Wendy: Hey Bill.
My name is Wendy and my question is: would the world be a better place if everyone was
an atheist or had no beliefs in god or religion?
Bill Nye: Wendy, this is a great question.
Practically, I don't know.
People get a lot of community out of religions.
They get a lot of friendship and they have extended families as a result of religion.
And my atheist friends—and, you know the old saying: "some of my best friends are
atheists"—I mean I do have a large circle of atheist friends.
We're all very supportive.
We have our own community in a different way.
So I think what we want is to transcend families, extended families and tribes to an understanding
that everybody in the world is in this together.
That all of our tribes are in this together.
People from different religious traditions, we're all in this together.
And whether or not there is one god that makes decisions for you, whether or not there is
one god that influences your life based on what you've done in past lives, whether
or not there is no god, these are all questions that are very important to ponder individually.
But in the bigger picture I'm not going to claim the world would be better with or
without communities.
I think the communities and interactions of tribes, or tribal-style nations and groups,
is very important to the future of humankind.
So as you may know, I am not a believer.
I'm a non-believer.
I spend a lot of time trying to understand my place in the cosmos and I've reached
my own conclusions.
But I'm the first to say that ultimately we are all agnostic.
This is to say you can't know whether or not there is a giant entity running the show
or choosing to not run the show.
You can't know.
So we all are, I believe, best served by just living good lives.
Trying to leave the world better than we found it.
That's a great question.
Whew.
For more infomation >> Why Atheists and Believers Are Actually Agnostic | Bill Nye - Duration: 2:21.-------------------------------------------
Bucky&Steve | He's my friend - Duration: 3:49.
Most of the intelligence community doesn't believe he exists.
The ones that do call him the Winter Soldier.
He's credited with over two dozen assassinations in the last 50 years.
So he's a ghost story.
Bucky!
NO!
Like you said, he's a ghost story.
It was him.
He looked right at me
like he didn't even know me.
Bucky?
Who the hell is Bucky?
It wasn't your fault.
None of that's your fault, Steve.
Look, whoever he used to be and the guy he is now
People are gonna die, Buck.
I don't think he's the kind you save.
He's the kind you stop.
I can't let that happen.
I don't know if I can do that.
Well, he might not give you a choice.
He doesn't know you.
Do you know me?
I knew him.
He will.
You know me.
Then wipe him and start over.
But I knew him.
No, I don't!
I'm not gonna fight you.
You're my friend.
This doesn't have end in a fight, Buck.
It always ends in a fight.
You're my mission.
Then finish it.
Because I'm with you to the end of the line.
I'm with you to the end of the line, pal.
Steve.
You're Steve.
Which Bucky am I talking to?
You pulled me from the river.
Why?
I don't know.
I don't know if I'm worth all this, Steve.
I know that road.
What you did all those years... It wasn't you.
You didn't have a choice.
I know.
But I did it.
It wasn't him, Tony. Hydra had controlled of his mind!
I don't care.
He killed my mom.
Do you even remember them?
I remember all of them.
He's my friend.
How about you? You ready to follow Captain America into the jaws of death?
You're gonna kill someone.
No.
That little guy from Brooklyn who was too dumb not to run away from a fight.
I can do this all day.
I can do this all day.
I'm not gonna kill anyone.
I'm following him.
Don't do anything stupid until I get back.
Even when I had nothing, I had Bucky.
It's me. It's Steve.
You're taking all the stupid with you.
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Road trip with Amarna Miller - Mesa Verde to Ridgway, CO #4 | ROAD TRIPS - Duration: 7:49.
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Trump to London Be More Afraid - Duration: 8:16.
Trump to London Be More Afraid
BY DAVID A. GRAHAM
Rarely does a leader in a liberal democracy embrace, let alone foment, fear.
But that�s exactly what Donald Trump did in response to attacks in London, as he has
often done before.
After a terrorist attack, there are two steps nearly every leader takes: first, condemn
the violence; second, appeal for calm.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan followed that familiar playbook in the wake of Saturday night�s
attacks.
Speaking to the BBC, Khan said:
There aren�t words to describe the grief and anger that our city is feeling today.
I�m appalled and furious that these cowardly terrorists would deliberately target innocent
Londoners and bystanders enjoying their Saturday night.
There can be no justification for the acts of these terrorists, and I�m quite clear
that we will never let them win, nor will we allow to cower our city.
Then Khan went on reassure the public:
Londoners will see an increased police presence today and over the course of the next few
days.
No reason to be alarmed.
One of the things, the police, all of us need to do, is make sure we�re as safe as we
possibly can be.
I�m reassured that we are one of the safest global cities in the world, if not the safest
global city in the world, but we always evolve and review ways to make sure that we remain
as safe as we possibly can.
Early Sunday morning, President Trump logged onto Twitter, offering not condolences to
Britain or support in fighting terrorism (though he did do that in a call with Prime Minister
Theresa May, according to a White House readout), but instead an angry �I told you so� and
an attack on Khan:
(Trump also argued that the fact that the attackers did not use guns proved gun-control
pointless, a claim my colleague David Frum has dissected elsewhere.)
The claim that political correctness, rather than violent attackers, is to blame for the
attack puts the cart before the horse.
Even if were situated properly, though, it would remain dubious, as the U.K. has aggressively
surveilled Muslims it believes could conduct attacks.
The Times reported earlier this year that British intelligence is watching 23,000 possible
jihadists, and more closely watching 3,000 of them.
As Khan�s full remarks make clear, the mayor was not soft-pedaling the attack, which he
condemned in blunt terms.
Rather, he was saying that the increased police presence offered no need for additional concern.
It comes as no shock by now that Trump would misrepresent comments or take them badly out
of context for his own political gain, but the tactic is no less distasteful for being
habitual.
In the broader context of his statement, Khan was making an argument about how populations
should react to terrorism: With anger, with sadness, with rejection, but also with courage
and a refusal to given in to fear.
Predicating the public response to terror attacks based on interpretations of �what
the terrorists want� is a slippery, trap-laden, and often self-serving approach.
For example, cracking down on civil liberties after a terrorist attack is not unwise �because
it�s what the terrorists want,� but because cracking down on civil liberties is unwise
and immoral per se.
However, if there is one thing that it is safe to say terrorists want, it is to sow
terror.
It�s the definition of the term: political violence meant to seed fear and intimidation.
Hence Khan�s statement that �we will never let them win, nor will we allow to cower our
city.�
The idea of maintaining a stiff upper lip is quintessentially British, of course, and
even more quintessentially Londoner: Think of the steadfast response to German bombardment
during the Battle of Britain.
But though Trump pays lip service to wartime leader Winston Churchill�restoring a bust
of the prime minister to the Oval Office, for example�he has consistently taken a
different approach in response to attacks.
Refusal to back down in the face of adversity is not uniquely British.
Churchill�s American counterpart, Franklin Roosevelt, famously cautioned in his 1933
first inaugural address that �the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.�
Trump is the panic president, bearing a radically opposed message: Fear is not only acceptable,
but necessary.
Rarely does one see a leader, much less the leader of a liberal democracy, actively embracing,
even calling for, panic.
But this is Trump�s response, ridiculing Khan�s plea for calm among Londoners.
If it is little surprise to see tired demagogues like Lou Dobbs do this, it is distressing
to see it in the president of the United States.
(There may be a connection�Trump�s rhetoric seems to often derive directly from Fox, Dobbs�s
employer.)
This is not a new tendency for Trump.
It has been evident since he announced his candidacy almost two years ago, in which he
claimed (without substantiation) that unauthorized immigrants were bringing a crime wave with
them over the border.
It runs through his doomsaying acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention
in Cleveland last summer, on to his pronouncements of �American carnage� in his inaugural
address, and in his repeated, dishonest claims of a nation in chaotic thrall to crime.
It is also central to his claim that the only way to stop terrorism in the United States
is to cut off Muslim immigration, even if political and legal realities have forced
him to scale back that promise.
Trump�s embrace of panic is instrumental: By first instilling fear, he can then build
himself up as the solution, as he did in his RNC speech when he declared, �I alone can
fix it.� But panic is a dangerous force, not always controllable by those who whip
it up in the first place.
Meanwhile, Trump�s governments stands ill-prepared to offer substantive aid to the United Kingdom:
His FBI has no permanent leader, after his abrupt firing of James Comey to stop an investigation
into Trump�s ties to Russia; he has appointed no ambassador to the Court of St. James; and
his State Department remains deeply understaffed.
(The U.S. charge d�affairs in London, the acting head of the embassy while no ambassador
is stationed there, contradicted Trump, praising Khan�s �strong leadership� following
the attack.)
That Trump used the opportunity of the attack to launch his own attack on Khan is likely
not a coincidence.
The two men have traded jabs before.
In May 2016, shortly after he was elected, Khan, a Muslim, criticized Trump�s rhetoric
about Muslims on Twitter:
In March, after a terrorist attack in Westminster, Donald Trump Jr. presaged his father�s tweets
on Sunday, taking a comment that Khan made out of context to criticize him.
Khan had said in September that residents of big cities had to prepare for terrorist
attacks�another unobjectionable statement that Trump Jr. mischaracterized as somehow
accepting of terrorism.
And on Sunday, Dan Scavino, Trump�s director of social media, made the president�s criticism
of Khan explicit as a rejoinder to Khan�s comments last year:
The feud is bound to continue.
Khan poses a particular challenge to Trump�s panic-fueled approach on two levels.
For one, his appeal to calm stand at odds with the president�s desire for greater
hysteria.
But for another, Khan himself represents a threat to that political message.
If a Muslim like Khan can win the mayorship of a city like London, and if he can win acclaim
as a strong leader who upholds liberal democracy, it undermines the president�s fear-mongering
about absorption of Muslims into Western society.
Now that�s something for Trump to fear.
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HSN | HSN Today: M. Asam Beauty / Temptu Airbrush Makeup 06.06.2017 - 08 AM - Duration: 1:00:01.
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HSN | HSN Today: M. Asam Beauty / Temptu Airbrush Makeup 06.06.2017 - 08 AM - Duration: 1:00:01.
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I Did Some Drawings For a Thing - DragoNate Daily Vlog - Monday 2017-06-6 - Duration: 2:46.
hey guys happy Monday night evening I guess night almost morning basically how
are you doing so today was a great day as a live stream the Prince of Persia
livestream went super super well and I thank you all for that
that was amazing I had a great time playing it and next week we will be
finishing it completely which will be kind of fun
also I apologize that my camera angles have been looking like I am looking down
at you because my phone is like down here angled upwards or something I am
getting it it's hard because I'm recording it in 1080p now which means I
have to use the back of my phone so I can't actually see what the camera looks
like what the what the view actually looks like but anyway so today was a
great day after the stream I did get still a bit quite a bit done today I
didn't get everything done that I wanted to I ended up falling asleep which sucks
because I missed another channels livestream that I really wanted to be
there for but next week next week I will be there next week I will be there Xingcat
don't worry but so recently I mentioned something about a drawing I'm
pretty sure I did that there's there's something I'm doing that involves
drawing right well here's the drawings we have that there that there that there
and that one there if you didn't fully see them I apologize but fear not
they will not be gone forever you will be seeing them or you can see them later
on so those are for a specific things that I will be talking about very soon
I'm going to get on that I just need to finish setting up everything but so this
evening I spent adding color to those and and doing all that which is a bit
difficult because I put it on a computer first and then I add color to them but
because of the lines and the white paper that isn't pure white but still has in
impurities or you know difference of color in it it makes it difficult to do
that but so it's a very long time and losing all my
progress on the one after I finished it and I had to restart that one from the
very beginning which sucked but so I got them all done and I feel good about it
and the rest of the day was pretty much just relaxing and there isn't too much
else to talk about so yeah I guess that's it so I hope you guys have a
wonderful Tuesday and I will see you again tomorrow Godbless and we're going
to now put my glasses on in interesting way that I did not think of
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How to make ringtone (completely!) without iTunes (New method!) - Duration: 7:53.
Hello Friends!
Welcome back to AppleFrendly.
This is video #33 and today I'm going to show you how to make ringtone in iPhone
completely without iTunes or a Computer.
I'm going to download free iPhone ringtone using a free ringtone app from the App Store
and I'll set it as my ringtone using GarageBand app.
So, everything will be done on iPhone itself.
No iTunes involved at all.
This is a new trick and hope you'll like it.
So, without further ado, let's get started!
I'm going to use 2 free ringtone apps from the App Store for this tutorial.
The first one is 'Ringtones for iPhone with Ringtone Maker' by 'Ringtones App Ltd.'
and another one is 'GarageBand' by 'Apple'
App download links are there in the description below.
Just click on them and get these two free ringtone apps from the App Store.
I have several videos on making ringtone using these apps earlier as well.
I'll put the link of all those videos in the description below.
If you wish, you can check them out.
Now, let's start making a ringtone!
So firstly, launch this 'Ringtones' app.
Now tap 'Catalog'
Here you have various categories to download or search free iPhone ringtones.
Let me select 'Newest' here.
You can select the ringtone you want to download.
I'll select 'Panda' for this demo purpose.
Two options will appear.
The star symbol and the download symbol.
Just tap this download symbol and it'll start downloading your free ringtone.
Now tap back.
Tap 'Done'
Now tap 'My Tones' at top right hand corner
you'll see the ringtone that we've just downloaded.
Tap this Ringtone.
Different options will appear.
Tap 'Send by Email'
An email will open up.
Now, email this free ringtone file to yourself.
So, let me put in my own email ID here.
And now, tap this 'Send' button at top right hand corner.
Done!
Now, before proceeding further, let me quickly show you how you can make ringtone
from the existing Music in your existing music library.
This is helpful for people not finding 'Music' option in GarageBand.
They can use this method and make ringtones without iTunes or Computer.
So, tap this 'iPod Library' on main screen of the ringtones app.
It'll open up your music library.
Now tap 'Songs'
Select your favourite music to convert it into a ringtone.
For a demo purpose, I'll select this 'Footprints'
Tap 'Done'
Now, select your favourite part of the song using these handles and this scrubber
to convert it into a ringtone.
Once you're done setting up your ringtone,
tap this 'Save' button here.
Tap 'Close'
Now, tap 'My Tones' at top right hand corner.
And you'll see the ringtone that you've just created using a music from the Music Library.
So, just tap this ringtone.
Now, select 'Send by Email'
An email will open up.
Email this ringtone file to yourself.
So, let me put in my own email ID here.
And now, tap this 'Send'
That's it!
Now, so far, we have mailed 2 ringtone files to our own email ID.
One is the free one and another one is the one we created using the existing Music from the music library.
Here, I'll be using a free ringtone for a demo purpose in this tutorial
but procedure is exactly same for ringtones made from existing music in your music library.
So, let's go ahead and check our email account.
Launch your 'Mail' app on your iPhone.
These are the two emails that I have received from my own email ID.
I'll go ahead with the free ringtone.
So, let me just tap it.
And here is my ringtone.
Once it is downloaded, just tap and hold this ringtone.
Few options will appear.
Select 'Add to iCloud Drive'
And now, it'll ask you where to save this ringtone.
Tap 'iCloud Drive'
Done!
We have added our free ringtone to our iCloud Drive.
Now, let's import it into the GarageBand band app and set it as a ringtone using few easy steps.
So, launch your GarageBand app.
Tap 'Audio Recorder'
Now, tap these 3 broken lines at top left hand corner of the screen.
Now, go and tap this + sign at top right hand side of the screen.
Now tap 'Section A'
And put this toggle ON.
Done!
Now tap anywhere outside to close this pop-up.
Now tap this circular loop icon.
Select 'Audio Files'
And tap 'Import from iCloud Drive'
It'll open up the iCloud Drive folders.
Tap the ringtone that we had saved using email account.
Now, It'll appear under 'Audio Files'
Just tap, hold and drag it into this empty area.
Now tap this inverted triangle at top left hand corner.
Select 'My Songs'
Now tap 'Select' at top right hand side of the screen
and tap 'My Song'
And now, tap this 'Share Sheet' button.
A pop-up will appear.
Now tap this 'Ringtone'
Now tap 'Continue'
Here you can rename your song.
Just tap to rename.
I'll rename it to 'Panda'
After renaming, tap this 'Done' here.
And now hit this 'Export' button here.
Now tap 'Use sound as..'
and select 'Standard Ringtone'
That's it!
You have set a new ringtone for your iPhone.
Let's go and check out in iPhone settings.
So, launch Settings,
Sounds,
and Ringtone.
And here is your new ringtone.
You don't need to go to iTunes anymore.
How was that?
I hope you liked watching it.
If you have any questions, do let me know in the comments section below.
I'd be happy to solve them.
And If it helped, put a nice comment and give this video a big thumbs up.
I'll see you in my next video.
Till then, take good care of yourself.
And as always, Subscribe, Stay tuned, keep the notifications ON for my next videos.
Thank you for watching!
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