Live Breaking News & Updates on How much should you

Transcripts For DW Kick Off - More Than Football 20180126 07:30:00


i hope that this will make us more ethical persons what would life be like as a cyborg and what do you think will happen society does the human race need to upgrade i think it s only the beginning of its cyborgs human machines starting february first on t w. i have determined. that it is time to officially recognize jerusalem as the capital of israel. football is more than just
a game when frank first left fact criticizes the us president. then becomes politics. the first. thing when charlie s out on peace moves from a portugal a neighborhood to the richest country in europe. and. then football turns into economics. when video evidence is used in football then does not fall into the category of lore and justice is to be all making more fair or is it just rubbish and when you do a study to find out whether fans can be bought like why is there not sociology right. kind of farmer s. markets here. on kick off life. football is more than just thinking i.
so. let s find out who he really. are you the first professional footballer to come from this village and how did that happen. it s big story. when i start. it is all to. the smallest club in my village. so i want to go there and play there and my father told me no you must. be like you. i have three brothers. bigger than me. my cousin was big from behind and. in two
thousand and four israel took his guns into life through the tragedy came an opportunity for tali to play football. my father was. he told me. he like football and. maybe you can live his dream and the football player. come and go you can start. his cousin steve ritchie mcabee high for recruiting and after several years he made it to the top when i was seventeen i play. my car behind. my first professional clinton. speaking of a beehive we had this image here looks like hell it is celebrating being held
up by his teammates talk to me about it. the first. seven years and i was seventeen. he was very good the. europa league champions league. i also the my. national team when i was eighteen. my last year in haifa when i was twenty three we will win the cup after nineteen years it was. the. victory for the club. yet i finished. with a. good member. tally
a new football family truck frankfurt is where his heart is now. my thing when he comes here i was really healthy and pretty and. we mean the same team you know. i i love my my team really teammates who are here like from me. you know how different is frankfurt there have to be huge differences. it s something you know it s all new life leaving the village and the people know you you go to everyone and know you and your family it s everywhere and you come here and. you miss this and i thought sphere in the
village but. really when i come here and. turning into studying with my teammates i feel that i. that funnily. enough someone picture that i love because it s in my hometown. the bay area california i m a california native. tell me about this picture it was just the first time you were there tell me tell me about that experience. the first and i afraid when we were walking this other really. five. to five this. is really right yeah very red and we was also.
really nice how was the food did you talk to americans at all or the food was really good. people. how you say that movie and everything you know it s big everything. that movie theater. does really. form with only. ten days and i mean if you re. given you re interesting background. of being in a room israeli have you been watching the news lately. i have just turman that it is time to officially recognize jerusalem as the capital of israel. i think.
it was. the president saying i think and i like this because. and. we love to resign him like do is love you is an enemy and. they must say it s for all people in the us of christiane. having jurors in. churches so. i think there is i mean for people. when somebody come and say. risen or lifo you do. it s make for. something bad inside. i wish that. would be.
the life. in those i met. you must believe that i have. every one. thing. what you want the. words of wisdom from young thailand to watch a legend in his small village in israel the twenty five year old is now making a name for himself in the bundesliga. now it s time to test the loyalty of some funders league i found in a little experiment. sons of georgia and. i m by
and what often big sums of money just what you re legion says sort of the good die hard fans follow the cash just like the play and let s find out. some of the last minutes marked it all somebody was in ones which are not some. form kids you re one of them my guns could force their views into what i would be with his hand and skull. and guns cause his temper and. it s got to be. dying with this case. so p.t.s.d. it s friend that was over they would have. to see oh yeah i mean i m good and i didn t think he was from the also could come in here and it s me sanker. it s occurred. meeting from try to move your. body. up. it s been on the boil before you can we are going
to it s going to. be slowly going to be swift amount via. the dancing meter company and even on such measures he also could on time does a shift in much of the. time decision. to survive the clink of fear fear fear fear from. want to get gates and hear of a few good judgment calls and it s like yeah to not buy one not miles food in the fall be my own food i won t buy it you won t buy this is all to give me a. call to fourteen. i m not from stage. to keep his ministry got rid of my gum so you didn t get a call dismissed. this is a noble. thing. as it s kind of it s just that hard response you re going to bore me and i struck off and.
didn t really show mine the. mind i knew the i need to see what you see is just ok but this is so old and i suspect respect here and it s really. hard times love the club no matter what but do they love the bundesliga the big summer signing the video assistant referee. we ve had the i.r. in the bundesliga for half a season and it s still not really clear if it was let s take a closer look at the video assistant referee gives us the lowdown and it explains.
ok science fans have no idea what s happening. with. video assistance refereeing v.a.r. is one of the biggest talking points in football the n.f.l. has it. and now it s right in a beautiful game troy league include syria and of course. we may even see they are at the world cup this summer. if successful. so how does it work the recovery from now use video evidence when making tough decisions there are all these areas where they are can get simple. penalties. a mistaken identity if the referee is unsure about anything that s happened down the pitch we can get in touch with a team in cologne how these guys can see the match from all the different angles and in super slow motion or use this information to help the referee make the best decision in the first half of the bundesliga season it seemed the average number of
incorrect decisions for the hard fifty two down to just twenty three it seemed nineteen penalties given a would have been otherwise and eleven goals that would have been falsely ruled out that s not bad right. so what is the everybody hates it we ve got a few ideas number one it takes ages the d.f.l. promised that when they are launched that some decisions will be made in the ten seconds that s not the case the fans don t have time to get out of their seats get a beer get a breath and worst go to the toilet get another beer and return to their seat before decision has even been made ok we might be exaggerating a little but it does take a long time to be so tall and number two it s killing the drama plays used to rip off their shirts slide in front of the away fans when they scored a goal and now they re looking nervously over their shoulder wondering what the referee was doing with his finger in his ear so he was going on just looking.
number three despite the new technology they are just making things confusing we see one player sent off only to be summoned back from the tunnel and given a yellow card instead and we ve seen a player given a red card something that didn t even deserve a yellow plus those four key situations that we mentioned earlier i ve gone out the window the referee appears to be in constant communication with the guys in cologne the fans have no idea what s going on. so what is going on here now that song is launched the bundesliga called they are video boys as it s known in germany the most significant development in football in the last fifty years he said that germany was at the forefront of footballing innovation that was supposed to be a huge leap forward for the bonus league has been met with tough criticism from diehard fans who believe the all is only interrupting the flow of the game. so what do you think is me are making for more fear or is it just rubbish lets us know in the comments if you enjoyed this video like and subscribe. now we re off the g.l.a.
to find out about charlie s honoring piece the man who messi twice since midfield enforcer was once a shy and skinny kid and what is your little laugh to. say about a fan if. you saw it let s find out more about his roots and his path to football star to. santiago the chilean capital on the far outskirts of the city lights pointing out the home town to china less than. one of the poorest areas in all of santiago twenty outro is a sense with problems violence drugs discrimination. and the new model for music. how do you make it sound. it helps to meet the right people. am with
a lance that respects ago. they could have put the code in all e.u. i guess and it s often law and so i thought i d look in to see it like the middle of the moment there where the law i think that meant to give you thought the meal was the word feed so at the. end what it all saw we had an eye. you also need someone to recognise your talent for not try to make short cuts it is even though he s loath to take the credit even. davis jagan the stage for a little. bit of milking line and that not the needle nor do. i just read life took a different turn and told how to devise for charles and his friends something we might all have touch. you only they were friendly but it seemed of this in.
their lives then they need to concede to. me you know million. or one silly. child lives knows just how true that is in twenty fifteen he tore his a.c.l. in training before he even got to play a game for his new club by eleven months of rehab following his. own i don t do that right. now but. on the. his job was very much on the rise of the time they just named to street and plenty also after him following chile s big win in the cup america beat messi every kid in chile knew his night the fans of the university down to chile love him the mongst he helped lead the club to three league titles and they treat him like a gold. club yet done
yet again to salvage the underworld of history we re going through the one where he was very aware of it but when we tried to alert the billion one hundred that i knew we d see big you know new england for the boy in. zero four i would examine to be allowed i m game. it would mean you gave me a class who even they just knew they known. go away to allow then you would be left in the meantime kiss my mouth and say it would be the new year to date. back on his old straight fans painted a makeshift tribute to the typical chilean lot and his journey from pointing out to all the whites of the bundesliga he s a role model to many and to everyone my friends that s been his nickname since his time in boyhood club. for we need for. a.
finance. kid sees each other less as proof that their dreams of a big career can come true. if you. can help us in it but i m also a little he. quit on my idea you were a little boy. also they re going to have him say. it again that yes if a little rust in the previous immensely old that here too you know what the don t mean a good deal to leave so you know they want to. yes out of their money. but it s a god they want the. water in the man. got it they d go where he. was and they could happen on a nano because channel is out and he s was just chatting is that i m the sort of kid with hopes and fears before he was
a mega star. as . the us and so. they. see. him from seeing the. beheading of keeping us. as the symbol of that. he remembers and also remembers how he made his house and went down so. fast that not all may not so old say i thought if i don t think of.
a few your immortal soul. then that will find out. how it works and humility helps countless succeed and staying a typical chilean lot. of. the faithful. in the end of the family. from sickle she lands to the prince and she shall list and i guess. to play a sound i found song from the gun and capital of across the fish house fallin cademy yes that s right the track is fly fish excessive stumble has a branch in gemini s capital by lynn and thank you in turn have
a football academy ngata. take it away boys. high order one man i mean who have gone up. and out into. a crowd to you and there we sing to express our song for you to become a star ok let s go on to when i do go back to where i go do one mind up yet on my i get a good day i think that s a new man oh yeah yeah i do but you. were doing no good you go to my yeah go good it is a lot of money yet oh my i gotta do. i say a new man oh my yeah yeah it did yesterday.
maybe he who is so so so so it s not so basic that now no no no no no no. oh. no no no no no no no no no. but he. me he such are still bashing past so it s automatic us well out no no no no no i are oh yes you got it. yeah are. oh. yeah. and. oh and i m on. right. now is the worst cell along the way so this thing that. like i don t know crocodile thank you very much
and there are things that you think i m going on right right right. and you know we re going to know mighty. fine for.
language in this time of. young good. w. dot com the german. tells us story in story so. it makes us laugh. and cry explain the trouble and smile illegibly to cook images of emotion the exploration goals. can see every movie jammed on d w.

Neighborhood , Country , Europe , Portugal , Football , Justice , Video-evidence , Lore , Making , Category , Economics , Life

Transcripts For CNNW Erin Burnett OutFront 20180223 00:00:00


he never went in, sheriffs deputy only armed guard on campus during a deadly shooting in high school, quote never went into the building when the shooting was taking place. that was according to sheriff israel of broward county who described how he felt as he watched the video of the deputy do absolutely nothing as the gunman killed 17 people. devastated. sick to my stomach. there are no words l i mean, these families lost their children. we lost coaches h i ve been to the funerals. i ve been to the homes where they sit and shiver. i ve been to the vigils. it s just there are no words. well, that deputy scott peterson, he resigned today. the irony this news coming on the same day that president trump doubled down on his call to arm the nation s teachers as a way to combat mass shootings
in schools. i think a concealed permit for having teachers and letting people know there are people in the building with a gun, you won t have, in my opinion, you won t have these shootings. because these people with cowards. they won t walk into a school if 20% of the teachers have guns. it may be 10%. it may be 40%. and what i would recommend doing is the people that do carry, we give them a bonus. we give them a little bit of a bonus. so practically for free you have now made the school into a hardened target. well, let s think about that for a minute. there are roughly 3.5 million teachers in the united states today. that according to the department of education. 40% would mean 1.4 million teachers in this country would be armed under the president s plan. the idea sparked outrage immediately from stoneman douglas high school students to even republican senators. to arm every like to arm
any teacher, they are there to teach. we don t need to put guns in the hands of teachers. i don t believe teachers should be armed. i believe teachers should teach the notion my kids are dwog to school with teachers that are armed with a weapon is not something that quite frankly i m comfortable with. i might say the same as a dad as well. well, even as trump proposes teachers carry weapons in the classroom, the president says that he opposed to preparing teachers and students with active shooter drills. active shooter drills is a very negative thing. i ll be honest with you. i mean if i m a child and i m ten years old and they say we are going to have an active shooter drill, i say what s that. people may come in and shoot you. i think that s a very negative thing to be talking about to be honest with you. let s go to martin savage, in parkland, florida with the breaking news on that sheriff s department. really, martin only armed officer on campus, never went into the building where the shooting was taking place.
what are you learning tonight about what happened? reporter: it s an additional horrific turn in the narrative, jim. and, remember, just a couple of days ago that these families who lost their children wrl told by the fbi that they had received a tip that they had failed to act on. now on top of that, they are being told there was an armed officer, the school resource officer, a trained veteran sheriffs deputy in uniform with aside arm standing outside the building where the shootings are taking place, and that officer, scott peterson, did not do anything according to scott israel which is broward county sheriff. they said they are launching an investigation. asked for his resignation. instead he is it resigning and going into retirement. but it is a horrible turn of events. questions have been raised about scott peterson eversince the shooting on campus especially for the families who had lost children. now it appears the time that he was waiting outside, the only
president did comments on twitter, that he believes will make schools safer. also heard him say he wants to get rid of though at the same time active shooter drills. how serious is he about that step? reporter: well, jim, there was certainly one stripping of consistent thought in the president s view on what should be done here. first, he voiced a lot of concern and ideas on social media. then again during a listening session with state and local officials. and one theme was to have more guns in schools. he said gun free zones in school, sign outside that says gun free zone is a welcome mat, if you will for shooters. sew said that school officials, coaches or teachers should be armed if they are prepared for that. he said not all of them, of course, will want to do it. but he talked about again and again about school teachers being armed. it s a deterrent. but we have all heard suicide by cop. this is what shooters do.
this if played out would be suicide by history teacher perhaps. it does not make a lot of sense to republicans in this town, democrats in this town who want to do something about this. but the president also was outlining a variety of different things. thing to keep an eye on, he said the age limit to buy these weapons he believes should go from 18 to 21. that is at odds with the nra. so that is one place he would potentially confront the nra it would be on that. but it was the teacher proposal the president talked about today again and again that certainly raised eyebrows at the white house. no question, jeff zeleny there at the white house. outfront let s ask teachers. sharon learner is teacher in stoneman douglas high school in parkland where the faculty and students were killed. and he s offering free concealed carry training to local teachers around the country. sarah, if i could begin with
you. you were in your classroom with stud ent students when shooting started at stoneman douglas. you lost two students. he heard the president to to be armed if you have aptitude, as he described t is thatit. is that a good idea? no, i have no desire to own a gun, shoot a gun, carry a gun, touch a gun. i don t think my coming to school with a gun would have changed anything. i wasn t in the building. i m in building six, not building 12. so if i would have been on campus with a gun, there would have literally been nothing for me to do. now, i know you initially, as i understand it, you started leaving the building where you were, which as you said was a separate building. yes. when the gunman pulled the fire alarm. once you heard the shooting ran back into your class room hold up there for i understand for more than two hours along with
several of your students until s.w.a.t. arrived. yes. was there ever a moment in there had you had a gun you might have felt safer? no. no. because hi i i don t need to have a gun to keep my safe. i knew the s.w.a.t. team, fbi, broward sheriff s office, local offices were here securing the campus and keep me safe. that made me feel safe. if i had begun in my classroom with 15 students, i wouldn t have used it. i didn t see the shooter. i heard the shots when i went outside. but having a gun would do me no good. if anything, if i had a gun on campus, it would have been locked in my closet, and if somebody had come in the room, in the time it would take me to get my keys and open my closet i would would be dead. sheriff, i know you are no
stranger, you had experience, 15-year-old wounded four other students opening fire in cafeteria in one of your schools just last year. but i understand you agree with the president? i agree with the president. or let s say the president agrees with me. we had a school shooting. i have talked to teachers in the school where we had the school shooting. they would have liked to have a gun. we are not talking about everybody having a weapon. the teacher you have on here i can understand if you are not comfortable with a weapon and trained, i agree with her. but still the teachers are being shot. kids are being shot. within five minutes the shooting is over. 8 minutes the police are there. the only thing you can do is hide and wait. we have to train. teachers should be trained at least to see a gun, no what it looks like, sounds like, what to do. they should be trained in first aid. we arrested two yesterday one said they would beat the 17 number. one said they were going to do
shooting. the day after the shooting we arrested five just in our local area. that s just here not the whole united states. let me ask you this. we had a test case of this, did we not at parkland. because there was an armed school research, resource officer, sor as we know, trained uniformed guard, who didn t do anything. and listen i don t want to attack this one person too much. i spoke to a u.s. retired u.s. general tonight who commanded troops in iraq and said that reaction to violence is not uncommon. i mean, if the armed trained uniformed security guard at parkland didn t do it, why would we expect teachers like sarah or others to be that frontline responder? i wouldn t expect sarah to be a frontline responder. i would expect, when you have people like the officer there, just imagine if we had some teachers in the school that were certified and trained, we would at least have somebody in that school with a weapon.
but there was someone in the school with weapon. please. they didn t go in. we had an officer in our school with a weapon also. he was in the cafeteria. and when he waited for him and the principal to leave the cafeteria, then the kid jumped up and shot four people, emptied weapon out, 15 years old. you need backup in the schools. officers aren t always the answer. you need someone twout a weapon that can be trained. when people say go ahead. let s give sarah a chance because she s in the classroom. sarah, what do you think? sure. okay. so just for argument sake, sheriff, if i were to have a gun and carry it at school and this happened in the cafeteria where i am not, how am i helping? if someone comes into my classroom and i m on the other side of the room not near ply gun, how is the gun going to
help keep me safe? he s going to shoot me before i can access my gun? sheriff, how do you answer that? you ll be shot anyway. you ll probably going to be shot anyway. students will be shot. only thing you can do is beg for your life or wait for the police to get there. you have people that are trained. so if i m going to be shot anyway, then why do i need to car ka carry a gun? because you ll save the lives of other students. if you had the gun you wouldn t be shot. that doesn t make sense. that s not necessarily true, sir. we agree to disagree. we do agree to disagree. because i don t think that arming teachers one at a time, so the audience can follow. sheriff, go ahead, and then sarah, trust me i want to give me your due. but sheriff if you can complete your shot. okay. sure, i talked to a teacher in florida today who said she s okay with weapons in school.
she personally doesn t want a weapon. we have people that are trained with weapons before they become teachers and school boards have to approve the weapons in the school. and here in ohio i had 300 teachers sign up in less than eight hours that want to be trained in firearms and want to have guns. so when people say that they don t want guns, the teachers don t want to be armed, sure there are those. but just as many that wanted to be harmed and should be. let s give sarah a chance to respond. yes, sir. i believe the overwhelming majority of teachers do not want to be armed. and the president said that those of us who would be willing to be armed would get some kind of a bonus h i m not even given adequate money to buy supplies for my classroom. but now if i choose to carry a gun, a gun will be provided for me and i ll be given a bonus? i would rather see all of that money go to having more security personnel on my campus. giving me more money in my
paycheck. i don t need a gun. give me the money instead. sarah and sheriff, we ll have to leave it there. but thank you. it s a difficult issue. you disagree on it but you gave each other time to make your points. sure. and i know on a topic like that that s tough. thank you to both of you. let s keep up the conversation. thaupnk you, guys. i appreciate it. up next, the nra out to blame everything but guns. prying white mott horse to you and many in the legacy media. plus breaking news in the russian investigation, new charges against manafort and gates, is mueller putting squeeze on them to make a deal. and father of a teenager killed just a week ago calls out senator marco rubio to his face. that father is my guest. insura- it was really easy. easy. that d be nice.
phone: for help with chairs, say chair. phone: for help with bookcases, say bookcase. bookcase. i thought this was the dresser? isn t that the bed? phone: i m sorry, i didn t understand. phone: for help with chairs, say chair. does this mean we re not going out? book-case. see how easy renters insurance can be at geico.com. of being there for my son s winning shot. that was it for me. that s why i m quitting with nicorette. only nicorette mini has a patented fast dissolving formula. it starts to relieve sudden cravings fast. every great why needs a great how. every great why don t we need that cable box to watch tv? nope. don t we need to run? nope. it just explodes in a high pitched yeahhh.
yeahhh! try directv now for $10 a month for 3 months. no satellite needed. but mania, such as unusualrder can changes in your mood,able. activity or energy levels, can leave you on shaky ground. help take control by asking about your treatment options. vraylar is approved for the acute treatment of manic or mixed episodes of bipolar i disorder in adults. clinical studies showed that vraylar reduced overall manic symptoms. vraylar should not be used in elderly patients with dementia due to increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about fever, stiff muscles, or confusion, which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements, which may be permanent. side effects may not appear for several weeks. high cholesterol and weight gain; high blood sugar, which can lead to coma or death; decreased white blood cells, which can be fatal; dizziness upon standing; falls; seizures; impaired judgment; heat sensitivity;
and trouble swallowing may occur. you re more than just your bipolar i. ask your doctor about vraylar.
but he hasoke up wwork to do.in. so he took aleve. if he d taken tylenol, he d be stopping for more pills right now. only aleve has the strength to stop tough pain for up to 12 hours with just one pill. aleve. all day strong. new tonight head of nra comes out swinging after days of silence following the florida school shooting massacre. wane lapeer, using his speech to attack the media and democrats calling for new gun control measures and calling his group as a victim. as usual, the opportunists wasted not one second to exploit tragedy for political gain. chris murphy, nancy pelosi, and more, cheered on by the national
media, eager to blame the nra and call for even more government control. they hate the nra. outfront now is former adviser to the trump campaign, steve cortes and former clinton white house aide steve boy ton. if i can begin there with the argument folks supporting gun control, brings in the media as well, are somehow just pursuing anti-nra gaepd. do you think that s a fair argument with any discussion of gun control after a shooting like this? no, i think it s part of it. because i think it s telling how quickly people immediately and particularly people in politics and media how quickly they try to blame the nra for this tragedy. and in fact the nra has brn diligently working to try to prevent these kinds of tragedies through things like arming our schools properly. i believe and the nra believes it s outrageous in america that our priorities are so misplaced that we grd our money and our
jewels and office buildings with armed security but not our precious children. and that has to change. keith, that was a comparison the president made today about banks and others. and he even talked about gun free campuses being something like ice cream compared the students to ice cream. do you think the nra is doing as steve says it s best to protect area students. i think they are doing their best to protect nra and people continue to own guns and stockpile weapons. i don t think they are trying to protect the students. i don t think against. but that s not their my yort. priority is to their millions of members. the reality is president trump received money from the nra. rubio received money from nra. and nra is using influence to present those ideas to them and block any kind of legislation that would prove common sense gun reform that most americans
support. most americans support universal background checks, and banning bump stocks, support things like raising the age for owning these deadly weapons. but the nra won t allow members of congress on their side to do anything about it. steve, that s an issue where the president and nra, there is daylight between them. on the age, 18 and 21 president might support that on bump stock ban. can you see the president following through even in defiance of a powerful lobbying group like nra? yes. and the nra hasn t said what they believe about the age definition. but the president is willing to go up against nra in that case. when we talk about the nra some of the critics of the nra want to give it mythical status and how powerful and money it gives. it is pretty darn powerful. decks and republicans will run from a negative rating from the nra. this is my point. what it spends on political races is pittance compared to
what unions. what they do have millions of americans incredibly dedicated to gun rights and organization and tens of millions of people agree with them. vast majority of the people believe guns are fundamental right that the second amendment is real and it s an individual right. and almost all of them by the way own guns responsibly. now, can we find better ways to keep guns out of people s hands who shouldn t have them who are mentally unwell? of course. trump for that, nra is for that, i m for that. in the meantime what makes sense is guard our children. why do we allow them to be sitting ducks when we know that sick and deranged people are purposely targeting them. keith, your response. best way to protect our people is not have armed guards in the schools. for god s sake, there is an armed security resource officer at the school in parkland, florida, he did nothing. this whole line that doesn t negate the argue mtd for having him. this whole line is baloney.
we saw it in las vegas. what was a good guy going to do to stop shooting of 600 people when the guy was in hotel room hundreds of feet away? that s totally separate issue. i m talking about school shootings. what would happen in fort hood? i m glad you mentioned this. let me finish. fort hood, the u.s. naval facility in washington d.c. yard. the naval yard. plenty of examples. yes i know they don t have weapons. everybody has weapons and facility. what you are going to say. no, they don t have weapons. plenty of examples where people have armed weapons, and they are still not able to stop a bad person with a gun. so how do you want to protect schools? way to do it, the way other countries do it, the way they don t have mass shootings, they don t have the access to guns that we do. they don t pal lou people who have mental issues to have access to guns. we don t here either.
young people to have access. they have universal background checks. they make sure we restrict certain guns so they are not in use. not everyone needs to have an a saultd weapon. steve, please respond. even if gun control were a good idea which i don t think at all it is, but let s say for sake of argument it is, there are already 10 million ar-15 in this country. 300 total million guns. that toothpaste is not going back in the tube. we still have a problem with school shootings and protect our school children even if i were to, grant you gun control. they did it in australia. do you think americans will give up their fundamental life? australia is different and thank goodness. very successful and they have had no mass shootings. i want to play. because this is a wider point that we heard nra c pack conference in washington. have a listen to the point she was making. many in legacy media love
mass shootings. you guys love it. now, i m not saying that you love the tragedy. but i am saying that you love the ratings. crying white mothers are ratings gold to you and many in the legacy media in the back. steve, you have to admit we often see after shootings like this nra and others find many culprits other than guns, right, for the trouble and of course the media is a favorite target. is that a fair argument for her to make there? well, by the way, you can t blame guns. she s saying that we i ve covered shootings before there is nothing enticing school shooting. i m a dad. is that fair? i think her words were far too harsh. i don t believe people critical of the media believe love mass shootings. she is ton an important point though. which is i live in chicago.
in chicago, statistically we have a parkland body count, roughly every week in chicago. it s mostly young black men. and because they are killed one and two at a time and not this mass scene that we saw in awful scene in parkland doesn t get much attention in the national media. so i think she s onto something there. i don t think that s the point she s making there. first of all, most of these conservatives talk about the black crime taking place in chicago and other places. i sure do and i live there. actually listen to what black people were saying, majority of black people, 74% of black support federal registry of gun purchases. if you want to listen to what black people are saying about weapons, then listen to us, don t lecture to us from c pack conference. how dare she go there and say that. when the night before she was town hall in parkland and refused to say any of that.
what a cowardly thing to make those comments. just like wane lapeer, why didn t he go there, where is the courage in that. when you talk about an assault weapon ban supposedly cutting down on crime, so long guns are not preferred choice of criminals. you have to admit is different story. we ll have to leave it there. thanks. difficult target. outfront next, new indictments from the mueller probe, is mule tear ramping up pressure on campaign aides. plus. your comments this week and those of our president have been pathetically weak. the father who lost a daughter and stood up to senator marco rubio is my guest.
breaking news tonight in the russia investigation. special counsel robert mueller filing new charges just unsealed against former trump campaign chairman paul manafort and former trump campaign deputy chairman rick gates sign that mueller is applying new pressure on both of them possibly to have them reconsider working with the investigation h this new indictment includes 32 counts of tax and bank fraud, including a charge that the pair laundered more than $30 million in income. shimon is outfront. i know you ve been reading through this indictment. a lot of counts there. what can you tell us? reporter: yes, very tangled facts in the indictment. the key here there are these new bank charges these two face. and the significant thing is they could land them in jail up
to 30 years which is significantly more time they faced in previous indictment. now as you said this could put pressure on the two to cooperate. this indictment is similar to some of the charges we saw in the first indictment where the two based on money the two were making on lobby work on pro russian leader of the ukraine. and new the two men according to the indictment pa ledge he hadly took this money and hide it from u.s. authorities. allegedly parked millions of dollars in unreported money in u.s. real estate as well as offshore bank accounts. and the indictment said they used new property as collateral to take out fraudulent bank loans. now these two charges mount pressure to perhaps cooperate. and cnn, as cnn has reported rick gates was in talks to cooperate. and the question now is will he still cooperate despite these new charges.
we are told they possibly could still strike a deal. but, you know, jim, there is every indication these new charges are effort to get manafort to flip as well. 30 years in prison, that is a lot of pressure. shimon, thanks very much. outfront now we have former u.s. assistant attorney kim wailly and former nixon counsel john dean. if i could start with you, manafort 18 new charges, gates 23 new charges, this is in virginia in addition to the charges they are already facing. manafort 70 years old, 30 years in prison, talking about dying in prison. gates is wronger but he s got kids. this is a significant amount of prosecutor pressure, is it not? absolutely. this has got to make these two men and their families and lawyers quake in their boots. really serious. and the level of specificity in this indictment. i mean, as a law professor it s actually in a way refreshing to
see so much focus on the facts. we have pages and pages of transactions. and corporations that money was hidden and all kinds of things that clearly demonstrate that this prosecutor is very serious about the kind of work that he s bringing to bear in this investigation. john, does it give you clues as to where the investigation is heading, apply pressure on gates and mueller to get higher up, including the president? is that what you read into this? i certainly do read that with the additional charges. but also in the indictment itself or actually in the status report i found in the docket today, that the special counsel says the reason he filed this additional indictment, the indictment in the eastern district is that one of the defendants refused to wave ive the district of columbia, that
any of the crimes occurred in the district of columbia, so they had a venue problem. so they have actually right now two indictments against them. one in the eastern district, this new 32 count indictment, and one the 12 count indictment is still standing in the dils tri district of columbia. so they created this em self a good nightmare. goodness. kim, cnn had reported gates had been in negotiations with mueller s office to strike a plea deal. you add these new charges, i imagine to try to resurrect plea bargains? or maybe ongoing. other thing interesting about this indictment that tells a story, it speaks of gates as manafort s quote right hand man. so it really paints a picture where they were side by side. manafort perhaps the boss. gates the henchman that s doing the bidding for many, many, many years, many, many, alleged
crimes. so there will be pressure i think on both of them. and certainly in gates does flip, it makes manafort in a particularly precarious position going forward. now, john, the president has been asked about the possibility of pardons. hasn t been particularly clear in his public comments. but here s what he has said in the past. i don t want to talk about pardons for michael flynn yet. we ll see what happens. that regarding michael flynn, well see, he s leaving the door open there. do the new charges impact what would happen if trump decided to pardon either of them? well, obviously, they are federal offenses so he could pardon both gates and manafort. however, there are offenses that occurred really unrelated to his campaign or his presidency. so these are this is bad behavior that predated that.
obviouslily found them in the course of the investigation. it was within the jurisdiction of the special counsel. and special counsel is obviously using it to try to learn more about the campaign. so, you know, it s an open playing field actually for the president what he wants to do. but i think heed have a lot of trouble justifying pardons for these offenses. and the list well, quick thought, kim, sorry. if i could jump in on pardon. a couple of things as was mentioned any state charges would not be pardoned. but the second thing is that, you know, pardon power is not unlimited. i think that s a bit of a mistaken belief. the president cannot, in my view, as constitutional law professor, pardon people for the wrong rooern. so you couldn t pardon someone to cover up for another crime. another thing the pardon power is crime specific. so even if he did pardon these two indictments at some point, it would not necessarily preclude robert mueller from bringing down additional charges
assuming he had the evidence. so it s a bit of a cat and mouse chasing gain pardon power. i don t think that s part of this panacea that will protect this president from this investigation. kim, john, thanks very much. thank you. thank you. outfront next, jaime guttenberg was killed in florida last week. tonight her father speaks out about what the white house is and is not doing about school shootings. and is trump s national security adviser on his way out? i m here to fix the elevator. nothing s wrong with the elevator. right. but you want to fix it. right. so who sent you? new guy. what new guy? watson. my analysis of sensor and maintenance data indicates elevator 3 will malfunction in 2 days. there you go. you still need a pass. there you go. alright,
i brought in high protein to help get us moving. .and help you feel more strength and energy in just two weeks! i ll take that. -yeeeeeah! ensure high protein. with 16 grams of protein and 4 grams of sugar. ensure. always be you. at holiday inn express, we can t guarantee that you ll be able to contain yourself at our breakfast bar. morning, egg white omelet. sup lady bacon! fruit, there it is! but we can guarantee that you ll get the best price when you book with us. holiday inn express. be the readiest. he s a nascar champion who s she s a world-class swimmer who s stared down the best in her sport. but for both of them, the most challenging opponent was. pe blood clots in my lung. it was really scary. a dvt in my leg. i had to learn all i could to help protect myself. my doctor and i choose xarelto® xarelto®. to help keep me protected. xarelto® is a latest-generation blood thinner. .that s proven to treat and reduce the risk of dvt and pe blood clots from happening again. in clinical studies, almost 98% of patients on xarelto®
did not experience another dvt or pe. here s how xarelto works. xarelto® works differently. warfarin interferes with at least six blood-clotting factors. xarelto® is selective. .targeting just one critical factor, interacting with less of your body s natural blood-clotting function. don t stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor as this may increase risk of blood clots. while taking, you may bruise more easily, or take longer for bleeding to stop. it may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. get help right away for unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you ve had spinal anesthesia, watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle-related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures and before starting xarelto® about any conditions, such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. you ve got to learn all you can. .to help protect yourself from dvt and pe blood clots. talk to your doctor about xarelto®. there s more to know.
hall with fred guttenberg. he lost his 14-year-old daughter jamie at the stoneman douglas high school. the comments this week and those of your president are pathetically weak. are guns a factor? of course they are. and they are la weapon of choice, can you say that? number one, fred, i absolutely believe that in this country, if you are 18 years of age you should not be able to buy a rifle and i ll support a law that will take that right away. fantastic. i think what you are asking about is assault weapons ban. yes, sir. so let me be honest with you about that one. if i believe that that law would have prevented this from happening i would support it. but i want to explain to you why it would not. outfront now is fred guttenberg. and, fred, as father i ve been thinking about talking to you all day, and my heart truly goes out to you. you really put it on the line.
thank you. last night going head to head with the united states senator there. yet today we hear from marco rubio, florida senator. and the white house no ban. what s your reaction? frustration. just over a week ago today my daughter was hunted as school as were 16 other people. not only do we hear no discussion on a ban, we hear no discussion on anything productive. the reality is we have we have a public safety issue but certainly school safety issue. and everybody kind of runs to the bunker on positions. i don t have i have a position chblt i m a dad and i want my kids to go to school be and safe. i ve been thinking about this a week. i ve been thinking about it all
day as i ve been talking to people. and this is a complicated issue. you certainly have entrenched special interests, many of which have been kind of nasty, i can take it, but to the kids. and i this i we need to deal with it. i do think leadership, that would mean the president, that would mean the senate, that would mean the congress and the states, need to deal with this issue. and i think they have to maybe the mistake is everybody runs to their bunkers rather than someplace there is a solution. and the problem is you have incidents and you have casualtities. we need to address all the factors that lead to the incidents. and honestly, everything i ve heard, i m in total agreement with. there is human factors in terms of law enforcement. there are factors of law and what law enforcement can do.
there is mental health factors. but then there is the issue of casualties and injuries. and that s the issue that has to do with guns. and you can t eliminate any of those factors. they all need to be addressed. yeah. we learned just a short time ago that the armed school resource officer, they are known as sro, there was one on campus, he was suspended today because officials found he never entered the building during the shooting. what does that say to you about armed guards being part of the solution? well, you know what, and i m glad you brought it up. that s the human factor. okay. and i thisnk that gets to the incidents part but also limiting casualties. i do think that maybe in the past we haven t put our best, when it comes to police, on school campuses. and maybe that s been a mistake.
and we need to relook at that. because i am all for enhancing security on school campuses. and maybe a campus of that size shouldn t just have one armed resource officer, not teachers, but security, who is a trained police officer, but should have more than one. and it shouldn t be somebody who has already kind of gone through their best police years, but maybe it should be the bad ast police officers who are going to take action and run in and not worry about the consequences to their public safety to save lives. and i apologize for my language, i just can t help it. hey, listen, i m not going to quell for you for that what you ve been through. the president today also brought up this issue that you often here after school shootings, active violence, that violence in video games is somehow partly responsible. video games, movies, for shaping young people s thoughts. do you think that that s in the scheme of causes, as you
said earlier, multiple causes behind this kind of thing, do you think that s a significant one? i m not sure. i would say i don t know. i doubt it. it kind of sound silly on the surface to me. but that said, if there is it a component of that why we have all these incidents, then it should be looked at. on the surface it kind of seems silly. however, if that is part of the mental health discussion, then i want to have that conversation. i would love to see the people in this country, and i would love to be part of that, let the president call it, let him pull it together, let him do a real public safety session, where we bring all the professionals together to identify what are the real factors that lead to the incidents, and what are the steps we need to take to cut
down the casualties and injuries when the incidents happen. right. you know, fred, after last night s comments in the town hall, your comments that interaction made headlines not just in the u.s. but around the world. you could see them on the screen here. eight days ago as you were sending your daughter to school, i m sure you never dreamed or had nightmares of being in a position like this. every desired to be in a position like this. you know, i spent my entire life with my children and my wife with a basic philosophy. and i always say to them in talking about what stress and hard times are, saying, when we wake up in the morning and those we love and care about are safe and healthy, it s the start of a good day. when we go to sleep at night, and those we love and care about are still safe and healthy, we have just finished a good day.
everything else in between is just stuff we need to deal with. in my wildest imagination, no, i never imagined that my daughter was going to be hunted at school. i never imagined that i would spend the rest of my life starting my day at a cemetery for my child who at the age of 14 truly had her life figured out. you know, this was not your typical kid. and now we talk about rights in relation to this discussion. all of my daughter s rights have been terminated. it s no, it s not something i ever manlimagined. off in the distance, and you can t see it, but i have my son waiting for me. my 17-year-old son.
i always thought i could protect my kids, and now i can t make him that promise. and now i have stoeto send him to school on tuesday. and i m going to send it back, because my family, we re strong. and i, i insist that you face it. but i m scared to death. yeah. listen, i m heartbroken for you. and i know i m not alone. folks here with me at cnn, but a lot of folks watching tonight are thinking of you and let me just share, let me just share those thoughts with you tonight. and i really do wish you the best. hug your son tonight. i m sure you will. thank you. i really appreciate your time. outfront next, is the white house trying to find a new job for the national security adviser? it s easy to think that all money managers are pretty much the same. but while some push high commission investment products, fisher investments avoids them. some advisers have hidden and layered fees. fisher investments never does.
and while some advisers are happy to earn commissions from you whether you do well or not, fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that s why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. i thought i was managing my moderate to severe crohn s disease. then i realized something was missing. me. my symptoms were keeping me from being there. so, i talked to my doctor and learned humira is for people who still have symptoms of crohn s disease after trying other medications. and the majority of people on humira saw significant symptom relief and many achieved remission in as little as 4 weeks. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you ve been to areas
where certain fungal infections are common, and if you ve had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don t start humira if you have an infection. be there for you, and them. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible. on the only bed that adjusts on both sides to your ideal comfort, your sleep number setting. does your bed do that? right now, save 50% on the ultimate limited edition bed. ends sunday. visit sleepnumber.com for a store near you.
tell your doctor if symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. never give up. see me. see me. clear skin can last. don t hold back. .ask your dermatologist if cosentyx can help you find clear skin that lasts. my healthy routine helps me feel my best. so i add activia yogurt to my day. with its billions of live and active probiotics, activia may help support my digestive health, so i can take on my day. activia. now in probiotic dailies. . new tonight, tension between president trump and his national security adviser. sources tell cnn s barbara starr the pentagon is looking for a four-star position that would allow h.r. mcmaster to quietly leave the white house and return to the military. that means that trump could be looking for his third national security adviser in just over a year. cnn politics editor at large,
chris cillizza, is outfront tonight. chris, the reports, trump and mcmaster, they haven t got along for months. we ve heard those stories. what do you think is the behind-the-scenes story here? well, first of all, donald trump is hard on the furniture, to put it one way, which is just to say, he is very tough on staff. look at who he has run through in his year and a little bit in the white house, jim. and then we got a signal in regards to the russia investigation on saturday, general mcmaster was in germany. and basically said, it s hard to deny at this point that russia was behind this interference effort. well, trump then took to twitter to say, what mr. mcmaster forgot to say was this and this and this and this. so donald trump doesn t really like anyone who doesn t defend him, what he believes to be wholeheartedly. mcmaster got sideways on that. the one thing i would say, that works for general mcmaster, is
he s a general. we know donald trump, refers to him as my generals, knows him as john kelly, jim mattis, h.r. mcmaster. donald trump moves towards and likes and values the counsel of military men. well, we know that mcmaster is not the only white house official currently on thin ice. he s recently had issues with non-generals. his attorney general, jeff session, chief of staff, john kelly, secretary of state, rex tillerson, deputy attorney general, rod rosenstein, and now, of course, mcmaster. this seems to be par for the course. yeah, i mean, it is like an episode of the apprentice, right? he brings all these people in. he swerves and you think he s going to fire this guy, but he fires this guy over here. this is donald trump s m.o. i always tell people, if you want some sense of how druonald trump views management and leadership, watch the apprentice and the celebrity apprentice for which he was, along with mark barnett, a
co-creator and producer of. he spars one against the other, cliff-hangers. he believe publicing calling people out is what gets them to give their best effort. i would suggest the past year would dispute that contention, but he clearly believes it. and he s even dismissed a former apprentice contestant, right, from his white house? fired three times and they just fired her a fourth, in the words of raj shah. chris zla cillizza, thank very much, and we ll be right back. it touches your tongue. and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. tum tum tum tum. smoothies. only from tums with advil s fast relief, you ll ask, what pulled muscle? what headache? nothing works faster to make pain a distant memory. advil liqui-gels and advil liqui-gels minis. what pain?
the updates you made to your plan strengthened your retirement score. so, that goal you ve been saving for, you can do it. we can do this? we can do this. at fidelity, our online planning tools are clear and straightforward so you can plan for retirement while saving for the things you want to do today. nana, let s do this! aye aye, captain! and as you go through life -whoo! - tryin to reach your goal

Horrible-mass-school-shooting , Building , Place , Campus , Sheriff , Sheriffs-deputy , Guard , High-school , Broward-county , Quote , Israel , People

Transcripts For CNNW Early Start With Christine Romans And Dave Briggs 20180403 09:00:00


ukrainian government which have links to russian politicians and operatives. the memo says the link compels investigators to examine russian efforts of interference in the 2016 election. the payments from ukraine to manafort is the basis for financial crimes charges he faces. manafort wants the charges dismissed claiming beyond mueller s scope because ukraine is unrelated to the campaign. the declassified memo was written in august by deputy attorney general rod rosenstein. it shows rosenstein s strong backing for the special counsel despite attacks from the president. let s discuss this with julian selzer. good morning. good morning. the constant attacks against the word collusion. the word he said the most in the first 14 or 15 months. how significant is this development? it doesn t seem there are any new findings here, but it shows
there is legitimacy to looking at the financial ties with officials in the trump orbit and russia. this just provides credibility for mueller looking into the area. there are reports that the white house is considering potentially meeting with putin at the white house with the president. what are your thoughts of that and how significant would that be? this is an initiative with any other president that would maybe be seen in a positive light and attempting to create a connection regardless of what putin has done. president trump doesn t have much credibility. this is the area he has undercut himself in diplomacy. there is very little trust. he takes the bad side of what russia has done very seriously. given all that has gone on, the president s focus on daca
coal industry and now pick losers like amazon. we will check in with you in 25 minutes. thank you. perfect. coming up, president trump is also targeting his own justice department claiming its dragging its feet handing over documents related to republican-led congressional investigations. he tweeted so sad the department of justice, end quotes, and the fbi are slow walking or not giving the unredacted documents requested by congress. embarrassment to our country. the timing of the tweet is a little odd considering fbi director chris wray promised around the clock shifts to speed up document production. the congressional requests seek documents related to the fbi probe of hillary clinton s private e-mail server and possible fbi abuses of surve surveillance warrants targeting
former campaign aide carter page. the wife of andrew mccabe is speaking out about the president s attacks on her family. jill mccabe said the taunts aimed at her husband just shy of his retirement are tiring. many centered on her 2015 run for the senate in virginia. she writes to have my personal reputation and integrity and those of my family attacked this way is beyond horrible. it feels awful every day. it keeps me up nights. i made the decision to run for office because i was trying to help people. instead it turned into something that was used to attack our family and my husband s career and the entire fbi. the president claimed donations to jill mccabe s from then governor terry mcauliffe. those donations came before andrew mccabe had oversight of the e-mail investigation.
his work on clinton came after she lost that election. epa straigadministrator sco pruitt s job is in jeopardy according to a white house open efficiently because the president is white house official because the president is angry over the ethics issues. a source says the president is upset over bad publicity. pruitt is facing criticism for travel expenses and bringing his security detail on personal trips. no official comment from the white house. talking of a dynasty is well deserved for jay wright. villanova is national champion for the second time in three years. they just routed michigan 79-62. villanova led by dante
divincenzo off the bench. he was named the outstanding player. they were dominant winning all six of the games by double figures. the best dressed man in college basketball is jay wright may be the best coach as well. congrats to all the folks outside philadelphia. and coming up, thousands of teachers in two states walking off the job in protest. more on their demands up next.
i was out here smoking instead of being there for my son s winning shot. that was it for me. that s why i m quitting with nicorette. only nicorette mini has a patented fast dissolving formula. it starts to relieve sudden cravings fast. every great why needs a great how.
unique blends of slow-release carbs to help manage blood sugar. every meal. every craving. it s the choices you make when managing blood sugar that are the real victories. glucerna. everyday progress. let s see. if this pack, and this pack, have the same number of bladder leak pads, i bet you think the bigger one is better, right? actually, it s bulkier. always discreet doesnneed all that bulk to protect. because it s made differently . the super absorbent core quickly turns liquid to gel, for drier protection that s a lot less bulky than poise. looks like good things really do come in small packages. always discreet. for bladder leaks.
thousands of teachers and students showed up at the state capitol. they said teachers were asking for the $10,000 raise and the legislative bill gave them a $6,100 raise. they asked for revenue appropriated to education funding and they got less than half they requested. it is difficult to be an educator in the state which ranks 49th of 50 states. 25% of the work force left the b profession in 2016. some have gone to four-day workweeks so teachers get jobs on fridays or school cannot keep the lights on. teachers i spoke to say it is especially difficult and more and more so by the day. it is getting increasingly harder to meet the needs of our students. it is important to us and tied to the funding we re requesting. we are asking secretary devos to come to oklahoma and see how
badly needed funding is for the classrooms. we are doing this for the kids today. it is not about us. it is about the kids. funding classrooms and getting adequate textbooks and highly qualified teachers and resources to do our job more effectively. reporter: the organizations i spoken to say there is another rally planned later this morning outside the capitol. dave. the congresswoman elizabeth esty of connecticut will not run for re-election in november. following reports it took her three months to dismiss her chief of staff after he allegedly harassed and threaten t ed a former aide. on monday, she announced she was ending her time in congress. adding too many women have been harmed by harassment in the workplace. in the terrible situation in my office, i could have and should
have done something better. esty asked the house ethics committee to expedite the investigation into the matter. federal authorities charged the pastor of the texas church of defraud beiing investors. prosecutors allege pastor kirby caldwell bilked millions of investors in a chinese bond scheme. he and his business partner face wire fraud and money laundering. the 64-year-old caldwell is a senior pastor of windsor village united methodist church in houston and reportedly a former spiritual adviser to george w. bush and barack obama. coming up, a 13-year-old boy saved hours after falling into a city sewer system. more on his amazing rescue just ahead.
great, another dead end. sarge, i just got a tip that ll crack this case wide open! turns out the prints at the crime scene- awwwww.did mcgruffy wuffy get a tippy wippy? i m serious! we gotta move fast before- who s a good boy? is him a good boy? erg.i m just gonna go. oh, you wanna go outside? you gotta go tinky poo-poo? i already went, ok? in the bathroom! as long as people talk baby-talk to dogs, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. hesumatra reserve told in the time it takes to brew your cup. let s go to sumatra. where s sumatra? good question. this is win. and that s win s goat, adi. the coffee here is amazing. because the volcanic soil is amazing. making the coffee erupt with flavor. so we give farmers like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. that erupts with even more flavor. which helps provide for win s family. and adi the goat s family too. because his kids eat a lot. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters. packed with goodness.
the toothpaste that helps prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try parodontax toothpaste. pepsoriasis does that. it was tough getting out there on stage. i wanted to be clear. i wanted it to last. so i kept on fighting. i found something that worked. and keeps on working. now? they see me. see me. see if cosentyx could make a difference for you- cosentyx is proven to help people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. .find clear skin that can last. don t use if you re allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx, you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms. or if you have received a vaccine or plan to. if you have inflammatory bowel disease, tell your doctor if symptoms develop or worsen.
serious allergic reactions may occur. never give up. see me. see me. clear skin can last. don t hold back. .ask your dermatologist if cosentyx can help you find clear skin that lasts.
two firefighters were killed in a plane crash. it happened on an indiana airport runway. authorities say 31-year-olds kyle hipp and david windcamper were taking off in the plane and hit the larger tail of the plane that just landed. the firefighters plane crashed and caught fire. the five people in the larger aircraft were not hurt. the faa says the airport does not have an air traffic control tower. the in tntsb is investigating.
system. he fell 25 feet below. with liquid flowing at 15 miles an hour. police officers and fire department and park rangers searched for him over 12 hours. in the early hours, a sanitation crew found him in the manhole cover between freeways here. he was talking and lucid. they dropped a hose and pulled him out. the first thing he asked for was a cell phone to call his family who were obviously very, very worried. rescue workers said they had hoped they would get him, but they knew the window was closing. dave and rene. back to you. nick, thank you. who is next to get the boot from the white house? cnn reporting points to epa boss scott pruitt. why a source says the president is angry at him coming up.
a place with 24-hour valet service. and upholstery classes a place where seniors get the care they need in the comfort of home. home instead senior care. weeds. nature s boomerang. at roundup®, we know they keep coming back. draw the line. one spray of roundup® max control 365 kills to the root and keeps weeds away for up to one year. roundup®, trusted for over forty years. (i ve done every night isince i was a kid,hing empty my pocket change into this old jar. it s never much, just what s left after i break a dollar. and i never thought i could get quality life insurance
with my spare change. neither did i. until i saw a commercial for the colonial penn program. imagine people our age getting life insurance at such an affordable rate. it s true. if you re 50 to 85, you can get guaranteed acceptance life insurance through the colonial penn program for less than 35 cents a day, just $9.95 a month. there s no medical exam and no health questions. you know, the average cost of a funeral is over $8,300. now that s a big burden to leave your loved ones. add to that credit card balances and final medical bills, and you ve got plenty of reasons to call for free information about this valuable coverage. it s easy and affordable to help cover your final expenses through the colonial penn program. as long as you re 50 to 85 you cannot be turned down because of your health. your premium never goes up and your benefit never goes down due to age. plus, your coverage builds cash value over time,
money you can borrow against. so don t wait, call now for free information and a free gift. all i did was make a phone call and all of my questions about the colonial penn program were answered. it couldn t have been any easier and we both got the coverage we should have had for years now. mm-hm, with change to spare. (laughing) (colonial penn jingle) a heart transplant. that s a whole different ballgame. i was in shock. i am very proud of the development of drugs that can prevent the rejection and prevent the recurrence of the original disease. i never felt i was going to die.
we know so much about transplantation. and we re living longer. you cannot help but be inspired by the opportunities that a transplant would offer. my donor s mom says you were meant to carry his story . capdynamic lightingrs elevated comfort powerfully efficient and one more thing the world comes with it you can go your own way. the 2019 jeep cherokee that protects as it colors. excellence haircolor by l oréal. rich, radiant color and it cares for my hair. no color protects better or covers grays better. 100% satisfaction guaranteed. so much care in one little box. excellence créme from l oréal paris.
breaking overnight. special counsel robert mueller cleared by the justice department to investigate whether former trump campaign chair paul manafort colluded with russia. president trump on the attack ripping democrats and dreamers while not protecting dreamers and the fbi is an embarrassment to the country. and villanova rolls to its second college basketball title in three years. the hero of the game came off the bench. welcome back to early start. i m rene marsh. i m dave briggs. christine romans on spring break. she will be back next week. we start with breaking news. a classified memo revealing special counsel robert mueller is authorized to pursue collusion charges against the
president s former campaign chairman paul manafort. the documents highlights payments to manafort from the ukrainian government which have links to russian politicians and operatives. the memo says the link compels them to examine russian efforts of interference in 2016. the payments from ukraine to manafort is the basis for financial crimes charges he faces. manafort wants the charges dismissed claiming beyond mueller s scope because ukraine is unrelated to the campaign. the declassified memo was written in august by deputy attorney general rod rosenstein. it shows rosenstein s strong backing for the special counsel despite attacks from the president. president trump on the attack as the white house pushing for an immigration bill. white house officials called immigration laws loopholes to allow immigrants to cross the border illegally.
loopholes they said must be closed. the officials admitted these were largely the same proposals they had been pushing since last fall. the white house easter egg roll where the president blamed the failure of daca protections and dreamers on democrats. the democrats have let them down. really let them down. they had the great opportunity. the democrats have really let them down. it s a shame. now people are taking advantage of daca. that s a shame. it should have never happened. didn t you kill daca, sir? no response from the president there. let s bring in julian zelitzer. julian, good morning. good morning. we are seeing the president return to the hard liner on immigration. similar to candidate trump. usually the candidate slightly different than president.
we re seeing the reverse here. he is reverting back to what we saw on the campaign trail. what do you make of that? he has never let go of the issue. attacks on immigration and demands of tighter immigration policies and his warnings that there is all kinds of chaos resulting from unauthorized immigrants in the country is a consistent thing he talked about. i think in his heart of hearts, he believes this and he likes to talk about it. i think he knows his supporters love this issue. this is red meat for the base. the other story dominating his twitter feed is his attack on amazon. they are side by side. it is strange to see him attack democrats on daca and then solely elsewhere focused on amazon dragging down the market and giving back the gains the president made in the first year. why do you think the president is solely focused on amazon? what problem does this present for conservatives? it is hard to see this as
disconnected from politics. it is not as if he is a pure ant anti-trust person. many see this as a political attack and a lot of the washington post and jeff bezos. that is why the stock market is tumbling. they are concerned with where the president will go with it. many republicans are quiet of actions of a democrat. they would be arguing about the winners and losers in the economy. that is strange turf for obama picking winners and losers. the president propping up the coal industry and attacking amazon. this is politically motivated. and staying with the economy. when do the republicans jump in before the bleeding gets bad. one item they want to run on is the corporate tax cuts and the
economy. if they don t have that and if the economy erodes and the stock market continues to tumble, what do they have to run on for 2018? they have a political disaster on their hands. i think there are two things prop up president trump politically. one is strong partisanship leads republicans to support a republican president no matter what. second is a strong economy allows them to keep saying whatever you think economic times are good. if that falls away, you will have a lot of republicans understanding there will be a wave in 2018 and 2020 can get ugly. this is one area of tweets i don t think the president can afford and the stock market numbers will scare a lot of republicans. it is interesting. he meets with the cable news personalities at mar-a-lago. we don t hear about meetings
with the congress. i want to talk about a piece you were for cnn.com. one thing you said struck me. the presidential instability has been stunning. there are so many stories. drip, drip, drip. we are zsipping from a fire hos here. what is missed among the chaos? i think the checks we assumed on the president and taking actions that could be dangerous don t exist. what we are seeing if we step back is a series of activities and tweets and political actions which can be very dangerous and can have big affects on the economy or overseas. no one is saying no. no one is really stopping it. i think that is what we are learning during the trump presiden presidency. he has long had a flood the
zone a approacpproach. even with all of the chaos and members of his cabinet, do you feel there is any one geopolitical issue that is pressing the president is not leaning into as much as he could or should be because he is distracted with the chaos at home? sure. nuclear disarmament is a big issue. there are a lot of nuclear weapons out there. we don t have a strategy. cyber warfare is connected with the investigation and political confidence. we are not talking what is the country doing and what are we doing internationally to curb the threat. the nuclear threat of 2018. this is not a lot of discussion about it. i think these issues in some of the chaos and day-to-day fascination with his latest tweet. let s hope they are planning for the meeting with kim jong un
in a couple of months here. that could be relatively pivotal. julian, thank you. president trump is also tar good evening the justice targeting the justice department claiming it is handing over documents and drags its feet. the president tweeted so sad the justice department and the fbi are slow walking or not giving the unredacted documents requested by congress. an embarrassment to our country. the teiming of the tweet is odd considering director chris wray promised around the clock shifts to speed up document production. the requests seek documents relating to the fbi probe of hillary clinton s e-mail server and fbi abuses of surveillance warrants with former aide carter page.
the wife of the former director is speaking out. jill mccabe says the taunts at her husband fired days before his retirement have been a nightmare. many centered on the 2015 run for the state senate in virginia. she writes to have my personal reputation and integrity and those of my family attacked this way is beyond horrible. it feels awful every day. it keeps me up nights. i made the decision to run for office because i was trying to help people. instead it was used to attack my family and my husband s career and fbi. the president claimed donations to jill mccabe from the then governor after an example of hillary clinton trying to sway the investigation into the e-mail server. those investigations came before andrew mccabe had oversight of the investigation. epa administrator scott pruitt s job is in jeopardy. according to a senior white
house official who tells cnn the president is angry over pruitt s ethical questions. another administration source says there is nothing the president despises more than his own officials getting bad publicity. pruitt is under scrutiny after the decision to rent a room in a condo below market value from the wife of a washington energy lobbyist. he is also facing criticism for travel expenses and bringing his security detail on personal trips. so far, no comment from the white house. all right. after a march full of upsets, a number one seed dominates. villanova wildcats are national champs for the second time in three years. andy scholes is in san antonio and joins us for the bleacher report. i know you are struggling. i did not get much sleep last night. that s the price i pay for going to the cool sporting events.
villanova sure does like the state of texas. they won it all two years ago in houston. now they are champions here in san antonio last night. the fourth team in past 40 years to win two titles in a three-year span. michigan was giving them all the they could handle in the game. that was until dante divincenzo to come off the bench to have the game of his life. he had 18 alone in the first half. he finished with 31 for the game. it was the most ever by a player off the bench and championship game history. villanova wins 79-62. divincenzo the most outstanding player in the final four. i caught up with him during the celebration on the floor. how amazing is this moment?
i we have been up and down this year. we competed every day in practice. we will share this for the rest of our lives. is this the moment you dreamed of since you were a kid? since i was born, honestly. the biggest thing for me is sharing it with these guys. and here are some of the pictures from philadelphia last night. fans taking to the streets to celebrate their second title in three years. of course, just the second title in the span of three months for the city of philadelphia after the eagles won the super bowl. they are becoming the city of champions in philly. guys, i have to say an impressive run by villanova. they won every single one of their games by double digits in the tournament. something which had not been done in 50 years. hat hat s off to the wildcats. jay wright has multiple titles
joining mike krzyzewski and mike williams. are the fans still out there? i think so. you know they grease the p e poles, but they still climb them. all the stuff they put on it not working. it is a challenge. it is. philly can conquer all challenges. thanks, andy. a career decision from a democratic congresswoman. under fire for how she handled a staffer accused of abuse. her story is next.
i have antivirus, but my computer s still slow. that s not right. maybe if i reboot. what s with all the popups? why does it keep on crashing? this is taking forever. i think it s time for the fixmestick. fixmestick is a plug-in virus removal device. it s the smart, simple, safe way to clean your computer yourself. with fixmestick you don t have to replace your computer. it helps you keep your files, and your privacy. fixmestick reboots your computer from a system on the stick, so that it can remove the malware that got past your antivirus software. it s the smart, simple way to clean an infected computer, with a whole lot going on inside the stick. [computers sound] alright, this computer s powered down. let s reboot from the stick, and start scanning. fixmestick contains 3 independent scanners, and connects to more in the cloud, for fast and effective detection of the latest threats.
i thought so - this one got around the antivirus software! not a problem. we re on it. today s viruses sabotage the computers they infect, like a burglar who gets into your house, and deactivates your security system. once your computer is infected, it s far easier to clean it with an external device. that s what makes fixmestick so effective. ok, i see spyware, trojans, keyloggers, and here it is, the rootkit! the fixmestick is like having your own it department in the palm of your hand. and because it connects to the internet, it s always up to date. coffee we re going to need some more coffee down here. anyone, coffee? advanced technology in an external device has enabled people all over the world to get the upper hand against viruses and malware. try it for 30 days, and see for yourself why more than a million people trust fixmestick to keep their computer fast, clean, and safe.
call us today or visit us online. if you d have told me three years ago. that we d be downloading in seconds, what used to take. minutes. that guests would compliment our wifi. that we could video conference. and do it like that. (snaps) if you d have told me that i could afford. a gig-speed.
a gig-speed network. it s like 20 times faster than what most people have. i d of said. i d of said you re dreaming. dreaming! definitely dreaming. then again, dreaming is how i got this far. now more businesses in more places can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america s largest gig-speed network. connecticut democratic congresswoman elizabeth etsy says she won t run for re-election in november. it follows reports are it took her three months to dismiss her chief of staff after he allegedly harassed and threatened a former aide.
last week, esty told cnn she was not resigning, but on monday she reversed course and announced she was ending her time in congress. addi adding, too many women have been harmed by harassment in the workplace and the terrible situation in my office, i should have done better. esty also asked the house ethics committee to expedite the investigation into the matter. 5:46. let s get a check on cnn money. stocks lower today after trade tensions and presidential attack on amazon rocked wall street. dow fell 458 points when china slapped tariffs on $3 billion of u.s. goods. amazon shares fell 5% after president trump again accused it of not paying taxes and hurting the post office. amazon was not alone. big tech facebook, apple and
google lost $78 billion in market value yesterday. the so-called faang stocks have driven the market to multiple record highs previously. intel shares may have to survive without apple. bloomberg reports apple will begin making its ovwn processor. intel makes most of the money from selling pc processors and mac computers are a part of the market. intel said the company does not comment on speculation. apple did not respond to our request for comment. spotify making the debut today on wall street. it is going around investment banks and taking itself public. spotify is planning a direct listing selling directly to investors. that will save it hundreds of millions of fees which could many a volatile start. nobody knows what the price will
be when it starts trading. it is the largest music streaming company with 159 million users worldwide. a 13-year-old boy saved hours after falling into the city sewer system. more on his amazing rescue is state ahead. straight ahead. and go to our coffee shop. and meet dave. hey. why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good, he asks? let me show you. let s go. so we climb. hike. see a bear. woah. reach the top. dave says dark magic is a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters packed with goodness. i ve been making blades here at gillette for 20 years. i bet i m the first blade maker you ve ever met. there s a lot of innovation that goes into making our thinnest longest lasting blades on the market. precision machinery and high-quality materials from around the world.
nobody else even comes close. it s about delivering a more comfortable shave every time. invented in boston, made and sold around the world. now starting at $7.99. gillette. the best a man can get.
swho live within five miles of custyour business?-54, like these two. and that guy. or maybe you want to reach women, ages 18 to 34, who are interested in fitness. namaste. whichever audience you re looking for, we ll find them we re the finders. we work here at comcast spotlight, and we have the best tools for getting your advertising message out there. anywhere, any way your audience watches. consider them found. internet providers promise business owners a lot. let s see who delivers more. comcast business offers fast gig-speeds across our network. at&t doesn t. we offer more complete reliability with up to 8 hours of 4g wireless network backup. at&t, no way. we offer 35 voice features and solutions that grow with your business. at&t, not so much. we give you 75 mbps for $59.95. that s more speed than at&t s comparable bundle, for less.
call today.
but i really love it. i m on the move all day long. and sometimes, i don t eat the way i should. so, i drink boost to get the nutrition i m missing. boost high protein nutritional drink has 15 grams of protein to help maintain muscle and 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d. all with a great taste. boost gives me everything i need. to be up for doing what i love. boost high protein be up for it look for savings on boost in your sunday paper. russian president vladimir putin traveling to turkey today topping the agenda with a meeting with recep tayyip erdogan is a situation with s r syr syria. the influence in the area is weakening and it seems moscow is calling the shots.
we have cnn s frederik pleitgen on the ground with the latest. reporter: good morning, dave. the u.s. is losing influence here. especially after president trumgz trump announced america could be pulling out soon of syria. you can imagine the ground forces are angry. especially the kurdish forces. they thought america would stand by their side after isis is defeated. the big winners in this appear to be the russians. look at the situation in today mass cast wheustomer where i damascus where i am right now and it is essentially the russians who have negotiated the withdraw of the rebels from the territories. you have russian president vladimir putin going to turkey today with the turks and russians and iranians the next couple days hacking out a plan
that they hope will determine the future of syria and once again america is not at the table as many here in syria wonder what america s long-term strategy is for the country. dave. fred, thank you. and tens of thousands of teachers in kentucky and oklahoma flooding state capitols and refusing to back down. in kentucky, fuming over a pension reform bill and demanding lawmakers add school funding. here is polo sandoval. reporter: dave and rene, this is more about pay and pensions here in kentucky, but funding the academic year. reform bill passed by legislators last week brought educators across the state here to frankfurt, kentucky. what is keeping them here is the push for legislators to not make any of the cuts for different education components. teachers say that is what brought them here and the
message that they want legislators to hear loudly. teachers will have to get second jobs in order to make ends meet. my husband even has told me he said you may have to get a second job to afford insurance. that is sad. reporter: what is helping is the majority of the school districts were closed for spring break this week. however, a handful of districts, including the teachers you heard from actually work at the locations where class is still in session. that begs the question what will happen come next week for the entire state if the teachers feel they are certainly not getting much from lawmakers, will they stage a walkout? in the meantime, many conservatives in both chambers here at the capitol maintain these cuts and reform is necessary to prolong the life of the pension plan. dave and rene. polo, thanks. sinclair broadcasting group and
the president defending the promo. the video went viral this weekend. false news has become too common on social media. alarminalarming. it was written to sound like an opinion, but mandate from management. sinclair is pushing back who call it pro-trump propaganda. the research initiative was done by the broadcasting group. the tweet stating so funny watching the networks criticizing. sinclair is far superior to cnn. even more fake nbc which is a total joke. we should note most of sinclair stations are cnn affiliates. a 13-year-old boy who was stuck in a sewage pipe for at least 12 hours is recovering this morning. authorities in los angeles say he was playing in griffith park when boards covering a pipe
opening gave way and he plunged 25 feet underground. cnn s nick watt has more. reporter: dave and rene, horrific story with thankfully a happy ending. jesse hernandez, a 13-year-old kid, in griffith park in los angeles on sunday afternoon playing with friends and fell into the sewage system. he fell 25 feet in the pipe of 4 feet in diameter with 2 feet of liquid flowing at 15 miles an hour. we had firefighters and park rangers and police officers search for him for over 12 hours. in the early hours, a sanitation crew found him when they opened a manhole cover between two freeway s here in los angeles. he was 11 feet down and lucid and talking. they dropped a hose to him and pulled him out. the first thing he asked for was a cell phone to call his family
who were obviously very worried. rescue workers said they hoped they would get him, but they knew the window was closing. dave and rene. back to you. amazing story. amazing survivor. thank you, nick. the sacramento county sheriff is blaming professional protesters for the trouble at a protest vigil in which a deputy struck a woman with his patrol car and drove off. sheriff jones said the video shows people were repeatedly kicking and banging the deputy s suv. he said the officer did not likely know the car had been hit by a protester. emotions have been boiling over after police shot and killed stephon clark, an unarmed black man. the woman struck by the vehicle is 61-year-old wanda cleveland. she was treated at the hospital for bruises. the california highway patrol

Payments , Memo , Interference , Politicians , Government , Link , Links , Operatives , Efforts , Russian , Investigators , Election

Transcripts For DW Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe 20180718 00:30:00


media came as a surprise. that it s crazy to think that we just did it for fun when we started now it s practically our job. i think what people like about our work is that they are highly structured pictures with clear lives and composition but above all we try to make them entertaining always with new creative ideas. when i. down now and i m a first measuring best starters he is an architect she is an illustrator but neither of them works much in actual profession a growing number of companies or take. notice of the photographs and send the couple products like watches or clothing to be staged creatively for ad campaigns. like these when the break from a french fashion label thank want to. use the theme of color hide and seek their idea is to put danielle in a cone of light the same color as the jackets to make them disappear. the way.
a top makeup artists award in serbia. she also made an appearance on spanish television. more than four hundred thousand fans subscribe to her you tube channel and regularly watch her videos she can t believe her luck. i m so happy i am old vehicle you know from all over the world and you re talking when they write he says for rosie okies from wrong i have the feeling that i was there or i you know so it s a very special feeling. a mother of two in her mid thirty s she makes a living from her shuttle posting to new videos a week she gets feedback from near and far she can read the comments written in spanish. it is. what you do is spectacular you surprise me every time. i wish you all the best carry on. this. what does that get
a lot. more than eight million people if you would this video alone but still worries about home who posts will be received i m taking ok what if people don t like it or what do you like it you know and i was wondering all the time and when we do a live. i can toward to it and i as. my friend ok can you can you please read you. can spend two days preparing her designs scrutinizing them in the mirror to see what works and what doesn t like the knot on her stomach. she can work on a new body painting for up to eight hours drawing inspiration from music and her own experience. i had a problem with my ways and. i couldn t eat i lost my
appetite. and. i felt that my stomach is you know not you know. the tricky part for the makeup artist is holding her breath for long stretches while she paints in the fine details of her works of art involve magic of some kind and blackwall. coke. and bread that are. not bad. in the body meaning illusionist can do more than tires off and knots she can put a spring in her belly. was part of her wooden property illusion one of her biggest challenges so far. that spring gave me sole watch trouble because it s very difficult to paint on your stomach on your skin on star trek because you can t you want to make picture.
perfect. it s motivated to keep perfecting her body paintings by her dream of what the future could hold my dream is one day to be on the red carpet and. cold. hollywood may or may not be on the horizon in the meantime she s busily creating body painted our den tutorials for her fans. among those who shared his videos is american actor charlie sheen but she remains dedicated to perfecting her art and she certainly isn t the time to lose or at over her success. now kiko may draw on her body but most artists draw or paint on paper but russian born artist yulia brought skyler certainly likes to think outside the box she works
with paper creating fascinating three d. images by folding rowling all bending it some works can take several weeks to complete but it s worth it designs have even been used on postage stamps. you have to look twice to really understand what this work of art is made of it s comprised of hundreds of little strips of paper which together form a picture but it s the combination of colors and shapes which gives the portrait its depth paper artist and illustrator u.d.r. broadscale created these works she s been fashioning paper three d. pictures for a decade. they purchase just amazing things like simple versatile there are just so many things you can do to you can fold it
it can cards. to know your name with her you like to use it. julia came up with the idea of creating three dimensional objects from paper when she was experimented with her signature after that are objects evolved to be more and more complex. the russian born artist works at her studio in some top north of london she uses a technique known as quilting paper filigree it s achieved by rolling strips of paper into coils and folding or curving them into different shapes. when they re glued together it s quite striking and exacting work. the mental easing this technique and working with paper is just the time it s so time consuming it s labor intensive takes days and weeks to create primitive lists mall sizes are torak there are lots of details to incorporate they
have to be really patient and julia is often inspired by plants each of our artwork starts as a sketch then comes the detailed work. she cuts the paper in strips for the hobby knife then shapes them into individual element. finally she posts images of the finished works on instagram she has more than thirty thousand followers. the advertising industry has also taken an interest in unity as paper art she has created works for an american airline. a japanese design a fragrance. and a british car brand. religious even grace postage stamps. and not long ago one of her designs was reproduced in a larger format in central london now serves as a window display in a clothing store first step in the artist s next direction. my plan is to also try
to work on the slightly larger. art form and make the impact. on the larger scale. my next goal is to try and find a way to. make it. has no desire to experiment with other materials she s already found her ideal medium with paper her ideas blossom. zaga in burgos one of the most successful three d. illustrators in germany that s because she sees creative potential in ordinary objects making a dress out of salad leaves or a drink out of paper or graphic illustrations have made it onto the covers of international publications and since she works here in berlin we thought we d pair a visit to a studio. a sunday breakfast made of paper.
grapes made of marbles. meat made a vegetable. brain made of wool. or even a whole head made of food. zahra illand bag it is a visual storytelling everything around her serves as a source of inspiration and of materials too so when she s out shopping there has studio in berlin she s also working but even today i love about the i love all materials of course but i ve been especially fond of fruit and vegetables for a long time because i m fallible ie because they re so varied and the colors are so vivid there s always an element of surprise because i don t know what i ll get it s an organic material side we ve all got this is my. this is the studio where sorry
limburger test the limits of traditional graphic design work is featured in adversus mints glossy magazines galleries and he s anything but flat she describes herself as a three d. illustrator combining techniques from the realms of graphic design and photography . the main interest lies in meticulous craftsmanship elin badger grew up in munich where her mother designed jewelry and her father ran a hip restaurant. lived after his bust i have my passion for crafting things probably goes back to my childhood i belong to the generation of children who grew up without t.v. or at least with less t.v. and without a computer and the digital world so there was enough time and space to make things with whatever was around four hundred.
the pantry in my father s restaurant was my playground when i was around four fundamental. lifelong interest in food. study graphic design in london then set up a jewelry label with her boyfriend up the. she felt limited in her creativity so she started sending her three d. designs to magazines and got rave reviews. feature on the covers of leading publications all over the world.
i think that as soon as you touch things with your hands and let your own energy flow into them something different emerges that s perhaps more human and not quite so flawless that interests me more than the perfect surface of a computer monitor. approach. she regularly creates stunning displays for the luxury brand as in germany she loves challenges and wants to look good from. she tends to collaborate with. projects. she worked with. create these. thing my career actually began with a big failure. design agency. and they let me go after three weeks.
by i going assigned to redesign an opera magazine and when the creative director saw my result he said it was unfortunately no better than the original so i had to go with. heft. but he did something that was encouraging for my future he said my portfolio looked more like a box of magic tricks than a traditional designer s portfolio and that i didn t have to worry i would make it somewhere and i m missing the kind of. the truth. and she did today. is one of europe s most successful illustrators mistake of will style is in the world. what if we were shrunk down to a fraction of a size how many films and books have explored that question and a french photographer is determined to show us the answer. minute to figures to do
that creating allusions and fooling those who set eyes on his work. a closer look reveals it s only a toy. everything s cute emerges from iceland spokane expands. you know so she is the title of an ongoing photo project i ve also been sitting. you know being a boy i had many small cars and i was playing like this imagine it on the road or of the road and. you know when i was four or five and know i do it in really my photos. in this paris studio the photographer brings his toy cars and other small scale things up to life size and he varies the depth of field to how create the effect of full sized objects attending to even the smallest details just as
important is imitating natural light such as the sun sets here. and. finally he touches at the reflections and shadows on the computer to make sure the two image planes merge into one. at first glance the illusion is almost impossible to make out. the hard part of creating these images will be in. creating something global and logical when you arrive in the in front of a printing at first you will see all that s nice and your own you wish there something else but enough so this is an example from the start shit but it it s the same for the other photos here is. his starts playing with altered dimensions in two thousand and seven with his first serious plastic life liberation two
centimeter tall figures from the miniature world to welcome them into the real universe. they helped us solve a lamb chops thing ad campaigns for luxury labels louie the tough. times cut. plays with our perceptions of dimensions of space and time. in doing so he creates all seeks out new worlds in places far away. he had to leave france for iceland to find suitable landscapes for his current series. friends accompanied him to the wind swept arctic island. goes to personal as well as climatic extremes for spectacular nature. i went once in finland and i discovered a lost place it s a small hill with a forest to three frozen and i spent one night alone i saw
a few prints of any moles and visit guys who were the only one who had been with me there. was a guy feels drawn to europe s fall north to search for fantastical landscapes and new perspectives. he gathers pedals and rearrange them in their original environment but magnified thousands of times. there when the rain the cold and it s so good just a few hours there one afternoon there and you come back and you re full of new things and new energy i don t want to to be patient i don t want to be bored i don t want to be normal not to normal at least and i want to live strong things and to have strong feelings. as a father of three children he s gained an eye for the smaller things in life and he s rediscovered something of his own in the child. and i just realise that this
isn t the solution and. i m. i m scared to get those ideas actually this is this is the reality. of. the same ingles reality and imagination is but it is a return to the visual world of childhood and. that s all from us for today if you fancy watching more you can find all your remarks reports on our website d.w. dot com slash lifestyle we re back tomorrow with another playful special i hope you can join me again for that thought from all of us here you know max i ve watched enough. you know our next hero max special edition. barnaby dixon a talented property here from britain. so let me as
a famous designer company from italy. and also good friend ever enters a top puzzle designer from the netherlands joining us for this and much more in our next euro max special edition.
time for an upgrade. how about furniture that grows all by. a house with no roof. for design highlights you can make yourself. trends tips and tricks that will turn your home page for a special. upgrade yourself with d w s interior design channel on you tube. or mandela one hundred of us on facebook and experience what nelson mandela means for young africans today. in the mind of people who are the middle too few other ministers by the way for me nelson mandela is a symbol of the first how did he show influence the mobs of money in dauphin island
alabama than some of the lead paint. yes. i leave maybe fletcher s it because it looks like the last words and i don t know where we ll be a. part of it find us on facebook and on d w dot com.

Graphic-design-work , People , Pictures , It , Crazy , Surprise , Composition , Lives , Job , Ideas , Illustrator , Starters

Transcripts For DW DocFilm - Fascia - The Mysterious World Beneath The Skin 20180802 03:15:00


and the world. your link to it simpson stories and discussions continue and welcome to the new country clean program tonight from for an examination from a news of easy now i would say d. debited close match africa join us on facebook at g.w. africa. time for an upgrade. how about funded sure that grows all buy. a house with. poor design highlights you can make yourself. tips and tricks that will turn your home to something special. upgrade yourself with d w s interior design channel on you tube.
just that love them nothing is there for the nothing of a first out then the fashion. there s a whole system out there that we haven t explored as the stuff. on your ology body perception force transmission elasticity wound healing there is scarcely a field in which fashion does not play a major role and seen from today s perspective an often surprising you know what if . it s a new buzzword. but what exactly is it. found throughout the body to reckon on to the skin deep. it s
a hidden whitish colored fiber spanned of connective tissue that accounts for roughly twenty percent of our body weight like clingfilm flashy enveloping muscles tendons and organs and provide a link to our. for centuries the physiological importance of the fashion was overlooked or underestimated but now is considered to be key to our health is at the onset to relieving one of the most common of all let a back pain. a search for answers takes us across the diamond in maine in the northeast of the united states thomas meyers trains physiotherapists he s written a pioneering book on fashion and that he trains. as has long believed that the fashion is in dick an egghead throughout the human body. is something comes to me with plantar fasciitis i very seldom get the best results from treating their plantar fasciitis i get the best long term and talking about
back handles the weight as the body goes forward just keep rolling forward in a tight loop because we want to see whether the spine is processes are going away from each other if they re fashionably locked in some area probably hard to see on the camera but she is locked between l two and l three here if i m trying to resolve a low back situation i can t afford not to look everywhere because i don t know where the source of that is going to be because the tense i gree of the fashion system will make it maybe show up in the lower back which is a very weak point for all of us but that doesn t mean that it s sourced in the low back half to look at the whole pattern i have to address the whole pattern if i have any hope of taking the pain away in any kind of permanent way. and that s only trains as a bible for therapists worldwide but what is the science behind my eyes or anatomy
of connection here and then where is the girl. in front for the german sports medicine specialist young very is trying to find out he s conducting research into whether such anatomical chains really exist. in a series of experiments that has looked for evidence of the back line that might describes . him leaving the angle should trigger a movement of the fashion at the back of the eye to find. and in fact the ultrasound indicates a gliding of the flash of their. ministers of. at least in the initial findings of our pilot type results it appears. that
when i move something down there is as a divide and if i stretch the lower thought in our souls that it seems i can detect a strain transfer to the area of muscles at the back of the upper thigh it now and so that s. the second experiment is more revealing proving the functional connection between the subtle spine and the length separated by the entire length of the back. first of the protests this article spawns mobility then the subject stretches his lank. wants to know what effects the stretching has on the cervical spine. so so let s look at the results as we see here the mean value of the five repetitions that we just undertook one hundred eight degrees is the total mobility value averaged through the five repetitions four degrees more than the previous test so mobility is improved following the stretching the leg muscles it we ve seen an improved ability to bend and stretch the head in the area of the cervical spine
. and that again seems to indicate a mechanical force transmission across the muscle fashion connections in this case from the legs to appear to the cervical spine so that you. even if for centuries hadn t been pointed at all muscle fashion lines working with the fashion rolled on the up a fine certainly affects more distant body parts such as the neck. philcon suspects that force is transmitted not only vertically but horizontally as well. as the of that of a how is this relevant to practice if that s because ultimately the goal of research is to make it application oriented to see if it provides an alternative for physicians or physical therapists or patients i don t stay in the as a so do patients really need to work on the cervical spine to relieve neck tension more they can lay if they don t want to do. that maybe also work on the torso or
the legs and achieve release through a force transmission effect physician. who was the first to render the fascinating full body network of fashion a visible to the naked eye. in his long professional life the hand surgeon from bordeaux in france has performed countless operations. in surgery you see every day how the land is of connective tissue slide to and fro but how does this connective tissue function. it s a question that so far no one has answered. it covers a wall i want to know how it functional so that i could reconstruct tendons better i say because tendons do a connective tissue all. at the institute of hand and foot surgery in bordeaux governor to makes the world of the fashion visible with a special camera. the films the tissue inside the living body.
his pictures have changed the way medical specialists view the fashion. you see those are the organizing fibers. it seems totally chaotic but it isn t it s what makes life possible in the first place a perfectly efficient system. if you still spot that glass the more we research it over the more we understand the fashion and its structure north shore all of this will open the door to new therapies the operative word. the italian city of power to our posts one of the oldest universities in europe it was here that galileo galilei proclaimed that the sun and planets do not revolve around the earth and it was here in sixteen seventy eight that the first woman in the world received her ph d. degree. today the university s revolutionary tradition lives on in anatomy
a grapefruit. nicholson what they did that it limited and in this great free it helps us to understand what the fashion is and how it s connected to the muscles. and i thought if i cut through the great phrase we see not only the flesh of the fruits and the few little certifiers components that divide the grapefruit into individual sections and support the tissue of the fruit. in the course of the destruction of human second shows her students have a fashion is found throughout the body. waste that a quick look at more this is the fashion with the connective tissue which allows me to slide from one level to the next you know it is better like the piano with if they call me and you see how extremely fluid it s trying to become
a fluid how it can be moved with ease more of it filled me with a look at all i can get into as it s all made up of rows that hers had likeness and to share and it s so beautiful. cause tech is research on fashion has helped reveal what we know today fashion exists everywhere in the body and many shapes and consistency lives. directly beneath the skin as the surface fashion. the deep fashion enveloped our muscles and also are almost fibers like the skin around a sausage. the fashion also invalid s. organs and i whiter skin even the brain as protected by the station. while there are only we can even view them in injuries as a special fashion because ultimately it shares the same characteristics as fashions that we know from other parts of the body they caught. with the help of numerous anatomical analyses cast teka has produced an atlas of fashion. the findings are
a reason eighty percent of people suffer back pain. the large back fashion researchers haven t yet been able to unlock all its secrets but evidence points to its significance for many types of back problems. with that is somewhat of an isolated the thorough colomba fashion the most important day fashion and the human body before more like it may be on when it got a pro it is now being studied by so many researchers because it appears to be the cause of unspecified back pain because if the my skin as bit if you call. the fashion of the back are among the most important fashion in the body but. how can fashion cause pain why do these layers of tissue in particular cause so much trouble. like as one of germany s best known research on fashion ever since he discovered how fashion is connected within the human body and how important movement is for our connective tissue he s exercised
every day with a skipping rope. as a trained psychologist and physiotherapist who like many involved in fashion research came to the field seeking answers to problems he saw daily in his practice to discover what he was feeling with his hands he did a sabbatical and devoted his energies to scientific study. he did his post doctoral thesis on fascial tissue at only university s institute of applied physiology his findings have won awards. i might this is an amazing gift it s a bit like a fairy tale because the facia really was a kind of cinderella s or something like that plump spotty kid at school who gets laughed at but then suddenly gains recognition that yes i have for me it is a deeply moving story and one that is also true that in the past the fashion was seen as a disposable organ or not only classical anatomists were happy when they had removed this colorless sticky tissue to expose the actual muscles and organs and mousqueton
are gonna for this to our or and that in recent years this structureless organ has attracted so much attention and that s to me is a really exciting development in the c.s.f. spawning vehicle. wants to determine the diverse functions of the long underestimated fashion and find out what this fibrous white tissue actually consists of. is comprised of fiber blasts and a surrounding structure known as a matrix. fiber blasts of the sounds of the connective tissue. among other things they produce the college in five years that the matrix largely consists of effectively the fresh a build up a home out of college an. interest otherwise about and interestingly the cells in the fashola connective tissue only account for very little of the tissues volume
picture and the left shows healthy undamaged tissue before the arm was put in plaster. pictionary was taken three weeks later and. the change in the tissue is unmistakable it has become matters a structure fickle and chaotic. but. the data we ve obtained show quite clearly that a lack of exercise results in over proliferation of the connective tissue structures and thus in a loss of function so that this is the decisive discovery or it means that exercise is essential for maintaining our fashion it s no one s with us it was out of the. too little exercise and bad posture can cause fasher to become so rigid it can even compress nerves and muscles. exercise we re told is a key to good health movement is also vital to maintain healthy fashion which needs regular stimulation otherwise it a gluten it so become staff. people with desk jobs who do not do sports to
a cause of back pain the studies are normal are they there s no indication as to what would be causing the pain conversed a lot of people have terrible of king m.r. eyes you know degenerative disks but they don t have any pain so we thought well what about that right along our fashion because it s a huge structure in the back it really essentially connects the shoulders with the eps it s a big sheet of connective tissue. as we can see from an ultrasound picture of an arm the fashion is arranged in layers when we move they slide back and forth. this also applies to the fashion in the back and how research compare. during the tissue of people who suffer from back pain with out of people who don t most of them has discovered that the difference lies in the connective tissues ability to slight. in normal people we have two layers like this and they can they should be able to move by about seventy five percent of their of their legs. when
you went back most and then we know that in people with back pain is reduced to about fifty percent of the of the of the of all of their legs and so we know that there s a reduction in the amount of of striding that occurs between layers things like a german colleague. going from believes the cells of the connective tissue are responsible for this. whenever they produce too much college and the sliding becomes more difficult and experiments with drops he s proved that exercise can counter this overproduction. we do experiments where we have we induce a little injury in an experimental animal very very small injury and then we randomized and want to either stretching or no stretching and the the the animal this stretches twice a day and this is a very kind of nice very calm gentle way of making animals stretch and then we find that the animals that stretch have decreased amounts of inflammation they heal
faster they re their injuries go away. lose heal faster through movement and stretching under the microscope lose fungus covered wiring the fiberglass to expand by up to two hundred percent and no certainty that the stretch cells also transmit chemical signals which cause the tissue to relax. this was a new thing what we found is in fact that this stiffness of the connective tissue is actively regulated from minute to minute by the fiber blasts so this is a dynamic active ah. cellular regulation of connective tissue tension and that could be important because what we re finding is that when you when you do acupuncture for example on the tissue the fiberglass actually respond in x. and that helps the tissue l. relax the same thing with stretching. because active stretching and ak
the added messenger substances. it really does react independently of any muscular or nerve stimuli and not only that bothers you what is really exciting is that we have also found messengers substances that affect fashion which are not only linked to inflammation but also to emotional stress it was a breakthrough for us to learn that the fashion also reacts to that very very slowly and sustainably with this slight has provided a possible explanation for something that has long been clear to many people with back problems but a motional stress can cause physical tension and pain. the culprit is known as t.g. at a signaling molecule its release is triggered by stress a groundbreaking finding. thank you bottom line if i m ten stop for weeks even in my sleep it is not mainly the red muscle fibers that attends they relax fairly quickly but it is the white fashion tissue such as the sheet
around the muscle. as manual therapists we can feel that it is not the contents of the sausage if we see the muscle as a sausage but it s the surrounding membranes that is hard at the f.b.i. how it s sometimes the mechanism we re now investigating some mechanisms in the forces. and main thomas miles office training for physiotherapists massage therapists and yoga teachers from all over the world. his goal is to boost their awareness of the financial network in a un body and share his years of experience. i m an autodidact so i went and educated myself on this with the help of many of my students my back up the a lot of good people along the way willing. others but really i went i wanted to learn all that i could about myself and there s very little but back in the early
seventy s there was very little written about it. miles is fascinated by the organization of connective tissue as a whole body network. the fashion ensures that we have a feeling for a body that everything in it is in the right place and keeps us in shape. fashion research is cool that ten secretary a combination of the words tension and integrity. tensegrity engineering is an example of. a different kind of engineering which comes closer to how you see the fashion system working as a whole system so as you can see this is just sticks and rubber bands and the piece is constructed in such a way that none of the sticks are touching each other they re all held in place by the rubber bells now if you take a skeleton standard classrooms gotten the bones are wired together and you make the
presumption oh there s a skeletal frame inside me and the individua. your muscles move around. you you know the wires on a crane move a crane around that s not true your bones are floating inside your connective tissue if i could go and disappear all the soft tissue on your body your bones would flatten the floor. just as i m hallock is this is a super counter model to our classic concept of the spine the soil of the model with the skeleton as a supporting structure stitched walked to work when dusty vobis or it was spine is a tent pole carrying the tent which is softer and. recently that was how we imagine the spine and here you see a nice ten secretary counter model. these are the vertebrae. but they don t rest on each other impressed down on each other no they are hanging for hours long as the fashion elements the rubber bands have good elastic retention last issue for spinal
both of fiber blasts but they have taken a different function it s the same that the good lord in the method said that it s you know that if this cell probably pretty is cut it and let me say it because it s in there. every other cell we see these tiny dots on the arm of it we magnify it we see the interior of the cell and above all of these tiny dots. there precious lichens and in particular highly ironic as it. is that we see how the two cells produce different extracellular substances. acid is a lubricant for our connective tissue. the substance forms for the molecules of various sizes and degree of branching to develop a sponge like network that can bind large quantities of water. the less highly
ironic acid out tissue binds the less mobile we are. conscious takers by the antonius teka conducts research into hi you re on acid at the do york university school of medicine. from the example of an upper fine muscle it s clear that higher along i guess it can be detected deep beneath the skin. here we see the dermis. and here we see this a few ten years tissue the fat the superficial fashion the date of fashion. and the definition there are as you see different layers of connective tissue. between we find highly ironic acid here and in this region here we have more black space which means there is more highly ironic acid present. in sufficient noise to the tissue becomes rough and brittle like terrycloth. highly ironic as it
provides a lubricant for the fashion to glide over the neighboring muscle. in germany. also carrying out research into highly ironic acid they re experimenting with therapy is to improve the moisture content of the fashion and it sliding across the sea first they measure the water content of the tissue and all of that nasty. behind the mass and we re hoping that many will stretching therapy will cause the water content to rise again what is turn it on this the great thing is. we believe that through this exchange of tissue water. inflammatory substances will be removed and the tissue will be cleansed diski because i need. a measurement points to a fairly high moisture content using a special message technique now presses down firmly on the fashion in the subjects back there i didn t please your old rolfing techniques that target as connective tissue and it s not the most efficient we have found untested so far with this
method powerful pressure is exerted very slowly on the skin in that would you have to imagine it like slowly forcing the water out of the sponge in such a way that every pore is empted which was all this kind that i insert you don t do that. really slowly this movement really. guns lungs are. the recorded measurements seem to confirm that through manual ferebee the water is absent the fashion can be replenished and the suppleness of the tissue are stored in this for this was prior to treatment but the you can see how we pressed out the water is it from a sponge on who invent haven t we stopped with the mechanical treatment for to shew filled up with water again. please and the dummy to asa here we had an interesting result that if we exerted enough pressure the sponge was even more moist afterwards for me falling off oyster bar i was in other words you press the old water out of
the sponge on the four hundred the up and if you do that forcefully enough several times the sponge is even more moist than before which of course is interesting for us. one does not really hit us that food. the idea is that masses realize the college and find us and the fiber blasts produce fresh higher on acid new water replaces old water and they bring the fashion to slide more effectively again. though to massage it with material out there is no doubt that massage stimulates the soul metabolism not to live but active movement brings even more dynamic. into the tissue and results in a rise in body temperature that already stimulates the metabolism and i each rise in temperature of one degree celsius results in roughly ten percent more enzyme activity marketed. it appears that with regular exercise the fiber plus can start to produce fresh college and and free up mascot fashion more than just three days.
but it can take up to a year for the agglutinative tissue to regenerate entirely exercise is important at the right dose is crucial. after exercise we find microscopic injuries in the tissue that look like spiders ones. so off to exercising one would be wise to consider resting for one two or three days to assess how much tensile strength should be applied to stimulate regenerative renovation my dog by the builder sells the fiberglass so yes these weaving new more useful and durable college and into my lumber fashion or into my achilles tendon so the ideal setup would be in tonight in high doses of ten sound stress with a two to three day break when done by since five i target how was it this way at the. faster pace to have an important and unsuspected impact on human health and well being international research on fashion has shown that relaxing and stretching
connective tissue fibers helps alleviate back pain. but to what extent can traditional medicine help. has studied the role fasher plays an acupuncture. my interest in connective tissue and therefore eventually fashion is began when i was studying acupuncture when you need to link the neck a bunch a needle. you have to insert the needle and then rotate it back and forth slightly and what happens then is that dead. is. something the academic jurists actually feels that the tissues are tightening around the needle that s what got me interested in well is that is important in the mechanism and i get puncher because that i m not in research before. is that just the acupuncturist subjective feeling that something is tugging at the needle when it s inserted and extract it or is there really a reaction in the connective tissue from wanted to find out. you first wondered
well is that measurable can you measure it can feel it can you measure it so we did experiments where we used to get like a robot that inserted the needle and then rotated the needle back and forth and call the needle out to measure the force that it would take to pull the needle out we way figured well if the tissues are really grabbing the needle for should increase after a little bit and we were able to demonstrate that. every time the needle is inserted and removed cogent corals around like spaghetti around a fork a sensation of a tug on the needle repair costs have long observed now has a scientific explanation. what fiber blasts respond to the needle even if s. several centimeters are wearing this effect is also visible in an ultrasound. but what exactly does the acupuncture needle trigger in the fashion and could this
mechanism of fiberglass activation within the fashion also explain the pain reducing effect of acca puncture treatment. the fiber glass that are inside the tissues up just several centimeters away not just only at the needle they expand they ve their response it relaxes the tissue there s another thing that happens which we are interested in is that it releases a substance called a.t.p. so a.t.p. is a signaling molecule and soul of the a.t.p. . is is something that we think may be possible. related to the ask and i ll just go back. and so modern research is providing evidence that validates ancient healing techniques until recently the end of our civil desks were viewed as the primary and most frequent source of back pain. but now there is an increasing focus on fashion as the trigger for chronic complaints. analgesics are such as are also
interested in the potential that fashion tissue office for new therapeutic applications. and german are such as he for advances from the medical faculty mannheim was one of the first to recognize the medical importance of fashion. he began exploring the extent to which fashion itself is pain sensitive. for that to be the case it would need to contain encapsulated nerve endings. thoughts to home via experimental good luck we ve conducted experiments in which we try to determine whether there are any nerve fibers and individual nerve endings in the large fashion of the back or in the going and what we have here is a relatively dense network of nerve fibers that form no from. these point shaped structures a nerve endings in which mensah detected the substance p b stands for pain and this move as it will dots of pain receptors but how can we know if the pain of
originates in the fashion rather than in the muscle after all fashion and muscles are virtually inseparable. menzi is a pair of delicate watchmakers tweezers to irritate the fashion and measures the subjects pain sensitivity. then the muscle is ever tasted and sensitivity is measured again. the results can pad is at the fashion of the muscle. via the. zinke latest issue is every berkeley line is an electric signal or and here using tweezers hundred anesthetized wrapped in the same way that i just demonstrated it we squeezed in fashion. which. or and here you see that the frequency of these electric signals increases. with and as if we do inflict winds
of of even further so what one can definitely say year is that the effect of an irritation of the fashion on this nerve cell is much more pronounced than the effect on the receptor is in the muscle and it was. fashion permeated with countless pain receptors making connective tissue the key organ of sensory perception this is being proven without a doubt. like secret manson and his team also believe that stress has a direct impact on fashion tissue. and that brings the sympathetic nervous system into play. the sympathetic nervous system as part of the autonomic nervous system from the brain through the spinal cord it leads to almost every organ we cannot control it in stressful situations it triggers what s known as the fight or flight response because that evolved as a survival mechanism that causes a quick and post sweaty hands and a quivering voice but how can it influence fascial tissue i gather data to answer
that question seriously and he pushes this year as a typical image which has confirmed our assumptions that these fibers are indeed present in the fashion. you see here a measure of nerve fibers. and if you were to enlarge it some more. you would see again the small point like enlargements of these fibers which are most probably sympathetic fibers for shine lish which means when these fibers are irritated for instance through stress. then they release substances that cause the blood vessels to contract so a contact saw and that could be one of the mechanisms that could explain why patients say their back pain worsens under stress. international research on fashion has made huge strides in recent years.
it s offered hope for progress in many scientific fields including cancer research . if we find that stretching. it s natural to wonder whether it might reduce the growth of cancer. secondarily to that and that s an area that we re. gonna never expected to field of oncology to suddenly be at the forefront of areas interested in fashion research and it s yielded an important contribution so i wouldn t like to predict what the future will look like i think this is a field that still has many surprises up its sleeve. the findings of fashion research have shown that this body spanning network of connective tissue disregarded for so long maybe the place where inexplicable disorders and pain
originate and because of that the place where healing can begin. to enter the conflict zone with tim sebastian. turkey is not an easy ally for the west to manage my guess is the tough formulas that member luther campbell show you are the differences between turkey and the e.u. becoming impossible to reconcile. conflicts of folks in thirty minutes plus.
say sarno just couldn t get this song out of his head. musicologist began searching for the source of these captivating sounds. and found them deep in the rain forest in central africa. the bike up people. hanging. and the like to believe a slow day before. anyone fitted. my little. he was so fascinated by their culture that he stayed. only a promise to a son who was a son only of the jungle and return to the concrete and glass john. the result

Colomba-fashion , Nothing , Love , System , Researchers-haven-t , Ology-body-perception-force , Transmission-elasticity , Stuff , Field , Role , Perspective , Body