Thứ Hai, 18 tháng 2, 2019

News on Youtube Feb 18 2019

STATE OF EMERGENCY DECLARED IN WASHINGTON

A state of emergency has been declared in Washington due to an outbreak of measles.

Gov. Jay Inslee issued the proclamation which directs state agencies and departments to

utilize state resources and do everything reasonably possible to assist affected areas.

A proclamation is also necessary to utilize the Emergency Management Assistance Compact

to request additional medical resources from other states.

As of yesterday, over 50 cases of measles have been reported and there's no end in

sight.

"Measles is a highly contagious infectious disease that can be fatal in small children,"

Inslee stated in his proclamation.

Measles virus can remain in the air for up to two hours after someone infectious with

measles leaves the area.

Measles is a highly contagious and potentially severe disease that causes fever, rash, cough,

and red, watery eyes.

It mainly spreads through the air after a person with measles coughs or sneezes.

Measles symptoms begin seven to 21 days after exposure.

Measles is contagious from approximately four days before the rash appears through four

days after the rash appears.

People can spread measles before they have the characteristic measles rash.

Measles complications can include ear infections, diarrhea, pneumonia, vision loss, encephalitis

(brain inflammation) and ultimately can be fatal.

Complications from measles can happen even in healthy people but those at highest risk

include: infants and children under 5 years, adults over 20 years, pregnant women, and

people with weakened immune systems from drugs or underlying disease.

The World Health Organization in November warned that measles cases worldwide had jumped

more than 30 percent in 2017 compared to the previous year, in part because of children

not being vaccinated.

The disease was declared eliminated in the US in 2000 but has since made a comeback that

is tied to imported cases and the rise of the anti-vaccine movement.

For more infomation >> STATE OF EMERGENCY DECLARED IN WASHINGTON - Duration: 6:02.

-------------------------------------------

Presidents Day Secret Love Story - Duration: 3:46.

For more infomation >> Presidents Day Secret Love Story - Duration: 3:46.

-------------------------------------------

Haunted Washington - Duration: 18:09.

For more infomation >> Haunted Washington - Duration: 18:09.

-------------------------------------------

What Made George Washington Great? - Duration: 5:43.

It's hard to imagine there would have been a United States of America without

George Washington.

He was there at the birth of the nation.

He successfully guided it through war and nurtured it in peace.

How did he do it?

Not by being a great general, a potent political theorist, or even a clever politician.

He was none of those things.

And yet, he was admired by generals, political theorists and politicians.

Why?

Because he was a man great men trusted.

Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, James Madison and so many others looked up

to him—literally.

He was one of the tallest men of his era at six-foot-three.

Add courage, integrity, and wisdom, and you have a truly impressive figure.

Let's start with his courage.

That was never in doubt.

If anything, he had too much of it.

Bold to the point of rashness as a young man, he fought for the British against the French

over control of the Ohio Valley, then the Western-most point of the American wilderness.

Throughout that conflict, known as the French and Indian War, and the American Revolution,

Washington was always in the thick of the action.

His aides often struggled to keep him from surging too far ahead of his own troops.

In one battle, his coat was pierced four times by musket fire.

Horses were shot out from under him.

Amazingly, some would say miraculously, he was never wounded—not so much

as a flesh wound.

By the time the revolution broke out in April of 1775, Washington was firmly committed to

the cause of American independence.

He arrived in Philadelphia in May of that year to offer his services to the

Continental Congress.

He was quickly made commander of the new rebel army.

There was only one problem: there was no army to speak of.

There was just a rag-tag collection of state militias.

How was Washington going to defeat the greatest military force in the world with that?

It was a problem the general struggled with for eight and a half years.

That he managed to hold the army together, organize it into a disciplined fighting force

and guide it to victory was testament to his fortitude, his patience, and his

personal bravery.

Of his integrity, one need only to look at what he did when the war ended: exactly what

he promised to do when the war began.

He resigned his military command and went home to Mt. Vernon.

By stepping down, Washington raised himself up as the embodiment of republican heroism.

It is said that King George III asked the London-based American painter Benjamin West

what Washington was likely to do when peace came.

West replied that Washington would probably return to his farm.

The king was astounded.

"If he does that," His Majesty declared, "he will be the greatest man in the world!"

This story may be apocryphal, but the Newburgh Rebellion, and how Washington handled it,

is not.

With experience had come wisdom.

As the revolution wound down, a group of officers refused to give up their arms until they were

paid.

If they didn't get their money, which Congress didn't have, they would take control of

the government.

It was not an idle threat.

No less a figure than Alexander Hamilton was in a panic.

Washington, no great orator, sought to defuse their anger.

They had risked everything to create a republican society, he told the officers.

To abandon the cause now, when true victory was so close, would mean all their sacrifices

would have been in vain.

However convincing the speech may have been, it was a simple gesture that carried the day.

He concluded his remarks by reading to them a letter sent to him from a member

of Congress.

Suddenly, he stopped.

From his pocket, he pulled a pair of spectacles.

None of the officers had ever seen him wear them.

Putting the glasses on, Washington said, "Gentlemen, you must pardon me.

I have grown gray in the service of my country and now find myself going blind."

He finished reading the letter and left the hall without another word.

The gesture, sincerely offered with just the right touch of stagecraft, pierced the hearts

of his men.

Many were moved to tears.

They immediately passed a resolution declaring their loyalty to civilian government.

George Washington had saved the revolution once again.

It wouldn't be the last time.

During the writing of the Constitution and during his eight years as President, Washington

was repeatedly called upon to hold the fractious young nation together.

He never failed to do so.

We commonly refer to George Washington now as the father of our country.

It's hard to imagine any nation ever had a better one.

I'm John Rhodehamel, author of George Washington: The Wonder of the Age, for Prager University.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét