Thứ Tư, 24 tháng 10, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Oct 24 2018

- Taco tip number 88.

- Know thy taco knowledge.

- [Jarod] You wrap a burrito.

- You roll an enchilada.

- But you fold a taco.

(Latin music)

- I'm Jarod Neece.

- I'm Mando Rayo.

- And we're taco journalists exploring the iconic tacos

of Texas, through the eyes of the people who make them.

- We're in Corpus Christi, Texas,

where people do "Anything for Selenas!"

- And breakfast tacos.

- We'll visit with Chacho's Tacos,

home of the biggest, baddest breakfast taco.

- [Jarod] And we'll go to Hi-Ho,

Selena's favorite restaurant.

- We'll also visit with local creatives, where they express

their love for tacos and culture through art.

- My name is Gerald Flores.

I'm a local creative here in Corpus Christi,

and we are at the Hi-Ho Restaurant on the west side.

- [Jarod] So Gerald, we are we at?

- We're at Hi-Ho, 'cause in Corpus Christi, when you wake up

the first thing you do is come get a breakfast taco.

(laughs)

♪ Hi-Ho, Hi-Ho, it's off to work we go ♪

♪ Hi-Ho, Hi-Ho

(laughs)

- It's off to tacos we go.

- Right here.

- Breakfast tacos, here.

- My name is Rick Garcia.

I'm owner of the Hi-Ho Restaurant in Corpus Christi, Texas.

We start at 3:30 in the morning, making chorizo and egg,

potato and egg, bacon, beans, tortillas,

so we can start serving our tacos.

- You know, the great thing about just breakfast tacos

in general is that it can be anything.

You have bacon and egg, chorizo and egg, bean and cheese,

carne salad tacos, you can have migas tacos,

you can have pretty much anything under the sun.

The list is long.

One iconic taco is just the bean and cheese.

You can call it a poor man's taco too,

because there's just the simple ingredients.

- A good bean and cheese can say a lot about a restaurant.

- We have the tortillas.

You gotta have fresh tortillas.

- It's time to name that breakfast taco.

Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding!

- Breakfast taco number one.

(funky music)

- That's a bean and cheese.

- Bean and cheese.

(ding)

Take it away.

(laughs)

- Taco number two.

- Carne Guisada.

(ding)

- Winning.

- That's one of the things I love about this taqueria,

and just places like this is it's almost like

everyone's individual home breakfast tables.

- [Rick] Yeah.

- Like, when you look at the people and the way that

they're just interacting, it's literally like

they're in their own kitchen, or their own living room

with their friends, and I love that you can

see all different kinds of people just interacting.

It's great.

(rock music)

♪ Well, I know

♪ Yeah, I know

♪ Yeah, I know

♪ What's a girl like you compared to a man like to me ♪

♪ And I know

♪ Yeah, I know

♪ Yeah, I know

♪ Girls like you

- [Jarod] We're here at Chacho's Tacos.

- To see the biggest, baddest breakfast taco in Texas.

- The almighty Chacho Taco.

It's grande.

- Muy grande.

- The almighty Chacho's Taco is a 14 inch tortilla.

It comes with beans, potato and egg,

carne salad, cheese, and bacon.

And it is a three and a half pounder.

My two boys were the ones that put that together.

He says, "Mom, we gotta have a big taco."

So I said, "Okay."

"Y'all put it together."

- Daddy, this is like the biggest taco I've ever seen.

- My name is Mary Gutierrez.

I am the owner of Chacho's Tacos here in Corpus Christi.

- [Mando] What are your most popular breakfast tacos?

- Our weenie and egg.

Which people ask for because they say,

"Oh my god, that's what mom used to give us."

- I grew up with that, too.

It was the poor man's taco.

- [Mary] Exactly.

'Cause I grew up with weenie and egg.

- [Mando] It's a hot dog.

Hot dog and eggs.

- My recipes are my mom's recipes, my grandmother's.

My mom was a single parent, so I had to cook for

my brothers and sisters, 'cause my mama had to go to work.

So this is how I learned to cook.

- And now you're passing that tradition to your boys.

- My two sons, yes.

They've been with me.

They've supported me, and I think without 'em,

I probably wouldn't have actually kept going.

They're my backbone.

(rock music)

- Mmm, mmm, mmm.

♪ Well, if it's all right with you ♪

♪ You know, it's all right with me ♪

♪ I said, if it's all right with you ♪

♪ Well baby, then it's all right with me ♪

♪ Yeah, it's all right

♪ All right

♪ All right

♪ It's all right

- [Mando] We're in the south side of Corpitos.

- At the Flores Creative Compound.

- We're gonna eat some more breakfast tacos,

and take in some taco culture.

(glasses clinking)

- Yes, it is taco time.

Thank you guys for cooking.

What are we gonna eat?

- Oh my gosh, we're gonna eat.

We have chicharrones in salsa verde.

We have papas fritas, refried beans, scrambled eggs.

Oh, oh my gosh, and we have weenie and egg.

(laughs) Like, weenie and egg.

- And these tortillas are amazing.

- When you asked me, "Oh, I want you to do brunch",

I thought you know what, "Voy a hacer todo,"

everything I grew up eating.

- And why is that important for you?

- Oh my gosh.

I think it's important just because I'm a recipe developer,

and I wanna share my culture and my heritage.

I feel like the more I share, the more people

connect with the food, and want to recreate

what their abuelitas made, and their tias

'cause there's a lot of people that e-mail me,

and they're like, "Oh, my mom always made beans

"but I never took the time to learn how to make the beans."

So I feel like the more I share, the more they connect.

- You know, growing up in a border town,

I was always surrounded by this kind of food, also.

But what I do, and when it comes to making things,

I love including the culture as far as

colors are concerned, and different patterns.

Things I grew up with, things that remind me

of my grandmother's tablecloth,

or her bedspread, or my mother's lipstick.

I love making things that replicate those,

and brings back memories, and they're relatable.

You know, we grew up here in South Texas,

and so the proximity to Mexico,

the proximity to another country was always there.

And I never took it for granted.

- And so what does culture mean for you guys?

- It means living a very vibrant life,

where you have food that you grew up with.

You recognize where you come from,

where your family's from, where their roots are planted,

and you acknowledge it, and you don't ever, ever forget it.

- It's something so special that

you wanna make sure that you pass it on.

Like, it's food, it's memories, it's flavors.

To me, it's smells.

I want my culture to go from generation to generation.

- I mean, for me it's interesting 'cause

the creative group of friends that I have, I mean,

they all have their outlets and they focus on

on so many areas of tradition,

and I chose to just focus on one, which is just tacos.

And the interesting thing about that is,

it happened by accident.

I was actually looking for a shirt for me,

but the one I found was made by people who had

no idea what tacos really are, and the shirt's like, $60.

You know, the most interesting thing about it is that tacos,

it was something that, if you took that to school,

like our parents took that to school

for lunch, they looked like poor kids.

And now, every white person under the sun in Austin,

and in L.A., they're going to taco places.

- I feel like they cut out the entire

cultural significance of the taco.

And then they put it on Instagram, and it's like this

awesome, creative thing that it is blowing people's mind.

And I'm like, we've been eating that forever.

(laughs) You know?

Like, my grandmother made that.

- Your grandmother could have been an Instagrammer.

- Exactly.

(laughter)

- They came from tradition, and our families made them,

and you guys can enjoy them now, and that's good,

but just know where they came from.

- Here's the thing.

You kind of, you embrace the culture,

but you hate the people.

Right?

I mean, our country is kind of, oh well we love tacos,

and we love embroidery dresses, but we don't want you here.

No, you can't do that.

It's either all or nothing.

You know what I mean?

You can't pick and choose things of a culture,

and then appropriate it, and then say,

"No, I don't want people that are

"brown skinned here, or taking our jobs."

You can't do that.

It's either all or nothing.

- If there was one thing you could say to somebody

that was doing that, what would you say to them?

- I would say, take your time to really get to know

who's cooking your food, who's making your clothes.

Hear their story, you know?

Just don't take take their idea and run with it,

'cause you're cutting out why that thing is awesome.

You're cutting out where he got that taste,

or where he got that smell, or who he learned it from,

and you're just taking it, and you're making it your own.

You're cutting out all the good.

♪ She'll make me feel all right ♪

♪ She made me tacos ♪

♪ I owe my money to a Sunday night ♪

- This was the first taco tattoo I got, right here.

So that's, I mean, pretty crazy about tacos.

I have one right here.

That's the traditional mom heart one, but I put tacos in it.

This eagle right here, it's not the Hi-Ho logo. (laughs)

But he is grabbing a taco.

- [Jarod] Man, I love breakfast tacos.

- [Mando] Me too.

- [Jarod] What's your favorite?

- [Mando] Bean and cheese.

- [Jarod] Potato and egg.

- [Mando] Bacon and egg.

- [Jarod] Chorizo and egg.

- [Mando] A la Mexicana.

- [Jarod] Papa rancheros.

- [Mando] Papa con huevos.

- [Jarod] I like bean, cheese, and bacon.

- [Mando] (sighs) Chorizo con huevo.

Weenie con huevos.

- [Mando] In the next Proximio Show,

we'll go to Dallas, and ask the question,

is Mexican modern, or is modern Mexican?

- [Jarod] Have you ever had an octopus in your taco?

You're about to.

- [Mando] And we'll explore the city's Latino chefs,

and see how they're making their mark on the national stage.

For more infomation >> Corpus Christi: Breakfast Tacos | Tacos of Texas Ep. 5 - Duration: 9:47.

-------------------------------------------

Hurricane Willa Will Impact North Texas With Rain - Duration: 2:54.

For more infomation >> Hurricane Willa Will Impact North Texas With Rain - Duration: 2:54.

-------------------------------------------

Wisdom From Lark in Texas #2: The Invisible Hand - Custom Subs - Duration: 5:26.

I would encourage anyone who wants to, look it up online, I've already done it.

Kenneth Boulding, the quote is simply this...

"A world of unseen dictatorship is conceivable.

Still using the forms of democratic government."

This describes communitarian-ism and the implementation of communtarian law, to a T.

This man was a quaker by the way, he since passed on, he was English.

Taught at the University of Michigan for instance.

Where you find the article at Robin's website:

Invisibleserfscollar.com

Do a search, it's entitled:

'Trigger's of action: Carving the n------ keels needed for politic's to steer society & people.'

Vicky Davis: You know what Lark, what you just read there made me think.

Isn't the invisible hand that Adam Smith wrote about the perfect icon

to use for developing this system that they have the

global system of the market on one hand with corporations

being self regulatory and developing their own system of law under the world

trade agreements and communitarianism which is the use of people which

controls people so that they can be used by the other by the market system.

That's exactly right, I mean, I consider I'm surrounded by zombies & criminal's.

I mean, I'm behind enemy lines.

Because, I mean, again, it's not what you think, it's not what you say, it's what do you do?

And see what we have is a dirigiste economy.

And this is another French term it's spelled:

D - i - r - i - g - i - s - t - e

Another, French term again.

A dirigiste economy, is a command & controled economy.

The word I referenced earlier, pravani, the Russian word.

Is, the steering of public perception.

It's scientific management, the control the control of psychology.

If we have a minute there is a minute, there is a book written by a Russian

that was published in 1971 that ---- speaks to.

As well as another book written by in 1976, again it's convergent.

The law and the systems are being melded together.

For a system of one world governance.

Remember, capital-ism hates obstruction. They love, capital-ists love the free flow capital.

And particularly, the uber rich super captial-ists.

Vicky it was you that reminded me that super capital-ism is nearly synonymous with communism.

People forget that communism is an economic system.

Vicky Davis: Right they interchange discussing the political system with the economic

system, so they make it seem like that communism is a political system when

actually it's an economic system.

That's exactly right.

And this is how they take up the control, they, accrue the wealth into their hands.

We have to describe that word, wealth. It's not what's just called money.

You know that we slaves consider money, it's really about control of

resources, territory & assets, including human resources.

This is what wealth is to the super capitalists & these communists.

Another word I think that is important here, in relationship to this quote from

Walt Kelligan Pogo, 'we have met the enemy and he is us.'

Is this French word called 'Engrenage.'

And the spelling is: E - n - g - r - e - n - a - g - e

You can look it up, the word means, gearing.

Imagine two gear wheels in motion. Parts of a machine.

I style it as the sequencing the inevitability of events.

And in an dirigiste managed command & control economy, in the information age.

With the speed of personal computers today.

You have the command & control of everything because see.

It's just like in a corporation or the military, people are on a need to know basis.

They're compartmentalized.

For more infomation >> Wisdom From Lark in Texas #2: The Invisible Hand - Custom Subs - Duration: 5:26.

-------------------------------------------

COTA, Texas Lotto partner with Operation Supply Drop to give 500 tickets to veterans - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> COTA, Texas Lotto partner with Operation Supply Drop to give 500 tickets to veterans - Duration: 0:41.

-------------------------------------------

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick on what awaits migrant caravan - Duration: 4:43.

For more infomation >> Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick on what awaits migrant caravan - Duration: 4:43.

-------------------------------------------

How Trudeau Bailed Out A Texas Pipeline | Direct From with Dena Takruri - AJ+ - Duration: 16:08.

Canada is divided over a pipeline. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government has

purchased a pipeline project from Texas-based energy giant Kinder Morgan. The

Trans Mountain pipeline, which will pump oil from the Alberta tar sands to the

Pacific Coast, is costing Canadian taxpayers $7.4 billion.

And opposition has been massive.

These protesters have taken over one of the busiest intersections in Vancouver

to call for a stop to this pipeline.

Activists have taken dramatic steps to resist this pipeline. Now, a Canadian

court has halted construction because the government didn't properly consult

Indigenous groups. But for many other Canadians, the pipeline means one thing: jobs.

Does it make you sad you have to collaborate with a big oil company?

Not at all.

How far are you willing to go to stop this pipeline?

It's in my blood not to stop.

Trudeau has repeatedly positioned himself as a climate leader

and a friend to Indigenous people.

Protecting our environment and growing our economy are not opposing values.

No means no, Justin!

Why are you guys still here?

Because this is unceded land.

So we're at a berry farm in a town called Delta in British Columbia, and we got

tipped off that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is here for an event.

It's the leader of the Liberal Party himself.

Hello everyone! How are you doing?

No means no, Justin! This is unceded

traditional territory! You're not welcome here!

So thank you very much! I'm counting on all of you for your help! Thank you everyone!

We're trying to get closer to ask the Prime Minister a question but there's a huge crowd.

This is an impossible situation. Prime Minister Trudeau!

British Columbia has become the epicenter of the anti-pipeline movement. Protesters have set up

resistance camps near Kinder Morgan construction sites. It's not the first time we've seen this kind of tactic.

The police are right behind us! We want to make sure we get out of here.

In 2016, water protectors at Standing Rock

successfully delayed construction of the Dakota Access pipeline for months. It

looked like the #NoDAPL movement would succeed. But President Trump

cleared the way for the pipeline after taking office. Now, the focus has shifted

north. In 2013, Kinder Morgan announced plans to build a twin pipeline next to

an existing one, in order to triple the flow of oil through Canada. The backlash

was immediate. After several lawsuits, Kinder Morgan threatened to walk away –

unless Trudeau guaranteed a path to construction. In a widely criticized deal,

Trudeau's government purchased the pipeline for $3.5 billion,

promising it would boost the economy and allow Canada's landlocked oil to be sold

to foreign markets. For many, it was a slap in the face.

Climate leaders don't buy or expand pipelines.

If it's completed, Canada will increase emissions,

a major step backwards for the Paris climate agreement. But tar sands

extraction actually produces more greenhouse gas emissions than

conventional drilling does.

So we're headed to see the main construction site of the Kinder Morgan

pipeline here in British Columbia. And because there's so much security

surrounding it, really the only way to get to it is by water. William George of

the Tsleil-Waututh Nation is the leader of the Coast Salish resistance here in British Columbia.

How do you feel when you look over there and you see how much

security there is and how much construction there looks to be?

There's a lot of emotions tied into it. You see the big crane there? From what I understand,

they're pile-driving in big steel structures, getting ready for these super-

tankers. So there'll be essentially, I think, four docks, docking base for these

super-tankers to come in and then take over, I guess, 890,000

barrels of bitumen. And the thing with bitumen that not a lot of

people are aware of is that it doesn't float. It sinks to the bottom, you can't recover

it at all. Again, just another reason why this is unacceptable and we

won't allow it to travel through our bodies of water.

Have you ever gotten in trouble for getting this close?

No. I'm not allowed within 100 meters in any compound, though.

Why?

There's a bridge right there,

so me and a team, we hung off there for 38 hours. We stopped an oil tanker from leaving here for two days.

This coastline could see 21,000 oil tankers over the

next 50 years. More tankers means more noise,

which scientists say poses grave risks for endangered mammals.

How has Kinder Morgan's presence affected the ecosystem here?

Well, right now we have a mother orca that's

swimming around for over a week, and she's pushing around her dead calf, and

it's really uncommon for them to do that. So in a way that they, are telling

us something. These are super-tankers that are the size

of the Empire State Building. Just that noise pollution in the water alone will

ultimately put to extinction those orca whales.

Days before the government announced it was buying the pipeline, the federal Fisheries and Oceans

Department sent a letter warning Kinder Morgan it could face prosecution for putting

marine life in danger near an oil terminal in Vancouver. The company had

gone months without filing mandatory monitoring reports.

Your prime minister, Trudeau, came to office and positioned himself as an ally to Indigenous folks,

and as a friend of the environment. And yet he's gone ahead and purchased this

pipeline. What do you think about that?

Well, unfortunately I voted for the bugger, but him lying to us is upsetting in so many ways, when he promised to

protect our Indigenous rights, promised to be a climate leader, and he's doing nothing

about it – absolutely just the opposite, really.

Would you vote for him again?

No.

Just looking around and being on this water, it's stunning. It's one of the prettiest things I've ever seen.

Yeah, and I'm gonna make sure it stays that way, absolutely.

Just outside Vancouver in Burnaby, protesters have set up two different

resistance camps, Watch House and Camp Cloud. Watch House is operated by the Tsleil-Waututh Nation.

We're taking it back to our old culture, our old teachings. We'd

have watch house locations and strategic ... you know, to watch out for the enemy,

centuries ago. Ultimately we do see Kinder Morgan as the enemy.

In 2007, Canada endorsed the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. It

specifies that states and organizations must adhere to what's referred to as

"Free, Prior and Informed Consent." While Kinder Morgan says it communicated with

more than 133 Indigenous groups along the pipeline route, several First Nations

communities say they weren't properly consulted.

It's devastating in every single way. This pipeline has got to go.

Reginald Gillins Jr. is an activist from Seattle who lives at Watch House.

How big is this anti-pipeline movement?

Oh, it's massive. It's massive. You see this happening all over the globe.

Disenfranchised communities are the first to be affected by the effects of

climate change and extraction efforts on Mother Earth.

Camp cloud is stationed right across the street from Kinder Morgan. Days before our arrival, the camp

was served with an eviction notice. Black Wolf is from the Kwakiutl nation. He's

been staying here for the past six months.

You guys got served with an eviction notice not long ago.

Yes, we did.

So if the city served you with an eviction notice, why are you guys still here?

Because this is unceded land. We're federal Indians. It means we don't have to listen to

the provincial levels of law. We're higher up than they are. We've had this law put

in since the early 1800s. This is our rights as natives to be here.

We're not even protesters – we're water protectors, land defenders. That's what we like to be called.

Why is this fight personal?

It's our food chain. We rely on all the salmon that are coming and going from here.

It's going through all the natural watersheds that we have here.

What do you think of Justin Trudeau's attempts at reconciliation between Canada and First Nations?

I think it was just ludicrous. There is no reconciliation going on. There's so much

devastation to all First Nations all around BC, it's not even funny. Let alone

before this even happened, 50% of our Native reserves still do not have

drinking water. This is just not right.

Camp Cloud's occupants run what they call surveillance operations to monitor Kinder Morgan's activities

and educate the public about the pipeline. This summer, the Federal Court of Appeals

delivered a major blow to the project, unanimously ruling the Trudeau

administration violated Canadian law when it failed to properly consult

Indigenous groups along the pipeline route, and that it did not consider all

the evidence regarding harm to the environment.

Our government inherited a flawed environmental review process, and we've made efforts to improve it.

Now, the government must restart talks with First Nations before construction can proceed.

This is Canada's most active port. Hundreds of ships pass through here

every day. Years ago, you'd see even larger ships in the water – that is, until

the Exxon Valdez oil spill. In 1989, an Exxon Valdez oil tanker bound for

southern California struck a reef in Alaska, releasing 44,000 tons of oil. It's

considered one of the worst human-caused environmental disasters in modern

history. As a precaution, Canada placed more regulations on the oil industry. In

2016, the City of Vancouver submitted a report to the National Energy Board,

claiming the risk of a spill along the Trans Mountain pipeline route is between

16% and 67%. They argued this could cost the economy hundreds of millions of

dollars and result in the deaths of 100,000 sea and shorebirds. Carl and Ann

have lived in Burnaby for years. They're opposed to the expansion because they

say it'll bring devastating effects to their community.

I was driving home one night and I started coughing really violently.

My car hit the curb, I thought I was going to go off the road. I was madly

looking around to see if there was a place to pull over – there wasn't, so I

remained going up the mountain. And I saw the tank farm and I thought, well, it must be

fumes from the tank farm. Then this happened three more times.

When this was built, nobody lived down this mountain. Now, there's residential areas all around

here, down here, and over here.

Would you say most residents of this city oppose Kinder Morgan's expansion?

75%.

Chief Ernie Crey of Cheam First Nation is in

favor of the pipeline and says his community will directly benefit from its construction.

Are the members of your nation in support as well, or is there opposition?

There is opposition in my community. Surprise. There are some people that are opposed to it.

For us, it means jobs, money, opportunities and a better

lifestyle, from this time forward, well, well, well into the future.

We didn't really get much advantage from the earlier pipeline, but we will from the

new pipeline, because we support it, and we also have an agreement with the

company, Kinder Morgan, that offers us a cash component. And I can't disclose how

much money is involved. That's part of the agreement.

We've been hearing a lot of different numbers about the jobs that will benefit your community.

Do you have an exact number?

Well, I think overall there will be thousands of jobs along the full extent of the pipeline.

So there's nothing exact and guaranteed?

No, I don't think so. The real jobs will come when we take

what we earn from the pipeline, drive it back into our own band-owned businesses,

and businesses owned by our community members, and a lot of jobs will accrue.

Does it make you sad that in order to lift your community out of poverty, and

give them jobs and better benefits, you to collaborate with a big oil company?

Not at all. Canadians have benefited from the

natural resources, including gas and oil, all these many decades, and found a very

good lifestyle for themselves, split-level homes, two-car garages,

sending their children off to university, enjoying the good life. For now, the short-

term goal for me is to improve the economic and social standing of my

community, and make them players in the economy, not people shunted over to the

periphery, out of the mainstream, out of sight, out of mind.

We're not going back there, folks, is what I tell white people, and others. We're not going back there.

But we're not just talking about white people. There are several Indigenous communities

who are vehemently opposed to this pipeline being built. What do you say to that?

I say that I understand their opposition. To me, it's worth the risk.

Do you feel that Kinder Morgan bought off your community?

No. Cheam is not the pushover community.

We're the tough men and women, and we've showed it repeatedly, down through the decades.

Back in Vancouver, resistance is building.

These protesters have taken over one of the busiest

intersections in Vancouver to call for a stop to this pipeline.

The day of the protest, Kinder Morgan announced that the pipeline will

cost billions more than initially estimated.

We're out here because we want to send a really loud, really clear

message to the Canadian government that we're not going to allow the pipeline to

be built. And the people are still committed to stopping it, no matter how

many billions of dollars they try and spend on it.

Thomas Davies is a member of Climate Convergence, a grassroots organization

dedicated to fighting for climate justice.

What's the significance of being around all these banks?

Well we just want to interact with as much of the public

as possible. The banks are big funders of the tar sands in Alberta. And

specifically, the Kinder Morgan pipeline – before it was bought by the government –

was financed primarily by big Canadian banks for hundreds of millions of dollars.

Days after we filmed at Camp Cloud, Supreme Court Justice Geoffrey Gomery

granted the city of Burnaby an injunction, ordering all camp structures

to be removed from outside the Kinder Morgan tank farm within 48 hours. The

morning of August 16th, Camp Cloud was evicted.

The Kinder Morgan protest camp on Burnaby Mountain known as Camp Cloud is coming down.

11 people were removed, and five were arrested. The injunction cited the camp's refusal to

put out the sacred fire. Camp Cloud says even though the camp is dispersed,

they'll continue to monitor Kinder Morgan's activities and resist further

colonization of their land. Both Kinder Morgan and Prime Minister

Trudeau declined to speak with us on camera. Energy and Indigenous sovereignty

are going to be key issues heading into the 2019 election. Trudeau still owns the

Trans Mountain pipeline, and the government is determined to see the

expansion through. But for those who put their bodies on the line to stop it, this is just the beginning.

How far are you willing to go to stop this pipeline?

It's in my blood not to stop. I will remain that warrior for my people.

Do you think you'll succeed?

Absolutely. You're going up against your own government,

and I'm just one person with a lot of supporters. So I really do hope and pray that I do succeed.

Hey guys, it's Dena, and that's what's going on with the Kinder Morgan pipeline

here in Canada. Come back next week for another Direct From episode on the

epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women also here in Canada.

Make sure you subscribe to AJ+, like this video, share it and please comment.

For more infomation >> How Trudeau Bailed Out A Texas Pipeline | Direct From with Dena Takruri - AJ+ - Duration: 16:08.

-------------------------------------------

Texas voters could elect two Latina congresswomen - Duration: 2:24.

For more infomation >> Texas voters could elect two Latina congresswomen - Duration: 2:24.

-------------------------------------------

Minimalist Artistic Dwelling Tiny Stacked Marfa 10×10 House in Texas - Duration: 1:58.

Minimalist Artistic Dwelling Tiny Stacked Marfa 10×10 House in Texas

For more infomation >> Minimalist Artistic Dwelling Tiny Stacked Marfa 10×10 House in Texas - Duration: 1:58.

-------------------------------------------

Cold temperatures affecting produce farmers in East Texas - Duration: 1:25.

For more infomation >> Cold temperatures affecting produce farmers in East Texas - Duration: 1:25.

-------------------------------------------

First permanent eye contact surgery performed in Texas - Duration: 2:03.

For more infomation >> First permanent eye contact surgery performed in Texas - Duration: 2:03.

-------------------------------------------

Check your tickets - $3 million lottery ticket sold in Texas - Duration: 2:33.

For more infomation >> Check your tickets - $3 million lottery ticket sold in Texas - Duration: 2:33.

-------------------------------------------

Spirit of Southeast Texas Chorus hosts Open House and Guest Night - Duration: 2:50.

For more infomation >> Spirit of Southeast Texas Chorus hosts Open House and Guest Night - Duration: 2:50.

-------------------------------------------

'A Haunting in South Texas': Hot Wells Hotel & Spa ruins - Duration: 2:15.

For more infomation >> 'A Haunting in South Texas': Hot Wells Hotel & Spa ruins - Duration: 2:15.

-------------------------------------------

President Trump's comments on U.S. Texas Senate campaign - Duration: 2:48.

For more infomation >> President Trump's comments on U.S. Texas Senate campaign - Duration: 2:48.

-------------------------------------------

Texas Rose Festival - Duration: 58:24.

For more infomation >> Texas Rose Festival - Duration: 58:24.

-------------------------------------------

Can LLCs Own Assets? (Texas Limited Liability Companies) - Duration: 2:25.

You already know what assets are.

Anything that has value is an asset.

Since an LLC is a legal business entity, an LLC can legally own assets.

Continuing with the bucket analogy, LLC assets go in the LLC's bucket.

Each asset increases the value of the LLCs bucket up.

Cash is the most basic asset.

Every dollar of cash brings the value of the LLC's bucket up by one dollar.

Equipment and other goods like inventory are also assets.

Not only does equipment and other goods increase the value of the LLC's bucket, they can be

used to generate income for the LLC.

There are also intangible assets that are easier to overlook and more difficult to value.

Intellectual properties are assets.

Patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secrets are types of intellectual property.

The value of most assets fluctuate over time.

Equipment usually decreases in value over time due to wear and tear.

Land can increase in value over time.

It's important that you carefully plan what assets the LLC needs to operate its business

now and in the future.

How the LLC will acquire these assets?

How they will be managed for the maximum benefit to the LLC?

What will the LLC do if it doesn't have the assets it needs to operate its business?

Answering these questions before organizing an LLC will help put you on the path to avoiding

personal liability for business obligations.

This Planning Guide is designed to help you prepare for organizing a new LLC.

The Planning Guide is made up of 5 parts.

Each part has sections.

Each section has an instructional video.

These instructional videos start by explaining the underlying legal concepts for that section.

Each video also includes a demonstration for how to fill out that section of the planning

guide.

In each demonstration, I'll show you how I would use the guide to plan an LLC called

"Fake LLC".

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét