Thứ Sáu, 27 tháng 10, 2017

News on Youtube Oct 28 2017

North Korea developing 'DEVIL'S VENOM' to wipe out United States

US experts are warning there is evidence Kim Jong-un's regime is producing the volatile liquid to power intercontinental missiles (ICBMs) capable of reaching the US mainland.

The hermit kingdom used to import the propellant, whose scientific name is unsymmetrical di-methyl-hydrazine (UDMH), from China and Russia. But recent UN sanctions slapped on the country last month mean its imports have dried up.

Jeffrey Lewis, the director of the East Asia Non-proliferation programme at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, California, warned North Korea could easily have produced stockpiles of the fuel.

"North Korea is hardly so backwards that UDMH production would come as a surprise" Jeffrey Lewis He said: "North Korea is hardly so backwards that UDMH production would come as a surprise.

"Over the years, a variety of liquid and solid rocket propellants have been found in seized cargoes from North Korea." And the toxic fuel is so dangerous that the United States stopped using it years ago, with space agency NASA even issuing a warning about it.

UDMH was also the fuel used in the Soviet Union rocket disaster in 1960 that killed at least 124 people.

Ankit Panda, the Asia analyst at The Diplomat said yesterday: "Nothing about [North Korea's] missile testing patterns suggests they're vulnerable to supply shocks from an overseas supplier, be it China or Russia, cutting them off.

"All signs point to a domestic propellant and oxidizer manufacturing base that's sufficient to fuel its own missiles." It comes as North Korea said its threat to carry out a huge nuclear test of the Pacific Ocean should be taken "literally".

The foreign minister is very well aware of the intentions of our supreme leader, so I think you should take his words literally, Ri Yong Pil, a senior diplomat in North Koreas Foreign Ministry said this week.

For more infomation >> North Korea developing 'DEVIL'S VENOM' to wipe out United States - Duration: 3:03.

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Deputy Secretary Sullivan At Reception in Support of United States' Bid to Host 2023 World's Fair - Duration: 10:39.

MS NAUERT: Hi.

Good afternoon.

Welcome, everyone, to the State Department.

And if I may have your attention for just a moment, please.

Isn't this such a beautiful center?

It is incredible.

Often, I walk through this center on my way in to work and it's pretty sparsely populated,

so it's wonderful to see so many people in here this afternoon.

Thank you so much for joining us today.

I want to extend a special welcome to our many distinguished guests, including the Diplomatic

Corps and those from the great state of Minnesota.

Where are all the Minnesotans here?

(Applause.)

Raise your hand if you're from Minnesota.

You're from Minnesota, you're from Minnesota, you're from – my husband's from Minnesota.

(Laughter.)

We have a lot of great folks there.

Do you all know how nice Minnesotans are?

You've heard it?

You've heard "Minnesota nice?"

Let me tell you how nice these folks are.

I would go running sometimes in Minnesota with my husband in the middle of winter – January,

February – and we'd be on along for a run, and it's maybe 15 degrees outside,

Fahrenheit, and people would smile and they would say hello at you.

In the middle of winter while you're running.

So we hope that you will consider Minnesota.

We are big fans of it certainly here at the State Department.

I would like to acknowledge the U.S. Diplomacy Center for allowing us to use this space today.

It is a beautiful pavilion.

It was completed last January and funded with private donations as part of a private-public

partnership.

It will be home to the first museum and educational center telling the story of U.S. diplomacy

and also American's diplomats.

We're here today to highlight the strong national support enjoyed by Minnesota-USA

bid to host Expo 2023 and to inspire member-states of the Bureau of International Expositions

to vote for the U.S. bid on November the 15th.

Please, mark your calendars.

We would love your vote.

(Applause.)

Thank you.

The Minnesota-USA project is private-public partnership that started more than two years

ago and is a part of our global campaign to bring a World's Fair back to the United

States.

We would love to see that.

I would like to thank the Office of the Under Secretary for Public Affairs and Public Diplomacy

for coordinating the State Department's efforts and putting today's event together.

I know they have been hard at work at this.

An initiative of this magnitude requires a true champion to advocate on its behalf.

Our Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan is here, and he has embraced this task and

is working tirelessly to mobilize not only the department but the entire U.S.

Government in support of the Minnesota-USA bid.

Deputy Secretary Sullivan is a native of Boston with decades of experience in both private

legal practice and public service, including positions at the Defense Department and also

Commerce Department.

His ties to diplomacy and the State Department started long before he was sworn in as deputy

secretary.

His uncle served as a Foreign Service officer for more than 30 years, and we all know how

important our Foreign Service officers are to the work that we do here every day.

As Deputy Secretary of State, he serves as principal advisor to Secretary Tillerson,

providing guidance and firsthand assistance to the Secretary in the formulation of conduct

of U.S. foreign policy.

We're honored that he is with us here today and that he is such a strong advocate for

Minnesota-USA's bid to host Expo 2023.

Please join me in welcoming Deputy Secretary of State John J. Sullivan, and he is a terrific

guy if you've not had a chance to meet him.

(Applause.)

Sir.

Thank you.

DEPUTY SECRETARY SULLIVAN: Thank you, Heather, for that kind introduction.

I have one qualification to Heather's remarks: I am from Boston and grew up as a hockey player,

a hockey coach, a hockey fan, so I've spent a lot of time both in my youth and then when

I was coaching my children's youth hockey teams in Minnesota – Brainerd, Red Wing,

Winona, Rochester – I've been all over the state, been in many of your hockey rinks,

tournaments, summer hockey camps, and Minnesotans, as Heather said, are just the most wonderful,

sweetest persons, except when they hop over the boards to take a shift in a hockey game

and then they're pretty nasty.

(Laughter.)

So I can speak from personal experience on that.

But I'm delighted to see so many people here to support this bid and all of those

who have played an instrumental role in the United States bid for Expo 2023.

I want to recognize the foreign diplomatic corps are present this afternoon, as many

of the foreign ambassadors who are here.

Thanks to all of you for being here and for standing behind this important cause.

Four months ago, I met with many of you at the department as one of my first public appearances

as Deputy Secretary of State, at which time I spoke about the United States initial efforts

to bring the World's Fair back here to our country.

I'm thrilled to report that since that time, the U.S. proposal has advanced to the final

round.

Our teams have been very busy highlighting why the United States, and more particularly

Minnesota, is the ideal location with the perfect theme for that state – health and

wellness – to host the World's Fair or Expo in 2023.

As Heather mentioned, the expo is a public-private partnership, one that's driven by grassroots

efforts of the Minnesota World's Fair Bid Committee under the dedicated leadership of

the committee president and chief executive officer, Mark Ritchie.

Thank you, Mark, for all your work.

Many of you know Mark, who is the former Minnesota secretary of state, and in a moment he'll

provide us with the latest update on the bid, including details on the recent announcement

of the proposed expo site in Minnesota.

Before Mark comes up here, I'd like to highlight the impressive work done thus far to effectively

mobilize international support for this important commercial and diplomatic initiative.

I want to thank our terrific Under Secretary for Political Affairs Tom Shannon, who himself

is a Minnesota native, and his colleagues from the regional bureaus present here today

for their diplomatic engagement in support of the expo.

Many have moved mountains to get us here to this point.

In May, Congress passed legislation by unanimous consent authorizing the United States to rejoin

the Bureau of International Expositions, or BIE, which is the Paris-based organization

that governs participation in the World's Fair.

Secretary Tillerson then signed the treaty accession documents that were deposited in

Paris.

Thank you to the Minnesota congressional delegation, as well as the leaders of the House Foreign

Affairs and Senate Foreign Relations Committee, for getting this legislation passed.

You'll hear later in the program from two members of the Minnesota delegation that are

with us today: U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar and U.S. Representative Tom Emmer.

Thanks to all of you for your help in getting us to where we are today.

In June, the Bureau of International Exposition's general assembly voted to advance the U.S.

bid to the final round that will be held in Paris on November 15th.

Earlier this month, the United States once again became a voting member of the Bureau

of International Expositions, and I look forward personally to traveling to Paris next month

to cast the U.S. vote in support of this expo, the first in more than 15 years.

(Applause.)

My colleagues in the United States and around the world, including my former colleagues

and friends from the Department of Commerce, have spoken to you and representatives in

your capital about the Minnesota-USA bid.

There is strong federal support for this public-private partnership in what would be the first World's

Fair that'd take place in the United States in almost 40 years.

BIE delegates have attended U.S.-hosted expo events in Paris, Brussels, and London, and

many of your consuls general in the United States have attended expo events in Minnesota

and Chicago as well.

I understand that several of you will join Deputy Chief of Protocol Cam Henderson in

the Office of the Chief of Protocol's Experience America trip to Minnesota in the near future.

For those ambassadors or charges who have not yet signed up for the trip, please speak

with protocol today before you leave.

It's not too late to join.

We want you to experience Minnesota as we seek to bring the world there in 2023.

We can all agree that there's something inspiring about a World's Fair, a time when

the world comes together to celebrate, explore, and discover the promises and opportunities

of new technologies and partnerships; in this case, to focus on the increasingly important

areas of health and wellness.

Minnesota, home to some amazing medical technology companies and a region regularly ranked as

one of the healthiest metropolitan regions as a – regions in the country, is an ideal

location for such an expo.

The Smithsonian's American History Museum even included Minnesota's Medical Alley

as one of the featured regions in their current exhibition, Places of Innovation.

I still fondly remember my experience as a child when my parents took me to the New York

World's Fair in Queens in 1964.

For those of you who have not been to the Queens Museum in New York City, there's

a great World's Fair exhibit that captures that time and experience through a fantastic

scale model of the city.

It's really something to see.

If you haven't been to a World's Fair yet – and I stress "yet" – I hope

that we will have the opportunity to come together in Minnesota in 2023 for the Healthy

People, Healthy Planet Expo.

However, in order for that to happen, we need your support, and we need your vote on November

15 in Paris at the BIE general assembly.

So again, I thank you all for coming this afternoon and appreciate your ongoing efforts

to make the 2023 expo in Minnesota a reality.

Thanks very much.

(Applause.)

For more infomation >> Deputy Secretary Sullivan At Reception in Support of United States' Bid to Host 2023 World's Fair - Duration: 10:39.

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How well you know American states? GuessWhat - Duration: 1:07.

So, how much do you know about USA?

Welcome to Guess What. So rules are simple you'll

get 10 seconds to answer the question. And 10 seconds because

I don't want to give you time to Google or Bing anything.

YEAH! So here's your question

How many states in the United States have letters

'IN' consecutively in their name?

Your options are

A : Six (6)

B: Nine (9)

c : Eleven (11)

or d : Fourteen (14)

Your time starts now!

Time's up! and here's your correct answer.

Watch this video until the end, if you want to know the names

of all those states and don't forget to like and

share this video and don't forget to subscribe.

I'm posting videos like this almost

everyday, so you don't want to miss them.

Thanks for watching and I'll see you soon again. b-bye

For more infomation >> How well you know American states? GuessWhat - Duration: 1:07.

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REPUBLICAN PARTY (UNITED STATES) - WikiVidi Documentary - Duration: 1:13:35.

For more infomation >> REPUBLICAN PARTY (UNITED STATES) - WikiVidi Documentary - Duration: 1:13:35.

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How Ground Water is Affected in the Western United States - Duration: 1:47.

Wyoming is the water tower of the west.

But we know so little about

the mountain hydrology.

We have this key drainage happening

at the top of the country

contributing water and driving the water flow.

Elevation is needed to drive the water flow.

So it's literally flowing downhill from Wyoming

and we're trying to understand how it happens.

We have very little information

about a process that happens underground

where, how, when the water enters the subsurface.

The Blair-Wallis well field is one of very few

research well fields in the western USA devoted to

understand ground water process

in fractured bedrock

in the mountains.

The purpose of the pumping test

was to investigatebthe pore spaces,

the openings in the subsurface fractures,

which are providing our drinking water resources.

From these water level responses

we can use a computer model.

Our hope is that our method

can help us better interpret the data

so we can get more information from the data.

In the real world, data is always limited.

We cannot drill wells all over the mountain

because by the process of drilling all the wells

we are changing hydrology.

In the near future

we may have a higher population, greater demand for water

and we need to understand these mountain aquifers now

so we can better manage and sustainably use these resources

in the future.

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