Tuesday 3 July 2018

Brazilian Wandering Spiders


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  •  ‘Phoneutria‘, The Greek name of Brazilian wandering spider means ‘murderers’ in English. As name suggests, Brazilian wandering spider is the deadliest living spider in the world. Instead of building webs, they wander on the jungle floor. That’s why they called so.
  • This extremely aggressive and deadly spiders found in Amazon rainforest of several South American countries including Brazil, Peru, Ecuador and Venezuela. They also found in many human inhabited parts of Brazil.
  • Brazilian wandering spiders are nocturnal creatures, forage for food only at night. During daytime, they hide in some parts of the houses, under rocks or fallen logs. As a result of this behavior, the chances of their encounter with humans are higher. Once disturbed, Brazilian wandering spiders will bite repeatedly. They are also famous for showing a defensive display by lifting their body on hind legs.
  • Venom of Brazilian wandering spiders contains poisonous neurotoxin. It causes swelling, extreme pain, breath problems and blurred vision. Without immediate medical attention, the bite could also result in death, especially to young children. Fortunately, there is antivenom available for the bite of Brazilian wandering spiders.

Saturday 17 February 2018

Amazing Facts About Girls




International Women's Day is celebrated on 8 March every year
Indian women become greedy after 22 years

In the US, 40 per cent of women gave birth to a child before marriage

80% of women are in the wrong shape of the bra puzzle
70 percent of women prefer to eat chocolate before sex
Women can keep anything secret until 47 minutes and 15 minutes
Women's tongue can taste more than men
African countries Niger Child birth rates are at the forefront of the women here who give birth to seven childrenHey most in the world
You have to know that women do not even like to do after sex
The record of the birth of most children was given to the women of Russia who gave birth to 69 children.

Thursday 15 February 2018

Abraham Lincoln boigraphy





When and Where Was Lincoln Born?

Abraham Lincoln was born in a log cabin in Hardin County, Kentucky, on February 12, 1809.

Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation

On January 1, 1863, Lincoln delivered the Emancipation Proclamation, reshaping the cause of the Civil War from saving the Union to abolishing slavery. The Union Army's first year and a half of battlefield defeats made it difficult to keep up morale and support strong for a reunification of the nation. And the Union victory at Antietam on September 22, 1862, while by no means conclusive, was hopeful, giving Lincoln confidence to officially change the goals of the war.
Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation stated that all individuals who were held as slaves in rebellious states "henceforward shall be free." The action was more symbolic than effective because the North didn’t control any states in rebellion and the proclamation didn’t apply to Border States, Tennessee or some Louisiana parishes.

Lincoln’s Most Famous Speech: The Gettysburg Address

On November 19, 1863, Lincoln delivered what would become his most famous speech and one of the most important speeches in American history, the Gettysburg Address. Addressing a crowd of around 15,000 people, Lincoln delivered his 272-word speech at one of the bloodiest battlefields of the Civil War, the National Cemetery of Gettysburg, in Pennsylvania.
The Civil War, Lincoln said, was the ultimate test of the preservation of the Union created in 1776, and the dead at Gettysburg fought to uphold this cause. Lincoln evoked the Declaration of Independence, saying it was up to the living to ensure that the “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth,” and this Union was “dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” A common interpretation was that the President was expanding the cause of the Civil War from simply reunifying the Union to also fighting for equality and abolishing slavery.

Abraham Lincoln’s Assassination

Abraham Lincoln was shot on April 14, 1865, by well-known actor and Confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. He was taken to the Petersen House across the street and laid in a coma for nine hours before dying the next morning. His body lay in state at the Capitol before a funeral train took him back to his final resting place in Springfield, Illinois.

Family

Abraham Lincoln was born to Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks Lincoln. Thomas was a strong and determined pioneer who found a moderate level of prosperity and was well respected in the community. The couple had two other children: Abraham's older sister Sarah and younger brother Thomas, who died in infancy.
When young Abraham was nine years old, his mother died of tremetol (milk sickness) at age 34, on October 5, 1818. The event was devastating to him, and young Abraham grew more alienated from his father and quietly resented the hard work placed on him at an early age. In December 1819, just over a year after his mother’s death, Lincoln’s father Thomas married Sarah Bush Johnston, a Kentucky widow with three children of her own. She was a strong and affectionate woman with whom Abraham quickly bonded.

Childhood and Education

The Lincolns were forced to move from Abraham’s birthplace of Kentucky to Perry County, Indiana, due to a land dispute in 1817. There the family "squatted" on public land to scrap out a living in a crude shelter, hunting game and farming a small plot. Abraham’s father was eventually able to buy the land.
Though both his parents were most likely illiterate, Thomas’ new wife Sarah encouraged Abraham to read. It was while growing into manhood that Abraham Lincoln received his formal education — an estimated total of 18 months — a few days or weeks at a time. Reading material was in short supply in the Indiana wilderness. Neighbors recalled how Abraham would walk for miles to borrow a book. He undoubtedly read the family Bible and probably other popular books at that time such as Robinson Crusoe, Pilgrims Progress and Aesop’s Fables.
In March, 1830, the family again migrated, this time to Macon County, Illinois. When his father moved the family again to Coles County, 22-year-old Abraham Lincoln struck out on his own, making a living in manual labor. At six feet four inches tall, Lincoln was rawboned and lanky, but muscular and physically strong. He spoke with a backwoods twang and walked with a long-striding gait. He was known for his skill in wielding an ax and early on made a living splitting wood for fire and rail fencing.
Young Abraham Lincoln eventually migrated to the small community of New Salem, Illinois, where over a period of years he worked as a shopkeeper, postmaster and eventually general store owner. It was there that Lincoln, working with the public, acquired social skills and honed storytelling talent that made him popular with the locals. When the Black Hawk War broke out in 1832 between the United States and Native Americans, the volunteers in the area elected Lincoln to be their captain. He saw no combat during this time, save for "a good many bloody struggles with the mosquitoes," but was able to make several important political connections.

Wife and Kids

Abraham Lincoln was married to Mary Todd on November 4, 1842. Todd was a high-spirited, well-educated woman from a distinguished Kentucky family. When the couple became engaged in 1840, many of their friends and family couldn't understand Mary’s attraction; at times Lincoln questioned it himself. In 1841, the engagement was suddenly broken off, most likely at Lincoln's initiative. Mary and Abraham met later at a social function and eventually married in 1842. The couple had four children, of which only one, Robert, survived to adulthood.
Before marrying Todd, Lincoln was involved with other potential matches. Around 1837, he purportedly met and became romantically involved with Anne Rutledge. Before they had a chance to be engaged, a wave of typhoid fever came over New Salem and Anne died at age 22. Her death was said to have left Lincoln severely depressed. However, several historians disagree on the extent of Lincoln’s relationship with Rutledge and his level of sorrow at her death may be more the makings of legend. About a year after the death of Rutledge, Lincoln courted Mary Owens. The two saw each other for a few months and marriage was considered. But in time, Lincoln called off the match.

Lincoln as Lawyer and Politician

In 1834 Abraham Lincoln began his political career and was elected to the Illinois state legislature as a member of the Whig Party. It was around this time that he decided to become a lawyer, teaching himself the law by reading William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England. After being admitted to the bar in 1837, he moved to Springfield, Illinois, and began to practice in the John T. Stuart law firm.
In 1844, Abraham Lincoln partnered with William Herndon in the practice of law. Though the two had different jurisprudent styles, they developed a close professional and personal relationship. Lincoln made a good living in his early years as a lawyer, but found that Springfield alone didn't offer enough work, so to supplement his income, he followed the court as it made its rounds on the circuit to the various county seats in Illinois.
Abraham Lincoln served a single term in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1847 to 1849. His foray into national politics seemed to be as unremarkable as it was brief. He was the lone Whig from the state of Illinois, showing party loyalty, but finding few political allies. He used his term in office to speak out against the Mexican-American War and supported Zachary Taylor for president in 1848. His criticism of the war made him unpopular back home and he decided not to run for second term, but instead returned to Springfield to practice law.
By the 1850s, the railroad industry was moving west and Illinois found itself becoming a major hub for various companies. Abraham Lincoln served as a lobbyist for the Illinois Central Railroad as its company attorney. Success in several court cases brought other business clients as well — banks, insurance companies and manufacturing firms. Lincoln also did some criminal trials. In one case, a witness claimed that he could identify Lincoln's client who was accused of murder, because of the intense light from a full moon. Lincoln referred to an almanac and proved that the night in question had been too dark for the witness to see anything clearly. His client was acquitted.

Lincoln’s Views on Slavery

As a member of the Illinois state legislature in 1834, Lincoln supported the Whig politics of government-sponsored infrastructure and protective tariffs. This political understanding led him to formulate his early views on slavery, not so much as a moral wrong, but as an impediment to economic development.
In 1854, Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which repealed the Missouri Compromise, allowing individual states and territories to decide for themselves whether to allow slavery. The law provoked violent opposition in Kansas and Illinois, and it gave rise to the Republican Party. This awakened Abraham Lincoln's political zeal once again, and his views on slavery moved more toward moral indignation. Lincoln joined the Republican Party in 1856.
In 1857, the Supreme Court issued its controversial decision Scott v. Sanford, declaring African Americans were not citizens and had no inherent rights. Though Abraham Lincoln felt African Americans were not equal to whites, he believed America's founders intended that all men were created with certain inalienable rights. Lincoln decided to challenge sitting U.S. Senator Stephen Douglas for his seat. In his nomination acceptance speech, he criticized Douglas, the Supreme Court, and President Buchanan for promoting slavery and declared "a house divided cannot stand."
During Lincoln’s 1858 Senate campaign against Douglas, he participated in seven debates held in different cities across Illinois. The two candidates didn't disappoint the public, giving stirring debates on issues ranging from states' rights to western expansion, but the central issue was slavery. Newspapers intensely covered the debates, often times with partisan commentary. In the end, the state legislature elected Douglas, but the exposure vaulted Lincoln into national politics.

Lincoln’s Election to the Presidency

In 1860, political operatives in Illinois organized a campaign to support Abraham Lincoln for the presidency. On May 18, at the Republican National Convention in Chicago, Lincoln surpassed better known candidates such as William Seward of New York and Salmon P. Chase of Ohio. Lincoln's nomination was due in part to his moderate views on slavery, his support for improving the national infrastructure, and the protective tariff.
In the general election, Lincoln faced his friend and rival, Stephan Douglas, this time besting him in a four-way race that included John C. Breckinridge of the Northern Democrats and John Bell of the Constitution Party. Lincoln received not quite 40 percent of the popular vote, but carried 180 of 303 Electoral votes.

Lincoln’s Cabinet

Following his election to the presidency in 1860, Abraham Lincoln selected a strong cabinet composed of many of his political rivals, including William Seward, Salmon P. Chase, Edward Bates and Edwin Stanton. Formed out the adage "Hold your friends close and your enemies closer," Lincoln's Cabinet became one of his strongest assets in his first term in office… and he would need them with the start of the Civil War the following year. 

The Civil War

Before Lincoln’s inauguration in March, 1861, seven Southern states had seceded from the Union, and by April the U.S. military installation Fort Sumter was under siege in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina. In the early morning hours of April 12, 1861, the guns stationed to protect the harbor blazed toward the fort signaling the start of America’s costliest and most deadly war.
Abraham Lincoln responded to the crisis wielding powers as no other president before him. He distributed $2 million from the Treasury for war material without an appropriation from Congress; he called for 75,000 volunteers into military service without a declaration of war; and he suspended the writ of habeas corpus, arresting and imprisoning suspected Confederate sympathizers without a warrant. Crushing the rebellion would be difficult under any circumstances, but the Civil War, with its preceding decades of white-hot partisan politics, was especially onerous. From all directions, Lincoln faced disparagement and defiance. He was often at odds with his generals, his Cabinet, his party and a majority of the American people.
Following Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, the war effort gradually improved for the North, though more by attrition than by brilliant military victories. But by 1864, the Confederate armies had eluded major defeat and Lincoln was convinced he'd be a one-term president. His nemesis, George B. McClellan, the former commander of the Army of the Potomac, challenged him for the presidency, but the contest wasn't even close. Lincoln received 55 percent of the popular vote and 212 of 243 Electoral votes.
On April 9, 1865, General Robert E. Lee, commander of the Army of Virginia, surrendered his forces to Union General Ulysses S. Grant and the war for all intents and purposes was over.
Reconstruction has already began during the Civil War as early as 1863 in areas firmly under Union military control, and Lincoln favored a policy of quick reunification with a minimum of retribution. He was confronted by a radical group of Republicans in the Senate and House that wanted complete allegiance and repentance from former Confederates. Before a political battle had a chance to firmly develop, Lincoln was assassinated.

BOIGRAPHY OF Bill Clinton



Bill Clinton was the 42nd president of the United States, and the second to be impeached. He oversaw the country's longest peacetime economic expansion.

Synopsis

Bill Clinton was born on August 19, 1946, in Hope, Arkansas. In 1975, he married Hillary Rodham. The following year, he was elected attorney general of Arkansas, and in 1978 he became the youngest governor in the country. Elected U.S. president in 1992, Clinton enacted such legislation as the Family and Medical Leave Act and oversaw two terms of economic prosperity. He was impeached by the House of Representatives in 1998 following the revelation of his affair with Monica Lewinsky, but was acquitted by the Senate in 1999. Since leaving office, Clinton has remained on the global stage by working with the Clinton Foundation and campaigning for his wife, Hillary Clinton, who ran for U.S. president in the 2008 and 2016 elections. 

Early Life

William Jefferson Clinton, better known as Bill Clinton, was born on August 19, 1946, in Hope, Arkansas, a small town with a population of about 8,000. His father, William Jefferson Blythe, had died in a car crash three months before Clinton was born, leaving him in the care of his mother, Virginia Cassidy Blythe.
To provide for her son, Virginia moved to New Orleans, Louisiana to study anesthesiology, while Clinton stayed with his grandparents, Eldridge and Edith Cassidy. While opposites in many ways—Eldridge was easygoing and Edith the disciplinarian—both lavished attention on the young boy, instilling in him the importance of a good education. "My grandparents had a lot to do with my early commitment to learning," Clinton later recalled. "They taught me to count and read. I was reading little books when I was 3."
Clinton's mother returned to Arkansas with her nursing degree in 1950. Later that year she married an automobile salesman named Roger Clinton, who soon moved the family back to his hometown of Hot Springs, Arkansas. Although neither his parents nor his grandparents were religious, Clinton became a devoted Baptist from a very young age. On Sunday mornings, he woke himself up, put on his best dress clothes and walked the mile to Park Place Baptist Church to attend services alone.
Throughout his childhood, Clinton grew increasingly disturbed by his stepfather's drinking and abusive behavior toward his mother and younger half-brother. At the age of 14, already standing more than 6 feet tall, Clinton finally snapped. He told his stepfather, "If you want them, you'll have to go through me." The abuse stopped but the drinking continued, and the tension persisted at home even after Roger and Virginia's 1962 divorce and subsequent reconciliation.
Clinton attended Hot Springs High School, a segregated all-white school, where he was a stellar student and a star saxophonist for the school band. The principal of Hot Springs High, Johnnie Mae Mackey, placed a special emphasis on producing students devoted to public service, and she developed a strong bond with the smart and politically inclined Clinton.
In late spring 1963, Clinton attended Boys State, an American Legion program designed to introduce students to government service. He was elected an Arkansas representative to Boys Nation in Washington, D.C., earning him an invitation to meet President John F. Kennedy at the White House Rose Garden. A photograph of the young Bill Clinton shaking hands with President Kennedy has become an iconic image symbolizing a passing of the baton between generations of modern Democratic leadership. On the same trip, Clinton met another of his political heroes, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee J. William Fulbright.

Higher Education

Upon graduating from high school in 1964, Clinton enrolled at Georgetown University to study international affairs. He immediately thrust himself into university politics, serving as the president of his freshman and sophomore classes, though he lost the election for student body president as a junior. The political hopeful also began working as a clerk for the Foreign Relations Committee under Senator Fulbright, one of Congress's most outspoken critics of the Vietnam War. Clinton came to share Fulbright's view that the war was both immoral and contrary to the country's best interests.
Prior to graduating from Georgetown in 1968, Clinton won a highly prestigious Rhodes Scholarship to study for two years at Oxford University. However, in the spring of 1969, Clinton received his draft notice and was forced to return to Arkansas. Clinton avoided military service by enrolling in the ROTC program at the University of Arkansas Law School, but instead of attending law school that fall, he returned to Oxford (and later claimed he had permission to do so). Feeling guilty about his decision to avoid the draft, Clinton resubmitted his name to the draft board, but he received a high enough lottery number to assure that he would not have to serve in Vietnam.
Clinton returned to the U.S. in 1970 to matriculate at Yale Law School. The following spring, he met a bright young Wellesley College graduate named Hillary Rodham, who shared his political ambitions. The pair graduated from Yale in 1973 and married two years later in 1975. They had their only child, a daughter named Chelsea, in 1980.

Early Political Career and Arkansas Governor

After graduating from Yale, the Clintons moved to Arkansas, where Bill began teaching at the University of Arkansas School of Law in Fayetteville and thrust himself into politics. In 1974, he challenged Republican incumbent John Paul Hammerschmidt for his seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Clinton lost the race, but it was closer than expected, and the campaign marked him as a rising star of the Arkansas Democratic Party. Two years later, Clinton was elected state attorney general, and then in 1978, at the age of 32, he easily defeated Republican Lynn Lowe to become the youngest governor in the country.
Working closely with his wife, Hillary, Clinton set out on an ambitious agenda to reform the state's education and health care systems. However, hampered by his youth and political inexperience, he made several blunders as governor. Clinton mishandled the riots by Cuban refugees interned at Fort Chaffee and instituted a highly unpopular fee hike on auto licenses. At the time, Arkansas governors served only two-year terms, and at the conclusion of Clinton's term in 1980 a little-known Republican challenger named Frank White shockingly knocked him out of office. 
Although the loss devastated Clinton, he refused to let it put an end to his promising political career. After spending some time working at the Arkansas law firm of Wright, Lindsey & Jennings in Little Rock, Clinton once again sought out the governorship in 1982. Freely admitting his past mistakes and beseeching voters to give him a second chance, Clinton swept back into office. This time he would hold onto the job for four consecutive terms.
As governor, Clinton took a centrist approach, championing a mix of traditionally liberal and conservative causes. Appointing Hillary to head a committee on education reform, he instituted more rigorous educational standards and established competence tests for teachers. Clinton also championed affirmative action, appointing record numbers of African Americans to key government positions. At the same time, Clinton favored the death penalty and put in place welfare reforms designed to put recipients back to work. Also noteworthy was Clinton's tactic of running the government like a political campaign, constantly consulting public opinion polls and pitching policies through carefully orchestrated advertising campaigns.
Seeking to increase his national profile, Clinton served as chairman of the National Governors Association from 1986-87, and at the end of the decade he became chair of the Democratic Leadership Council, a group of moderate Democrats seeking to move the party in a centrist direction. However, at the 1988 Democratic National Convention, Clinton squandered an opportunity to announce himself as an obvious future presidential candidate when he delivered an excruciatingly long and boring nomination speech for Michael Dukakis. In a skillful bit of political damage control, Clinton quickly made fun of his disastrous speech on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.

U.S. Presidency

In 1992, Clinton easily defeated his competitors in the Democratic primaries to become the party's nominee for the presidency, choosing Tennessee Senator Al Gore as his vice presidential running mate. The Republican incumbent, President George H.W. Bush, was vulnerable in the election of 1992 because he had broken his celebrated campaign promise not to raise taxes and, especially, because the national economy was mired in recession.
Although Clinton's campaign was troubled by accusations of draft dodging and rumors of marital infidelity, he managed to turn the narrative by portraying himself as a hard-working, family man. Additionally, he successfully hammered home his economic message, underscored by chief strategist James Carville's pithy slogan, "It's the economy, stupid." Clinton was also aided by the surprisingly successful third-party campaign of billionaire Ross Perot, who siphoned off a significant portion of the Republican vote from President Bush. On November 3, 1992, Bill Clinton was elected the 42nd president of the United States.
Despite several notable accomplishments, including the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, the implementation of the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy for LGBT military personnel and the ratification of the North American Free Trade Agreement, Clinton's first years in office left him politically vulnerable. Through a task force headed by First Lady Hillary Clinton, he endorsed a massive health care reform act that was designed to provide universal coverage. The bill failed to move through Congress, however, and became a massive political disaster, leading to Republicans regaining control of both houses of Congress in 1994.
However, in an impressive political comeback, President Clinton again embraced centrist policies and rhetoric to restore his popularity in advance of the 1996 election. In 1994, he signed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, a law that added 100,000 policemen and instituted harsher punishments for a variety of crimes, and in 1996 he signed a law increasing the national minimum wage. Additionally, he emerged favorably from a budget dispute with House Republicans that resulted in a pair of government shutdowns in 1995, the second of which lasted three weeks. Although a one-term presidency had seemed a foregone conclusion two years earlier, in 1996 Clinton handily defeated Republican challenger Bob Dole to secure a second term in office.
Clinton's greatest accomplishment as president was leading the nation to a period of strong economic prosperity. While Clinton was in office, the nation enjoyed the lowest unemployment rates in decades, as well as a surge in median income and a rise in home-ownership rates.
Clinton's foreign policy achievements included presiding over the 1993 signing of the Oslo Accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, during which the famous handshake between Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat occurred, stabilizing war-torn Bosnia through the Dayton Peace Accords and helping to end Serbia's ethnic cleansing of Albanians in Kosovo. However, the failure of the American military mission in Somalia and subsequent inaction in the face of genocide in Rwanda, both from Clinton's first term, stand out as major blemishes on his foreign policy record.
Clinton's reputation also suffered from scandal in his personal life. His second term in the White House was dominated by the Monica Lewinsky scandal; the president at first denied, and then later admitted, that he had sexual relations with the White House intern. A panel-appointed prosecutor, Kenneth Starr, initially charged with investigating Clinton's Whitewater investments as Arkansas governor, had expanded his investigation to expose the affair. In 1998 he produced an explicit report with salacious details, known as the Starr Report, which outlined a case for impeachment.
That December, the Republican-dominated House of Representatives voted to impeach the president for perjury and obstruction of justice for his actions in the Lewinsky affair. However, in February 1999, following a five-week trial, the Senate voted to acquit Clinton on both articles of impeachment.

Post-Presidential Career

In the years since his presidency concluded in 2001, Bill Clinton has remained active on the global stage. Through the William J. Clinton Foundation (founded in 1997 and later renamed the Clinton Foundation), he created the Clinton Climate Initiative, dedicated to supporting research to combat climate change; the Clinton Global Initiative, which connects entrepreneurs and world leaders to foster new ideas and action; and the Haiti Fund, dedicated to rebuilding Haiti in the aftermath of its devastating 2010 earthquake. According to Clinton, the foundation's mission is "to alleviate poverty, improve global health, strengthen economies and protect the environment, by fostering partnerships among governments, businesses, nongovernmental organizations and private citizens."
Having published his first book, Between Hope and History, prior to the 1996 election, the former president in 2004 followed with a best-selling autobiography, My Life. Clinton has since published two more books, Giving (2007) and Back to Work (2011). He also played an active role in Hillary Clinton's failed 2008 presidential bid and, afterward, in Barack Obama's successful presidential campaign.
Despite facing an enormous backlash from the Lewinsky scandal, Clinton rejuvenated his image and remained popular among Democratic supporters. Assessments of his successes and failures reflect the political divides of the moment, and history has yet to reveal the full consequences of many of his policies. Nevertheless, Clinton himself offered his own preliminary evaluation of his presidency in his memoirs: "I judge my presidency primarily in terms of its impact on people's lives. That is how I kept score: all the millions of people with new jobs, new homes and college aid; the kids with health insurance and after-school programs; the people who left welfare for work; the families helped by the family leave law; the people living in safer neighborhoods—all those people have stories, and they're better ones now."

In Recent Years

Clinton showed his support for the Democratic 2012 election candidates, incumbents President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden, at the 2012 Democratic National Convention. In his speech at the convention, Clinton said that he wanted Obama to be the standard-bearer of the Democratic Party, calling him a president who's "cool on the outside, but who burns for America on the inside." The speech garnered wide success for Clinton in the form of positive news reports and social-network posts by fans.
In November 2013, Clinton received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest honor awarded to civilians. Recipients of the medal are chosen for their “meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors,” according to the White House website.
On September 26, 2014, Clinton became a grandfather when daughter Chelsea gave birth to Charlotte Clinton Mezvinsky. His second grandchild, Aidan Clinton Mezvinsky, was born on June 18, 2016.

Campaigning for Hillary 

Clinton has continued to be a force behind his foundation, which has overseen the distribution of hundreds of millions of dollars from corporations, governments and individuals to global-minded charitable works. The organization has dealt with issues ranging from providing increased access to HIV/AIDS medications to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The former president has also remained in the media spotlight with special appearances that have included administering the oath of office in 2014 to New York City mayor Bill de Blasio and eulogizing boxing legend Muhammad Ali in 2016.
Having previously served as secretary of state under the Obama administration, Hillary Clinton eventually launched a new campaign to be elected commander-in-chief. In July 2016, she became the official Democratic nominee for the American presidency, becoming the first woman in the U.S. to win a major political party's presidential nomination. During the Democratic National Convention, Bill, who had previously campaigned on behalf of his wife, spoke at length about the history of their dating and marriage, her Civil Rights work, her work on behalf of children, her commitment to diversity and the disenfranchised, her professional dedication as a public servant and her overall tenacity. "For this time, Hillary is uniquely qualified to seize the opportunities and reduce the risks we face, and she is still the best darn change maker I have ever known," he said in his speech.


Saturday 10 February 2018

mystery of titanic



Titanic's mysterious stories that you have never heard of

Friends, the full name of Titanic was the Lopel Mill Service titanic, the largest ship of the time, a titanic ship and one in 3000 peopleThe team created it, which took 26 months to build, and this vessel was huge like the 3 football grounds, which was estimated to be approximatelyOne million people came and this ship was told to say that this is a never-ending ship and its first trip was submerged.The Titanic ship departed for South America from South Amonton in 1912, in New Delhi in 1912, after four days of its journey 14 April 1912On the Atlantic Ocean collided with pieces of ice floating in and within a few hours the vessel sank in the seaThere were 2223 people in the morning, 1571 people were killed, and with friends drowning, some questioned that there was no sinkingWhy the ship was submerged and one thing is also believed that the captain of the Titanic, from his first trip to New York PochachwaBecause of the excessive speed due to which I wanted to make the ice collided with the ice and the other is also the belief that the coal in the shipIn the room there was a fire, so the coal started to burn in order to burn the fire so that the speed of the vessel exceeds and collides with the snow and oneThere is also a belief that a cursed mother of Pujari of a journalist William Thomas Steve Isaac was purchased from the British Museum, from this ship.He had taken his fellow passengers off to the United States and this was a bad name for the misfortune so that the tragedy happened.But friends, the truth is that in the report of a leading journalist and author St. Malani, the true story of the drowning of a Titanic ship has been written and TitanicSimply drowning from flying with the snow, but the fire in the Boiler room of the vessel weakened the panels of the outside because of the ignition of fire and during the journeyThe place which was weakened, the ice celar collapsed so that the hole fell into the ship and started penetrating inside the water and the ship started sinking and the 30's of MalaniLooking for the story till the year that what finally happened and finally it reached to the verdict, and Malani claims that the companyPresident Smriti Kashyal was aware of the fire, but he did not take it into focus and the ship became a victim of the tragedy and the documentary of MalaniThe name is Titanic The Arabianes and the ship is also seen in the photo of the first journey on the trip, where there was a black dump outside the Boyler room.And as soon as snow collapsed, this huge ship of the world was submerged in the sea today.





Wednesday 10 January 2018

most different mountain in the World












Hello friends
I want to know about a mountain which today is a mystery: Dosto This mountain is situated in the Himalayas in Jammu and Kashmir of India, named Mani MaheshKnown by name. This mountain is also written in the mythological stories, there is such a belief that till today no one has climbed this mountain, the local people of this regionIt is believed that Lord Shiva has built this mountain on its own and there is a Shivling on this mountain where Lord Shiva sits in self, wherever people are earthquakeIt is believed that Lord Shiva has become depressed, and on this mountain a Nepali team tried to rush the mountain but failed, and it is believed that oneA young man from Shree Nagar had climbed this mountain and shared that photo on the Internet, but he was banned, and asked the young manIt is said that what he saw there, he said that I saw Lord Shiva manifested and then the Lord disappeared within the clouds, and the height of the mountain could still be measuredBut not from the approximate sea level, it is 18567 feet, and the local people also have the belief that this mountain has a dignity which can be lighted like a huge bulb on the other side.That is, many people are seen and are always covered with this mountain clouds, and this is the secret of the light where it happens and how it is done, which is still a mysteryIt is understandable that it is not known but in Hindu culture, this mountain is considered holy. It is also a special significance for the journey of this mountain which is involved in this journey, all its sinsBurns are burnt down and yes, on this mountain a shepherd has climbed with his goats, and all the stones were there and the figure of the stone is still visible.

Tuesday 9 January 2018

future man nostradamus



Hello friends

I want to tell you the life story of a person whose future speech was 500 years ago, this person is none other than the country of IndiaIt is believed that the world famous Jyotish Shastri, who was born in 1503, is the Prime Minister of India, who is said to have prophesied this prophecy.Nasratus Dosas was born in France on 1503, when he was younger, he was proficient in prophesying, but his parents feared that doing this would make this mad, so heIt is believed that the future of the world is like this in the hostel for study, but after completing the study and taking back the prophecy in the future, it is believed thatThe car was not about anybody, who said about Narendra Modi, that such a person would be born in India who would rule all over Asia and take the country towards progress andBirth will be done in the state of Gujarat, which will have 3 ocean and Modi will not face any problem till 2026, it will rule in the entire Asia region, it will not be anyYou can defeat him and have a speech that he will hear his opponent stand up and stand still.It seems to be true.

this temple is one time sow in one day










Hello friends

This is the temple of Shankar Lord located in the Arab Ocean, located in the Gujarat state of Gujarat, which you see in the photo, this temple is a mysteryIn the whole day only once open for darshan, in the morning and evening the temple sinks in the water. There is such a belief that in the Puranas one sunny Sur is namedAsura prayed to God and then asked to bless him to immortal, God gave it a blessing, giving it a blessing that Shiva's son onlyI can only do it for 6 days after birth and when the sun begins to grow on the sun shining on Earth, then all the goddess Devas will be near Lord Shiva.When he came and told a remedy, Lord Shiva said that Kartik, the son of Lord Shiva was born when his son hit him and Kartik was illAfter killing the Ashur, and after killing Taraka Sur, Kartik realized that while Kartik Mahadev was established when Tarakasura was the father of his father.All of you know this place as the place of birth.

world mysterious temple








Hello friends


This is the ancient temple of Somnath Jyotirlinga, which is believed to be the first to believe in 12 Jyotirlinga, in ancient times it was believed that this JyotirlingaThe air was hanging in the air but the carriages were broken by the invaders, Veraval is located on the beach in Gujarat. It is believed that the temple was built by Swayam Chandra DeoAnd this temple was destroyed in 17 times but now it is made new, it is believed here that in the Mahabharata Period, Lord Krishna also has his life, Lord Krishna was a hunter who hunted God with his arrows, filled with mysteries and miracles.No one can understand this secret till today.

indian mysterious place




Hello Namaste Dosto

The photo you are viewing is located in the Himalayas mountain range in India and within it is the Kailas mountain which is believed to be in the present age.
That Lord Shiva is sitting here, and yet, there has not been any access to it and the one who has reached it has not come back, and at present it is believed
Coming out of this Kailash mountain, Plain does not even pass, this is a mysterious place in a world that no one can find yet.

Saturday 6 January 2018

world bugest mony bank




पद्मनाभस्वामी मंदिर के पास एक लाख करोड़ रुपये? । <a style='COLOR: #d71920' href='http://bit.ly/richesttemple' target='_blank'>देखें खजाना</a>
केरल में श्री पद्नाभस्वामी मंदिर में करोड़ों का खजाना मिलने के बाद यह मंदिर सुर्खियों में है.


श्री पद्मनाभस्वामी मंदिर के तहखाने से स्वर्ण आभूषण, स्वर्ण और चांदी की मुद्राएं, रत्नजड़ित मुकुट, बहुमूल्य पत्थरों की प्रतिमाएं और आभूषणों से युक्त ऐसा खजाना हाथ लगा है जिसकी कीमत 90 हजार करोड़ रुपए आंकी गई है.



तहखाने से मिले स्वर्ण आभूषणों एवं बेशकीमती सामानों की सूचि बनाने का काम उच्च न्यायालय के दो पूर्व जजों सहित सात सदस्यीय समिति द्वारा 27 जून से शुरु किया गया.

Monday 19 June 2017

the most amazing men in the world

You must have known this man well for the goodness of your life. Hey Abram Lincoln, who was the 16th President of the United States and he belonged to the Republican Party, he completely ended the slave tradition.
Abraham Lincoln was born in a very poor family, and he was the first Republican to become the president and he failed twice in the Senate election.
Lincoln did not take more fees than his clients who were 'poor like him'. Once one of his clients sent him twenty five dollars, Lincoln returned ten dollars from him saying that fifteen dollars were enough. Usually, he advised his clients to resign from outside the court and settle the matter so that the money of both parties was not wasted in litigation. In exchange for this, they got the same fees as they did not. A pension agent was demanding $ 200 in fees to get the widow of a martyr sold for 400 pence of his pension. Lincoln not only advocated for the woman, but also arranged for her stay at the hotel and the return ticket.

Lincoln and one of his colleague advocates once punished a sly man who took possession of the land of a mental patient woman. The matter was only fifteen minutes in the court. After winning the associate lawyer, Bitwarkan gave her a dazed fee. The associate counsel said that the woman's brother had paid the full fee and was pleased with the decision of all the court, but Lincoln said - "But I'm not happy! That money belongs to a poor patient woman and I would prefer to starve rather than take this money. You return the amount of my fees to him. "

Think today, Lincoln was stupid. They had never been in abundance and they had their own fault. But he was the best man in all of us, can anyone deny this?

Lincoln never used to discuss religion and was not affiliated with any church. Once a friend asked him about his religious views. Lincoln said - "Long ago I met an old man in Indiana who used to say 'When I do something good then I feel good and when bad I feel bad'. This is my religion '

Friday 16 June 2017

World's Biggest Temple History



This is the name of Lord Swaminarayan Temple, Delhi and Gandhinagar, which is known by the name of Akshar Dham as the whole world.
What is this temple that is famous from such a magnificent art and craftsmanship? To see the people from abroad, people come to see. This is a big symbol of Hinduism, on which every Hindu is proud and this temple
The Prime Minister of many countries has also taken an appointment, in which the Prime Minister of power countries such as France America London have also praised this temple and in the form of auspiciousness
It took 15 years but the President Swami Maharaj in just 5 years made the people open to darshan and India's present Prime Minister also visits this temple regularly.
And this is a splendid temple that can be included in the wonders of the world, and in particular the fact that the terrorists also attacked the Akshardham in Gandhinagar, but the temple could not be cured.
If you have not seen this temple then once you see it, I assure you that your mind will experience peace and leniency.