The video owner has disabled playback on external websites.
This video is no longer available on YouTube.
This video cannot be played right now.
Watch on YouTube
ابزارهای یادگیری هوش مصنوعی را باز کنید
ثبتنام کنید تا به ابزارهای قدرتمندی دسترسی پیدا کنید که به شما کمک میکنند سریعتر از هر ویدیو یاد بگیرید.
Why the US government is always shutting down
آمار یادگیری
سطح CEFR
سختی
زیرنویسها (151 بخشها)
When a trash can gets full and there’s a government shutdown,
people don’t stop throwing stuff on top of it.
But I did manage to pick up a couple truckloads of trash before I was told:
“Don’t do it anymore.”
People were not even able to volunteer during the government shutdown.
"Stop the shutdown, stop the shutdown!"
The US is the only country in the world where the government can actually shut down.
And the threat looms nearly every year.
"Seven days until shut down—"
"Four days—"
"T-minus six days—"
"Five days—"
"Government shutdown at midnight tonight."
I just feel my gut in my chest - like, ugh, not again.
So, why does the US even shut down?
And what happens when it does?
“You travel 3,500 miles to America and find that they shut down!”
Every government in the world has to do the same thing:
decide how to spend the country’s money.
In the US, they do that by passing spending bills,
called appropriations bills,
that give these federal agencies their budgets.
It happens every year — or every fiscal year.
Japan is April 1st.
In Kenya, it's July 1st.
In the US, it’s October 1st.
And if the government misses that deadline...
The budget wasn't passed.
We have no money.
And then, "Oh, you have to come to work anyway."
Just not getting paid.
زیرنویس کامل در پخشکننده ویدیو موجود است
با تمرینها یاد بگیرید
تمرینهای واژگان، گرامر و درک مطلب از این ویدیو بسازید
نظرات (0)
برای نظر دادن وارد شویدثبتنام کن و همه امکانات رو باز کن
پیشرفتت رو دنبال کن، واژگان رو ذخیره کن و تمرین کن
حالت تعاملی
آزمون
پاسخ صحیح:
آزمون
پاسخ صحیح:
آزمونها هنگام تماشای ویدیو ظاهر میشوند
راهنمای حفظ
از این ویدیو
شروع رایگان یادگیری زبان