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My Best Advice For TWENTY SOMETHINGS - Dreams Around The World - Duration: 7:56.
Hey Dan here and in this video I want to share with you two stories that I think
you're gonna find pretty entertaining and insightful about how we can actually
solve our problems and make changes in ourselves without overthinking and over
complicating things I was talking to a friend a little ways back to keep it
vague for privacy sake and this is a young single guy and he was telling me
about some some things he realized about his childhood and this psychological
term related to it I'll keep it vague again but he where he had realized like
he'd had these experiences and it involved this psychological termini had
this issue and he was going to see a therapist about it
and kind of instinctively although I was thinking about it I and I know him quite
well I said I think if you see to get laid like be a man and get laid and
that's probably 90% of the issue here and he didn't dismiss it
he was like yeah you're probably right but you know I'm gonna keep up with this
therapy thing and see what happens and we connected you know maybe six months a
year later and I asked him you know how did that go and he told me he saw the
first few therapists and they were quite terrible but the third one was actually
quite a good fit and you know it's really helped and things had resolved
themselves and such and I asked you know what was the advice what did you kind of
follow as your path and it was to embrace my masculine energy so be a man
and to basically get laid to go out and meet girls and have a good time and stop
overthinking things basically to do what men in their 20s are supposed to do
right I would argue all people in their 20s but at least traditionally
definitely men that was what you were encouraged to do I think everyone needs
to get laid more in their 20s like that if I had one message it should be like
dreams around the world get laid more in your 20s really though I and of course
for my religious viewers I mean get laid a lot in a committed marriage to the
first and only person you'll ever have sex with in your life because that's
really healthy now getting back on topic I'm not saying that therapy is bad or
coaching is bad like you should just do the simplest thing but keep in mind that
a lot of therapy like cognitive behavioral therapy is based on change
your actions and very simple solutions as is a lot of coaching now we're
coaching or therapy can come in is actually helping you work through it
process it and take the actions to do it right someone just telling you in 30
seconds that you should do something differently even if it's the right
advice doesn't necessarily actually help change that behavior in the long run and
so again not dismissing those things but kind of funny that ultimately the
simplest solution that pretty much any construction worker could have come up
with was the right solution now this brings me to the second story a story I
heard during some of my early coaching training that I absolutely love now I'm
going off memory here so if I get any little detail wrong I apologize but I'm
pretty positive the important part of the story I have nailed here so this
goes back to Richard Bandler and John grinder who are the founders of NLP and
back in the day they were often called in to psychiatric hospitals to deal with
the patients that no one else could deal with well they weren't necessarily
accepted by the psychological community they were still called in and used when
everyone got desperate and the traditional methods of therapy weren't
working and in this particular case they were called in for someone let's call
him John this patient had been locked up for a couple years believing he was
Jesus nothing had worked he was absolutely convinced he was Jesus now
one of the foundations of NLP is essentially that people are sane and our
thinking is generally rational at least rational if you understand how
irrational we are but there's usually a cause behind things and it's not that
people are just randomly broken that behavior language actions there's
reasons for why people do what they do so they get called in and they know the
whole background on this patient and they they go into the hospital and at
first they have these other men with them and at first the therapist is like
nope you cannot like this is not what we agreed to and then okay we'll leave then
if you know this isn't cool with you okay okay fine fine do what you got to
do so they go into the room at first the two of them and say to the guy yeah
you're Jesus right he's like yeah yeah I'm Jesus okay
cuz we've been looking for you what do you mean just don't worry about it so
you're Jesus the carpenter from above habla this is you like we just saw to
check all these details they go through this motion and guys kind of confuse
because no one's believed he was Jesus for the last couple of years like yeah
yeah that's that's me I'm Jesus awesome great we've finally found you and at
that note they knock on a door and these two huge guys come in with two giant
pieces of wood and they lay them down on the ground and across and start nailing
them together and then they bring out two large nails and the guy's looking
around like what what what's going on here you're you are Jesus correct yeah
yeah but what what are you doing what is this for you said you were Jesus we've
been looking for you and they continue with this song and dance and ultimately
get to the point where they they take this guy and they start to drag him over
and he's freaking out like what the hell are you doing what is this like he's
seen a hammer these big pegs of like metal pegs that are we all know where
this story ends and he starts to freak out and it just finally breaks no no no
I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm John I'm an accountant I'm 38 years old I'm not
Jesus no this is the only part of the story I really got it didn't go into
what was happening in the back end but if I were to think about it I think that
this person that ultimately at the core of this psychiatric issue was a feeling
of insignificance was something where they they created this identity of being
Jesus maybe as a way to feel love from people maybe as a way to feel
significant and obviously it got to the point where it was basically insanity
but that had the basis of it there was some reasoning behind why it happened
and that ultimately the way to eventually treat that was not to keep
studying them and saying wow this case is amazing this person that has thought
their Jesus for you know two years oh my god because that's giving the person
that attention that they wanted that may have been May
again I don't know the details but may have been at the basis for why they
actually created this delusion in the first place and so that the solution
ended up being pretty outrageous but a very straightforward solution of putting
a very painful choice up to this person so you can continue to say you're Jesus
and get this attention and possibly be executed in the next couple minutes or
you can go back to your old self and not die and in that very simple decision or
that very simple choice this person made the decision to be like okay I'm going
to be sane again so just keep that in mind it doesn't always have to be that
complicated I'm going to link to another video here I film back in my hometown
Vancouver a couple years ago where I share another story about keeping things
real simple and finding solutions in that way as well now if you've made it
this far and I didn't offend you with my everyone needs to get laid and stories
of murdering a fake Jesus then I definitely insist you subscribe to the
channel hit the button hit the bell so you get notified of new videos and I
will catch you in the next one very soon I publish Sunday Tuesday and Thursday
you
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Stunning Warm Anti Minimalist Tiny House A Tiny Home Built for a Maximalist By Tiny Homes Tiny House - Duration: 3:09.
Stunning Warm Anti-Minimalist Tiny House A Tiny Home Built for a Maximalist By Tiny Homes Tiny House Concepts
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Asif Ghafor's Message For India | Indian drama over Pulwama attack exposed | Pulwama Attack - Duration: 3:51.
Asif Ghaffor
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Full Episode | The Search For Alfred The Great | BBC Documentary - Duration: 50:53.
.
LOW, EERIE MUSIC
NEIL OLIVER: A cold morning in March 2013.
At St Bartholomew's Church in Winchester,
the rector is preparing for an unusual day.
Gathering here is a team of local historians,
archaeologists, and a bishop.
May God's peace be in our hearts,
may God's peace be with us in our homes...
This group is hoping to resolve a long-standing mystery
about THIS unmarked grave in their local parish church.
To some, what these archaeologists are doing may seem like sacrilege...
..but this could be the culmination of an incredible story
that began over a thousand years ago.
I can see...a coxa, a humerus down there, there's
a mandible, tibia, femora...
For 150 years, it's been claimed that this unmarked grave
contains the remains of one of England's greatest kings -
the man who laid the foundations of the English nation -
Alfred the Great.
Well, that is extraordinary.
Oh... Wow!
Very, very moving indeed.
No-one knows for sure where Alfred the Great's remains lie buried.
So why does the team believe that these might be his bones?
And why would they be mixed together with other skeletons
in this unmarked grave?
To answer these questions,
I'm going to explore the story of Alfred's life...
and death.
I'll team up with specialists to test the bones.
And we'll discover how they came to be
buried in the graveyard of this modest parish church,
and whether they really are the remains of King Alfred the Great.
This is an extraordinary historical mystery
concerning a great Anglo-Saxon king.
If it hadn't been for Alfred,
we would probably have a different national identity,
we might even speak a different language.
Alfred the Great was a hugely significant leader in our history,
so it's important that we find out the truth
about the remains exhumed from the unmarked grave.
And if they do turn out to be those of Alfred,
then they can be re-buried with all the dignity they deserve,
well over a thousand years after his death.
BELL TOLLS
MONASTIC—STYLE CHORAL MUSIC
BELL TOLLS
On the 26th October 899,
the people of Wessex
were in mourning for the death of their king.
A grand procession bore the body of King Alfred
through the streets of Winchester,
the royal capital of Wessex.
It was a fitting tribute to the king
who had forged the beginnings of the English nation.
Alfred had bound his people together through the power of language,
religion and military force.
This is precisely the sort of place where you would expect
to find a great king buried -
Winchester Cathedral.
But in fact, this great cathedral wasn't even built
until two centuries AFTER Alfred's death.
CHORAL MUSIC
When Alfred was buried in 899,
it was at the Anglo-Saxon Old Minster, a much smaller church.
It stood on a site right next to this cathedral.
If you look down there,
you can see where the foundations of the Old Minster
have been picked out in brick
in the cathedral lawns, and you can also
see that it's been orientated on a slightly different direction.
But Alfred didn't rest in peace in the Old Minster for long.
Before his death, Alfred had been in the process of commissioning
a new monastery - the New Minster - right next door to the Old Minster.
He wanted it to become a mausoleum for him and his family.
It was Alfred's dying wish to be buried in the New Minster.
So in honour of his father,
Alfred's son Edward completed the building. And in 903,
Alfred's remains were exhumed, just four years after his burial,
together with those of his wife, who had died the previous year.
And with great ceremony they were carried in procession
from the Old Minster to the New, and there reinterred.
But that was only the start of the story.
Alfred's remains weren't just exhumed once,
but at least three times during the course of the next thousand years.
The team leading the exhumation at St Bart's Church
wants to find out if this really is
the final resting place of King Alfred and his family.
But before any work can begin
on the bones, they have to wait for the Church of England
to give permission for scientific testing to go ahead.
For five months,
the bones are securely stored at the University of Winchester.
Finally, in August 2013, permission is granted.
Dr Katie Tucker can begin the process of unlocking their secrets.
Today, I've been able to start washing the bones.
Essentially we just use normal tap water
and soft toothbrushes to wash the bones with, and just very,
very gently cleaning away any soil or any mud to get them as clean
as they can possibly be to look at them properly for an analysis.
To be able to actually look at the bones properly
for the first time, to be able to get the process under way,
it's actually very exciting and it's very interesting already.
There's the potential that these could be the remains from very,
very important individuals in the history of this country.
Alfred the Great was born in 849
in the town of Wantage, now in Oxfordshire.
He was born the son of Aethelwulf, King of Wessex.
As the youngest of five brothers,
Alfred was never expected to become king.
Today, we would scarcely recognise
the England that Alfred was born into.
In fact, it was a land of many kingdoms and many kings.
Post-Roman Britain had been invaded by a succession of tribes
from northern Europe - Jutes, Angles and Saxons.
By the 9th century, there were four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in England -
Mercia, East Anglia, Northumbria and Wessex.
In the 850s, these four kingdoms would come under increasing attack
from another invading force...
..the Vikings.
Alfred would grow up in the shadow of the Viking threat.
Alfred is the only English king to be named "the Great",
but we know very little about his formative years.
The information we do have
comes from the writings of a monk called Asser
from St David's in Wales.
In later life, Alfred commissioned him to be his biographer.
Asser tells us that Alfred was
"ignorant of letters" throughout his childhood.
And that for all of his life
he regretted not having had the benefit of an education.
But the story goes that his mother Osburh had a book,
a treasured book of poems.
And that one day she said to her sons that whichever one of them
could learn the poems by heart could keep the book.
So dutifully Alfred set to work.
And there came the day when he was able to demonstrate
that he could indeed perform all of the poems in the book,
and so he kept it.
This love of literature and of learning was a character trait
and it contributed to the making of a great king.
Another powerful influence on Alfred came not in England,
but hundreds of miles away...
in Rome.
In the 9th century, Rome was the centre of the Western world
and of the Christian faith.
The Anglo-Saxons had accepted Christianity
as their primary religion just 200 years earlier.
But they were soon enthusiastic about making pilgrimages to Rome.
Alfred's father was no exception and he sent young Alfred on two visits
to the city, the first in 853 when the boy was just four years old.
These visits to the most impressive and powerful city
in the Western world made a huge impression
on the boy who would be king.
This was a city of towering stone,
quite unlike the simpler buildings back home.
Alfred almost certainly stayed somewhere around here
in what was once a fully-fledged Saxon quarter.
It was founded by Saxons who came to Rome on pilgrimage
and on business, and over time it became a permanent Saxon base,
which is why it's still called "Borgo" today -
from the Anglo-Saxon word "burh" meaning a "fortified town".
And "Sassia" - from the word "Saxon" -
is still seen on street signs around here.
In the 9th century, Rome suffered repeated raids by Saracen bandits.
One attack had terrorised the city
just a few years before Alfred's first visit.
The solution was to build a network of giant walls -
and this is part of them here.
They were built by Pope Leo IV and in 853 -
the year of Alfred's first visit to Rome -
Leo initiated a tradition of bare-foot walks around the walls,
praying for the protection of the city as he did so.
This vivid display of Christian faith
coupled with military readiness made a lasting impression on Alfred.
It shaped his thinking as an adult, as a warrior, and as a king.
VOICES SING MUSIC FROM RELIGIOUS SERVICE
Then came the real reason for Alfred's visit -
the moment that probably impressed the young boy more than any other.
You have to try and imagine what it must have been like for the boy.
Alfred's only four years old at this point,
and ushered into the presence of the Pope himself.
What an occasion.
Asser tells us that the Pope
"anointed the child Alfred as King, ordaining him properly,
"received him as an adoptive son, and confirmed him".
As Alfred's biographer, Asser was possibly being
a little bit creative with the truth here to build up Alfred's legend.
It seems unlikely that the Pope would have anointed Alfred as King.
But we do know that a ceremony took place.
In a letter to Alfred's father, Pope Leo confirms that it had
diplomatic as well as spiritual significance.
The Pope wrote that "we have decorated him as a spiritual son
"with the dignity of the belt and the vestments of the consulate".
This may have been a special ceremony to honour
a son of the royal House of Wessex.
It could possibly have been papal recognition of Alfred
as a potential future king. Whatever it really meant,
it clearly had a huge significance for young Alfred,
because he was to grow into a committed, devout Christian,
who absolutely believed in his divine right to be king.
CHORAL MUSIC
Back in the lab,
Dr Katie Tucker continues her examination of the exhumed bones.
I think we've got bones from adult individuals,
both males and females represented,
and it's looking like we've probably got five or six individuals.
Mostly cranial remains and long bones,
though we do have pieces of the pelvis and quite a few small bones,
like quite a few ribs, bones of the hands and feet,
parts of the spine,
but it does seem to be largely
cranial remains and long bones that we have.
We do need to separate them out to try and work out
which bones go with different sets of remains,
to see if we can get different individuals.
I have to be scientific about it
and remember that all human remains are essentially the same.
You have to treat them all with the same amount of respect.
It will take two weeks to piece the skeletons together.
If one of them turns out to be King Alfred,
it will have been on an EXTRAORDINARY journey.
Buried first in Winchester's Old Minster in 899,
Alfred was exhumed and re-buried next door
in the New Minster just four years later.
But Alfred's bones would soon be disturbed for a second time.
In 1066, William the Conqueror invaded England.
The country he captured was a valuable prize -
it was one of the best-organised states in Europe,
with a reliable currency and an efficient centralised legal system.
This was a great triumph for William.
But for Anglo-Saxon England it was a catastrophe.
The Anglo-Saxon aristocracy was cut down at the Battle of Hastings.
And in their place came Norman nobles,
who took control of the country and crushed any opposition violently.
King William stamped his authority by building stone castles
all over the country, that dominated the landscape.
The Normans also tore down the Saxon churches and replaced them
with their own towering cathedrals, like this one at Winchester.
First, the Normans demolished the Old Minster.
Then in 1109, they destroyed the New Minster -
the church where Alfred and his wife lay buried,
along with their son Edward the Elder.
The monks moved to a new home -
Hyde Abbey -
it was built on farmland outside the city walls.
And this gatehouse is one of the last fragments
of Hyde Abbey still standing.
According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles,
in 1110, in the presence of William the Conqueror's son,
Henry I, and his Queen, Maud,
the monks walked in procession to their new home,
carrying the remains of King Alfred, his wife Ealhswith
and members of the royal family.
BASS VOICE SINGS CHORAL PIECE
The monks carried the remains to the new Hyde Abbey.
OTHER VOICES JOIN IN SONG
And the journey ended here,
where the high altar of Hyde Abbey used to stand.
Alfred and his family were entombed in sepulchres
beneath the floor and in front of the high altar.
A final resting place fit for a king.
Alfred's bones would lie undisturbed
under the high altar of Hyde Abbey for the next four centuries.
Back in 868, the young Alfred came to a very different church -
a small, wooden Anglo-Saxon church -
much like this one in Essex.
Alfred was about to enter a diplomatic alliance
with the neighbouring kingdom of Mercia.
An act which would begin the process
of unifying the four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
In 868,
Alfred, accompanied by members of his family,
came to be married to a member of the nobility.
Her father was a Mercian nobleman,
her mother was a member of the Mercian royal family.
The bride's name was Ealhswith.
Alfred's marriage to Ealhswith was a diplomatic coup
that would increase his power and influence.
But at the wedding feast,
Alfred was suddenly struck down with excruciating stomach pain.
He would never fully recover.
Asser said that the pain "plagued him remorselessly by day and night".
Asser tells us Alfred was in so much pain
his guests thought it must be witchcraft
or perhaps even the devil's work.
More recently, experts have suggested that the ailment
that stuck him down, and affected him for years to come,
might have been Crohn's disease, which is a digestive disorder that,
amongst other things, causes severe stomach pain.
In any event, it was so bad that Alfred wrote to rulers
and physicians all across Europe in hope of a cure.
Despite his chronic illness, Alfred outlived his older brothers.
One by one, they became king.
One by one, they died.
So, in 871, just three years after his wedding,
the youngest son, who was never expected to rule,
took the throne of Wessex.
Alfred was immediately called upon to defend his kingdom.
By the time of Alfred's coronation,
the Vikings had cut a swathe across the kingdoms of England.
East Anglia and Northumbria were the first to fall. Mercia fell next.
Then the Vikings turned their full force
on the only remaining English kingdom -
Wessex.
Alfred was driven into hiding
in a wasteland known as the Somerset Levels.
Today, the Somerset Levels are dominated by farmland,
flat farmland as far as the eye can see.
But in the 9th century, when Alfred came to power,
this was primarily marshland.
And it was just after he had taken the throne
that he faced one of his greatest challenges.
Alfred had fought alongside his brothers
so he was no stranger to the battlefield.
But in the year 875, a new foe appeared on the horizon -
a Viking warlord called Guthrum.
And in 878,
when Alfred was celebrating the Yuletide at Chippenham,
Guthrum and his men mounted a surprise attack.
And it was into this terrain that Alfred fled in fear of his life.
This was Alfred's lowest point as king.
With a core band of men,
he was forced to set up a secret fortified base
deep within the wetlands of Somerset.
When Alfred was here, this landscape was a watery maze of rivers
and little streams, marshland, ponds, reed beds and little islands.
In fact, it was the perfect place to hide.
Alfred found a way through the treacherous bogs and marshes.
And right in the middle of it all, he made his camp...
..on a low-lying hill called the Isle of Athelney.
He re-built his forces
and waited for an opportunity to strike back at the Vikings.
According to one of the best-known legends about Alfred,
it's around here that he sought shelter from a farmer's wife
and then inadvertently let her cakes burn
because he was too distracted worrying about his own future.
It's almost certainly a myth and possibly drawn from Norse legend.
But archaeological digs up here,
have found not just the remains of an abbey founded by Alfred,
but also traces of iron smelting,
which makes it possible that he and his men
were smelting weapons
while they spent time up here in a temporary camp.
In May 878, Alfred decided to make his move.
He rallied his forces, and Asser says he was joined by
"all the inhabitants of Somerset and Wiltshire and Hampshire".
The precise location of the battlefield
has never been identified,
but it's thought to have taken place down here on the low ground.
It takes its name from the nearby village of Edington.
Asser writes that Alfred
"destroyed the Vikings with great slaughter
"and pursued those who fled, hacking them down".
At the Battle of Edington, Alfred won a stunning victory,
for Wessex and for Anglo-Saxon England.
According to local folklore,
this white horse was cut in the 18th century
to commemorate the victory.
A fitting tribute.
In the aftermath of the battle, Alfred persuaded Guthrum
to convert to Christianity,
and with Alfred acting as godfather to Guthrum,
all of it taking place amid much feasting and celebration.
The two soon agreed to divide the country -
Alfred would keep Wessex to the southwest,
Guthrum the lands the Vikings had conquered to the northeast.
In battle and through diplomacy, Alfred had established himself
as the "King above all the other kings" in the land.
And the nation had taken a step closer to being a united "England".
In Winchester, Dr Katie Tucker has finally assembled
all the bones found in the unmarked grave.
I must admit that my first reaction is I'm amazed by how much is here.
There's a lot of bones from the individuals. Yeah.
Well we have five skulls, you can see here,
and then we have the remains of six post-cranial skeletons -
so the rest of the skeleton that isn't the skull.
Is it both sexes represented here?
Yes, we do have males and females.
This individual is definitely a female. Mm-hm.
You can see the pelvis is very, very wide
and of course they would generally tend to be smaller than males.
So, it's one woman definitely? Yes.
And then the likelihood that it's five males.
We have a definite male here. Mm-hm.
This one, probably a male, and this individual is also probably a male.
So, based on that, this could be Alfred?
That could be... That could be...
That could be... And that's... This one definitely not.
That one's definitely female, yes.
When you look at these skeletons, what story
do they tell about the kind of lives lived by the people?
For such a small number of individuals
they've got a lot going on in terms of disease.
You can see the vertebrae,
you can see they're all fused together into one lump. Yeah.
And this is because all the ligaments that attach
all the vertebrae together, and the tendons,
they've all turned to bone - they've all ossified. Right.
So it would have left the individual with very, very limited movement.
Surely that makes it unlikely that this would be Alfred?
There are historical reports
that Alfred had some form of chronic health problem.
It's suggested maybe it was Crohn's disease,
but you probably would not be able to see that in the skeleton.
So, in terms of the search for
Alfred and his relatives, what is next?
Well the next stage is to take some samples for radiocarbon dating,
so we'll actually be able to work out
the age of the bones from bone samples.
By the early 16th century,
we know that Alfred's remains had twice been exhumed and reburied.
They were now buried with those of his family
beneath the high altar of Hyde Abbey.
But the story was about to take another extraordinary turn.
Hyde Abbey was about to fall victim to one of the greatest acts
of state vandalism England had ever seen.
Vandal-in-chief in Hampshire was one Thomas Wriothesley,
who built himself a hunting lodge here at Beaulieu.
Thomas Wriothesley was a highly ambitious young man.
At the age of just 19, he dropped out of a law degree at Cambridge
to become assistant to a man who was on his way to becoming
the most powerful person in the court of King Henry VIII -
Thomas Cromwell.
Wriothesley would rise up through the ranks,
eventually becoming Lord Chancellor himself.
And he made his name helping Henry
resolve one of the greatest crises of his reign.
In the early 16th century,
a religious revolution was sweeping across northern Europe.
In protest at the corruption and extravagance
of the Catholic church, many people rejected Rome,
turned to the Protestant faith,
and embraced a simpler, more austere form of worship.
When the Pope refused to grant Henry VIII a divorce from his first wife,
Henry too decided to break from Rome and establish the Church of England.
Men like Thomas Wriothesley were employed
to close down the wealthy Catholic abbeys and monasteries.
Anything that symbolised the pomp and ritual of Roman Catholicism
was destroyed or stolen.
Religious images were defaced,
holy relics and bones were smashed to pieces.
Within four years, 800 monasteries were attacked,
including this one at Beaulieu.
It's almost unbelievable, and it's certainly hard to imagine,
that this vast, empty space
was once the interior of a magnificent abbey church.
You still do get a sense of the scale though,
and the scale of this church
would have been similar to that of Hyde Abbey church.
The fragments that remain let you recreate it in your mind's eye.
Each of these piles of rubble marks the footing for an enormous column,
each of them about 60 or 70ft high, supporting the roof,
and then all the way down at the end of this paving,
in the east end, would have been the high altar.
The dissolution of the monasteries meant yet another disturbance
of Alfred's resting place.
In 1538, Thomas Wriothesley turned his attention to Hyde Abbey,
one of the richest abbeys in Hampshire.
Wriothesley wrote to his boss, Thomas Cromwell,
to assure him that at Hyde he was hard at work
sweeping away the old bones that were known as relics.
It was all about destroying for the last time
the abomination of idolatry.
Hyde Abbey itself was quickly demolished.
It became little more than a fine stone quarry
to be used for building and rebuilding all over the area.
And you can sometimes see fragments of the abbey
incorporated into the new.
Look up there and you'll see a horned head,
heavily weathered, but that was once a decorative item on the abbey.
And all the while, King Alfred
and his family were silently under the ground.
With the abbey demolished, there was no longer any visible monument
to mark the location of Alfred's remains.
They now lay hidden, possibly lost for ever.
By 880, King Alfred was at the height of his powers.
He'd taken control of large swathes of the country.
His kingdom would form the basis of what would become England.
But only if he could keep it safe from attack.
Alfred built new forts, protected by great defensive earthworks,
like these at Wallingford in Oxfordshire.
Overgrown as they are, these earthworks,
are still incredibly impressive,
but they're made even more so when you realise
that all of this was put in place
as part of a kingdom-wide system of defences
that date back to King Alfred the Great himself.
Now, it's about 8m deep at the moment,
but in the 9th century, it would have been even bigger,
probably with a timber palisade running around the top,
all of it acting together to turn the town into a fortress.
These earthworks surrounded the village on three sides,
with a river defending the fourth.
Such fort-like defences were called "burhs",
from which we get the word "borough".
Beginning with his capital, Winchester,
Alfred chose strategic locations - intersecting roads and rivers -
and commissioned 33 of these fortified towns
all across southern England,
from Devon to Kent and as far north as Warwick.
These fortified towns were placed strategically
no more than 40 miles apart,
meaning Alfred's soldiers could be summoned quickly
to defend the nearest town
and the people could take refuge from attack.
With his defences spread across this network of fortified towns,
King Alfred and his kingdom became almost impossible to conquer.
It was nothing less than a masterstroke.
But Alfred's new defences needed another resource.
An army.
Instead of just rallying the men to help him,
Alfred came up with a much more efficient way of doing things.
He basically used a mathematical formula to enable him
to calculate exactly how many men were needed to defend each town,
and it came out at approximately
one man for every four foot of wall.
He was also careful to keep half the men in reserve,
so that if half were committed,
he had the rest waiting fresh to join the fray.
He was organising the military in a way that hadn't been seen
since the time of the Romans.
A new England was emerging under his rule.
Once his kingdom's defences were established,
Alfred was able to realise his other great ambition.
This would come to define his reign
and help earn him the title "Alfred the Great".
Alfred mourned the loss in England of all the culture and art
and literacy that he'd enjoyed in Rome.
And so he summoned, from all across Europe, some of the great scribes -
John, the Old Saxon, from Germany, Grimbald from France
and, significantly, Asser from Wales -
and he had them teach him Latin
so that he could personally supervise the translation
into Old English of the "books most necessary for man to know".
He was building a bridge between Anglo-Saxon England
and the great minds of the classical world.
MONASTIC SINGING
I've come to the Bodleian Library in Oxford
to see evidence of Alfred's determination
to educate and unite his subjects.
This is the oldest surviving book
written entirely in the English language.
It was translated by King Alfred in the early 890s.
It's Pope Gregory's "Pastoral Care"
and it's a guide explaining to the clergy
how they should be looking after the people in their congregations.
It's the best example of Alfred's translations.
It reveals his passion not just for the language,
but also for the nurturing and the care of his subjects.
In the preface, he explains his wider ambition for the project.
He wanted a copy of this to be sent to every bishop in his kingdom.
It was for the benefit of the less well-educated clergy,
those who couldn't read Latin.
Hundreds of years after it was first written,
the wisdom here was still regarded as ESSENTIAL reading for churchmen.
This was the beginning of a new age
of Anglo-Saxon literacy and knowledge.
At court, Alfred established a school
to instruct the children of the nobility
and he required his ealdormen and reeves, the local rulers,
to learn to read on pain of losing their offices.
Here at the Ashmolean Museum, there's another remarkable symbol
of Alfred's eagerness to celebrate the power of learning.
This stunning little object
is about as close to the man
and his beliefs as we're likely to get.
It's called the Alfred Jewel
and it's the most unique item associated with King Alfred himself.
And it is a wonder to behold.
It's beautifully crafted - gold, cloisonne enamel.
Underneath this single piece of highly polished crystal
is a Christ-like image
that's thought to represent learning or wisdom.
It's almost certainly the handle of an aestel,
which is a special pointer.
There would have been a piece of ivory or wood coming out here.
And it's used to point out the individual words,
line by line on a page of manuscript, while reading aloud.
And then worked into the outside
and going all around this teardrop shape are the words, in Old English,
"Alfred ordered me to be made".
This isn't just about love of learning.
It's more than that.
It's the belief that kingship entails the responsibility
to be mindful of the well-being of the people.
And it had an extraordinary consequence.
It unified the languages of the people,
their beliefs and knowledge.
Several disparate kingdoms were coming together as one.
Anglia - England.
Today in Oxford, Dr Katie Tucker is handing over some of the bones
from the unmarked grave
to Professor Tom Higham for radiocarbon dating.
So, how old do you think this is?
This is the big question. OK.
If they're royal House of Wessex
we're hoping they're, well, Saxon. That's 900AD-ish. Mm-hm.
Professor Higham begins by taking a small sample of bone.
He'll test it with a cutting-edge carbon-dating technique.
Of all of the global carbon, a very, very small proportion of it
is what we call radioactive.
About one atom in a trillion atoms of carbon
is radioactive carbon or radiocarbon.
And all of us, all living organisms, take up in food carbon,
which we use to build our bones and build our bodies.
But once death occurs,
the amount of radioactive carbon
begins to slowly decline and disappear.
The key to the dating technique is that we know how rapid this decay is
and so our job is to measure how much radiocarbon there is
and thereby date the bones.
The tiny sample of bone is dissolved in acid
and placed into an accelerator.
Travelling at a speed of 15 million mph,
the carbon is broken down into individual atoms,
one of which is the radioactive carbon-14.
Carbon-14 is what gives scientists the age of the specimen.
But it'll be a couple of weeks before we get the results.
We know that after Alfred's death in 899,
he was buried and exhumed twice,
before being laid to rest in Hyde Abbey.
When the abbey was demolished in the 16th century,
Alfred's coffin remained under the ground
and the land returned to farming.
250 years later,
the story of Alfred's bones took another dramatic turn.
I've come to Hampshire Record Office to find out what happened.
In the late 18th century, interest in King Alfred was growing.
This pamphlet was written by an amateur historian
called Captain Henry Howard.
Howard came to Winchester in 1797
to try to find out what had happened to Alfred's grave.
Howard provides the next piece of the jigsaw puzzle.
About ten years earlier in 1788,
the site of Hyde Abbey had been acquired by the county
for the construction of a different sort of building altogether -
Bridewell, the new town jail.
According to Howard,
the keeper of the jail was a man by the name of Mr Page.
And Mr Page told him that in advance of the building work,
the convicts themselves were brought in
to prepare the ground, to clear the rubble and so forth.
And while they doing that
and while they were digging the foundation trenches,
they also found "a stone coffin cased with lead
"both within and without, and containing some bones
"and remains of garments".
Howard was convinced that Alfred's remains
had been exhumed for the third time.
Howard was appalled by what happened next.
The stone coffin was broken into pieces,
the lead from it was sold for two guineas
and the bones were thrown around.
It seemed likely to Howard that the remains "of the great Alfred,
"after having been scattered about by the rude hands of convicts,
"are now probably covered by a building erected
"for their confinement and punishment".
As well as writing this account of what had happened
to Alfred's remains,
Howard also drew a map,
showing the foundations of the demolished abbey church.
Howard marked the spot where the graves had been
in front of the high altar,
but he had no way of knowing what had happened to the bones
after they were scattered around.
To me, this is the most critical moment
in the extraordinary journey of Alfred's remains after his death.
Reburied somewhere within the foundations of a prison,
they might have been lost now for all time.
In the years after Howard wrote his pamphlet,
national interest in King Alfred continued to grow.
With his famous defence of country, Christianity and education,
Alfred was seen by many Victorians as the perfect English king.
Fuelled by growing national and imperial pride,
they erected statues in his memory.
By this time, the site of Alfred's grave was under the local prison,
but that was demolished too in the 1840s
and the area returned to farmland.
This, though, was the era of great British enthusiasm
for the Anglo-Saxon hero,
and more and more people wanted to find his remains.
One amateur enthusiast came to Winchester in 1866
determined to find Alfred.
His name was John Mellor
and he was captivated by Captain Howard's account
of the desecration of Alfred's grave.
Mellor added a new twist.
He claimed that Mr Page, the keeper of the jail,
had told Captain Howard that he had reburied the bones
from the stone coffin in a vault beside a spring on the site.
Now, Mellor was convinced enough to find the spring
and here is where he started digging.
This memorial garden is built on the site
of the high altar of Hyde Abbey.
These three stones represent the graves of Alfred,
his wife Ealhswith and his son Edward the Elder.
Using Captain Howard's hand-drawn map as a guide,
Mellor claimed he found five skulls and their skeletons.
He was convinced that these were the remains of King Alfred
and his family.
Mellor said he felt he'd "proved beyond the possibility of a doubt"
that he'd found Alfred's remains.
To record his discovery, he took THESE photographs.
But even with photographic evidence,
Mellor wasn't given a warm welcome in Winchester.
All of this activity was scandalous to some.
It was technically illegal as well as sacrilegious
to disturb human remains in this way.
It made the local papers.
One writer, identified as Mr Q,
said that he had visited the site
and had seen "numerous arm bones and skulls and long bones
"lying huddled together in a candle box".
Mellor responded to his critics by publishing a pamphlet of his own.
He insisted that he wanted to "save the bones from further mutilation
"and violence and transfer them to more hallowed ground",
and he invited the people of Winchester to come and view
the bones of their long-lost king.
But in an age before carbon dating,
it was impossible for Mellor to prove
that the remains were indeed Alfred's.
He won little support.
Maybe he was too much of an amateur to be taken seriously.
Mellor went on to sell the bones for just ten shillings.
That's £38 in today's money.
And the buyer?
The Reverend William Williams, vicar of the local parish church,
this church, Saint Bartholomew's in Hyde.
This small church once stood in the grounds of Hyde Abbey.
It's only a few hundred metres from the site of the abbey's high altar.
The Reverend Williams reburied the bones here in this unmarked grave.
Ever since, it's been said that this is the last resting place
of King Alfred the Great.
If these were the remains of Alfred and his family,
then by now they had been exhumed and reburied four times.
But did Mr Page, the keeper of the jail,
really put them back exactly where he found them?
And did John Mellor discover them again nearly a hundred years later?
The bones lay undisturbed in this unmarked grave for nearly 150 years.
But three years ago, a local history group called Hyde900
began the legal process
that would lead to the bones being exhumed and tested.
They'd pieced together all the available historical evidence
and decided to find out once and for all
if the unmarked grave in their local churchyard
really was the final resting place of King Alfred the Great.
Well, that is extraordinary.
Oh... Wow.
It's very moving, actually seeing it in the flesh, so to speak.
It's almost one of those slightly heart-stopping moments.
Circumstantial evidence suggests it might be Alfred and his family,
but, frankly, we don't know and we won't know
until the scientists do their job, but I'm very excited.
Six months after the exhumation, Professor Tom Higham
has finally established the age of the bones from the unmarked grave.
OK, Tom, the radiocarbon dates are back.
You know that we're looking for a date around 900AD.
What have you got?
OK, so these are the results and they're in calendar years.
And what you can see is that four of the five specimens
are actually quite a lot later.
They're in the period of 1300 to about 1420AD.
So, way off? Way off, I'm afraid to say.
There is one that's older but I'm afraid it's not as old as...
as you'd hope.
That's individual C, this single skull here,
and that one is older than those.
It centres on around 1100AD
but I'm afraid it's still not as old as King Alfred's death date.
So the earliest date we've got is a skull that went into the ground
around the time of the building of the Abbey?
Yeah, so around 1110 was Hyde Abbey,
so there's no possibility that
that could be much further... far enough back.
Yeah, I'm afraid I was really disappointed when I saw the results.
I was hoping, like you, that there'd be at least one
in the right ballpark, but unfortunately not.
So, who on earth are they then, these five, six individuals
that all end up bundled together into an unmarked grave?
It seems, unfortunately, these are individuals
either from other graves within the church
or other graves within the precincts of Hyde Abbey,
rather than being from in front of the high altar,
and Alfred and his family.
So, it does make you wonder, where is Alfred?
We now know that the mysterious unmarked grave
in St Bartholomew's churchyard
is NOT the final resting place of Alfred the Great.
It seems that John Mellor was either mistaken or lying
about the identity of the bones he excavated and sold to the church.
This suggests that Alfred's remains are still lying
somewhere near the site of the high altar of Hyde Abbey,
where we know the convicts scattered them
in the late 18th century.
Just as the trail looks like it's gone cold,
there's an extraordinary twist.
Back in 1999, there was a community excavation of the Hyde Abbey site.
They found traces of Mellor's excavation
and what they thought to be animal bones.
These were boxed and stored in Winchester's City Museum.
While waiting for the test results from the unmarked grave,
Dr Katie Tucker decided to see what else the animal bones
from the 1999 dig could tell her about the history of the site.
But when Katie asked the museum for permission to study them,
she was told there were also two boxes of human bones.
Because funding for the community excavation ran out,
they hadn't been fully examined at the time.
Katie decided to examine the bones to find out
if THEY could be the remains of Alfred and his family.
So this is more potential material that could be related
to the royal House of Wessex? Yes,
there's a possibility that any one of these,
or more than one, could be the right date.
And what have we got?
These are the bones that were found closest
to the site of the high altar.
I can see, obviously, leg bones but is this skull material?
Yeah, we have parts of single skull here
that's probably an adult female.
We've got another part of skull here, it might be an adult male
but it's quite fragmentary.
We have parts of a humerus here, so this is the upper arm.
And yes, we have quite a lot of a single individual here -
we've got parts of both arms, the majority of one of the legs,
and part of the other leg.
And then we have here
a part of a male pelvis.
So, in terms of looking for Alfred the Great,
have you had these bones dated?
Yes, we've sent a small fragment of bone
from each of the groups of bone off
and we're now just waiting for Tom Higham.
He's abroad at the moment, but he's hopefully got the results for us
and he's going to join us on the screen.
Conjure him up. OK.
DIALLING TONE
Hi, Tom. Hi, Tom.
'Hi, Katie. Hi, Neil. How are you?'
We're well.
Yeah, pretty good.
'We've got some news - we've got five new dates.
'Three of them fall, once again, to the 1300s period,
'so they're consistent with the previous batch.
'There's one which is a little older bit than that,
'but there's a fifth one - which is this piece of male pelvis -
'that's older than anything we've actually done before.
'And it's actually falling into the late part of the 800s
'and into the 900s AD.'
No! Really?! Fantastic. 'So very, very old indeed.'
You're joking?
So, it's right from the right time for Alfred and family?
'It's bang on the money.' That's fantastic, Tom.
'Great stuff.' Yeah, that's great news. Thank you very much.
'A pleasure. Bye for now.' Bye, Tom.
Well, what do you make of that?
That is unexpected, I would say. But, yeah, very good news.
I was sceptical.
What does it mean, if we add it up, what we've got here?
It's this bone here, isn't it? Yeah, it's the part of the male pelvis.
Um, well...
the part of the pelvis that we have,
it's from a male, from an adult male
in their 40s,
so that would tie in quite well with either Alfred
or his son Edward the Elder.
Um, and, basically, as far as we know,
from the chronicles and from the records,
the only individuals close to the site of the high altar
who are of the right age when they died,
and the right date when they died,
would either be Alfred or Edward.
So, in terms of circumstantial evidence, this is pretty good.
And at the distance that we're reaching back into time
to find the pelvis of a 40-something man
who died around 900-ish
in that location by the high altar in Hyde Abbey,
the likelihood is, or the strong possibility is...
Yes, there's a good chance I would say
because just from the records, who else could it be?
What more would you need, then,
in a court of law, I suppose,
to say conclusively?
Well, really, because we only have that one piece,
there really isn't much else we can do from that.
We haven't got anybody else we could compare it with,
so from that piece of bone
there isn't really anything else that we could do.
However, there is the possibility of going back to the site
to re-excavate.
So more of Alfred or his son, or both, could be there still?
Yeah, there's the potential that in areas that were not excavated
in the '90s, there may still be fragments of bone to be found.
But imagine, even given all of that, the possibility as we stand here,
is that the life and the legend of Alfred the Great
comes down to this enigmatic fragment of bone.
Yeah, it's quite amazing, really, yeah.
This isn't quite the conclusion
the members of Hyde900 had been expecting.
But it's an exciting development in the 1,000-year long story
of Alfred the Great's remains.
I was just very thrilled. I can't tell you.
In fact, I can't tell you. Words can't say.
What's fantastic about it is that we've come full circle,
we've come back to the site of the Hyde Abbey
and we're in the right context.
So I think that's really exciting
and is it not by any means the end of the story.
We've been excited on several occasions through this project,
but it's another very important step. It's taken us
where we perhaps hadn't anticipated being
when we looked for bones from the churchyard,
but it's nonetheless following the story through.
This really is an opportunity for us, working with our partners locally,
to do further excavation on this site to see what else is turned up.
I think it's also important that we seize the opportunity
to convey the wider message about the significance
of Alfred the Great and his era.
CHORAL MUSIC
Alfred the Great was the king who began
the unification of England...
..who fought off the Viking threat...
..and who inspired a cultural renaissance.
Without him, England would be a very different place.
And now we have evidence indicating where his remains might be.
Our investigation has brought us back here to Hyde Abbey
and it seems highly likely that Alfred's remains
are still buried here,
probably close by the site of the high altar.
It's not clear exactly what will happen next.
There may in time be a full-scale
archaeological excavation of the site.
And if that work turns up more of Alfred's remains,
there are those who believe they should then be reburied
with all the ceremony and honour that they deserve.
But if history has taught us anything,
it's that Alfred the Great's best memorial is probably all around us,
the nation that he helped inspire -
England.
-------------------------------------------
Gov. Newsom pushes for new ties with Mexico as Trump fights to build a wall Los Angeles Times - Duration: 7:33.
Gov. Newsom pushes for new ties with Mexico as Trump fights to build a wall Los Angeles Times
As President Trump pushes Mexico further away, declaring a national emergency to force the construction of along the border, Gov. Gavin Newsom and California lawmakers have made clear they want to draw the country closer.
Along with a commitment to reopen a trade office in Mexico City, the governor also plans to revitalize a state commission that would allow California officials to work on issues with their counterparts in Mexican government. And over the course of his first term, Newsom and state Democrats are expected to refocus attention on what they consider the real issues at the heart of the U.S. Mexico relationship: tackling cross border pollution, promoting cultural and educational exchanges, and defending the human rights of all immigrants.
In a state where Latino elected officials have helped to the Trump administration, top California leaders say they see a powerful ally in the states new chief executive. They believe Newsoms more forceful stance on immigration and diplomatic approach to Mexico could help reinvigorate old ties and usher in an era of stronger collaboration, providing a viable alternative to the White Houses approach to relations there and around the world.
The relationship between Mexico and California is not only a political relationship, said Jeronimo Cortina, associate professor of political science at the University of Houston. You have commerce, you have tourism, you have trade. Regardless of what the federal government is doing, as a governor you dont want to lose that relationship.
But whether the state can move beyond the symbolic wins to become an effective model for how to improve and maintain those ties depends on whether Newsom is able to deliver on his promises.
Weeks before he took office, Newsom attended the inauguration of Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, where he first pledged to open a trade office in Mexico City. He and his staffers have not yet released details on the plan or efforts to revive a Commission of the Californias, saying only that it will allow a state delegation and members of the Mexican government to work together on areas of economic, political and cultural concern.
Though most economic, foreign and border policy falls under the purview of the federal government, a governor can lead trade missions abroad, promote investment into state businesses and build alliances with government officials to elevate the states priorities on an international stage.
Two years ago, former Gov. Jerry Brown on climate change, touring China to meet with business leaders and executives just after Trump announced the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris accord. In Mexico, in 2014, Brown signed to develop joint task forces and explore other ways to cooperate in battling wildfires, improving data on air quality and reducing greenhouse emissions.
State lawmakers say Newsom will be key in renegotiating those agreements, which are due to expire soon, and lauded the governors promise to reopen the Mexico City trade office, saying it could expand trade deals, loan agreements and technical assistance in manufacturing, alternative energy, technology and other areas.
But similar proposals for such a state funded office were twice rejected by Brown, who pointed to existing agreements between California and Mexican officials, saying he remained unconvinced the state needed it. Similar foreign offices closed in 2003 amid a recession and criticism from legislators and trade experts who said they doubled services and were ineffective.
Michael Flores, the states secretary of foreign affairs under Gov. Gray Davis, unsuccessfully fought to keep the Mexico office open and contested the claims.
You got to have dialogue, you have to have diplomacy, you have to be talking, he said. If not, there is a vacuum filled with something else the Washington rhetoric.
Injecting new energy into the cross border relationship could be a way to heal divisive rhetoric coming from the Trump administration, state lawmakers and political analysts said. But for California, it isnt just a matter of principles, its economics. Newsoms approach is more persistence of past [state] policies than resistance to [federal] policies now, said Tomas Jimenez, associate professor of sociology at Stanford University.
Mexico is one of the , exporting roughly dollar 26 billion in goods and importing another dollar 46 billion just last year, according to the state Chamber of Commerce. Latino purchasing power has grown to dollar 320 billion since 1990, one Latino advocacy group found, and the state is home to the largest most of whom are here legally people born in Mexico, more than 35 percent of the United States Mexican born population, according to census data and the Public Policy Institute of California.
Against that backdrop, it was Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon D Lakewood and former state Senate leader Kevin de Le and 243;n who first began to chart the states course in confronting Washington, releasing a joint statement the day after the 2016 presidential election declaring California the new keeper of the nations future.
As leaders of a state that is now home to the worlds fifth largest economy, they pledged to defend Californias progressive strides in historic diversity, scientific advancement, economic output, and sense of global responsibility. And as Latinos and representatives of immigrant dense Los Angeles communities, they began reaching out to Mexican leaders and passed legislation designed to counter the presidents call for mass deportations.
In court, they in Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, a former congressman and the son of Mexican immigrants, and Secretary of State Alex Padilla, who challenged Trumps unproven claims of widespread voter fraud and moves to change to , which they say threaten to significantly undercount the states immigrant population.
While Trump tolerance for illegal immigration is cruel and the source of a border crisis, Newsom has dismissed those characterizations as comedy and the theater of the absurd.
He walked on stage at his inauguration just after the music group Los Cenzontles serenaded the crowd with Mexican melodies and his wife, documentary filmmaker Jennifer Siebel Newsom, in both English and Spanish by former U.S. poet laureate Juan Felipe Herrera.
The governor has since state funded healthcare to more young immigrants who are in the country illegally and for nonprofit groups assisting asylum seekers in San Diego. Last week, he of most California National Guard members from the border, realigning the priorities of those left behind to ensure they do not enforce immigration laws.
Not all have praised the efforts. State Sen. Jeff Stone R Temecula called the overall tone of last weeks State of the State address disappointing, saying Newsom seemed more interested in picking a public fight with President Trump than addressing the needs of working California citizens.
To call the Presidents actions to curtail illegal immigration political theater is an insult to the millions of legal immigrants who came into this country legally and work hard every day to make California a better place, Stone said in a written statement.
But others said Newsom was making a smart investment in a young and growing population of Latinos, whose numbers will boost Californias political and purchasing power and serve as an .
California and Mexico previously experienced turbulent relations in the 1980s and 1990s, when the state was a wellspring of anti immigrant rhetoric and measures. Television campaign ads for statewide candidates played on voters anxieties over race and called for increased border security, using images of immigrants streaming across the border from Mexico.
The relationship between the state and its southern neighbor didnt begin to improve until the early 2000s under Gov. Gray Davis, who appointed Flores to serve as a liaison with Mexico.
Wed hear, No, no, Pete Wilson until they realized Davis wasnt Wilson, Flores said, calling the Davis administrations early overtures to Mexican officials difficult.
Under Davis, Mexican Presidents Ernesto Zedillo and Vicente Fox made unprecedented visits to California, the state opened a Mexico City trade office and Sacramento hosted a border governors conference in 2000, with members of U.S. and Mexican states. But the office closed three years later amid a recession and allegations that it took too much credit for deals other partners helped facilitate.
Over the next two decades, state legislators said, relations between California and Mexico though haphazardly organized remained strong as an increasingly diverse Legislature took office. Many members, some of whom began their political involvement in activism against the anti immigrant ballot initiatives of the 90s, took on a new focus: establishing protections for immigrants in the country illegally.
Later, as efforts to overhaul the nations immigration laws collapsed in Congress under the Obama administration, state lawmakers pushed Brown to work more closely with Mexican partners to provide access to drivers licenses, offer college tuition assistance for immigrants without legal status and put distance between immigration enforcement agencies and state and local law enforcement.
After Trumps election, Brown took a to defend immigrants without legal status, signing proposals to expand previous laws on immigration enforcement and fund legal services. But he was circumspect in his speech and actions.
Some lawmakers say their Mexican counterparts have started in the Trump era to echo the same concerns once heard under Wilson.
We spend more time than we need to with our peers across the border trying to convince them, Its not us, its not us, Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins D San Diego said.
With a new federal administration in Mexico, some lawmakers say they believe Newsom will do more to open lines of communication.
The governor is extremely influential in this discourse, state Sen. Ben Hueso D San Diego said. What resources and time and attention he plans to apply to this is going to be very important. Its going to be interesting for us to see and also send a message internationally about what this governors feelings are toward Mexico.
Rendon, legislators in his chamber and others including Mexican Consul General Liliana Ferrer already have been working on the California Mexico Strategic Dialogue initiative to develop the working relationship among officials. In April, members will take on cross border pollution, including cleaning up sewage and waste in the Tijuana River near San Diego and the New River, which cuts through Imperial County.
I wanted to make sure we went beyond the grip and grin meetings that didnt have any impact on policy, Rendon said. It initially had nothing to do with Trump, he said, but the state has filled the vacuum.
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나이가 가장 많아 보이는 사람은 누구? ► Skills for Life - Duration: 3:37.
For more infomation >> 나이가 가장 많아 보이는 사람은 누구? ► Skills for Life - Duration: 3:37. -------------------------------------------
Detroit Lions: Jon Gruden, Raiders an 'excellent choice' for 'Hard Knocks' - Duration: 6:53.
CONNECTTWEETLINKEDINCOMMENTEMAILMOREThey can't say no, no matter how much they'd want to, so the Detroit Lions have taken to promoting another team for the HBO series "Hard Knocks
"Both Lions coach Matt Patricia and general manager Bob Quinn joked at a forum for season ticket holders Monday that the Oakland Raiders would be an ideal fit for the reality series that goes behind the scenes of an NFL training camp
"I think Jon Gruden is an excellent choice for that show," Patricia said. "I think the Oakland Raiders and everything they've got going on right now would be fantastic viewing for everybody to watch
"The Lions and Raiders are two of five teams that can be compelled to take part in a series that got its start way back in 2001
Dec 16, 2018; Cincinnati, OH, USA; Oakland Raiders head coach Jon Gruden takes the field for warmups prior to the game against the Cincinnati Bengals at Paul Brown Stadium
Mandatory Credit: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports (Photo: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports)The Lions have never appeared on the show, but the Raiders, playing their final season in Oakland before moving to Las Vegas, with the No
4 pick in the draft and a big personality in Gruden, are considered the more attractive option for TV
4th & MONDAY:Our NFL newsletter always brings the blitzWHO WILL GET KYLER MURRAY?Teams that could draft Heisman winnerThe NFL exempts teams from appearing on "Hard Knocks" if they have a new coach, if they've made the playoffs in either of the last two seasons, or if they've appeared on the show at some point in the last 10 years
Only the Lions, Raiders, New York Giants, San Francisco 49ers and Washington don't fall into one of those categories
"Nobody wants to do it," Quinn said. "Except Oakland."Patricia joked that he wouldn't want to take part in the show because "I would get a lot of phone calls from my mom at night
" But there are more practical reasons why the Lions want to keep cameras away, too
The last three teams to appear on "Hard Knocks" have finished with losing records, and Quinn said the show can give opponents valuable insight into scheme and personnel
"One of my guys in scouting watches that show," Quinn said. "If we're playing them that year, we DVR that show, we watch that show, we might glean a little thing about a personnel matter or a scheme thing
That's something that other teams always do. I know we do it, we did it at our previous team (the New England Patriots), I've done it here
So it's real."Is it going to be a matter of a win and loss? I'm not sure, but we take the stuff that we do behind our doors pretty privately and pretty securely so that's something that definitely is a factor
"The Lions play the Raiders – and Giants and Washington – this fall.Follow Dave Birkett on Twitter @davebirkettFacebookTwitterGoogle+LinkedInNFL mock draft: Post-Super Bowl edition Fullscreen Posted!A link has been posted to your Facebook feed
1. Cardinals - Nick Bosa, DE, Ohio State Matthew Emmons, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen2
49ers - Quinnen Williams, DT, Alabama Brett Davis, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen3. Jets - Josh Allen, DE/OLB, Kentucky Jasen Vinlove, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen4
Raiders - Clelin Ferrell, DE, Clemson Matthew Emmons, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen5
Buccaneers - Byron Murphy, CB, Washington Jennifer Buchanan, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen6
Giants - Dwayne Haskins, QB, Giants Aaron Doster, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen7. Jaguars - Drew Lock, QB, Missouri Denny Medley, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen8
Lions - Greedy Williams, CB, LSU Matthew Emmons, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen9. Bills - Jonah Williams, OT, Alabama Jason Getz, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen10
Broncos - Daniel Jones, QB, Duke Steve Mitchell, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen11. Bengals - Cody Ford, OT, Oklahoma Kevin Jairaj, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen12
Packers - Jachai Polite, DE/OLB, Florida Bryan Lynn, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen13
Dolphins - Rashan Gary, DE, Michigan Rick Osentoski, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen14
Falcons - Ed Oliver, DT, Houston Troy Taormina, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen15. Redskins - Kyler Murray, QB, Oklahoma Jasen Vinlove, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen16
Panthers - Montez Sweat, DE/OLB, Mississippi State Vasha Hunt, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen17
Browns - D.K. Metcalf, WR, Mississippi Mark Zerof, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen18. Vikings - Jeffery Simmons, DT, Mississippi State Douglas DeFelice, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen19
Titans - Brian Burns, DE/OLB, Florida State Melina Myers, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen20
Steelers - Devin White, LB, LSU Mark J. Rebilas, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen21. Seahawks - Zach Allen, DE, Boston College Greg M
Cooper, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen22. Ravens - Marquise Brown, WR, Oklahoma Kevin Jairaj, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen23
Texans - Jawaan Taylor, OT, Florida Bryan Lynn, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen24. Raiders - T
J. Hockenson, TE, Iowa Jesse Johnson, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen25. Eagles - Dexter Lawrence, DT, Clemson Jerome Miron, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen26
Colts - Kelvin Harmon, WR, North Carolina State Mark Konezny, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen27
Raiders - Deandre Baker, CB, Georgia Kim Klement, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen28. Chargers - Devin Bush, LB, Michigan Kirthmon F
Dozier, Detroit Free Press-USA TODAY SportsFullscreen29. Chiefs - Nasir Adderley, S, Delaware Chuck Cook, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen30
Packers - Noah Fant, TE, Iowa Jesse Johnson, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen31. Rams - Deionte Thompson, S, Alabama Jason Getz, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen32
Patriots - Christian Wilkins, DT, Clemson Matthew Emmons, USA TODAY SportsFullscreen Interested in this topic? You may also want to view these photo galleries:Replay1 of 322 of 323 of 324 of 325 of 326 of 327 of 328 of 329 of 3210 of 3211 of 3212 of 3213 of 3214 of 3215 of 3216 of 3217 of 3218 of 3219 of 3220 of 3221 of 3222 of 3223 of 3224 of 3225 of 3226 of 3227 of 3228 of 3229 of 3230 of 3231 of 3232 of 32AutoplayShow ThumbnailsShow CaptionsLast SlideNext Slide CONNECTTWEETLINKEDINCOMMENTEMAILMORE
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For Some 2020 Democrats, Rejection of Amazon Aligns With Far Left Policy Views The New York Times - Duration: 5:36.
For Some 2020 Democrats, Rejection of Amazon Aligns With Far Left Policy Views The New York Times
By and
The decision by Amazon this week to abandon its planned headquarters in New York City tapped into one of the major themes of left wing Democrats: that giant corporations — and in some cases the billionaires who run them — must be held to account for wage inequality, corporate greed and middle class stagnation.
And some contenders and would be contenders for the partys 2020 presidential nomination were quick to take a victory lap over the retailers sudden reversal.
The economic incentives offered the company amounted to no more than taxpayer bribes, said Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, who accused Amazon of holding American democracy hostage.
. – one of the wealthiest companies on the planet – just walked away from billions in taxpayer bribes, all because some elected officials in New York arent sucking up to them enough. How long will we allow giant corporations to hold our democracy hostage?
Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, to tax companies that he says underpay employees, congratulated New Yorkers for standing up to the power of Amazon.
Their blunt condemnation of Amazon underscores the extent to which this has become an animating issue for the far left. And their reaction is one act in a broader set of 2020 issues for progressive Democrats that includes the Green New Deal, which proposes far reaching federal intervention in the economy to tackle climate change, and the determination to rein in leviathan tech companies, whose founders have lost their luster as heroes of a new economy.
Candidates and potential candidates perceived as more centrist did not immediately weigh in, reflecting one of the fault lines in a Democratic Party wrestling over who is the best standard bearer to suit up for a coming titanic struggle with President Trump. Some candidates, like Senators Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kamala Harris of California, have deeper connections to tech companies.
The views of centrists may have been channeled by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York, for putting their own narrow political interests above their community.
[Check out the Democratic field .]
The on Thursday meant the companys promise of 25,000 jobs in New York City would be unfulfilled over opposition to the city and states offer of dollar 3 billion in tax incentives, which highlighted the practice of luring businesses to states and cities with promises of big tax breaks.
There are large questions philosophically about whether taxpayers should give billions of dollars to billionaires, said Gordon Hintz, the Democratic minority leader of the Wisconsin State Assembly, who is a critic of a state deal in 2017 to with dollar 4 billion in taxpayer subsidies.
Theres frustration in the public right now where wealth is being concentrated, the opportunities for economic mobility are lower, and they see the people who receive these deals seemingly unconcerned with their reality, he added.
Wisconsin, a battleground state that Mr. Trump narrowly won in 2016 as part of his appeal to white blue collar voters, is certain to be a crossroads of national Democratic contenders ahead of 2020, as they try to win back some of those voters and excite others who stayed home. That Mr. Trump played a role in the Foxconn deal — and jumped in again recently when the Taiwan based company wavered — is a ready made target for Democrats inclined to criticize corporate giveaways.
Mr. Hintz said the issue played a role in of Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican.
Even as New York sent Amazon packing, other cities and regions renewed their courtship of the company. On Thursday, Newark officials sent a courier in red to deliver a giant heart shaped card to the company bearing the Valentines Day message that the city and New Jersey still love u, Amazon!
[Make sense of the people, issues and ideas ]
Mr. Booker, who is seeking the Democratic nomination, has made no comment on the deal. A Democratic county chairman in Iowa, Kurt Meyer, who put Mr. Booker up overnight on a recent swing through the state, predicted that criticisms of large corporations would feature in appeals to the party base there, which is more progressive than in many states. Iowas dollar 208 million in incentives for an Apple data center near Des Moines with just 50 jobs was debated in last years midterm elections.
I suspect the issue will be exploited extensively in Iowa, due in part to our vague but distinct sense of economic insecurity, which, while unrelated to Amazon and Apple, is pretty dry tinder, Mr. Meyer said.
At a CNN town hall in Iowa last month, Ms. Harris was asked if the existence of multibillionaires was morally defensible. She replied that was unconscionable for giving breaks to corporations and those in the top 1 percent but excluding working families.
Amazons decision to cancel its deal with New York also comes at a time when prominent Democratic lawmakers in Washington are crafting legislation and advocating policies that could constrain or even break up large technology companies.
In the past two years, big scandals in the technology sector have made privacy and the security of social media networks hotly debated issues. Russian entities used Facebooks network to try and influence the 2016 presidential election. The revealed that Facebook users data had been misused.
Senator Amy Klobuchar, a Minnesota Democrat and candidate for president, is sponsoring a bill about who is paying for online political advertising. Ms. Warren supports antitrust policies. Mr. Sanderss Stop BEZOS Act, named for the chief executive of Amazon, Jeff Bezos, would tax corporations whose low wage workers find it necessary to rely on food stamps and government health care benefits.
The push to step up regulation may have support among the public. In a Pew Research , 55 percent of the respondents said technology companies had too much power and influence, compared with 37 percent who said the firms had the right amount.
But not every party official believes in shaming corporate chieftains and corporations.
In northeast Ohio, Representative Tim Ryan, a Democrat with the shutdown of a plant making the Chevrolet Cruze, on Friday imploring Amazon to build a second headquarters there.
Mr. Ryan, in an interview, predicted that everyone at the basketball game he planned to attend Friday night at Howland High School, where his daughter is a cheerleader, would be talking about how to lure Amazon and its jobs to the area.
Ohio is a swing state that Democrats, including Senator Sherrod Brown, who is weighing a presidential bid, would like to win back in 2020.
It doesnt serve us well to be hostile to business in general, Mr. Ryan said. We need them. We cant reverse climate change. We cant rebuild manufacturing. We cant retool work force development without a partnership with the free enterprise system.
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This Guys Amazing San Jose P0lice Chief Praises UPS Driver For Purposely Driving Slow During Pursui - Duration: 3:10.
This Guys Amazing San Jose P0lice Chief Praises UPS Driver For Purposely Driving Slow During Pursui
Investigation into Deadly Police Standoff in SJ Continues
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As authorities continue looking into the deadly standoff in San Jose, the UPS driver who was held hostage for hours is hailed as a hero by police. Ian Cull reports.
The San Jose police chief on Friday praised the actions of the UPS driver taken hostage by an armed carjacker, who was eventually shot and killed Thursday by authorities on city streets.
The UPS driver purposely drove slowly over spikes to stop the vehicle, according to San Jose Police Chief Eddie Garcia. In order to keep police on their trail, the driver said he told the hijacker that UPS box trucks could only go 50 miles an hour.
"This guys amazing, I really need to give him an application or something," Garcia said at a news conference Friday. "He purposely drove over the spike strips ... they actually wanted him to drive faster and he lied and told them the UPS truck couldn"t go over 50 miles per hour because he didn"t want the police to lose the truck."
The chase began late Thursday afternoon after a sheriff deputy approached a suspicious SUV illegally parking by the Ohlone Chynoweth VTA light rail station.
Mark Morasky and a female suspect identified by police as 24 year old Joanna Macy Rogers were inside the vehicle and they took off as soon as they recognized the approaching deputy. Officers later relocated the vehicle nearby and thats when thewoman fired one shot at the sheriffs deputy vehicle.
Authorities said the woman shot at officers at least three more times during the pursuit along Highway 87.
The SUV exited onCurtner Avenue and the suspects abandoned their vehicle. Thats when they spotted the UPS driver walking, and forced him at gunpoint to get into his box truck and drive, according to Garcia.
San Jose police then joined sheriffs deputies in the chase. The UPS driver eventually took the exit on Skyport Drive and the pursuit turned into an intense standoff on North First Street and Trimble Road.
A dispatch call from thestandoffconfirmed what friends of the suspect told law enforcement officials, that he didnt want to live through the confrontation with officers.
"The suspect also said that he wanted to die tonight," an officer can be heard telling the dispatch center in the call before Morasky was eventually shot and killed by police after he ran from aUPS truck he allegedly hijacked with a shotgun.
Several of Moraskys friends had been talking with him on the phone, trying to calm the situation.
"He was scared," friend Amanda Bazzani said. "He called me and said, I love you, Im in a standoff. And then he was saying goodbye, and I was like, No, no, dont say that."
Macy Rogers was released from the UPS box truck and taken into custody, according to officials. The unidentified UPS driver who was taken hostage was safely released.
Chief Garcia said Macy Rogers was charged withattempted murder, car jacking, kidnapping and shooting at occupied vehicles.
Morasky ran out of the truck with a shotgun and was shot by a San Jose police officer. Investigators later made a grim discovery in the SUV Morasky and Macy Rogers were driving. "They had the loaded shotgun of course, additional shotgun shells, but also duct tape, a machete and zip ties." Sheriff Laurie Smith said.
Morasky was on parole from armed robbery and carjacking charges. He was sentenced to five years in prison, and served four years in 2012, according to Garcia.
The officer who shot and killed Morasky has been placed on paid administrative leave. Internal Affairs and the District Attorneys office continue to investigate the incident.
SUICIDE PREVENTION HELP: The National Suicide Prevention Hotline 1 800 273 8255 is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
+ showMoreText +
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Preparing for a day when treatments come - Duration: 7:33.
I have a question to ask you today, and the obvious answer isn't necessarily the answer
I'm looking for.
My question is, how ready are you for the day when they find a cure?
And I'm guessing your immediate reaction is, are you kidding?
I'm ready.
Bring it on.
If there's a cure, give it to me today.
Now, of course, you know and I know that if you're dealing mild cognitive impairment,
there isn't a pill your doctor can give you right now.
But treatments are coming, probably sooner than later.
And I've been thinking about that a lot lately.
Because of a health scare I just went through with my own father, who you see here.
I learned a valuable lesson from that.
Yes, medicine is what a doctor gives you.
But how well that medicine works can depend a lot of on how ready you are to get it.
Just ask my dad.
Hi, I'm Tony Dearing of GoCogno.com, the website for people with mild cognitive impairment.
If you've been watching my videos any time now, you may know my story.
My mother developed cognitive impairment, progressed to a less common form of dementia
known as FTD, and about four years ago, we lost her.
I still miss her every day, and everything thing I do to educate people about brain health
and the prevention of dementia is done in honor of her memory.
Since mom passed away, my father lives alone now on the horse farm they retired to.
He's 83, and fortunately, he is, as they like to say, sharp as a tack.
Unfortunately, in early December he fell in the driveway and he broke his hip.
You're probably aware that for someone of that age, a broken hip can be calamitous.
It can be the beginning of a downward spiral that they never really recover from.
I'm happy to say that dad is doing great.
Here's a recent picture of him with my brother-in-law, and he looks good.
After a short time in a rehab facility, they sent him home in time to celebrate Christmas
at his house, and a few weeks after that, he was even driving again.
His doctors and his therapists are kind of amazed.
His physical therapist told you, "You know, most people your age never really recover
from this."
But there's a reason that he's doing as well as he is.
A few years ago, my father was not doing well.
He was experiencing a lot of back pain, he was having trouble getting around.
He was becoming, and I hate to use this word, but it was true, he was becoming frail.
And he knew he needed to do something about it.
So he started going to the gym, and working with a personal trainer who specializes in
working with people his age.
And a little while after he started, I was talking to him and I said, so how's your personal
trainer?
And he said, "I hate that man.
He is a torturer."
He was joking.
Kind of.
This personal trainer was pushing him, and getting him to do things he didn't think he
could do, pushing through certain amounts of pain to get him into a position where he
was stronger and more mobile and more able.
What my father didn't realize at the time, is that he was getting ready to recover from
a broken hip.
In fact, last week, he was back to the gym, resuming his regular exercise.
So I think you've figured out where I'm going with this.
Let's translate it to cognitive impairment.
If you've got MCI, a doctor can't put you on the operating table and fix that.
Can't give you a pill and make it go away.
Instead, your doctor is talking to you about lifestyle changes, exercise, diet, sleep,
stress reduction.
Someday, a doctor will be able to offer you more.
Most experts think there's going to be a single blockbuster drug for either mild cognitive
impairment or Alzheimer's.
More likely, it's going to be treated the way things like heart disease or AIDS are,
with a combination of two or three or four medicines, and improvements in lifestyle.
When the "cure" comes, your doctor is still going to be telling you to do the same kinds
of things your doctor is telling you to do right now.
These aren't thing you're supposed to do until there are treatments.
They are part of the treatment, the part that's available now.
Realistically, we can expect to see the first treatments coming possibly sometime in the
next three to five years.
Now that is not soon enough.
But given a condition like mild cognitive impairment and how slowly it progresses, the
is not impossibly far away.
I've just come back from two days at one of the leading medical centers in the world,
where scientists are immersed in research on cognitive impairment.
And I will tell you what.
These people are working their asses off to find a cure.
And there's work you can do too, to give yourself the best possible chance of slowing or perhaps
even stabilizing your cognitive loss, and putting yourself in the position to get the
maximum benefit from treatments if and when they become available.
Their message to you is, we're working on it, and we believe treatments are coming.
Let your message to them be, ready when you are.
Thanks for joining me today.
I look forward to seeing you again next week.
Until then, as always, be kind to your mind.
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Arjen Robben claims Liverpool was 'the worst stadium' for him ahead of Bayern's CL visit - Duration: 4:00.
One of the greatest wingers to ever grace the game, Arjen Robben, will be leaving Bayern Munich at the end of the season after a decade at the German giants
The 35-year-old - known for his famous 'cut inside' from the right flank - has played with the very best from the English, Spanish and German top flights and has a rather handsome trophy return to go along with his impressive club resume
Robben has managed to pick up one La Liga with Real Madrid, two Premier League titles with Chelsea and an astonishing seven Bundesliga's as well as a Champions League with Bayern
The former Dutch-international will not feature for the Bavarians in their up and coming Champions League game against Liverpool due to injury
It's the first time in recent memory that Liverpool have had a better domestic campaign than their German opponents, yet Robben believes Liverpool have always posed a huge threat - predominantly in European competition - especially when looking back at his time with Chelsea
"At that time [Liverpool] were really capable of being this cup fighter team, also in the FA Cup or [League] Cup," the Bayern winger told the Guardian
"In one or two games they could really live up to it and perform; just not the whole season, which was maybe too much
"That was their biggest quality: they were there at the moment they needed to be there," he added
Robben went on to admit something that will fill Liverpool fans with hope ahead of their European clash, with the Dutchman having played at grounds such as the Nou Camp and Old Trafford, his views on Anfield may surprise a few
"I think, if you ask [about] the worst stadium for me, it's probably Liverpool, "You always have your favourite opponent and there always has to be a negative one
" Robben has even called it "the worst possible draw" for Bayern, despite the likes of Barcelona, Paris Saint-Germain, Real Madrid and Manchester City still being in the competition
If you delve deeper into Robben's history with Liverpool then it does become a lot clearer
He was at Anfield for Champions League semi-final defeats in both the 2004/05 and 2006/07 season
The first being that infamous Luis Garcia 'ghost' goal, with the latter being a painful penalty shootout defeat, in which Robben saw his spot-kick saved by Pepe Reina
The former Madrid man not only thinks that Liverpool were a threat during his spell in the Premier League but believes that Jurgen Klopp has set them up to be even more prepared for success
"Now I think it changed and they developed really well," Robben added. "The manager has done a great job
"Last year they were in the Champions League final and at the moment they are top [of the Premier League]
"It's a long, long time ago that they won the league and that's the one they're dreaming of
"
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✅ Breaking News - H Kane ready to make FA Cup history for League One Doncaster Rovers - Duration: 2:50.
H Kane is ready to make FA Cup history - and for once it's not Tottenham and England star Harry taking centre stage
Doncaster Rovers midfielder Herbie Kane, a talented youngster on loan from Liverpool, will be key if his League One side are to reach the quarter-finals for the first time in their history against Crystal Palace
Kane has been tipped for the top by his idol and former youth coach at Anfield, Steven Gerrard, who wrote about him in positive terms in his autobiography
Share this article Share 'When I heard about that, I went out and got the book straight away - so did my Nan!' reveals Kane
'For someone of that stature to mention you, it was a shock and obviously very pleasing
I'm a box-to-box midfielder so he was someone I have always looked up to.'As for his famous namesake, Kane adds: 'I've seen Harry once at St George's Park (when Herbie was preparing for an England under-17s game)
I think he was getting an ice bath!''I don't regard my initials as fortunate or unfortunate
There is nothing I can do about it!'Kane, 20, has scored seven goals in 36 games for Doncaster this season and signed a new three-year contract with Liverpool last month
Ironically, he's outlasted them in the cup and is adamant he wouldn't swap a sixth-round tie for a warm weather training camp in Marbella where Jurgen Klopp's players have gone
Indeed, he is the last remaining Liverpool player in this season's FA Cup.Rovers boss Grant McCann enthuses: 'Herbie has been the best attacking midfielder in our division
We did well to keep him in January because five or six Championship clubs were interested
'Credit to Herbie, he wanted to finish the job here and Liverpool also wanted him to stay
I think he'll cope fine with a big game live on television. He's very grounded.'Doncaster's chances of causing an upset have been boosted by Palace having to travel without the suspended Wilfried Zaha
For the record, the 'other' Kane has scored three times against Palace for Tottenham
Share this article Share
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A Simple Blood Test that Can Save Your Life | Blood Test for Pregnancy at Home - Duration: 1:58.
a simple blood test that can save your life
c-reactive protein is a protein produced by the liver and found in the blood the
level of CRP rises when the body suffers inflammation the American Heart
Association categorizes the levels of CRP as follows low HSC RP less than one
point 0 milligrams / L moderate HSC RP between one point 0 milligrams / L minus
3 point 0 milligrams / L high HSC RP higher than 3 point 0 milligrams / L
inflammation in itself is not a serious problem typically it occurs in response
to trauma illness or infection in such cases inflammation may manifest in
various forms such as hives rashes a sprained ankle or a sore throat a CRP
test is a simple blood test that could measure your body's inflammation level
based on the level of CRP in your blood this information could be crucial to
identifying a hidden health risk that standard and even specialized checkups
often miss several studies have found that abnormal CRP levels can be an early
warning sign of trouble while and elevated CRP level is by no means
concrete proof of cancer it is a crucial indicator that could direct to high-risk
individual to a diagnosis a CRP blood test could be useful in successfully
predicting the early progression of rheumatoid arthritis and inflammatory
autoimmune disease if you liked the video give us a thumb and subscribe to
our Channel thanks for watching and please share with friends
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Bill Weld Will Challenge Trump for 2020 Republican Nomination The New York Times - Duration: 3:39.
Bill Weld Will Challenge Trump for 2020 Republican Nomination The New York Times
William F. Weld, the maverick former governor of Massachusetts, announced on Friday that he would form an exploratory committee to challenge President Trump for the Republican Partys 2020 nomination, presenting himself as a dissident voice in a political party that has abandoned its mainstream roots.
[Make sense of the people, issues and ideas ]
Mr. Weld, 73, is the first Republican to announce he will run against the president. But Mr. Weld is unlikely to pose a major threat to Mr. Trump and he is in some ways an incongruous figure to leap into the presidential fray. Mr. Weld is a moderate Republican who ran for vice president in 2016 on the Libertarian ticket. His candidacy might be more of an act of protest than a conventional national campaign.
But appearing in New Hampshire, Mr. Weld called it a moral duty to stand against the hard heart, closed mind and clenched fist of nativism and nationalism.
I hope to see the Republican Party assume once again the mantle of being the party of Lincoln, Mr. Weld said, . It upsets me that our energies as a society are being sapped by the presidents culture of divisiveness of Washington.
He continued: We cannot sit passively as our precious democracy slips quietly into darkness.
Mr. Weld had made little secret in recent months of his interest in challenging Mr. Trump in 2020, either by running for the Libertarian Partys nomination or by contesting the Republican presidential primaries. He met repeatedly with Republicans organizing opposition to the president, and earlier this month he was reported to have changed his voter registration back to Republican.
Several other Republicans are contemplating challenges to Mr. Trump in the primaries, including Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland and former Gov. John Kasich of Ohio. Mr. Trumps aides have taken the threat of a primary challenge seriously enough to undertake a close review of and to begin scrutinizing state party chairs and potential convention delegates for political loyalty.
But Mr. Trump and his allies have largely declined to go after potential primary rivals in public, trusting that his solid approval ratings with Republicans will insulate him and declining to issue vocal attacks that could have the effect of elevating a challenger.
Mr. Weld, a former federal prosecutor from a prominent Boston family, has spent most of his career as the kind of Republican that used to dominate politics across the Northeast. A fiscal conservative who has long supported gay rights and abortion rights, Mr. Weld could have some appeal to moderate Republicans who feel alienated from their party as it continues to swing far to the right.
But partisan Republicans also have ample reason to regard Mr. Weld with suspicion. He endorsed Barack Obama for president in 2008 over John McCain, before flipping back to the Republican side in 2012 when his friend and longtime ally, Mitt Romney, was the G.O.P. nominee.
Mr. Weld then backed Jeb Bush in the 2016 Republican primaries, before defecting to the Libertarian Party to become the running mate of Gary Johnson, the former governor of New Mexico. The two won a little over 3 percent of the vote.
Mr. Weld explained his decision to run that year as a function of his horror over Mr. Trumps candidacy, comparing Mr. Trumps rhetoric about immigration to .
It is no accident that Mr. Weld unveiled his tentative plan to run for president in New Hampshire, where there is still a sizable community of Republican centrists and independent voters are permitted to vote in partisan primaries.
Mr. Weld has some experience with insurgent presidential primary challenges in New Hampshire. In 1992, as a fresh faced governor from next door, Mr. Weld campaigned in the state to help President George H.W. Bush turn back a challenge from Pat Buchanan, a hard right nationalist in the mold of Mr. Trump. Mr. Bush defeated Mr. Buchanan, but the conservative commentators showing in New Hampshire helped sustain his activist campaign nationally and hobbled the presidents re election.
A New Hampshire contest between Mr. Trump and Mr. Weld would effectively reverse the roles from 1992 — with the fire breathing immigration hawk as president, and the low key aristocrat as his gadfly challenger.
Cassie Smedile, a spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee, dismissed Mr. Weld and any other challengers who might emerge, citing Mr. Trumps popularity with Republicans and his long list of incredible accomplishments for conservatives and the country.
The R.N.C. and the Republican Party are firmly behind the president, she said. Any effort to challenge the presidents nomination is bound to go absolutely nowhere.
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Liverpool news: Jurgen Klopp to ask for signings after frustrating January window - Duration: 4:36.
The Reds had a frustrating January window, with Liverpool failing to bring anyone in
Liverpool sold Dominic Solanke to Bournemouth with Nathaniel Clyne also heading to the Cherries on loan
And according to The Sun, Klopp wants defensive reinforcements this summer. They say the Reds boss wanted cover at the back in January, however, Liverpool failed to get any deals over the line
Klopp is keen to land a new centre-half to provide cover for first-choice Virgil van Dijk and Joe Gomez
Liverpool are in the midst of a defensive crisis, with Gomez, Dejan Lovren and Trent Alexander-Arnold all sidelined
The Reds sat four points clear at the top of the Premier League last week, however, Manchester City have turned it around
City sit top on goal difference after beating Arsenal and Everton since last Sunday
A lot has been made of Klopp's team losing their advantage, with Liverpool hero John Aldridge slamming two Reds stars
"Klopp's side dropped more points at West Ham, but a bigger issue for me in both games has been the performance or lack of it from Liverpool's midfielders," he said
"Salah, Mane and Firmino will give you a cutting edge if the balance of the team is right, but the players sitting behind them at West Ham failed to produce the goods and it cost Liverpool
"I know Klopp was forced into changes due to injuries, but Adam Lallana and Naby Keita cannot play together in midfield again, as they are just not up to the job for a title-winning team
"My first impressions of Lallana when he came to Liverpool were not positive and while he proved me wrong to an extent with some good performances before his recent injury problems
"It looks like he is struggling to get back to those levels once again after so long in the treatment room
"As for Keita, he has not settled at Liverpool and has failed to deliver the performances we were expecting from him, with Klopp and his coaching staff fighting to get him up to speed and still waiting to see if he will be good enough to play in this team
" Liverpool face Bournemouth on Saturday afternoon at Anfield in the Premier League
Pep Guardiola lays down challenge to Liverpool Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has challenged title rivals Liverpool to respond after they went top of the Premier League for the first time in two months
A 2-0 win at Everton, thanks to goals in added time at the end of each half from Aymeric Laporte and substitute Gabriel Jesus, lifted them above their title rivals on goal difference, having played one match more
"It's a question for them. We are leaders. Twelve games to play, a lot of points," said Guardiola when asked what his side going top of the table meant
"Now comes a big test, a big goal. Chelsea are an exceptional team who have had seven days to prepare
"We have to prepare well. It really is a final for us this weekend. If we are able to take these points, it is a huge step forward
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