Sunday, November 26, 2017

Youtube daily report Nov 26 2017

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this video the 29 best Christmas tree ornaments and decoration ideas one bells

and branches wreath this olive branch and Belle's wreath is us all to a

festive wreath wreaths need not be standard greenery

we love the mixed materials in this door showstopper 3 an ornament really more

recent SPO this one is a simple Jingle Bell wreath that is spray-painted white

for a white Christmas look for country Christmas tiny trees and a holly wreath

yes please 5 silver and gold mental if this isn't pound sign garland goals then

we don't know what is plus the silver and gold theme those gold antlers are to

die for keeps this mantel cohesive 6 rustic

mantel burlap stockings Magnolia leaf garland and a wreath over a window pane

is the stuff rustic dreams are made of

7 a Christmas china cabinet trees aren't the only places for decor dress up your

china cabinet with a few well-placed wreaths garland and mini trees 8

tabletop trees because Christmas trees aren't just for the family room they

clearly look right at home on top of this sleigh and dining room table 9 tree

art no room for a full-size Griswold tree no

problem create this tree art with some greenery and ornaments pinned to a sheet

of plywood instead 10 hanging advent calendar ribbons gift bags a sturdy tree

branch and some DIY elbow grease are all that is required to create this fun spin

on an advent calendar 11 cotton ornaments there is something so sweet

about cotton Christmas ornaments not to mention the fact that you can't break

them a holiday win-win 12 Christmas bears it's official tiny wool christmas

bears are the adorable mini ornaments we never knew we needed 13 scrabble

ornament who knew that Scrabble pieces made for

such adorable DIY ornaments 14 calligraphy ornament pretty calligraphy

and a natural wood ornament makes for a sweet addition to any tree 15 colorful

ornaments these festive ornaments are the definition of merry and bright 16

mistletoe ornament this mistletoe ornament is bound to guarantee lots of

holiday kisses 17 flower ornaments sorry but these gold and white flower

ornaments are the prettiest things we've ever seen 18 him Lee angels these Dutch

paper angels would be a darling addition to any holiday decor 19 Christmas music

print Christmas music is an excellent way to spread holiday cheer as this

pretty print proves

20 a tree of books a literati Christmas look no further than your favorite books

for this easy and festive decor idea 21 a wire tree a white chic and simple is

always a good theme when it comes to decorating 22 firetruck trees tree

saplings and a vintage firetruck will warm up Ethan the screw gia stove places

23 keep it simple tree more doesn't always lean best when it comes to

Christmas tree decorating 24 pinecone tree more simple style this tree

features just large white ball ornaments and pinecones and has our hearts all are

fluttering 25 vintage toy tree this vintage toy tree appeals to the inner

kid in all of us 26 birdhouse tree the main lesson from this gorgeous tree

muted shades both snow and a birdhouse ornament are always a good idea 27 faux

snow tree this is a streaming of the white Christmas 28 frosted tree this

monotone frosted tree with its glowing gold lights is certain to warm up every

space 29 white tree tree Oh what's better than one gorgeous white tree

three statement-making white trees wowza

before you leave please leave a like comment and share if you like this video

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never done this before thanks for watching

For more infomation >> The 29 Best Christmas Tree Ornaments and Decoration Ideas | Home Decorating Ideas - Duration: 6:38.

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장현성 부인 양희정 양택조 딸과 어머니 문정복 여사 - Duration: 4:16.

For more infomation >> 장현성 부인 양희정 양택조 딸과 어머니 문정복 여사 - Duration: 4:16.

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Hegel y la política | Murray Rothbard - Duration: 23:25.

3

Hegel and politics

Por lo general, los esquemas deterministas dejan huellas de escape

implícitas convenientes para sus creadores y defensores,

que de alguna manera son capaces de elevarse por encima del determinismo de hierro que aflige al resto de nosotros.

Hegel no era diferente, salvo que sus escotillas de escape

eran demasiado explícitas.

While God and the absolute refer to man

Mientras que Dios y lo absoluto se refieren al hombre como un organismo colectivo más que a sus insignificantes y despreciables miembros individuales,

e vez en cuando surgen grandes individuos, hombres 'históricos del mundo',

que son capaces de encarnar atributos del absoluto más que otros, y actúan como agentes significativos

en el próximo gran Aufhebung histórico

-el próximo gran avance hacia el hombre- el avance de Dios o del alma del mundo en su "autoconocimiento"..

Así, durante un tiempo cuando la mayoría de los prusianos patriótitas

reaccionaban violentamente contra las conquistas imperiales de Napoleón,

y movilizando sus fuerzas contra él,

Hegel reaccionó de manera muy diferente.

Hegel escribió a un amigo en éxtasis por haber visto personalmente a Napoleón cabalgando por la calle de la ciudad:

"El Emperador - esta alma del mundo - cabalgando a caballo por la ciudad para la revisión de sus tropas

- es realmente una sensación maravillosa ver a un hombre así".

Hegel estaba entusiasmado con Napoleón

debido a su función histórica mundial de llevar el Estado fuerte a Alemania y al resto de Europa.

Así como la escatología y la dialéctica fundamentales de Hegel prefiguraron el marxismo,

también lo hizo su filosofía de la historia, más directamente política.

Así, siguiendo al escritor romántico Friedrich Schiller, Hegel, en un ensayo en 1795,

afirmaba que el equivalente del comunismo temprano o primitivo era la Grecia antigua.

Schiller y Hegel elogiaron a Grecia por la supuesta homogeneidad,

unidad y "armonía" de su polis,

que ambos autores consideraron erróneamente como libre de toda división del trabajo.

The consequent Aufhebung disrupted this wonderful unity and fragmented man,

but - the good side of the new historical stage -

it did lead to the growth of commerce, living standards, and individualism.

For Hegel, moreover, the coming stage,

heralded by Hegel's philosophy,

would bring about a reintegration of man and the State.

Before 1796, Hegel, like many other young intellectuals throughout Europe,

was enchanted by the French Revolution, individualism, radical democracy, liberty and the rights of man.

Soon, however, again like many European intellectuals,

Hegel, disillusioned in the French Revolution,

turned toward reactionary State absolutism.

In particular, Hegel was greatly influenced by the Scottish statist, Sir James Steuart,

a Jacobite exile in Germany for a large part of his life,

whose Inquiry into the Principies of Political Economy (1767)

had been greatly influenced by the ultra-statist Germán eighteenth century mercantilists,

the cameralists.

Hegel read the Germán translation of Steuart's Principies (which had been published from 1769-72),

from 1797 to 1799, and took extensive notes.

Hegel was influenced in particular by two aspects of Steuart's Outlook.

One held that history proceeded in stages,

deterministically 'evolving' from one stage (nomadic, agricultural, exchange, etc.) to the next.

The other influential theme was that massive State intervention and control

were necessary to maintain an exchange economy.

It comes as no surprise that Hegel's main disillusion in the French Revolution

carne from its individualism and lack of unity under the State.

Again foreshadowing Marx, it became particularly important for man

(the collective organism)

surmount unconscious blind fate, and 'consciously' to take control of 'his' fate via the State.

And so Hegel was a great admirer not only of Napoleón the mighty world-conqueror,

but also Napoleón the detailed regulator of the French economy.

Hegel made quite evident that what the new, developing strong State really needed

was a comprehensive philosophy, contributed by a Great Philosopher

to give its mighty rule coherence and legitimacy.

Otherwise, as Professor Plant explains, 'such a State, devoid of philosophical comprehension,

would appear as a merely arbitrary and oppressive imposition

of the freedom of individuals to pursue their own interest'.

We need make only one guess as to what that philosophy,

or who that Great Philosopher, was supposed to be.

And then, armed with Hegelian philosophy and Hegel himself as its fountainhead and great leader,

'this alien aspect of the Progressive modern State would disappear

and would be seen not as an imposition but a development of self-consciousness.

By regulating and codifying many aspects of social practice,

it gives to the modern world a rationality and a predictability which it would not otherwise possess...'.

Armed with such a philosophy and with such a philosopher,

the modern State would take its divinely appointed stand at the height of history and civilization,

as God on earth.

Thus: 'The modern State, proving the reality of political community,

when comprehended philosophically,

could therefore be seen as the highest articulation of Spirit, or God in the contemporary world'.

The State, then, is 'a supreme manifestation of the activity of God in the world',

and, 'the State stands above all;

it is Spirit which knows itself as the universal essence and reality';

and, 'The State is the reality of the kingdom of heaven'. And finally: 'The State is God's Will.'

Of the various forms of State, monarchy is best,

since it permits 'all' subjects to be 'free' (in the Hegelian sense)

by submerging their being into the divine substance,

which is the authoritarian, monarchical State.

The people are only 'free' when they are insignificant particles of this unitary divine substance.

As Tucker writes, 'Hegel's conception of freedom is totalitarian in a literal sense of the word.

The world-self must experience itself as the totality of being,

or in Hegel's own words must elevate itself to

"a self- comprehending totality", in order to achieve the consciousness of freedom.

Anything short of this spells alienation and the sorrow of finitude'.

According to Hegel, the final development of the man-God,

the final break-through into totality and infinity, was at hand.

The most highly developed state in the history of the world was now in place

the existing Prussian monarchy under King Friedrich Wilhelm III.

It so happened that Hegel's apotheosis of the existing Prussian monarchy

neatly coincided with the needs of that monarch.

When King Friedrich Wilhelm III established the new University of Berlín in 1818 to assist in supporting,

to assist in supporting, and propagandizing for, his absolute power,

what better person for the chair of philosophy than Friedrich Hegel the divinizer of State power?

The king and his absolutist party needed an official philosopher

to defend the State from the hated revolutionary ideáis of the French Revolution,

and to justify his purge of the reformers and classical liberáis who had helped him defeat Napoleón.

As Karl Popper puts it: Hegel was appointed to meet this demand,

and he did so by reviving the ideas of the first great enemies of the open society

[especially Heraclitus and Plato]

... Hegel rediscovered the Platonic Ideas which lie behind the perennial revolt against freedom and reason.

Hegelianism is the renaissance of tribalism...

[Hegel] is the 'missing link', as it were, between Plato and the módem forms of totalitarianism.

Most of the modern totalitarians,...know of their indebtedness to Hegel,

and all of them have been brought up in the ciose atmosphere of Hegelianism.

They have been taught to worship the State, history, and the nation.

On Hegel's worship of the State, Popper cites chilling and revealing passages:

The State is the Divine Idea as it exists on earth...

We must therefore worship the State as the manifestation of the Divine on earth...

The State is the march of God through the world...

The State must be comprehended as an organism...

To the complete State belongs, essentially, consciousness and thought.

The State knows what it wills... The State...exists for its own sake...

The State is the actually existing, realized moral life.

All this rant is well characterized by Popper as 'bombastic and hysterical Platonism'.

Much of this was inspired by Hegel's friends and immediate philosophical predecessors,

men like the later Fichte, Schelling, Schlegel, Schiller, Herder and Schleiermacher.

But it was Hegel's particular task to turn his murky doctrines

to the job of weaving apologetics for the absolute power of the extant Prussian State.

Thus Hegel's admiring disciple, F.J.C. Schwegler, revealed the following in his History of Philosophy:

The fullness of his [Hegel's] fame and activity, however, properly dates only from his cali to Berlín in 1818.

Here there rose up around him a numerous, widely extended, and...exceedingly active school;

here too, he acquired, from his connections with the Prussian bureaucracy,

political recognition of his System as the official philosophy;

not always to the advantage of the inner freedom of his philosophy, or of its moral worth.

With Prussia as the central focus, Hegelianism was able to sweep German philosophy during the nineteenth century,

dominating in all but the Catholic areas of Southern Germany and Austria.

As Popper put it, 'having thus be- come a tremendous success on the continent,

Hegelianism could hardly fail

to obtain support in Britain from those who [felt] that such a powerful movement

must after all have something to offer...'

Indeed, the man who first introduced Hegel to English readers, Dr. J. Hutchinson Stirling,

admiringly remarked, the year after Prussia's lightning victory over Austria,

'Is it not indeed to Hegel, and especially his philosophy of ethics and politics,

that Prussia owes that mighty life and organization she is now rapidly developing?

Finally Hegel's contemporary and acquaintance, Arthur Schopenhauer,

denounced the state-philosophy alliance that drove Hegelianism

into becoming a powerful force in social thought:

"Philosophy is misused, from the side of the State as a tool, from the other side as a means of gain...

Who can really believe that truth also will thereby come to light, just as a by product?

...Governments made of philosophy a means of serving their State interests, and scholars made of it a trade..."

In addition to the political influence, Popper offers a complementary explanation

for the otherwise puzzling widespread influence of G.W.E Hegel:

the attraction of philosophers to high-sounding jargon and gibberish

almost for its own sake, followed by the gullibility of a credulous public.

Thus Popper cites a statement by the English Hegelian Stirling:

'The philosophy of Hegel, then, was...

a scrutiny of thought so profound that it was for the most part unintelligible'.

Profound for its very unintelligibility!

Lack of clarity as virtue and proof of profundity! Popper adds:

philosophers have kept around themselves, even in our day, something of the atmosphere of the magician.

Philosophy is considered a strange and abstruse kind of thing,

dealing with those things with which religión deals,

but not in a way which can be 'revealed unto babes' or to common people;

it is considered to be too profound for that,

and to be the religión and the theology of the intellectuals, of the learned and wise.

Hegelianism fits these views admirably;

it is exactly what this popular superstition supposes philosophy to be.

4. Hegel and the Romantic Age

G.W.F. Hegel, unfortunately, was not a bizarre aberrant force in European thought.

He was only one, of the most influential and the most convoluted and hypertrophic,

of what must be considered the dominant paradigm of his age, the celebrated Age of Romanticism.

In different variants and in different ways, the Romantic writers of the first half of the nineteenth century,

especially in Germany and Great Britain,

poets and novelists as well as philosophers,

were dominated by a similar creatology and eschatology.

It might be termed the 'alienation and return' or 'reabsorption' myth.

God created the universe out of imperfection and felt need,

thereby tragically cutting man, the organic species, off from his (its?) pre-creation unity with God.

While this transcendence, this Aufhebung, of creation has permitted God and man,

or God-man, to develop their (its?) faculties and to progress, tragic alienation will continue,

until that day, inevitable and determined,

in which God and man will be fused into one cosmic blob.

Or, rather, being pantheists as was Hegel, until man discovers that he is man-God,

and the alienation of man from man, man from nature, and man from God will be ended

as all is fused into one big blob,

the discovery of the reality of and therefore the merger into, cosmic Oneness.

History, which has been predetermined towards this goal, will then come to an end.

In the Romantic metaphor, man,

the generic 'organism' of course, not the individual, will at last 'return home'.

History is therefore an 'upward spiral' towards Man's determined destination,

a return home,

but on a far higher level than the original unity, or home, with God in the pre-creation epoch.

The domination of the Romantic writers

by this paradigm has been expounded brilliantly by the leading literary critic of Romanticism, M.H. Abrams,

who points to this leading strain in English literature stretching from Wordsworth to D.H. Lawrence.

Wordsworth, Abrams emphasizes, dedicated virtually his entire output

to a 'heroic' or 'high Romantic argument',

to an attempt to counter and transcend Milton's epochal poem of an orthodox Christian view of man and God.

To counter Milton's Christian view of Heaven and Hell as alternatives for individual souls,

and of Jesus's Second Advent as putting an end to history and returning man to paradise,

Wordsworth, in his own 'argument',

counterpoises his pantheist visión of the upward spiral of history

into cosmic unification and man's consequent return home from alienation

The eventual eschaton, the Kingdom of God,

is taken from its Christian placement in Heaven and brought down to earth,

thereby as always when the eschaton is immanentized, creating spectacularly grave

ideological social, and political problems.

Or, to use a concept of Abrams, the Romantic visión constituted the secularization of theology.

Greek and Roman epics, Wordsworth asserted,

sang of 'arms and the man', 'hitherto the only Argument heroic deemed'.

In contrast, at the beginning of his great Paradise Lost, Milton declares:

'That to the height of this great Argument I may assert Eternal Providence

And justify the ways of God to man'.

Wordsworth now proclaimed that his own Argument surpassing Milton's

was instilled in him by God's 'holy powers and faculties',

enabling him (presaging Marx's yearnings) to create his own world, even though he realized,

in an unwonted flash of realism, that 'some call'd it madness'.

For there 'passed within' him 'Genius, Power, Creation, and Divinity itself'.

Wordsworth concluded that 'This is, in truth, heroic argument', an 'argument not less

but more Heroic than the wrath of stern Achilles'.

Other Englishmen steeped in the Wordsworthian paradigm were his worshipful follower

Coleridge, Shelley, Keats, and even Blake,

who, however, tried to blend Christianity and pantheism.

All these writers had been steeped in Christian doctrine,

from which they could spin off on their own heretical, pantheistic versión of millennialism.

Wordsworth himself had been trained to become an Anglican priest.

Coleridge was a philosopher and a lay preacher,

had been on the edge of becoming a imitarían minister,

and was steeped in neoplatonism and the works of Jacob Boehme,

Keats was an explicit disciple of the Wordsworthian programme,

which he called a means toward secular salvation.

And Shelley, though an explicit atheist, idolized the 'sacred' Milton

above all other poets, and was constantly steeped in study of the Bible.

It should also be noted that Wordsworth, like Hegel, was a youthful enthusiast for the French Revolution

and its liberal ideáis and later,

disillusioned, turned to conservative statism and the pantheist versión of inevitable redemption through history.

The Germán Romantics were even more immersed in religión and mysticism than were their English counterparts.

Hegel, Friedrich von Schelling, Friedrich von Schiller, Friedrich Hólderlin,

Johann Gottlieb Fichte, were all theology students,

most of them with Hegel at the University of Tübingen.

All of them tried explicitly to apply religious doctrine to their philosophy.

Novalis was immersed in the Bible. Furthermore, Hegel devoted a great deal of favourable attention to Boehme

in his Lectures on the History of Philosophy,

and Schelling called Boehme a 'miraculous phenomenon in the history of mankind'.

Moreover, it was Friedrich Schiller, Hegel's mentor, who was influenced by the Scot Adam Ferguson

to denounce specialization and the división of labour as alienating and fragmenting man,

and it was Schiller who influenced Hegel in the 1790s by coining the explicit concept of Aufhebung and the dialectic.

In England, several decades later, the tempestuous conservative statist writer Thomas Carlyle

paid tribute to Friedrich Schiller by writing a biography of that Romantic writer in 1825.

From then on, Carlyle's writings were permeated with the Hegelian visión.

Unity is good, and diversity or separateness is evil and diseased.

Science as well as individualism is división and dismemberment.

Selfhood, Carlyle ranted, is alienation from nature, from others, and from oneself.

But one day there will come the breakthrough, the spiritual rebirth, led by world-historical figures ('great men')

by which man will return home to a friendly world by means of the utter cancellation,

the 'annihilation of self' (Selbst-todtung).

Finally, in Past and Present (1843),

Carlyle applied his profoundly anti- individualist

(and, one might add, anti-human) visión to economic affairs.

He denounced egoism, material greed and laissez-faire, which,

by fostering the severance of men from each other,

had led to a world 'which has become a lifeless other,

and in severance also from other human beings within a social order in which 'cash payment is...

the solé nexus of man with man".'

In opposition to this metaphysically evil 'cash nexus'

lay the familial relation with nature and fellow-men, the relation of 'love'.

The stage was set for Karl Marx.

For more infomation >> Hegel y la política | Murray Rothbard - Duration: 23:25.

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How To Use Your Anger In A Healthy Way l | Quantum Consult #32 - Duration: 11:09.

I think one reason why I wanted to talk about this is because you kind of called

me out on it once, publicly - about you said you imagined that I was angry. Now

at the time I wasn't angry but anger is something I deal with a lot. I just

wanted to hear your thoughts on what you think about anger and if there's a

healthy way to utilize it.

Yeah I think anger is extremely sacred in the

sense of - it's like a very fiery energy. And there's so much cool research on

this like if you're specifically wanting to dive into the topic of how different

emotions might vibrate at different frequencies. There's - have you read

any of David Hawkins by any chance? He has some great books so I might be

partly biased with my answer based on some of the research I've done from him

but like if I remember what he says correctly and what I've experienced in

the events and everything is that - anger is much of a - much faster energy a

much more intense energy and a much healthier energy than like say no

emotion - say depression. So if someone is caught in a

depressing state they may want to get angry first - so I think anger is a

beautiful thing. The thing with anger is because it has so much fire and so much

light, it can create a big shadow and someone can get used by anger rather

than using it and that's where I think we see violence - like where we've

seen violence is when someone has suppressed something so long their anger

is so bottled up and pent up they're no longer control of it - it overtakes them.

Yea. I feel it's healthy for me to use anger but it's not typically what people expect from me and

when I'm angry I feel like I have a lot more energy in certain

situations. Obviously I feel like there's certain situations where

it might not be helping that specific circumstance but more and more I learned

to let it out and it feels good afterwards. Sometime during it people

around me might not like it but it feels good for me. And you know where I learned

it the first time was one of your retreats when JP had us scream.

Yup. That is a great way - if someone feels like they're out of control with their

anger, I do think a scream therapy or some kind of cathartic release is a

great idea. However I think that when we are aware of our anger, or when I'm aware

of my anger I can use it to the advantage of my expression. I can use it

to the advantage of being more loving or caring - paradoxically more peaceful. I can -

if I know what I'm angry about or if I can see my anger before I express it, I

can actually channel that anger to be more peaceful. So in the sense of like

wow I'm feeling some anger build up. Let me go run. Like I wanted to -

I wanted to go for a good run today. Let me let that be fuel for my fire for my run

and then when I'm back home with Diana, although this anger might be a cover-up

for sadness or it might be kind of hiding something that's even more

scarier for me than anger maybe something I want to express to Diana,

maybe now that I've expressed it in the run i've gotten fitter i got faster and

i'm more now present with Diana rather than just letting it explode out of

control. It's like the difference between a volcano that never erupts and that

blows its top off, versus like Yellowstone National Park - that's an

active volcano, but there's so many geysers going off all the time just

like letting steam off. And all of a sudden that fire - that fire that's being

expressed in steam and geysers is one of the most attractive places on earth.

And I think some of the best fighters in the world, some of the best athletes in

the world - they've learned to transmute their anger into success and on the

other side of anger though - a lot of times I've seen anger be a

cover-up for sadness or for boredom or for frustration, so I think if we get

really clear with our own anger it might be really revealing to what's

going on a deeper level - maybe some some sort of sadness that we haven't been

able to look at. And I think the more we peel back every emotion all that's left is

love. So anger is like oh there's there's something happening - like love wants to

be expressed and first we got to let out the mud. We got it let out the dirty -

"the dirty" - the geysers. We got to let that out so then we can be as loving as possible.

Yea as I learn more from you and learn more from myself and

getting more in touch with emotions, the questions always like

where's the threshold when anger can not be healthy? When anger isn't serving me or serving

people around me. So that's just something I've never really been good at -

is being in touch with my emotions and expressing it freely. So anger is

just one of those things that just comes out so naturally. I typically don't

show other people the anger - or maybe people can see it but I don't show it 100%.

I usually express it like you said like when I run. I run angry. A lot of people probably don't know that

but I definitely run angry and I let out that energy so that like you said when I return to wherever that

is whether physically or mentally I am at a place of peace even if the anger is still kind of with me.

Yea anger is real fast energy and it's not to be handled by the amateurs in a reckless

way. It's like it's something to be really practiced and be really

aware with. It's basically like a gun. It's a weapon. It's a weapon

that can be used to provide for your family in the sense of someone can use

a bow for a deer or you can use your anger to be extremely successful

business wise or to get stuff done or to become fitter or if that weapon has

turned the wrong way and used in the wrong way all the sudden it's like holy

moly - then anger gets a bad rep. Then a an arrow or a gun or a weapon gets a bad rep.

Yea, so that's a great segway to the other part.

When I express anger - even small amounts to people - of course it's harder

for me to harness that energy with people or directing it to people

in a healthy way because I only know how to do it by myself like when I'm

working out or like you said running. One of the funniest things - naturally I

get angry at ******* sometimes. Right I like the circumstances or maybe there's a

situation where I'm not agreeing with and anger will just build up in me and I wil literally clean the whole house

just like clean - like you know when people on drugs or something they just

like kind of go crazy and just like like have OCD. I literally will just clean

everything. I don't know if that's healthy or not because I know that she sees

me like that. So I don't know. Like do i express it with words to her?

like do i express it with words to her yeah so I love like the metaphor once

Yea so I love the metaphor once again - anger can be a tool or a weapon and I think when you're - you are

using the tool of anger to clean the house and get things done and there

might be even a more powerful way to use it which is the deepest connection

possible with your wife or whoever it may be - a business partner or whoever you

might think you're angry at and I think the best way to do that is to realize

that anyone that we're angry at or anyone that you may be angry or people

that I've been angry at in the past - they're usually reflecting something

that I don't understand, something I don't like about myself or something

that I want for myself but I'm not willing to admit - so aka envy. All

the sudden anger is covering up envy so below that anger may be envy or

jealousy or whatever it is but I think that one of the best ways for me I found

when if I'm gonna be angry and I think I'm angry with Diana is to really own

my own anger - to not say I"'m angry at you. You did this." It's like "I feel this anger

because how I experienced this. Like this is my -" I'll be really clear with Diana

or be really clear with whoever it is it like "this is your expression" - and they're

not responsible for it and you're wanting to navigate it and the best way

possible for both of them like to use it as a tool for connection rather than a

weapon of destruction and I think that vulnerability and admitting that -

like if it's Diana like "I experienced anger and I'm not saying it

has to do with you. This mental small self of me wants to blame you for

something. Are you willing to be with me while I kind of navigate what I think

I'm angry about?"

So those are the three things?

Yeah that's the way I've seen it show up in the trifecta.

I'm sure there's offshoots but those seem to be the main three sources of

someone's anger - and we have one minute till 11 minutes is up. Is there anything

else that you wanted to chat about? I definitely want to talk to you more

whenever is best for both of us. I'm definitely honouring these creative constraints. I love them.

For more infomation >> How To Use Your Anger In A Healthy Way l | Quantum Consult #32 - Duration: 11:09.

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Jock-5етух Tikhomirov and killed hormonally! - Duration: 10:59.

For more infomation >> Jock-5етух Tikhomirov and killed hormonally! - Duration: 10:59.

-------------------------------------------

Learn English Conversation - Oxford English Daily Conversation Part 1 - Duration: 1:37:14.

Good morning. It`s seven thirty.

I`m Gary Fenton. Here is the news.

The Prime Minister is in the United States today...

...for talks with the American president at the White House.

The talks are very important for British and American...

Look at the time! Julia!

It`s half past seven.

- Your train`s at quarter to eight. - Coming.

Is this OK

Lovely, dear. Well, good luck.

Thanks, Mum. Bye, Dad.

Bye, love.

Colin. It`s her first day today.

What Oh yes.

Thanks, Dad. Bye.

That`s £4.50, please.

- Here you are. - Thank you very much, thank you.

OK, bye. Bye.

- Excuse me. - Sorry.

- Morning, Ted. - Good morning, Tim.

- How are you - I`m fine, thanks. And you

Good morning. Can I help you

Yes, Martha McKay, please. She`s the producer.

That`s 5894. What`s your name, please

Julia Drake.

Hello. Miss Drake is at Reception.

Yes, all right.

Mrs McKay is in Room 1 2. That`s on the second floor.

- The lift is over there. - Thank you.

And what`s your address

94 Tindall Street.

How do you spell Tindall T-I-N-D-A double L.

Thank you. And your postcode

Can you repeat that, please KT9 8NB.

And your telephone number

01 372 89531 .

Thank you, Ms Fossett. Goodbye.

- Hello. I`m... - Julia! Welcome to Apex TV.

Come in. No, don`t come in.

This is my personal assistant, Rebecca Bond.

- How do you do, Rebecca. - Pleased to meet you.

Come and meet some of the people in the newsroom.

Is Frederick in He`s the Managing Director.

No. He`s in London.

Oh, I see. Right. Well.

Come on then, Julia.

That`s Tim Barnes over there. He`s a reporter.

Tim, this is Julia. She`s our new trainee.

- Hi. - Hi.

This is a very interesting story, Martha. Look at this.

- Tell me about it this afternoon. OK - Sure. See you around, Julie.

Julia.

Sorry

My name isn`t Julie. It`s Julia.

Oh, right.

And address has got two D`s.

What

Address is A, double D.

Right. Thank you.

Don`t mention it.

Who`s that young woman with Martha and Sean

Her name`s Julia. She`s a new trainee.

Mmm. She`s very pretty.

Well, that`s everyone, I think. Tea or coffee

- Coffee, please. - Black or white

Oh, white with no sugar, please.

Hello. You`re Julia, aren`t you

Yes, and...

Pleased to meet you. I`m Gary.

Nice to meet you, Gary. What do you do

I`m a newsreader.

Oh yes! You`re Gary Fenton.

You`re my Mum`s favourite news reader.

Here you are.

Hello, Gary. This is Julia.

Er, yes, I know.

Anyway, I must be off. See you!

He`s very nice.

Yes.

Hi. I`m home.

Hello, dear. How`s your new job Tell me all about it.

It`s great. Everyone`s very friendly.

Well, almost everyone.

No, I can`t make it today, Ellie... I haven`t got time.

I have to finish this programme and... Ellie Ellie!

Hi, Tim.

Good morning, Julia. How nice to see you.

Martha, can we take a look at the diary for this week

Now Oh, yes, all right.

Well, this morning you`re on the food programme.

Then this afternoon you`ve got a meeting with Floyd and Hank.

That`s at quarter to two.

Then tomorrow you`ve got an appointment at the dentist`s...

...in the morning at quarter past ten.

Marvellous!

Then in the afternoon you`ve got a meeting with Frederick.

Oh no, sorry. He can`t make it. He has to go to Paris.

So is Tuesday afternoon free now

No, you have to finish the Videocom report.

Oh, hi, Julia.

Then on Wednesday morning you`re at the Birmingham conference.

- Martha. Can I have a word

- Yes, Tim. What is it

I haven`t got an assistant for this afternoon...

...for the story about Carl Stalker.

You know, the windows guy.

Oh yes. Well who have we got

Ah, Chloe`s away. Gita`s on holiday...

...and everybody else is busy.

But I have to have an assistant.

Can I do it Can I be your assistant, Tim

That`s an idea.

She hasn`t got the experience, Martha.

She has to learn.

And there`s nobody else.

OK.

See you later.

So what`s this job about

"Wonderful Windows. Can you believe it

"New windows for just £500."

And who`s this guy Walker

Stalker. Carl Stalker.

He`s the Managing Director of Wonderful Windows.

And he`s got his customers` money...

...but they haven`t got their windows.

These are all letters from his customers.

We have to leave at one thirty sharp.

Jason`s in trouble at school again.

Who`s Jason

He`s my son.

Oh, how many children have you got

Two - a son and a daughter.

What`s your daughter`s name

Kylie. She`s 1 3. Jason`s 1 6.

My wife Sharon...

OK Julia. Now you wait at the corner with one of these.

Stalker`s got a blue Jaguar.

What does he look like

He`s quite tall. He`s got short, dark hair.

When you see him, call me.

Tim. Tim. Here he is.

A blue Jaguar and...

Oh no. It isn`t him. It`s a woman.

And it isn`t a Jaguar. Sorry.

Wait. Yes. He`s here.

A blue Jag, registration number S307 ABW.

Great. OK. Get ready, Sean.

Mr Stalker. I`m from Apex TV.

Can I ask you some questions

What the... No, you can`t.

Where is your customers` money, Mr Stalker

I`ve got nothing to say.

Mr Stalker. You and your wife have got a big house...

...and an expensive car, but your customers have got nothing.

Where is their money, Mr Stalker

Look. Go away and switch that thing off.

Where`s the money, Mr Stalker

Clear off!

Are you all right, Sean

Great. We`ve got him now.

How about a drink

Oh, just a minute. What`s the time

It`s half past seven.

Excuse me.

If that`s Tim, I`m not here.

Hello

Hi, Rebecca. It`s Tim.

Hi Tim. Er, Ellie`s not here.

Oh, well, can you video the football match for me

- I can`t get back in time. - Yes, OK.

- Thanks, Rebecca. See you later. - Yes. Bye, Tim.

Ellie!

- Is Rebecca still at work - No, she`s at home.

Oh, are you and Rebecca...

- See you at the usual place - Yeah, see you there.

Sorry. Are Rebecca and I...

Oh, nothing. Let`s go.

Rebecca Bond speaking.

Good morning.

This is Angus Moon from The Modern Woman magazine.

We`d like to do an article on the job of a personal assistant.

Uh huh.

Martha McKay`s an old friend of mine...

...and she says that you are a wonderful PA.

Are you busy now Can I ask you a few questions

Well, yes, of course.

Great. First a few questions about you.

What time do you get up in the morning

I always get up at seven o`clock.

I have a shower and wash my hair.

I have breakfast at half past seven.

Then I get dressed.

And what do you normally have for breakfast

Breakfast Oh, I usually have a glass of orange juice...

...a grapefruit, two slices of toast one with butter and jam...

...and one with butter and marmalade.

And two cups of coffee.

You`re very organized.

Well, you have to be for this job.

And what do you do in your free time

I go to the gym three times a week...

...on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.

On Thursday evening, I go to my dance class...

Oh, do you like dancing

Yes, I do. I like cooking, too. And I love going to parties.

OK, Rebecca. Thank you very much.

But don`t you want to talk about my job

Well, I have got one last question.

Um, do you know Gary Fenton

Gary Yes, of course. He`s one of our newsreaders...

And he`s a very good newsreader, isn`t he

Gary! You...

Hey. It`s only a joke, Rebecca.

Well, I don`t think it`s funny.

Now, I always come on at the end of the programme...

...and try the food and drinks.

That`s the next bit. Is everything ready

I think so.

Frederick`s on the phone, Martha. He`s in New York.

OK. Five minutes then, Julia.

Five minutes, Neil.

Some salt in the lemonade.

And some chilli powder in the soup.

Hello, Gary. Do you want to try it

Oh no. Martha always tries the food and drinks.

But, um, can I watch

If you want to.

Ready, Martha OK.

So, this is our lunch for a warm summer`s day...

...a green salad, cheese with French bread...

...cold tomato and onion soup, and home-made lemonade.

It`s time to try it.

No. Why don`t we make a change today

Here in the studio today is everybody`s favourite newsreader, Gary Fenton.

Would you like to try this delicious meal, Gary

I bet you can`t wait to taste it.

Here. Try the home-made lemonade first.

Isn`t that wonderful, Gary

Very nice.

Now, what about this soup

A nice cold soup, eh Gary

Come on, a big spoonful.

Well, that`s it for this week.

I hope you enjoy your summer lunch as much as Gary. Bye.

OK. What would you like

I`ll have a glass of white wine, please.

Me, too.

Home-made lemonade for me, please, Gary.

Very funny.

Just a joke, Gary. Just a joke.

I`ll have a mineral water. I have to drive.

- Ice and lemon - Yes please.

Oh, I must give Ellie a ring.

Two glasses of white wine...

...a mineral water with ice and lemon, and a pint of lager.

- Who`s Ellie

- Tim`s girlfriend.

Oh! Aren`t you Tim`s girlfriend

Me No. Ellie`s my flatmate. Tim lives upstairs.

Oh, I see. What does she do

She works in a hotel, so she works funny hours.

Here we are. Nice, cold drinks.

No reply.

- Morning, Tim. - Morning, Ted.

Oh dear. You look tired.

What time were you up this morning

About four o`clock. There was an accident at the station.

There weren`t any trains for five hours.

- Terrible. - Oh hi, Rebecca.

Hi. Thanks Ted. What`s the date today, Tim

What

Today`s date. What is it

Er, it`s the fourth of October.

And what do you know about the fourth of October

It`s the day after the third of October

Try again, Tim. Think of your girlfriend.

Oh no! It`s Ellie`s birthday.

But I haven`t got her a card or a present or anything. Excuse me!

Oh, sorry!

Good afternoon, Julia.

I know. I`m sorry. The trains were all late.

There was an accident at the station.

Is Martha annoyed

Well, she isn`t pleased - this is the second time this week.

Yes, but it wasn`t my fault today.

And you were late last Thursday, too.

Well, that`s it. I must find a flat in town.

Are there any places in there

No, there aren`t.

What about this

Second floor flat - bedroom, living room, small kitchen and bathroom/WC.

Yes, but it`s £600 a month. I can`t afford that.

No, I suppose not. You could try an agency.

I haven`t got time.

Ask Martha for some time off this afternoon.

Oh come on, Rebecca. I was late this morning, remember

Well, try it.

Martha`s got a teleconference with Frederick all afternoon.

A teleconference

Yes. Frederick`s in Tokyo.

Oh, so Martha doesn`t need me.

So let me see - there`s the room and the kitchen...

...and the bathroom and the toilet are in the hall.

Yes, that`s right. You share them with the people upstairs.

They`re very nice people.

And how much is it, Mr Jackson

It`s only £65 a week.

So are you interested

Yes, definitely.

- The people upstairs - Uh, yes.

Reception.

Any luck

No. There isn`t anything.

Everything`s too far away, too expensive, too noisy, or just grotty.

Never mind.

Look. Come to my place for a drink.

It`s a sort of surprise for Ellie`s birthday.

OK.

Back in a minute.

- This is a nice place, Rebecca. - Yes, I like it. This is Ellie`s room.

We`ve got this living room, a kitchen and the bathroom`s down the hall...

...next to my bedroom.

Where do you live, Gary

I`ve got a flat just round the corner.

Gary`s got a lovely place.

It`s on the top floor and it`s got a great view.

Tea, everyone

There`s a message on your answerphone.

Happy birthday to you. Happy birthday to you.

Happy birthday, dear Ellie.

Happy birthday to you.

See you later. Love you. Bye.

Love you. Bye. You old romantic.

Well, I think it`s very sweet, Tim.

Hi, Rebecca. It`s me...

Sshh, everybody. It`s Ellie.

Hi, Rebecca. It`s me, Ellie.

This is just to say goodbye.

I`m really sorry about this, but I`ve got a job in a hotel in San Francisco...

...and so... well... er...

The rent for this month is on the dressing table in my room.

There`s a letter for Tim there, too.

Can you give it to him, please

So, er... that`s it. Bye. Take care.

- Oh dear. Poor Tim. - Well, it was very strange.

I mean she wasn`t here last night...

...and then she wasn`t here this morning and...

Look on the bright side.

You need a new flatmate now. Julia needs a room, so...

Gary!

It`s all right, Julia. Gary`s right. The room is yours, if you want it.

- What Really - Yes, really.

Oh, thank you! That`s great. Wonderful!

Oh, Tim. I`m sorry.

I`m sorry I`m late, Tim.

I had to go to the police station about Kylie and Jason. They...

Not now, Sean. We need to go in five minutes.

What`s the matter with him today

- It`s Ellie. - Ellie

- She`s gone. - Gone

- To the States. - To the States

She left yesterday.

You see, yesterday was Ellie`s birthday.

Tim, Gary, Julia and I went back to my place for a birthday drink for Ellie.

Ellie wasn`t there, but there was a message from her on the answerphone.

She said that she had a new job in San Francisco and well... goodbye.

What did Tim do

He just walked out of the flat.

He didn`t say a word.

It was all very sad and, well, embarrassing.

We didn`t know what to do.

No wonder he`s in a bad mood.

But it`s not all bad news, because Julia`s my new flatmate now.

- Come on, Sean. We haven`t got all day. - Have a nice day.

There, that`s the lot.

Cup of tea, Mr Drake

Um, no, thank you, Rebecca. I`d better be off now.

- Thanks, Dad. - Don`t mention it, love.

- Bye. - Bye.

- Bye. - Bye Rebecca.

- Welcome to Wellington Gardens. - I still can`t believe it.

Why don`t we have a party - a sort of `Welcome to Julia` thing

Oh, yes. Great idea. When

Next Friday

We can invite some of the neighbours and everyone from work.

Everyone Even Frederick

Don`t worry. He`s in South Africa for the rest of the week.

So who can we invite

Oh, what`s this

It`s an invitation to our party.

A party, eh When is it

It`s next Friday. The eighteenth. Tim, here.

Great! I like parties.

- We can`t come. - But...

We`ve got that programme to finish.

Can`t we do it another time It`s Julia`s...

No!

Oh, well...

Hi, Tim. It`s party time.

No, it isn`t.

OK, I think we can take a look at that now.

Last year Richard Bennett gave up his job in a London bank...

...and decided to walk to the South Pole.

Why did you give up your job, Richard

Well, I didn`t like my job and I had a lot of problems at home.

I just wanted to get away from it all.

I wanted to find myself, if you like.

So you left England in August. What did you do first

I flew to Buenos Aires in Argentina.

From there I travelled to the Antarctic by boat.

When did you actually start your journey to the Pole

Well, I had to wait for a few weeks, because the weather was very bad...

...so I didn`t set off until the end of September.

Did anyone go with you

No, I was on my own.

And did you reach the South Pole

No, I didn`t.

After about three hundred kilometres I fell into a huge crevasse...

...you know - a big hole - about ten metres deep.

Were you hurt

Yes, I broke my arm.

I couldn`t climb out.

What did you do

Well, fortunately, my sledge fell into the hole with me...

...so I had food, and I had my radio, too.

And I called for help.

How long were you there before they found you

Five days.

There was a bad storm, you see.

I thought it was the end, but then suddenly I heard voices and dogs.

I shouted and shouted and faces appeared above me.

What did you think about, while you were in the crevasse

I thought about my life back in England.

And the funny thing was that all my problems at home and at work...

...weren`t important any more.

I just wanted to be with my family and friends again.

Life`s very short, you know. You have to enjoy it while you can.

Thank you very much.

Can I just look at that last part again

I thought about my life back in England.

And the funny thing was that all my problems at home and at work...

...weren`t important any more.

I just wanted to be with my family and friends again.

Life`s very short, you know. You have to enjoy it while you can.

Thank you very much.

Yes, that`s fine.

Do you want a cup of coffee Tim

Sorry. What did you say

Would you like a coffee

No thanks, Sean. We`ve got a party to go to.

What do you think, Rebecca

The skirt or the trousers

I can`t afford both.

Hmm. I don`t know. How much are they

The skirt`s £28.50.

The trousers are a bit more expensive, but not much.

Look. There`s Gary.

Where

There. He`s going into the Men`s department.

Oh, I suppose he`s buying some new clothes...

...for his interview with that magazine.

Oh yes. What did he say

The readers of Stars and Style magazine voted me...

...the best dressed newsreader on TV.

Let`s see what he`s buying.

Hi, Gary. What are you doing

I`m looking for a shirt and a tie to go with my new suit.

Are they for your interview

Oh, do you know about that

Oh, come on, Gary. Everybody knows.

You mention it at least ten times a day.

Excuse me. Can I try these on, please

Sure. The changing rooms are over there.

Thank you.

How many shirts are you taking

Only the best is good enough for the best-dressed newsreader.

Hi, Tim.

OK, Gary. What`s in the bags

Oh, these It`s my new suit and things for my interview...

...about the best dressed newsreader.

Yes, we know. Armani, eh

Bet that cost a bit.

Well, if it`s good, the price doesn`t matter.

Did you hear that

Yes, he`s even worse than usual.

Somebody should do something about him.

When is this interview anyway

Straight after the six o`clock news.

Psst! Sean! Sean!

Gary Fenton to the studio, please. Five minutes.

Oh, there you are, Gary. Why are you so late

Good evening.

This is Gary Fenton with the six o`clock news.

Gary, your visitors.

Charlotte Mortimer from Stars and Style magazine.

Pleased to meet you, Mr Fenton, or may I call you Gary

Of course.

Now, can we take some photographs first

Oh no. We always see you at your desk, Gary.

Well, I feel more comfortable here.

But I`m sure all our readers want to know if you`ve got any legs.

I`d really prefer to be at my desk.

Come on now, Gary. Don`t be shy!

All right!

What are you wearing

Er, well, perhaps at the desk is better.

What`s happening

The reporter`s interviewing Gary.

And Gary always enjoys interviews.

Well, he isn`t enjoying this one.

I think we should give his trousers back now.

Why Oh, all right.

So when did you start doing that

A couple of years ago.

Sorry to interrupt. We found these, Gary.

Excuse me.

Photograph

Come on, Gary. Cheer up.

The magazine got photos of you in your new suit in the end.

But you looked so funny in those baggy old trousers.

Where did you get them, anyway

They were Sean`s.

Oh no, Sean!

So what are we going to do at this school

Tim`s going to interview one of the teachers.

She`s won the lottery twice.

I`ve never won the lottery.

In fact, I`ve never won anything!

Is everything OK

Sure. Let`s go. Oh!

Tim! Are you all right

Yes, I`m fine. I`ve just got stomach-ache, that`s all.

You can`t work like this. You should be at home in bed.

Look. I`ve never missed a day`s work in my life...

...and I`m not going to start now.

Anyway, who`s going to do the interview if I`m not there

Me.

Have you ever done an interview before

No, I haven`t, but I`ve watched you several times and Sean`s here.

He`s filmed hundreds of interviews.

No, it`s OK, I can... Ow, ah!

Give me your car keys.

I`m going to take you straight to the doctor.

Hi, how are you

Hi, Julia. Did you get the interview all right

Yes, everything was fine. But what about you

I feel a bit sore.

They took my appendix out yesterday afternoon.

I know. I came to see you, but you were asleep.

I was with Rebecca.

Uh-huh. I`ve never been in hospital before.

How long are you going to be in here

I can go home tomorrow and the doctor says...

...I can go back to work next week, if I want to.

Tim. Don`t you ever stop

Hi, Gary.

Tim... Oh, hello, Julia.

Appendicitis, eh Ah no, I suppose you can`t eat anything at the moment.

- Julia - No thanks.

I`ve had appendicitis, you know. Have you, Julia

Very painful. Now when did I have it

Oh yes. I was at school. It must be oh, twenty years ago.

Hello Tim. What did the doctor say

All clear. And the best thing is I can eat normally again.

Good.

Er, Julia...

... I, em, wanted to say thank you for all your help when...

...you know... and well, erm...

...would you like to go out for a meal sometime...

...just to, you know, say thank you

Yes, I`d love to.

Shall we try that new Italian place near the museum

Mmm. That would be nice. When

Is this evening any good for you

Yes, it`s fine.

Great. Shall I call for you about eight

I`m going to be in town anyway.

So can we meet at the restaurant at say half past seven

OK.

Tim Barnes. Hi Pete...

- This is good. I love Italian food. - Have you ever been to Italy

- I lived there for a couple of years. - Really

It was after I left university. I worked in a travel company.

You know, looking after groups of British tourists.

Did you enjoy it

Yes, it was great fun. I like travelling.

What about you

I`ve travelled around a bit, mostly in Asia and South America...

...but I`ve never actually lived in another country.

Erm... You`ve got some sauce on your cheek.

Have I Where

- Hi, you two. - Oh, hello, Gary.

Can I join you I`m having dinner here, too...

...but my friends aren`t here yet...

You`ve got a bit of sauce on your cheek, Julia.

Thank you, Gary. I can do it.

That was a really good meal. I enjoyed it.

Yes, me too. Until Gary arrived.

Yes.

Um, well, I`ve got an early start tomorrow.

Yes.

So...

Yes. Goodnight.

Goodnight. See you tomorrow.

- Tim! - Yes

I can`t find my keys, I think I`ve left them at work.

Oh, isn`t Rebecca in

I don`t know. Probably not.

Oh dear.

Oh hi, hi Tim. I heard voices.

I`m just on the phone to my sister, so I`ll see you in a minute.

Still locked out

Yes.

For more infomation >> Learn English Conversation - Oxford English Daily Conversation Part 1 - Duration: 1:37:14.

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🔴 Coaching gratuit - Comment bien s'Endormir et mieux Dormir la nuit ? | Sommeil et insomnie - Duration: 19:40.

For more infomation >> 🔴 Coaching gratuit - Comment bien s'Endormir et mieux Dormir la nuit ? | Sommeil et insomnie - Duration: 19:40.

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Ist das ein privater Clash Royale Server?! 😲 (unglaublich!) - Duration: 6:29.

For more infomation >> Ist das ein privater Clash Royale Server?! 😲 (unglaublich!) - Duration: 6:29.

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Tiny And T.I.'s Daughter Zonnique Pullins Has A Message For Malia Obama - Duration: 2:43.

Tiny And T.I.'s Daughter Zonnique Pullins Has A Message For Malia Obama

Malia Obama was spotted making out during a tailgate for a Harvard vs.

Yale football game.

Now, there's a new footage of the 19-year-old blowing smoke rings that has surfaced online.

Zonnique Pullins, Tiny Harris, and T.

's daughter seems to be tired of watching intimate moments from Malia's private life go viral.

Due to the private manner in which the footage was shot, many people online believe that Malia's inner circle was definitely responsible for the fact that it went viral.

There's been a call for the former first daughter to reevaluate her friend group, and Zonnique is one of the celebs leading the pack who advises Malia.

The 20-year-old reality star and singer took to Twitter shooting her shot for a spot as a friend.

Zonnique isn't alone because lots of Twitter users followed begging Malia Obama to get new friends who will keep her moments as a private citizen where they belong: private.

Just recently Zonnique was complimented by her mother Tiny for a lovely photo that she shared on social media.

Tiny wrote 'This ain't no fluke she just comes from a different breed @zonniquejailee #Zonnique #PrettyHustle #LittleBittyBitchStopPlayingWithMe.

' She completed the caption with heart and kiss emojis.

Tiny is also continually dealing with rumors about her marriage with the rapper T.I.

Despite all the things that she has to handle these days, it's impressive that Tiny always finds a moment to be a loving and supportive mother.

For more infomation >> Tiny And T.I.'s Daughter Zonnique Pullins Has A Message For Malia Obama - Duration: 2:43.

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Camille Chamoux s'en prend à "papy Finkielkraut" - Duration: 1:40.

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7 signes évident pour démasquer un homme infidèle ! - Random888 - Duration: 4:59.

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Laeti­cia Hally­day veut très fort passer Noël auprès de son homme- [Nouvelles 24h] - Duration: 3:47.

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Back to 90's - Custom Furby Halloween [ENG SUB] - Duration: 8:00.

Hello everyone, it's Angel !

And this is my new Furby video ! :D

A special custom Furby video !

I'll try to be quick because I don't have a lot of battery in my camera.

Here is Nora !

a non-binary Furby.

I never needed to choose a gender for this Furby.

Today, we will try to create something about Halloween theme

Horror, gothic and blablabla...

I've a lot of gothic and Halloween accessories

I will add them one after the other.

And we will try to create something really cool !

First : Background accessories

Because, after I'll make a nice photo

So, background accessories as I said

Something with an Halloween necklace

That I bought in a costume shop

Here is his little halloween pumpkin :D

And I'll put a necklace

A human necklace (not for furbies ahah)

Caution ! When you accessorise your furby...

(I repeat it once more)

...be careful... Don't put magnetic things on your furby!

It can damage it... D:

And this isn't your goal

We will add stuffs

With a bat pins and a fake earing

As you can see, it's easy to open and close

I prefer to combine them out of camera view...

So !

I'll combine them

hop !

We need to close the earing like this

And it's done !

We hang it to his ear...

And it looks really cool! :D

hm....*think*

*change camera angle*

hm...

To conclude ! We will add a witch hat

That i'll add in every Furby Halloween photos (tumblr : Angel-Nee)

And it looks nice!

Voilà :D

you'll see the hat entirely at the end of the video (picture at 7min 22)

I bought

red hair extensions

And it's like... strange...

Maybe we can add it under this hat

Like this.

And now it's better

Here is the first Furby with hair xD

Its wierd but it can works

It's strange omg xD

Nora has got red hair.

Do you have any question about this?

No, I don't think so...

It's strange to see Furby with hair...

It looks really nice to the camera (Canon camera)

Ok!

actually it looks nice and creepy at the same time.

Hm...

We will continue this custom

with fake Spider web.

(I will try to work quickly this time!)

hm...

I try to work with this strange material (fake spider web)...

And after

We will try to create a nice creepy background

I think it'll go quickly

It looks nice!

You can feel the Halloween spirit now

(You know, i'm very meticulous everytime)

I'm not sure of the result

This is an improvisation!

We will finish this video with another thing that a lot of people ask me.

Ok I found my battery now

I love technology, electronics

and I bought a lot of leds

and there is red leds in this lot.

what I do is that I take tamagotchi battery

I take a red led

TADA!

and I put this light in the pumpkin.

Voilà!

And when I turn off the lights...

it looks nicer in the dark.

Ok, that's the end of this custom halloween Furby video! :D

look the result at the end (7min 22)

Thanks for watching guys!

*add more spider web*

*turn off lights*

I know you see nothing now but please watch at the end of the video to see the amazing photo of Nora! (7min 22)

Translation : Angel-Nee (v1)

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Jo Malone

WOW

Limited Edition

Orange Bitter

ของ FREE เราชอบอยู่แล้ว

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Kim Kardashian Just Revealed Who Would Play Her in a Movie - Duration: 2:58.

Kim Kardashian Just Revealed Who Would Play Her in a Movie

Its a little hard to imagine anyone taking on the role of Kim Kardashian West in a movie about her life.

The iconic reality star is one of the most recognizable people on the planet, after all.

And as she has so many famous siblings, its easy to assume that she might want Kylie Jenner to play her in a movie biopic.

However, Kim had a surprising answer when asked the question in a recent interview.

When asked by an Extra host if Jennifer Lawrence could play her in a biopic of her life, Kim responded, Of course she could.

Shes the best actress. Which sounds like an Oscar winning role, doesnt it?.

The suggestion isnt all that surprising, considering Lawrence is such a huge fan of Keeping Up With the Kardashians.

Lawrence recently had the chance to interview Kim, and covered everything from KKW Beauty products looking like dildos, to whether Kim and Kanye fart in front of one another.

Clearly, this is a match made in heaven.

While a movie about Kims life hasnt been greenlit just yet, its surely only a matter of time.

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Trump Just Deep Fried The Taliban With This Glorious Thanksgiving Day B-52 Bombing - Duration: 8:00.

President Donald Trump has given us all patriotic Americans a very happy and thankful Thanksgiving

week.

U.S. and Afghan forces have launched a series of attacks this week on narcotics laboratories

in southern Afghanistan.

What may very well be marking the start of what could become a very long and expanded

air war in the area under President Trump.

The initial strikes began Sunday and lasted most of the week.

This is said to have represented the first significant use of new legal authorities granted

by the Trump administration in August that enable the Pentagon to target Taliban revenue

streams, said Army Gen. John W. Nicholson Jr., the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan.

Previously the U.S. military conducted strikes only when facing an imminent threat or working

directly with the Afghans, but sadly this method which was made in order to reduce collateral

damage didn't work because the Muslim Terrorists know very well how to exploit the weaknesses

the US makes for its self by bowing down to pressure from the politically correct crowd

in the US and abroad.

Luckily for us, President Trump knows this and is ready to do what's right, not just

what's politically correct for our enemies who aren't governed by any doctrine from

the Geneva Convention.

Stars and Stripes Reports:

Strikes on Taliban opium facilities first major use of new bombing authorities in Afghanistan

U.S. and Afghan warplanes bombed 10 Taliban-controlled opium production facilities in Helmand province

Sunday in the first major use of new White House-approved authorities to target the insurgents'

revenue stream, the top U.S. general in Afghanistan said Monday.

American B-52 bombers and stealth F-22 Raptor fighter jets struck eight drug labs where

the Taliban was producing narcotics, including heroin, from the vast poppy fields that it

controls in the region, said Army Gen. John Nicholson.

The Afghan air force struck two other facilities with their American-provided A-29 Super Tucano

attack planes and Afghan commandos conducted a raid on a prison in a mission tied to the

operation dubbed Jagged Knife.

Nicholson said the operation would continue to target much of the Taliban's 400 to 500

other heroin-producing facilities throughout the coming weeks.

"This is going to be steady pressure that is going to stay up," he told reporters

at the Pentagon from his headquarters in Kabul.

"We're not going to let up."

The strikes were conducted under new rules granted in August as part of President Donald

Trump's reworked strategy for south Asia including Afghanistan, Pakistan and India.

The strategy includes boosting American forces in Afghanistan by some 3,000 troops to the

roughly 14,000 there now.

The new authorities also allow the United States to target the Taliban directly with

airstrikes.

In recent years, American warplanes could only strike the Taliban if it was in support

of an Afghan security forces operation or to protect U.S. or NATO troops.

Among the tools that Trump provided Nicholson was the ability to launch strikes such as

those attacks Sunday designed to cripple the Taliban's narcotics network, which accounts

for the bulk of its funds, the general said.

The Taliban is believed to take in about $200 million yearly from poppy cultivation and

opium production, Nicholson said.

The insurgents have used the funding to achieve battlefield gains.

They are now said to control more territory than at any other time since a U.S.-led invasion

ousted the Taliban from power in 2001.

Washington has provided $8.6 billion for counternarcotic efforts in Afghanistan since 2002, according

to the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, or SIGAR.

Still, the area used for poppy cultivation in the country has continued to grow.

This year, opium production in Afghanistan reached a record high, a report released last

week by the Afghan government and the U.N. said.

The report said production jumped from about 5,300 tons last year to 9,900 tons so far

in 2017.

"It is high time for the international community and Afghanistan to reprioritize drug control,"

said Yury Fedotov, executive director of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime.

Nicholson said the counternarcotics operations were part of the U.S.-backed Afghanistan security

forces' plans to continue offensive operations against the Taliban throughout the winter,

a time of year when fighting has traditionally lulled in the country.

The strategy seeks to push the Taliban toward reconciliation talks within two years.

Nicholson said the Afghans aim to control about 80 percent of Afghanistan's nearly

36 million people by 2019.

As of August, the government controlled or influenced only 56.8 percent of the country's

407 districts, a 1 percent decline during the past six months and a more than 6 percent

decline from the same period last year, according to the most recent SIGAR report.

The Taliban controlled or influenced 13 percent of the population, a 2 percent increase in

its territory from the previous six months, the same report found.

The rest of the nation is contested.

Nicholson pushed back Monday on concerns about the Taliban's gaining influence.

The areas where the insurgents gained control were in rural regions, he said, adding the

advances occurred before Trump granted the new war authorities in August.

"We didn't see the enemy attempt to take cities like they did," Nicholson said.

"They did go after some district centers, but when they did they undertook heavy casualties.

… These new authorities give me the ability to go after the enemy in ways that I really

couldn't before, and it's freed us up now to use airpower the most effective way

going forward."

The attacks Sunday included the first use of the advanced F-22 fighters for strikes

in Afghanistan.

While the B-52s dropped 500 and 2,000 pound bombs to obliterate opium facilities, the

F-22s were used to fire smaller, more precise munitions.

"We used an F-22 Raptor aircraft that can carry 250-pound bombs and hit direct targets,"

Nicholson said.

The twin-engine, stealth aircraft had been engaged in anti-Islamic State missions in

the Middle East.

But the plane had not been used operationally in Afghanistan until now.

With the United States dropping fewer munitions on ISIS in Iraq and Syria last month than

it had since November 2014 and operations against the terrorist group in those countries

winding down, Nicholson said he has more resources available to fight in Afghanistan.

"We're beginning to see the effects of a shift of resources, which will increase

over the course of the winter going into the spring," he said, adding the United States

expected to continue to expand its bombing campaign in Afghanistan next year.

"We've dropped more munitions this year [in Afghanistan] than in any year since 2012,"

Nicholson said.

"These new authorities give me the ability to go after the enemy in ways that I couldn't

before."

This is how you treat your enemies.

Back in the Bush 43 and Obama days soldiers were only allowed to fire if fired upon, which

needless to say put our troops in added danger.

If a terrorist would shoot at them and he would throw his weapon under a car they were

no longer allowed to shoot at him.

Now, thanks to our new president we can shoot first and ask questions later.

That's the way it should have been since 9/11/2001.

Something tells me this new ramped up war will last a very short time and we will be

the victors, after 16 long years of tieing our right arms when we have the upper hand.

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