually wrote an

article on that and I can probably send

copies of that to your audience yeah

I would be glad to do that but anyhow the

fibromyalgia often is accompanied by

irritable bowel migraines urinary issues

irritable bowel and migraines sometimes

and I see those actually being part of a

the same underlying mechanism of a

core dis-regulation and so we've been

working on a program for helping to

address these kind of conditions with

focusing primarily on fibromyalgia but

again knowing that these are followed

with these other conditions and we we

were in the process of we are in the

process of testing it of seeing really

how well it works as you know we did a

test with a group of 12 people who were

suffering from fibromyalgia and these

conditions and by enlarged it was a very

positive response so we want to really

make sure that that we want to test this with

more people and tested in a program and

a format that people can use at home so

forth so we're going to be continuing

research on that and I'm working with an

incredible team of it was a man who who

is a a philanthropist and entrepreneur

and who's really mission is to help

people who are suffering and we met at a

lecture that I gave and then we have a

person from MIT who is an expert in in

computers of human interaction and so

forth so we've been working together on

develop this program and we're in the

process of testing it and for sure if

your audience is listening or wanting

more information we'll give you a

website and they can sign up there and

we'll give you that information send the

article and I thought also a video that

might be helpful this marine that I had

worked with who is suffering from

traumatic brain injury and severe PTSD

chronic pain depression and so forth and

we see how in a few sessions he really was

able to come out of this and engage back

into life so we'll we'll send them that

link as well I think this says real

stories where you you see and you hear

about the transformation that's possible

are essential and thank you yeah right

again you know it's all theory until you

experience it and then when people you

know experience that oh my god I don't

have to be caught in this that I'm able

to actually move into it and out of it

and into it out of it that it no longer

keeps us absolutely trapped and and and

when that happens the person has gone 50

one percent of the way thats kind of

like Richard Miller had mentioned you take

these incremental steps and you kind of

move from hope to faith to trust and it

was kind of like the example you were

giving where you release the energy slower

or it's kind of incremental steps yeah with

yeah yeah that is

the key the incremental steps so again we

don't want to be overwhelmed we don't

want the person to be overwhelmed

because in terms of the brain it really

can't tell the difference between being

overwhelmed in present time and being

overwhelmed in past time so it's not

really helping and I'm I'm very I'm

definitely not a fan of some of the

treatments for PTSD that have to do with

exposure where you have the person

relive over and over again the worst

part of a traumatic experiencing I think

that's just inflicting unnecessary pain

and suffering and that does lead me

lead me to my next question for you

how does your understanding of fibromyalgia

differ from Western medicines

understanding right well Western

medicine is fantastic for certain things

that I am actually seeing and seeing

almost 20 20 is a miracle of modern

technical medicine i had cataracts and

had the surgery and then had lens

implanted that's absolute miraculous

you're in a car crash you're taken to the

hospital emergency medicine miraculous

you you have a lung infection and you

get an antibiotic and you're cured the

infection medicine is incredible in this

realm when people with fibromyalgia

comes to see a physician you need people

with fibromyalgia see an average of six

physicians before they even are diagnosed

with fibromyalgia Western medicine

really doesn't have anything to help

very much I mean there are a few things

that help some people there's there's no

question about that

but really getting at the underlying

dynamics of what's causing the

fibromyalgia Western medicine doesn't

doesn't really understand that doesn't

really have a have a clue and as I

described it I see it as a functional

disorder not as a pathology not as a

disease but the functional disorder

again that we get stuck in this

condition where our bodies are tight are

braced and often at the same time also

collapsed and without energy so to work

with these kind of functional issues a

Western medicine doesn't really have

much to say I mean occasionally they may

recommend something like biofeedback

which of course in very often it is

helpful but basically Western medicine

really doesn't have a clue about working

with fibromyalgia indeed many people who

see a physician who have fibromyalgia and

the other and other condition they may

be sent to a Rheumatologist because of

the pain and then there may be diagnosed

with fibromyalgia they migraines are

sent off into a neurologist and by the

way of course if somebody has any of

these conditions you have to eliminate a

possible medical cause and that's that's

that's common sense so so anyhow further

for gastrointestinal problems for

irritable bowel they're sent to a

gastroenterologist the urinary problems

to the urologist and so forth and so on

and so and then often these these

specialists you know report back to the

primary care physician we couldn't find

anything so again it's important to make

sure that there's nothing medically

involved but medicine per se doesn't

understand these kind of conditions and

therefore unable to work with them

effectively hopefully we'll begin to

change this I've seen a little bit of

change with alternative practices at

the VA I get all my health services

here in San Diego at the VA

okay the VA here they're really good

they have yoga in house now

they'll send you outside the facility

for acupuncture that's right yes there

are certain exactly exactly things are

opening up yeah acupuncture even the

bodywork or massage yeah you know

things are happening and I think in

10 years people look quite different

than they look right now I think in a

way as you gave an example for the VA

you know that people were not getting

the treatment that they needed it and so

then they started to ask the question

why and and that's an example of a

forward-thinking organization I I think

the subtitle of your book freedom

from pain it references your body's

power to overcome physical pain can you

speak more to what you mean by the

body's power yes important question this

is I spoke a little bit about this

before this is about the our innate capacity to

rebound from states of stress or threat

it's what allows the animal to shake off

its encounters with a predator it's

what I think someone called the instinct

to heal and I believe that instinct is

profoundly powerful the question is how

to tap into it and that for me is about the

living knowing the living sensing

knowing body that when we allow the body

to do what it is meant to do to allow

our sensations and feelings to do what

they are meant to do then we can begin

to overcome the effects of pain and

stress

and trauma again I see them not as

separate but as coexisting conditions so

you had said just a few moments ago that

the body the mind actually doesn't

understand the difference between a

real-time stressor and a stressor from

the past am i understanding you

correctly that is actually the body is

kind of that gateway to differentiate

between the two which will then allow

the space for healing yeah yeah you

i mean you could for

sure say that I think that it goes back

to again of not wanting to overwhelm the

person and that's really the key so a

lot of times are symptoms our physical

symptoms are in a way snapshots

accumulated snapshots of things that

have happened to us in the past and they

kind of layer one upon the other and the

other and again the key is getting the

best touching incident allowing it to

complete and to resolve so for example

let's just say the child was uh was was

hit by a parent routinely so the first

time the child lifts up you know tries

to protect themselves from being hit and

then they let go and then the parent

again start yelling or screaming or hits

them and the shoulders go up again this

time it doesn't come down all the way it

stays partly up so what what is the

shoulder doing the shoulder is actually

trying to protect the child against

being hit but it gets stuck here so

through body awareness through as we do

in somatic experiencing the person

actually is able to complete this

response so they're able to feel not

only the shoulders going up

but what the rest of their arms had

wanted to do but couldn't do because

they were too small and we're

overwhelmed so we're completing that

stuck response and then that allows it to

release it is powerful and when a person

first experiences it you see their eyes

will open and they look around the room

in utter amazement you know and also

because they're seeing things

differently they're seeing things with

more color more clear because once we

shift from the inside it also shifts on

the outside as within so without and

then how must that effects all the

layers of their life that they no longer

have that need to protect which isn't

just showing up in the body it's showing

up on how they relate and respond to the

world right exactly exactly because when

you're in that kind of a state you

experience even the loving touch from a

from a mate as being frightening as

being yeah right frightening or as

disgusting or something like that

because again it's reactivating

reactivating those circuits from the

earlier the earlier trauma amazing work

that you're doing that you can

understand and are training all these

practitioners to help then all the

people that they're touching to undo the

effects of this in our bodies and you

know I I have believed for very long

time that the symptoms I experienced

after my traumatic brain injuries were

not just the results of this traumatic

brain injuries like you know what was my

lifestyle leading up to that point not

everyone that has a traumatic brain injury

ends up debilitated for 13 years by

chronic pain right so you understood that

mechanism was you know was

the trauma was the trauma was

actually kinda a gift the traumatic brain

injury was kind of the gift that has brought me to

an understanding and through through

through body work through movements and

moving with the breath and then being introduced

to your work last year which we

so appreciate so so thank you from my

perspective and Michael really has

similar perspective and I think a lot of

times it's true I'm sorry I just to finish

my thought about PTSD in my

opinion a lot of people with ptsd

likely had some pre-disposition to it

before the trauma because of lifestyle or

yeah right I I mean it's the thing that

we're we're discovering more and more is

when there's neglect or chronic stress

in the family that makes the people more

susceptible to becoming traumatized

later there's there's no question but

again it is my experience that when

we're able to tap into that innate

capacity to heal that we can actually

restore re-learn how to be more

resilient human beings and as you

pointed out beautifully and many people

who have trauma have say this you know

when they come to the other side when

they come back to their bodies they in a

way thank the trauma because without

that they wouldn't have made that inner

connection also this one thing i forgot

i want to just add in that example of

where the child is afraid of being hit

well think of what happens when this

becomes chronic just do that for 20

minutes and you're going to start

feeling significant pain i'm not

suggesting people do that right

especially people with fibromyalgia

again you can see how these input

responses can then add up and then the

body is just burden

with this accumulation of stress and

pain yeah so I would love now if we

could come back to the practices to

to the things that you're actually doing

to help with this rewiring of trauma

and can you share with this you know

maybe one or two of your proven

practices to help with breaking the cycle well there are many

many many many but let's give one that's

deceptively simple and this relates to

the what we were talking about before

with the contraction and the expansion

this is what I call pendulation so when

we're experiencing something even if it

feels worse momentarily then it can open

and feel better and gradually will open

more and more and more so and this also is

again is a very simple exercise to take

the first step to coming back to the

body in a safe way so what I'll do and

by the way if any of these exercises

evokes this exercise evokes pain then

just don't do it just observe it or

imagine doing but sometimes that can be

as effective even more effective than

also doing it so let's just look at your

hand our hands and now just put your

hands in to a fist and just look at that

notice that again just gently gently

into a closed fist and then open them

again and just looking at that so you're

noticing that now begin to put your mind

your awareness into the physical

sensations of your hands as they slowly

begin to close and again only closing as

is comfortable enough moving towards the

fist feeling the closed position and

then slowly opening again feeling the

physical sensations noticing if they

spread to other parts of the body if

there's some sense of openness and

receptivity and then again if the hands

closed do you feel an increase in

tension or do you even maybe even

experienced something like strength or

power again just noticing the sensations

of the feelings and once more just

allowing the fingers slowly the

hands slowly to open and I'm just

wondering what you are experiencing

Michael and Dannette in doing the exercise

yeah so when the first time i was

closing slowly there was a moment where

it felt a little more comfortable and

then it became the constriction I guess

I could feel it more as constriction and

opening the second time i opened it was it

was much more of a release than the first

time got it Michael yeah so I think mine was similar

the first time I actually clenched

my fist a little tighter than I needed

to so I certainly felt the tension

there but with each time that I did

it I felt like I was I was focused

obviously that's important but there

was a became calmer and calmer I guess

just wow with great each time that i did it

again that's such a simple thing it's

trivial in a way but

it gives you again an indication of how

powerful the the introceptive sense the

felt sense of the body can be in helping

us release stress and restore the sense

of goodness and wellness which is our

true natural state which is exactly

which is our natural state and it's

about restoring that natural state I

don't know if you have another practice

to share but I want to ask about your

experience when we start to restore that

natural state what's the effect on our

experience of stress from there versus

when we're in that more diminished state

so in other words i'm just going to kind

of lead you like are we much more able

to cope with stress once we start to

restore versus when we're still stuck

in our our traumas sorry what more able to what

to restore you so are we able to deal

with life's daily stresses because stress is

inevitable from from that restored place

that you're talking about versus

before we you know where we're stuck in

our previous trauma right now

absolutely absolutely you know I think

that's the really the point of this is

that we what when we are more in balance

then then the stresses of everyday don't

effect us nearly as much maybe even

challenge us in some ways you know one of

my intellectual mentors was a man named

Hans Selye and he's the person who coined

the term stress and he was working the

1940s 50's into the sixties I think and

basically his idea is that we stress

it's like a bank account you keep

withdrawing cash stress

and then till you don't have any left

and then you go into the red so he saw

this as kind of I guess you could say

a zero-sum game we just the stress erodes us

erodes us erodes us but I was

discovering again something very different and

I can I can maybe give this as an

example if we have time but that people

when they rebound and they meet stress the

nervous system is able to to move through the

strength into relaxation activation

deactivation relaxation the stress

doesn't accumulate so it's not a linear

system like Selye had thought and when

I said to my PhD when I finished

it I I was in a way critiquing his

approach to stress and he sent me this

most amazing letter saying that he

really sees how important this is and and I was

so deeply touched I really was because I

didn't know what his reaction was

because it really contradicted his whole

whole theory but this is the key that when

we are resilient the stresses of

everyday life don't effect us in the

same way not to say I mean obviously

what we're talking about refugee Syrian

refugees who are in this refugee camps under

these horrendous conditions I don't

think you know the Dalai Lama is going

to do that well in the conditions like

that you know it's just one thing after

another after another although you do

find some people again like in the

concentration camps that were more

resilient you know Viktor Frankl of

course is the example of that and that

is a number of conditions and other

types of situations two colleagues and I

are actually going to be probably

writing an article

on resilience and I when that happens

again I'll be glad to send copies of

that too to your group i'll give you a

link before we know before we end and we

can get all that information to them

well that's a great cause i know our

listeners are going to resonate with you

and I know they're going to want to find

you so they can look into your work more

further and join you in some of your

programs and if you can just quickly

mention so many websites where they can

find you okay gladly the website where

they can sign up to get this information

and to get updates on how our project is

going how our research is going we will

absolutely do that and the website is

www.somaticexperiencing.com and then get on the

list and we'll send them send them

that information be sure oh and also my

assistant said that would I guess it's

kind of a raffle thing and we're giving

away three copies of the book and the

additional CD that goes with that

also can go with the book on chronic on

freedom from pain so we'll we'll send those

out there i guess to 3 folks yeah

wonderful thank you so is there any

final wisdom you want to share yes I

do i would say trauma and pain is

it's universal but it doesn't have to be a

life if trauma and pain may be a fact of

life but it doesn't have to be a life

sentence and another thing that I've

noticed when people work through their

pain and trauma that they become a side

effect of this is they become more

compassionate more compassionate to

themselves and more compassionate to

eachother and so I would say that's a

commodity that we could well use more

more of in the world today thank you for

your compassion your wisdom your

time your whole team's time I you know

I look forward to reading the book I haven't

yet but i definitely look forward

to it and I know personally my FibroHaven

community that you have made a

difference and we'll get you copies of

the book thank you for all the work you're

doing with PTSD and those with trauma and

for spending the time with us today well and

thank you for getting this kind of

information out it's so dearly needed

you know education is the first step

yeah yeah thank you to our participants

tune back in tomorrow we have another

amazing thought leader like Dr Levine

who will share their wisdom so many

different perspectives and approaches to

to helping with this so thank you again

Dr Levine and we look forward to tomorrow

okay Bye!

For more infomation >> Dr. Peter A. Levine - Stress Relief Simplified Summit - Duration: 44:32.

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(한글CC)프레이 (2017) 1편.베데스다 신작 공포게임 (1080P60FPS) - Duration: 28:51.

For more infomation >> (한글CC)프레이 (2017) 1편.베데스다 신작 공포게임 (1080P60FPS) - Duration: 28:51.

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These U S Cities Would be Targeted First in a Nuclear War -politics - Duration: 4:57.

These U.S. Cities Would be Targeted First in a Nuclear War

Following the end of the Cold War, the world breathed a sigh of relief when the two superpowers

� the United States and the Soviet Union � did not destroy each other with nuclear

fire and much of the remaining planet with nuclear fallout.

And for the ensuing two decades, there hasn�t been much concern, generally speaking, about

a nuclear World War III breaking out.

There has been concern about so-called �rogue� regimes like North Korea and Iran developing

nuclear bombs along with the capability of delivering them around the globe, but as for

great power nuclear war, no one really gave that much thought.

Until recently.

Last week President Donald J. Trump engaged in his first major combat as commander-in-chief

when he ordered the U.S. Navy � on the advice of his national security team � to launch

a massive Tomahawk cruise missile strike against a Syrian government airbase believed to have

been the launch site for the latest sarin gas attack against rebels and non-combatants.

The attack finally put to rest the Left-wing fake news narrative that Trump is nothing

more than a lackey for Russian President Vladimir Putin, who was quite angry at the U.S. president

for attacking his client state and key regional ally.

In fact, in the days following the destruction of the Syrian airbase, Russia and Iran issued

a joint statement asserting that �red lines� had been crossed and they would respond forcefully

to any new attacks, no matter who launched them.

That got us to thinking: Would Russia launch World War III over Syria?

Quite possibly, given its strategic and financial interests there.

So that leaves the next question: What U.S. targets and cities would Russia most likely

attack?

That would depend largely on the strategic outcome Moscow sought.

For example, if Putin decided to first hurt the U.S. militarily and limit our ability

to counterstrike, the most likely targets would be our largest military bases and nuclear

mission facilities.

Nuclear mission facilities would include ground-based missile silos, nuclear-armed submarines and

bases with nuclear-capable bombers like Whiteman Air Force Base in mid-Missouri, home to all

of the B-2 stealth bombers.

But Putin could also decide that it would be better to hit major American cities instead,

including � in no particular order:

� Washington, D.C.

� New York City

� Chicago

� Los Angeles

� Dallas/Fort Worth

� Miami

� Seattle

� Houston

� Denver

� Philadelphia

� San Francisco

� Phoenix

� Tampa

� St. Louis

� Minneapolis

� Boston

� Atlanta

This would be devastating, both in terms of casualties and long-term economics.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, though major American cities comprise less than 4

percent of the country�s land mass, they are home to nearly two-in-three Americans

(62.7 percent, according to March 2015 figures).

Of those, the congested East Coast would make a far more tempting target, given that �cities

with the largest land areas are mostly in the West and have fewer people per square

mile,� the Census Bureau said, adding that �population density in cities is 46 times

higher than the territory outside cities.�

Very tempting targets, indeed, then.

But then striking American cities would have a multiplying effect.

For cities that were spared, residents would no doubt panic, leading to widespread chaos

and even more death and destruction.

Smaller cities of 1 million, 500,000, even 100,000 people would quickly degenerate into

mayhem as the national government fought mostly to save itself � though a strike on Washington,

D.C., would most assuredly take out the bulk of the federal government.

Even a single nuclear strike could cause widespread pandemonium in American cities that were not

targeted.

In addition to traditional military targets, which would no doubt be part of Russia�s

nuclear strike plan, the largest American cities will certainly be on the list as well.

It�s all food for thought as the world once more appears on the brink of widespread death

and destruction.

For more infomation >> These U S Cities Would be Targeted First in a Nuclear War -politics - Duration: 4:57.

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BREAKING Whoopi To Possibly Be FIRED By ABC After She Did THIS - Duration: 2:20.

BREAKING Whoopi To Possibly Be FIRED By ABC After She Did THIS

Whoopi Goldberg's future at The View is looking very uncertain this week after she

gave ABC executives a truly insane list of demands in order for her to return to the

show next season.

Daily Mail reported that Whoopi is demanding at least a $1.5 million raise, which would

bring her total salary to $3.5 million.

In addition, she wants an executive producer credit and for her nemesis, an ABC executive,

to be fired.

"She wants this one ABC executive off the show," a source revealed.

"She blames this person for trying to turn The View into Good Morning America with the

rotating hosts and contributors and doesn't want that exec involved in the show any more."

"She is tired of having to answer to people that she doesn't feel like are worthy of

their positions," the source said.

"So she wants to be an executive producer of the show so that she has a seat at the

decision-making table and can have more control over the things going on."

Whoopi is so entitled that she actually thinks she deserves $3.5 million for her role on

the show.

"She's asking for no less than $3.5 million a year to return.

She feels that she helped this show turn the corner again in the ratings and knows she

plays a huge factor in its success," the source continued.

"She wants them to pay her what she thinks she's worth, despite the fact the network

is crying budget concerns."

SHARE this story if you think ABC should just FIRE Whoopi Goldberg!

For more infomation >> BREAKING Whoopi To Possibly Be FIRED By ABC After She Did THIS - Duration: 2:20.

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WATCH LIVE: The National April 4, 2017 - Duration: 59:57.

For more infomation >> WATCH LIVE: The National April 4, 2017 - Duration: 59:57.

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BREAKING This is not the health-care bill that Donald Trump promised - News - Duration: 7:03.

For more infomation >> BREAKING This is not the health-care bill that Donald Trump promised - News - Duration: 7:03.

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20170413 ♥ 妮婭 ♥ 別裝了泛妳是粉絲吧 - Duration: 0:30.

For more infomation >> 20170413 ♥ 妮婭 ♥ 別裝了泛妳是粉絲吧 - Duration: 0:30.

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HOW TO: Brown smokey eyes - Duration: 15:52.

For more infomation >> HOW TO: Brown smokey eyes - Duration: 15:52.

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5 Investigates: What was found in Aaron Hernandez's jail cell - Duration: 1:52.

HAS THE FIRST

PICTURES OF WHAT WAS FOUND IN

THE CELL.

IN THE DOCUMENTS DETAIL

EVERYTHING FROM THE SONG THAT'S

THE CONVICTED MURDER BOUGHT FOR

HIS MP3 PLAYER TO PHOTOS

DISCIPLINED HE RECEIVED AND

INTERVIEWS WITH INMATES TALKING

ABOUT THE LAST CONVERSATIONS

WITH HERNANDEZ.

THIS IS THE FIRST PICTURE.

IT IS LEFT OPEN TO JOHN 16:00

AND CAN SEE MARKS WITH THE DRAW

OF BLOOD.

THE DETAILS COME FROM

HERNANDEZ'S PRISON FILE WE ON

TAIN FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF

CORRECTION THROUGH A PUBLIC

RECORD'S REQUEST.

31 PAGES FROM THE DISCIPLINARY

REPORT T. THE LAST REPORT WAS IN

OCTOBER WHEN AN OFFICER HAD TO

REMOVE ANOTHER INMATE AND WHO

WAS LOCKED IN HERNANDEZ'S CELL

WITH HIM.

THERE IS LASS DETAILED REPORT

ABOUT INTERVIEWS WITH OTHER

INMATES AFTER THE SUICIDE.

1:00 AN INMATE WHO CLAIMED TO BE

ONE OF HERNANDEZ'S CLOSEST

FRIENDS TOLD INVESTIGATORS, HE

SPOKE WITH HIM.

HE SAYS HE WAS IN A GREAT PLACE.

HE SAID HERNANDEZ WAS A VERY

SPIRITUAL GUY WHO QUOTED THE

BIBLE.

THAT SINCE THE NOT GUILTY

VERDICT IN THE BOSTON DOUBLE

HOMICIDE, HE SAID HERNANDEZ WAS

TALKING ABOUT THE NFL AND GOING

BACK TO PLAY FOOTBALL EVEN IF IT

WAS NOT WITH THE PATRIOTS.

AND ANOTHER SOURCE STATED

CREPTLY, HERNANDEZ MENTIONED

THAT IF INMATE HAS OPEN APPEAL

OF HIS CASE, AND DIES IN PRISON,

HE COULD BE ACQUITTED OF HIS

CHARGES, AND DEEMED NOT GUILTY.

AND POSSIBLY, HIS TIME WORDS

BEFORE LOCK-IN ON THE NIGHT

BEFORE HE WAS FOUND IN HIS CELL,

ANOTHER INMATE WHO WAS

INTERVIEWED SAID, HERNANDEZ

STATED, REMEMBER WHEN YOU DIE,

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