Gorgeous Tiny House Amy by Tiny House Siesta
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神鵰俠侶 第三十三集 33/50 (劉德華,陳玉蓮 主演; TVB/1983) (粵語中字) - Duration: 41:24.
For more infomation >> 神鵰俠侶 第三十三集 33/50 (劉德華,陳玉蓮 主演; TVB/1983) (粵語中字) - Duration: 41:24. -------------------------------------------
Piers Morgan: Scream snowflakes, but Trump may win again | news 24h - Duration: 12:03.
Scream all you like, snowflakes, but if you don't get your s**t together soon, Trump's going to be your President for another seven years
In two weeks it is the first anniversary of Donald Trump's astonishing US election victory.
To 'celebrate', thousands of Trump-hating liberals in cities like Boston, New York and Philadelphia are planning a day of protest in which they will go outside, stare upwards and shout their little heads off in rage.
I'm not joking.
The planned event is actually titled on Facebook: 'Scream helplessly at the sky on the anniversary of the election'.
Organizer Johanna Schulman told Newsweek: 'This administration has attacked everything about what it means to be an American.
Who wouldn't feel helpless every day?'.
Well, let me try to explain, Johanna, if you haven't already started preemptively screaming.
There are tens of millions of Americans right now who don't feel helpless at all.
In fact, they've never felt happier that they've finally got a guy in the White House who THEY believe stands up for THEM.
They don't share YOUR view of what it means to be an American.
They share Trump's view, because it's THEIR view.
That's why he was elected President, and that's why I am beginning to think he will be comfortably re-elected in 2020.
For those who think I've gone completely mad, here is what I told British GQ magazine in September, 2015, when they asked me: Who will win the US election?.
'I think Donald Trump will win the Republican nomination,' I answered.
'The Democrats will only stand a chance of beating him if they ditch Hillary Clinton, who is now a busted flush, and go with Joe Biden, possibly with Elizabeth Warren as his running mate.'.
So, putting my Nostradamus hat on again, here are 10 reasons why I think Trump can pull it off again:.
1) He's the most resilient, uncompromising man in America.
Love him or loathe him, Trump hasn't changed or pivoted one iota from the candidate who ran for office.
He is both absurdly thin-skinned AND absurdly thick-skinned – incapable of ignoring any slight, however small, but also showing quite extraordinary strength of character in repelling what even Jimmy Carter just called the most frenzied media attack on a serving president in US history.
Yes, Trump's an inveterate bulls**tter, the by-product of life as a shameless salesman, but to date he hasn't lied us into an illegal war like one of his most recent critics George W.
Bush did in Iraq – so political fibbing is all relative.
2) Trump's enemies are bailing out from the fight like conscientious objectors in the war.
Yesterday, two Senators, Bob Corker and Jeff Flake made grandiose media-grabbing attacks on the President, effectively branding him a lying useless goon.
Both are standing down, and in (Snow) Flake's case, he's only doing so because he knows he's going to get an absolute drubbing in the next election.
This, remember, is a guy so principled that he wrote to a Sandy Hook relative saying he agreed with her about introducing background checks on gun sales, then voted AGAINST it just months later.
That was a major reason why his poll numbers collapsed.
So spare me the sanctimony now, Senator.
You're a fraud.
3) Hollywood's liberal elite, Trump's most vociferous, influential and vicious opponents, have exposed themselves to be a bunch of shocking hypocrites whose high moral and ethical plinth now lies in a pile of ruins.
The Weinstein scandal was just the tip of the unedifying iceberg.
Today we learned that Woody Allen, a man who ran off and married one adoptive daughter and was accused of sexually abusing another adoptive daughter when she was just seven, is currently making a movie about a pedophile who preys on a 15-year-old girl.
Meanwhile, Trump's most indignant Hollywood opponents like Meryl Streep continue to celebrate convicted fugitive child rapist Roman Polanski.
Middle America is watching all this and thinking: 'Don't you lot DARE lecture us about anything ever again.'.
4) The Democrats don't have anyone yet who can run against Trump and actually beat him.
Say what you like about the man but he's proven himself to be a formidably fierce political campaigner who wipes away opponents with the flick of a mocking 'Low Energy Jeb' nickname switch.
My preferred choice last time, Joe Biden, will be 78 by 2020 – surely, sadly, too old by then to mount a winning challenge? If not Joe, then who? The clock is ticking.
5) Hillary Clinton's still hanging around like a malodorous failure to remind everyone on a daily basis of the world's biggest and most shocking political defeat.
Her global loser tour, in which she continues to blame everyone but herself, is a vote-destroying disaster for the Democrats.
She needs to be pushed out into the political long grass, but who will tell her? Every day Hillary stays in the limelight is another win for Trump.
Today, it was shockingly revealed that after all her pontificating about Russia, it was 'Halo' Hillary who secretly paid for the dirty Russian dossier on Trump to try to smear him.
She'll collude with the worst of them when it suits her, and voters know it.
6) Trump's doing very well with the crucial election-deciding issue: the economy.
The stock markets keep roaring to record highs (Lest we forget, top liberal economist Paul Krugman told us on election night, when the markets tanked, that they would never recover under Trump!), growth continues around a steady 3%, and unemployment numbers have fallen consistently in the past year.
If Trump gets his game-changing tax plan through, and I think eventually he will, then the US economy will likely surge forward just in time for his 2020 campaign.
As Reagan and Clinton proved, when an incumbent president runs with a strengthening economy behind him, he's pretty much unbeatable.
7) His base is rock solid.
The polls suggest everyone who voted for Trump last time would do so again.
I've spent time down in states like Florida and Texas recently and they're revelling in Trump's presidency.
Everything the screaming liberals loathe about him, from The Wall and travel ban to his 'Fake News!' mantra and attack on kneeling NFL players, they love.
8) On the foreign stage, far from being the disaster that Corker and Flake claim, I'd argue that Trump's proven himself to be rather effective in re-establishing America's status as the world's No1 superpower.
He slapped Syria dictator Bashar al-Assad round the chops when he tested him with a chemical weapons attack, he's got ISIS on the run from places like Raqqa exactly as he promised, and he's stood up to North Korean lunatic Kim Jong-un and told him if he messes with America, he and his country will be vaporized.
I very much doubt bellicose self-preservationist Kim will now test that theory.
Trump's visits to places like Saudi Arabia, Poland and France were all huge successes, and I confidently predict now that his trip next week to Japan and China will be too.
For all his faults, Trump's a world-class schmoozer when he needs to be, and a savvy negotiator.
By all accounts, most foreign leaders have enjoyed their interactions with him.
9) Trump's Twitter feed continues to dominate the world's news agenda.
It remains astonishing that a 70-year-old man is the best social media practitioner on the planet, but he is.
Trump uses his tweets to refute damaging stories, promote positive ones, take down enemies and talk up friends.
More importantly, he's been able to by-pass mainstream media to get HIS message out to millions of people, exactly how HE wants to, and in an often brutally frank manner that his supporters thoroughly enjoy.
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Pictures show surgeons taking womb out of expectant mother | news 24h - Duration: 11:34.
This glowing red sphere is a mother's womb OUTSIDE her body as surgeons perform a pioneering operation on her 24-week-old baby that could transform countless lives
The theater lights are dimmed and the heating has been boosted to sauna levels when suddenly an eerie red glow illuminates the hands and faces of the doctors who crowd around the operating table.
Its source is a medical marvel — a human womb as we have never seen it before, raised up from a woman's body so that surgeons can perform life-changing spinal surgery on the baby boy inside.
He is just 24 weeks and two days old and weighs less than 2lb.
The glow comes from a tiny light on the camera that has been inserted via a 4mm slit into the womb of Lexi Royer.
It will relay images to the three enormous flat-screen TVs in the operating theater, allowing surgeons to safely manipulate the precision instruments through a second tiny slit in the womb.
The ground-breaking operation on a 28-year-old California hairdresser was performed on September 27 by US doctors who are pioneering the procedure — known as fetoscopic repair — to treat a severe form of spinal defect without cutting open the womb.
A routine ultrasound scan in May had shown that the fetus had spina bifida, an abnormality of the neural tube that will develop into the spinal cord and brain.
Part of the tube does not form properly or there is incomplete closing of the membrane and bones, leaving the spinal cord exposed.
It affects 24 babies in 100,000 and has been associated with B-vitamin folic acid deficiency.
As pregnancy progresses, the amniotic fluid surrounding the fetus becomes increasingly toxic to the delicate nervous tissue as fetal waste material accumulates, worsening the condition and its consequences.
It is generally too late to operate after birth and children with spina bifida are often unable to walk, may need catheters to pass urine and are at risk from brain damage because of a fluid-build up in the brain which may need a shunt implanted under the skin of the skull to drain it.
Since the 1990s, 'open surgery' on babies with spina bifida has been performed with mixed success.
It requires a 6cm incision made into the womb to access the child.
However, the procedure has been linked to premature births and other harmful side-effects — such as poor healing of the uterine scar — for mothers who must give birth by cesarean section in case of womb rupture during labor.
Now an amazing alternative has been developed by Dr Michael Belfort, chief obstetrician and gynecologist at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston, and his colleague, Dr William Whitehead, a pediatric neurosurgeon, allowing them to briefly remove the womb — intact and still attached to the mother via muscle, blood vessels and connective tissue — and perform surgery through tiny incisions in its side.
The procedure took three years to develop in collaboration with doctors in Barcelona.
The two American surgeons perfected their technique by practicing with a rubber football — replicating the womb — which contained a doll covered in chicken skin, which acted as the baby.
Dr Belfort and his colleagues have now performed 28 such operations at between 24-26 weeks of pregnancy — with no deaths — since 2014, as reported in the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology.
But news of the breakthrough emerged only this week.
Former high school sweethearts Lexi Royer and her husband Josh, a 29-year-old fireman, from San Diego, California, had long been trying for children but had suffered a miscarriage and no further pregnancies.
Early this year, they were overjoyed to learn that they had conceived.
But a scan at 13 weeks confirmed the fetus had spina bifida, which typically develops at just three to four weeks of pregnancy when the neural tube should be closing.
In this case, the defect was particularly severe and doctors suggested Lexi have an abortion.
'It sounded like we were looking at brain damage, feeding tubes, a breathing tube, a wheelchair.
just a bad quality of life,' she said this week.
But acutely aware this might be their only chance of having a child, the Royers searched the internet and found reports of Dr Belfort's work.
Two days of tests in Houston followed — and suddenly they had hope.
The child Lexi was carrying was able to kick his legs and flex his ankles: a sign that he might be able to walk if damage to his spinal cord from the amniotic fluid could be halted.
On the day before the operation, the Royers met the dozen-strong medical team and Dr Belfort confirmed the baby had a 'significant lesion' involving much of his lower back, but 'there's a lot of function to save'.
Addressing Mrs Royer, he said: 'This is experimental surgery, with no guarantee.
You are the person who will take the risk for another person. .
WHAT IS SPINA BIFIDA? Every year around 1,500 babies in the US are born with spina bifida.
Most cases are detected at a 20-week scan.
The most common and most serious form of the disease is called myelomeningocele.
In patients with myelomeningocele the spinal column remains open along the bones making up the spine.
The membranes and spinal cord push out to create a sac in the babys back.
This sometimes leaves the nervous system vulnerable to infections that may be fatal.
In most cases surgery is carried out to close the gap in the spine after birth.
But damage to the nervous system will usually already have taken place, resulting in: partial or total paralysis of the lower limbs bowel and urinary incontinence loss of skin sensation.
There is no mandate for you to do this.
Nobody will think less of you if change your mind, and you can change your mind until the last minute, until you go to sleep.'.
Lexi Royer didn't change her mind.
With country and western music playing in the background — at Mrs Royer's request, although she was under anesthetic by then — Dr Belfort began the operation, with 10 doctors in the theater and numerous specialist nurses on hand, sweating in temperatures raised to keep the baby's heartbeat up.
Every few minutes, the pedriatic cardiologist called out the heart rate — which held steady at 150 beats per minute.
Once the womb was removed and held steady by two doctors just above the cavity, the amniotic fluid was drained from it and carbon dioxide pumped in to keep it expanded and enable the surgeons to move inside it more easily.
An anesthetic injection was then administered to the baby, although it is not known if, or how much, it would feel pain.
Guided by the images showing up on the monitors around them, and working with infinite care, the surgeons made a series of tiny snips in the skin along both sides of the baby's body to loosen it so it could be tugged up and over to cover the exposed spinal cord.
The skin flaps were then sewn up with five minuscule stitches to ensure that amniotic fluid, regenerated as the pregnancy continued, didn't leak in.
Finally, after almost three hours, saline solution containing an antibiotic was pumped into the womb before it was gently replaced inside Lexi's abdomen and her wound sewn up.
Lexi and Josh's son is due in January and, for now, they remain living in Houston, close to the hospital.
They know that surgery hasn't cured their baby and Dr Belfort says he will almost certainly suffer from some degree of disability.
Dr Belfort and his team admit they will only truly know how successful they have been when the Royers' baby is delivered and they can assess the spina bifida repair and any physical defects.
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