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AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report.

I'm Amy Goodman.

We're here in West Belfast with Emma Campbell, who is co-chair of the Alliance for Choice

and a photographer with the X-ile Project.

You'll find out what that is in just a minute.

Welcome to Democracy Now!, Emma.

So, talk about what is happening here in Northern Ireland around choice and reproductive rights.

EMMA CAMPBELL: In 1967, when the U.K. government introduced the 1967 Abortion Act, which allowed

women in England, Scotland and Wales access to an abortion with the sign-off of two doctors,

it was never extended to Northern Ireland.

Northern Ireland had its own Parliament at the time.

It was a devolved Parliament, and they never introduced the act.

Of course, since then, there have been many occasions when Northern Ireland hasn't had

a devolved government and have been directly ruled by U.K., Westminster.

And in that long period of time, the act was never extended to Northern Ireland.

It was never introduced.

And, in fact, on a number of occasions, when there was an attempt to extend it to Northern

Ireland, politicians in the DUP, which is the Democratic Unionist Party—but, regardless

of the name, they're not very democratic, but they're very pro-union with the United

Kingdom, and they're very conservative, with a small c, very religion, and come from

a kind of Protestant loyalist background.

And they were extremely opposed to any extension of the '67 act to Northern Ireland and,

in fact, did a number of deals with the U.K. government to vote for some measures, for

internment and so forth, with the U.K. government in order to stop abortion happening in Northern

Ireland.

So, we've been on this kind of path of struggle for abortion rights since then.

There's been a lot of activism amongst women in Northern Ireland from the '60s and '70s,

especially the trade unions were amongst the first to adopt pro-choice policies and try

and campaign around the idea of getting abortion extended to Northern Ireland.

AMY GOODMAN: Where do abortion rights stand in Ireland?

EMMA CAMPBELL: So, the two jurisdictions of Ireland—so Northern Ireland and the south

of Ireland—the south of Ireland recently had a change in the law to bring it up to

almost the same as what we have in Northern Ireland, which is a woman is entitled to termination

if her pregnancy will put her at risk of death or grave risk of suicide.

So, it's a very small percentage of the women who actually need abortions have real

access to it.

And even women who qualify in those very strict circumstances often can't find the medical

practitioners who will perform the abortion.

And still, then, they have to travel to England at a huge expense.

So, in England, Wales and Scotland, if you need an abortion, you can avail of it on the

National Health Service, which means you don't pay for any treatment, whereas if you're

traveling from the north or south of Ireland, then you have to pay for your travel, your

accommodation and then, of course, the privately—the private treatment, as well, which is hugely

expensive.

AMY GOODMAN: Has Scotland just told the women in Northern Ireland, "If you come here to

get an abortion, we will pay for it"?

The National Health Service will pay?

EMMA CAMPBELL: So, Scotland were the first other jurisdiction that offered an olive branch,

as it were, to women in Northern Ireland and suggested that they would look at the costing

for the services, the abortion services, if we travel to Scotland for them.

And then, in a very kind of fast, vote fast, over in U.K., Westminster, because the—Theresa

May is struggling with this snap election result, so she didn't have the majority

that she imagined she might.

So Theresa May wanted to do a deal with the DUP in order to have a greater majority and

to appease a lot of the members of the Tory party, who were scared at high right-wing—the

DUP, where she then started making noises about introducing measures that meant that

women from Northern Ireland would get their abortions paid for in England.

Stella Creasy from the Labour Party, in fact, put the amendment into the queen's speech.

And from that, it kind of, you know, snowballed into a situation now where there are actually

talks happening about getting women's treatment paid for in England.

Obviously, it still means women have to travel from Northern Ireland, and it has no impact

on women in the south, because they're not part of the U.K., so they still would have

to pay privately and travel.

AMY GOODMAN: So, what do women do now in Northern Ireland?

EMMA CAMPBELL: We know from our sisters in an organization called Women on Web, who provide

abortion pills to women in countries where abortion is still illegal, that over a period

of about three years, over 5,000 women accessed just their pills online, and they're only

one of many providers.

You don't necessarily have to go to Women on Web or Women Help Women.

You can go to just a private provider in China or India on the internet.

But we know from Women on Web's research that over 5,000 women in the last three years

have accessed these pills, which are illegal to take in Northern Ireland without—you

know, without a medical practitioner involved.

And women have been prosecuted when they have been discovered to have taken these pills.

Often they have been reported to the police by medical practitioners, if they've gone

to hospital, because they're not sure if the bleeding is normal, or if they face real

complications and have gone to hospital, then the nurses and healthcare people that they

meet there are, unfortunately, obliged, under a Northern Irish terrorist act, to report

any crime.

So, yeah, we've had one prosecution last year and then about four or five cases that

are currently waiting in the courts.

And they're waiting because there's a few Supreme Court actions kind of in the mix

that I think they're waiting to hear the results from, that have been appealed a few

times.

So, the maximum penalty is life imprisonment.

But the woman who was charged last year got a custodial sentence.

And—

AMY GOODMAN: That means?

EMMA CAMPBELL: It means that she didn't have to serve any of the sentence, because

the amount of time that she was—the amount of time that she waited between being charged

and going to court was the same as the amount of the sentence.

AMY GOODMAN: That she was jailed?

EMMA CAMPBELL: That she was jailed.

But we know that she was actually saving up money to travel, and then took the pills when

she couldn't get enough money.

So, the financial burden is a huge—a huge part of this access problem.

AMY GOODMAN: Estimates of how many women a day leave, on average, Northern Ireland to

get an abortion?

EMMA CAMPBELL: Well, between one and two women a day leave Northern Ireland.

We know that 12 women a week leave Northern Ireland, and 40 women a week leave the south

of Ireland.

It's approximately 1,000 women a year, on average, and about between 4,000 and 5,000

women a year, on average, that have left the republic.

So that's thousands of women who have just been left behind for such a long time.

AMY GOODMAN: So, talk about what a photographer like you has to do with this movement, what

you're doing now, what the X-ile Project is all about.

EMMA CAMPBELL: So, the X-ile Project was really envisioned as a way of showing solidarity,

a way of removing the stigma and the silence and secrecy around abortion, because obviously

that plays a huge part in moving the ideas forward.

Women have had to—when they travel over, they quite often pretend they're going over

for a different reason, that they're visiting family or they're going on a business trip

or—and the X-ile Project wanted to have something that showed that there are lots

of women just like you and me who have had to access abortions.

And so, these are women who are willing to put their face forward and say, "I've had

an abortion."

And it's the first time, really, anything like this has happened in Ireland, north or

south.

So, it's been quite amazing, and the response has been overwhelming.

AMY GOODMAN: Now, explain what you're doing.

You are taking—

EMMA CAMPBELL: So, we photograph women who have had abortions, and we don't ask them

their story or ask them to explain anything.

We just take their first name and their face.

And—

AMY GOODMAN: Portrait.

EMMA CAMPBELL: Portrait.

And we publish.

We always publish the portraits as a group rather than as individuals, because it's

about talking about how many women have had to go through this alone before.

AMY GOODMAN: So this is a gallery of women—

EMMA CAMPBELL: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: —who have had abortions.

EMMA CAMPBELL: That's right, yeah.

And a lot of them have found—consequently, as a part of doing the X-ile Project, as being

one of the faces in the gallery, a lot of them have found their way to being more active

in the fight for abortion rights.

And certainly, you know, for many of them, the sky didn't fall in.

So it's been a very empowering project for the women involved.

AMY GOODMAN: Can the authorities get a hold of these pictures and track these women down?

EMMA CAMPBELL: Well, there's no attached evidence to how they accessed abortions.

So, of course, there was a move in the south of Ireland to try and even make travel to

England illegal, but that was quashed, in the '80s.

So, there's no way of telling how these women accessed the abortion and whether it was illegal

or not.

So—

AMY GOODMAN: Are the women you're photographing only from Northern Ireland, or from the Republic

of Ireland, as well?

EMMA CAMPBELL: They're from the whole of Ireland, so from north and south.

AMY GOODMAN: And what's the experience like, Emma, for you, as the photographer, to sit

across from the women?

How do you set this up?

Where do you take these pictures?

And how do they feel when you're shooting them?

EMMA CAMPBELL: Well, one of the other organizers, Julie Morrissey, she arranges that we contact

each other.

And then I ask them to just decide on somewhere that they would feel comfortable.

And when we meet, we quite often would have coffee first and have a chat.

And I never ask anyone their story, but nine times out of 10 they want to share their story,

I guess because they know that they're talking to somebody who understands where they're

coming from and isn't going to be from a place of judgment.

And they've been from all different backgrounds, from medical consultants to teachers and retired

women and stay-at-home moms, so it kind of spans the breadth of just different women

in the country.

AMY GOODMAN: And this is for women who have had an abortion any time in their lives.

EMMA CAMPBELL: That's right, any time.

And sometimes it's more than one, obviously, given the span of your reproductive years.

So, it's—every woman's story is different, but everyone's experience is definitely

overshadowed by the stigma and shame, which is part of what we're trying to remove with

this project.

AMY GOODMAN: What do the polls show here?

I mean, in the United States, the majority of even Catholics support choice, support

abortion.

What about here?

EMMA CAMPBELL: So, there have been a number of polls over the last few years.

Amnesty has carried out a poll specifically in the south, and in the north, as well, so

two different—in the two different jurisdictions, but they reflect each other, which is that

across the board, across religion, across socioeconomic background, people—over 70

percent of people in Ireland, north and south, support abortion rights and support a change

in the law.

There is a tiny minority that supports the law as it is and wish to see women criminalized,

but it's less than 10 percent.

AMY GOODMAN: The United Nations has called Ireland's abortion laws cruel and inhumane,

calling for a change in the law.

EMMA CAMPBELL: We would agree.

And with my other hat on, as part of Alliance for Choice, we've made submissions to the—to

CEDAW, which is the Committee on Ending Discrimination and Violence Against Women, as part of the

U.N.

We've made submissions to the U.N. committees on the child, on disabilities and on the rights

to sexual freedoms.

And in each instance, the response that we've had from the U.N. is that they agree with

us that there are definitely human rights that are being breached, a lot especially

around Article 8, Article 13 and Article 14, and that really, unless the punishments here

are removed, so the criminal punishments are removed, that there's no way that you can

say that women's rights are being properly upheld.

AMY GOODMAN: How many women have been charged?

EMMA CAMPBELL: We don't know, but we know that the amount of women that are waiting

to get a judgment in court is currently about six.

So, people only started being arrested once the popularity of the online pills became

wider, wider public knowledge, yeah.

AMY GOODMAN: You talked about the DUP.

How about Sinn Féin?

What's its position on abortion?

EMMA CAMPBELL: Well, Sinn Féin recently changed its position on abortion to agree with abortion

in cases of rape, in cases of fetal abnormality or sexual crimes.

So, as you know, that's the very kind of baseline of—that's the kind of extreme

circumstances of people that need abortions, but that will only cover a very small percentage

of the amount of people that actually need access, and it's not far enough.

But they are further on than the DUP.

And in the south, they do support the Repeal the Eighth campaign.

And the Eighth Amendment in the Irish Constitution actually enshrines the right of the fetus

to be protected, and that was inserted in the '80s.

And they need that to be removed before they can progress in any way with any abortion

law.

AMY GOODMAN: Are you concerned with the British Prime Minister Theresa May making coalition

with the DUP, which is fiercely anti-choice, that it could change the laws of the rest

of Britain?

EMMA CAMPBELL: I think that what we've seen over the last month has shown us that the

people in government at Westminster want to protect the rights that are already there,

thankfully.

However, it certainly, unfortunately, lets the DUP off the hook in terms of making any

legal policy decisions on abortion in Northern Ireland.

And as an activist and as a member of the activist community fighting for abortion rights,

we are worried that this is now seen as, you know, this is dealt with.

We have abortion rights because you can travel to England and Scotland and Wales and access

it for free, where in actual fact there's an awful lot of women who, for very many reasons,

can't travel—women in situations of domestic violence, people who don't have the proper

travel documents, recent immigrants, and people with disabilities, that mean that travel across

to England for them is just impossible.

So, we believe it still leaves far too many women behind, and we're just concerned that

the will of the people here isn't really being listened to.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, your thoughts on what's happening in the United States under President

Trump?

EMMA CAMPBELL: Well, there was a lot of reflection took place when Trump, in the run-up to the

elections, talked about how he believed that women who had abortions should be punished.

And, rightfully, many people were horrified about his comments.

But in actual fact, that's what happens here.

So, I guess for a warning to people of America that you could be living in this kind of situation

if Trump is left untrammeled in his opinions.

But also, there's a very worrying influence of American politics especially on the hard-wingers

in this country and in the U.K.

A lot of the training manuals for the anti-choice people that operate and who bully women outside

clinics come directly from America.

So...

AMY GOODMAN: X-ile Project, the name?

X-dash-ile Project.

EMMA CAMPBELL: The X-ile, X-dash, yeah.

AMY GOODMAN: Where does it come from?

EMMA CAMPBELL: I guess because so many people feel like they're exiled as citizens whenever

they have to travel over to other countries for abortions.

So we really feel like we've been undermined as citizens and devalued as kind of state

members.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, Emma Campbell, I want to thank you for being with us, co-chair of the

Alliance for Choice and one of the photographers with the X-ile Project.

Thanks so much.

EMMA CAMPBELL: Thank you very much.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!

We're in West Belfast in the north of Ireland.

I'm Amy Goodman.

Thanks for joining us.

For more infomation >> Meet the Irish Photographer Documenting Women in Ireland Who Must Travel Abroad for Safe Abortion - Duration: 18:01.

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Malibu Miley Cyrus Lyrics - Duration: 3:48.

Malibu Miley Cyrus

I never came to the beach or stood by the ocean

I never sat by the shore

Under the sun with my feet in the sand

But you brought me here and I'm happy that you did

Cause now I'm as free as birds catching the wind

Don't forget to Share and Subscribe Click Thumbs UP IF You Enjoyed the Video

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Margaret's Weather Picture for September 29, 2017 - Duration: 0:23.

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Charli XCX: Boys - Duration: 3:14.

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Beyoncé Donates the Proceeds of Her New Track to Hurricane Relief - Duration: 2:12.

What's up, guys?

Beija here for Complex News.

On Thursday night, the recent spate of hurricanes and earthquakes met another force of nature—Beyoncé.

A new version of J. Balvin and Willy William's hit "Mi Gente" was released, featuring contributions

from the Queen Bey herself.

The new version was put out without any prior warning.

With it came a message from Beyoncé: she'd be donating her share of the dough from the

tune to a good cause.

"I am donating my proceeds from this song to hurricane and earthquake relief charities

for Puerto Rico, Mexico and other affected Caribbean islands."

In addition, the star directed fans to a page on her website, beyonce dot com slash relief

efforts, that encourages fans to donate to a number of different organizations involved

in hurricane and earthquake relief.

The singer put out a lyric video for the tune as well.

It featured a whole bunch of people dancing, with a handful of cameos.

On the track, Bey sings in both Spanish...

and English.

The

original version of the track, which came out in late June, was already a hit before

the world's biggest pop star added on.

It's been on the Billboard Hot 100 for 12 weeks, and currently sits at number 19.

In a case of the snake eating its own tail, the newly remixed "Mi Gente" is itself kind

of a remix—the track borrows heavily from Willy William's "Voodoo Song."

"Mi Gente" is far from Beyoncé's only contribution to relief efforts.

She took part in the Hand in Hand: A Benefit for Hurricane Relief telethon, which raised

over fourteen million dollars.

She also visited her hometown of Houston to speak to survivors of Hurricane Harvey, established

Harvey relief efforts on her website, and donated an undisclosed amount of money herself,

rumored to be up to seven million dollars.

For more about Beyoncé and other unstoppable forces, make sure to subscribe to Complex

on YouTube.

For Complex News, I'm Beija Velez.

For more infomation >> Beyoncé Donates the Proceeds of Her New Track to Hurricane Relief - Duration: 2:12.

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Prince Harry And Meghan Markle Will Get Married, Keir Simmons Predicts | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 8:29.

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Editorial: Puerto Rico needs our support - Duration: 1:08.

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Mallard train World's fastest steam locomotive - Duration: 1:27.

And this is the world-famous Mallard fastest steam engine in the world. It still holds the record.

On the 3rd of July 1938 the Mallard broke the world speed record by

travelling at 126 miles per hour its 203 km/h on a slightly downward grade of line

just south of Grantham. And this record is remarkable in that it still stands

today this is the fastest steam engine on earth

Okay this is the test equipment they used on the record breaking run.

Look at that. That's real em... Steampunk but this is real, that is the real deal.

Look at the carriage. How beautiful it is. Beautiful. Every little detail just so carefully thought about.

So it just didn't function. It looked great as well. Bizarre!

These days we're kind of er, very utilitarian. It says there. Dynamometer

For more infomation >> Mallard train World's fastest steam locomotive - Duration: 1:27.

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Puerto Rico In Crisis: Supplies Sit While Thousands Line Up To Evacuate | TODAY - Duration: 2:40.

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Why Yahar'gul is the Best Area in Bloodborne - Duration: 7:46.

Yahar'gul, The Unseen Village and the Hypogean Gaol, two areas that for my

money, are Bloodborne's finest. While some may argue for Byrgenwerth or Old Yharnam,

I find Yahar'gul to be the most fascinating. I've read several

players hated the area, but I genuinely think that it's one of the most defining

parts of Bloodborne. Much like how fellow video essayist Hamish Black

argued that Blighttown is the barometer for where players put down Dark Souls 1

or fall in love with it completely, I feel as though Yahar'gul is Bloodborne's

version of that. Everything before this area feels insurmountable, yet, once

you dominate and master the area it immediately gives you the strength and

belief to power through the rest of the game knowing that you can beat it. When

you first encounter this area, it's likely called the Hypogean Gaol. You

awake locked inside a cell with no awareness of where you are how you got

there only works to intensify the experience of it all. This moment is what

kindled my interest in Yahar'gul as an area when playing Bloodborne or any of

the souls games for that matter. Death is an inevitability, multiple deaths even

more so. When you die the loading screen is already etched into your mind - you

expect it and therefore you know that the cycle of madness is about to begin

again. In the Cathedral Ward, though, when you die to one of the sack men - yes I

know they're called Snatchers but honestly Sack Men makes them sound less

scarier - you expect that loading screen but it never comes. Your screen remains

black for a while until...

This moment catches you by surprise and, at least for me, symbolizes what makes

Bloodborne so damn great. In a game where death is a by-product of gameplay,

there are still moments where you were rewarded for dying -

whether that be sack men carrying you to Hypogean Gaol or Amygdalas teleporting

you elsewhere...

When you first arrive at the Hypogean Gaol, the map looks a little something

like this: quite small, right? Yet, depending on your

playthrough, it may very well be that you are severely underpowered against pretty

much anything that lurks here. If it's your first time the odds seem

insurmountable and I love that because this area is merely optional. Once you

defeat Rom later on in the game you now unlock Yahar'gul in its entirety. You

will notice many things have changed upon arrival: the moon has descended and

thus the sky carries this gorgeous orange/purple color hue. After scouring

the area and facing off against The One Reborn, all the pieces of the Yahar'gul

puzzle finally connect. Let's take a look at the monstrosity that is The One Reborn...

Look at its core, containing several dead bodies and limbs. It could be assumed

that the sack men have been kidnapping people to use as rituals for The One

Reborn. It's even more sinister, then, that you could have very well been one of

them if not for your escape from the Hypogean

Gaol earlier in the game. There are various areas in Bloodborne that you

can arrive at well-equipped and powerful enough to plough through. Remember when we

first arrived at Hypogean Gaol just how insurmountable the odds feel and how

powerless we are to some of the creatures? FromSoftware does this

wonderful thing of recreating that same experience with the now expanded Yahar'gul -

- a familiar setting, yes, but you're still bombarded by new and old faces

alike... Oh and some batshit crazy laser shooting Amygdalas come out to play.

So here's the part I love: remember this area of the Hypogean Gaol and how you

get cornered by the old sack men? when you return to it in Yahar'gul,

you're probably dreaming of revenge on those puny bastards... except FromSoftware

now packs the area with three livid, powerful hunters - each one with their own

move set and varying degree of difficulty. That's what I love - the fact that you

think you have an area sussed out and then all of a sudden the game flips its

head on you, it's a testament to the gorgeous level design of Bloodborne

that enemies can be changed but still fit the aesthetic and space of the ones

prior. It's a vast improvement on the shambles that was Dark Souls 2's Iron Keep

- an area where enemies either reduced or increased depending on, well...

nothing... it's just bad. Bloodborne's Yahar'gul feels as though FromSoftware

straight up corrects its mistakes from previous Souls games in regards to

returning to areas. Oh, and can we just take a brief minute to

talk about the gorgeousness of this area? It might get lost between the cavalcade

of insanity that circulates the area but, wow, those creature designs, the way it

goes full-Lovecraftian on you, the color of the sky... it's so beautiful. Yahar'gul

is also one of the core hubs of the lore. It's believed that Micholash and

the school of mensis performed research for the church in the secrecy of Yahar'gul.

There's also that terrifying note found in the area which reads

"nightmarish rituals crave a newborn. Find one and silence its harrowing cry." This

ties in to Mergo and the Wet Nurse and links further to Micholash, especially

since the run for fighting him in Mensis is peppered with a child's cry

that rings around the area. More than any other area in Bloodborne, the people of

Yahar'gul worshipped the great ones directly. You can see statues of people

in stances of prayer and and the huge chapels outright devoted

to great ones resembling the form of a spider. It makes sense then that The One

Reborn - an experiment of Yahar'gul's - takes the bodily structure of a spider,

what with the various limbs and bulky middle. There's so much to infer from the

world of Yharnam and a massive chunk of that comes from Yahar'gul, which is

why I believe it to be the best and most captivating area in Bloodborne. When you

first arrive you're locked in a cell, yet your second time passing through you are

firmly outdoors... it's a metaphorical advancement one that speaks of how much

knowledge and insight you have acquired since. So that's why I love Yahar'gul

and why I think it's the best area in the entirety of Bloodborne. I'm

interested, though, in your opinion. What's your favourite area in Bloodborne?

Thanks for watching and I'll see you all next time!

For more infomation >> Why Yahar'gul is the Best Area in Bloodborne - Duration: 7:46.

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Ladies Of 'Saturday Night Live' Talk About The Show's New Season | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 5:34.

For more infomation >> Ladies Of 'Saturday Night Live' Talk About The Show's New Season | Megyn Kelly TODAY - Duration: 5:34.

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(NOT FAKE)-ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS6 WITH LICENCE KEY-WORKING 100%-LINK IN DISCRIPTION - Duration: 2:58.

LINK IN DISCRIPTION

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See The New Football Helmet Test That Could Save Kids From Concussions | TODAY - Duration: 3:49.

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Best Tools For YouTube Channel 2017-2018 Urdu | Hindi - Duration: 16:48.

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Learns colors with surprise Egg and Duck colors 3D for children - Duration: 3:10.

Learns colors with surprise Egg and Duck colors 3D for children

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🌱 Early Skunk De Sensi Seeds, Graine Féminisée 🌱 - Duration: 1:56.

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Giao lưu giải hạng 1 Premiere League và hạng 2 Championship - trước thềm mùa giải - Duration: 2:22:23.

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I'm playing Minecraft?/Kontact with TheJoCraft?! | Slenderschnizel - Duration: 2:21.

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How to Reset Your LG V30 | AT&T Wireless - Duration: 2:08.

Reset Device:

Restart.

If a power cycle doesn't fix the issue,

try performing a device restart.

Press and hold the Power Lock button.

Select "Restart".

Select "RESTART" to confirm.

The device will take a moment to restart.

Factory Reset.

A factory reset will erase all information on the device

and return it to factory default settings.

It will permanently erase all personal data, preferences,

settings, and content that are saved to the device.

It is recommended

that you back up important data before proceeding.

The device must also be charged to at least 30%

to perform a factory data reset.

From the home screen,

swipe down from the notification bar.

Select the Settings icon.

Select the General tab,

then select "Backup & reset".

Select "Factory data reset".

Select "RESET PHONE".

Select "Delete all".

Select "RESET".

Alternate Factory Reset.

If unable to perform the standard factory reset

using the previous steps,

try the alternate method by first powering off the device.

With the device powered off,

press and hold the Volume Down and Power Lock button

until the device turns on.

With the Volume Down button still pressed,

release the Power Lock button when the LG logo appears.

Then immediately press and hold the Power Lock button again.

Release both buttons when

"Factory data reset" appears at the top of the screen.

Press the Volume Down button to highlight "Yes",

then press the Power Lock button to select.

Press the Volume Down button to highlight "Yes",

then press the Power Lock button to begin the reset process.

[♪AT&T jingle♪]

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