._,,,,,,。,,、 广'x、 ,,、._ 」'゙''i、 ,,,,,_.,,,,、广゚┐ .,,,v―冖"~゛ ゙'i、 .ト ,|,_ riゃ .} .,i´ '冖i、 .] ` f゙,l° ,i´ .゙l_ .y-┐ 'や'゙"゙’ _,,,vr" .゙ト.゙'x,,,,广 ィ・'''゙~ .._,,v・゚ヒ''''・x、 入、rУ ,iレ-v,,,、 .,r°."'''l゙ ,|√゙゚'i、 匸 ._ .y・'゙゚,,,v―-, .:゚ーa .√ ._,rll_ :} .,r''y|゛゙゙l..,i´ ,i"゙l, .゙ト ,r°,,, .., ._,,vぐ .`√ .,i´l广._,,,,,,,,i´ ,,i´ ,i´ ,「 .:| .~''''″ .r″ .|゙l、 “ .,i″.yi入-イ il∠i、.` .,メ| | 」'ト .,,i´ .,i´ ,, ̄ .[ .,i´.,,,,,,! .]_ .゙l_,i´,レ .'_,,,,レ ~''┐ .,r°.,i´.| .| ,l゙ :゙l、 ,,i´ ,i´ l゜.゚L__ .:―ヤ゚″_ :~''=、 .,r″.,x=,, .,i´ ,x'".,,x'″ .゙l、 ゙冖''″ .] | .,i´ .゙l, .~1 .゚L '゙〃 ,n, .,,} .,l彡'''″ .゙~"''''''''''"゜ .テ''~゛ .:゚'―---―・° ―″ .~''¬―'″ .:゚=_,r 0483名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/11(水) 06:18:50.86ID:raFKPWdA0 === 0484名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/11(水) 14:29:26.43ID:QrNpQXsNH I went to the hospital due to back pain, and they put me on a water bed kind of thing. The thing that fix your back by vibrating. The strength of the vibration have 3 setting, “strong” “medium” and “weak”, I started off with “weak” but couldn’t feel a thing. So I said to the nurse “I can’t feel anything” She reply “Then I’ll set it to medium, if there anything else just use the call button.” And she left after saying that. After a while, I still don’t feel the vibration I press the button and call the nurse over “I’ll set it to strong then.” And she sets it to “strong.” The strangest thing, I still couldn’t feel a thing, then I look to my side, The old man right next to me is vibrating like crazy.
This one time I was in a car with 3 of my friend. The car we were in was a modified one, where in a normal car all seats face the front. This seats in this car and turn around, so everyone can be facing each other Since we were all friend so why not sit together, so my friend turn the seat around, And the some guy holding up a news paper also got turned since he was in the same seat. So my friend turn the chair back, And the guy was turned around again.
When your mom walk in on you watching prom, You said “What are they making!? Children~!! Correct~!!” While trying to pass it off as a joke, mom reply “I’m sorry I could only make someone like you”
You guys make FOREX too hard The stock is very mechanic, as long as the loss-cut is -2% and profit taking is 4% then it’s fine Using this simple rule, I made my $820,000 profile into $140,000
You won’t get good result on that…
Make the loss-cut is -5% and profit taking is 5% With this I made my $400,000 into $12,000
Tomorrow is finally the National Center Test for University Admissions! I’m so nervous right now… Anyone taking the test should be resting for the big day tomorrow right?
I’ve seen the exams bulletin It seems that there will be testing today and tomorrow…
I told my parent and they cry at me. Got mad at me. Hit me. I called the teacher and they yelled at me, and told me to come to school right now.
Even if I go now……it’s kind of too late, huh?
2 days ago me and 2 of my friend went to a family restaurant It was busy so we wrote our name on the wait list
After a while, the waitress called out “Party for 3 F,Frieza?” I whispered to my friend “There’s always someone doing this,” And then the other friend stood up, and said “It’s time! Let’s go! Zarbon, Dodoria!!” 0485名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/11(水) 14:30:00.95ID:QrNpQXsNH I went to the hospital due to back pain, and they put me on a water bed kind of thing. The thing that fix your back by vibrating. The strength of the vibration have 3 setting, “strong” “medium” and “weak”, I started off with “weak” but couldn’t feel a thing. So I said to the nurse “I can’t feel anything” She reply “Then I’ll set it to medium, if there anything else just use the call button.” And she left after saying that. After a while, I still don’t feel the vibration I press the button and call the nurse over “I’ll set it to strong then.” And she sets it to “strong.” The strangest thing, I still couldn’t feel a thing, then I look to my side, The old man right next to me is vibrating like crazy.
This one time I was in a car with 3 of my friend. The car we were in was a modified one, where in a normal car all seats face the front. This seats in this car and turn around, so everyone can be facing each other Since we were all friend so why not sit together, so my friend turn the seat around, And the some guy holding up a news paper also got turned since he was in the same seat. So my friend turn the chair back, And the guy was turned around again.
When your mom walk in on you watching prom, You said “What are they making!? Children~!! Correct~!!” While trying to pass it off as a joke, mom reply “I’m sorry I could only make someone like you”
You guys make FOREX too hard The stock is very mechanic, as long as the loss-cut is -2% and profit taking is 4% then it’s fine Using this simple rule, I made my $820,000 profile into $140,000
You won’t get good result on that…
Make the loss-cut is -5% and profit taking is 5% With this I made my $400,000 into $12,000
Tomorrow is finally the National Center Test for University Admissions! I’m so nervous right now… Anyone taking the test should be resting for the big day tomorrow right?
I’ve seen the exams bulletin It seems that there will be testing today and tomorrow…
I told my parent and they cry at me. Got mad at me. Hit me. I called the teacher and they yelled at me, and told me to come to school right now.
Even if I go now……it’s kind of too late, huh?
2 days ago me and 2 of my friend went to a family restaurant It was busy so we wrote our name on the wait list
After a while, the waitress called out “Party for 3 F,Frieza?” I whispered to my friend “There’s always someone doing this,” And then the other friend stood up, and said “It’s time! Let’s go! Zarbon, Dodoria!!” 0486名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/11(水) 14:31:35.17ID:QrNpQXsNH Omar Khayyam, Arabic in full Ghiy?th al-D?n Ab? al-Fat? ?Umar ibn Ibr?h?m al-N?s?b?r? al-Khayy?m?, (born May 18, 1048, Neysh?b?r [also spelled N?sh?p?r], Khor?s?n [now Iran]?died December 4, 1131, Neysh?b?r), Persian mathematician, astronomer, and poet, renowned in his own country and time for his scientific achievements but chiefly known to English-speaking readers through the translation of a collection of his rob???y?t (“quatrains”) in The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (1859), by the English writer Edward FitzGerald.
His name Khayyam (“Tentmaker”) may have been derived from his father’s trade. He received a good education in th e sciences and philosophy in his native Neysh?b?r before traveling to Samarkand (now in Uzbekistan), where he completed t he algebra treatise, Ris?lah fi?l-bar?h?n ?al? mas??il al-jabr wa?l-muq?balah (“Treatise on Demonstration of Problems of Algebra”), on which his mathematical reputation principally rests. In this treatise he gave a systematic discussion of the solution of cubic equations by means of intersecting conic sections. Perhaps it was in the context of this work that he discovered how to extend Abu al-Waf?’s results on the extraction of cube and fourth roots to the extraction of nth roots of numbers for arbitrary whole numbers n.
He made such a name for himself that the Seljuq sultan Malik-Sh?h invited him to E?fah?n to undertake the astronomical observations necessary for the reform of the calendar. (See The Western calendar and calendar reforms.) To accomplish this an observatory was built there, and a new calendar was produced, known as the Jal?l? calendar. Based on making 8 of every 33 years leap years, it was more accurate than the present Gregorian calendar, and it was adopted in 1075 by Malik-Sh?h. In E?fah?n he also produced fundamental critiques of Euclid’s theory of parallels as well as his theory of proportion. In connection with the former his ideas eventually made their way to Europe, where they influenced the English mathematician John Wallis (1616?1703); in connection with the latter he argued for the important idea of enlarging the notion of number to include ratios of magnitudes (and hence such irrational numbers as Square root of√2 and π).
His years in E?fah?n were very productive ones, but after the death of his patron in 1092 the sultan’ s widow turned against him, and soon thereafter Omar went on a pilgrimage to Mecca. He then returned to Neysh?b?r where he taught and served the court as an astrologer. Philosophy, jurisprudence, history, mathematics, medicine, and astronomy are among the subjects mastered by this brilliant man.
Omar’s fame in the West rests upon the collection of rob???y?t, or “quatrains,” attributed to him. (A quatrain is a piece of verse complete in four lines, usually rhyming aaaa or aaba; it is close in style and spirit to the epigram.) Omar’s poems had attracted comparatively little attention until they inspired FitzGerald to write his celebrated The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, containing such now-famous phrases as “A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread?and Thou,” “Take the Cash, and let the Credit go,” and “The Flower that once has blown forever dies.” These quatrains have been translated into almost every major language and are largely responsible for colouring European ideas about Persian poetry. Some scholars have doubted that Omar wrote poetry. His contemporaries took no notice of his verse, and not until two centuries after his death did a few quatrains appear under his name. Even then, the verses were mostly used as quotations against particular views ostensibly held by Omar, leading some scholars to suspect that they may have been invented and attributed to Omar because of his scholarly reputation.
Each of Omar’s quatrains forms a complete poem in itself. It was FitzGerald who conceived the idea of 0487名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/11(水) 14:32:10.86ID:QrNpQXsNH Maria Sk?odowska-Curie jest jedyn? kobiet?, ktora zdoby?a dwie Nagrody Nobla w dziedzinie fizyki i chemii. Zyska?a s?aw? jako badaczka promieniotworczo?ci i odkrywczyni dwoch nowych pierwiastkow - radu i polonu. Do?wiadczenia, ktore przeprowadza?a wraz ze swoim m??em Pierre’em Curie i ktore kontynuowa?a po jego ?mierci doprowadzi?y do powstania pierwszych metod badania wn?trza atomu. By?a najs?awniejsz? uczon? na ?wiecie, jednak nie zepsu? j? ten fakt. Nauka by?a dla niej w ?yciu najwa?niejsza.
Urodzi?a si? w 1867 roku w Polsce, w Warszawie. By?a najm?odsz? spo?rod pi?ciorga siostr. Nie mia?a ?atwego dzieci?stwa. Jej ojciec by? profesorem fizyki. Pomimo trudnych czasow rodzice bardzo wspierali swoje corki w zdobywaniu wiedzy. Maria, po uko?czeniu pensji w Warszawie, kontynuowa?a nauk? pocz?tkowo na nielegalnym Uniwersytecie Lataj?cym, a nast?pnie korzystaj?c z pracowni Muzeum Przemys?u i Rolnictwa. W 1891 roku wyjecha?a do Francji, do Pary?a, gdzie wst?pi?a na Sorbon?, ktora ju? wowczas by?a jednym z czo?owych uniwersytetow ?wiata, gromadz?cym wiele s?aw naukowych i s?yn?cym z wysokiego poziomu studiow. W 1894 roku uzyska?a stopie? magistra w dziedzinie fizyki i matematyki. W tym roku rownie? pozna?a Pierre’a (Piotra) Curie, za ktorego wysz?a za m?? w 1895 roku. Maria rozpocz??a w laboratorium m??a niezale? ne badania nad nowym wowczas problemem radioaktywno?ci (promieniotworczo?ci), b?d?cym tematem do jej rozprawy doktorskiej. Ona jako pierwsza zmierzy?a promieniowanie znanych wowczas pierwiastkow ? uranu i toru, dochodz?c do wniosku, ?e promieniowanie to zachodzi wewn?trz atomow. Kontynuuj?c badania A. Henri’ego Becquerela nad luminescencj? soli uranu w 1896 roku napisa?a prac? pod tytu?em ?O promieniowaniu wysy?anym przez zwi?zki uranu i toru”, w ktorej wysun??a pogl?d o a tomowym charakterze promieniotworczo?ci. To odkrycie zrewolucjonizowa?o owczesn? fizyk? i skierowa?o zainteresowania uczonych na badania nad wn?trzem atomow.
Podczas systematycznych bada? promieniotworczych minera?ow zawieraj?cych uran i t or Maria Sk?odowska-Curie stwierdzi?a, ?e niektore z nich wykazuj? wi?ksz? aktywno?? promieniotworcz?, ni? by to wynika?o z zawarto?ci w nich uranu i toru. W wyniku tych prac wyrazi?a przypuszczenie, ?e minera?y te zawieraj? silniejsze, od dotychczas znanych, pierwiastki promieniotworcze.
Dalsze badania prowadzone wspolnie z m??em P. Curie, doprowadzi?y do odkrycia w 1898 roku dwoch nowych pierwiastkow radioaktywnych pochodz?cych od uranu ? polonu i radu. Oba te pierwiastki znalaz?y po?niej szerokie zastosowanie, m. in. w medycynie. Polon stosowany jest np. jako ?rod?o cz?stek alfa oraz w mieszaninie z berylem jako ?rod?o neutronow, a tak?e jako aktywator fosforow w lampach luminescencyjnych. Ponadto znalaz? on zastosowanie w generowaniu pol elektrostatycznych w ma?ych przeno?nych ?rod?ach pr?du, na przyk?ad takich, ktorych w medycynie u?ywa si? do zasilania serca. Rad jest pierwiastkiem, ktorego niewielka cz?steczka mo?e przez wiele lat emitowa? ciep?o i ?wiat?o. Jest 0488名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/11(水) 16:51:06.91ID:raFKPWdA0 === 0489名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/17(火) 12:24:36.55ID:IbgBNr2s0 第33話「妖怪・米ツキバッタ!」 脚本:大原清秀 監督:岩原直樹
34話 横浜フリューゲルスVSサンフレッチェ広島。BANDAIは横浜フリューゲルスのスポンサー 0496名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/17(火) 12:26:43.24ID:U7onUh+a0>>495 === 0497名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/17(火) 12:26:53.08ID:QXvsijhmd 33話、34話 協力 映画工房 横浜ドリームランド mikiHOUSE 東映演技研修所 0498名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/17(火) 12:27:12.82ID:U7onUh+a0 === 0499名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/17(火) 13:45:02.35ID:RnwhG4gV0 コメツキバッタの名前の由来を知らなかったので、最初はおじぎとの関連がよくわかりませんでした。 0500名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/17(火) 14:20:47.00ID:U7onUh+a0 === 0501名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/19(木) 15:36:48.55ID:FYBvHpDn0 Maria Sk?odowska-Curie jest jedyn? kobiet?, ktora zdoby?a dwie Nagrody Nobla w dziedzinie fizyki i chemii. Zyska?a s?aw? jako badaczka promieniotworczo?ci i odkrywczyni dwoch nowych pierwiastkow - radu i polonu. Do?wiadczenia, ktore przeprowadza?a wraz ze swoim m??em Pierre’em Curie i ktore kontynuowa?a po jego ?mierci doprowadzi?y do powstania pierwszych metod badania wn?trza atomu. By?a najs?awniejsz? uczon? na ?wiecie, jednak nie zepsu? j? ten fakt. Nauka by?a dla niej w ?yciu najwa?niejsza.
Urodzi?a si? w 1867 roku w Polsce, w Warszawie. By?a najm?odsz? spo?rod pi?ciorga siostr. Nie mia?a ?atwego dzieci?stwa. Jej ojciec by? profesorem fizyki. Pomimo trudnych czasow rodzice bardzo wspierali swoje corki w zdobywaniu wiedzy. Maria, po uko?czeniu pensji w Warszawie, kontynuowa?a nauk? pocz?tkowo na nielegalnym Uniwersytecie Lataj?cym, a nast?pnie korzystaj?c z pracowni Muzeum Przemys?u i Rolnictwa. W 1891 roku wyjecha?a do Francji, do Pary?a, gdzie wst?pi?a na Sorbon?, ktora ju? wowczas by?a jednym z czo?owych uniwersytetow ?wiata, gromadz?cym wiele s?aw naukowych i s?yn?cym z wysokiego poziomu studiow. W 1894 roku uzyska?a stopie? magistra w dziedzinie fizyki i matematyki. W tym roku rownie? pozna?a Pierre’a (Piotra) Curie, za ktorego wysz?a za m?? w 1895 roku. Maria rozpocz??a w laboratorium m??a niezale? ne badania nad nowym wowczas problemem radioaktywno?ci (promieniotworczo?ci), b?d?cym tematem do jej rozprawy doktorskiej. Ona jako pierwsza zmierzy?a promieniowanie znanych wowczas pierwiastkow ? uranu i toru, dochodz?c do wniosku, ?e promieniowanie to zachodzi wewn?trz atomow. Kontynuuj?c badania A. Henri’ego Becquerela nad luminescencj? soli uranu w 1896 roku napisa?a prac? pod tytu?em ?O promieniowaniu wysy?anym przez zwi?zki uranu i toru”, w ktorej wysun??a pogl?d o a tomowym charakterze promieniotworczo?ci. To odkrycie zrewolucjonizowa?o owczesn? fizyk? i skierowa?o zainteresowania uczonych na badania nad wn?trzem atomow.
Podczas systematycznych bada? promieniotworczych minera?ow zawieraj?cych uran i t or Maria Sk?odowska-Curie stwierdzi?a, ?e niektore z nich wykazuj? wi?ksz? aktywno?? promieniotworcz?, ni? by to wynika?o z zawarto?ci w nich uranu i toru. W wyniku tych prac wyrazi?a przypuszczenie, ?e minera?y te zawieraj? silniejsze, od dotychczas znanych, pierwiastki promieniotworcze.
Dalsze badania prowadzone wspolnie z m??em P. Curie, doprowadzi?y do odkrycia w 1898 roku dwoch nowych pierwiastkow radioaktywnych pochodz?cych od uranu ? polonu i radu. Oba te pierwiastki znalaz?y po?niej szerokie zastosowanie, m. in. w medycynie. Polon stosowany jest np. jako ?rod?o cz?stek alfa oraz w mieszaninie z berylem jako ?rod?o neutronow, a tak?e jako aktywator fosforow w lampach luminescencyjnych. Ponadto znalaz? on zastosowanie w generowaniu pol elektrostatycznych w ma?ych przeno?nych ?rod?ach pr?du, na przyk?ad takich, ktorych w medycynie u?ywa si? do zasilania serca. Rad jest pierwiastkiem, ktorego niewielka cz?steczka mo?e przez wiele lat emitowa? ciep?o i ?wiat?o. Jest 0502名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/19(木) 15:37:51.47ID:FYBvHpDn0 Omar Khayyam, Arabic in full Ghiy?th al-D?n Ab? al-Fat? ?Umar ibn Ibr?h?m al-N?s?b?r? al-Khayy?m?, (born May 18, 1048, Neysh?b?r [also spelled N?sh?p?r], Khor?s?n [now Iran]?died December 4, 1131, Neysh?b?r), Persian mathematician, astronomer, and poet, renowned in his own country and time for his scientific achievements but chiefly known to English-speaking readers through the translation of a collection of his rob???y?t (“quatrains”) in The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (1859), by the English writer Edward FitzGerald.
His name Khayyam (“Tentmaker”) may have been derived from his father’s trade. He received a good education in th e sciences and philosophy in his native Neysh?b?r before traveling to Samarkand (now in Uzbekistan), where he completed t he algebra treatise, Ris?lah fi?l-bar?h?n ?al? mas??il al-jabr wa?l-muq?balah (“Treatise on Demonstration of Problems of Algebra”), on which his mathematical reputation principally rests. In this treatise he gave a systematic discussion of the solution of cubic equations by means of intersecting conic sections. Perhaps it was in the context of this work that he discovered how to extend Abu al-Waf?’s results on the extraction of cube and fourth roots to the extraction of nth roots of numbers for arbitrary whole numbers n.
He made such a name for himself that the Seljuq sultan Malik-Sh?h invited him to E?fah?n to undertake the astronomical observations necessary for the reform of the calendar. (See The Western calendar and calendar reforms.) To accomplish this an observatory was built there, and a new calendar was produced, known as the Jal?l? calendar. Based on making 8 of every 33 years leap years, it was more accurate than the present Gregorian calendar, and it was adopted in 1075 by Malik-Sh?h. In E?fah?n he also produced fundamental critiques of Euclid’s theory of parallels as well as his theory of proportion. In connection with the former his ideas eventually made their way to Europe, where they influenced the English mathematician John Wallis (1616?1703); in connection with the latter he argued for the important idea of enlarging the notion of number to include ratios of magnitudes (and hence such irrational numbers as Square root of√2 and π).
His years in E?fah?n were very productive ones, but after the death of his patron in 1092 the sultan’ s widow turned against him, and soon thereafter Omar went on a pilgrimage to Mecca. He then returned to Neysh?b?r where he taught and served the court as an astrologer. Philosophy, jurisprudence, history, mathematics, medicine, and astronomy are among the subjects mastered by this brilliant man.
Omar’s fame in the West rests upon the collection of rob???y?t, or “quatrains,” attributed to him. (A quatrain is a piece of verse complete in four lines, usually rhyming aaaa or aaba; it is close in style and spirit to the epigram.) Omar’s poems had attracted comparatively little attention until they inspired FitzGerald to write his celebrated The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, containing such now-famous phrases as “A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread?and Thou,” “Take the Cash, and let the Credit go,” and “The Flower that once has blown forever dies.” These quatrains have been translated into almost every major language and are largely responsible for colouring European ideas about Persian poetry. Some scholars have doubted that Omar wrote poetry. His contemporaries took no notice of his verse, and not until two centuries after his death did a few quatrains appear under his name. Even then, the verses were mostly used as quotations against particular views ostensibly held by Omar, leading some scholars to suspect that they may have been invented and attributed to Omar because of his scholarly reputation.
Each of Omar’s quatrains forms a complete poem in itself. It was FitzGerald who conceived the idea of 0503名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/19(木) 15:39:08.57ID:FYBvHpDn0 I went to the hospital due to back pain, and they put me on a water bed kind of thing. The thing that fix your back by vibrating. The strength of the vibration have 3 setting, “strong” “medium” and “weak”, I started off with “weak” but couldn’t feel a thing. So I said to the nurse “I can’t feel anything” She reply “Then I’ll set it to medium, if there anything else just use the call button.” And she left after saying that. After a while, I still don’t feel the vibration I press the button and call the nurse over “I’ll set it to strong then.” And she sets it to “strong.” The strangest thing, I still couldn’t feel a thing, then I look to my side, The old man right next to me is vibrating like crazy.
This one time I was in a car with 3 of my friend. The car we were in was a modified one, where in a normal car all seats face the front. This seats in this car and turn around, so everyone can be facing each other Since we were all friend so why not sit together, so my friend turn the seat around, And the some guy holding up a news paper also got turned since he was in the same seat. So my friend turn the chair back, And the guy was turned around again.
When your mom walk in on you watching prom, You said “What are they making!? Children~!! Correct~!!” While trying to pass it off as a joke, mom reply “I’m sorry I could only make someone like you”
You guys make FOREX too hard The stock is very mechanic, as long as the loss-cut is -2% and profit taking is 4% then it’s fine Using this simple rule, I made my $820,000 profile into $140,000
You won’t get good result on that…
Make the loss-cut is -5% and profit taking is 5% With this I made my $400,000 into $12,000
Tomorrow is finally the National Center Test for University Admissions! I’m so nervous right now… Anyone taking the test should be resting for the big day tomorrow right?
I’ve seen the exams bulletin It seems that there will be testing today and tomorrow…
I told my parent and they cry at me. Got mad at me. Hit me. I called the teacher and they yelled at me, and told me to come to school right now.
Even if I go now……it’s kind of too late, huh?
2 days ago me and 2 of my friend went to a family restaurant It was busy so we wrote our name on the wait list
After a while, the waitress called out “Party for 3 F,Frieza?” I whispered to my friend “There’s always someone doing this,” And then the other friend stood up, and said “It’s time! Let’s go! Zarbon, Dodoria!!” 0504名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/19(木) 15:42:18.85ID:FYBvHpDn0 onald J. Trump defines the American success story. Throughout his life he has continually set the standards of business and entrepreneurial excellence, especially in real estate, sports, and entertainment. Mr. Trump built on his success in private life when he entered into politics and public service. He remarkably won the Presidency in his first ever run for any political office. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Finance, Mr. Trump followed in his father’s footsteps into the world of real estate development, making his mark New York City. There, the Trump name soon became synonymous with the most prestigious of addresses in Manhattan and, subsequently, throughout the world. Mr. Trump is also an accomplished author. He has written more than fourteen bestsellers. His first book, The Art of the Deal, is considered a business classic. Mr. Trump announced his candidacy for the Presidency on June 16, 2015. He then accepted the Republican nomination for President of the United States in July of 2016, having defeated seventeen other contenders during the Republican primaries. On November 8, 2016, Mr. Trump was elected President in the largest Electoral College landslide for a Republican in 28 years. Mr. Trump won more than 2,600 counties nationwide, the most since President Ronald Reagan in 1984. And he received the votes of more than 62 million Americans, the most ever for a Republican candidate. These voters, in delivering a truly national victory and historic moment, rallied behind Mr. Trump’s commitment to rebuilding our country and disrupting the political status quo that had failed to deliver results. Mr. Trump won, in part, because he campaigned in places Republicans have had difficulty winning?Flint, Michigan, charter schools in inner-city Cleveland, and Hispanic churches in Florida. He went there because he wanted to bring his message of economic empowerment to all Americans. Millions of new Republicans trusted Mr. Trump with their vote because of his commitment to delivering prosperity through a reformed tax code, an improved regulatory environment, and better trade deals. President Trump’s victory has brought Americans of all backgrounds together, and he is committed to delivering results for the Nation every day he serves in office. President Trump has been married to his wife, Melania, for twelve years, and they are parents to their son, Barron. Mr. Trump also has four adult children, Don Jr., Ivanka, Eric, and Tiffany, as well as nine grandchildren. Learn more about First Lady Melania Trump here. Donald Trump’s Birthday Donald Trump was born on June 14, 1946, in Queens, New York. Net Worth Donald Trump’s Birthday Donald Trump was born on June 14, 1946, in Queens, New York. Net Worth According to a September 2017 Forbes estimate, Donald Trump’s net worth is $3.1 billion. Of that, $1.6 billion is in New York real estate; $570 million is in golf clubs and resorts; $500 million is in non-New York real estate; $290 million is in cash and personal assets; and $200 million is in brand businesses. That’s down from $3.7 billion in 2016, according to Fortune, mostly due to declining New York real estate values. Over the years, Trump’s net worth has been a subject of public debate. In 1990, Trump asserted his own net worth in the neighborhood of $1.5 billion. However the real estate market was in decline, reducing the value of and income from Trump's empire; a Forbes magazine investigation into his assets revealed that his existing debt likely brought the number closer 0505名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/19(木) 15:45:04.89ID:FYBvHpDn0 onald John Trump was born in Queens, New York, on June 14, 1946. His father, Fred Trump, was a highly successful real estate developer. The elder Trump was of German heritage, and his wife, Mary McLeod, of Scottish background. Their son Donald was the second youngest of five children.
Donald Trump entered the New York Military Academy at age 13 and, at 21, graduated from the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce at the University of Pennsylvania. He was drawn at once into real estate and construction. Fred Trump stepped down as official head of his firm, Elizabeth Trump & Son, and it was renamed the Trump Organization. Donald Trump’s early projects in real estate were achieved in close concert with his father. He shifted the company’s focus toward Manhattan. In the late 1970s, when many were despairing of the future of New York City, Donald Trump achieved what he considered his first major success by transforming the old Commodore Hotel, adjoining Grand Central Station, into a new Grand Hyatt Hotel.
The most famous of his projects is the 58-story Trump Tower, on New York’s Fifth Avenue, opened in 1983 and where Trump has lived since 1984. With Der Scutt as architect, the glass-walled building, which includes retail, residential, and commercial space, has become a symbol of Trump and his career. As his business life unfolded, he became involved with a myriad of projects, including hotels, residential and commercial buildings, and casinos in America and abroad, as well as beauty pageants and sports endeavors. His first of many books was The Art of the Deal, published in 1987. Trump’s fame increased when he launched still another career in 2004 as star of The Apprentice (later The Celebrity Apprentice). Produced in a studio in Trump Tower, the series was widely viewed and aired on NBC until Donald Trump decided to run for president of the United States, which he announced in June 2015.
Trump defeated more than a dozen rivals to win the Republican nomination. After three televised debates with his Democratic opponent, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and one of the most intense and rancorous presidential campaigns in American history, he won the election held on November 8, 2016. Historically Donald Trump would become the first president to be elected without experience in the military or in political office?he cited this aspect of his biography as a virtue that would help him to “drain the swamp” in Washington?as well as the fifth president to have prevailed without a popular vote plurality.
Early on the morning after election night, in New York City, with his three sons, two daughters, and wife Melania at his side, the president-elect told his supporters, “Now it is time for America to bind the wounds of division . . . to all Republicans and Democrats and independents across this nation I say it is time for us to come together as one united people. . . . I pledge to every citizen of our land that I will be president for all of Americans, and this is so important to me. For those who have chosen not to support me in the past, of which there were a few people, I’m reaching out to you for your guidance and your help so that we can work together and unify our great country.” He went on to say, “As I’ve said from the beginning, ours was not a campaign but rather an incredible and great movement, made up of millions of hard-working men and women who love their country and want a better, brighter future for themselves and for their family.” 0506名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/19(木) 15:47:01.04ID:FYBvHpDn0 President Trump relishes his reputation as a savvy dealmaker. “Deals are my art form,” he once tweeted. “Other people paint beautifully or write poetry. I like making deals, preferably big deals.” He promised during the 2016 campaign that if elected, he would work with politicians and foreign leaders to make “smart deals for the country.” But since he took office there has been precious little evidence of Trump’s vaunted dealmaking prowess. Such successes as his administration has been able to claim have generally been accomplished without his direct involvement?and sometimes in spite of it.
There is, though, one obvious piece of evidence from the president’s political career that suggests his dealmaking reputation might be deserved after all: the relationship he has with evangelical political leaders. He has lavished them with attention and let them bask in his celebrity star-power, things that they, long feeling like outsiders in American culture and politics, have badly craved. In exchange, they have thrown him their support?unconditional support, by all appearances?and with it, the backing of a political constituency vital to his success at the polls.
In The Faith of Donald J. Trump, authors David Brody and Scott Lamb provide an in-depth look at the relationship between the president and American evangelicals. Brody and Lamb?respectively a newscaster with Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network and a vice president at Jerry Falwell’s Liberty University?have written what they dub a “spiritual biography,” even though they come right out and say they have no intention of answering the question of whether Trump is a Christian. Instead, they hope to convey his faith through his actions.
In the process, though, Brody and Lamb inadvertently expose the corruption and moral vacuity of the political evangelical movement in the United States.
Trump only started paying attention to evangelicals once he began to consider running for president?some five or more years before the 2016 campaign. He made a show of cozying up to evangelical pastors who write books that usually don’t sell well outside their own congregations. He reached out to the prosperity-gospel heretic Paula White and flattered her. He asked questions of other religious leaders.
As his ambitions grew, Trump cannily cultivated relationships with evangelicals, and they convinced themselves that those relationships must be sincere since they began before he openly started campaigning for the presidency. Once he did start openly campaigning, the outreach only became more intensive. As Brody and Lamb report, Trump would seek out the preachers to sit next to at events. He would bring his mother’s Bible to meetings to show it off. Evangelicals fell for it. So deluded and distracted are they by the trappings of power, they do not even see what Brody and Lamb see. “He’s the P. T. Barnum of the 21st century,” an anonymous banker in the book says of Donald Trump. These evangelical leaders have yet to realize that they are the suckers. 0507名無しより愛をこめて2018/04/19(木) 15:49:24.76ID:FYBvHpDn0 Brody and Lamb’s book highlights everything wrong with the morphing of American evangelicalism into a post-Jesus cult of personality looking for salvation delivered by politicians?including its hypocrisy and sophistry regarding Trump and morality. The authors quote one evangelical leader saying that evangelicals’ relationship with the president is authentic, not transactional. But a few chapters earlier, the same individual described a conference call he led with the Trump campaign’s evangelical advisers just after the release of the Access Hollywood tape in which Trump bragged about assaulting women. During that call, “all of us agreed to stand behind the candidate.” After all, Trump “had sacrificed his entire life, in my viewpoint, and supported us. How could we not support him?”
We can wink-wink at Trump’s misdeeds because he does good things for us. The authors actually write that “when assessing the faith of Donald Trump, the significance of the Neil Gorsuch nomination cannot be underestimated.” Really? That is essential to assessing Trump’s faith? More than his sexual proclivities and adulteries, which are barely touched upon in the book? In a few spots in the book, the authors blame American culture for Trump’s sexual ethics, and in one passage, they even find a way to implicate evangelicals in Trump’s sexual behavior. Follow the twisted logic: First, Brody and Lamb quote another biographer who says that “Clint Eastwood, James Bond, and Hugh Hefner” are the figures who dominate Trump’s self-image. Then we are told that Trump boasted about being a womanizer roughly around the same time that Pierce Brosnan’s first James Bond movie came out. And who do we have to thank for Bond’s having a place in Trump’s mind? “Americans?including evangelicals?fund these culture-shaping products with their book purchases and ticket sales.” So if you’ve ever seen a Bond movie, you’ve contributed to the culture that made Trump Trump.
More egregiously, in another passage the authors suggest that Trump’s rapacious libido is just his misguided quest for God. I wish I were kidding. The authors prominently quote a character from a 1944 Bruce Marshall novel: “I still prefer to believe that sex is a substitute for religion and that the young man who rings the bell at the brothel is unconsciously looking for God.” Brody and Lamb’s book was printed before the appearance of press reports about Trump having had sex with a porn star around the time his wife was giving birth to their son, but one gets the sense that the authors of The Faith of Donald Trump and the evangelical casuists they quote would have no trouble spinning that infidelity as something unimportant or, in a roundabout way, even admirable.
When not justifying or shifting blame for Trump’s sexual escapades, the authors turn to anonymous sources to assure us that Donald Trump’s heart is not bent on greed. “These off-the-record friendly interviewees sense that Trump’s ambition stems from a deep-rooted need to command respect.” It is certainly true that he enjoys receiving praise and respect?including from the book’s authors. One five-page chapter recounts a lunch at the Polo Bar in New York City with one of the authors (Brody), his wife, and Trump. George Lucas, Ralph Lauren, and Michael J. Fox all come to Trump’s table to genuflect. Trump then brags to Oprah that he is meeting with the Christian Broadcasting Network. The chapter ends. Time and again the authors boast about their access to Trump, giving away the game of just how Mean Girls evangelicalism has become.