Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 10, 2018

Youtube daily Oct 25 2018

Last night, even after multiple, high profile, democratic politicians, donors, actors, everyone

else, media outlets, after they received bombs, Donald Trump still decided he was going to

hold his rally yesterday evening.

The rally began with the crowd chanting, lock her up.

Again, this is just hours after it was reported that Hillary Clinton received a pipe bomb

in the mail.

Lock her up, is what that idiotic crowd was chanting.

Let's talk about lock her up.

Because the things that's pissed off conservatives, republicans, the MAGA crowd, is the fact that

Hillary Clinton had a private email server.

That's what her emails were hosted on.

There's no evidence at all that suggest that this email server was attacked by foreign

adversaries.

But they're mad that she used it and she could have risked classified information getting

into the hands of the enemy.

That alone is reason to lock her up, according to the MAGA crowd.

If they think that that's a reason to put Hillary Clinton in prison, then I'm assuming

they're also wanting to put Donald Trump in prison, because a new report from the New

York Times, shows that yes, Donald Trump is still using his private cellphone.

Oh, and by the way, we have evidence now that proves that yes, the Chinese government and

the Russian government have also been eavesdropping on his phone calls from this unsecured iPhone,

that the president refuses to put down.

Foreign governments have officially hacked and tapped into the phone of the president

of the United States.

Here's what's happened, Donald Trump reportedly has three different iPhones.

Two of those have been secured by the NSA.

One of them is unsecured, and the president does not want it secured.

That is his private personal cellphone.

One of the ones that is secured actually only works on WiFi, and that is the one that he

uses for Twitter according this New York Times report.

He has a phone just for his horrible Twitter account.

But it's the unsecured one that's causing problems, 'cause they know, the intelligence

agencies here in the United States that mostly the Chinese government has been listening

into his phone calls.

What they're doing is they're finding out who Donald Trump is having these private,

friendly conversations with.

They're finding out what kind of policy proposals he's talking about with these people, so that

they can get a headstart on them, so that they can use this private information about

the president to manipulate him.

The report says that at least two different people have now been targeted by China.

They're sending their businessmen to go do this.

One is the CEO of the Blackstone group, the other is Steve Wynn, a Las Vegas Casino mogul,

and they're trying to get to these men, to influence them and then have them influence

the president in a way that benefits China.

That's what is happening in the country today, all because Donald Trump refused to put down

his private, unsecured cellphone.

He had been warned multiple times.

We've even talked about this on this program here.

Reports have been coming out since the man took office that he refuses to give up his

private cellphone.

Everybody's telling him that it's easily hackable, and likely hacked already.

And now we find out that it was.

They are listening in.

They do know every dirty secret about this president.

We can only hope that he's not leaking classified information to his buddies, which he most

likely is.

Because the Chinese then have that too.

If these MAGA folks at these rallies think Hillary Clinton should be locked up for having

a private email server, that wasn't accessed by foreign adversaries.

Then I can only imagine that pretty soon they're going to be calling for Donald Trump to be

locked up in GTMO, over the fact that he knew about the dangers of his private cellphone,

decided he knew better than everyone else, and then ended up leaking information to the

Chinese, who are using that information to manipulate policy here in the United States.

For more infomation >> Foreign Countries Have Tapped Donald Trump's iPhone And Are Listening To His Calls - Duration: 4:30.

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Así fue el tiroteo en el hotel de la cadena Trump | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> Así fue el tiroteo en el hotel de la cadena Trump | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:41.

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Noticias Telemundo Mediodía, 25 de octubre de 2018 | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 21:43.

For more infomation >> Noticias Telemundo Mediodía, 25 de octubre de 2018 | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 21:43.

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Vulnerability in Missions - Anabaptist Perspectives Ep. 038 - Duration: 8:47.

Well, welcome, everybody, to another episode of Anabaptist Perspectives.

We're here today with Merle Burkholder. Welcome!

Thank you!

Glad you've joined us.

He's a Bible teacher/pastor for over the past 30 years.

He's currently administrator for Open Hands Ministry as well as the staff

pastor for Believers Fellowship. So Merle you have a background in working with

missions and as you've seen that, there's some vulnerability that you've observed

from the conservative Mennonite people on the mission fields. Could you describe that for us.

Traditionally the conservative Mennonite church has had a

desire to do missions and do church planting and evangelism and relief work

and those kinds of things. In the past we often sent people out with very little

preparation and very little direction actually. They were just kind of sent

there and said, "Well go try and do good stuff."

So, we've floundered in mission work because we don't have clear-cut objectives.

We don't have an understanding of how to do what we're doing.

Often people aren't given training. Well, how do you start a church

and where do you begin? You wind up in a community and you have to

do language learning. Well how you do language learning?

You kind of bumble your way through language learning, and then it's say, well now you

have to do evangelism. How do you explain the gospel? The Bible is a big

book, so where do I start? What's important? What's not? How do you

bring people to Christ? Then how do you disciple people?

How do you form a church? Many times we've grown up and we've been discipled in a system.

We know what we do. We're good at practical things and doing things.

We're often better at doing than we are at understanding why we do what we do.

Take a person who's been raised in a community that has a lot of internal

relationships and it's not an isolated community,

but it's a community that interacts a lot with people who have the same ideas

and the same beliefs and practices. Now you take that person and you

transplant them into a situation where nobody else has those beliefs and values

and practices. You have a person who sat in Sunday school and someone

made a statement and everyone nodded their heads, you know, -- "That's right."

That's how it is." Now you put that person in a place where nobody believes that and

they say the same thing that was affirmed by everybody where they came from.

They say it over here and people are like, "Where did you get that

idea? That's the craziest thing I ever heard!" You know. "That can't be true."

Then all of a sudden they're like

"Well, is it true? Where does that come from? Why do we do that?"

So people are often unprepared to explain their beliefs and their practices,

why they do what they do. Then they get into interactions with

people from other religions that they're not prepared to explain even the

basic elements of Christianity or they get into contact with other missionaries

from other denominations that have different theological positions.

Those missionaries they've gone to seminary.

They've been trained in their theology. They know what they believe. They can explain it.

All of a sudden, you have a person that really can get knocked off balance

because they're not sure how to explain what they believe and what they practice.

They're vulnerable because they haven't been prepared for

what they're experiencing. I think that we ought to be doing evangelism.

We ought to be doing the work of missions, but we need to do a better job of

preparing people to go and that includes skills in language learning,

in cross-cultural adjustments, skills in many areas, but it also includes

theological training and just a discussion of theology and for people to

really understand the Christian faith and to understand

the Biblical background for their own beliefs and

practices and be able to coherently explain that to someone who doesn't believe it

and to whom it sounds really, really strange.

So the difficulties or vulnerabilities as you call them that you've seen there, most of that could be

alleviated with better preparation and training instead of going into it

thinking everything will work out.

I think that we have lost missionaries to

the conservative Mennonite church because as they interacted with

missionaries of other denominations and people of other faiths.

Sometimes we've had missionaries who've gone into missions really feeling like for us as

conservative Anabaptists, we're evangelical, protestant Christians with a

few extra added on. I think they can get convinced that well we ought to just

kind of drop those extra things and just merge into the evangelical protestant church.

In reality, our whole theology is so different. Our approach to

church is so different from evangelical protestantism. I think it has value

and it's something that there's a need for in the world now as much as there

was in the Reformation. I don't think it's something that we should lose.

Well as you think about those vulnerabilities are there

practical things that can be done by churches or mission organizations to

help avoid those problems and vulnerabilities?

At the church level, it's the selection and preparation of people. Be ready to go into cross-cultural

overseas mission work and I think opportunities to share their faith in

the local community and get involved in outreach ministries in the local community.

So before you go to Nepal, maybe your next-door neighbor would be a good person to talk to.

I think that church can provide

opportunities for people within the local setting to get some experience in

sharing their faith and some experience in being involved in ministry.

Then, I think when a person is selected or has chosen to go into cross-cultural

ministry, then I think mission training programs that deal with the skills

areas and also with the theological training, I think are very, very

important for mission organizations to give people the proper coaching and the

proper mentoring as they enter into the ministry and to stay in touch with people

and just see what their questions and "How are things going?" and strengthen

people in what they're doing.

So you kind of gave a three-fold thing where it

was what happens at the local church, the possibility of additional training, and

also then the mission organization itself staying in tune with its workers.

On the second of those, is there more possibility for training now than

what there had been earlier?

Absolutely! Yeah, when I first went into

missions in 1978, I was one of those people who went with good intentions.

You know, "I'm gonna go do good stuff." I had no idea what I was getting into.

Then after I was there, I started to realize I need help. I need training.

So I started looking for where can I get help? Where can I get training after

I was already on the mission field. Today, we have opportunities. There's a mission

training center in Queens, New York.

There's the Institute for Global Opportunities in Thailand.

There's opportunities for training that

it's much preferable if people can do that before they actually go up on the field.

Well, thank you Merle for joining us for this time talking about

missions and what you've learned in your many years of experience.

You're welcome.

Thank you all for joining us for another episode of Anabaptist Perspectives.

We welcome your comments. We invite you to come back and to see the next episode.

We have weekly releases for video and podcasts and we'd love to hear from you.

Join us again next week for another episode of Anabaptist Perspectives.

For more infomation >> Vulnerability in Missions - Anabaptist Perspectives Ep. 038 - Duration: 8:47.

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Tennoji Zoo | Osaka Japan * Dani Travel TV - Duration: 6:08.

Tennoji Zoo is located at Tennoji Park in Osaka.

The admission fee for Tennoji Zoo is 500 yen for adults this is around 3.82 euros or 4.33 dollars.

The Tennoji Zoo opened in January 1915 as the third zoo in Japan.

The zoo's approximately 11 hectares house 1,000 animals of 200 different types.

Including everything from lions and chimpanzees, to the always-popular koalas, penguins, birds and many more.

Tennoji Zoo serves as a kind of ecological exhibition, introducing the public to the way these animals live.

It's very beautiful place where you can admire the nature and animals.

Subscribe to my channel and don't forget to activate the bell icon.

From Tennoji Zoo you can go to explore the rest of Tennoji Park.

More about Tennoji Park you can find in previous video in the top right corner of the screen.

More information and location you can find in the description.

If you have any questions, you can write it in the comments section.

Subscribe to my channel and don't forget to activate the bell icon.

Thumb up if you like the video.

Thank you for watching and till the next time.

For more infomation >> Tennoji Zoo | Osaka Japan * Dani Travel TV - Duration: 6:08.

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How to Get Away with Murder 5x05 Sneak Peek "It Was the Worst Day of My Life" (SUB ITA) - Duration: 1:12.

For more infomation >> How to Get Away with Murder 5x05 Sneak Peek "It Was the Worst Day of My Life" (SUB ITA) - Duration: 1:12.

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PUBG Animation - Mobile playing on I phone [Game Hak Great] #26 SUB 4 SUB - Duration: 4:42.

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