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S e u o n g

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Everything posted by S e u o n g

  1. Donald Trump will be a one-term president. He was defeated at the polls. The Democratic candidate Joe Biden on Saturday surpassed the barrier of the 270 electoral votes needed to become the new tenant of the White House, according to the BBC and other US media projected. This year's US elections already have their place in the history books. And not only because of the coronavirus pandemic, the time it has taken to know the results of the elections or the unfounded accusations of Trump's fraud, but also because the outgoing president will become one of the few who has failed to repeat in The charge. And it is that since the United States elected its first president (George Washington) more than 200 years ago, only 10 leaders had lost their race for a second term in the White House. The fact, in itself, is seen by some historians as a management failure and, in most cases, as a vote of punishment by Americans towards controversial policies or positions of their rulers. At BBC Mundo we tell you who were the presidents who lost re-election in the last century, before Donald Trump. George H. W. Bush (1989-1993) The former CIA director and father of former President George W. Bush was the last of the US leaders to lose re-election before Trump. Although he did not make it to the primaries when he ran for president in 1980, his path to the White House was made for him when then-Republican candidate Ronald Reagan asked him to become his running mate. He served as Reagan's vice president from 1981 to 1989, when he was elected to the presidency. He passed several trade treaties that became po[CENSORED]r and enacted the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. However, the Gulf War during his term undermined his po[CENSORED]rity and the arrival on the Democratic political scene of Bill Clinton, a young and charismatic candidate, weighed down his chances of victory and he lost in the 1993 elections. James Carter (1977-1981) Democrat Jimmy Carter drank his own medicine at the end of his presidency: he came to office after overthrowing Gerard Ford, who then held the White House after Nixon's resignation and was looking to stay for another cycle in office. And Carter denied him the possibility in 1976. Ford, by the way, could also be part of this list, since he failed to repeat, although the truth is that he was never elected to the position: he came to the presidency due to a series of resignations after the Watergate case. Carter took several progressive measures and even made notable approaches to governments in Latin America, including that of "communist" Cuba, where he opened an "office of interests" to try to improve relations with Fidel Castro. However, economic problems hampered his po[CENSORED]rity, which was seriously damaged by the takeover of the US embassy in Tehran (Iran) near the end of his term. He was defeated by Reagan in the 1980 elections. Herbert Hoover (1929-1933) Hoover was the 31st president of the United States and his failed re-election confirmed what appears to be an unwritten law: If the economy does not do well, the president is rarely re-elected. And it is that Hoover had one of the most critical economic moments in US history: the stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression. Blamed for these events and for his inability to contain economic and financial losses, he was defeated in the 1932 elections by Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was, incidentally, the only president of the United States who was elected for more than two terms.
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  2. DH2 good song, good rhythm !!
  3. my vote is for DH2 I like eminem's songs, their lyrics and rhythm so good
  4. Name game: ARK: Survival Evolved Price: $4,92 ( $24,62 Without promotion) Offer Ends November 10 Link store: https://store.steampowered.com/app/346110/ARK_Survival_Evolved/?l=spanish SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS MINIMUM: OS: Windows 7 / 8.1 / 10 (64-bit versions) Processor: Intel Core i5-2400 / AMD FX-8320 or better Memory: 8GB RAM Graphics: NVIDIA GTX 670 2GB / AMD Radeon HD 7870 2GB or better DirectX: Version 10 Storage: 60 GB available space Additional Notes: Requires broadband internet connection for multiplayer
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  5. Video title : Funny Kids Doing Silly Things Compilation 2020 - LAUGH A LOT Content creator ( Youtuber ) : Laugh A Lot Official YT video :
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  6. accepted
  7. DH2 good song & lyrics, nice video; good rhythm !!!
  8. DH2 good video, good rhythm and lyrics , i love Drake <33
  9. Russian lawmakers submitted a draft bill that could grant former presidents lifelong immunity from criminal prosecution beyond their terms of office, state-run news agency TASS reported Thursday. Such a bill would give current President Vladimir Putin protection from prosecution if and when he decides to leave office. Under current Russian law, presidents cannot be prosecuted for crimes committed while in office. The proposed change seeks to extend the immunity beyond their terms of office so it would apply to offenses committed in the president's lifetime. It was submitted by a parliamentary group that assessed Putin's controversial constitutional amendments earlier this year. "After the expiration of his term of office, such person has the right to count on the level of protection and legal guarantees that is not lower than those provided to him while he exercised presidential powers," senator Andrey Klishas, the group's co-chair which submitted the bill, told TASS. "This order acts as a guarantee against unjustified persecution of the former head of state and recognizes the importance of his role of him in the general system of public authority." The legislation has to go through three readings in the lower house of the Russian parliament, a review in the upper house, and then be signed by Putin to come into force. Immunity Among the first decrees Putin signed when he first came into office in 2000 was a document granting immunity to former president Boris Yeltsin, who stepped down and picked Putin as his successor. The new bill also complicates the process of revoking immunity by requiring the indictment of high treason or other grave felonies to be confirmed by the Supreme and Constitutional courts, where judges are nominated by the president. Then both chambers of the Russian parliament must support the motion by a two-thirds majority. Under current law, a former president could be stripped of immunity if a criminal case over state treason or grave felony is initiated by the Investigative Committee and supported by the both houses of the parliament. The latest legislation comes a week after Putin submitted another bill under his constitutional reforms giving ex-presidents a lifetime seat in the upper house of the Russian parliament, the Federation Council. The proposed bills have prompted speculation whether this could be a retirement plan for Putin, who has the option to stay in power until 2036 thanks to the constitutional reforms approved this summer. Putin's spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Thursday in a conference call with reporters that lifetime guarantees for former presidents are not "a novelty" in the international law and follow the constitutional amendments. Peskov said Friday that Putin is in great health and has no plans to step down.
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  11. President Piñera announced on Wednesday that he hopes to begin the inoculation plan during the first months of 2021. Meanwhile, Janssen, Sinovac and Oxford are analyzing their formulas in Chilean volunteers. The data, seven months after the hit of the toughest pandemic in modern society in memory, seem encouraging. In Chile and the rest of the world, expectations are swirling around the possibility that, sooner rather than later, the use of a vaccine that can stop the spread of the virus will be approved. The data, in fact, seem so encouraging that the authorities have clarified that it is not necessary to trust. "We are not going to lower our guard, nor our arms, nor are we going to fall into any reckless sense of false confidence," President Sebastián Piñera himself said this Wednesday. And the fact is that the plan that he unveiled is, indeed, promising: he hopes to start vaccinating 5 million people at risk from the first months of 2021. Then, he plans to "reach 14 million people" during the first semester of next year. For that, explained the Minister of Science, Andrés Couve, the Government works in two parallel tracks: the clinical trials that have already begun in the national territory and the commercial agreements so that, when the vaccines are approved by regulatory bodies, "Chile has the option of being able to acquire them and supply them to the national po[CENSORED]tion ". "We must not forget what the President said," emphasized Health Minister Enrique Paris. "We are not claiming victory, as some have said, quite the contrary: we are calling for us to continue with our arms up," he said. The minister also thanked the public, private and academic ecosystem that carries out clinical trials, a gear that tests the formulas developed abroad, in which their own creators place high expectations. On Wednesday, the chief investigator of the Oxford vaccine trial, Andrew Pollard, told British lawmakers that he is "optimistic" and thinks they could get approval for his product "before the end of this year." In the meantime, some Chileans are already beginning to circulate through the national territory with the doses in the body or with the corresponding placebo. The schedule of each current or authorized test in the country, its dimensions, associated centers and expectations, below. The first vaccinated by Janssen On October 31 The University of Chile obtained the registration and authorization to begin the trial of the vaccine from Janssen, a Johnson & Johnson pharmacist, in Chilean volunteers. "We have already started the enrollment," explained one of the main researchers of the project, Dr. Miguel O'Ryan, academic at the Institute of Biomedical Sciences of the School of Medicine of the campus. So far, ten volunteers have been inoculated. "We are, at the moment, working. While I am here, there are three teams of researchers in each of the sites, with more than ten people among doctors, vaccinators, nurses, who are recruiting volunteers. We hope to meet the goal.The trial was carried out in three hospitals in the Metropolitan Region: the Family Health Centers (Cesfam) of Colina and San Bernardo, and at the Exequiel González Cortés Hospital. The prototype will also be applied at the Center for Clinical Studies and Medical Research (Cecim), at a center in Temuco, another in Viña del Mar and at the Center for Integral Medicine and Clinical Research in Talca. The vaccination will be extended in a period of between 45 and 60 days, where health personnel and also the community in general of people over 18 years of age will be immunized. For this, the project continues to recruit volunteers. Once vaccinated, the participants will be monitored for 25 months, with controls every four months. Sinovac landing Along with Janssen's vaccine, the one developed by Sinovac Biotech was cleared for Phase 3 trials in late September. This Wednesday, 6,000 doses landed in Chile, which will be tested thanks to an agreement with the Catholic University, after the Public Health Institute (ISP) approves the "use and destination" protocol to begin the trials. "The vaccines arrived today and fortunately we were informed that they arrived safely," said Alexis Kalergis, director of the Millennium Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy and principal investigator of the project. The study, he estimates, will include between 2,500 and 3,000 participants, initially the po[CENSORED]tion at risk and health personnel, but they seek to "expand the study to the general po[CENSORED]tion." "For that we have managed to get a sufficient number of doses to carry out the studies," he said. It is an associative work that includes more universities, centers and public hospitals in regions, such as the Gustavo Fricke Hospital in Viña del Mar and the Carlos van Buren in Valparaíso. Antofagasta could also join. The volunteers will be monitored for a year to evaluate the appearance of possible adverse effects or diseases, but in addition, a subgroup of volunteers will undergo an immunological study to understand the "mechanism of action" of the vaccine. "It seeks to understand whether the vaccine generates antibodies, whether it generates T cells, and most importantly, how long they last," Kalergis explained. The particularity of this trial is that UC made an agreement with Sinovac to secure about 20 million doses once the vaccine is registered. "Through an agreement with the Minsal, the UC has transferred those rights to the Government. There is the option. Without a doubt, the final decision is made by the Minsal through the National Immunization Program and with the support of the Cavei," he said. In addition to the agreement with Sinovac, the Government joined the WHO initiative, Covax, to accelerate equitable access to vaccines worldwide.
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  13. Mars is the fourth planet in terms of distance from the Sun, and the second smallest planet in the solar system. Also known as "The Red Planet" due to its reddish appearance, it is also the inner planet furthest from the Sun. Today we would like to tell you some curiosities about Mars that you may not know and that are very interesting. Current theories say that in order to find life on Mars, there must be water in a liquid state, and a NASA study determined that more than 4,000 years ago the planet had a vast ocean. It has never been confirmed but it is believed that at some point there was life on that planet, although it probably no longer remains. These are some curiosities about Mars that you do not know: He received his name as a tribute to the god of war in Roman mythology, Mars. Its surface has a reddish orange color because its usually contains particles of oxide or iron oxide. This is why it is known as "The Red Planet". At the south pole of Mars, a large lake of water has been discovered that increases the chances that there may be some kind of life, at least bacterial. Also at the south pole there is a pit so deep that it penetrates the ice and dust from the surface. NASA thinks it could be an impact crater or a collapsed well. This planet is over 4,600 billion years old. On Mars there is a strange natural phenomenon called araneiform terrain with which spider-shaped mounds form when the carbon dioxide ice that is under the surface heats up and is released. It is the only planet that has been known so far in which it has been proven that only robots inhabit. It is believed that it had a large ocean whose water evaporated over time. The first image of Mars was made with colored pencils. The last of the curiosities about Mars is that its sunsets are blue due to the dust in the atmosphere. Without a doubt it would be an incredible picture to be able to enjoy any of them.

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