Wednesday, January 27, 2016

The Latest On The Malheur Occupation In Eastern Oregon

At a press conference Wednesday morning, U.S. District Attorney for Oregon Bill Williams said those arrested, including Ammon and Ryan Bundy, will be arraigned at 1:30 today in Portland, Oregon. 
Referencing Tuesdays arrests and an officer-involved fatal shooting, an emotional Harney County Sheriff David Ward said, “We could have waited a lot longer, but this has been tearing our community apart.
“It didn’t have to happen. We all make choices in life. Sometimes those choices go bad.”
Also at the press conference, Greg Bretzing, Special Agent in charge of the FBI in Oregon, said in a statement, “the armed occupiers were given ample opportunities to leave peacefully. They were given the opportunity to negotiate. As outsiders to Oregon, they were given the opportunity to return to their homes and have their grievances heard through legal and appropriate means. They chose, instead, to threaten the very America they profess to love with violence, intimidation and criminal acts.”

VIP party revvs up Houston Auto Show .

Sunday, September 6, 2015

This little boy it's sleeping with a puthon(snake) but in night the snake ....

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Ferrari 458 Italia vs Audi Rs6 Sportmile


Beautiful moments!


From South Sudan to Canberra: Young soccer star looking to play for Australia


One of the ACT's brightest soccer prospects has taken a step towards representing his new home on the world stage, after being made an Australian citizen this week.
Bul Juach arrived in Australia as an asylum seeker in 2013.
The 14-year-old was born in war-torn South Sudan and spent several years living in a refugee camp in Kenya.
While there, he learned some valuable ball skills that have helped him stand out on the football field in Canberra.
"We all played street soccer, basically no rules, we were just on the street all day," Bul said.
Soccer hopeful Bul JuachPHOTO: Bul Juach says one day he hopes to play for Australia in the World Cup. (younger-time)
Less than three years ago Bul travelled to Australia, leaving most of his family behind.
Life in Australia has been a steep learning curve, but he has taken each challenge in his stride.
"It took me ages to learn the style of football here," he said.
"Stuff like offside for example, we didn't have that in street soccer."
Despite a lack of formal coaching, Bul has dominated junior competitions in the ACT.
He is a scholarship holder with the ACT Academy of Sport and many believe he is destined to represent Australia on the world soccer stage.
The academy's head coach of men's football, Patt McCann, is one such person.
"One of our jobs is to take that raw talent and manage it, because there's a certain component of Bul that you don't want to coach out of him," Mr McCann said.
While Bul is now an Australian citizen he still has other hurdles to clear before he can play for Australia.
"There's also FIFA rules, which are different to our own citizenship rules, so even if he was to be selected for Australia, he's got to meet the FIFA residency rulings as well," Mr McCann said.
But with big talent and big dreams, Bul looks unlikely to let red tape get in the way of his ambitions.
"[I want to] play at as high a level as I can, and represent Australia at the World Cup," he said.

North Korea welcomes new time zone to break from 'imperialism'


North Korea has switched to a new time zone, turning its clocks back by 30 minutes to mark its liberation from the Japanese at the end of WW2.
Bells rang out in the capital Pyongyang at midnight on Friday as the new time zone came into effect.
North Korea announced the move earlier this week, surprising South Korea whose president warned it ran counter to efforts to foster co-operation.
The North had been nine hours ahead of GMT - like South Korea and Japan.
But before being colonised by Japan in 1910, the entire Korean peninsula - then one country - was 8.5 hours ahead of GMT.