Thứ Bảy, 25 tháng 8, 2018

News on Youtube Aug 25 2018

At some point in your childhood, did you wish to magically transform into a princess?

If you had a particularly active imagination, maybe you even thought you'd actually become

one someday.

But growing up as a princess, or any form of royalty, really, is likely a whole lot

better in concept than in reality.

Spoiler alert: It wasn't always great.

In fact, it was downright depressing at times.

When your mother is the Queen of England, the family dynamic is bound to get a little

complicated to say the least.

Here's the real truth behind the Queen and Prince Philip's relationship with their children.

Raised by nannies

Prince Charles was born in 1948, just a year after his parents' wedding and around three

years before his mother became the Queen.

Next came Princess Anne, who was born one year later.

Elizabeth and Philip decided not to have any more children until a decade later.

In 1960, the couple welcomed another son, Prince Andrew, and, in 1964, welcomed another

boy, Prince Edward.

In Jonathan Dimbleby's authorized 1994 biography of Prince Charles, Charles is quoted as saying

that the people who raised him were not his parents, but the nursery staff.

In yet another biography of the prince, author Sally Bedell-Smith reiterated that fact, writing

that Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip only saw their children after breakfast and teatime.

So, basically not much at all.

Prince Philip the disciplinarian

Although he may not have spent much time with his parents growing up, Prince Charles still

viewed his father as a disciplinarian.

The unauthorized biography Prince Charles: The Passions and Paradoxes of an Improbable

Life describes the young prince as having been a sensitive child.

Worried his son would become, quote, "weak and vulnerable," Prince Philip attempted to

toughen young Charles up.

Patricia Mountbatten, Charles' godmother, explained in the prince's biography that Philip

was also very concerned with Charles becoming spoiled.

Philip felt some tough love would work to "counteract the spoiling."

Philip is also said to have relied on sarcasm when dealing with not only Charles, but with

daughter Anne as well.

Unlike Charles, Anne reportedly pushed back.

You can't help but feel bad for the little prince.

Lacking in warmth

When Charles would sit with his parents during teatime, it wasn't exactly quality family

time.

Martin Charteris, a former long-term senior adviser to the Queen, is quoted in Prince

Charles' biography as saying,

"Somehow even those contacts were lacking in warmth.

The Queen is not good at showing affection."

When Charles' parents returned after nearly six months away, both the Queen and Philip

proved their standoffishness when it came to their children by not embracing them with

long hugs or kisses.

Instead, they simply shook hands with their then five-year-old son and three-year old

daughter.

When Charles was four years old, however, the Queen did set out to teach her son horseback

riding, but unfortunately for Charles, he said

"The whole idea of taking off scared me stiff."

It's the thought that counts, right?

A "happy unit"

In a BBC interview back in 2002, Princess Anne clapped back at the critics who labeled

the Queen as an "uncaring mother."

Instead of aligning with her brother Charles' beliefs and classifying her mother as lacking

warmth, Anne seems to feel that their mom was indeed a loving parent.

Anne further dubbed the royal family a "happy unit" in which they all got along.

She explained that they "may not have been too demanding" of their mother's time because

they recognized her unique position as, you know, ruler of the country and all.

They may have been just young children, but, according to Anne, they seemed to have a pretty

good idea of what the monarchy entailed, saying,

"I don't believe any of us for a second thought she didn't care for us in exactly the same

way as any other mother did."

Mommy-and-me time

Robert Lacey's biography Monarch: The Life and Reign of Elizabeth The Second quotes the

Queen as saying

"What fun it is to have a baby in the house again!"

...after Edward, was born.

According to Lacey, Queen Elizabeth was able to spend a lot more time with Andrew and Edward

than she'd been able to with both Charles and Anne.

By the mid-1960s, ruling the country may not have exactly been old hat, but the Queen was

surely more comfortable in her role.

Unlike the awkward meals she once shared with her oldest son, Queen Elizabeth spent time

"cycling and chasing" her younger children through Buckingham Palace.

Once a week, Edward and Andrew's nanny was given the night off and Queen Elizabeth would

take over according to Lacey, the Queen even began to refer to the nanny's night off

as her favorite night of the week.

Prince Philip's soft side

It's not exactly a secret that Charles and Princess Diana had a relationship that was

fraught with disagreements, infidelity, and essentially everything else that could tear

a marriage apart.

But, Diana seemed to have an ally, and one you might not expect.

In 2007, The Telegraph released a transcript of letters written to and from Philip and

Diana.

The letters were read during the inquest into Diana's tragic death, and cast Philip in a

new, and very caring, light.

Diana fondly referred to her father-in-law as "Pa" and would often end her letters with

"my fondest love."

Philip wrote Diana saying he hoped they could continue their letter-writing as an "opportunity

to exchange views" and reassured her, saying,

"I will always do my utmost to help you and Charles to the best of my ability."

Picking favorites

Who's the Queen's favorite?

Perhaps that's an impossible question to ask, but some have surmised that it's not actually

one of her own children, but rather a daughter-in-law.

According to Express, the monarch's preference is Sophie Rhys-Jones, who married Prince Edward

back in 1999.

Edward is the only one of the Queen's children who has not gone through a divorce, but that

may not be why Rhys-Jones is favored.

Queen Elizabeth and Rhys-Jones share a lot of similar interests and spend a good chunk

of time together, sometimes riding horses and other times simply relaxing with the grandkids.

In 2010, the Queen further proved her love for Rhys-Jones when awarding her with the

Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order, which is Queen Elizabeth's highest seal of

approval.

There's no doubt about it, this daughter-in-law is in the Queen's good graces.

For more infomation >> The Truth About Queen Elizabeth's Relationship With Her Kids - Duration: 5:54.

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The Truth About Sarah Huckabee Sanders' Relationship With Trump - Duration: 5:24.

For Sarah Huckabee Sanders, defending the president has become an art form.

The Arkansas native picked up the position of White House press secretary when Sean Spicer

resigned after months of public ridicule.

Since then, Sanders has seemed to become a trusted confidante to Donald Trump, whose

presidency has been plagued by a record amount of staff turnover.

Though Sanders is responsible for defending the president, the pair haven't always on

the same page.

The mother of three has often been misinformed or at odds with Trump, who notoriously dislikes

what he perceives as signs of weakness.

Sanders also had to learn to weather Trump's unpredictable moods, so it's no wonder that

rumors about her plans to leave the administration persist.

Sanders may put up a good front for the press corps, but she doesn't always get along with

the man she's tasked to defend.

Here's the true state of things between Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Donald Trump.

The face

You'd think that Sanders would have a tight personal relationship with her boss, considering

her role in the administration.

But reportedly, the two really aren't that close, with others in his inner circle getting

much more adoration than the press secretary.

While some of Trump's staffers are treated more or less like family, the best he can

reportedly say about Sanders is that she's, quote, "fine".

Of course, Sanders isn't necessarily disliked by Trump, who's notoriously concerned with

aesthetics.

According to CNN, the president has given her props for presentation, saying, "She's

got a great face.

Perfectly round."

Well, that's better than the alternative.

Stormy weather

Presidents and adult film stars didn't used to go together in the news cycle, but Trump

is a different sort of president.

Even two years in, government staffers are still trying to adjust to the new status quo,

and Sanders may have missed the memo.

Reportedly, Trump was quite upset with the way she handled the Stormy Daniels situation,

while that story was still developing.

Daniels' allegations outlined an outlandish extramarital affair that reportedly involved

nondisclosure agreements, thug-like threats, and somehow, Shark Week. Trump denied the

affair and initially claimed to have no knowledge of the $130,000 payoff Daniels claimed she

received in exchange for her silence.

Naturally, Sanders had to field quite a few questions about the payoffs.

In March 2018, she claimed that Daniels' case against Trump went to arbitration, which ended

in the president's favor.

According to CNN, this was the first time the White House admitted Trump was involved

with Daniels in any way, essentially serving as an admission that the nondisclosure agreement

existed.

As you might imagine, Trump was reportedly unhappy with Sanders' statement.

Settling the score

In June 2018, Sanders was turned away from Red Hen, a farm-to-table restaurant in Lexington,

Virginia.

The restaurant's co-owner said the move was a protest towards what they saw as Trump's

"inhumane and unethical" administration.

Though Trump came to Sanders' defense eventually, his response was delayed and notably lukewarm.

He also was allegedly asking people about their private impressions of the press secretary.

To many, this signaled that Sanders was falling out of favor with Trump.

Roasted

During 2018's annual White House Correspondents'.dinner, comedian Michelle Wolf roasted the administration

and made particularly sharp remarks about Sanders, who was sitting at the head table.

"And I'm never really sure what to call Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

What's 'Uncle Tom, but for white women who disappoint other white women?'"

It was reported that members of the administration walked out of the dinner after hearing Wolf's

scathing remarks, but Sanders took it gracefully.

But if she thought that was the right move in her boss' eyes, she was wrong.

Apparently, Trump believed staying in attendance was a bad move.

He allegedly thought Sanders should have walked out of the dinner as well, feeling that sitting

and taking the routine was an act of weakness that reflected poorly on him.

On message

You would think that the president's official mouthpiece would be the one person who's always

on-message, but that's not the case.

In fact, the two have a history of contradictory statements.

In March 2018, Sanders denied that Trump knew anything about the payment given to Stormy

Daniels, which Trump's former attorney Michael Cohen claimed was from his own personal funds.

Sanders admitted that she had "conversations with the president" on the subject.

Fast forward to early May and Trump's attorney Rudy Giuliani claimed Trump had reimbursed

Cohen for the Daniels payment, meaning he definitely knew the payment existed.

Cohen later confirmed as much in his guilty plea at a criminal trial that stemmed, in

part, from the payoffs.

Sanders claimed that she had no idea Trump knew about the payment in advance, putting

her in a lose-lose situation.

She's either lying to the public, or she's out of the loop.

The long haul

While Sanders has managed to hold onto her job for more than a year, that doesn't mean

she's going to be in the White House through Trump's whole presidency.

But during her tenure, she's become one of the more reliable elements of Trump's White

House, and some close to the president have reportedly gone into panic mode over the thought

of Sanders leaving.

As one former administration official reportedly put it, "Who would want that job?"

Thanks to numerous contradictions and incorrect statements, Sanders' credibility has waned.

The real problem preventing her from sticking around may be the amount of times she's contributed

to embarrassing Trump: a hard thing to come back from.

Though Sanders has publicly claimed she has no plans to leave, it's been reported that

higher-ups have begun asking around about possible replacements.

If history's anything to go by, no one, including Sanders, is going to see the end coming until

it actually happens.

If Sanders does leave, it'll be par for the course of an administration plagued by early

departures.

The only real question is: who will be next?

For more infomation >> The Truth About Sarah Huckabee Sanders' Relationship With Trump - Duration: 5:24.

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Jose Mourinho insists his relationship with Man Utd chief executive Ed Woodward is fine - Duration: 3:21.

Jose Mourinho insists his relationship with Man Utd chief executive Ed Woodward is fine

Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho insisted his relationship with Ed Woodward remains strong, in what was a succinct eight-minute press conference on Friday.

United endured a frustrating summer in the transfer market as they failed to recruit the centre-half Mourinho had requested.

The United boss also wanted an additional signing - believed to be an attacking midfielder - but had to settle for the three players the club did sign - midfielder Fred, defender Diogo Dalot and goalkeeper Lee Grant.

Mourinho also clashed with Anthony Martial, while Paul Pogba hinted at his frustrations after United's win over Leicester.

The growing unrest at Old Trafford was compounded last weekend when United were defeated 3-2 by Brighton but Mourinho insists there is no tension between himself and Woodward.

"Of course (our relationship is fine)," the United boss said, having turned up 30 minutes early to talk with the media.

"No (problem at all).

After the defeat to Brighton, Pogba admitted United had the wrong attitude and said he was at fault as much as anyone.

Mourinho was asked about those comments but said it was Pogba's place to explain what he meant.

"Paul said that so Paul has to answer that.

If you want an explanation for Paul's words, you must get him and ask him," Mourinho said.

There is good news for United on the injury front as Mourinho confirmed captain Antonio Valencia, Nemanja Matic, Alexis Sanchez and Diogo Dalot have all returned to training.

A final decision on their availability for Monday's visit of Tottenham, live on Sky Sports, will be made on Sunday.

Mourinho said: "Today is still Friday and we will have training on Saturday and Sunday, then the match on Monday.

"The decision will be made on Sunday but yes, they are training with the team and [Diogo] Dalot also is training with the team for the first time this week so in terms of the medical department, they are almost free.

For more infomation >> Jose Mourinho insists his relationship with Man Utd chief executive Ed Woodward is fine - Duration: 3:21.

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Robert Irvine Show (8/24/2018)Former guests with anger and relationship issues. - Duration: 37:50.

For more infomation >> Robert Irvine Show (8/24/2018)Former guests with anger and relationship issues. - Duration: 37:50.

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Ashley Benson Won't Confirm or Deny a Relationship with Cara Delevingne: 'It's the Best Way' - Break - Duration: 2:44.

 Got a secret, can she keep it?  Pretty Little Liars alum Ashley Benson has been linked to model Cara Delevingne, but she's not revealing anything about her relationship status

 "I think it's the best way in any relationship," the 28-year-old told People Now

"I've always been very private about them, and I think it's just better."  Benson also revealed her feelings on the downsides of achieving celeb status, specifically losing one's privacy

 "I mean it's hard, I don't know, you kind of can't get away from that if you're in the public eye," she said

"I just kinda try to keep myself as private as possible."  Despite the challenges, though, Benson's figured out a trick to make her lifestyle a bit more relaxed

"That's one good thing about living in New York — I can live kind of a normal lifestyle," she said, adding that "in L

A., the paparazzi are really bad, but here I can kind of just walk anywhere and not be bothered

"  Benson was photographed kissing Cara Delevingne, 26, on Aug. 14 after they landed in London's Heathrow airport

Waiting for a taxi, they reportedly kissed multiple times, and Delevingne had her arm wrapped around Benson

 Even earlier, though, Benson gave her Instagram followers reason to wonder about her relationship status

She posted a selfie on Aug. 10 that shows her wearing layered gold necklaces, one of which has charms with the letters "A" and "C," perhaps in honor of her new flame

Benson also appears to be wearing the "C" again in the London photo.  She attended Delevingne's birthday party on Saturday, according to group photo booth shots that the guest of honor posted on Instagram

 Zoë Kravitz, Sienna Miller, Suki Waterhouse, Margot Robbie, Kate Beckinsale, Chloé Caillet, and Alice Dellal were also among the partygoers — along with a woman dressed as a mermaid

 "It was my birthday a week ago and I am still giggling with MERmazing memories," Delevingne captioned the photos

For more infomation >> Ashley Benson Won't Confirm or Deny a Relationship with Cara Delevingne: 'It's the Best Way' - Break - Duration: 2:44.

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Inside you there is the same as inside me - Duration: 5:05.

Program for the promotion of Inclusive Education in the Americas (OAS & Oritel)

My brother Rafa had just been born

and my mother came back from the hospital.

Then, when she came back from the hospital

– she tells a story of a conversation with a neighbor. –

And the neighbor asked her, a little shameless and rude,

she asked: Hey, they say your child is mongoloid. Is he or isn't he?

And then my mother said:

Well, if you say so, then he must be. If you say so, then he must be.

To me he isn't, to me he is my child.

I stand by those words

and I go back to get the full sense they have.

A sense that perhaps is not entirely conscious

but that is completely inserted in that language.

My mother is saying: if you say so, then he must be.

He must not be if you do not say it, of course.

Because disability is not a biological issue.

It is not something physical.

But it is a social and cultural issue.

So 'if you say so, then he must be'

means that the way you conceive of disability,

the meaning you construct for disability.

And you are turning her son (in this case),

she was turning him into something that was a syndrome.

Then my mother responded with much wisdom,

with natural wisdom:

Not for me. For me he is my son.

There is a great hope in reworking our ways of thinking, feeling and acting

listening deeply ...

My weakness is mothers. But mothers, fathers, siblings, families ...

they have built their knowledge about their relative

from love. From a direct relationship with the person.

And what we are doing as professionals is implanting

a previously made model, which is generic

and we implant it in the person:

If a person has Down syndrome, then he or she acts in this way.

If a person has cerebral palsy, then we know how he or she behaves.

In families you learn from knowledge,

because the other is from prejudice.

Families from the direct knowledge of the person.

If the professionals really listened to what those relatives tell us

we could build a very different pedagogical knowledge.

These relatives could tell us other ways of thinking about that reality

that surely would guide institutions in a very different way.

Reality is a social construction.

The reality of disability is also.

When we are talking, when we are communicating with each other

we are building that reality.

And in institutions, reality is built.

There is a whole professional knowledge built

that comes from medical knowledge

and that has been implemented in schools.

That medical knowledge has a meaning, obviously, in medicine.

But when transplanting it to the pedagogical terrain,

everything that was medical and biological

It has served as an argument for segregation and exclusion.

What we have done has been to say that if he does not learn, it is a problem of that person.

But the studies that have been developed from other areas of knowledge

They have shown that it is not like that.

That the disability is not inside a body,

but it is at least between two bodies.

It's in the relationship between two people, at least.

It's hard to see differences, I mean imbalances, between two people

when we have understood that one person has the same humanity as another.

But within how we have been riding this idea of ​​disability

is an ideology, that we have embedded all

through which we think that within that person there is not a person at all.

We stole part of that humanity

because he has no vision, or because he has deafness,

or because his head does not work like mine.

That allows us, from a position of power,

to say that there is not the same thing inside here.

When we are able to think that there is the same thing inside here

the relationships change.

And when changing relationships what changes is disability,

which is a form of relationship.

For more infomation >> Inside you there is the same as inside me - Duration: 5:05.

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Released Files Reveal Long, Intimate Relationship Between Fired Superintendent & Assistant (KNWA) - Duration: 2:30.

For more infomation >> Released Files Reveal Long, Intimate Relationship Between Fired Superintendent & Assistant (KNWA) - Duration: 2:30.

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Sarah Ferguson: How William and Kate's relationship sparked 'great regret' for duchess - Duration: 4:37.

 The Duchess of York opened up about her "mistakes" in a candid interview where she told how bride-to-be Kate reminded her of herself when she tied to the knot to Prince Andrew on July 23, 1986, in Westminster Abbey

 She told how she shared the "same experiences" as Duchess Kate when both women married an heir to the throne, in a recently unearthed clip

 Sarah wasn't invited to Kate and Prince William's Westminster Abbey nuptials, but revealed how she felt in the moment she watched Kate walk down the aisle

 Speaking to Elizabeth Saab on US TV show, The Daily, she said: "I was that bride and at 25-years-old I went down the aisle of Westminster Abbey

  "It caused me to have great soul searching on regret, on all the things, you look at

" Sarah Ferguson paved the way for her exit from the royals in 1992 when pictures emerged of the redhead receiving a toe-sucking from oil tycoon John Bryan, who was described as her financial advisor

 In 1992 the Duke and Duchess of York finally announced their separation after spending a lot of time part while Prince Andrew was on royal duties, and later divorced in 1996

 The scandalous divorce came after photographs emerged of Fergie with her toes in the mouth of Texan financial advisor Mr Bryan, while wearing a bikini and lounging in the sun

   Andrew and Sarah were still married at the time, with the photographs also showing the two kissing and canoodling in their swimwear

 But the pair, who have two daughters, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, still remain firm friends and even share a residence

 Sarah has not been an official member of the Royal Family in 20 years. Looking back on the turbulent years that followed her divorce from the father of her two children, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, Sarah admitted she had made "mistakes"

  Speaking in 2011, she said: "I reflect on the past, reflect on what it is like to make thunderous mistakes, or huge lapses of judgment

" But the mother-of-two says it was her two daughters and the support of her ex-husband that helped her see the light in the end of the tunnel

 The said: "Had I not had this great faith, and great heart, this great belief for life, and the passion for humour and joy and my great children and my ex-husband, I certainly wouldn't be here, there's no question about it

" Quizzed over whether she would go back and do things differently if she could, Sarah reflected on herself as a young bride

  She added: "If I being me now could go back to that young girl when I was 24, I would say to her, you know what, I will stick with you, I will stay with you, I'm with you…

you don't need to run around trying to get everyone to love you. I love you i.e. yourself, myself

 "You've got me, listen to me, I will guide you. "Listen to your instincts Sarah and be aware of your behaviour and be aware of how lucky you are

 "You've got the world, you've got the best looking looking prince, you've got the world at your feet

Don't blow it."

For more infomation >> Sarah Ferguson: How William and Kate's relationship sparked 'great regret' for duchess - Duration: 4:37.

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Trump takes fresh swipe at Theresa May and 'special relationship' with UK - Duration: 2:53.

</form>  Donald Trump appeared to take a swipe at Theresa May last night by claiming the US had 'no greater friend than Australia

'  The US President delivered a slap-down of the so-called 'special relationship' between the Britain and America in a tweet late on Friday night

 Trump congratulated Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison after he succeeded Malcolm Turnbull as the leader of the country's Liberal Party on Friday

 He wrote: "Congratulations to new Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. There are no greater friends than the United States and Australia!"  Scott Morrison said the pair had enjoyed a 'great discussion' following a phone call on Friday morning and revealed how ties between the countries dates back decades

 He wrote: "Had a great discussion with Donald Trump this morning. We affirmed the strength of the relationship between the US and Australia

I shared the story of Leslie "Bull" Allen, an ANZAC hero who is a symbol of our 100 years of mateship

"  Donald Trump's love for the UK appears to have soured following his acrimonious state visit to the UK earlier this year

 Thousands of protesters descended on central London in July for a huge show of opposition to his visit

  A large Trump Baby balloon was hoisted above Parliament Square depicting Trump as an angry infant wearing a nappy

 The controversial commander-in-chief also sparked fury by posing in Winston Churchill's chair during a visit to Chequers

 Labour's Ruth Smeeth said about the incident: "Churchill embodied the best of British spirit when we were fighting and defeating racists and fascists during World War Two

 "Given Trump's appalling actions and rhetoric, he doesn't even deserve to look at a statue of Churchill let alone sit in his seat

"  Despite his complicated relationship with Britain, Trump still appears to greatly revere Britain's former wartime leader

 Trump moved a bust of the former prime minister back into the Oval Office after he was inaugurated in 2017

 He also hosted a screening of film 'Darkest Hour' which shows Churchill's early days as prime minister leading Britain through World War II at the White House last year

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