Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 2, 2019

News on Youtube Feb 4 2019

the US Special Representative for North Korea Steven vegan arrived in Seoul

yesterday afternoon and met with his South Korean counterpart IDO Han Seoul's

foreign affairs ministry says they discussed veganz upcoming working-level

talks with the north today vegan is expected to visit the presidential

office of Cheong Wa Dae to meet with South Korea's national security adviser

Chung a young and discussed the latest on the nuclear negotiations Tuesday is

when vegan is expected to sit down with his North Korean counterparts at the

inter-korean truce village of Panmunjom it's likely they'll be fine-tuning the

details of the planned summit between their leaders scheduled for late

February

For more infomation >> Nuclear envoys of Seoul, Washington discuss N. Korea-U.S. working-level talks - Duration: 0:41.

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Lawmakers call for Northam's resignation - Duration: 2:25.

For more infomation >> Lawmakers call for Northam's resignation - Duration: 2:25.

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Trump's Super Bowl Sunday interview, annotated - Duration: 3:24.

For more infomation >> Trump's Super Bowl Sunday interview, annotated - Duration: 3:24.

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Washington Post Super Bowl message: Democracy Dies in Darkness - Duration: 1:11.

-When we go off to war.

[ Helicopters whirring ]

When we exercise our rights.

[ Cheering ]

When we soar to our greatest heights.

When we mourn and pray.

When our neighbors are at risk.

When our nation is threatened.

[ Siren wails ]

There's someone to gather the facts.

To bring you the story.

No matter the cost.

♪♪

Because knowing empowers us.

Knowing helps us decide.

Knowing keeps us free.

♪♪

For more infomation >> Washington Post Super Bowl message: Democracy Dies in Darkness - Duration: 1:11.

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Following U.S., Putin suspends nuclear pact and promises new weapons The Washington Post - Duration: 1:11.

Following U.S., Putin suspends nuclear pact and promises new weapons The Washington Post

MOSCOW — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday said his country would follow the United States in its participation in a treaty banning midrange nuclear weapons, the latest step toward the demise of a pact that had been a pillar of international arms control since the close of the Cold War. 

Putin ordered his military to start developing land based missiles that could deliver nuclear warheads in the range prohibited by the treaty, including a hypersonic version. He also directed his diplomats to stop initiating any arms control talks with the West, claiming Washington hadnt negotiated in good faith. 

Putins move came a day after the Trump administration announced it was pulling out of the agreement and underscored analysts fears that a budding arms race between Russia and the United States is about to intensify. 

Our answer will be symmetrical, Putin said in a televised meeting with his defense and foreign ministers. Our American partners declared that they will suspend their participation in the treaty, so we will suspend ours as well. They said they would start research and development, and we will do the same. 

The United States and its allies have said for years that Russia is violating the 1987 pact between Washington and Moscow, the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, by developing and fielding a banned missile. Russia denies the allegation. 

Critics of U.S. withdrawal from the treaty say that, despite Russias violation, the best way to keep Russian arms in check would be to negotiate while keeping the treaty intact. Trump administration officials say the treaty threatens U.S. national security by preventing the country from responding to missile threats, not just from Russia but also from China, which isnt a signatory to the INF Treaty.

Putins directive on Saturday to start new development referred to missiles that would be different from the prohibited one the United States accuses Russia of already having deployed. He approved a request from Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu to create a land based version of existing sea launched missiles and to start developing a new, hypersonic medium range ballistic missile. 

Both of those missiles would be capable of a range between 500 and 5,500 kilometers, or 311 and 3,418 miles, which is banned by the INF Treaty. The pact, signed near the close of the Cold War by President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, eliminated more than 2,600 missiles and ended a years long standoff with nuclear missiles in Europe.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Friday that, effective Saturday, the United States will suspend participation in the agreement, starting a six month countdown to a final U.S. withdrawal. Pompeo said Russia could salvage the treaty by ending its banned missile programs, but Putins Saturday underscored the very low likelihood Russia will make such a move. 

In the televised meeting, the Russian president directed officials to stop initiating any talks related to arms control. Putin had previously been eager to negotiate with the United States on the matter — in part because, analysts say, discussion of nuclear arsenals is one of the only issues on which Moscow can engage on near equal diplomatic footing with Washington.

Im asking both ministries to no longer initiate any negotiations on this issue, Putin said, referring to his foreign and defense ministries. Lets wait until our partners are ready to hold an equal, meaningful dialogue on this extremely important topic. 

But Russias defense budget is far smaller than that of the United States — another incentive for Moscow to avoid a full fledged arms race, especially as show growing domestic discontent. Putin on Saturday said Russia would not let itself be drawn into an expensive arms race and, as the cameras rolled, made sure his defense minister could carry out the new missile development without increasing the defense budget. 

With the demise of the INF Treaty, the key remaining arms control agreement between the United States and Russia is the New START treaty, which limits deployed strategic nuclear warheads and expires in two years. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told Putin Saturday that the United States had failed to engage in Russian efforts to negotiate the treatys renewal. 

All they say is that a decision about the fate of the New START treaty has not been made, Lavrov said. All in all, the situation is worrying. 

Read more:

For more infomation >> Following U.S., Putin suspends nuclear pact and promises new weapons The Washington Post - Duration: 1:11.

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Washington Post to air Super Bowl ad showcasing reporters plight Freedom of the press News Al Ja - Duration: 2:26.

Washington Post to air Super Bowl ad showcasing reporters plight Freedom of the press News Al Ja

The 60 second commercial, narrated by Tom Hanks, will highlight dangers journalists face in the field.

The Washington Post will air a commercial during the Super Bowl on Sunday evening, highlighting the role of journalists and the dangers they can face.

The 60 second commercial, to be narrated by Hollywood actor Tom Hanks, will briefly show several slain or missing journalists affiliated with the Washington Post and other publications, including who was murdered inside the Saudi embassy in Istanbul last year.

Khashoggi a Saudi writer, resident and Washington Post columnist entered the building on October 2 to obtain documentation certifying he had divorced his former wife so he could remarry.

After weeks of repeated denial that it had anything to do with his disappearance, eventually acknowledged that its officials were behind the gruesome murder. Saudi Arabia has yet to disclose the whereabouts of his body. 

Other journalists in the commercial include freelance reporter Austin Tice, who has been missing in Syria for more than six years, and Marie Colvin, a US correspondent for the Sunday Times in London who was killed in 2012 by Syrian forces while reporting in Homs.

, the commercial shows scenes from major news events from World War II through the present day, ending with the publications logo and its slogan, "Democracy Dies in Darkness".

"The Super Bowl is a remarkable moment to recognise the courage and commitment of journalists around the world that is so essential to our democracy," said Fred Ryan, publisher and CEO of The Washington Post.

"We decided to seize the opportunity to make this a milestone moment in our ongoing campaign."

While the publication declined to reveal how much it is paying for the 60 second slot, a CNBC report said CBS is charging a record dollar 5.25m for a 30 second slot.

More than died in targeted killings, bomb attacks and crossfire incidents last year, according to The International Federation of Journalists IFJ .

The figure was up from 82 deaths recorded in 2017.

For more infomation >> Washington Post to air Super Bowl ad showcasing reporters plight Freedom of the press News Al Ja - Duration: 2:26.

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Greece should have said no to the Macedonian name change The Washington Post - Duration: 2:04.

Greece should have said no to the Macedonian name change The Washington Post

Opinion Interpretation of the news based on evidence, including data, as well as anticipating how events might unfold based on past events

Regarding the Jan. 26 The World article :

During the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln refused to publicly utter the words the Confederate States of America. He felt it would legitimize the Southern rebellion.

Unfortunately, the government of the Hellenic Republic gave no heed to Lincoln by endorsing the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonias name change to the Republic of North Macedonia. The change would be the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonias ticket to join the European Union and NATO.

Greek opponents of the agreement say it would embolden other Balkan players to follow the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonias example and press their own irredentist claims to Greeces northernmost state, where Greek speaking people have lived for at least 3,000 years, compared with the migration of Slavic people only 1,000 years ago.

Indeed, just days after the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonias prime minister, Zoran Zaev, reached agreement in principle on the name change with the Greek prime minister, he declared: Macedonia is a geographic region of the Balkans. We now have the north, eastern Macedonia is in Bulgaria, the west is in Albania, and the south belongs to the Greeks. He retracted the statement after Greece threatened to cancel the deal.

The Greek Parliament should have said no to the agreement and sent the message that there is only one Macedonia.

John C. Costopoulos, Cary, N.C.

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

For more infomation >> Greece should have said no to the Macedonian name change The Washington Post - Duration: 2:04.

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Bunny Lane Modern Home Designed By Heliotrope Architects In Mount Vernon, Washington - Duration: 3:02.

Bunny Lane Modern Home Designed By Heliotrope Architects In Mount Vernon, Washington

For more infomation >> Bunny Lane Modern Home Designed By Heliotrope Architects In Mount Vernon, Washington - Duration: 3:02.

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Washington Post to air Super Bowl ad showcasing reporters plight Freedom of the press News Al Ja - Duration: 2:26.

Washington Post to air Super Bowl ad showcasing reporters plight Freedom of the press News Al Ja

The 60 second commercial, narrated by Tom Hanks, will highlight dangers journalists face in the field.

The Washington Post will air a commercial during the Super Bowl on Sunday evening, highlighting the role of journalists and the dangers they can face.

The 60 second commercial, to be narrated by Hollywood actor Tom Hanks, will briefly show several slain or missing journalists affiliated with the Washington Post and other publications, including who was murdered inside the Saudi embassy in Istanbul last year.

Khashoggi a Saudi writer, resident and Washington Post columnist entered the building on October 2 to obtain documentation certifying he had divorced his former wife so he could remarry.

After weeks of repeated denial that it had anything to do with his disappearance, eventually acknowledged that its officials were behind the gruesome murder. Saudi Arabia has yet to disclose the whereabouts of his body. 

Other journalists in the commercial include freelance reporter Austin Tice, who has been missing in Syria for more than six years, and Marie Colvin, a US correspondent for the Sunday Times in London who was killed in 2012 by Syrian forces while reporting in Homs.

, the commercial shows scenes from major news events from World War II through the present day, ending with the publications logo and its slogan, "Democracy Dies in Darkness".

"The Super Bowl is a remarkable moment to recognise the courage and commitment of journalists around the world that is so essential to our democracy," said Fred Ryan, publisher and CEO of The Washington Post.

"We decided to seize the opportunity to make this a milestone moment in our ongoing campaign."

While the publication declined to reveal how much it is paying for the 60 second slot, a CNBC report said CBS is charging a record dollar 5.25m for a 30 second slot.

More than died in targeted killings, bomb attacks and crossfire incidents last year, according to The International Federation of Journalists IFJ .

The figure was up from 82 deaths recorded in 2017.

For more infomation >> Washington Post to air Super Bowl ad showcasing reporters plight Freedom of the press News Al Ja - Duration: 2:26.

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Troy Sellman at the Washington Park Zoo in Portland, Oregon 1992 - Duration: 5:57.

For more infomation >> Troy Sellman at the Washington Park Zoo in Portland, Oregon 1992 - Duration: 5:57.

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The state of the union is petrified The Washington Post - Duration: 3:06.

The state of the union is petrified The Washington Post

One should never feel sorry for anyone working in President Trumps White House. They volunteered for this dreadful and chaotic administration. But its hard to envy those tasked with writing drafts of his State of the Union address.

Trump is an incumbent who behaves as if he is in the opposition. He relishes bemoaning the terrible things happening to the country on his watch — after two years of unified Republican government.

At the same time, its hard to recall a president more boastful about how great he is and how he has accomplished more than anyone who has ever held his job, which presumably includes Washington, Lincoln and FDR.

Trump is so in love with bragging that he even touts events that are anything but achievements.

On Jan. 4, 2018, Trump proudly : Dow just crashes through 25,000. Congrats! He the same thought last Wednesday: Dow just broke 25,000. Tremendous news! Think about it: Taken together, the news from the two tweets is that the stock market has been flat for a year, hardly joyous tidings for investors.

But recall that Trump years ago in that he engages in truthful hyperbole, which can play to peoples fantasies. The problem is that we never know for certain if the fantasist himself believes the tales he is spinning.

The latest fantasy, to journalists by Trump aides, is that his speech Tuesday will be a unifying, bipartisan call to end old divisions and heal old wounds.

Good luck with that, especially because his aides say hell also focus a large part of his speech on immigration.

Will he be able to stay away from his staple references to , and those he loves to summon? The president, as my Post colleague Monica Hesse , regularly and questionably at best describes female migrants as being tied up with duct tape on their faces. Will such phrases disappear, too?

And how credible can calls for bipartisanship be from a man who Thursday that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi D Calif. might someday be begging for a wall?

What we can be sure of is self congratulation over that the economy added 304,000 jobs last month. Trump may talk about he has scrapped though probably not with a lot of specifics, since most voters dont cotton to dirtier air or water, or less policing of shady banking practices . He might mention his corporate , even if its unpopular and has fallen far short of the promises made on its behalf.

But Trump can never get too upbeat, because he decided long ago that his political project depends on inciting anxiety and anger as well as hostility toward nonwhite outsiders. This requires him to conjure a dystopian world because what he fears most is a world in which fear is abating.

There was one truly unforgettable line in his : This American carnage stops right here and stops right now. But the carnage can never end because Trump must argue he and his wall are all that stand between us and chaos, duct tape, gangs and coyotes.

This isnt working. Even members of that base hes obsessed with expect the president they voted for to solve problems and not simply exploit them. Thats why his core support is shrinking. The survey number that should trouble Trump most is a recent Post ABC News finding that only 28 percent of Americans said they would definitely vote for him in 2020. Maybe thats why Trumps lieutenants insist hell try something different this week.

The of Stacey Abrams to respond to Trump will highlight his dilemma.

Selecting the partys 2018 Georgia gubernatorial nominee certainly underscores the partys diversity and the importance of African American women in its coalition, as The Posts Eugene Scott . But as important is the fact that she describes herself with two words often miscast these days as polar opposites: progressive and pragmatic. Shes also an optimist who the further ahead we get, the harder it is to drag us back.

The largest contrast Tuesday night will thus not be the obvious disparity in the backgrounds of two speakers, but in their spirit: hope vs. carnage. No matter how hard his speechwriters work to make him buoyant and collegial, Trump needs to depict a country facing a petrifying crisis. Its the only way can justify what he does.

Read more from , or .

Read more:

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

For more infomation >> The state of the union is petrified The Washington Post - Duration: 3:06.

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QUANTO COSTA UN MINUTO DI INFORMAZIONE LIBERA? 10 MILIONI - STASERA IL ''WASHINGTON POST'' MANDERÀ I - Duration: 4:30.

Non solo birre, computer, bibite e automobili. Durante l' evento sportivo e mediatico da oltre 100 milioni di spettatori - il Super Bowl - stanotte debutterà una merce preziosa: l' informazione libera

Promossa dal quotidiano da 47 premi Pulitzer, il Washington Post acquistato sei anni fa dal fondatore di Amazon Jeff Bezos, l' uomo più ricco del mondo

E in effetti ci vuole un miliardario dalle spalle larghe per uno spot che la Cbs mette sul mercato (dati Cnbc) a 5,25 milioni di dollari per trenta secondi (4 milioni e mezzo di euro circa)

Ma il fine giustifica i (costosi) mezzi (circa 10 milioni di euro il probabile costo, ma dai vertici del Wp bocche cucite sia sulle spese di produzione che per l' acquisto della fascia televisiva)

E in questi tempi di fake news e attacchi ai media, anche dall' uomo che siede alla Casa Bianca, ecco sessanta secondi di tributo al giornalismo libero, «ai reporter come testimoni e custodi dei fatti» con la voce narrante di Tom Hanks per rilanciare lo slogan della testata che con le inchieste di Woodward e Bernstein portò alle dimissioni del presidente Nixon: «Al buio la democrazia muore»

Si parte stanotte alle 00.30 italiane (le 18.30 del Mercedes-Benz Stadium di Atlanta, in Georgia), quando i New England Patriots incontreranno i Los Angeles Rams nella finale di fotoball americano che inchioda metà degli spettatori davanti alla tv ed è l' evento sportivo più seguito al mondo (da noi in diretta streaming su Dazn e in diretta tv su Rai Due)

Il video arriverà al quarto quarto, nella fase finale del match e viaggia in un arco di tempo che parte dalla Seconda Guerra mondiale per arrivare ai giorni nostri

Al centro della narrativa le storie recenti e simboliche di tre protagonisti del giornalismo mondiale

C' è quella di Austin Tice, freelance sparito in Siria da oltre sei anni ma che potrebbe essere ancora vivo

Quella atroce di Jamal Khashoggi, commentatore del Wp, fatto a pezzi al consolato dell' Arabia saudita di Istanbul, lo scorso ottobre

E infine Marie Colvin, statunitense, corrispondente di guerra del Sunday Times di Londra, uccisa nel 2012 dalle forze siriane mentre svolgeva le sue corrispondenze dalla città di Homs

«Il Super Bowl è un momento importante per riconoscere il coraggio e l' impegno dei giornalisti nel mondo ed è essenziale per la nostra democrazia», ha commentato l' amministratore delegato del quotidiano Fred Ryan

La scelta di Tom Hanks non è casuale visto che l' attore, doppio premio Oscar, con Meryl Streep è protagonista di The Post di Steven Spielberg (2017), la pellicola che racconta un altro successo del giornale: la pubblicazione nel '71 dei Pentagon Papers, che misero a nudo i punti deboli della guerra in Vietnam

È la prima volta che il quotidiano si lancia in uno spot che non ha fra i suoi diretti obiettivi la sottoscrizione di abbonamenti

Il video andrà in onda durante una finale che potrebbe avere un peso politico (con le tensioni razziali sullo sfondo)

I New England Patriots sono di proprietà di Robert Kraft amico di lunga data di Trump come il quarterback Tom Brady, entrambi simboli dell' America bianca

For more infomation >> QUANTO COSTA UN MINUTO DI INFORMAZIONE LIBERA? 10 MILIONI - STASERA IL ''WASHINGTON POST'' MANDERÀ I - Duration: 4:30.

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Brexit Theresa May and Parliament fight for control The Washington Post - Duration: 2:15.

Brexit Theresa May and Parliament fight for control The Washington Post

LONDON — Prime Minister Theresa May will return to Parliament on Tuesday to face a House of Commons trying to wrest control of Brexit from her, as the clock ticks down toward Britains departure from the European Union in just 60 days.

Members of Parliament, frustrated by the inability of the prime minister to win approval for her withdrawal agreement, are ready to debate and vote on cross party amendments designed to steer the government one way or another on Brexit.

Mays initial deal was crushed by  in Parliament two weeks ago, and she survived a subsequent on a party line vote.

The  — or obstinate — May appeared to be out of fresh ideas when she returned to the House of Commons last week with a Plan B that sounded a lot like a .

Meantime, Parliament remains gripped by deadlock, without a clear majority on how to exit the European Union after four decades of free trade and shared governing.

The flamboyant, sharp tongued speaker of the House of Commons, , has upended tradition by allowing  to be debated — leading his critics to charge that the speaker is trying to help backbench renegades foil Brexit by taking control away from the government.

One of the most popular amendments likely to be considered Tuesday, written by two backbenchers from opposing parties, seeks to give May until the end of February to secure a deal with Brussels that could pass the Parliament. If the prime minister fails again, then the chamber wants her to seek permission from E.U. leaders to delay Brexit beyond the scheduled departure date of March 29. 

There is disagreement over whether such a delay should be a few months long — or until the end of 2019, as the amendment proposes. 

Another amendment seeks to stop Mays government from allowing Britain to crash out of the E.U. in two months time with no deal at all.

The no deal scenario is unpopular among many members of Parliament, but it remains a real possibility. Governments and businesses in Britain and across Europe are preparing to spend billions on contingency plans. 

Richard Harrington, an undersecretary for industry and energy, told a gathering in London that a no deal Brexit would be .

I am very happy to be public about it and very happy if the prime minister decides I am not the right person to do the business industry job, he said, essentially daring May to sack him.

Yet some hardcore Brexiteers support leaving the European trading bloc with no deal, because of their extreme dislike of Mays approach, which seeks to keep Britain closely tied to European rules.

Many ordinary citizens who support Brexit are telling pollsters the same thing, that they are sick and tired of the  and .

Andrea Leadsom, the Tory leader of the House, told the Sunday Times that taking no deal off the table has been used as .

Recent days have seen British business leaders warn that a no deal scenario poses real risks to the economy.

The British Retail Consortium, which includes major grocery store chains, warned Parliament that it is reliant on fresh produce from growers in the European Union — and that is would be impossible to stockpile greens and fruits if Britain crashes out of the trading bloc with no deal. 

We are extremely concerned that our customers will be among the first to experience the realities of a no deal Brexit, the association said in a letter reported by the BBC.

Airbus chief executive Tom Enders said last week, Please dont listen to the Brexiteers madness, which asserts that because we have huge plants here we will not move and we will always be here. They are wrong.

Airbus employs 14,000 people in Britain, manufacturing airplane wings.

It is a disgrace that, more than two years after the result of the 2016 referendum, businesses are still unable to plan properly for the future, Enders said.

His remarks came as the company that assembles Jaguars and Land Rovers, Britains biggest carmaker, said it would extend its annual spring assembly line stoppage for an extra week .

Facing such dour warnings from British business, May will probably try to persuade Parliament to allow her to return to Brussels one more time to try to strike a better deal.

In a briefing with reporters on Monday at 10 Downing Street, Mays official spokesman, who goes unnamed according to protocol, said that prime minister wants two more weeks to try to change the withdrawal agreement she spent two years negotiating in Brussels. Another vote on her new and improved Brexit deal, if she can strike on, would be held Feb. 14.

The most contentious section of the current failed agreement involves the legally binding guarantee, the so called backstop, which is designed to prevent a hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland — essentially between the United Kingdom and the E.U. — after Brexit.

The Irish border backstop requires Britain to remain closely aligned with E.U. rules and customs arrangements if it is unable in the future to agree a new free trade deal with the bloc.

Critics say the provision could trap Britain in the E.U. forever.

Boris Johnson, an arch Brexiteer and former foreign secretary who has previously argued that Britain should have the courage to leave with no deal, now appears to be tacking.

If May were able to secure a freedom clause from Brussels that would make the backstop time limited or allow Britain to leave on its own, without permission from the E.U., she would win the full throated approval of the entire nation, Johnson wrote in his .

This wont be easy.

As British reporters were being briefed at 10 Downing, Margaritis Schinas, the European Commission spokesman, told journalists in Brussels that the current withdrawal agreement now on the table has the unanimous backing of the leaders of the 27 nations remaining in the European Union.

It is endorsed by leaders and is not open for renegotiation, Schinas said.

European Commission  it would be a stupid thing for the E.U. to make further concessions that would put the remaining 27 members at a disadvantage.

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