Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 12, 2017

Waching daily Dec 27 2017

New video Carl Bernstein FBI isn't tainted, Trump's presidency is

New video Carl Bernstein FBI isn't tainted, Trump's presidency isGovernment which are trying to do their job Carl Bernstein FBI isn't tainted Trump's presidency is

veteran journalist Carl Bernstein torn through president Trump on Tuesday over the latter's attacks on the FBI

Saying it's Trump's presidency whose integrity has been compromised not in the law enforcement agencies who in an interview with CNN's Jim sciutto

the legendary Watergate reported accused Trump of acting contemptuously toward the FBI and other instruments of American democracy

The key word that he keeps using his team

There's really only one institution that has really been tainted through these months and that is the Trump presidency

Burns fan said it's tainted where the president flies by his

Disrespect for American institutions operating under the law with traditional American democracy and the instruments thereof has contempt choice of those instruments

Bernstein addict

Bernstein accused the president of doing a grave disservice to the country by undermining institutions such as the FBI

Trump Bernstein said she'd welcome moves from Mueller's team if he really believes

He will be exonerated in the end if the president is as confident as he says if this

Investigation is going to end very soon with him being exonerated. He ought to welcome all of this instead of attacking constantly Bernstein said

House doing a grave disservice to our democracy

Trump tweeted on Tuesday morning that the FBI was tainted

His comment came after he sharply criticized Deputy FBI director Andrew McCabe on Saturday over reports that McCabe will possibly retire in March

How can FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe the man in charge?

Along with leaking James Comey of the phony Hillary Clinton investigation including her 33,000 illegally deleted emails be given 700

zero-zero-zero for wife's campaign by Clinton puppets during investigation the president tweeted

FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe is racing the clock to retire with full benefits

90 days to go Trump added another tweet

Mccabe has been the target of Republican criticism over a campaign donation his wife received from Virginia, Governor Terry McAuliffe d

Atop alive Hillary Clinton just the year before the investigation he managed into her private email server cleared Clinton of wrongdoing

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C&M cameras capture video of Trump golfing in Florida

CNN cameras spotted President Trump on the golf course Tuesday at his property in Palm Beach, Florida

the president and avid golfer played at Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach with Georgia Senator David Perdue our

PGA Tour player Bryson Dane Timbo and former pro golfer Dana Quigley according to the White House

Trump who is staying at his martyred lager Resort is scheduled to remain in Florida through New Year's Day on Monday

Trump had tweeted that he would be getting back to work after Christmas. I hope everyone is having a great Christmas then tomorrow

It's back to work in order to make America great again, which is happening faster than anyone anticipated

He tweeted Christmas night Trump previously promised during the 2016 presidential race that he would largely give up golfing if elected

Tuesday's visit marked his 85th visit to one of his courses as president. I am going to be working for you

I'm not going to have time to go play golf

believe me Trump said in Virginia during in August 2016 rally

Trump's predecessors including President Obama often came under scrutiny for the amount of golf they played, thank you for watching

new New York's Attorney General in battle with Trump Eric Schneiderman New York's Attorney General reached a milestone of sorts recently

By moving to sue the Federal Communications Commission over net neutrality this month his office took its hundredth legal or administrative

action against the Trump administration and congressional Republicans

His lawyers have challenged mr.

Trump's first

Second and third travel bans and sued over such diverse matters as a rollback in birth control coverage and a weakening of pollution standards

They have also unleashed a flurry of amicus briefs and formal letters often with other Democratic attorneys general assailing legislation

They say is cutting consumer finance protections or civil rights we try and protect New Yorkers from those who would do them harm mr.

Schneiderman said during a recent interview in his Manhattan office the biggest threat to New Yorkers right now is the federal government

So we're responding to it and mr.

Schneiderman's seventh year as Attorney General the office has been transformed into a bulwark of resistance amid an unusually expensive level of

confrontation with the federal government other

democratic state attorneys general are

taking similar efforts

Often in concert like Xavier Becerra and California where extra money was set aside in the budget for the Attorney General to battle the Trump

administration

How far mr. Schneiderman is willing to go in taking on mr.?

Trump could define his political career particularly in a blue state where disapproval of the president is high

the Attorney General's Office potential for troublemaking and generating national headlines was redefined in the early 2000s by Eliot Spitzer

Mr.. Schneiderman is a less combative man. Who was often the target of mr.

Trump's Twitter rant amid a three-year civil investigation into Trump University in the end mr.

Schneiderman's office extracted a 25 million settlement in the case nonetheless

Mr.. Schneiderman is seen by some as a possible backstop should the president exercises pardon power to help those who might become ensnared in the

investigation of possible Russian involvement in the 2016 presidential election being led by Robert S

Mueller 3 the special counsel

Federal pardons do not apply to violations of state law write a comment in the

Interview mr. Schneiderman would say a little about his potential role as a criminal prosecutor in relation to the Trump administration

Except that he hoped it would not come through that earlier this year mr.

Schneiderman began a criminal inquiry focused on allegations of money laundering by Paul Manafort mr.

Trump's former campaign chairman

But his office stood down at least temporarily out of deference to the special counsels inquiry

The offices did not work together his staff said I have a lot of respect for the work the special counsels doing he said

They've put together a terrific team

He added just watching it from the outside like everybody else it seems like they're doing a very thorough and serious job

I hope there's not going to be any effort to derail them or shut them down if that happens

Well do as I think would be a genuine sentiment around the country well do whatever we can do to see that justice is done

But I hope we don't have to face a problem like that mr.. Trump said recently. He was not planning to fire mr.

Mueller though many of his allies have stepped up their attacks on the special counsels investigation

Regarding mr.

Schneiderman's myriad legal filings the White House referred questions to the Justice Department the federal court system is not a substitute for the legislative process

Said of an anomaly a spokesman there the Department of Justice will continue to defend the residents constitutional and statutory

authority to issue executive orders aimed at securing our borders protecting US workers

promoting free speech and religious liberty among many other lawful actions

Republican attorneys general targeted President Obama's policies while he was in office

Scott Bruin the head of mr.. Trump's Environmental Protection Agency sued the EPA 14 times as Oklahoma Attorney General

But if mr. Schneiderman were to take on a criminal prosecution

They would very likely be met with disdain by conservatives one columnist at the National Review already called for mr.

Schneiderman to recuse himself from any criminal investigation of mr.

Trump because his comments and civil actions made it impossible for the public to have confidence that he could be impartial

Certainly mr.. Schneiderman and mr.. Trump have little in common

Mr.. Trump watches a lot of TV and craves his McDonald's mr.. Schneiderman does yoga other than sports?

I really don't watch TV much anymore mr. Schneiderman said and paused to think about the last time he had eaten a fast-food burger

That's a long time ago

mr. Schneiderman

Also says it's better to have opponents and not enemies a statement that would seem to run counter to Trump doctrine

During the Trump University inquiry mr.. Trump called mr.

Schneiderman a lightweight a total loser the nation's worst AG and dopey he has tweeted that mr.

Schneiderman wears revlon eyeliner his dark eyelashes have been attributed to the side effect of a glaucoma medication and said he needed to take a

Drug test because the Attorney General cannot be a cokehead without presenting evidence that he was in

2014 the front page of the New York Observer which was owned by mr.

Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner depicted him as clockwork Garrett the take off on the mouth

You

For more infomation >> New video Carl Bernstein FBI isn't tainted, Trump's presidency is - Duration: 10:41.

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mhxx is better than mhw - Duration: 4:44.

stupid fucking idiot with stupid fucking voice speaking

For more infomation >> mhxx is better than mhw - Duration: 4:44.

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Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal? THIS is the toughest thing about playing them - Querrey - Duration: 3:31.

Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal? THIS is the toughest thing about playing them - Querrey

Querrey enjoyed his best ever season in 2017, finishing No 13 in the world, five places higher than his previous year-end best that came in 2010.

He also secured a first ever win over either Federer or Nadal, beating the latter in the final in Acapulco, just his 16th win over any top 10 player.

But the American has revealed that playing the top two men in the world has an added difficulty.

"The toughest part is mentally going out there and playing against Roger or Rafa – you're a little nervous because they're so great and they've got so many accomplishments," Querrey said.

"You walk out there and almost feel like sometimes they're a step ahead of you before you even play the point, so that can be a little tricky sometimes." However, Querrey, who has played Federer at Wimbledon and the French Open and Nadal at the US Open, does enjoy the chance to perform in front of the enlarged audiences the two men attract.

"The most fun is whenever you get to play them, it's on Centre Court, and it's in front of a packed stadium," Querrey added.

"It's a stadium where every seat is full and it's kind of a special thing for a player when you get to play in front of such a great crowd.".

But Querrey has looked increasingly more at ease with that stage and he is not the only American to have made strides forward in 2017.

No US player has won a major since Andy Roddick in 2003 and Jack Sock's Paris Masters victory made him the first of his countryman to manage a top-level title in seven years.

And Querrey, 30, believes tennis in the nation is approaching a special period.

"We're probably at an all-time high from eight years with the current group," Querrey said. "This is kind of the highest all four of us - John [Isner], Jack [Sock], Stevie [Johnson] and myself - have ended the year.

"So I feel like we've got a good group right now.

"I feel like guys this past year won a lot of big tournaments, won a lot of big matches and so we didn't have a Grand Slam [singles] winner but guys did a lot of really good things.".

For more infomation >> Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal? THIS is the toughest thing about playing them - Querrey - Duration: 3:31.

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What is Social Justice Fatigue? - Duration: 3:14.

So, what is social justice fatigue?

Social justice fatigue is the physical mental

and/or emotional toll incurred through advocating for social change, while

simultaneously serving as an agent of an institution of higher education.

We wanted to know how and to what extent this definition resonated with

student affairs professionals. Additionally, we wanted to discover what

the core components or core features of this fatigue was for them.

Physically, at the beginning of the study, folks described feeling sluggish, sleepy, tired, exhausted...

They also described specific physical pains in their body--nausea,

headaches, tension in their back or shoulders.

Mentally, folks used really similar words at times--

--tired, exhausted, drained, heavy...

They also described a lack of clarity and inability to focus,

mentally being unable to show empathy at times, being apathetic.

And that started to teeter into the way folks described

how they felt emotionally. Emotionally, folks felt as if they were

really drained, they felt sad, they felt unhappy--like they didn't want to get up

and go to work, even though they loved their jobs.

And this overlap between mental and emotional fatigue

continued throughout the 30 days together.

Participants really had a hard time discerning whether or not

how they were feeling, they could ascribe to a mental feeling

or how they were feeling more emotionally.

These two components were very intertwined together

and interdependent on one another.

Throughout the study we saw change over time.

So, by the end of the study many participants still, sometimes,

they would feel physically tired and exhausted, but mentally and emotionally

some folks felt that they were able

to show more gratitude, they were able to be

more clear, more present in the day and so they started to feel--

--and then physically folks started to also feel as if they felt better--

--particularly folks who are able to remain consistent in

achieving the goal of 30 minutes of movement every single day.

And so folks really found that

with the intentional reflection, with the movement,

with the personal development--when they were able to do that,

we saw some greater change over 30 days.

Folks who struggled to do those three tasks every day, didn't

necessarily see as much movement--it was a lot more challenging to feel happier

or to find joy in their everyday life when they weren't necessarily able to

make time for even the commitments that

they had agreed to do over the course of the 30 days.

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