Jamuna tv News 29 November 2017 Bangla Latest News Today Bangla Breaking News BD News all Bangla.
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BREAKING NEWS Out Of FLORIDA… Every American PISSED - Duration: 3:42.BREAKING NEWS Out Of FLORIDA� Every American PISSED
The state of Florida is in the hot seat after news broke that they have paid a whopping
$11 million over the last 30 years to settle hundreds of cases involving state workers
who were sexually harassed by their supervisors and co-workers.At a time when it seems a sort
of mass cleansing is taking place in Hollywood and the political realm, with top producers,
actors, directors, and politicians being outed for sexual misconduct of varying kinds, this
revelation certainly hits hard.
A request was made by the Associated Press to obtain information tracking the payments
made in these settlements where lawsuits were filed against specific state agencies and
state colleges.According to Fox News, the information revealed a stunning 300 plus setteled
cases since 1987, with payment amounts ranging from $5,500 made out to a Florida State University
student who claims they were harassed by a supervisor, to a $1.3 million payout for nurses
who were victimized while working at state prisons.
The ordeal with the prisons and the nurses was not an isolated incident either.
Close to 60 percent of the cases that were settled were filed by folks who woked for
the Department of Corrections.Seems like prison just hardens criminals and creates more monsters,
doesn�t it?
If we as a nation would do a better job of upholding the law and making an example out
of our worst offenders, perhaps this wouldn�t be the case.
Another lawsuit, filed by a woman, alleged that her boss at the Florida Department of
Health liked to talk dirty about sex acts he personally witnessed and dropped comments
about the physical appearance of women around him, making remarks about their breasts and
backsides.
The woman who filed this lawsuit fought a two-year battle that ended with a $129,000
payment.
Her attorney, Marie Mattox, doesn�t believe sexual harassment is more prevalent in the
state government than other areas, but that such behavior is simply more tolerated in
certain agencies and that it takes more time to resolve a lawsuit against a government
agency than it does a private company.
This is precisely why politicians just love all the bureaucracy and red tape nonsense.
It helps protect them from being hassled when they started to get busted with their hand
in the cookie jar.
A spokesman for Florida Gov. Rick Scott told the media that only two percent of the settlements
occured while he�s been in office, making sure to highlight the bill the governor signed
this year to protect the name and identity of any state worker who alleges sexual harassment.
The governor wants every state employee to be able to work in an environment where they
feel safe,� Tupps said in a statement.
�The overwhelming majority of these expenditures predate the governor�s time in office and
are approved by the chief financial officer.�
It seems the corruption in Florida�s state government runs on both sides of the political
spectrum.
Republican State Sen. Jack Latvala is being investigated for allegedly groping and harassing
women while he was active in office.
Notable Democratic Sen. Jeff Clemens actually resigned from his seat earlier this month
after reports began to surface of an affair he was having with a lobbyist.
If this isn�t enough proof to convince you that politicians are some of the most deceitful,
slimy wretches to ever grace the face of the earth, what will?
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BREAKING Trump calls Schumer, Pelosi 'even worse' than all talk, no action - News - Duration: 3:31. For more infomation >> BREAKING Trump calls Schumer, Pelosi 'even worse' than all talk, no action - News - Duration: 3:31.-------------------------------------------
North Korea launches ballistic missile towards Japan - DAILY NEWS - Duration: 2:32.North Korea launches ballistic missile towards Japan
NORTH Korea has fired an inter-continental ballistic missile, the US has confirmed.
South Korea then retaliated with a "precision strike" missile exercise.
The North's rocket flew for 50 minutes and travelled 620 miles before landing in Japanese
waters.
Its government officials yesterday intercepted radio signals that suggested another launch
would be close.
The hermit kingdom's enemies were placed on high-alert and closely monitored the regime.
Activity had stepped up around North Korean military bases in recent weeks.
This is the first missile launch since the rogue state fired over Japan in mid-September.
The secretive state yesterday appeared to operate a radar to track a missile's trajectory.
A worried South Korean government source said: "More monitoring is needed to gauge whether
the North is trying to launch a missile or is preparing for winter training that starts
in December."
Pentagon spokesman Robert Manning added: "We watch North Korea very closely.
We'll continue to do so.
"The Republic of Korea and US alliance remains strong and capable of countering any North
Korean provocations or attacks."
Tensions have ratcheted in the region as the regime continues its quest for long-range
nuclear weapons.
The hermit kingdom remained eerily quiet over the past two months as fears grew over tyrant
Kim Jong-un's health.
The US and its allies have since stepped up military drills in response but the dictator
is refusing to back down.
China unleashed a barrage of military firepower close to North Korea's border over the weekend
in a brazen show of force.
Soldiers from the People's Liberation Army (PLA) carried out large scale war drills east
of Inner Mongolia on Saturday morning, according to Chinese media.
-------------------------------------------
BREAKING NEWS Out Of FLORIDA… Every American PISSED - Duration: 3:44.BREAKING NEWS Out Of FLORIDA� Every American PISSED
The state of Florida is in the hot seat after news broke that they have paid a whoppin$11
million dollars over the last 30 years to settle hundreds of cases involving state workers
who were sexually harassed by their supervisors and co-
At a time when it seems a sort of mass cleansing is taking place in Hollywood and the political
realm, with top producers, actors, directors, and politicians being outed for sexual misconduct
of varying kinds, this revelation certainly hits hard.
A request was made by the Associated Press to obtain information tracking the payments
made in these settlements where lawsuits were filed against specific state agencies and
state colleges.According to Fox News, the information revealed a stunning 300 plus setteled
cases since 1987, with payment amounts ranging from $5,500 made out to a Florida State University
student who claims they were harassed by a supervisor, to a $1.3 million payout for nurses
who were victimized while working at state prisons.
The ordeal with the prisons and the nurses was not an isolated incident either.
Close to 60 percent of the cases that were settled were filed by folks who woked for
the Department of Corrections.Seems like prison just hardens criminals and creates more monsters,
doesn�t it?
If we as a nation would do a better job of upholding the law and making an example out
of our worst offenders, perhaps this wouldn�t be the case.
Another lawsuit, filed by a woman, alleged that her boss at the Florida Department of
Health liked to talk dirty about sex acts he personally witnessed and dropped comments
about the physical appearance of women around him, making remarks about their breasts and
backsides.
The woman who filed this lawsuit fought a two-year battle that ended with a $129,000
payment.
Her attorney, Marie Mattox, doesn�t believe sexual harassment is more prevalent in the
state government than other areas, but that such behavior is simply more tolerated in
certain agencies and that it takes more time to resolve a lawsuit against a government
agency than it does a private company.
This is precisely why politicians just love all the bureaucracy and red tape nonsense.
It helps protect them from being hassled when they started to get busted with their hand
in the cookie jar.
A spokesman for Florida Gov. Rick Scott told the media that only two percent of the settlements
occured while he�s been in office, making sure to highlight the bill the governor signed
this year to protect the name and identity of any state worker who alleges sexual harassment.
The governor wants every state employee to be able to work in an environment where they
feel safe,� Tupps said in a statement.
�The overwhelming majority of these expenditures predate the governor�s time in office and
are approved by the chief financial officer.�
It seems the corruption in Florida�s state government runs on both sides of the political
spectrum.
Republican State Sen. Jack Latvala is being investigated for allegedly groping and harassing
women while he was active in office.
Notable Democratic Sen. Jeff Clemens actually resigned from his seat earlier this month
after reports began to surface of an affair he was having with a lobbyist.
If this isn�t enough proof to convince you that politicians are some of the most deceitful,
slimy wretches to ever grace the face of the earth, what will?workers.
-------------------------------------------
Ivanka Trump Headlines India's Global Entrepreneurship Summit | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 1:58. For more infomation >> Ivanka Trump Headlines India's Global Entrepreneurship Summit | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 1:58.-------------------------------------------
Action News Investigates: Public records requests for Pittsburgh Amazon HQ2 bid denied - Duration: 2:51. For more infomation >> Action News Investigates: Public records requests for Pittsburgh Amazon HQ2 bid denied - Duration: 2:51.-------------------------------------------
Entertainment News 247 - リーガ最下位のアラベス、デ・ビアージ監督を解任…後任は未定 - Duration: 2:16. For more infomation >> Entertainment News 247 - リーガ最下位のアラベス、デ・ビアージ監督を解任…後任は未定 - Duration: 2:16.-------------------------------------------
임동진 딸 임예원 임유진 배우 집안 | King News - Duration: 7:36. For more infomation >> 임동진 딸 임예원 임유진 배우 집안 | King News - Duration: 7:36.-------------------------------------------
ATN BANGLA News today 29 november 2017 Bangladesh Latest News Today News Update bd news all bangla - Duration: 16:59.Today Bangla Breaking News Update, Bangla News update,
bangla news, Bangla tv News, Bangla News today, Today Bangla News
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News Korea | SM엔터 "태연, 운전부주의로 사고…다친 곳은 없어" - Duration: 2:04. For more infomation >> News Korea | SM엔터 "태연, 운전부주의로 사고…다친 곳은 없어" - Duration: 2:04.-------------------------------------------
Minecraft- AER One Minute Headlines (28 November 2017)+(Custom news Report) - Duration: 1:07.Hello, I am Evelyn Grace with the latest headlines fromAER World News.
North Korea has fired its highest-ever intercontinental ballistic missile
and poses a worldwide threat
US secretary of Defense James Mattis has said
The man accused of masterminding the 2012 attack
on a US consulate in Benghazi, Libya, has been acquitted
by a US jury of the most serious charges
and, a man accused of killing eight people and injuring twelve
after driving a truck into pedestrians in New York City
in October has pleaded not guilty to charges
of murder and terrorism
Also, Democratic congressional leaders have cancelled a meeting
with President Donald Trump after he attacked them on Twitter.
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle will marry at St. George's chapel,
Windsor Castle, in May, Kensington Palace says.
*Music*
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Entertainment News 247 - なでしこ、EAFF E-1サッカー選手権メンバー発表…阪口、岩渕ら23名 - Duration: 2:57. For more infomation >> Entertainment News 247 - なでしこ、EAFF E-1サッカー選手権メンバー発表…阪口、岩渕ら23名 - Duration: 2:57.-------------------------------------------
Tucker Carlson Tonight 11/28/17 8PM | November 28, 2017 Fox News - Duration: 34:42. For more infomation >> Tucker Carlson Tonight 11/28/17 8PM | November 28, 2017 Fox News - Duration: 34:42.-------------------------------------------
강수지 이혼이유, 강수지 전남편 황정빈 | KRVBA NEWS - Duration: 4:47. For more infomation >> 강수지 이혼이유, 강수지 전남편 황정빈 | KRVBA NEWS - Duration: 4:47.-------------------------------------------
이민기X정소민, 서로를 그리워하다|K-News - Duration: 1:35. For more infomation >> 이민기X정소민, 서로를 그리워하다|K-News - Duration: 1:35.-------------------------------------------
Entertainment News 247 - ミラン電撃解任のモンテッラ監督が心情語る「これがサッカーだ」 - Duration: 2:41. For more infomation >> Entertainment News 247 - ミラン電撃解任のモンテッラ監督が心情語る「これがサッカーだ」 - Duration: 2:41.-------------------------------------------
Tucker Carlson Tonight 11/28/17 8PM | November 28, 2017 Fox News HD - Duration: 34:54. For more infomation >> Tucker Carlson Tonight 11/28/17 8PM | November 28, 2017 Fox News HD - Duration: 34:54.-------------------------------------------
News Brief November 28, 2017 - Duration: 10:23.President Trump's agenda today seems familiar - head to the Hill, meet lawmakers, try to
gin up more support for a tax overhaul.
But the stakes seem to be getting higher day by day.
Yeah, that's because the clock - it's a-ticking (ph).
The president wants this tax bill passed by Christmas.
The party has seen legislative defeats, of course.
Yesterday, though, President Trump sounded upbeat about the GOP and this bill's chances.
We've had great - great spirit.
And I will tell you, the Republican senators were up.
If we win, we'll get some Democratic senators joining us.
Now, Trump did not, however, mention the most recent Congressional Budget Office analysis.
That report finds most people who make less than six figures will actually see their taxes
go up under this bill.
All right, joining us now - NPR White House correspondent Tamara Keith.
Hi, Tam.
Good morning.
All right, before we get to the CBO score, can you just give us the lay of the land at
this moment because it has been shifting?
How close are Republicans right now to getting the votes they need?
Most Republicans in the Senate support this bill.
Many of them would support a ham sandwich as long as it cuts taxes and is a win.
But there are a handful of senators - eight or nine - it's hard to know exactly - who
have reservations about the legislation, and their reservations are about a wide range
of issues related to this bill.
All right, so speaking of those reservations, I mean, let's talk about the CBO report.
It basically says, Americans who make less than $100,000 are going to take a hit, and,
oh, also, the deficit is going to go up.
It would add $1.4 trillion to the deficit.
How's this going to go over?
Well, so the hit that people take is - it's a little more complicated than just, your
taxes are going up.
It's related to another provision in the bill which would repeal the individual mandate
under the Affordable Care Act.
That means millions of people would drop their insurance.
They would no longer get the subsidies from the government that help them pay for it.
This was kind of a late...
And that's how they would be net losers.
This was kind of a last-minute add that Republicans put into their bill.
Yeah, and it might be a last-minute subtraction.
It's not clear.
Of the concerns that people have - Republicans have - that's one of them.
Another is the deficit effect, and another is the effect that this has on small businesses.
There's a sense that wealthy people, big businesses and corporations benefit the most, and lower-income,
middle-income and smaller businesses don't benefit as much.
All right, we have to talk about this because there's this power struggle going on at the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
There are two bosses - Mick Mulvaney, the White House's pick, and Leandra English, the
former agency head's pick.
Are they both going to work right now?
Yeah, and Mick Mulvaney is the only one who brought doughnuts.
I saw that.
They've also gone...
Very political move.
They've also gone to court, and that's the more significant matter here.
It is in U.S. District Court in D.C.
Arguments have already been heard last night.
Briefs were filed overnight.
But Mick Mulvaney in particular says he's the acting director, held a press conference,
says he's putting in a 30-day hiring freeze.
He's moving forward even as Leandra English argues she's the director.
Wow.
OK, NPR's Tamara Keith this morning for us - thanks, Tam.
You're welcome.
Pope Francis is in Myanmar, and perhaps his most important meeting is happening today.
Yeah, this is a very delicate trip in Myanmar.
Pope Francis is meeting with the country's de facto leader, Aung San Suu Kyi.
Then comes an address by the pope that some fear could lead to tension.
Earlier this year, the pope spoke out against what the United Nations has called ethnic
cleansing in Myanmar - the violence against Rohingya Muslims that's led to 600,000 people
fleeing the country.
And some are really worried about the impact of whatever the pope decides to say today.
Right.
Almost no matter what he says, this could be complicated.
NPR's Sylvia Poggioli is traveling with the pope.
She joins us on Skype.
Good morning, Sylvia.
Good morning, Rachel.
Can you just outline the stakes for this?
I mean, he is - Pope Francis - walking a very thin line here.
Well, what is at stake, essentially, is just one word - the name Rohingya.
Local church authorities had advised Pope Francis not to use it because the military
authorities who had ruled Myanmar in dictatorship for five decades and still hold on to key
ministries in this very difficult and delicate transition to democracy - they consider Rohingya
Muslims illegal migrants and do not grant them citizenship.
Use of the word could be perceived as offensive by the military leaders and by the Buddhist
majority, so the Catholic minority - and that's only 1.3 percent of the population - fears
that if the pope uses that word, it could unleash reprisals against them.
Wow.
So we literally will be listening for whether or not he uses the word Rohingya, and it's
going to send a message if he does or if he doesn't.
Exactly.
He's going to meet with Aung San Suu Kyi, who's the de facto leader of Myanmar.
There are questions about how much actual power she has there.
But she has gotten a whole lot of criticism from the international community for not doing
enough, not saying enough to protect the Rohingya, so she's also in a difficult spot.
I mean, what is likely to come out of this meeting between Pope Francis and Aung San
Suu Kyi?
Well, that's what we're really waiting - it's happening probably just about right now.
You're right - very difficult.
Former dissident, Nobel Peace Prize-winner, but she's seen by much as - of the outside
world as more or less complicit with the military for not having denounced this crackdown against
the Rohingya.
However, her supporters say she does not have sufficient power to challenge the military.
And that is the view of the local Catholic church, and they say the pope is here to show
his support for her.
Besides listening for whether or not he says the word Rohingya, what else can we expect
him to communicate?
How's he going to use this opportunity, this public address today?
Well, it's going to be very difficult - difficult balancing act.
And of course, he has to maintain his reputation as the champion of the downtrodden all over
the world, and at the same time, not endanger local Catholics.
He has to somehow address the humanitarian crisis, which, as you said, both the U.N.
and U.S. have branded ethnic cleansing and - but the military denies charges of murder,
rape, torture and forced displacement of hundreds of thousands.
They - he's going to have to trial somehow - forcefully talk about it through - you know,
basically running a semantic tightrope, and it's going to be a very difficult diplomatic
test for a pope who is not known - who is known not to mince words.
All right, we'll be listening for that.
NPR's Sylvia Poggioli - thanks so much, Sylvia.
Thank you Rachel.
Now to the transition of power underway in Kenya this morning, where we're seeing and
hearing what you might expect for a presidential inauguration.
Yeah, cheering crowds, music filling a stadium for hours now - but this celebratory mood
stands in such contrast to the political violence that has killed dozens of people over the
last two months - all of this because of disputes over President Uhuru Kenyatta's re-election.
NPR's East Africa correspondent Eyder Peralta is on the line from Nairobi, where the inauguration
ceremony is just wrapping up.
Hey, Eyder.
Hi, Rachel.
Where are you right now?
It sounds like there's some drumming happening.
There is.
I am at Kasarani stadium in Nairobi, where the inauguration is happening, and we've got
a dance troupe right now.
The official ceremony has finished.
Kenya has a new president.
It's Uhuru Kenyatta, who is going to - into his second term.
And we've seen, you know, huge celebrations here and huge crowds.
There's about 60,000 people here.
There were so many people trying to get into the stadium that we...
Oh, we may have lost Eyder's line.
He was talking to us live from - oh.
And such lovely sound - there he is.
I know.
There, it's back.
Communication's obviously spotty from where you are.
Eyder, we just lost you for a second, but we got you back.
You were talking about how the celebratory mood and so many people were waiting to get
into this inauguration ceremony, but it was not always thus.
I mean, there were protests, there was violence, people died during the contest and the debate
over whether or not Kenyatta had actually won a free and fair election.
There still are.
If you - you know, you can hear the celebration here, but just outside the stadium, a few
miles from here, police are battling it out with protesters.
We've heard reports from colleagues that, you know, police are firing tear gas, and
they're also firing at protesters who are saying that they want to commemorate the people
who have died during these elections.
But here at the stadium, what people are saying is that they want a unity and that they want
a Kenya to emerge here united.
It's going to be very hard to do because about 50 percent of the people here in Kenya support
the president.
About 50 percent support the opposition leader, who still believes that this president is
illegitimate.
So what does that mean, though, for Kenyatta?
I mean, how does he make peace with the opposition?
Does he have what it takes to do that?
He's certainly trying.
You know, he has not delivered a speech today, but he went to a prayer rally a few days ago
in which he invited the opposition leader to talk.
The opposition leader says he doesn't want to talk.
He says that the president is illegitimate and that he will not accept that.
All right, NPR's Eyder Peralta - he is at the site of the inauguration of President
Uhuru Kenyatta.
He assumes office after months of political violence.
Eyder, thanks so much for your reporting this morning.
Thank you, Rachel.
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