Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 6, 2018

Waching daily Jun 26 2018

What's up guys it's Everything Kodi back with another video

so many of you are looking for a build with lot of different add-ons

and lot of different sources for content then you might want to check the DUREX BUILD

I've also tested on my fire TV and two other fire sticks the build works great

You will enjoy this kodi build on your amazon fire stick or nvidia shield or android tv box

now I'm gonna give you guys an overview of what it has to offer

offer if you like it I can show you how you can get it installed on your device.

Now if you haven't already go ahead and hit the subscribe button

and make sure you click the little bell icon right next to subscribe so you don't miss any of my posts

so let's go ahead and jump into the overview of the build.

Now once you install it the first section you're gonna run into is the movies section

so you have the widget here at the top

you can scroll through find a movie and tv shows you like.

Don't forget to subscribe and click the bell icon to stay informed.

For more infomation >> DUREX BUILD FOR KODI 17.6 KRYPTON BEST KODI BUILDS AND BEST KODI ADDONS FROM DUREX WIZARD - Duration: 15:38.

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Search for missing man - Duration: 0:28.

For more infomation >> Search for missing man - Duration: 0:28.

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In Big Win For White House, Supreme Court Upholds President Trump's Travel Ban - Duration: 10:41.

In Big Win For White House, Supreme Court Upholds President Trump's Travel Ban

Updated at 3:36 p.m.

In a 5-4 ruling that gave broad leeway to presidential authority, the U.S.

Supreme Court upheld President Trump's travel ban that barred nearly all travelers from five mainly Muslim countries.

The president's proclamation was "squarely within the scope of Presidential authority under the INA," the court wrote in its majority opinion, referring to the Immigration and Nationality Act.

"Today's Supreme Court ruling is a tremendous victory for the American People and the Constitution," Trump said in a statement.

"The Supreme Court has upheld the clear authority of the President to defend the national security of the United States.

In this era of worldwide terrorism and extremist movements bent on harming innocent civilians, we must properly vet those coming into our country.

"This ruling is also a moment of profound vindication following months of hysterical commentary from the media and Democratic politicians who refuse to do what it takes to secure our border and our country.

As long as I am President, I will defend the sovereignty, safety, and security of the American People, and fight for an immigration system that serves the national interests of the United States and its citizens.

Our country will always be safe, secure, and protected on my watch.".

The court seemed to tip its hand at oral arguments in April, when a majority of the justices appeared ready to side with Trump.

The court was ruling on what was the third version of the ban, which Trump has complained is a "watered-down" version.

History will not look kindly on the court's decision today, nor should it.

" Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor after reading her dissent from the bench Tuesday morning in response to the court upholding President Trump's travel ban.

The court allowed it to go into effect while the case was being litigated, but the lower courts had ruled that all three versions either violate federal law or are unconstitutional.

Like the earlier two bans, Version 30 bars almost all travelers from five mainly Muslim countries — Iran, Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Libya — and it adds a ban on travelers from North Korea and government officials from Venezuela.

The court acceded broadly to presidential power.

The majority opinion, written by Chief Justice John Roberts, noted that the INA exudes deference to the president.

The executive order, he wrote, was more detailed than similar orders by Presidents Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter and defers to the president's power.

The only thing a president has to signal is that entry for people from various countries would be detrimental to the interest of the United States.

The president undoubtedly fulfilled that requirement here, the court noted.

The president, Roberts said, has extraordinary power to express his opinions to the country, as well.

The plaintiffs argue that Trump's past campaign and other statements about Muslims should be taken into account, but the majority said it is not the court's role to do that.

"The issue, however, is not whether to denounce the President's statements," Roberts said, "but the significance of those statements in reviewing a Presidential directive, neutral on its face, addressing a matter within the core of executive responsibility.

In doing so, the Court must consider not only the statements of a particular President, but also the authority of the Presidency itself.".

Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor both made the relatively rare decision to read their dissents from the bench.

Speaking with unusual passion, Sotomayor blasted the court's reasoning.

"The United States of America is a Nation built upon the promise of religious liberty," she opened in her dissent.

"Our Founders honored that core promise by embedding the principle of religious neutrality in the First Amendment.

The Court's decision today fails to safeguard that fundamental principle.".

What's more, Sotomayor said, the court's decision "leaves undisturbed a policy first advertised openly and unequivocally as a 'total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States' because the policy now masquerades behind a façade of national-security concerns.

Comparing Tuesday's outcome with the court's decision, in 1944, to uphold the legality of Japanese-American internment camps, Sotomayor noted, "In holding that the First Amendment gives way to an executive policy that a reasonable observer would view as motivated by animus against Muslims, the majority opinion upends this Court's precedent, repeats tragic mistakes of the past, and denies countless individuals the fundamental right of religious liberty.

She added that plaintiffs did have a case related to the Establishment Clause of the Constitution, and blasted the majority for believing otherwise.

"The majority holds otherwise by ignoring the facts, misconstruing our legal precedent, and turning a blind eye to the pain and suffering the Proclamation inflicts upon countless families and individuals, many of whom are United States citizens," Sotomayor added.

And while the court has a duty to be deferential to the president, she said, "Deference is different from unquestioning acceptance.

Thus, what is 'far more problematic' in this case is the majority's apparent willingness to throw the Establishment Clause out the window and forgo any meaningful constitutional review at the mere mention of a national-security concern.".

She then read a selection of anti-Muslim statements made by the president, admonishing the audience to "take a brief moment to let that sink in.

After reading her decision from the bench, she added, "History will not look kindly on the court's decision today — nor should it.

Outside reaction to the ruling was swift.

"This ruling will go down in history as one of the Supreme Court's great failures," said Omar Jadwat, director of the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project, in a statement.

"It repeats the mistakes of the Korematsu decision upholding Japanese-American imprisonment and swallows wholesale government lawyers' flimsy national security excuse for the ban instead of taking seriously the president's own explanation for his action.".

House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi slammed the decision in a statement, saying, "The court failed today, and so the public is needed more than ever" to challenge officials who do not move to rescind the ban.

Pelosi added that the ban will actually backfire and serve a "recruiting tool" for terrorists and invoked other recent controversial foreign policy moves by Trump.

"The President's disdain for our values and the safety of the American people has led him to undermine relationships with critical allies, embrace autocrats and dictators, launch damaging trade wars and sow fear in our communities with his hateful, ugly language," she said.

"Whether tearing children from their parents at the border or advancing a ban founded on open bigotry, President Trump is making our nation less safe at home and less respected abroad.".

For more infomation >> In Big Win For White House, Supreme Court Upholds President Trump's Travel Ban - Duration: 10:41.

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History & Future of the Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:58.

It started as the Radio Propagation Laboratory in 1916, morphed into the Central Radio Propagation

Laboratory in World War Two , was responsible for doing a lot of the analysis and science

behind the radios that were being used during the war.

The original mission was to provide for all agencies of government, radio wave propagation

research and services.

So initially a lot of our work was devoted to figuring out how radio waves propagate in

the atmosphere to be used for things like situating radio antennas, television antennas,

transmission systems for the Navy and so on during the war years.

So I think in the future it's going to be interesting to see where virtually infinite

computing in ubiquitous communications is going to take us.

You know when you no longer have to think about finding a Wi-Fi hotspot where wherever

you are you've got access to whatever you want.

And you've got all the computing and memory you could possibly ask for.

That's got to bring about some incredible changes in the way we live and work.

The Institute for Telecommunications Sciences stands ready to assist governmental agencies

and industry in technical analysis, expert technical consultation, the promotion of performance

standards, the undertaking of applied research and the evolution of telecommunications for

the benefit of all mankind.

For more infomation >> History & Future of the Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:58.

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Video Lab: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:36.

Our overall goal is to develop new and improved ways to measure video quality from the point

of view of human perception.

We bring in groups of people in a carefully controlled circumstance and ask them to rate

videos or images or audio visual sequences.

So they would watch a ten second video or a still image like we're seeing here and

then typically rate it on a scale of something like, 'excellent, good, fair, poor or bad'.

The problem of course is it's slow and expensive.

So another whole half of what we're doing is to develop or examine automated algorithms,

computer programs, that predict what people would say is the quality of the video sequence.

Consider you've just taken a picture, you're out there, and you could press a button that

tells you if you're going to like that picture or hate that picture when you get back home.

Because you're out there with your camera, you've got this little teeny device, its

got a little teeny screen; you really have no clue if it's going to look good or not.

And if you had a button there right then, you could know 'okay that's no good.

I need to take another picture'.

That's something that a consumer can then use and look at in their experience.

And we're hoping to extend that to video quality as well and this is one step along

the away, is having a better understanding of how people perceive the quality of images.

For more infomation >> Video Lab: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:36.

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Smithsonian Reveals Winning Design For New Native American Veterans Memorial - Duration: 5:13.

Smithsonian Reveals Winning Design For New Native American Veterans Memorial

The Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian has announced the winning concept for the National Native American Veterans Memorial: Multimedia artist Harvey Pratt's Warriors' Circle of Honor will incorporate a large, upright stainless steel circle set above a stone drum in the center of a circular walkway with intricate carvings of the five military seals.

The memorial will sit on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., and Pratt envisions that from there will be a clear view of the U.S.

Capitol's dome.

As Smithsonian.com has reported, Pratt's use of circles suggest "the cycle of life and death, and the continuity of all things." The stone drum, it adds, symbolizes an invitation for people to "harmonize their experiences" with one another to the "silent rhythms" of the drumbeat.

Pratt was born in Guthrie, Okla., and is a citizen of the Cheyenne and Arapaho nations.

He's a veteran of the Marine Corps and served in Vietnam from 1962 to 1965.

He also worked as a forensic artist for years, creating witness description drawings for law enforcement.

Pratt tells NPR's Mary Louise Kelly that he hopes his design will function as an architectural piece rather than just a work of sculpture — something that people can become a part of.

He says he can picture people taking a seat on the benches tucked into the drum fountain, and reflecting on their own experiences with the military.

He also hopes that it might be a cathartic place for some veterans.

"Most nations have veterans tell stories about what they did," Pratt says.

"People can come in there and do that and be comforted, and get rid of some things that are on their minds that bother them.".

More than 150,000 veterans identified as American Indian and Alaska Native in the 2010 census.

And according to the U.S.

Department of Defense, there are more than 20,000 active duty service members in the military who identify as American Indian or Alaska Native.

The memorial was selected unanimously by an eight-person jury of Native and non-Native artists, designers, museum directors and veterans.

It acknowledges the history and service of American Indian, Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian veterans, according to the museum's director, Kevin Gover, who is a citizen of the Pawnee Tribe of Oklahoma.

Gover says that throughout the process of helping plan the memorial, he's met thousands Native American veterans who have demonstrated over and over their commitment to the U.

"These veterans are perfectly aware that they are serving a country that had not kept its commitments to Native people, and yet they chose — and are still choosing — to serve," Gover says.

"This reflects a very deep kind of patriotism.

I can think of no finer example of service to the United States and the promise it holds.".

The memorial will break ground on Sept.

21, 2019, and will be unveiled in late 2020.

"I want it to be a place of healing and comfort, and a place that's hopefully going to be built on love," Pratt says.

For more infomation >> Smithsonian Reveals Winning Design For New Native American Veterans Memorial - Duration: 5:13.

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LTE Spectrum Sharing: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 2:27.

[Frank Sanders] "We're developing methods for understanding in a comprehensive way how

people who are already using spectrum, called incumbents, can share with new types of services

that other people want to bring into different spectrum bands."

[Rob Stafford] "What we are tasked to do from our parent organization, the National Telecommunications

Information Administration, is to support and protect government run radio systems,

among other things.

LTE is a very attractive technology for telecommunications.

So as Congress makes more spectrum available for auction, and telecommunications service

providers buy more of that spectrum, they move into frequencies that are closer and

closer to known government radio systems like radar, or like public safety, or like satellite

communications."

[Rob Stafford] "Our job is to assure that LTE does not create a problem for those radio

technologies.

And LTE is overwhelmingly what the telecom providers want to put in and also that those

technologies don't create a problem for the telecom providers because after all, the

parent organization of NTIA is the Department of Commerce, so we have to protect commerce

at the same time."

[Frank Sanders] "I think that there's going to be more sharing, not less in the next five

years.

More and more and more people want to use spectrum for a whole variety of reasons and

purposes.

Again there really aren't any unused or really arguably any underused bands.

And since we can't just move incumbents back and forth anymore like we used to when

new people want to come in with a new service, we're going to have to try to do more work

to really try to share between the incumbents who are already using spectrum and the new

services that are sought for use in the spectrum."

For more infomation >> LTE Spectrum Sharing: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 2:27.

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In-Building Communications: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:25.

We're doing a lot of in building research and right now with broadband networks eighty

percent of communications, roughly eighty percent of communications, emanates from indoors.

And we need to have the ability to communicate in indoor environments, from room to room,

from inside of buildings to outside of buildings.

There's a lot of communications scenarios that we need to address and buildings unfortunately

are not very friendly to radio frequencies.

So one of my projects here is to investigate ways of first of all, improving in building

coverage and two we want to quantify it.

So another project that I'm working on is to basically develop a measurement system

that's on an android phone that's going to enable us to do estimates of in building

coverage.

So that first responders can actually install the software that we're going to do for

android phones and actually do the measurements themselves.

And so they can go out and measure buildings within their jurisdictions like hospitals,

schools and other public facilities and do the analysis and identify coverage problems

within their jurisdictions.

I love working in public safety communications because there's lives impacted and it's

something the community can really relate to.

For more infomation >> In-Building Communications: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:25.

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David Eisenhauer to seve 50 years for murder of 13-year-old Nicole Lovell - Duration: 2:50.

For more infomation >> David Eisenhauer to seve 50 years for murder of 13-year-old Nicole Lovell - Duration: 2:50.

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2BR/2BA MH For Sale in Sarasota FL; Updates; Seller Motivated; $29,900 - Duration: 4:00.

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For more infomation >> 2BR/2BA MH For Sale in Sarasota FL; Updates; Seller Motivated; $29,900 - Duration: 4:00.

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A Word Without ITS: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:32.

[Keith Gremban] "ITS has lead the way in a lot of advancements that have really changed

telecommunications."

[Dr. Bob Johnk] "The role that we play here is to do good science, report it to the community

and let them make the decisions.

If you're ever caught in a first responder scenario where life depends on it and you're

saved because of good communications, I think you would appreciate the fact that we are

here."

[Frank Sanders] "We would have less of a lot of the good things that we have in life

related to radio, systems radio, spectrum usage if we didn't have ITS in the picture."

[Dr. Bob Johnk,] "Probably without ITS somebody else would have to pick it up and do that

research because the need is there."

[Keith Gremban] "It worries me that if we don't have a government agency kind of acting

as the referee and just go into a wild west mode, that can be scary because then the big

guys win.

You know, and there's potential a lot of abuse that could go on."

For more infomation >> A Word Without ITS: Institute for Telecommunication Sciences - Duration: 1:32.

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Michelle Obama steps out for an upscale vegan lunch in Los Angeles - Duration: 7:00.

Michelle Obama was spotted out and about in Los Angeles again this week, just days after a candid talk and reading from her upcoming memoir in New Orleans

 The former first lady was seen slipping out of the side door of Crossroads Kitchen, an upscale vegan restaurant on West Hollywood's famous Melrose Avenue

 Michelle walked in between two Secret Service agents before slipping into a black car

 She sported a black dress that featured a pattern of pink and white flowers, accessorizing the look with a pair of gold hoops and a chain-link black purse

  Michelle topped off the look with a big pair of black sunglasses as she tried to keep a low-profile

 . She sported a softer palate of pastels for the meeting, opting for light green wide-leg trousers and a suit jacket done in matching green and black stripes

 It has been rumored that Barack and Michelle plan to settle in Southern California after their youngest daughter Sasha, 17, graduates from high school

  And Michelle has been seen plenty in the neighborhood this summer, recently bumping into Robert F Kennedy Jr in the Santa Monica mountains

'I stumbled across this amazing lady hiking the Santa Monica mountains this morning,' Kennedy wrote in the caption of their photo on Instagram

 The former first lady was sporting a black hat, a blue sweatshirt and black workout pants

She flashed a huge smile as Kennedy posed beside her for the photo. Last week Michelle revealed her passion in the White House was always children

    The mother-of-two became emotional on Friday as she spoke candidly about her work as first lady and how she balanced being a mother to Malia, 19, and Sasha

 'Kids watch what you do, not what you say,' she said during the American Library Association annual conference in New Orleans

 'So the biggest thing that Barack and I could ever do to be good parents to our kids, is to be good people in the world for them to see everyday

''They just want somebody to love them. They just want somebody to tell them that they're okay

'   'And that's one of the things I tried to do as first lady with kids and why I did so much with kids because I always thought, this is the interaction that could change a kid's life

This one hug, this one "you are worth it"', she continued. 'You never know what can make a difference

'   Michelle also shared snippets from her memoir Becoming, which follows her childhood on the South Side of Chicago to her years as an executive and her time at the White House

She revealed how former president Barack Obama was not welcome at parent-teacher conferences after he once dropped by Malia's school with a fleet of Secret Service agents

  'I tell this story of how Barack went to a parent-teacher conference, and you know, he's got a big motorcade

It's big,' she said. 'And men with guns — machine guns — and black sniper gear, they follow him everywhere in trucks and they're leaning out, looking at you like, "I will kill you" because that's their job

'  RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 Next 'I REALLY DON'T CARE, DO U?' Melania wears $39 jacket with

Star and stripes! Michelle Obama steps out in Venice for. Share this article Share 'But when they're…on the roof of the elementary school, even Malia was like, "Dad come on

" So everybody was sort of okay when dad didn't go. Sort of politely going, "Dad you don't have to come to the Fall-Winter concert

It's OK. You can take a pass."'Michelle also spoke about how living in the White House affected their daughter's lives

'You're trying to be a normal parent in the midst of it when your kid is invited over for a sleepover, and you have to explain to them, "We'll need your social security number, and there will be dogs sweeping your house and they're going to ask you if you have guns and drugs and you'll have to tell them, "Sorry, Julia's mom but this is what it means to have Sasha over

But it's going to be fine."'Michelle also said it was difficult for the former first daughters to go to prom

 'Our daughters had their own detail all the time, so imagine trying to go to prom with eight men with guns and doing anything else you're trying to do as a teenager,' she said

 'Barack and I were very happy about it. But we had to learn how to discipline them without letting them think their agents told on them,' she joked

  But when it comes to parenting, Michelle revealed how she learned that 'kids don't need that much'

'If they know you love them, unconditionally, you can live in the White House, you can live the little bitty apartment that I grew up in,' she said

 'Home is what you make of it. It doesn't have to be perfect. It can be broken and funny and odd in many ways

'  'Kids are resilient. They make it through, which is why I think about all the kids that don't make it through because it takes a lot to break a kid

'  'But there's so many broken kids which reminds us how bad we're doing because you have to do really messed up stuff to kids to send them off

   Last week, Michelle joined all of the living, former first ladies in an unusual united political front to express their horror at children being separated from their parents at the US-Mexico border

As Michelle put it on Twitter, in support of Laura Bush: 'Sometimes truth transcends party

'Michelle also re-tweeted Bush, who first spoke out in an opinion piece Sunday in The Washington Post

The pair were later followed by Rosalynn Carter and Hillary Clinton. A few days later President Donald Trump signed an executive order ending family separation at the border

 

For more infomation >> Michelle Obama steps out for an upscale vegan lunch in Los Angeles - Duration: 7:00.

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France vs. Argentina: Date, Time, Odds for World Cup | Heavy.com - Duration: 4:24.

France vs. Argentina: Date, Time, Odds for World Cup | Heavy.com

Kylian Mbappe leads the youth movement for France.

The World Cup heats up this weekend, as Round of 16 matchups are beginning to take shape.

France are the winners of Group C, and they'll start their run to the final against Argentina, who were runners-up in Group D.

Come on, did you really think we'd keep going without Messi?.

France vs.

Argentina Date, Time & Location.

France will take on Argentina on June 30th at Kazan Stadium.

The match will kick off at 10 a.m.

Eastern and air on Fox in the United States.

France played their opening match, a 2-1 win over Australia, at Kazan Stadium.

There are a total of four games played in Kazan Stadium during the group stage, including Spain's nervous win over Iran and Colombia's dismissal of Poland from the tournament.

France vs. Argentina Odds & Prediction.

It could not have been more dramatic for Argentina.

In their first match, a Messi penalty miss results in a draw against Iceland.

In their second match, Willy Caballero makes an awful mistake to start a blowout loss.

But in their finale, Messi put one in and Argentina defeated Nigeria 2-1.

They escaped the group by the narrowest of margins, dodging rumors of mutiny along the way.

Now the experienced Albiceleste take on France, who, unlike Argentina, cruised through the Group Stage.

France have the fourth-best odds to win the World Cup, priced at +800 by Bovada before Tuesday's action.

They cruised through Group C, only allowing one goal in three group games.

They only scored three, but showed plenty of flair and creativity in the attacking third.

Olivier Giroud, added to the starting lineup in the team's second game against Peru, brought an added element in front of goal.

France are loaded with stars, and boast one of the youngest teams in the tournament.

Paul Pogba and N'golo Kante play physical at both ends, freeing up space for talent like Antoine Griezmann and Kylian Mbappe to break into space.

The youth is a fun contrast with Argentina, who started the oldest World Cup lineup in history against Nigeria.

Normally France would be a runaway favorite in their first knockout game, and they'd certainly be favored over Group D participants Nigeria and Iceland.

But Argentina are a different beast, and will garner respect from bettors on Messi alone.

For more infomation >> France vs. Argentina: Date, Time, Odds for World Cup | Heavy.com - Duration: 4:24.

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21 Savage Offers Sound Advice For What To Do When Someone Tries To Rob You - Duration: 4:42.

21 Savage Offers Sound Advice For What To Do When Someone Tries To Rob You

21 Savage has made millions off his menacing street raps, but that doesn't mean he's stupid.

If anything, his harsh upbringing has given him great wisdom in how to survive when people are gunning for you; wisdom that he's kindly opted to pass on to his fans.

In a recent Instagram Live session, 21 lets everybody know what his stance is if somebody comes up to him and tries to rob him of his jewelry, or anything else.

"This shit ain't worth dying over," 21 says during the live stream. "Y'all protect yourself, and give it up.".

The advice your mom probably gave you as a teenager, 21 Savage is imparting upon you now.

If someone gets the drop on you and they have a weapon, it's better to just take the financial loss of losing whatever it is you have rather than risking it all and possibly losing your life in the process.

"If a nigga got you down bad, and you aint got no weapon on you or no way to defend yourself, just give it up," 21 continues.

"You ain't no lame if you give it up.

Because if a nigga gets me down bad and he got a gun on me, I'm gonna give it up.".

Of course, the whole point is to not let it get to that point in the first place.

That might be why 21 Savage has taken steps to defend himself, or even a factor in why he decided to stop wearing jewelry.

Check out 21 Savage's sage advice down below.

For more infomation >> 21 Savage Offers Sound Advice For What To Do When Someone Tries To Rob You - Duration: 4:42.

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2 security guards fired for alleged inaction during Stoneman Douglas massacre - Duration: 2:30.

For more infomation >> 2 security guards fired for alleged inaction during Stoneman Douglas massacre - Duration: 2:30.

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West Nile In Mass.: Virus Detected In Mosquitoes For First Time In 2018 - Duration: 0:19.

For more infomation >> West Nile In Mass.: Virus Detected In Mosquitoes For First Time In 2018 - Duration: 0:19.

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'I'm Crushed': Migrant Parents, Advocates Press For Family Reunification - Duration: 8:25.

'I'm Crushed': Migrant Parents, Advocates Press For Family Reunification

A Honduran father caught crossing the border illegally with his daughter was released from custody with an ankle monitor in El Paso, Texas, on Monday — the same day his daughter turned 10 years old in a government-run shelter.

The father and daughter have been separated for the month he was in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention, and she was in a shelter run by the Department of Health and Human Services.

He said he called a 1-800 number that HHS set up to get an update on his daughter.

"It rang and rang with no answer," Mario said on Monday.

The distraught father asked to be identified by only his first name because he feared that speaking out could hurt his asylum claim.

"I'm crushed," he continued.

"I don't know anything about her.

Today she's 10 years old, and I can't call her and tell her how much I love her.".

The Trump administration's "zero tolerance" initiative against illegal border crossings — which led to families being separated at the U.S.-Mexico border — has effectively ended, at least for now.

Customs and Border Protection said on Monday that it will stop referring every person caught crossing the border for criminal prosecution.

"A much better system would be to keep families together through their immigration proceedings," CBP Commissioner Kevin McAleenan told reporters Monday in McAllen, Texas.

"That's what Obama did in 2014, and that's what the president has asked the Congress to help us do now.".

CBP's announcement comes less than a week after President Trump signed an executive order aimed at ending the controversial separation of migrant families at the border.

He insisted the administration would continue to refer every person who is caught crossing illegally for prosecution.

On Monday, administration officials called on Congress to provide more resources to secure the border.

The reality on the border, according to one Customs and Border Protection official, is that the agency is overwhelmed.

Border Patrol stations are overcrowded and kids are waiting in cagelike holding cells while their mothers and fathers go to court in shackles.

The agency simply does not have the resources to enforce "zero tolerance.".

Federal agents also complain they're spending more time processing immigrants than guarding the border.

"It's a huge challenge operationally for our agents," McAleenan said.

'I'm Crushed': Migrant Parents, Advocates Press For Family Reunification.

Health and Human Services spokesman Mark Weber says the agency's main goal is family reunification and that it knows where the children's parents are.

The agency operates more than 100 shelters and is facing continued criticism from parents, advocates and lawyers who say the government is not doing enough to immediately reunite the some 2,000 children still in shelters with their parents.

Weber says the agency is "working as fast as we possibly can" but that the reunification process takes time because sponsors need to be vetted before children are released to them.

"There's a lot of safety precautions," Weber said Monday at a border crossing in Tornillo, Texas, where the agency's newest emergency shelter is located.

"We do not want to release a child too soon, too fast, because we didn't take the care to ensure that that child is going to be reunited with a parent or an appropriate loved one that the parent has designated.".

On average, the children spend about two months in the shelters before they are released to go live with a family member.

Some are at the Tornillo shelter — a collection of about 20 sand-colored tents in the remote windblown border crossing in Tornillo, about 30 miles east of El Paso.

Critics have dubbed it a "tent city." It's about 100 yards from a steel border fence and the Rio Grande beyond that.

The shelter has 326 migrant kids ages 12 to 17, mostly teenage boys from Central America.

Twenty-three of them were separated from their parents when they crossed the border illegally.

And under the president's now suspended child separation policy when it was still in effect, they were sent here, and the parents are detained elsewhere waiting to see whether their asylum request is accepted.

Since the shelter hurriedly opened 12 days ago, an official said, three of the 23 have been reunited with parents.

Reporters touring the encampment were not allowed to speak with the children, who smiled and gave thumbs up when asked how they're doing.

It's completely self-contained out in the Chihuahuan Desert, where afternoon temperatures soar to 103 degrees.

They have large air-conditioning units next to each big, military-grade tent.

There's a cooling station next to the soccer field, which is made of AstroTurf, where kids go to chug Gatorade and sit next to fans.

The shelter also has its own power, water and Internet.

They have the same services seen in other HHS-contracted youth shelters — 24-hour mental health and medical care, individual caseworkers, a mess hall with three hot meals a day.

Also at the shelter: a phone tent with nine operators.

The children are supposed to be able to call family members, either in the U.S.

or abroad, to tell them where they are and try to reunite with them.

For more infomation >> 'I'm Crushed': Migrant Parents, Advocates Press For Family Reunification - Duration: 8:25.

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Tax Talks: Tax Incentives for Investing in Opportunity Zones - Duration: 1:40.

for wealthy high-net-worth individuals that are anticipating a significant

amount of capital gains there's a new provision of the tax law which creates

qualified Opportunity Zones that may be beneficial for deferring and even

potentially eliminating a large amount of those gains

a qualified opportunity zone fund effectively is a low-income community

that is designated by the governor of a state the AG designation is good for ten

years the way to take advantage of the

incentives for investing in opportunity's own communities is to

invest in a qualified opportunity zone fund that's a corporation or a

partnership that invests 90% of its assets in low-income communities there

are two primary advantages the first is the deferral of capital gain income

effectively if non zoned property is sold and those capital gains are

invested in a qualified opportunity zone fund those capital gains are deferred

for a certain period of time some of them are even fully eliminated once an

investment is made and a qualified opportunity zone fund if that investment

is held for ten years any appreciation on that investment escaped taxation

completely the one caveat to keep in mind is in order to get the initial

deferral within 180 days of realizing a capital gain the proceeds need to be

reinvested into the qualified opportunity's own fun anybody with the

expertise to invest in low-income communities can set up a qualified

opportunity zone fund to invest in these qualified Opportunity Zones

you

For more infomation >> Tax Talks: Tax Incentives for Investing in Opportunity Zones - Duration: 1:40.

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Institute For Telecommunication Sciences: What is ITS? (Sketch) - Duration: 1:53.

The Institute for Telecommunication Sciences researches tests and evaluates

advanced communication and information technology that touches every one of our

lives on a daily basis. From the largest satellites and radar systems to the

smallest smartphones and every communication device in between, ITS

serves as the primary federal resource for solving telecommunication concerns

for government agencies, industry, and for all of us. Telecommunication includes

public safety networks, cell phones, and even Netflix. For example think of attending a

concert trying to share your video of the band but the slow speed and weak

signal make it nearly impossible. That's because everyone else is trying to do

the same thing. ITS analyzes video streaming technology and helps find ways

to get your message to the world faster. Now imagine trying to call for

emergency help from that same crowded concert, but your signal is blocked or

unclear. ITS works with first responders to make sure those messages get to them

and they're able to communicate clearly with each other despite heavy usage and

physical barriers. Is the speech clear? Is the video too grainy? Do cell towers

interfere with radar? Are government communications secure? How can we all

possibly share limited radio frequencies and wireless internet space in an

ever-growing world of technology? These are the questions ITS is answering

every day. The Institute for Telecommunication

Sciences is recognized as one of the world's leading research facilities. ITS

is finding ways to make sure science stays a step ahead of our critical

communication and information technology needs.

For more infomation >> Institute For Telecommunication Sciences: What is ITS? (Sketch) - Duration: 1:53.

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What is The Institute for Telecommunication Sciences? - Duration: 1:59.

Our mission is to inform the administration of the science and engineering behind telecommunications

issues and inform policy.

As telecommunications has advanced it is no longer just a matter of broadcast TV, but

now we've got cell phones.

We're now involved in a lot of propagation studies of how cell phones interact with each

other, and, how they interact with some of the other systems.

Our most recent work has to do with things like, 'How close to a weather radar system

can you put a cell tower before it starts interfering with the weather radar?', 'How

close can you site a cell tower to an airport before it starts interfering with the airport

radars?'

Things like that.

Another thing that we're involved in is support for what's called 'First Net'

which is a nationwide cellular system for first responders.

For police, for fire, Coast Guard and so on.

We're filling an important role in testing the capabilities of some of the systems that

come out of the manufacturers.

And looking and working to better define and enhance the standards that they have to meet

in developing this equipment.

It's necessary to have a group that understands the physics, understands the engineering,

understands the technology and can help inform the policy makers and the general public about

what is possible; what isn't possible.

What is efficient; what is not efficient without having a dog in the fight.

We're providing the basic facts, we're kind of the nutrition chart on the back of

the packet that says, 'this is what you're going to get out of this'.

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