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PTDEiym1YaM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTDEiym1YaM | How to make the best KELEWELE - Spiced Fried Plantain || Ghanaian delicious Street Snack | hello guys welcome back so today we are going to prepare K let's start with with our ingredients we have rping plantain cayenne pepper onion garlic we also have ginger our spices are here we have African nut me we also have our gloves here and we have our anigo pepper these are peanuts this are s for seasoning so let's start cooking so let's start by blending our dry spices here next is our Cay peer we are come to blend it we added extra seed of cayne pepper so that our pepper will be hot we have our Blended dry spices here and there Ouray pepper and this our Ginger so we are grinding our [Music] Ginger so we have our chopped onion and garlic here so that's the next thing I'm adding to my grounded [Music] Ginger next is to add my salt because it's still salt I have to add it to the grounded H Ginger and onion before adding my dry spices [Music] so there my natural spices my [Music] powder as you can see I'm done with my k spices so the next thing is to wash my plant and then start choing [Music] [Laughter] [Music] it so I'm peeling my ring plantin then I chop it [Music] dream [Music] true now [Music] so um done cutting my ring plain to the shape that I want so next thing is to mix with my spices my grounded [Music] spices so I already added salt to my spicy so I'm not going to add salt to it again [Music] so I'm done mixing my rping planting with my spices the next is to cover it for 5 minutes before fying it so let's cover it and wait for some time [Music] so in my bowl I have fresh peanut I soaked it with warm water and salt I'm now coming to se out the water and wait for it to dry I'm going to try it that's what we'll be using to garnish our K with so let's see about the water so we have our [Music] trying [Music] normally this been eting with the K so I'm done frying my peanuts it's time to take it out from [Music] the [Music] it's time to fry [Music] our [Music] C is a popularly gan food made with fried planting seasoned with spices it is usually sold at Night by Street vendors [Music] true I hope you enjoy watching this video if you are returning subscriber I do appreciate you a lot and if you are new to this channelo you are warmly welcome try and subscribe to my [Music] channel [Music] we are done preparing our k please don't forget to comment like And subscribe to our Channel thank you bye-bye [Music] | Roginas Cocina | UC0L_bULWTpwQrXCWKq36wHQ | 2024-03-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 467 | 2,351 |
6Attk9y_new | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Attk9y_new | 12 (Little Horn 3) Discoveries from Ancient Civilizations | during this lecture we will look at a very interesting prophetic period of more than a thousand years you will also hear about the greatest crime in human history buckle up and may God bless you in a very unique manner in our lecture on the image of Daniel 2 we heard the good news that we've come to the end of a long night of struggle a righteous Kingdom will soon replace the cruel Nations and Christ will be the king in Daniel chapter 7 the nations of antiquity reappear in the form of vicious beasts a lion a bear and a leopard the prophet spends quite a considerable time when he describes the characteristics of the fourth Beast he Endeavors to get our attention focused on a little horn in our previous lecture we looked at five characteristics of this little horn number one he arose from the 10 horns in other words we can expect him to appear somewhere in Europe second point he only made his appearance after the others were established this is a very important time aspect only after the establishment of the nations of Western Europe would he make his appearance Point number three he uprooted three of the other horns or kingdoms there is only one power that did this and that was the power of the medieval Church Point Number Four The Prophet Daniel predicted that this little horn would be different than he was all the other European nations were political entities the medieval church was both religious and political Point number five a remarkable prediction is the fact that this little horn would be prominent history attests to this fact the church dominated Europe for many many centuries and now for the identifying marks number 6 through 10 Mark number 7 is found in Daniel 7:25 where it says he will speak against the most high while you're looking at St Peter's Square we must ask ourselves what is the meaning of speaking against the most high Revelation 13: 5 and 6 gives us the answer the Beast was given a mouth to utter proud words and blasphemies proud words and blasphemy are synonymous we call it Hebrew parallelism this is a serious accusation verse 6 he opened his mouth to blaspheme God the Beast of Revelation 13 possesses the same characteristics as the little Horn of Daniel chapter seven John gives us additional information that pertains to our day if you look carefully you will see the pope looking through the window with a red banner before we look at the Blasphemous papal utterances we must get the biblical definition of blasphemy John 10: 30-33 I and the father are one again the Jews picked up stones to Stone him but Jesus said to them I have shown you many great miracles from the father for which of these do you Stone me we are not stoning you for any of these replied the Jews but for blasphemy because you a mere man claim to be God now that is very clear when mortal man says he is like God who is the creator he blasphemes my God help us to be humble when you study egyptology you discover that the Egyptians also woried their pharaohs centuries later the same phenomenon occurred as ruler Worship in Rome but I was shocked when I discovered that the popes made similar claims the following statements are not to slander but to look at the accuracy of Bible prophecy in in 1439 the Council of Florance decreed we Define that the Roman pontiff is successor of blessed Peter Prince of the Apostles and the true Vicor of Christ this comes from the most holy councils page 526 nowhere in the world will you find an exhibition of art that compares to those in St Peters and the Vatican and nowhere in the world do you find such Blasphemous statements as here listen to this shocking statement we hold on this Earth the place of God almighty this comes from the great encyclical letters of Pope Leo I [Music] 13th while looking at this poor leopard child from Malawi we are reminded in Romans 3:21 that we have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God whether Pope or poper only Jesus can cleanse us this is St John Lan in Rome the seed of the papacy where the pope lies in state when he dies listen to the next statement this is surely a fulfillment of Bible prophecy given in Rome from our Palace the 10th of February 1817 the 14th jurisdiction of the most holy pontiff and the father in Christ and the Lord Our God the Pope Leo the 12th I'm standing in one of the confession cubicles in St Peter's did you know that blasphemy has yet another definition Luke 5: 20 and 21 when Jesus saw their faith he said friend your sins are forgiven the Pharisees and teachers of the law began thinking to themselves who is this fellow who speaks blasphemy who can forgive sins but God Alone Daniel 7:25 predicted that the little horn would speak great words against the most high in other words he would blaspheme does the papacy admit that it has the power to forgive sins the judicial Authority will even include the power to Pardon sin this comes from the Catholic encyclopedia volume 12 article under Pope page 265 the priest who waits for people to confess their sins is actually fulfilling Bible prophecy Acts 4:12 says salvation is found in no one else for there is no other name under Heaven given to Men by which we must be saved my heart bleeds for every sincere Catholic a church or a pope does not save us we are only saved by the merits of Jesus Christ who died for us Daniel 7:25 predicted that the seventh point of identification would be that of persecution he will persecute the Saints of the most high noted Catholic Thomas aquinus said that convicted Heretics should be put to death just as surely as other criminals because they were counterfeits Catholic Professor Alfred bodart says the Catholic church is a respector of conscious and Liberty nevertheless when confronted by heresy she has recourse to force to corporal punishment to torture she lit in Italy the funeral piles of the Inquisition this comes from the Catholic church inance and protestantism Pages 182 and 183 this is another sad fulfillment of Bible prophecy the eth identification Mark concerns the changing of God Eternal holy law now this is very [Music] shocking Daniel 7:25 says he shall think to change times and law I don't like to share this information but I will be guilty if I don't this is the main entrance to the Catholic church in the famous town of leids in France where daily Miracles are reported I watch the crowds of sincere people coming to find physical and spiritual healing many thoughts rushed through my mind as I saw them walking to the so-called holy cave for healing I thought of the terrible ignorance in the Christian church today do these worshippers realize that their Church changed God's holy law I had to take a picture of these two little innocent children at LS as long as they keep growing and learning their parents will be happy our heavenly father also expects us as his children to keep on growing in the knowledge of his word if you take a careful look at the Commandments in the Bible compared to the Catholic catechism you will notice that the second commandment is deleted and the 10th is divided into two the catechism reads question what is the second command answer the second commandment of God is Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain is this really what the second commandment says no it is always safe to check what the Bible says let me read it to you and you'll notice the difference Exodus 20: 4 and 5 you shall not make for yourself an idol in the form of anything You Shall Not Bow Down and Worship them I took this picture in Rome in a church called Maria arul where a wooden image is on display and here I saw with my own eyes how a room full of pilgrims bowed down and venerated or worshiped a little statue called bomin millions of people from all over the world come to St Peter to kiss the toe of Peter so they think why did the little horn scrap the second command which forbids this kind of worship because image worship was a common practice in the ancient world I took this picture at pompe not far from Rome this is a typical example of people having their Idols in their Courtyards you're looking at a nearly excavated home in herculanum next to pompier what do you see you see an image of an idol voices spoke through these statues similar to a modern seon the worship of these images degraded people this is constant arch in order to persuade pagans to join the Christian church he tolerated the worship of images so instead of worshiping the statue of Aphrodite they changed their name to that of Mary in a little museum at an Egyptian town called Mala I discovered these interesting graven images people worship them in ancient times here you have a mother and a child wapt in linen the mother mother's name is Isis and the child is called Horus when the church and paganism compromised they only changed the names of the mother and the child to Mary and Jesus the veneration of the graven images continued when I visited St Peters in Rome I was told that this statue represented Peter but is this really Peter no I subsequently learned that long before this statue was venerated as St Peter the Heathen World actually kissed away the toe of Jupiter the dis you see on top is connected to Sun worship whenever I watch these sincere worshippers my heart cries salvation cannot be found in pilgrimages to venerate images Jesus is the only one who can handle my sin problem 1 John 2:1 my dear children are right to you that you will not sin but if anybody does sin we have one who speaks to the father in our defense not the pope not the Saints not even Mary our friend and Advocate is Jesus Christ the righteous one there is another good reason why the second commandment was deleted it takes the focus away from Jesus our mediator and puts it on the church Dani iel 7 predicted that the little horn would tamper with God's holy law and this is exactly what happened this is another quote from a Catholic Source the pope can modify Divine Law Catholics say the pope has power to change times to abrigate laws and to dispense with all things even the precepts of Christ please pause a moment and ask yourself this question can a man change the words and teachings of Jesus can a sinful man change the precepts and laws given by a holy God when we read from the converts catechism of Catholic Doctrine we see how they altered the fourth Commandment question what are we commanded by the third commandment answer by the third commandment we are commanded to worship God in a special manner on Sunday the Lord's Day in Matthew 5:17 Jesus says think not that I'm come to destroy the law and the prophets I'm not come to destroy but to fulfill maybe you've read about Lo sea in the Book of Revelation the Lord says he has a problem with this church because it is lukewarm when this stream of thermal water leaves its source it is still hot but as it flows down the hills it cools down and forms beautiful crystals when I visited these beautiful white sediments my thoughts went back to ad 336 when the early church committed a very serious crime right here at L DEA the Builders of these water pipes used heavy insulation to maintain the temperature of the water but when it reached lyia it was lukewarm so typical of the spiritual condition of the people when John wrote his letter to them three centuries later the early church changed the fourth Commandment right here at Lysa this was the first in a series of four decrees to abolish God's holy Sabbath I'm quoting from the converts catechism of Holy Catholic Doctrine page 50 by Reverend Peter gaman question which is the Sabbath day answer Saturday is the Sabbath day question why do we observe Sunday instead of Saturday answer we observe Sunday instead of Saturday because the Catholic church in the Council of lysia transferred the solemnity from Saturday to Sunday Daniel told us through prophetic utterance he will speak against the most high and oppressive the Saints and try to change the set times and the laws the Saints will be handed over to him for a time times and half a Time Daniel 7:25 Catholics say the pope has power to change times to abrigate laws and to dispense with all things even the precepts of Christ before I left Loda I had a little talk with the Lord I asked him to help me never to change any of his Commandments I also ask him for divine power to make me an obedient child now we look at our next identifying Mark of the little horn power it is coupled to prophetic time let's read it Daniel 7:25 the Saints will be handed over to him for a time times and half a Time the word that is being used here for time is the Aramaic word idon which means a prophetic year consisting of 360 days this is our ninth identifying Mark there are some who think that because they are Christians nothing bad should happen to them but Jesus our example suffered and in love he for warned his followers that they would pass through persecution for 1,260 prophetic days let's do a quick review when in this prophetic context stood for what for war water stands for multitudes and beasts kingdoms now what about horns they also represent kingdoms what about time times and half a time should we take it as little or symbolic time in the Bible we find what is called the Year Day principle this means that whenever time appears in a prophetic context one prophetic day equals one literal year two examples will suffice numbers 14:34 and Ezekiel 4:6 each day for a year let's do some [Music] arithmetic time singular equals 1 year in the Jewish calendar A year had 360 days so time equals 360 days times is plural or two years we multiply 360 Days by two and you get 720 days half a time or half a year is 180 days if you add up all these days you get 1,260 days does this make sense now this comes from Daniel's prophecy so these are prophetic days therefore they become 1,260 literal years before Consulting the historians about the accuracy of the 1,260 day or year prophecy let us first look at the woman who fled Into the Wilderness in Revelation 12 in verse 6 John calls the period of persecution 1,200 60 days and then in verse 14 he speaks about time times and half a Time by means of this Hebrew parallelism the Bible interprets itself this prophetic time frame is so important that God tells us about it seven times we just looked at the first one in Daniel 7:25 let's look at the six others when they are described in Daniel and revelation Daniel 127 speaks of times time and half a Time Revelation 11: 2 speaks of 42 months Revelation 126 mentions 1,260 days Revelation 12:14 says time times and half a time and then Revelation 135 speaks of 42 months each time this 1,260 days is applied consistently to the papal persecution you see my dear friend because God loves every single human being he doesn't want us to miss out in order to discover the official beginning of the 1,260 years of papal domination we will have to consult the historians let's begin our research in istan buul in Turkey formerly the city was called Constantinople Constantinople was named after emperor Constantine who used to Reign here he was the builder of the beautiful haia Sophia which means holy wisdom and it was in the year 538 ad that he issued a decree in which he gave the pope power to discipline Heretics it was also in this year 538 that the last of the Three Kingdoms that opposed the church the Catholic Church the ostrogoths were uprooted this huge column near the Sultana met in Istanbul is of great historical importance it commemorates Emperor Constantine's decree to appoint the bishop of Rome as the official head of the church in 538 [Music] ad let's do a thorough investigation of this amazing 1,260 day or year prophecy by 476 ad the 10 kingdoms were established and 62 years later in 538 the bishop of Rome received official recognition let's add 1,260 years to 538 and we come to 1798 according to the prophecy of Daniel 725 the Pope's power had to come to an end any good encyclopedia tells you that the pope was captured in [Music] 1798 what an accurate fulfillment of Bible prophecy biria ended Rome on the 10th of February 1798 and proclaimed a republic half of Europe thought Napoleon's vet would be obeyed and that with the Pope the papacy was dead this comes from Modern papacy by Reverend rickerby Bible prophecy is amazing when the Great prophetic Clock Struck at the end of the 1,260 year prophecy the power of the papacy received a deadly wound I took this picture at Santa Scala in Rome what a pathetic sight many people despise these outcasts and pass by but they are precious in God's sight this Italian prostitute can no longer sell her body for Italian ler she has to beg in order to prolong her miserable life although discarded by Society she is still loved by God God loves every Pope who ever lived and he loves every Catholic in the world he loves the people but not the system he plad with this church for many centuries to repent of their false doctrines history tells the sad story how this Mighty Church kept on rejecting the light that came to her ever since her Inception what is God going to do to her Daniel 7:26 but the court will sit and his power will be taken away and be completely destroyed forever what a tragic end to A system that relies partly on Christ and partly on Good Works in order to be saved Sinners can only hope for eternal life when they lay their pride in the dust of humility and rely entirely on the merits of Jesus Christ to be saved you don't have to approach God through human instrumentalities in order to be forgiven of your sins you can approach God the Father through the merits of Jesus Christ directly and he will forgive you in this awesome Vision Daniel saw the courtroom of Heaven whom did he see sitting in judgment Daniel 7:9 and 10 as I looked Thrones were set in place and the Ancient of Days took his seat the court was seated and the books were opened before Jesus comes a second time he wants to remove even the record of his people's confessed sins he is just about ready to give us his reward of eternal life Matthew 16:27 for the son of man is going to come in his father's Glory with his angels and then he will reward each person according to what he has done have you confessed your unkindness have you confessed your greatest sin your inhumanity to people have you asked God to help you to be a little Kinder a little gentler if you have be assured that he's going to reward your Reliance upon him at the Holocaust Museum of yadvashem in Jerusalem I looked at the sorrowful results of a people who ignored the Prophecies of Daniel I was impressed by a message I read there it says forgetfulness leads to Exile while remembrance is the secret of redemption let us not forget the kind warnings of the the prophecies because it would lead us into Exile let us remember the kind warnings of the prophecies because it is the secret of redemption Daniel pictures the Glorious end of God's kind and obedient children he tells us in Daniel [Music] 7:18 but the Saints of the most high will receive the kingdom and will possess it forever yes forever and ever you know I like this forever and ever forever happy forever in the company of kind people forever in the presence of the lovely Jesus I want to be there what about you once we have learned what truth is we have a responsibility may God help you to accept what you have heard and share it with others but please do it in love let us pray Lord we stand amazed at the facts brought to us through history we realize how shrewd and subtle our enemy is and that he wishes to guide us on the wrong track please help us not to go astray but to follow the narrow road to your kingdom as you are the way the truth and the life may we distinctly hear your voice as you say this is the way follow me in Jesus name amen e | ItIsAboutGod | UCaBAwmf0uZeTYejbXpXV7VQ | 2011-10-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,669 | 19,845 |
DrA5TU97nAg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DrA5TU97nAg | Ryobi P305 (Glue gun) review | hey what's up welcome back to the channel in this really short video I'm going to review this Ryobi hot glue gun I got this about a month ago I've been using it my wife's been using it we've been you know doing crafts and stuff like that with as you can see it's battery powered it uses the Ryobi 18 volt what do they call it plus one batteries this happens to be the smallest I think you can get the 2 Amp Hour I'll go ahead and plug turn it uh plug the battery in and turn it on it does take a little while to get um heated and actually be usable so let me check what time it is okay it's 12 30 right now so let's see how long it takes to get this fully heated in the meantime let's check what the weight actually is looks like 29 ounces with the battery which is 823 grams so that's the one kind of drawback if you've used like a small cheap one that you plug in this is a lot bigger it's a lot bulkier it's a lot heavier you know the big Advantage is you just plug a battery into it you don't have to worry about the cord and we didn't like the other little one because you plug it in but it's so light itself it would just kind of fall over sometimes and make a mess or burn you this is like you can stand it up which is nice you can even lay it down you know it's pretty good but the one thing it doesn't improve on from those ones is once it starts flowing uh the glue it will drip you know unfortunately I was kind of hoping maybe they figured out something spending more money on this and by the way I want to say this cost 25 bucks or 20 bucks without the battery so yeah it does still drip so once it starts heating up you do need to put like a napkin or paper under it they didn't improve on that any one thing I should mention is the diameter of this glue stick is not the small one that you may be you might be used to this is the thicker one I'll put in the comments or description what one this is or maybe I can put a link in Amazon so you can get both this and the glue sticks but they are thicker the good thing about the thicker bigger glue sticks as we go through them uh slower maybe two or three times as much glue in them so you tend to go through them more slowly this did come with three two or three I think we're on our second or third one right now so they do last quite a bit longer the way to operate it is you know couldn't be more simple you just put the battery in you flip the switch on and when the red light is on it means it's on or Heating and then you just you know wait for it to heat up and uh looks like it's already starting to heat up but it does take a little longer to get fully hot and then of course once it's uh once it's heated you just pull the trigger like any other so I'm going to go ahead and pause it and come back when it's fully heated okay we're now at about four minutes and it starts starting to the glue is starting to melt you can see you can push it now but you shouldn't be warned it's still not fully heated and you can use it like this but it's not really too good you'll find that you have to squeeze really hard to get the glue out so it's almost there I'm going to give it like one more minute and I think we'll be ready okay we're now at six minutes and I think it's fully heated now one thing I should mention and it did smoke a little bit is that it does smoke you know so sometimes you'll see a little bit of smoke coming from the tip and that's we have the same thing with our other cheapy one too but uh yeah I mean I'll just give you a little demo of it of it working here on the snapkin as you can see you can get a lot of glue out with this one that was one see now there's some smoke coming that was one uh squeeze of the trigger so maybe I can demonstrate that again there you go so you get a lot of glue out of this one with these bigger sticks and this long throw on this trigger um yeah but that's pretty much it after about five six minutes it's fully heated and ready to use you know it's uh it's pretty good you can also do some finer work too I suppose let me see if I can demonstrate that just like some little little dots of glue you can do of course maybe not quite as fine as the small ones but you know that's a glue gun I think that's of all I think that's all I really have to say about it it's a good it's been a good product so far so far I'm happy with uh with it it does take of course a little while to cool down so even though I switch to switch off it's you know still hot and uh we'll take a you know another five plus minutes to cool down but yeah that's about it I'm happy with it we are using it we you know for what it's worth we haven't used our other ones since and I don't think we will it's just so easy to grab a battery stick it in and just go all right that's about it thanks everybody for watching see you in the next one | Bruce Chastain Reviews | UCfvDRDIEepWjU4574BDVNxw | 2023-02-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,020 | 4,837 |
8lS-kRSzCVg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8lS-kRSzCVg | Using a small LPG (Autogas) car to cut your carbon emissions [Superhome59 part 19] | my mop round this is of a super home fictional video this one was about transporting now this car looks like any other Twitter to a go it's black is the 2009 plate but it has been modified to run an author of gases LPG liquid petroleum gas it's very hard to spot the modification but I want to point out to you here is a device to feed lubricant to cinders we have here is a lubricant tank these two devices just beyond my fingernails are the actual injectors for the LPG so here we are in the driver's seat everything here is basically bog standard Toyota AYGO anything it's slightly different is this small black box here let's have a look at that on this device here is actually a push button here that swishes the LPG system on and off but it won't come on automatically because the gas is expanding it's going to get very cold and the engine will lock of a cold start so it's allowed to heat up on pixel so yes we have a petrol tank and an LPG fuel tank in the rear of the car right when it kicks over from pixel to LPG that light will go out and red light here will go on and the green lights will show health or the tank is right let's set off Omega switched over the green lights come on initially the only indication and I came on was the click switch to overtake his horse from showing four greens and after system initializes the small red light and now we're running on LPG notice absolutely nothing because it's exactly the same special we've been using LPG powered cars at super home 59 since 2005 this is our second the reasons are that it saves co2 about 16% over normal petrol the simple chemical makeup of auto gas ensures that it is clean burning the engine is quieter and lives for long anyone is in Auto gas Philip station and a petrol station we have noticed that it's half the price of petrol what we have here is a valve safer fluid as a valve lubricant is only required on the petrol engines converted to LPG to go out a bit of extra lubricants and all I have to do once a month is just to check the tank is full of nothing here it doesn't it doesn't use very much so just a little drop today in 2015 I can fill up my tank at a local supermarket for around 13 pounds our LPG tank is in the spare wheel will so how do we fill it up here's the regular petrol for a Toyota AYGO that's all completely is normal you fill that up at once it if for months what's really interesting is what's down there this is the filler cap before LPG this is actually a protective cover and pull it off it's held on what you have it's a circular Boehner cap as you can see this is a screw inside the thread but that's nothing to do a bit where you can see behind are the tool oaks for the bayonet cap and when you feel enough further the LPG stations use a bayonet caps connector that fits over this and twists to lock that produces a seal open to the valve and size and the bin then pit filled up with LPG so what we have underneath the car wait closely you can see the pipe that joins to fill a cap on the right to the bottom of the doughnut to put LPG tank in the spare wheel well to the left see how it enters the car just here and here's the point paying along here it's also another point that you can see over there and that goes to the engine there's also a small electric wire there that actually goes to the village age for the LPG the fuel tank is here in the looped Lance they're not section my finger shown you now is the fuel tank it's obviously the size of a spare tire and it's fitted into the spare tire well so what happens if you get a flat tire well something like this a hopes tire world emergency kit home kit will allow you to re-inflate the tire to get you to a garage so what are the economics of a car like this well I can get around 220 miles and fit it off for about 13 pounds obviously they're on their mission system that acts like an awesome shirt for under 200 pounds pretty comprehensive probably the mine is running costs at this so much lifetimes about 6:00 p.m. Isle so if you load this car with four people you're gonna get 23 grams of co2 per kilometer per person now a full transatlantic cruise ship or yield 1611 grams per kilometre per person short haul flying 300 long haul flying 200 motorbike 100 bus 90 and rail 60 so you could in theory argue the next is cycling and working this is probably the lowest form of carbon transport you can ride in today however that's simplistic as much as thing as an environmentally friendly car and their days are numbered normally I finished all my videos by saying in konkey house but today we talk about conquering your car transport really we shall be walking and taking more public transport do you like me you can't really do about a car then this is the next best thing a small ever driven car converted to Auto gas or LPG this has been a super in 59 video and a neutral one I hope you agree hope you learned something thank you for joining us de Bercy next time for next video in the meantime konkey house and computer | Low Energy Retrofit South Bucks - Superhome 59 | UCutRfRRP1TFvARSsb_f6dLw | 2015-07-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 986 | 5,009 |
M_tSFaeGG0M | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M_tSFaeGG0M | River Angels, by Rod Wellington | First off, thank you very much, everybody, for coming out. This is awesome. I love this space, the restaurant, the café here as well, very cool. I have been having great chats with people here tonight and it is really awesome just seeing the whole thing come about. When I came in, none of this stuff was set up and these guys have done a fantastic job in helping me set some stuff up here, and putting all this together, so yah, kudos to you guys. That’s awesome. To the organizers here, as well, Big Muddy speaker series. Thanks to Steve Schnarr who is in Columbia right now, Columbia, MO, for getting a hold of me and saying “Hey dude, want to do this?” and me saying, “Yah dude, I do!” And here I am. It’s pretty awesome. I’ve got a little thing over my ear over here, and a microphone, that I don’t know if you can all see. It’s one of those cool like Ted-X kind of microphones. I feel so sophisticated right now. It’s awesome. It’s like, I just want to do like some Britney Spears moves or something here, but they told me not to wander too far from the patio, so I can’t do like any, well, I can’t show off, actually I guess. But I came here tonight to talk about my books, talk about my publishing company which is called Crow Books, which I founded a couple years ago so I could publish all my books and hopefully in the future, publish some books by other people as well. I was talking to a gentleman tonight, Mike, who would like to put out a book of his travels in Mexico that he did years ago and he said one of the hardest things that he has done, is to get to the stage where he is comfortable enough with his book to try to publish it. So he is still in the draft stage, basically. I am well acquainted with the draft stage. I have been there many times myself. It feels like I have written ten books by now, but there are only two. But I’m proud of those two for sure. We were talking about the river. The river that runs right past Kansas City, the Missouri River, the Big Muddy you’re all well acquainted with it and I’m sure some of you have been on it, paddling as well. I was in Parkville last night, talking to a group there, a group of city officials and paddlers and we were talking about possibly putting paddlers’ camp, a place that long-distance paddlers could stop and overnight in Parkville, and I’d really like to see that happen. There is a great spot there, Platte’s Landing. There is a boat ramp, so it’s easy to get the boat out. If you’re in a kayak or a canoe, or on stand-up paddleboard, so be it. And there is a toilet there. There’s fresh water there. There is a road where they could walk into downtown if they wanted to get a burger or a beer or resupply, and they’re probably only going to be there overnight and then get back on the river. From doing long-distance travels on rivers, I know that research is really critical. The people do a lot of research before they do a trip, and they have an agenda. Almost all of them have a place to go back to. They have loved ones and friends that they want to see, so they have an agenda. They have an itinerary as well. So knowing that 50 miles downstream, they can stop, resupply, overnight, and then get back on the river next morning and continue on, and not have to worry about stopping in Kansas City. Because, I’ve gotta say, even though there are boat ramps in Kansas City and a number of parks, River Front Park, I think, is one of them…I didn’t, when I paddled through, I didn’t stop. I stopped at Kaw Point. I stayed with some people in Kansas City. We went back in the morning, I put my boat back in and continued on, and then paddled right through down probably another 30 miles and camped somewhere in a forest after that. And, I don’t recall seeing anywhere through the downtown Kansas City area where I would want to leave a boat for any length of time. So having something like that in Parkville would be awesome, to be able to leave your boat for an hour, go in town and then come back. That would be great. So I’d really like to see that happen, and I think last night, there was good discussion about it, and I think it is on the positive side. I think they are going to make the right decision in Parkville. In 2012, I paddled 2800 miles from the utmost source of the Missouri River, in the Centennial Mountains of southern Montana, close to the town of West Yellowstone actually, and started at a place called Brower Spring. I guess it’s not really a place, because there is no place name there—it’s just a little area that big where the water bubbles out of the mountainside, 8800 feet, 200 feet below the Continental Divide. When I was there, I climbed up and looked into Idaho. It was beautiful. So it was pretty cool to go all the way from the spine of the continent, all the way to the Gulf of Mexico. And along the way, I met a River Angel. I met people who helped long-distance paddlers. I didn’t know it at the time, but there was a whole network of people along the river who enjoy following along vicariously and also offering help, offering assistance, when paddlers come into their area. I was on Fort Peck Lake in eastern Montana, and I was in a dead zone for about ten days. I had no internet access; I had no cell phone access. Tom Bailey over here, he’s smiling, because he’s been through it as well. Tom paddled from Three Forks to the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 and I remember reading Tom’s blog that he put together as well, which was part of my research. So years later, I got to meet Tom and Tom’s developing into a fantastic guy—our friendship is developing, let’s say that. And being on Fort Peck Lake, it is very isolating. At times, it seems like I’m on another planet, I was on another planet or on the moon or something—just so different from what was upstream and what was downstream. I had no idea what was going on in the outside world, especially the Facebook world, because when I do stuff like this, I like to share my adventures, and I had been very adamant about keeping up to that point. Well, a friend of mine got a hold of me and said “The only way that we knew you were alive, was that your GPS tracker was still blinking. It was still showing that you were moving forward”. My spot tracker, as it’s called. So the spot tracker was an entertainment device for those people back home, because then they knew that I was alive. I couldn’t look at it. I couldn’t look at the page, but they could look at the page and find out where on the river I was anytime. They put out a wave point every ten minutes. So when I finally got down to Fort Peck Lake, to the dam at Fort Peck Lake, I had a Wi-Fi connection for the first time in 10 days and I was like, “Yah! There are going to be a lot of red numbers up on the corner there, the things that we like to see, that make us feel important”. And sure enough, there it was. As I scrolled through my news feed, there were people in boats, in canoes and kayaks and stand-up paddleboards, and I had no idea who they were. And I kept scrolling and scrolling and scrolling, and I scrolled some more, and then scrolling, and still, I didn’t know any of these people, but I’m thinking, “Wow, this is pretty cool.” How did they end up on my news feed? My sister had been monitoring my Facebook page, and people had been requesting, sending friend requests to her. It turns out that my friend-to-be, Norm Miller, had approached my sister and said “We know what Rod’s doing. We would like him to join our Facebook group page called Missouri River Paddlers”. And she said “Sure, where do I do that?” And so she signed me up. Here are a bunch of photos that he sent there—post those on there. So Norm got right on and posted all this stuff and all the sudden, all these people knew that I was coming downstream. So as I’m scrolling through all these things, I look and I go “wow, look at all the messages!” Messages from Waverly, Missouri, messages from Columbia, messages from Kansas City. “When you get to our area, you can stay at our place—we’ll host you. We’ll get you a meal. We’ll bring you a cold beer to the boat ramp. We’ll give you a pat on the back. We’re here for you”. These people, as I found out, were river angels. They are people who wanted to help out. They are long-distance paddlers, some of them, themselves. So it was quite astonishing that now, there were so many more people interested in my trip. And being a writer, each one of these people had a cool story to tell as well, and what they told me, that they had overcome during their journeys as well, and some of them were amazing. All of them, I should say, are amazing. So I went back a year later, after I finished my expedition, after I got to the Gulf of Mexico and swam in the salty water and did my little dance, just like this, maybe a little more movement, but I cannot move too much because I’ve got this thing on my ear and this cord hanging by my butt. But anyways, I went back in December of 2014 and interviewed all of these people who helped me out. I did 22 interviews in 15 days. It was exhausting but it was lots of fun. I had tons of material. So I started putting that material into a series of books about River Angels and about my travels, and weaving all of those stories together. So this is the first of what will be four books, actually, of river journeys and stories from people who have overcome amazing, amazing things, the most difficult things, the heart breaking things—cancer. A woman, a friend of mine in Jackson, Mississippi, breast cancer diagnosed at age 33. She is a mother with three young girls. The doctor said, “You’ll never paddle again, because you won’t be able to hold the paddle over your head.” Months later, she was competing in a race, Battle of the Bayou, in southern, Mississippi. She won the race. Her kids competed in the kids’ version. They won the race. She said, “I’m going to creat my own race in Jackson”, so she did. She won the race. Now she doesn’t compete, she just organizes, but her kids—she also organizes a kid version of it too, which is pretty cool. It’s called the Gator Bait Race, which is perfect for that area. They do have alligators where they do the race. It’s pretty awesome. So I love telling her story and I look forward to weaving her story into mine, and then numerous other stories too. Paddlers are really amazing people. They are tenacious, they are persistent. They are egocentric at times, which I can totally relate to. They like to be the center of attention sometimes, but sometimes they are really humble too. So, they’re friends. I call them friends. And River Angels takes on a lot of different definitions as well. So the people who are helping put something together in Parkville, those people are River Angels. People who are here because they’re concerned about the river and the health of the river. Those people to me are River Angels. The people who helped out the paddlers during the MR-340. Those are River Angels. And we have some of those in the audience tonight. So, and the people who paddled the MR-340 for that matter, are River Angels, because they’re all ambassadors, too, who go out and talk about how cool it was…how cool it was to paddle at night on the Missouri River, and how safe they felt, if they weren’t hallucinating, and how for many of them, that was the best part of the race for them. So, meeting these people has enhanced my life. It has given me tons of material to talk about and to write about, and I am forever grateful for that, definitely. So what I’m going to do tonight, is I’m going to read a couple excerpts from these books, “River Angels”, which is my second book, and also “Part-Time Superheroes, Full-Time Friends”, which is my first book, and a little bit about this book---in 2001, I went down the Mississippi River, from source to sea, with an old friend of mine. His name is Scott McFarlane. And I kind of wish that Scott was here tonight, because he would be sitting in the front row heckling me, because he’s really good at that and he really enjoys that, and he would stand up and say, “Well, you know, that story that Rod just told, or that excerpt from the book that Rod just read? It was sort of like that, but not really, and I’ve got a different version and I’m going to tell it to you right now.” And I know that, because I’ve invited Scott to a few of these events and he loves to get up and be center stage and I love to just let him get up and be center stage. He’s just—he’s the guy, that when I said “Hey, if anybody ever makes a movie about this book, who do you want to play you? I’m thinking, like Brad Pitt. I’m thinking Brad Pitt man, because you’re a handsome guy Scott, and Brad Pitt is a handsome guy—he’d make a great fit.” And he said “Pffft." The only person who can play me is me.” That is Scott. So there’s enough of Scott in this book and there is enough of Scott in my life, to fill several volumes, for sure. But so much so—and I love the guy—love him like a brother—so much so, that I decided to write a book about our friendship. A real tribute to our friendship, and create two superhero characters as well, to really mock our egos, because our egos definitely needed marking, and talk about our journeys, going down the Mississippi River from source to sea, and then in the same summer, ending up at the Burning Man Festival in Nevada. So we went right from the gulf, right over to an arts festival in the desert, wearing the same handmade loin cloth and sandals and the cutoff coveralls that I bought for $10 in New Westminster B.C. and put a little name patch on it that said “Jim”, which was my superhero character. It was also our characters that we played, at Burning Man. So, lots of fun. We did that on the river. We rehearsed a lot on the river for what we were going to do at Burning Man, so it was a hoot. It was a hoot. It was summer, for sure. So what I did with this book is I leapfrogged the chapters. I talked about Scott and I in first person, and then for the superhero characters, I did it all in narration. So basically, I stepped back and talked about these two superhero characters named “Action Man and Jim”. I’m the skinny one, Scott is the buff one. I’m the sidekick. Always the sidekick with Scott, for sure. So I’m the Robin to his batman. I am the cheetah, I guess, to his Tarzan. So, lots of good stuff in this book. Lots of funny stories and lots of stuff that Scott would heckle me about endlessly, if he was sitting in the front row. Again, I would really like to put him along on a book tour like this, because it’s just—the chemistry between us, is so funny, and the audience seems to just love it. “Let’s watch these two guys rip each other apart—this is awesome”. So, I’m going to read a little bit from this book. This is a short excerpt. We were in a canoe. It was a $250 canoe that we bought off an outfitter close to Lake Itasca which is the source of the Mississippi River in northern Minnesota. We bought it for $250 and the next day we sold it. We hadn’t even used it yet. We sold it to the outfitter’s brother who lived in Saint Paul. He said “When you guys are finished with it, if it’s in good shape, I’ll buy it from you.” Awesome. So that whole part of the trip wasn’t going to cost us a dime. We just had to get this aluminum canoe to 500 miles downstream in good shape and sell it to the guy. We eventually did that, which was pretty cool. So, I would always try to get Scott’s goat because we had this lovely chemistry together, and I didn’t really like paddling a canoe all that much. It was not really my idea to use a canoe. It was actually my idea to take like a cheap inflatable, $100 inflatable boat, or maybe a zodiac. A zodiac would be cool, let’s take a zodiac, Scott. I like saying zodiac. Let’s use a zodiac, Scott. And let’s get a motor for it. And let’s put lots of gas on it and let’s carry it around 15 dams above the Twin Cities. Yah, that sounds like a lot of fun. Scott said, “No, let’s just get a canoe for $250”. So I didn’t get my zodiac, and I had to sit in a canoe and do this for 500 miles, instead of doing this, which I wanted to write in my journal. “Scott, how about you sit behind me and do this for 500 miles? I’ll do this, and I’ll write an awesome book. It’ll be great.” And he said “Ha, that’s not going to happen. You’re going to be doing this. We’re both going to be doing this.” So that’s what we did. So I wasn’t the happiest person, on my self-propelled journey that I really didn’t want, and I didn’t get my zodiac. I didn’t get to say zodiac every day. So I would blow up from time to time, and this excerpt is the morning after a blowup. Scott, who I thought was making my trip worse, was actually the glue that was holding it together. He’s the guy who didn’t say anything when Rod, little Rodney was whining, picking broken beer bottles out of the sand before he set up his tent…boo-hoo-hoo. He just sat over there and was quiet, just like the river. Many years later, I realized that he was the rock on that trip and I was the one who was spinning out of control. And I thanked him for that when I wrote this book. With my volatility well slept off, we launched the canoe into yet another overheated morning. The city of Saint Cloud was a short five-mile paddle downstream and we resolved to find some cool refreshments there. Still a bit numb from the night before, but comfortable in the bow away from the space of Scott, the sudden sound of whitewater caught me completely off guard as we rounded a bend. “Rapids”, I yelled in near panic. I turned to see Scott’s very serious face looking back at me. “Run it,” he yelled. Standing waves gnashed at our thrashing panels and as the aluminum hull bonked off unseen boulders, “Hard left, Roddy,” shouted Scott. “Hard!” We plunged into a giant white wave, splitting it in two, and drenching ourselves in the process. As the muddy water drained from my face, I coursed my eyes open and saw a huge boulder directly in our path. I braced my legs for impact and felt Scott lean and dig in with his paddle. The canoe glanced off the boulder and fell headlong into a menacing pit of madly-circulating water. “Hard right!” yelled Scott from the rear. “Dig!” Overcoming a fear that nearly froze me immobile, I thrust the paddle deep into the frothy hole and watched the canoe shot crazily sideways, bouncing to a calm eddy near the shore. “What was that?” shouted Scott. “Suke rapids” I replied, turning back to look at him. The map said “scout before proceeding”. We laughed hard and high-fived each other with our paddles. “Forget the cold drinks Roddy,” said Scott with a chuckle. “I need to change my underwear”. So Scott and I went on to have some fun adventures, and other adventures as well—road trips across the U.S. and road trips across Canada. We lived in Vancouver, British Columbia for 20 years, and as luck would have it, we settled in our old hometown of Chatham, Ontario, Canada, where I lived for the first 20 years of my life and where he lived for the first 20 years of his life. He met a lovely woman, named Adori. They have two children. They live in Chatham. He has a much different life now than he did in 2001. But, he cherishes his memories of the river and of Burning Man as well. So the book looks at our friendship and brings it all up to date at the end. He gets married—I buy a kayak. Hence, this book. This one segways right into this one. And I start meeting people that I, five years ago, never thought I would meet paddlers. I was a cyclist. I enjoyed riding across continents on my bicycle. In 2005, I road from Vancouver, British Columbia, to Alaska, all the way to the Arctic Ocean and went for a swim in the Arctic Ocean and it was very cold, I might add. But I’ve also ridden a bicycle across Australia from the most westerly point to the most easterly point, 5100 miles, and across North America from Vancouver to the far side of Newfoundland, 5200 miles altogether. And those experiences really bolstered my self esteem, which was lacking as a kid. So, meeting people who I could relate to on a bike was difficult. But when I got on the river, I started to meet people all the time. I never would have thought of that, thanks to my sister, and all those friend requests on Fort Peck Lake in 2012. So, 2012 was a very busy year for me and for my adventuring friends. I was invited to take part in an eight-day, 105 mile descent of the Wolf River, in northern Mississippi and Tennessee. If you’ve ever been to Memphis, the Wolf River empties into the Mississippi River at Mud Island, at the foot, close to Beal Street, the foot of Beal Street. So, my friend, Dale Sanders, who is 81 this year—he’s the oldest person this year to compete in the MR-340 and finish it. He walked away with a medal. He was on a standup paddle board with his friend, Jericho LaForte and Shane Perrin, on a hand-built 18 foot paddleboard that was like, I don’t know how wide it was—52 inches wide, or something. It was quite a mammoth. It was a standup paddle barge, I think, is what they called it. It was pretty awesome. He paddled all 340 miles at 81 years old, and that would seem like a huge thing, and it was a huge thing, except that the year before, he paddled the entire length of the Mississippi River at 80 years old, in a solo canoe as well, all the way from Lake Itasca to the Gulf of Mexico, and he did it in 80 days. And not only that, he met every itinerary stop for media because he was raising money for juvenile diabetes, and he raised over $23,000. He did a lot of media interviews along the way and said “I’ll be at this boat ramp, at this port, at this time”, and he met every single one. And I love that. I love that part of the journey, because I know how difficult it is to do that, not always show up, or show up, and the media is not there. And they never show up. Well, sometimes they show up. So, it’s pretty cool that he was able to do that and pull it all off. I was at the gulf to take pictures of him when he finished on what’s called The Last Beach, below Venice, Louisiana. It is pretty cool to be there with almost 30 other people on three boats—three motorized boats—one of them was a shrimp boat as well, which was pretty cool. First time on a shrimp boat for me. And to be there when my friend finished his journey. You’ll see some business cards that I have here. And the thin card has a photo of me that was taken by Dale on The Last Beach. He was there when I finished my journey in early 2013. So, Dale asked me to join him for this eight-day expedition. I said yes. A friend of mine, Dave Cornthwaite, who is quite an adventurer himself—he’s from England. He has a project called “Expedition 1000”, 25 journeys, self-propelled journeys, using non-motorized methods of transportation and each one is more than 1000 miles in length. Dave has skate-boarded across the Australian continent. First time anybody ever did that. He stood up paddle boarded the entire length of the Mississippi River from source to sea, in 2011. He has also swam 1000 miles of the lower Missouri River, something that nobody has ever done before, and coming through this area—through Kansas City, yah, it smells a little bit. Smells a little bit more when you’re getting it right in your eyes, right in your mouth and right in your nose. It was quite a journey for him. And I love to tell the story of when he was swimming and dealing with an upset stomach and he would vomit then swim through his vomit. That just really encapsulates the whole journey for him—swimming through your own vomit and finishing. There’s the race, right there. So I was there at the Arch when he finished his 1000 mile swim, after he lost 30 pounds or whatever it was, on his thin frame anyways. And I gave him a big hug and said “congratulations”. Earlier that year, he was in Memphis. Earlier, just before that, he said “Hey, I’ve been given a four-wheeled bicycle. It looks like a car without a car body. It’s got two drive trains and two seats, and a steering mechanism of sorts. Can you help me get it from Eugene, Oregon, to Memphis, Tennessee, because I want to ride it 1000 miles from Memphis to Miami.” And I said, “That’s the craziest idea I’ve ever heard. Sure I can do that!” So it was my job to get it across the country. All of that, and how I did that, which ended up being far more difficult than I ever imagined, is in this book. And Dave, who likes to say “yes”…he’s a “yes man”. He started a project called “Say Yes More”. He also said yes to Dale Sanders’ request to join in on the Wolf River descent, eight days, which sounded easy to both of us. And I have communication with Dave, and it was like, “Dude, all we need to do is like, show up. We are going to have topo maps, we’re going to have GPS. These guys have got all the coordinates. Easy man. It’s not going to take us eight days to paddle 105 miles, that’s crazy!” What we did not know is that we would be going through snake-infested swamps for the first three days. We would also be on standup paddle boards, which, for some reason, I said “Yes, I’ll do that”, even though I’ve never been on a standup paddle board. I’ll paddle a standup paddle board. So, they go the standup paddle boards, we showed up. So did the snakes. We ended up not paddling those paddle boards too much because we were pulling them through the swamp for the first three days. So, what I’m going to do…oh look at that. I forgot that we put that up there. I’m going to show some footage. This footage here was taken on day 3. This is a film that was put together by a friend of mine, a filmmaker in Memphis. His name is Chris Rays. You will see, LFM—Live From Memphis. He used to run an entertainment guide in Memphis, in 2012. It is now defunct unfortunately. He has moved on to other projects. He does a lot of work with the city there, which is pretty cool. And he put together this cool little go-pro video. He was in this 18 foot monstrous canoe with his friend, Phillip Beasley, behind him, another musician, and these guys were paddling through—he had the go-pro mounted on the front, and he had like this $20,000 camera that he was taking all this amazing footage with. And unfortunately, I do not have that footage here tonight, but it is a 40 minute edit, so I didn’t want to show that anyways, but it is very cool. We get to see this. I put together this little tribute to Day 3, of the 8 days. So we are going to look at this. These guys had a tough Day 3, because they were drinking all night. Chris came out—that was Chris there with the cool hat—Chris Rays came out, Phillip Beasley, John Henry—they came out in a 4 x 4 to meet us at what’s called Pipeline #5. I think there are probably five people that that mean anything to, but that’s where we camped, at Pipeline #5. And they brought lots of beer with them, and like an amazing assortment of food, which they then proceeded to cook over the fire. It was incredible. So in the morning, the guy came back with a 4 x 4, took all of our gear, all of our camping equipment, but not the beer--left the beer—and went away. And basically, we were left without any gear. And the object there was to paddle downstream to where the gear was, which was all in John Henry’s truck, at a bridge, actually, the first major bridge on the river, which is called the New 72 bridge. And that would mean the same to the same five people. But that was our goal for the day, and it wasn’t far. Like we probably only had to paddle maybe 12 miles or something like that. But we got a late start. Dale, the ever diligent Navy man, wanted to start at 7:30 in the morning. Oh—Brenda laughed. That’s funny. She knows Dale. She crewed for Dale on the MR-340. Dale is an interesting guy for sure, and he just loves to get up and go. But that day, he didn’t go anywhere, because we didn’t get on the river until 11 a.m. So Dale just stewed for a few hours, and I had to hear about it. We finally got on the river. We went through a whole bunch of crazy stuff. There is stuff right at the end—when you see Chris at the end, it’s like “Oh…” and his expletive there that he slowed down. That was getting into the tough part of the day, and the tough part was still to come. There was three-quarters of a mile at the end of that day that was just brutal. Unmaintained debris that had just piled up for years, and it was John Henry’s idea to take us all through it…to finish strong. “Let’s finish strong today. Let’s drink lots of beer and finish strong”. A zodiac might have been a good thing to have there. The comic relief of me saying zodiac. There was no comic relief on this day. It was a very difficult day, and it was only Day 3. We still had five more days of this stuff to do, and it didn’t get a lot easier. All of those eight days get examined in this book. Supas. Day 3. April 9, 2012 and it was Easter Monday. John Henry withdrew his wooden canal panel from the river and laid it dripping atop one of the crafts thwarts. He heaved a heavy sigh, braced his boots against the bottom of the hull and stood straight up in one sinuous motion. Suddenly, he was the tallest thing in the swamp. He lifted both hands to his brow and shielded his eyes from the glaring sun, as he scanned the slew for a navigable channel. “I’m looking for movin’ water”, he says. Earlier in the day, while perched in the same statuesque stance, “I’m looking for movin’ water”. Somehow he found it then, and I had no doubt that he would find it now. John’s good at locating a current, I thought, but he’s not too good at keeping it. I looked over at Dale. His canoe was empty except for an expensive camera, a snack bag and a jug of water. His camping gear, like mine, was locked in the bed of John Henry’s truck. Five miles downstream at the Highway 72 bridge. If we didn’t reach the bridge by sundown, we’d be sleeping in our boats in the middle of the snake-infested swamp. Dale wasn’t scouting and standing. He was twitching in his seat, like an impatient toddler in a shopping cart. He wiggled and wriggled and jiggled and squirmed. He fretted and fussed and tossed and turned. And I thought he would leap clean free of the boat and dance ‘cross the lily pads like a gravity-less goat. But stay in his seat, he did, against choice, and pursed his lips purple, and silenced his voice. His anger was evidence. His confidence irked. And beneath his white hair, insanity lurked. I hoped not to see it, hoped not he’d show, how volatile and malicious or low, he could go. He’d voiced it before in spurts on Day 2, when John Henry was absent from this hullaballoo. But now John was near, within eye shot, within ear, within uncomfortable range that filled Dale with a fear so irrational, so silly, so crazy, so true, that is spread wide ‘crossed his face like a cancerous hue. A blackened shade, a darkness made, from antiquated thoughts and redundant beliefs that festered in a mind saturated with grief. ‘Tis in my nature to counsel, to guide. ‘Tis in my nature, to cower, to hide. ‘Tis in my nature, to love to support. ‘Tis in my nature, to abandon, to abort. ‘Tis in my nature to leave the wolf pack, to stumble ever onward and never look back. But look back I do, and sometimes I stare long and wish for forgiveness for loving, for friends staid and strong, who voice their displeasure with respect and esteem, who cast off their burdens and admit they were wrong. Surely, think I, there can be such apt closure, such wounds healed from truth, and truthful exposure. A venomous behavior that no longer favors the goodness of all those who partake in the complicated crossing of a shallow dank lake, that lies in a remote corner of an American state, in the middle of nowhere, nowhere exists. And with nowhere come questions, and wringing of wrists, and when wrists have been wrung and skin sloughed away, marrow and morrow will cease to decay. A new hope will spring from a font once kept shrouded and a new path will arise, uncluttered, uncrowded. Surely, thinks I, a canoe statue man, with a ginger goatee, who stands here before us like a young cypress tree. We’ll find moving water and set us all free. This way, shouted John Henry, pointing off to his right. His gaze led to a tangled row of cypress trees that towered over the swamp. “Follow me”. Dale looked unsure. Doubt furrowed his forehead and crinkled the dangling grey moustaches that doubled as eyebrows, on a 76-year-old face. It was a face that had weathered more storms than the rest of our group had seen collectively. Based simply on longevity, Dale trumped us all when it came to experiences on life and on water. He was a river guide, used to leading groups on the Wolf, but now he was being led, something he secretly hated. His anger had been brewing all day, all week, all month. In a split second before John perched himself back on his canoe and began paddling toward the towering cypresses, I carefully watched Dale’s wrinkled face for a telltale reaction. There it was. The headshake of disagreement, followed quickly by the scowl of impatience and the glare of resentment. He was a silent, seething mess. He was relinquishing power. He was following the leader. He was also following the only person among us who had paddled this section of the Wolf. John guided us down a twisting corridor of cypress trees, their grey/brown trunks rooted well below the water line. The rivers rippled surface parted clearly around each tree as the channel flowed under our boats. Fallen trees blocked the route on numerous occasions and we found ourselves atop them, hauling our paddle boards and canoes over the trees and back into the stream. It was tedious work. Finally, we reached what appeared to be an impasse. The forest had pinched us tightly into a corner. John left his craft and scouted the area ahead for an opening and he returned several minutes later with the news. “It’s a dead end. No way through”, he said as he climbed in his canoe. “We have to go back”. So what I’m going to show now is a film that was put together in like, three hours. I don’t know how he did it. He’s good at that. It’s Dave Cornthwaite’s film—that guy right there. He’s from England. He likes to interrupt me sometimes. He was there. He showed up on Day 4, actually at the end of Day 3. He was stuck—this will be fun to tell--he was stuck in an air-conditioned airport in Hawaii, because he had just sailed 1000 miles, actually it was a little more than 1000 miles—he had sailed on a 70 foot yacht from Mexico to Hawaii as part of his big project. I think he had it kind of cush for a few weeks on the boat, although they put him to work for sure. But he wanted to be there with us, right from the source of the Wolf, all the way to its mouth, but he missed the first three days. So he showed up right at the end. Still daylight in this video. We didn’t get there until after dark. The end of the video before, we were on our way to here. So those three-quarters of a mile that were really tough, are just out of sight. In the shadows, you see those trees back in there? That’s where all the fun is. Dave was out here looking like he just stepped off—well, I don’t know—he hadn’t shaved for a while. But he had it easy for a few weeks, I’ll tell you that. But as you’ll see, he had his challenges as well. He put this together in three hours. It turned out really good. He has made over 200 short films. He is doing great. Standup guy, hard worker. He is an adventurer, author, speaker, and he is doing some amazing work, bringing positivity and adventure into the lives of a lot of people, so kudos to him. Let’s roll this. It’s April 9, 2012, and it’s time for another adventure. Usually when I start paddling along the river, it’s from the very source, but this time, unfortunately, that is not the case. Last week, I finished sailing across the Pacific with the crew of Sea Dragon, and now, I’m very close to Memphis in Tennessee and about to put in underneath the beautiful Highway 72. For three days, I tried in vain, to fly out of Honolulu. In the meantime, a trusty group of friends had already begun their descent of the Wolf River, from Baker’s Pond, Mississippi. “First time on a standup paddle board, here at Baker’s Pond. Wish us luck, because we’re going to need it” As I reclined in an airport seat several thousand miles away, Jonathan Brown, Dale Sanders and Rod Wellington, along with a few other sectioned paddlers, were dragging their standup paddle boards and canoes through thick, muddy swamp. Their short communications out of the bush had suggested it would be both their first and last time through that terrain. “Are you here yet?” Through all the warnings about hot days, cold nights, mosquitoes, fallen trees, cypress knees and poison snakes, I was sad to have missed the challenges of the upper 18 miles, as I trudged the highway bridge, waiting patiently for our gallant paddlers to transpire from the undergrowth. The squished blue runner brought me back to reality. Just as this venomous snake had tragically failed to negotiate a manmade route, I was about to joint a journey through a habitat not designed for humans. “Log after log, dragging through mud. It was really difficult. I paddled on ahead because I fell in, got wet and started getting chills, so I had to move”. “Oh, this is my aqua pack bag”. “Now the thing is, I paddled from there to LeGrange”. “Here we go. Give me the wave, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you!” Pulling our paddle boards up over logs and wading through swamps, critical.” “We’re going to go back around here and maybe jump on that line there, and you can see that as you’re looking at my I-Pad inside this beautiful aqua pack” “The king of subtle advertising—Jonathan Brown there everybody.” “You’re looking comfortable back down there.” “It’s been good today. I’ve enjoyed it. It was fun. It was long. And I am tired”. “Jamie put all this together. It was his idea in the first place. This man is amazing. This man is incredible.” How old are you now, 105?” “Getting close to it. My birthday, I’ll be 78.” “Seventy- eight? And when’s your birthday?” “You know what—I forgot!” “Those of you who watched the Mississippi videos from last year’s expedition will remember that Dale is not retired, he’s retarded. And he’s been playing around with cotton mouth’s today, snakes. Poisonous snakes on his paddle—very naughty”. “Jonathan, what do you think, am I going to put it on your board?” “Yes, I’m the one guy that hasn’t fallen in, so you throw a snake on my board?” “So Rod’s from Canada, adventurer extraordinaire. How are you feeling buddy? You’ve done all four days so far? A little sleepy?” “Yes, I’m tired today, and a little grumpy. I’ve been grumpy every day, actually, and everybody here has been tolerating my grumpy mood for the last four days, and he’s laughing, but I’m not. It’s challenging. We’ve had our fair share of challenges again today, but we’re pushing through it and we found this beautiful little sandbar here to camp on tonight so, yah.” “And Dale, he’s unstoppable. Thanks buddy. Hey, it’s been hard today, but I think the challenge has been worth all the beauty that we’ve experienced, and this sandbar that we’ve found is probably the biggest and one of the only sandbars we’ve seen all day, so we’ve been pretty lucky. The end of another day on another river. The fire is burning. Am I looking after this? This is beautiful. Time for food.” It’s hard to beat the feeling of waking up on a sandbar in early morning, however cold it is, and getting out on the water, especially on a standup paddle board. It is Day 2 on the Wolf. These are the kinds of conditions we have had to encounter time and time again, although this is probably the easiest portage of the entire lot so far, just a simple tree trunk. J.B. had a hand at this as you can see, with his little five-finger feat, makes it look like something out of Africa. How are you doing over there buddy? Whether the camera is pointed at J.B., he’s incapable of acting like a normal human being. laughter.” The mayor of LeGrange has come out to see us. My old friend, Tom is here. My brother and I stayed with Tom last year. Hi buddy—hello, hello. Now the funny thing is, Tom has brought his canoe. Look how clean it is compared to the rest of ours. It is a perfectly clean canoe. Look at that. Oh, by the way, we’ve traveled further in the first hour and a half today than we did the entire morning yesterday.” “We’ll see about harvesting this hollow log. How cool was that?” “You may have noticed the water running off up through there, and it runs off into the section we call the famed ghost section of the Wolf River.” “We’re in quite a fast-flowing technical section, dodging all of these trees and stuff. My paddle boat has become wedged under an enormous fallen log. J.B.’s rope is stuck. He just came around this corner and that is wrapped around another log, so we’re in a slight predicament. Luckily, we’re first in the line of paddlers today. If we don’t get through this, we’re going to cause a log jam.” “Excellent. You did well. That’s going to be cool, right there.” There is Dave Cornthwaite’s website if you want to check it out. There is lots of cool stuff there, and more of his films and links to his films as well. Please, if you get a chance, if you only watch one other Dave Cornthwaite film, or a film about Dave Cornthwaite, make it “Swim 1000”, the journey that he did—the swim that he did on the Missouri River here, an awesome film, done by his friend from Florida, Miguel Andruro, a great filmmaker. He is doing some pretty cool stuff for sure, and he does some amazing art, including a piece that was sold to J.J. Abrams, pretty awesome, and the little film that he made for that piece of art, has been viewed over 8 million times on Vimeo. So, some pretty amazing people involved in this project and the project in 2012. So, a lot of that stuff gets discussed in River Angels. So, I’m gonna wrap this up and I’ll take some questions. Ask me about expeditions if you want, or self publishing questions, if you’re interested in that. And we’ll do that. Any questions? | kcdigitalvideo | UCsDAWZ7ShqvvzROh1fZ-5wA | 2016-11-13 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,924 | 42,152 |
M4W-PRDmb34 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M4W-PRDmb34 | THE CRAZIEST WAGONTRAIN IN THE WEST #Forrest Tucker #Bob Denver #FUNNIEST WESTERN MOVIE | [Music] dust is the reason for their flight thanks to Dusty nothing's right only the wagon Master's Hand keeps on my rolling to the promised land all the dawn gets Mighty rough but they don't seem to mind it's California a that's the place they must find deserts and rocks are in their way but they won't stop come what may mountains and Hills that they must scale but they know they'll make it cause they just can't fail on Dusty's prayer but we're ready to move out Dusty you've got everything straight yes sir Mr Callahan you've been right ahead to scout the trail and where do you mean about a mile behind right and don't worry about a thing I got everything under control good welcome home please [Music] I will be getting to start as soon as Dr gets his team hitched up to the stage already had them hitched yeah so did he oh Andy yeah Miss Callahan you'll be sure and keep that wagon close to the stage on the trail today we have to run into some hackamas hackamas yeah Indians the hakimas are the most hostile and fierce of all the Indians doesn't that make you nervous not Lulu well match my warpaint against their war paint anytime well now that's how it should have been done the first time dusty yes sir well now a few people get in we'll get started I thought I made it perfectly clear that you ought to handle the stage coach and Dusty can do the scouting oh boy I'm the wagon master so I will make the decisions may I remind you they have just discovered gold in the California territory I must get there as quickly as possible to open a Western Branch by Bank Harmony bank shumon doesn't mean a thing to me I also own the company which owns this Wagon Train that means something to me well if that's the way you want it Dusty you're going to ride Scout oh wow I always wanted to ride Scout [Applause] wait a minute Dusty fix the stir up for you okay we'll show him [Music] oh thanks Dusty for what Mr Callahan for not wearing spurs oh yeah [Music] Chicago [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] oh my gosh [Music] oh yeah bye-bye yep what happened Dusty well I got there just in time he was being mauled by a bear what's happened now he's just a boy yeah hakimo Indian well I couldn't leave him there he might have died his tribe would have found him Buzzard brain now they'll find us yeah the hakamas are noted for their tracking ability they are Lulu and I better take care of his wounds yeah Andy good idea but we can drop him off where Dusty found him should I water your horse Mr Callahan oh boy that was a smart thing to do don't you know that those hackamas might could be looking for him right now yeah well at least you covered your Trail huh Lola Numa no two [Music] roller [Music] lucky thing we have these spare Wheels we can leave some folding tracks throw the hackables off our Trail are you sure the hackamores are trailing us positive but we can't tell the passengers they might panic I wish they would I'd like a little company hey just quiet down while you put the wheel on the axle besides I mean how do you know they're gonna follow this Trail instead of the other Trail there won't be any other Trails we're gonna wipe them out with some brush huh that's a bright idea I wonder why I didn't think of it because it was a bright idea what happened to your end oh that's what happened to my head [Music] [Applause] now come on let's get the wheels on that axle before those hackables catch up with us [Music] hey Dusty you tighten up that bolt and I'll go clear the brush out of the way [Music] Mr Callahan [Music] [Applause] can't you see I'm busy [Music] [Applause] [Music] they should be able to follow that trail huh Mr Callahan yes Dusty certainly should these wounds don't look too serious no but he's starting to get a fever what are you looking at the design on this headband very unusual I wonder if it means anything Andy might know before we left he studied about all the Indians the rivers the mountains everything we'd encounter on the trip he really came prepared I should have known any man who wears suspenders in a belt is always prepared huh never mind Andy bringing that Indian boy back here when are you gonna do something right Dusty whoa come on boy Whoa whoa you're letting us know I gotta talk to Andy what's the problem it's about the Indian boy if we get in any more trouble over him I'm going to use you for target practice you didn't get a chance to look at his headband before now unless I'm wrong sure Chief son exactly oh that's great just great well you've done it this time every Brave and that tribe will be after us on the contrary now a chief Sun could be a valuable asset in a trade no a safe Passage through the hakama territory safe passage yeah you're right by delivering the chief son to us Dusty's all but guaranteed our safety you know if anything he's a hero foreign [Music] still burning with fever I'll make another wet concrete I might let him sleep a little better we got to keep him in good shape you're saying he's still unconscious speaking of unconscious by the way Dusty up it's his turn to take over the guard Duty anything I can get for you no I'll just sit with a boy yeah good [Music] foreign thank you oh it's you Mr Callahan well who did you expect Daniel Boone come on now wake up Dusty it's time for you to take over guard Duty we'll buy that big rock Dusty this is the last watch Before Dawn yes sir Mister Dusty Callahan what's up I'm awake we'll stay that way wake me at dawn so we can get an early start right [Music] early Dawn it close enough [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] good morning [Music] Betsy's gone too she's not in the wagon yeah I know look at those tracks moccasins looks like couple Indians came in here and took the boy in Betsy Hey where's Jesse maybe they took him too oh no such luck Dusty wake up wake up sorry I must have dozed off for a few minutes yeah while you dozed off for a few minutes two Braves came in here and captured the Indian boy and Betsy two Indian boys catch an Indian Betsy no no two betsies captured the brakes come on we better pick up the trailer refresh away from me please [Music] the Brookhaven Mr Brookhaven hey good right in the middle of the garden I'm afraid we've got some bad news the hackamas have Betsy tied to a post he and those breeds people walking past her and poking her with a stick that means that one of them's gonna take her as his wife those Scoundrels I say we should get on our horses and ride as far away as we can Mr Brookhaven you should be ashamed suggesting we ride off without attempting a rescue well one of us could slip in there and get her out I'll be back as soon as I can one moment whacking Master what will happen to us if everything happens to you I'd be in charge that's a foreboding thought yeah your point is well taken it'll have to be somebody else I'll go he volunteered why didn't you he beat me to it now volunteer that's an order I volunteer Mr Callahan I must insist I be allowed to go I'm preparing for this trip I studied several Indian languages including the hakama dialect I believe that gives me a distinct Advantage we'll be ready to move as soon as you get back here with Betsy I should be back with her within an hour unless I run into a problem yeah okay foreign [Music] listen up I got a great plan how somebody can walk right under that Hackamore Camp without even being noticed fantastic yeah well anyway somebody wearing these clothes will skin die and some braids feathers they could walk right in there and cut Betsy and Andy loose that's a great plan it can't fail yeah the only trouble is somebody wearing these clothes gotta be kind of small slight built about like it'll never work yeah looks too red better put in some more blueberries tone you down a bit um I think it's delicious serious what are you two people's lives depend on you three including me oh no that's a little pal you don't think for a minute I'd let you go over there if there wasn't a good chance you're coming back or are you here I guess not why are you that bad on yourself I'll go see Lulu see how the braids are coming [Music] okay [Music] that looks great where'd you get the hair sick and that looks like a hackamore braid all right just don't tell Dusty where I got it well it seems the two of them go very well together all right Dusty now I better teach you a few words or hack them all in case you got to speak to somebody good idea how do you say I surrendered no stop that yeah Allison I say you get into camp and you cut Andy and Betsy free you see and the brave says to you Juka Moringa hot sauce then you say to him koranumba you see he has said to you where are you taking the prisoners and you say to him to the chief you got that yeah if he says to me no no no you just said that you'd catch any worms did I say that listen up well you know pay attention we haven't got much time repeat after me Chuka Chuka Moringa Moringa Hots hot hot now put it all together moringa hey that's great hey that's great no no just use the Indian word Moringa hot pot that's fine then you say to him put the wagons circles only got two wagons you get everybody hidden I'll keep them busy [Music] [Laughter] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] that is Dusty you what is you talking me for I'm sorry I guess I just got carried away [Applause] [Music] hey hey I'm be careful with that hat how long did this go on before they select a wife I don't know but I sure hope they believe in Long Engagement I haven't been able to spot Dusty are you sure he's here there's a hero to save our lives huh well the odds are you would have been caught by capturing you himself Dusty's proved he's a hackama now he's free to help us [Music] all right I don't know what to do I can't attack tomorrow he just chose Betsy to be his wife Spears I did foreign [Music] that must be the chief and the little boy Dusty saved [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] hmm okay [Music] stop go away [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] he just told him a Dusty saved his life in there we made him well tomorrow he's gotta cut us loose [Music] [Laughter] it's all right it's all right darling everything's all right we won [Applause] foreign [Music] please [Music] Mr Callahan look what I caught more like he caught you she's really a beauty isn't she a genuine Appalachian it's not an Appalachian it's Appaloosa and it's not a she it's a he I don't care if it's a boy Appaloosa or girl Appalachian it's a beauty it sure is can I keep him it looks like a wild horse and no shoes uh we'll see any sign of a brand yeah looks like you found yourself a horse Dusty really it's my own horse and I can keep him my own horse but don't don't fight I'll see if I can get you out of this you're getting some of the wildest let go of this one let's go [Music] [Applause] [Music] looks like your Appaloosa cut off here Uriah with them other tracks I told you it was a horse Steve Marshall he could rope handy Roy as soon as we catch up with him we're gonna hang that bomb to the nearest tree [Music] well it's not exactly the governor's mansion oh but it'll sure be nice to sleep inside for one night that Corral's in pretty good shape I'd be happier with that information if I were a horse this place looks like it's a rest home for termites oh Carter thing out west so Western [Music] all right hey look everybody I got myself a wild horse he's beautiful I'll be he's a beauty I'm gonna call him freckles and account he's got all those bricks no those are called blotches I'm still gonna call them freckles I don't like the name blotch he is an elegant looking Beast isn't he yeah of course you're a pretty piece of change to buy one like that please I never invest in anything that eats I'm not gonna sell them I'm gonna keep them forever may take you that long to break him it looks a little ornery to me I could be just as honing as he is let's see a little practice well afraid we haven't got time Dusty we're gonna pull out of here at sunup tomorrow of course the accommodations here are simply Dreadful okay I found a telegraph in there oh boy a telegram I mean a real Telegraph right what's the telegram it's a new invention by Samuel Morse you see that wire you can send messages over it you got to be joshing me you can't send messages over a skinny lore like that you feel the words don't even fit yes you can you send it by clicking a series of dots and dashes invention is going to make millions what's the matter with him nothing he always cries when he hears someone else making millions anyway I figure if I can repair the break in The Wire I can make contact all the way back to St Louis oh oh God we can find out where we are and where to go how long you think it'll take you to fix that Contraption a couple of days maybe three oh great then I can break freckles while we're waiting yeah and then you'd have your very own horse Dusty yeah my very own horse me and freckled together forever looks like your horse they've join a wagon train Uriah yeah yeah come on let's move Marshall I don't want him crossing any borders before we hang him okay [Music] wow that makes 17 times he's hit the ground according to my account I counted 18. you're both wrong it's 20 you forgot the time he bounce twice come on Dusty get up on him begin boys [Music] hey Dusty why don't you quit for a while tired you think he's tired he's not throwing me as far as he was before all right Dusty I'm gonna show you something about breaking a horse the first thing you got to do is show him who's boss he knows that he knows that come on come on to Jones bean bean and Stringfellow stop uh buy one million shares of eerie barge stop Mr Brookhaven even if I repair this Telegraph key I must use it for more important messages than that more important than money if you're not joking young man you're sick [Music] thank you [Music] [Applause] [Music] oh it feels like I slipped and fell in the bathtub look it is a bathtub well I'll be I wonder why I knew I would leave it here yeah well uh too heavy to carry on a stage coach yeah they probably busted an axle getting it this far are you thinking what I'm thinking a hot bath a hot bath hey how about that Dusty a nice hot bath not big enough for all of us no no separately Little Pals separately girls go heat up some water right away yeah come on come on knees tight [Music] get that rope ready Roy [Music] [Applause] hurry with the hot water my Goosebumps are getting bigger than the soap bubbles ah [Applause] now don't be frightened freckles I'm not gonna hurt you question is are you going to do the same okay easy boy easy easy easy this is your friend Z is your friend [Music] foreign [Music] thank you ought to be ashamed of yourself acting like a wild animal just wanted to be your friend some friend you turned out to be okay I'm not gonna put up any more worse than around even your horse do you understand hmm [Music] foreign [Music] Dusty you're a man after my own heart I can't believe it my own horse my really own horse for the rest of my life of course that won't be for very long welcome to the hanging folks the strong trees over by that relay station Marshall why don't we hang them over there just a minute Dusty did not steal that horse right he's innocent you'll have to prove otherwise well that's easy this horse's Circle o stock he's only got one mark on him and it's mine and there it is Circle oh well I've looked at a lot of Brands but I never saw that circle before well that horse has always been covered with sports first time I saw him I thought he had measles he Low Down horse sleep and we're gonna hang him now hold on they're extenuating circumstances of the United States government will not receive another Penny of my tax money thought you were supposed to be a law man what kind of Justice do they have in this territory okay okay we'll give them a fair try now that's better and then we'll hang it honor the court foreign how long have you known the defendant since we left the East and your personal opinion would he ever steal anything oh no never see I'm innocent sit down we ain't even got to the part about you stealing horses yet do you believe that Dusty would go around stealing horses your honored Dusty wouldn't steal honey from a beehive there's two things I wouldn't steal horses and honey sit down Marshall what's she saying got to do with him stealing my Appaloosa she's a character witness what we need here is a miracle Witness honor and a court your honor may I uh approach the bench [Applause] that's what I call a good approach to the bench what you have to say ma'am well you're honor Ed about uh anything to save Dusty's life Marshall if we're going to get on with hanging this fella don't you go getting swayed by no painted lady she ain't no Painted Lady she's my friend and if you want to be swayed my friend The Painted Lady just go right ahead you can step down I miss you your honor I think it is time that I had to talk with you in the privacy of your Chambers I ain't got no chamber speak your mind well it's uh it's a terribly a personal it concerns uh are you offering me a bribe a bribe how dare you sir well if you are you're wasting your money I was merely willing to offer a very great deal of money to have you release this young man on bail permanently Carter would never dream of bribing anyone it still sounded like a bribe to me let me approach it in a different way I am willing to pay a large amount of money to this young man here for the misappropriated horse providing spares Dusty's life thanks a lot Mr Brookhaven the horse ain't for sale mister no matter how much money you got nonsense every man has his price women too your honor honor and a court sit down mister you've had your peace is anybody else got anything to say before I pass judgment I do that man is guilty right oh I mean he is guilty of making a simple mistake wow Dusty heard thought for a minute that horse belonged to somebody else he'd never claimed it for his own way you and I both know we all make stupid mistakes from time to time I sure do just like he's doing now right I should have been the one to find that brand but I didn't so it's my fault and I'm asking you to hang me instead you don't have to take my blame Marshall we found the accused sitting on my horse not him and that's a hard fact under the circumstances I ain't got but one choice and that's to find you the defendant guilty honor the court I'm afraid we're gonna have to hang you son what are you afraid about I'm the one who's going to be hung with any of it set up and only gives me about 12 hours to fix that Telegraph what Good's that gonna do us now the territorial court of appeals in Johnson City if I can get the judge there to declare a mistrial the martial will have to free Dusty come on let's shackling up take him over there now you can sleep in this tonight well considering the hang and everything I don't like the shape of my bed well this way nobody will have to keep guard and everybody will get a good night's rest now get in there there's no way he's gonna run away change of this fancy voice Barrel [Music] Telegraph fixed I got an idea might give us a time we need right [Music] thank you [Music] nasty boy I got the piece here I've got to get my guns [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] damn I think the Marshall's waking up I'm gonna come before I get home no it's all right not bad sleep again okay take these off I did give you the keys didn't I yeah yeah yeah but but but what but I threw them away over there if we get out of this I may hang you myself [Applause] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] do you folks know the penalty for Aiden and a betting The Escape of a horse Reef we didn't aid about anyone well I would have if I could have we would have if we could have and we should have had wagon Master sprung him loose looks like when we catch up to him we'll have a double necktie party [Music] will you warn me when you're going to stop I'm sorry was that fast enough hey Dusty do you know where we are yeah I sure do up the creek no no this is the place you found at Appaloosa oh no let's get out here I don't want to find another one I'll get hung twice I don't know if we can find another set of Hope prints it might lead us to the real horse thief and it was split up but we can cover more ground that way right of course but wait no we have got to find something to get these things off of us not a chance these handcuffs are as solid as a rock well keep looking okay can't see anything neither can I well I guess this is gonna be stuck together the rest of our lives I guess so I say how'd you do that how did I thank you never mind never mind when we're old sitting in rocking chairs we'll figure it out but we will never live to get old if we don't find that horse thief I tell you what you take that trail I'll go down that way if either one of us spot anything we meet back here hi [Music] don't take them off some folks like to die with their boots on not mean please reconsider what you're doing here's the horse beef right here it's crazy blue crazy blue that's the wild stallion that's been chasing horses off all over the territory well I thought it was dead he had to run these parts for years yeah well he's driven some of your prized stock into a box canyon about four miles from here he could have driven off that Appaloosa yours too yes was he curve well now I reckon we almost made a dumb mistake you are free to go sonny I know I know Callahan not allowed to say thank you except thank you oh that's all right little pal you'd have done anything in the world to save my neck wouldn't you I'd save your whole body [Music] hold it good what's on your mind man we passed yesterday she said there's a wagon train over here with some real pretty girls we'd like to get friendly with us well you can see there's no women at all on this Wagon Train here we know you got girls here we want to meet him or else or else what or else this thank you understand yeah now that you've explained it get their guns mcgurk right Jake all right I'll just take these now we'll get some Brandon to do but we'll be back before Sundown Brandon how many had a cattle you got mcgurk that depends on how many we can steal I'll just take this shotgun here too oh there's another one hit under the seat Jake and you just be worrying about Sundown make sure those women are friendly here yeah he shattered it he forced sundown now stop that that's the only one in real trouble got to be some way out of this I got away let's run huh Dusty may be right Mr Callan we've got that spare wheel in the wagon and they said they won't be back before Sundown ah you're right all right let's get her on and get rolling that you go round up the others and get them back here as fast as you can right as soon as I tell them about Jake and mcgurk they'll come running now listen huh you go get them and get them back here but don't say a word you'll only scare them yeah and what they don't know won't hurt them understand sure right now I'm scared and don't worry Mr Callahan I won't be the word to him [Music] we gotta get back to Camp hurry what's the hurry I can't tell you why can't you tell us I can't tell you why I can't tell you because that would be telling well we gotta get started real quick before it's too late too late for what it's too late for us don't ask me anything more I can't tell you about mcgurk and then Jake and the danger and the cattle thieves well who are mcgurk and Jake what danger and what cattle thieves doctor you're not making sense I know I'll see you back at camp ready for the peasant hunt my dear ready when you are Carter then carry out [Music] one more time dear I think you interest him [Music] Mr Mrs Brookhaven come on hurry hurry yeah Mr Callahan wants everybody back at the wagons and packed up right away it's important what could be more important than pheasant under glass us underground underground what are you talking about I can't tell you because if I tell you what I'm not supposed to tell you you'll only get scared yeah it's kind of what I can't tell you about the danger what danger well is Jake and mcgurkin the women let's hope that axle holds up till we get to the next town yeah I hope so let's get this wagon loaded I want to get out of here Prado I did Mr Callahan they're all coming and you didn't tell anybody why not a hint I promise didn't I Callahan that is Callahan why are we leaving and who are Jake and mcgurk and which is about cattle thieves in danger and what is Bam Bam not even a hint huh well maybe a little teeny one I demand to know what is going on all right hold it hold it everybody there's two cattle thieves named Jake and mcgurk they came riding in here demanding our women we tried to put them off but they got our guns they're going to be back by Sundown looking for these women and I want this Wagon Train packed and rolling before then I'll be packed in one second oh me too what about the Pheasant blast the Pheasant they can pack for themselves Dusty get the horses right away all right let's get this thing going here come on you guys you gotta get out of here there's a lot of danger we gotta get back to the wagon we gotta take you guys down there taking my grick's coming back before Sundown come on everybody get ready we gotta get going oh no wait wait for me no you guys come on guys [Music] still be right here with the horses hey Dusty where are the horses that's a good question the only problem is there's four answers four answers north south east and west oh take us all day to round those horses up looks like we're stuck here what do you mean we're stuck here with those men do before Sundown or Mr Callahan if you are paid to defend us you must simply protect our women poor Betsy and Lulu what about me Carter I'm a woman too oh of course you are my pet but Betsy and Lulu are single whereas you are married to me your Valiant night your protector beautifully put Carter I thought so too dear what are we gonna do well without our guns our only chances yet I'm at a surprise we gotta take them out of Wares and overpower them but how well they're coming here for girls yeah we'll give them girls nice friendly girls okay turn around I want to see the back are you too Dusty hmm I went to my first dance in this dress Dusty yeah I bet you look better than I do I feel silly what kind of scout wears girls clothes a Girl Scout shut up and paint your lips there you're beautiful are we ready yeah oh your Bloomers are slipping I'll do it I don't say to keep these things up without suspenders anyway Hey listen I want you girls to stay in that wagon out of sight you got that you ready dolly ready Kitty good luck we know you're risking your lives for us and our reputations all right come on Dolly let's don't keep our dates waiting [Music] Dusty watch your dress I can't help it I'm always nervous on the first date yeah relax all you got to do is be sweet get your gutters away from them they just you know sit there and and smile pretty like this lucky thing for us they haven't seen a woman in a long time you call that lucky [Music] well what do we have here looks like we got us a couple of real cuties hey baby you can call me mcgurk no I'm Dolly who you're busy I'm kidding and I'm here to get pregnant come here hey here a big girl aren't you well there's that much more to get friendly with I think you're mighty pretty though I know come here oh you're not so tight I mean don't be so shy Dolly remember we're here to get friendly because I know right let's show them how her Kitty you're wearing a gun I always wear a gun but they frighten me so I couldn't you just make an exception for me well considering it's for you I mean nasty yeah come here all right come on Dolly look how good they're getting along well let's talk first what do you think of the weather I think it's fine you know everybody could push lately now when you quit stalling I'm getting mad now don't do that she's just shy I'll talk to her don't be too long now Kitty I'm waiting what's the matter you crazy or something you're supposed to be friendly it's not my type you don't have to marry him you just got to get him away from his gun I'll get back in there be friendly okay but I wish he'd shaved well it's all straightened out now that's good now come on Duffy oh you're gonna my corset that's all it's bothering you come here please oh come here this is more like it yeah well let's just move over a little bit huh all right sweetheart I just I just want to stroke your hair now that's it sexy [Music] get him up get him up get him up give up get him up all right you too Nobody Does this to us now you're gonna get it you know there for a while I really started to like you foreign no don't shoot here we are girls it's real ones gave me the horses let's get out of here and you two just stick Right Where You Are yeah what happened yeah everything was going great for those Cutthroats the outsmartedness and they've kidnap blue and busted Mr Callahan you promised us you were going to overpower them we tried Mr Brookhaven yeah we would have succeeded except for one thing what was that me Betsy kidnapped by those Ruffians absolutely barbaric you know Mr Callahan the way Jake and mcgirk keep coming back here I figure they must be camped somewhere nearby good thinking Andy good thinking let's see if we can pick up their Trail track them down wipe off your mouth [Music] thank you now sit down and relax [Music] office you know you're prettier than them other guys I'm gonna like you [Music] school teacher I'd like to get some learning we're glad you ladies happened to Pace a visit I'm sure you are this place is a mess there's dust all over everything so well we would never get friendly in a dirty place like this now would we Betsy oh no but there's dust all over the table [Music] wait a minute we've asked you there to get friendly not to clean first things first here now you dust the table I ain't gonna sweep do you want us to get friendlier don't you well uh [Music] that's more like it and you get all the corners okay Betsy came over here this window's filthy [Music] how long do you think we can stop our friends come and save us I'm just disgusting until we get here any sign of a trail Prince broken branches anything yeah I haven't anything like that I want to keep finding a piece of the Petticoat like this hey that's a woman's Petticoat yeah so there's another one hey Lulu yeah she'd think of that she must have torn these strips off to leave us a trail all we got to do is follow him lead us right to them you better hope it's a short Trail or a long Petticoat when we find them we better have a plan you're right Andy yeah without any guns we've got ah wait a minute uh maybe just maybe yeah yeah you and I will follow the trail Dusty you will get the brookhavans hey wait I'll get the bugle pots pans dishes anything that'll make a lot of noise and those firecrackers were saving for the Fourth of July coiled your rope and all the sacks of flowers you can carry all right hurry and catch up with us on the trail what's all that stuff for I'm gonna call out Cavalry the Cavalry our camera what Cavalry our Cavalry oh that's Cavalry yes our Cavalry I'll explain it to you later come on [Music] let's get to know each other a little better huh just a moment uh the place looks nice and clean but you fellas don't you mean now we have to wash I mean just to get acquainted all right after all you are entertaining ladies all right here we are you first I don't believe this ah don't forget your ears now here's the soap that does it now cats tell them I will have to get tough what do you mean he means we want to get yummy that's what he means well you don't have to shout I mean all you have to do is say so we were too busy cleaning now you two sit down over here and start getting friendly that's the place I see their horses yeah all right bring those supplies up when do we rush them we can't they got Lulu and Betsy down there it's too dangerous we gotta scare them out Mr cudahan where is your Cavalry please drag these surprise for miles and how many will there be for dinner that is our Cavalry I think of Pardon follow me foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] game we prefer kissing games uh oh I know a great kissing game uh the two of you sit down yeah and then close your eyes and one of us will kiss you and you try and guess who it is won't that be fun well let's start okay now close your eyes tight and no peeking I'm waiting ready Betsy Lulu no yes again [Music] Betsy run again now you two get back in there get down [Music] thank you wait here [Music] thank you [Music] all right now listen we gotta move fast everybody remembers what they're supposed to do when I give the signal aye aye Kevin I sure hope this plan works there's a suspended plan I'm in the reserves you know come my dear [Music] come on [Music] help ain't no use in screaming there ain't nobody around for Miles our friends are Gonna Save Us they'll get her for this do those two guys miss skirts no users struggling here you want to put that right on here you got firecrackers ready already all right Dusty come on give us some laughs [Music] charge [Applause] cavalry can't be there ain't no Ford around here I always loved men in uniform where'd they come from [Applause] get me out there Jake I don't know I can't see a thing they must be hiding come on out we got you surrounded you don't have to come in and get it [Music] foreign [Music] let's give up you better it's the whole Army shut up we'll fight it out I'm tired mcgirt y you blasted girls [Music] thank you [Music] all right mcgurk we're going out that front door just keep that girl in front of you right well go on go home get out that door you always go first so you go first not this time it's your turn I'd do it all the time you go first you're always first and you go first now okay [Music] you say that [Music] okay hold it very sweet the Greek out nothing to herself you all right you fellas we've really got to stop meeting this way huh you are right Dusty boy oh sure Mr gal Hannah I'm just fine well we don't have to worry about Jacob mcgurk anymore Sheriff tells me they're going to be locked up for a long time that's great yeah you know what's up Mr Callahan you really looked tall and straight in that saddle today really man something else too looks like he lost a lot of weight especially around your middle it forgot to take my corset off Dolly hey wagon [Music] thank you saddle burn Wells pop 114. what how old mom is well I wonder where everybody is [Music] where is everyone I don't know it looks to me like we found ourselves a ghost town I think one of them is trying to tell us something yeah I don't like it Got a Feeling somebody's behind me breathing hot and heavy down my neck there is Callahan Dusty I told you to stay close not that close him just tell him you know this place is in pretty good shape for a ghost town I don't think where he's alone here as we think feel that too huh feel what have I got well like somebody's watching us listen I tell you what you and Mr Brookhaven Scouts are north side of the street Dusty and I'll take the South Side you ladies you stay right here by this wagon look if something scares you while we're awake you just fire a shot we'll come running what are you shooting at just adjusting look please wait till I tell you huh come on foreign [Music] I don't see any horses oh perhaps they all went off in a fox hunt I don't know there's something mysterious going on maybe the barbershop will tell us something you want to come with me no do you want to stay here no where would you like to be Burger Boston [Music] I know someone's staring at it I can just feel it so can I but then I kind of like being stared at does seem odd yet there's no one in town to do the staring there's some clothes up there on the clothesline everybody must have left in a hurry yeah they must have cleared out faster than the gold nugget Saloon the night two-ton Tilly tried to do the belly dance This is Dusty I don't want to scare the women but I smell some trouble up ahead now you you stay close until my back already okay [Music] Dusty I said cover my back not get glued to it now come on I want to check out that Saloon up there [Music] maybe it's only the wind maybe somebody in there waiting for us it's the wind I'm sure it's the wind I've never been so sure of anything my whole life that is to win why because I don't want to go in there and find out it's not to win let's go I'll go check out the salon I just remembered I'm a miner I'm not allowed all right little pal you stay out here I'll check the suit let's leave me out here in the street alone oh no I'll go in and check what's the matter what'd you see the Dancehall Hostess what dancehall Hostess that's good talking about me she's the ugliest woman I've ever seen in my whole life she's got a big nose and her hair is going out of her head like horns and her eyes all glassy and beauty and Redner's skin is all kind of that's not a dancehall Hostess look again it's a Moosehead yeah a Moosehead I wonder how fast he was going to hit that wall [Music] what took you so long from The Barbershop I made an interesting Discovery found a pair of boots a pair of pants and a pair of socks do you know what that means certainly some cow hand was having his legs shaved it means that somebody left the shop in too much of a hurry to even dress judging by the quality of his trousers I guess he rushed off to shoot his tailor I've got a feeling it's all part of the same mystery let's go over the newspaper office maybe the last edition of the paper will give us a clue good maybe they'll have a stock market report come along dark in here I wish we had a ladder or something maybe there's something behind the bar well oh hey I found the candle hey good little fast well now we can see what's what I can see the saloon the tables and the gunpowder what gunpowder this whole bar is stacked with gunpowder why would a saloon be full of gunpowder I don't know hold that candle down here so I can say dusty that's not a candle sure it is you just said it was why would you lie no no that that's not that is a stick of gunpowder that's why you wouldn't lie because it's a sticker throw it out in the window I'll break the window please for beef sake throw it out the windows get down I couldn't get up now little town I said I said you can get up now let's see what the matter didn't you hear me didn't you hear me oh you know they say when you're gonna die whole life passes right in front of you yeah mine was only half done you know it's really interesting hey that sounds like a Troublesome let's go [Music] [Applause] [Music] what is it everybody here all right yeah so far but I wouldn't count on our future we found the reason the town people deserted it's right here in this newspaper I'll take one here keep the change far scholar Brothers Outlaws I never heard of them he says here they're armed bank robbers and murderers perhaps they had an unpleasant childhood Daphne says good in everyone well the scholars threatened to come back to town and kill everyone they didn't give them all their money and their valuables yes please nose on your face just a case of blackmail so the whole Lily liver Town took a powder I think the townspeople were wise to run especially the wealthy ones and I happen to be a member of that club come along Daphne now wait a minute everybody just simmer down by the way I see it they've already come and gone they saw the town was left in they just took off are you sure I'm positive well it's not absolute [Music] [Applause] [Music] the horses are running away I know Dusty's chasing him he's passing them all right you girls in the wagon come on no [Music] I thought you'd be halfway to California by now I suddenly realized it was my job to help you protect everybody especially me Mr Callahan the skullness obviously believe that we are citizens of this town now I think we should let them know that we're perfect strangers I think they did this call and with their records I don't think they'd buy that nevertheless I would like to inform them who we are oh please be my guest yes I stay out there we are perfect strangers well I guess they figure nobody can be perfect huh hey Whip come here didn't you see what just happened to Mr Brookhaven well yes sir but the scholars aren't animals I'm sure they'd recognize the white flag of truce what makes you think so what happens to be the code of the West Yeah the code of the West right oh maybe the code of the East [Music] well Scholars haven't fired at us for quite a while maybe they're out of bullets [Music] somehow I don't think so yeah Mr Callahan one of the schoolness is riding right for us [Music] we've got a visitor but that ain't one of the sconers come on [Applause] hey it's a scarecrow hey baby yeah a dead scarecrow look at that knife yes holding a message oh I hate the sight of blood even if it's straw we have the town surrounded Fork over all your gold and stuff by sign up or we'll burn you out they're blessing of course and if you think we're bluffing you're a bigger dummy than the one on the jackass oh we still got a problem but at least we're safer in here and we are out on that street Where Do We Go From Here Mr Callahan we don't go any place too dangerous out there impossible how can three minutes around to town because they got a lot of guns besides the gut the only Road out of here blocked I do not believe those Ruffians realize they are jeopardizing the lives of women is Brookhaven Scarlet Brothers do not care about women men children pets or anything else Lulu Betsy I think it's time we stepped in at a girl Mrs V I'm with you me too Mrs Brookhaven Daphne dare not now Carter good Heavens just like a mother Mrs Brookhaven is Your Wagon master I cannot permit stand aside Mr Callahan take my hands go I think it's time we showed these men what women can do this is B you've got more sand in your little crawl than a gila monster with a long neck thank you wait a minute have you all lost your minds I mean those sconer Brothers don't show no mercy they would never dare shoot a woman only about or a cad would entertain such a notion well I can [Music] they were two Founders and a card out there guess who better change if anyone should see you like that we'll be drum right out of the country club no it's no use they've got us covered so tight and take an army to penetrate their position Army Andy Ah that's the answer yeah Army that's the answer but what is the question Fort Hotchkiss it's it's just over the hill there if one of us could get up over those rocks we could get some help we can draw straws to see who goes no no I'm the wagon master I should be the one to do this I still think we should draw straws struck I'll explain [Music] you look great Mr Callahan thank you Dustin by the Timeless scholar Brothers figure out you're not a scarecrow you'll be on your way to Fort Hotchkiss they'll never give me a second look neither will a crow only trouble is this stuff makes you want to sneeze whatever you do don't sneeze no he sneeze you're a dead man all right wish me luck luck luck good thinking [Music] our wagon Master is a very brave man oh I'd say he's Brave fanatic she's a very very brave man to show my appreciation in case Mr Callahan is killed in this attempt to save our lives I intend to raise his salary ain't we gonna have us some fun and town folks is pinned out as cold as a dead carp in February we're gonna get all their gold and burn them all down too [Music] oh something's head this way hey save your Bullets Luke it's only that old jackass we sent him it's way back me [Music] about a little lady let's move on put one foot in front of the other there and that scarecrow looks a little different if you ask me it looks like his noses grow to mine well let's just see which one of us can shoot it flat again for more listen yeah hey that ain't no scarecrow that's a real dummy let him have it boys Barney and good old freckles they came back and the rest of the horses followed him yeah that'll do it just a great idea Mr Callahan yeah I've used that trick before all that stuff on the wheels keeping nice and quiet we'll be able to sneak out of town real easy yeah it sure feels funny looking at my bustle on a different caboose yeah now we got those Wagon Wheels all silent so all of you can get out of here without any trouble you're going with it no no no I got a plan I'm gonna stay here and keep those Stoner boys I'm Your Wagon master I made up my mind I can't let you do it I can't face them alone I highly agree with Dusty perhaps the Dad should stay with you no no Dusty's got a scout the trail take care of the animals and you know the big tall mountain over there North Northwest you headed right toward that uh North by Northwest you're quite a guy Cal and when I open up a little Saloon I'm going to name a drink after you hey you just make sure it's a tall one and don't put in too much water okay I've learned a lot from you Callahan okay all right Mr Callahan I know we'll see you soon yeah of course you will let alone baby Callahan all of Mr brookhaven's Money couldn't pay you for what you're about to do oh what you said but you don't miss Callahan which is quite right thank you sir Mr Brookhaven Mr Brookhaven is there anything I can do to help you before I leave uh yeah why don't we see if all the weapons are loaded huh yeah Winchester 44. yeah check Single Barrel check double barrel I'll get a bandage behind the bar court all right [Music] well it's all up to you now Andy I'm sorry but you know there's nothing like well you've done all you can how did the accident happen well uh oh it's all my dumb phones no we got this one caught in the breach of that shotgun that wasn't the dumb thing the real dumb thing was he he had his hand on the bar like this you know and I wanted to get a bandage I took a countertop like that and went yeah well I'll tell you one thing I just about settled Zar hash [Music] yeah maybe if Bat Masterson rode into town yeah Batman doesn't could do it he was a little guy like me when those bad guys saw him with that cane they ran for their lives I'm gonna go get my makeup kit meet Bat Masterson [Music] yeah yeah listen are you sure I look enough like Batman Anderson before the skeleton Brothers yeah well if you just look a little tougher you know like you mean business yeah now how you get it come on accident perfect Dusty take a look it's sent out Mr Callahan skoners will be heading this way any minute oh Darren's face him and if I got this figured right there won't even be any gun play well have you covered from here as best we can I guess this is it poor Dusty we may never see him again yes you will that's your closet [Music] thank you [Music] Matt Masterson what's that Masterson doing here let's go see the scholars of dismounted they're coming after him we better get ready to protect them [Music] we had a bat Master 78 world is Kane yet [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] Dusty that was a pretty good thing you've done there with that cane how'd you do that easy Mr Gallant all I did was just take it like this and I threw it in the air and then I waited for it to come down um [Music] | Xtreme Movies | UC2j5esvEqvFtHAozOCw6KKQ | 2023-04-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 9,355 | 47,554 |
VKRgyoBdkjg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKRgyoBdkjg | Hubblecast 29: Mission Accomplished: Healing Hubble | The fifth and final mission to the iconic Hubble Space Telescope was a long time coming. After a delay in the fall of 2008, spring brought new hope and, on 11 May, the seven Space Shuttle crew members headed for the mission of a lifetime. This is the Hubblecast! News and images from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. At nineteen years old, Hubble is the veteran of space telescopes. Opening our eyes to the Universe that hosts us, Hubble has looked far and deep to reveal fundamental scientific truths. Hubble isn’t without its battle scars but the latest servicing mission has left it more capable than ever. Astronauts had just five spacewalks to complete the Herculean tasks set before them: the installation of two completely new instruments and the repair of two others. And not to mention hundreds of smaller — but still vital — tasks. This kind of “space mechanics” was never intended and likely never even dreamed of by Hubble’s creators in the 1970s. A dedicated team of ESA engineers headed to the U.S. to support the mission by ensuring the solar arrays’ drive electronics and mechanisms were functioning properly. The very lifeblood of Hubble, the panels must be monitored constantly so that astronauts can do the work that they need to do while avoiding damage to the panels themselves. But before anyone could support the mission, it first had to get off the ground. A bright, clear and powerfully hot morning with very few clouds looked promising for an on-time departure. Invited guests, scientists and engineers and the press gathered across Kennedy Space Center to watch Space Shuttle Atlantis rise with the hope of rejuvenating Hubble. At 20:01 on May 11, Atlantis roared off the launch pad and into the sky on its way to its historic rendezvous. After Atlantis was safely in the air and all that was left was its trail of smoke, the ESA Hubble Space Telescope team moved north to NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, where engineers there man the STOCC — the Space Telescope Operations Control Center. There, the ESA team worked closely with the Goddard team to ensure both the safety of spacewalking astronauts and the solar panels. Astronauts put in over 36 hours of spacewalks during the 13-day mission. The workhorse WFPC2 camera was replaced by its more powerful descendant, the WFC3, or Wide Field Camera 3. WFC3 will greatly enhance the observational capabilities of Hubble, providing enhanced field of view and broader waveband. Removing a refrigerator-sized instrument is no small task. Astronauts John Grunsfeld & Andrew Feustel removed Hubble’s COSTAR package that was no longer needed to make way for the new Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS). COS will study the large-scale structure of the Universe and the formation and evolution of galaxies, stars and planets. It will also help determine the formation of elements considered essential for life, such as carbon and iron. Astronauts didn’t just perform “transplant surgery”; they also did corrective operations on two existing instruments with great success. The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) that combines a camera with a spectrograph, and covers a wide range of wavelengths from the near-infrared region into the ultraviolet was affected by a power failure. Astronauts had a particularly difficult time repairing STIS due to a stubborn bolt on the instrument’s handrail. But after Houston gave astronaut Mike Massimino the go-ahead to “use brute force”, he was able to break the handrail and access STIS. The Advanced Camera for Surveys, another of Hubble’s workhorse instruments, was also down due to a power failure. The Servicing Mission 4 repair has brought it new life. As astronaut Megan McArthur released Hubble from the Shuttle’s grip and the pilots carefully manoeuvred away, it was a bittersweet moment for the astronauts as well as the NASA and ESA support personnel on the ground — the last time humans would visit the telescope that has taught us so much about our origin and our place in the vast Universe. | HubbleWebbESA | UCllDaJE5yvO0PbjqvIn3iCw | 2010-06-23 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 666 | 4,040 |
7EM3jeSvdBI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7EM3jeSvdBI | Is Suicide Justified? | Sadhguru | Questioner: All the cultures in the world they have a common thing that they revere human life. Taking away your own life or somebody else’s life is not considered proper but if… if one is really suffering, one has got a bad deal in this life then why can't just one, you know, start a new game, end this one and restart the game? Is there anything wrong with that? Sadhguru: So ‘if I have a bad deal don’t I have the right to shut it up and come back again?’ If you have a bad deal with your job you could just quit. If you have a bad deal with your marriage you could just divorce. If you have a bad deal with the society in which you live you can come to Isha Yoga Center. If you have a bad deal in Isha Yoga Center you can go up the mountain. So these are not good enough reasons for you to end the process of life. First of all you didn’t create it. So you don’t talk about ending it. Unless your identity as a separate being or a separate person has has disappeared and you and the source of creation are just the same if you come to that point then you can just throw away your body consciously. Then you are allowed to do it, not by damaging the body, not by hanging from a tree. We don’t mind burying you under the tree but hanging from a tree is neither good for you nor for the tree We already looked at this; whether it's a good deal or a bad deal if you have a larger purpose everything is a stepping stone. Everything is a stepping stone for your ultimate well-being if you have set the larger goal. Every situation that you get into you are getting so identified and caught up with it, now it feels like it's better to end your life. Anyway, this is lot of bull ‘cause today if something is going wrong you want to end your life; tomorrow morning something is going right you want to live; you want to have your third baby. You want to get married once again. If things are going little better tomorrow morning you will have plans. Everything looks bleak - you think of suicide, isn't it? So this is just a game that you are playing in your mind. It once happened, a salesman decided to go into a new development; housing development. He thought no other salesmen would have still ventured yet because it's a new development. So he wanted to be the first one; be the early bird. So he went and knocked on the very first house that he saw there. A lady came and opened the door. Without giving her a chance he just slipped into her house, took a lot of cow dung, fresh cow dung from his bag and threw it all over the new carpet and he said, ‘See, I have a wonder vacuum cleaner. You watch it; I’ll clean this carpet without even leaving the slightest of odour. If I don’t do it I will eat every piece of this cow dung myself, I will eat it.’ So the lady asked, ‘Would you like some tomato sauce because we still do not have electricity in the house.’ What you need is a little bit of tomato sauce. Tastes a little good then you suddenly want to live. Just eating cow dung you feel like dying. You stood up and said, ‘Sadhguru…’ If you know what you’re uttering, such nonsense should not come out of your mouth. There is no meaning to Sadhguru when you are wanting to end your life because it's not worthwhile sitting here - that’s what you are telling me, isn't it? It’s not worthwhile sitting here; you are not in grace; you are somewhere about how your job is not working, how your family is freaking you, how something else is happening; that's all you are thinking about. Just be here; suddenly it’ll be worthwhile. I’ll make it worthwhile. | Sadhguru | UCcYzLCs3zrQIBVHYA1sK2sw | 2014-08-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 689 | 3,558 |
7g6GXFofQXU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7g6GXFofQXU | Linux Debian Network Manager DNS Setting Changing | something like that very good episode but all in all look you got you gotta understand that this might have big implications on the market traditional markets are recovering a bit you do see tech stocks for example Facebook back up with 10% and a lot a lot of stocks are back up right now Bitcoin still down 4% from yesterday but we've had this amazing increase from 3 point 9 to 5 point 5 K which was a flash crash really but you gotta realize what's important right now is to really monitor what kind of psychology the traditional markets have because they take us with us they take us with with them they | Fajar Purnama | UCTBKfcgMplSqm6mm1B-sHUQ | 2020-04-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 115 | 607 |
UzYkzKhgadE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UzYkzKhgadE | Red Sovine - You're Calling Me Sweetheart Again [1956]. | there's nothing so precious as something you've lost and found it somehow in the end I lost you my darling but now you've come back you're calling me sweetheart again it's wonderful how heaven in my arms so Hearts again Lonesome I've been no matter what happened or who's had your love you're calling me sweetheart again please [Music] your love was a treasure I couldn't replace so nobody's sweetheart I've been your heart has come home and there's happiness here you're calling me sweetheart again [Music] your lovely you're sweeter than they'll never be there before your kiss is where Heaven begins no matter what happened or who's had your love you're calling me sweetheart again [Music] | mrblindfreddy9999 | UCvaARHrkgAqAxZ4d6p9cncA | 2023-03-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 118 | 692 |
ZcaL-C7JNHA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcaL-C7JNHA | (AV07376) WOI News Clips 510 | i think there's been a little crime there and i think they all should pay for what they've did do you think they can get a fair trial i would hope to think so in america we can still have a fair trial of some kind for him do you think the part of mr nixon will have an effect on their trial i think it did have an effect on their trial i think it's had an effect on The country Ma'am do you think the other watergate defendants should be pardoned no, not really i feel like there should be equal justice and i don't feel like i was against nixon's pardon i think that at least they should go through the court procedure before a decision is made and i feel like dean Has and others have been prosecuted and i think the other should go through the court oh my that's that's a difficult question without some thought behind it No, i don't i don't i wouldn't go that far you know i've never really understood the seriousness of this crime that was committed of course i've i've been very sympathetic with with our president can you tell us how you feel about pardoning any of the other watergate defendants well i think they should all be brought to trial And have to take what the courts give them because if i was an individual i get tried and i'd have to stand For the actions that i took and the things that i did and i think they should have the same thing done to them ma'am can you tell us how you feel about pardoning any of the other watergate defendants i don't feel that in the first place that president nixon should have been pardoned and i don't really feel that any of them should have been there is one law for the land and i feel that everybody should be part of it last year iowa farmers harvested over 270,000 bushel of soybeans we all know what soybeans are used for primarily for food but now there may be a new use for soybeans as a substitute for fossil fuels So while the oil companies are spending millions of dollars trying to find more fuel Underground perhaps the answer has always been up here on top of the iowa topsoil with soybeans this is don keeler reporting The association is an organization which will be organized by iceberg it's going to consist of around 300 shippers from across the state of iowa what we're doing is going after people like the grain shippers we've located perhaps elevators which are easy people to to spotlight manufacturers such as lumber yards local shippers and we're going to pull these people together to form an a federation perhaps you might call it of this shipping associations how does the organization plan on going about revitalizing iowa railroads the association is going to is planning on being what you might call a pressure group it will be through public information and through lobbying the association will not Try to be an adversary To the railroad companies we want to work in conjunction with the railroads not in opposition to them Well we're going to work on our passing game and try to improve it a little bit and Better our execution offensively so we don't have any center quarterback exchange fumbles and we're gonna work very hard on tackling and gang tackling and pursuing the football and stopping the veer attack that washington runs and worked very very hard on our pass defense because they throw the ball they threw the ball a lot last year and they threw it 29 times against Cincinnati so we know we're going to get a better pass defense test than we got last week against texas tech material-wise is washington a little bit more physical than texas tech perhaps well they're bigger and stronger than than texas tech i don't think they're as quick but they're big and strong and they hit you were there any real positive points to pick out of the last week's loss to texas tech not much good sometimes comes out of a loss well i think basically our defense got stronger as the game went on i think which is good it's a young defense that could should come on and get better we're gonna have to not make as many missed tackles and we're gonna have to strengthen our third down and long situation offensively phil danowsky looked very good running the football in blocking and did a good job and i think buddy hardeman's just a step away from breaking some big plays and we've got to get the ball more to mike strong i Guess we're gonna have to throw the ball a little more to open up the attack they've never had the opportunity with the buyers of their products and the processes of their products and The nfo for the first time has given the producers of agricultural commodities that opportunity and with us having given that opportunity in with a correct understanding i have no fear about what we can show the SEC that they or no other government agency is going to take over the nfo or dominate it or destroy it why do you think the city is pursuing this line of action I'm not quite sure because we have a program at [kars?] pool that has been effective for 25 years and most of the parents are much in favor of keeping it right where it is We have over 1200 signatures of Concerned people there have been letters to the editor there have been phone calls hundreds of phone calls to the parks and recreation department their persistence in it evades me i would like to know why they insist upon doing it their way when it obviously isn't the way the public wants it needs the tractors from the in this unit we would have four agents permanently assigned to the investigation of rural crimes these agents would be stationed throughout the state would assist the sheriff and the local officials in the investigation of agricultural related crimes such as larceny of grain larceny of farm machinery farm chemicals and the like these agents would also work in the area of crime prevention and one of the things that we discussed at this resolutions meeting was the titling of farm tractors and the titling of large combines also the trip tickets that would have to accompany the transportation of livestock from one farm to another or from the farm to the market The first step from the nearly 100 iowa draft evaders starts here at the us attorney's office in the federal courthouse in des moines colonel (inaudible) will your office be directly responsible let's say that a draft evader calls in from whenever in iowa or canada and wants to turn himself in in effect what will you do if a young man should call us and wishes to turn himself in we will refer him to the united states attorney and he in turn will take the case and It'll then be handled by the department of justice to determine whether or not this young man must perform some type of alternate service In order to be returned to the so the role of the selective service in iowa will come after the man has been processed by the attorney's office yes in other words we will be responsible for his work assignment and then supervises performance during that period of assignment how different will the jobs that will be established or the work established for the Draft evaders or deserters be from conscientious objectors what they've done in the past the information that we have available to us at this time indicates that the type of work these young men will be doing will be comparable to that performed by conscientious objectors in the past (inaudible) Donaldson the us attorney here at the federal courthouse says he hasn't had any specific calls asking for conditional amnesty he has had a number of hypothetical calls asking for information from the us courthouse in des moines this is don kela reporting | ISU Library. SCUA. AV Collection. | UC0NllHpQOW8Uc3IPfe03oow | 2018-06-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | detection | en | 1,390 | 7,576 |
tKxspQWVc6A | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tKxspQWVc6A | Writing clearly and concisely in Crime and Society at UWA (Part 1 of 3) | Welcome to this UWA STUDYSmarter video all about writing clearly and concisely in Crime and Society at UWA. I'm Siri Barrett-Lennard, I work with the STUDYSmarter team at the University of Western Australia, and we’ve designed this as the first of three videos on this topic. Here we'll look at writing clear sentences. Pause the video whenever you like. We'll start with the basics of clear simple sentences; then look at how to vary what we write. To write a clear sentence: First, indicate the subject early on. The subject tells readers who or what the sentence is about. Second, follow this subject swiftly with a complete verb. Verbs are doing or being words. Complete verbs show past, present or future time by changing their form. Third, if you need one, place an object straight after the verb. Objects tell readers who or what the verb is affecting. Keep these three elements close together and choose strong, dynamic, active verbs where you can. These three elements make an independent clause, which can form a simple sentence. You can expand simple sentences by adding more words to the subject, verb or object, making the subject more precise, and changing the verb form if you need to, or qualifying your object, narrowing its scope like this. These techniques help you flesh out your ideas and make your writing more interesting to read. You can also make your ideas clearer by telling the reader when, how and where events are taking place. Ideally, add this information around clauses. You can put some of it, for example, before the subject and some of it after the object as well. In this way, your subject, verb and object are still close together, and your ideas are easy to read. But for clear writing, there are two things to avoid. One is overloading sentence beginnings, like this. When we overload sentence beginnings, it taxes our reader's memory and makes our writing less clear. Secondly, we need to avoid putting a lot of detail in the middle of clauses like this. Putting a lot of extra information in the middle can make sentences difficult to read. So for clear, long sentences, keep subjects, verbs and objects close together, and avoid overloading the beginning or the middle of sentences. So far we've been looking at simple sentences and how to vary them. Simple sentences have one independent clause and express one main idea. You can also vary your writing by creating compound sentences. These combine more than one main idea. Let's take a look at two different ways to join these ideas. One way is to use semi-colons. Semi-colons work especially well when you use them to join clauses that are similar in structure but have contrasting ideas, like this. The second kind of compound sentence uses coordinating conjunctions to join ideas. To remember what coordinating conjunctions are, just think of the word FANBOYS. Use the first letters of this word to remind you what they are. Coordinating conjunctions express simple relationships between equally important ideas, like this. As we've seen, compound sentences add variety to your writing. Another way to vary your sentences is to create complex sentences to express more complex relationships between ideas. There are three main techniques for creating complex sentences. First you can use subordinating conjunctions to join a subordinate - or less important - idea to a main idea. If you think of the word SUB, it'll remind you of some examples of subordinating conjunctions. Subordinate clauses can come either before or after independent clauses, as in these examples. Second you can use a relative pronoun like who, which or that to join related but less important ideas to a main idea. You can put relative clauses early in the sentence as part of the subject or later on as part of the object. And third, you can use a participle to join a partial or incomplete idea to a main idea. Participles often end with "ing" like these words. You can put participle clauses before or after independent clauses, as in these examples. In summary, you can write clear sentences for Crime and Society if you do all these things. | UWA Students | UCykFBmzQsPXCyuiQUBHc2uA | 2014-02-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 699 | 4,117 |
r44azv_N6Os | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r44azv_N6Os | Universal (metaphysics) | Wikipedia audio article | in metaphysics a universal is what particular things have in common namely characteristics or qualities in other words universals are repeatable or recurrent entities that can be instantiated or exemplified by many particular things for example suppose there are two chairs in a room each of which is green these two chairs both share the quality of chair nests as well as greenness or the quality of being green in other words they share a universal there are three major kinds of qualities or characteristics types or kinds each II mammal properties eg short strong and relations eg father of next to these are all different types of universals paradigm ethically universals are abstract eg humanity whereas particulars are concrete eg the personhood of Socrates however universals are not necessarily abstract and particulars are not necessarily concrete for example one might hold that numbers are particularly at abstract objects likewise some philosophers such as diem Armstrong consider universals to be concrete most do not consider classes to be universals although some prominent philosophers do such as John Bigelow topic problem of universals the problem of universals is an ancient problem in metaphysics about whether universals exists the problem arises from attempts to account for the phenomenon of similarity or attribute agreement among things for example grass and granny smith apples are similar or agree in attribute namely in having the attribute of greenness the issue is how to account for this sort of agreement in attribute among things there are many philosophical positions regarding universals taking beauty as an example three positions are idealism or conceptualism beauty is a property constructed in the mind so it exists only in descriptions of things platonic realism beauty is a property that exists in an ideal form independently of any mind or thing Aristotelian realism beauty is a property that only exists when beautiful things exist taking a broader view the main positions are generally considered classifiable as realism nominalism and idealism sometimes simply named anti-realism with regard to universals realists posit the existence of independent abstract universals to account for attribute agreement nominal lists deny that universals exist claiming that they are not necessary to explain attribute agreement conceptualist posit that universals exists only in the mind or when conceptualized denying the independent existence of universals complications which arise include the implications of language use and the complexity of relating language to ontology topic particular a universal may have instances known as its particulars for example the type dog or Don hood is a universal as are the property red or redness and the relation between us or being between any particular dog red thing or object that is between other things as not a universal however but as an instance of a universal that is a universal type dog hood property redness or relation between us and here's in a particular object a specific dog red thing or object between other things topic platonic realism platonic realism holds universals to be the reference of general terms such as the abstract non-physical non mental entities to which words such as sameness circularity and beauty refer particulars are the reference of proper names such as Phaedo or of definite descriptions that identify single objects such as the phrase that bed over there other metaphysical theories may use the terminology of universals to describe physical entities play those examples of what we might today call universals included mathematical and geometrical ideas such as a circle and natural numbers as universals Plato's views on universals did however vary across several different discussions in some cases Plato spoke as if the Perfect Circle functioned is the form or blueprint for all copies and for the word definition of circle in other discussions Plato describes particulars as participating in the Associated universal contemporary realists agree with the thesis that universals are multiplied exemplify polenta teas examples include by diem Armstrong Nicklaus Walter store Reinhardt Grossman Michael Lu topic nominalism nominal lists hold that universals are not real mind independent entities but either merely concepts sometimes called conceptualism or merely names nominal lists typically argue that properties are abstract particulars like tropes rather than universals JP Moreland distinguishes between extreme and moderate nominalism examples of nominal lists include the medieval philosophers Rosalind of campaign and William of Ockham and contemporary philosophers WVO Quine Wilfrid Sellars DC Williams and Keith Campbell topic Ness ity hood principle the Ness ity hood principle is used mainly by english-speaking philosophers to generate convenient concise names for universals or properties according to the Ness ity hood principle a name for any Universal may be formed that is distinctive of left-handers may be formed by taking the predicate left-handed and adding Ness which yields the name left handedness the principle is most helpful in cases where there is not an established or standard the universal in ordinary English usage what is the name of the universal distinctive of chairs chair in English has used not only as a subject as in the chair is broken but also as a predicate as in that as a chair so to generate a name for the universal distinctive of chairs take the predicate chair and add nests which yields chair nests topics see also hypostatic abstraction philosophy of mathematics sortal transcendental nominalism the secret of Hegel universality philosophy topic notes topic references Feldman Fred 2005 the open question argument what it isn't and what it is philosophical issues 15 normativity liu michael j 1998 metaphysics a contemporary introduction and why route llege lu michael j 2001 the problem of universals in metaphysics contemporary readings michael j lu e d and y route llege PP 3 to 13 MacLeod m and Rubinstein e 2006 universals the internet encyclopedia of philosophy J feasor and B doubt and EDS length Moreland JP 2001 universals McGill Queens University Press acumen price HH 1953 universals and resemblance CH 1 of thinking and experience Hutchinson's university library Rodrigues Pereira Gonzalo 2008 nominalism in metaphysics the stanford encyclopedia of philosophy edward and zalta Eadie link topic further reading Aristotle categories link Aristotle metaphysics link Armstrong DM 1989 universals an opinionated introduction Westview press link Plato veto link Plato Republic especially books vv7 index-linked Plato Parmenides link Plato Sophists link Quine wvo 1961 on what their us in from a logical point of view 2nd EDN why Harper & row Russell Bertrand 1912 the world of universals in the problems of philosophy Oxford University Press Russell Bertrand 191 to be on the relation of universals in particulars link swore Chris 2000 properties the Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy Edward and zalta Edie link Williams DC 1953 on the elements of being review of metaphysics volume 17 link topic external links Chris APIs Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy Chrissa pissed internet encyclopedia of philosophy | wikipedia tts | UCMeSYAu27EY1aslaUSaL6VA | 2018-11-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,136 | 7,294 |
SNf77i40SoU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNf77i40SoU | Ride Home Review - Searching | hey what's up ryder's here's this week's ride home review and this week I am going to review searching which stars John Cho and Debra Messing and directed by I need Anisha Gandhi and hopefully I said his name correctly and before I get into what it's all about don't forget to subscribe at ride home reviews Instagram YouTube Facebook so so yeah so the film basically is about a man a single dad and his daughter ends up missing and so he works with the detectives and such to try to find her and the whole premise of the film is that is takes place on screens by computer screens computer screens mostly the the whole the whole film is just the communication devices that we use to tell the story it's it's interesting now what I liked about the film is I you know well first and foremost this style I saw on Modern Family I believe it was modern family who did it first did a whole episode in which they use just the computer screens and instant messaging and texting and so on and so forth through the screens to develop the whole show and I thought that was clever and this film takes that up a notch I really didn't expect to be at the edge of my seat as much as I was and I thought it was really well done in that regard I mean it just it felt like you were with this father as he was going through screen after screen you know how we search things and how we well how we find things and how we do things and what would we do if we were tech savvy as a parent trying to find our child you know John chose performance was great Debra I mean the acting was for the most part really good between all the main actors especially John Cho I mean there may have been some drop-off here there I didn't think his brother was actor that play his brother was great but he wasn't on there enough to distract detract from the film but I mean I thought I thought that the way they built it up and the way they had the intensity I just kept going and going and going and then they threw twist after twist and if you were paying attention you would have seen the clues to where the the the conclusion came to you just had to listen and you had to pay attention and it was just very it was just really cool how it how it laid out in front of you and I mean I like I said I mean I think the movie was a little bit longer than it had to be and I feel like there was a couple scenes that really slowed it down especially the John Cho and his brother with the security camps that seemed just what went a little long I don't know it just it just felt it felt like it slowed down but yeah I was all in all it used the platforms that were used to it was just interesting and there's nothing really out there what the watch for is just pay attention to what's going on on the screen and what like I said what people are saying and that will and that will really lead you down their road do you need to see this in the theater probably not for the simplified a you probably could watch it on a computer screen and be okay because of the way that it's set up so all in all I must say I was not disappointed with this film I thought it I thought it went well I thought it did really really good and so I do recommend seeing this at some point but like I said I I wouldn't run out to the theater to see it although it was cool how they were able to do some of this stuff anyway but that's it searching starring John Cho Debra Messing directed by a nitch chick man I forgot how to pronounce his name already so sorry about that so yeah so check it out and until next week watch something [Music] | Ride Home Reviews | UCxF0P22muihYEufhNTHzeww | 2018-09-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 721 | 3,571 |
6UbK72Guabg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6UbK72Guabg | CAPITALISM Made the Poor Become RICH | poverty is our natural state before capitalism and i know this is not i mean the marxists know this because karl marx actually admitted this but other than that most people don't know before capitalism what were 99 of people poor everybody was poor so for example today the u.n defines extreme poverty as i think two dollars a day or less how many people lived the two dollars a day or less in 1750 extreme i mean imagine today and we're talking about equal dollars so i'm not playing an inflation game right i mean you couldn't live in two dollars a day less than anything but in 1750 how many people in england lived in two dollars a day less yeah basically 90 something percent everybody was poor and that's true through our human history so if you got like a hundred thousand years throughout that entire period with a few exceptions maybe greece and rome where people got a little bit wealthy for a little period of time everybody's lived in two bucks a day or less forever and then we have this amazing thing happen called freedom capitalism industrial evolution portion of that and suddenly we became relatively rich | Yaron Brook | UCabMx-URCjr2toe9wOE3Y-Q | 2022-07-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 203 | 1,123 |
L9VtP8sU8YY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9VtP8sU8YY | From Stonehenge to SpaceX: Astronomy's Journey | imagine standing within the mysterious circle of Stonehenge built over 5,000 years ago where ancient civilizations once gather to gaze up at the same Starlet sky that blankets us today fast forward to the present and we find ourselves at the threshold of spacex's launch sites where Modern Visionaries are not just observing the stars but reaching for them this is the story of Humanity's unquenchable thirst for understanding the cosmos A Journey that spans Millennia from the rudiment tools of the Ancients to the sophisticated Rockets of today in this video we embark on an epic Voyage Through Time tracing the evolution of astronomy from its Inception among the standing stones of ancient Landscapes to the groundbreaking Endeavors of SpaceX we'll explore how our quest to comprehend the universe has shifted from Mere observation of celestial phenomena with the naked eye to the ambitious goal of interplanetary travel and beyond our mission is to unravel the incredible tapestry of astronomy's History highlighting the profound connection between the ancient astronomers who aligned Stonehenge with the stars and the engineers of today who design vessels capable of navigating the vast ocean of space join us as we delve into the remarkable journey of astronomy from its ancient Roots at Stonehenge to the cuttingedge advancements of SpaceX and discover how Through the Ages our fascination with the Stars has propelled Humanity into the future as we Trace the origins of astronomy Stonehenge stands as a Monumental Testament to Humanity's early fascination with the cosmos this prehistoric monument composed of massive Stones arranged in a circular layout has baffled archaeologists and astronomers alike for centuries recent studies suggest that Stonehenge may have served as an ancient Observatory aligning with the solstices and equinoxes marking the changing seasons and creating a calendar system that was crucial for agricultural societies similar structures around the world from the megalithic tombs in new gra Ireland to the Sund daggers in chako Canyon New Mexico indicate a widespread ancient effort to harmonize human life with the rhythms of the stars and planets these early observatories underscore the universal human impulse to seek patterns in the heavens a Pursuit that laid the foundation for modern astronomy Beyond Stonehenge ancient civilizations across the Globe made significant astrological advances that have shaped our understanding of the universe the Babylonians for instance meticulously recorded celestial events on clay tablets creating a wealth of astronomical data that included the movements of planets the phases of the moon and the occurrence of eclipses their work laid the groundwork for future astronomers and introduced the concept of mathematical predictability to Celestial phenomena in ancient Greece figures like aist starus of same as proposed revolutionary ideas that challenged the geocentric models of the universe although his heliocentric theory that the Earth orbits the Sun was not widely accepted until the time of Copernicus it represented a significant leap in astronomical thought meanwhile hip parcus developed the first comprehensive star catalog and is often credited with discovering the precession of the equinoxes further refining our understanding of Earth's place in the cosmos across the ocean the Maya civilization made remarkable contributions to astronomy aligning their impressive pyramids and temples with celestial events and developing an intricate calendar system that accurately measured time the mind's ability to predict solar and lunar eclipses along with their detailed Venus cycle highlights their Advanced understanding of astronomy and its integration into their culture religion and daily life these ancient Endeavors in Celestial observation and interpretation demonstrate a deep-seated curiosity about the universe a curiosity that transcends cultural and temporal boundaries the work of these early astronomers armed only with the naked eye and a profound sense of wonder laid the Cornerstone of our journey to the Stars a journey that continues to expand our Horizons and challenge our understanding of the universe through their legacy we are reminded that the pursuit of knowledge about the cosmos is an ancient and enduring Quest connecting us with our ancestors in a shared wonderment at the vast Starry Sky above as we journey through the timeline of astronomy we encounter a period often referred to as the Dark Ages in Europe where scientific inquiry and progress including astronomy experienced a significant slowdown during these centuries much of the ancient knowledge cultivated by Greeks Romans and other civilizations risked being lost to time however this was not a universal setback a th000 miles to the South East the Islamic world became a beacon of scientific scholarship and Discovery Islamic scholars and astronomers diligently translated and expanded upon the astronomical texts of ancient Greece and Rome preserving this precious knowledge they made significant advancements in observational techniques and Celestial navigation contributing Innovations such as the astrolab which revolutionized the way Sailors navigated the Seas The Works of Scholars like Al batani and Al haisen not only kept the light of astronomy alive during Europe's darker times but also laid the groundwork for future scientific revolutions as the Middle Ages waned Europe began to awaken from its intellectual Slumber heralding the dawn of the Renaissance this Rebirth of interest in The Sciences was propelled by two key inventions the printing press and the telescope the printing press made knowledge more accessible than ever before spreading ancient and contemporary scientific Works across the continent then came the invention of the telescope a tool that would forever change our view of the universe with it astronomers could now see far beyond the capabilities of the naked eye unveiling the mysteries of the cosmos piece by piece the Renaissance Era became the stage for some of history's most renowned astronomers who would challenge the very foundations of how Humanity perceived the universe Nicholas Copernicus proposed a heliocentric model placing the Sun not the Earth at the center of the solar system a revolutionary idea that laid the groundwork for modern astronomy following Copernicus Johannes Kepler and Galileo galile made groundbreaking discoveries that supported and expanded upon the heliocentric model Kepler's laws of planetary motion describe the orbits of the planets around the sun with unprecedented accuracy while Galileo's telescopic observations including the moons of Jupiter and the phases of Venus provided compelling evidence that challenged the prevailing geocentric models the Renaissance marked a pivotal moment in the history of astronomy characterized by a surge of discoveries that expanded our understanding of the universe this era set the stage for the Scientific Revolution which would see astronomy transition from a philosophical pursuit to an empirical science driven by observation and Mathematics as we reflect on this transformative period we recog I the Renaissance as a time when Humanity's gaze turned upwards with a new intensity fueled by the desire to explore the vast Uncharted territories of the cosmos the trajectory of astronomy and space exploration took a dramatic turn on October 4th 1957 with the launch of Sputnik by the Soviet Union the small beeping sphere orbiting the Earth marked the dawn of the Space Age and catapulted Humanity into a new era of exploration beyond the confines of our planet sputnik's successful launch did more than just orbit the earth it ignited the Space Race a competition between the Soviet Union and the United States for Supremacy in space exploration this rivalry accelerated advancements in rocketry spacecraft design and our understanding of space setting the stage for some of the most remarkable achievements in human history in the wake of Sputnik both superpowers invested heavily in developing technology that could send humans into space and return them safely this culminated in NASA's Apollo program an ambitious initiative that aimed to land humans on the moon and bring them back to Earth on July 20th 1969 Apollo 11 achieved this breathtaking goal when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldren became the first humans to set foot on the lunar surface the moon landing was not only a Monumental achievement in human history but also a testament to the role of a astronomy in navigating and planning these complex missions the Apollo missions relied on precise astronomical calculations to navigate the vast distances between Earth and the Moon astronomers and Engineers meticulously mapped the moon's surface calculated the gravitational forces at play and plotted trajectories that would safely guide the astronauts to their destination and back the role of astronomy was crucial in determining the timing of launches lunar Landings and Earth three entries ensuring the mission's success the moon's exploration provided scientists with valuable data about its composition geology and history offering new insights into the origins of the Earth Moon system moreover the Apollo missions inspired a generation of scientists engineers and Ordinary People proving that the boundaries of human exploration were not limited to the Earth the stunning images of Earth rising over the lunar Horizon underscored our planet's fragility and interconnectedness shifting Global perspectives on environmental stewardship and international cooperation the launch of Sputnik and the Apollo moon landings are pivotal chapters in the story of human exploration marking the transition from observing the heavens from afar to becoming active participants in the cosmic Arena these milestones in space exploration not only expanded our scientific knowledge but also redefined what Humanity could achieve setting the stage for fure future endeavors beyond our solar system as we reflect on these achievements we are reminded of the Relentless curiosity and Ingenuity that Propel us toward the Stars continuing the Journey of exploration that began with ancient observers gazing up at the night sky in the Continuum of space exploration a significant chapter began in 2002 with the founding of SpaceX by entrepreneur Elon Musk motivated by the extraordinary vision of making life multiplanetary Musk embarked on an audacious journey to revolutionize space travel spacex's foundational goals were clear to drastically reduce the cost of accessing space and to lay the groundwork for human colonization of Mars these Ambitions were not just about continuing Humanity's exploration of the cosmos but about ensuring our survival and fostering a future where humans are a space fairing civilization spacex's Journey has been marked by a series of groundbreaking Innovations and achievements that have reshaped our approach to space travel in 2008 spacex's Falcon 1 became the first privately funded liquid fueled rocket to reach orbit proving that private companies could indeed play a pivotal role in space exploration this Milestone was followed by another significant achievement in 2012 when the dragon spacecraft became the first commercial vehicle to dock with the International Space Station ISS fing cargo and later astronauts 2 and from the ISS however perhaps the most revolutionary advancement has been the development of reusable Rockets the successful landing and reuse of the Falcon 99's first stage marked a new era in space travel drastically reducing costs and increasing the frequency of space missions looking to the Future spacex's Ambitions soar even higher with projects like the Starship a fully reusable spacecraft designed to carry humans to Mars the moon and Beyond the Starship represents the next leap in our quest to become a multiplanetary species with its first unred missions to Mars plann in the coming years this colossal vessel capable of carrying up to 100 passengers is at the heart of musk's vision for Mars colonization by establishing a self-sustaining City on Mars SpaceX aims not only to safeguard Humanity's future but also to open up new Realms of scientific research resource utiliz ation and perhaps even terraforming the implications of spacex's work extend far beyond the immediate technological advancements as we stand on the brink of a new chapter in Humanity's astronomical Journey projects like the Starship challenge us to reconsider our place in the universe the potential for Mars colonization reinvigorates our ancient desire to explore the unknown and confronts us with profound questions about our responsibility to other planets the ethics of space colonization and the shared future of humanity Among the Stars in this bold New Era of space exploration spacex's Innovations serve as a beacon guiding us toward a future where the boundaries of human exploration are limited only by our imagination as we contemplate the vast Uncharted expanses of space we are reminded that the journey from Stonehenge to SpaceX is but the beginning of Humanity's Cosmic Saga a saga that promises to unfold across Generations propelling us into the mysteries of the cosmos with renewed Vigor and boundless curiosity as we conclude our journey from the ancient stones of Stonehenge to the cuttingedge Rockets of SpaceX it's clear that the threat of curiosity about the universe has remained unbroken across Millennia this enduring Fascination has propelled Humanity from merely observing the Heavens to actively seeking to Traverse them the remarkable evolution of astronomy and space exploration reflects our desire to understand our place in the cosmos and to push the boundaries of what is possible as we stand on the cusp of new discoveries and Ventures into space the story of our exploration is far from over it's just entering its most thrilling chapter we invite you to share your thoughts on this Incredible Journey Through Time and Space what fascinates you most about the evolution of astronomy and what do you envision for the future of space exploration your insights and dreams add to the rich tapestry of this ongoing Adventure thank you for joining us on this Voyage from Stonehenge to SpaceX if you're intrigued by The Mysteries of the universe and the history of our quest to explore it don't forget to subscribe for more content that delves into the wonders of space and the indomitable Spirit of discovery that drives us together let's continue to explore the final frontier propelled by curiosity and the Timeless urge to look up at the stars and dream of what lies Beyond | Insight Voyager | UCaWu7XsbJ8wlEf2DBlTkabw | 2024-03-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,298 | 14,706 |
P-RMpDtKywA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-RMpDtKywA | Monsta Infinite Presale Whitelist Closed & Inception Monsta Giveaway! | pre-lodge giveaway 20 inception monster giveaway event yo what's up guys i'm black hero and in this video we're going to be talking about a giveaway there's a giveaway curly for inception monsters that's going to be coming out um i'll go through the details later but before that right before that there is actually some news because i was gonna make a uh whitelist video how to join right but apparently the white listing for monster infinity's pre-sale like if you want to join the pre-sale you have to white be white listed is is closed temporary or permanently that's what they said on twitter um also on telegram it's also posted on telegram our white listing right data they hit 100 000 participants or this isn't filtered data so we might temporarily or permanently close the white listing thank you for your overwhelming support they also posted this on twitter uh watch out for that uh this is the there's a giveaway um this is the one that i'll be talking about but yeah i just wanted to show tell you guys that if you weren't able to join the white listing yesterday on the 22nd then you might potentially might have missed a chance so um yeah that is unfortunate but you know there's still hope just stay posted and i'll update you guys whenever there's news that circulates okay so here here's some other details i'm like if you guys can see this so when whitelist result will be come out all right how and where and to know you're selected all right answers august 25th right will be the result of pre-sales one all right round one because there's gonna be two rounds for the first 400 people pre-sell two restarts will be announced uh we'll announce date again all right so they're gonna update you guys on when they're gonna announce the pre-sales two results but if you want to join you can tell this was rushed if you want to join pre-sale must apply whiteness first so that's that's the thing uh pre-sale one will be on september 8th that's so that's you have to prepare your bnb all right depending on how much you want to you know spend by september 8th and for presale to september 15 so that's basically one later this is part of the road map it's still there still up to date all right if you missed a chance to apply whitelist you can buy it during tge and ideo date based on the road map in september 28th so you know when they open up uh their initial decks offering i'm pretty sure that's what ideo means if not then yeah all right so we're still negotiating with multiple exchanges please always check your announcement channels all right so if you guys want to stay up to date on which exchange should be going with then yeah i think they're working with they're trying to get uh to a contract with bsc right now binance smart chain so yeah just watch out for that not all things are confirmed so our wide listing dating yeah has 100 000 participants this is unfiltered data so yeah that is unfortunate it really is um there there was wait here we go so this is the information right or was it on there yeah it was under white paper all right so let's go to the white paper really quick i want to show you something yeah here was that on how this was i was this is what i was gonna make a video on i already made one but it's not relevant anymore all right the white listing is done um you just have to do kyc you have to put your full name age email web address selection of country uh here's more details on the rounds minimum bnb for the pre-sale when you do join the pre-sales one bnb 10 billion i'm like these might be subjected to change who knows but for now this is the data that we have been given uh also it's also noted on their white paper um if you go here to monday all right monday here we go so yeah this is our pre-sale one pre-sale two and white listing it's all here as well um for also information i'm like i made a spreadsheet right so token for sale for pre-sell one is gonna be 540 000 money right uh that's point two of the total token supply which is also listed on their tokenomics uh for the price is 2700 the difference between pre-sale one and presale two is that this is gonna be two four and this is two seven so that's what they say the ten percent discount um the sale method for this is gonna be a first come first serve all right so white white list i want you guys to make sure that you don't get confused alright the white list address is 400 but at most you know because i did the math all right assuming alright hopefully you guys can see this assuming that 400 paid a minimum of one bnb right because that's the minimum contribution right one bnb uh at the price right now is um 25 i think this is going up to 13 pesos right wow it's going up it's going to the moon um so that means one point this isn't this is monster all right this is monster i mean this is monet money all right so this is 1.08 million money their allocation is 540 000 as stated here so that can they're over they're making sure that it's gonna fill up all right so pros probably half if each individual that pays one bnb right will be able to get in but there is a max contribution here right make sure see that that's there's a max contribution that's why i said a while ago that it might be subject to change stays tuned for announcement so assuming assuming people pay 10 right now this is now like all right so say this is the max right uh why is it with 10 all right um that's more than the allocation all right so you drop this to 20 right so for instance for example the first 20 people all right drop 10 bnb right the pre-sell one's over that's it that's it all the four all the 380 people that got into the white list will now be moved on to pre-sale round two so that's how that's gonna work so there you guys have it that's that uh for pre-sale two i also did some math let's revert this to some better numbers right that that makes more sense assuming everyone just plays one bnb to get their allocated money um for b-cell 2 i initially thought that you have to have a minimum of 0.1 but then i clarified this with the awesome guys on discord that that's not the case um so we we disregard this all right so we now focus on on this all right so 100 000 right they said a hundred thousand applicants were able to join let's actually subtract this by this so ninety nine thousand eight hundred rejoining the pre-sale too all right uh just assuming these are rough numbers these they're not verified guaranteed remember they're still filtering this out um so if that's going to be the case you know what let's actually just make it let's just round it up to 100 000. all right their total allocation for pre-sale round two is 7.56 million money right at 2 4 per 1 bnb if that's the case and 100 people joined the presale 2 uh the max out because they're using a over subscription method right over subscription meaning there's actually a example here on how over subscription works or some sort of example so target sales 1000 bnb right the what's their target sale do they put their target sale here 7 600 money do i do the math did i do the math on that probably not but okay say for example their target sale is 1000 bnb their total bnb gathered is 10 000 bmb so mr a invested 10 bnb mr a gets only one bnb allocation of money because the extra 9bnb will be returned to mr a and for those of you are wondering when you will get the refund for your oversubscription it's going to happen on the 28th of september all right so just wait for like um if you're investing on the 6th that's about 22 days after so you know try to try to try to read the scenario on how many people to know how much you're going to invest so that you don't have to wait for your bnb to return at a later date so that you can use that bnb to invest in other projects or for the september one uh september one inception i'm gonna talk about that it's gonna be it's gonna be fun it's gonna be so cool so yeah round two that's how that works so you know over subscription so example mr a invest 5 bnb he'll get 4bnb back because if you do math right they had a target of 10 000 b b so yeah it's pretty safe and make sure that everyone gets a piece of the pie which is just a good thing it's a good thing right so by doing the math um if we do if we take into consideration the oversubscription method that they just you know said here over subscription uh if all 100 000 players invest like say anything about like 10 10 b 100 b b um they're gonna get like say for example i i invest 5 bnb right that's what i'm going to invest right i'm going to get this minus this back i'm going to get 4.97 b and b back on 28th because it's going to make it so that all of us all 100 000 of us will invest .03 bnb which amounts to 75.6 money tokens but all right just to make sure that we reach the allocation of 7.56 million as they did here so yeah that that's that's that that's how that's gonna work all right i initially thought it was gonna be the other way around all right for those of you who are wondering what the other way around was is 0.1 max right that means of the 100 000 that joined the pre-sale only 31 500 will be able to join a first come first serve [Music] basis to reach the target max and then everyone that paid 0.1 will get 240 money tokens which which which is good because it also prioritizes that first but then it's not good because not a lot of people will be able to join so it's up to them you know if you guys are watching it's up to you which method uh i i would prefer this one because um i'll i'd stay awake i'd camp this and make sure that i will get my share and but you know whatever is fair whatever is fair i also propose that you know of the 200 right because you know 400 will be guaranteed whitelisted for pre-sale run right so if you if you do if you do the math 400 minus i'm like it's not even gonna be guaranteed but say 200 this is the best case scenario 200 we move move to uh pre-sale round two uh it'd be cool if that these 200 people get at least five minutes all right advanced time to join the pre-sell too before everyone knows i'm like that's only fair right because you know they got lucky and got selected for the 400 and then they didn't get lucky to be able to buy because it's a first come first serve basis especially of those whales that jump you know just dump 10 bnb so yeah that's the case all right uh this right here this is just me speculating prices i'm like if yeah do we have time i'm like you you wanna yes okay so bnb prices right now actually went up all right let's refresh this 25 000 okay so here we go 25 000 that's one bnb is 25 000 pesos this is philippine currency uh it's php um so that means one money as of right now as of the pre-sale is nine pay sales and 37 cents and uh during the pre-sale round two it becomes 10 passes 54 cents because of the 10 discount i'm like if you do the math that actually goes up all right all right so if you join the pre-sale one you you spent one bnb you're gonna get 25 you're gonna need 25 000. i mean no you're going to get 25 000 worth right uh same here if you spent point 10 you got 240 money tokens you're gonna get 2.5 000 worth and then if you go through the other scenario we're only got point zero three where you only got 75 money that means you're gonna be spending you're gonna get like yeah 796 pesos right yeah you know what the funny thing is if we actually do spend 0.03 i actually have it saved here but it's also posted here uh by the mods right here zoom this a little bit because i don't know how to zoom all right normal master use money 18 money for one normal monster in early price around 10 to 15 dollars each or monster for 30 to 45 dollars for a whole team of three monsters so basically what it's saying is that one monster equals 80 money all right to get a full team of three monsters good to play the game it's gonna require 240 money so um assuming we do the math right here go beautiful 240 money that's why it's 0.1 bnb i'm like they really detail this so that's about how much you're going to be paying for one team if you joined the pre-sale to around two five that's not bad to start playing the game right now but remember guys the prices will fluctuate will go up or down depending on the market especially when it gets uh into the ideal so yeah watch out for that on the 28th mark your dates now here is the fun part all right if you just you know if you're you're a trader you just buy and hold right assuming right this is one x right this is 1x so the price is the same all right say the value goes up 2x right that's 200 so yeah your initial investment of 25 000 will become 50 000. you get the point all right so it becomes 3x 75k 4x 100k 5x you're 26k all right now let's make things interesting 10. all right that's 250k pesos pesos 100x 2.5 million so you're 25 000 pesos will become 2.5 million pesos all right this actually makes sense this is actually probably achievable because look axe infinity right they started uh after because this is max right this is axs all right right now it's at 3 3837 pesos that's about like almost what 40 bucks for 50 bucks 40 bucks i can't do them at 60 bucks 60 bucks six yeah anyway at the start it had seven it was seven pesos all right our start right here is nine pesos so you know i don't know how that works but it kind of makes sense so it's like it's about the same right and then it shot up right to 3087 pesos right right now that's the highest it's at okay this is only nine like 936 that's 936 pesos that was that that's it happened in july 14th for axs and it shot up to almost 70 dollars um so if i thousand x this so that's two point million there that makes more sense nine thousand okay fine not probably not one thousand but like 500 x there so your initial investment of twenty five thousand assuming you got the pre-sale you spent one bnb and by the time it goes up you'll get get a profit of of course you're gonna have to do the math um that minus investment equals yeah that's that's your profit right there 12.6 million i'm like it doesn't feel like anything changed so yeah uh just shooting numbers here for fun all right again it could also go down it could go to the negatives like you never know like negative two so you could lose money i don't know how that works but yeah for now let's just keep it at zero just you know we play for the fun of the game as well as the same time we earn money you know that's fun that's a good concept not to the giveaway i've been i don't know why i how does this happen i've been talking for 17 minutes so the giveaway here is um on the telegram but i'll send you my links all right so that way i think it's like a referral method so here we go monster you know can i just move this a little bit here oh you can do that it's a mazda infinite pre-lodge giveaway 20 inception monster giveaway event by the way guys if you guys don't know i'll be covering this soon but uh inception monsters are basically like origin mods origin axes in axi infinity it's another game actually infinity is another game that uh has this you know which monster infinite was inspired from all right they're totally different but you know just to give you guys perspective so these are inception monsters there's going to only be 000 88 of them all right and you know the cool thing is they could have legendary parts and their legendary parts are like very rare 25 i'm like if you want a hexa all right that's a 1.34 million chance which i highly doubt is gonna happen but if it does yeah the value of that might shoot up all right though it's gonna be the most expensive monster in the game if there's a hexa monster so yeah that's what an inception is you're gonna be 24 grab up for grab to be eligible you have to join the telegram group and the discord server all right the discord server is actually full so you have to wait for that to open uh or they could change the mechanics of this um send our telegram to discord invitation or discord link in the content all right boom so you send these links all right follow our official twitter account retweet our post and tag three friends or share our facebook posts in three crypto related groups all right i'll just go probably go to tag three friends around so here is this and then you fill up this form all right let's go check out the form that they have given us uh on how to join this event oh it's the same thing all right required email address is here on everything telegram use username your answer please make sure you join our telegram group your bep 20 wallet address your discord tag your twitter handle and your twitter facebook profile link all right a screenshot of your chat you're friends with in okay so so it's using screenshots screenshot of your chat to your friends with invitation link too and screenshot your chat to your friends with invitation link three i'm like oh that's very thorough um nice nice very good so yeah do this it's pretty straightforward again you know your email address your like i'm using metamask if you're using just wallet you know where to find your okay yeah but yeah you know how to get your address if you join the presale if you don't then there's videos on it but it's it's something it's here you press copy and you paste it here it's like a bunch of like it's an x1 and then a bunch of numbers and then seven three nine i think that was my last and then yeah you do that and then you double check all right telegram username my telegram username uh if you wanna be like if you wanna be very very sure what your telegram username is you just do edit profile and then you edit this and then you just copy that cancel and cancel all right there blank blank hero there we go oh we have to put add okay discord tag you just open up discord and then yeah so it's pretty straightforward that is how you join the giveaway i guess um yeah i'm gonna actually have to you know invite some friends uh follow yeah follow is this the one that i am not supposed to retweet let's see all right just follow the links just follow the instructions it's pretty straightforward so yeah there you go you this is oh yo that's why there's a bunch of retweets everyone's retweeting this so that's kind of cool oh yeah they also have their own money speculation i don't know how this works your roi is 2x that price of 244 their market cap is 1.7 million if the roi is time five so yeah this is the tweet you're gonna be retweeting is this a different oh this is their facebook version i think it's the same thing uh let's go check get out if it loads all right what else and then just fill up this form so they're going to be announcing 20 lucky winners on the 31st of august 2021 all right for me that's gonna be happening uh one two three four five six seven all right about eight days from now all right the event will start once we publish this google form and end on 30th august so deadline for this giveaway is on the 30th of august remember guys i mean entering is better than not entering that means that you have a chance to actually win something the name and photo will show you where your google account will be recorded when you upload files and submit this form okay so make sure your your picture here all right because when you win make sure it's a good one make sure you're looking good you're looking sharp all right join their telegram join their discord if you can if you can't then all right i'm like you can give them a reason why you can't and yeah it's a pretty straightforward way to join the giveaway and yeah see on facebook it's the same thing here alright so beautiful make sure to like and share so there you guys have it uh that is monsta infinite i talked too long i talked probably really too long but you know i i was able to to nail everything down that i wanted to say to you guys so hopefully you guys did enjoy this video make sure to like and subscribe for more content just like this and until next time see ya uh advantage all right it's not it's not a big advantage but it's an advantage all right i'm like that that's actually kind of cool so hopefully hopefully i can win one all right and then we'll make it our mascot for our monster infinite videos you know that would be very epic | Blank Hero | UCRGEOT6NzNgfVK4kEHtIlHQ | 2021-08-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,985 | 20,282 |
FS0YqXNuKfU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FS0YqXNuKfU | Marxism Today 4-14: Ideology is Sneaky | hey everyone it's red Wagner this week's episode is on ideology it's actually our second episode this season on that topic our first one came out in August you can go back and listen to it now if you like it's not required for this upcoming episode the one that you're listening to right now in this episode we discuss slavoj ejects movie the perverts guide to ideology Tony fed and I talk about all of these different ways that ideology functions if there's one thing that really pulls in all of the different parts of our discussion it's this theme that ideology is sneaky it works in ways that you don't necessarily think about at first and and as you talk about it and as you dig deeper and study it more you keep pulling back these additional layers more things that ideology does or controls or contributes to and and more things that it interacts with this will be the first part of our discussion on the movie the second half will be posted as an episode probably later this year so with no further ado please enjoy the current episode ideology is sneaky hello and welcome to marks and a I'm Tony Schmidt and I'm red Wagner and we are also joined today by the lovely that Logan hi thank you for calling me lovely you're welcome I thought I look kind of good today and made me feel very good about myself thanks and today we are going to be continuing our discussion that we started a bit ago on ideology and this time we all sat down and watched slava gee Zack and anyone feel free to correct that pronunciation because I'm sure it's wrong we watched the perverts guide to ideology that he did you pronounce the J I mean that you can pronounce it but it's gotta be like a why like slavi Lavoie owsla voy oh I'm just gonna say a Zach okay is that okay I'm speaking in words is not the Big Z yeah z-man mm-hmm you know like though that's probably his superhero name I think he portrayed he has like superhero powers in this movie too because he is like teleporting into these stories something I noticed right off the bat as we go as we start talking about this but that you made a very conscious choice to dress up like the peak like he would be in the movies himself talking about them from within and I I mean I don't know what that says about that choice maybe just like it made it feel like he was looking at it from the inside instead of like a professor lecturing at you like it gave it a sense of I don't know depth their intimacy and maybe that's a superficial like stylistic choice but it was choice he made for sure like he could have just been sitting in a room and oftentimes he was but they made a clear point and sometimes too hilarious effect to have him like in the movie I agree and I think that this choice came from his earlier film which is called G Jack ! and the director of that film did something where she wanted to have him in all of these different situations you know he could just be a talking head and talk to you for two hours or however long the movie is yeah uh but in G Jack what she did is filmed him in his kitchen in his bed like this she filmed them just in all these like weird different places that are kind of part of his normal everyday life which was interesting people liked that I think they responded to the fact that like yeah he's a philosopher but he's not just this talking head hmm I think this was sort of the more magical version of that yeah totally you see him in a lot of different like garments I think at one point maybe he's dressed as a priest or so and in different situations and then they show jaws and I jokingly said wouldn't it be awesome if they show them like doggy paddling with a little thin on his back leg then it would have been fantastic well so do we just want to jump in maybe we should give a brief introduction to Z Zach himself people don't know slow voice Dziedzic he is a Slovenian Marxist philosopher and also a lacanian cycle analytische a psychoanalysis psychoanalyst yeah yeah he's a beat he dressed watch from a guy name is jacques lacan who was big into Freud and he has a lot of really confusing concept um then the one that comes up the most in this one I think that in this isn't hard to understand is the big other which is basically but what it sounds like it's you know it a higher power or even while we can get into more about some of the other things that it could be but yeah do you guys want to discuss a little bit of what you've already covered in reference to ideology be helpful maybe you just seem over where you where you come from yeah our first episode on ideology we talked about how you can divide the things that support a productive system into the repressive apparatus a--'s and the ideological apparatus is this is drawing from a theorist by the name of value ser things like the police and the military would be the repressive apparatus 'as these are things that are going to use force to reinforce the social system so for example our social system capitalism says that the employer is the person who owns all of the products of the employees labor mmm that's that's how it works and if an employee chooses to bring home the things that he is made while on the job then that person can be arrested and jailed or whatever or taken to court so you can call in force in that sense however for some zone usually is not effective enough and you need to have these things called ideological State apparatuses the and these are not limited just to things that the states does we have a little spiel about that in the previous episode but basically it's all of the things that you would call ideology that support a social system so it's how the schools work it's how news is formatted it's how politics works it's how culture you know what stories are the interesting stories what movies get made what TV shows show up but what also I think in our culture advertising is a massive part of of ideology would you say that extends just how people treat each other the things that they that they feel like treat as socially bad like the value system that is reinforced or sort of written by just interactions with each other absolutely ideology taps into what is a good citizen now it will define for you as a good citizen has these characteristics and in capitalism you can see ideology in the sense of a good citizen is someone who works hard or a more modern expen an example of kept that of capitalist ideology for a long time now more recently in capitalism a good citizen is also somebody who consumes to the correct level the person that you know lives a life that requires them to work how longer hours or more jobs or whatever I think two part of that since it was recently veterans day pops in my head is the ideology that you also have to support the repressive apparatus is and stuff like is with the black lives matter stuff people aren't keen when people are like these cups are murdering people or you know war they're not keen if you like well why are they why were these people fighting a war killer like is that something that should be universally praised like you know that sort of stuff too yeah and I think there's even more subtle ones but they they they get at this sort of connection connective tissue between like values that individuals have and they think that they're their own but they're sort of our learned they don't realize like people would think I was weird if I didn't have a bank account certainly people in my family would think well that's odd you should probably do that that's what like a mature adult does and in a lot of ways that makes that I see the reason is the practical side why that's there but also that's that's sort of buying into a big a lot of other baggage that you're not realizing you're buying into it not only a bank account but today it's the bank account and the credit card and you need to build up good credit you can use that credit card you've got to take out loans because there's this whole financial structure of our society that those provide real incentives for that but then there's also like the the soft ideological portions of it as well where it's just people that saying oh that's weird or you know you really should or whatever well in most jobs you can't not have a bank account now most jobs only do direct deposit mmm yeah well so this leads me to the the first one of the first things in the movie is it cool if we jump in oh yeah totally so the first movie he talks but i think is they live yep okay and if you're not familiar with this movie it's about a man who receives glasses that allow him to see the true nature of the world and the true nature of the world is that there's i think they're aliens they are running this things behind the scenes and at everything is sort of a subliminal message to get you to be a better consumer to to obey to buy it's like we he looks at billboards and the billboard would just say like that like obey right or something like that or um and there's a lot of hokey like fighting and it's pretty awesome movie but one of the things that Jesus talks about with that is that ideology is is a spontaneous relationship with the world is not necessarily enforced and that's sort of why I brought up this idea of of this sort of soft ideology you were talking about because I think it any humans are together culturally you're going to have an ideology form and that was something I hadn't thought about before he said that but the point that it will exist spontaneously and that the the fact that it takes place is not enforced does not mean that it is not used or manipulated in ways that are to enforce but yeah I just thought it was interesting to note that that it is sort of a natural way that humans in a group interact with the world I think related to that point is the fact that the movie makes a very good choice a choice that Jie Jie calls out as the right choice and I agree with him on this point that the protagonist sees the truth not when he removes something which I think ties into the fact that there's always going to be some ideology there's going to be some things that are valued some things that are expected whatever there's going to be a of ideology and it's not that you need to clear something away to see the truth behind the ideology it's that you need to add something in order to see the full picture of the ideology that you're currently in so so in the film and and both you know it's very applicable to us because in the film the it's a modern setting that's I don't know the 60s or whatever the film came out seventies but the clearly that people live in capitalist america and by putting on the glasses that's a representation that you need a strong and well developed theory to understand capitalism that simply not being exposed to you know advertising and all of the other expectations of capitalism it's not that you can one it's not that you can even be removed from all of those factors and to even if you were removed from them that wouldn't help you understand how the ideology functions it's the this extra thing in the movie represented by glasses in real life being theory that helps you understand it it's a new way to look at the world as opposed to like in the it could have been just um a sci-fi premise of like having a chip removed from your brain and you lose that now you can see the world right but no there was a new apparatus he had to use like you said and what I what gee Zack also pointed out was the extreme violence of liberation and that's a big part of what about in the movie word that that theory that you're saying is the sort of key to unlocking your perspective and seeing things in a new way people are very comfortable without that key sometimes the ideology makes them feel very good even though it's a lie it makes them feel very at home and they will be resistant to getting those glasses and that visit like that happens in may in the movie there is a scene where two beefy dude just like punch each other a bunch because the one guys trying to make him put the glasses on and just doesn't wanna and and it's exactly that and I think what he's saying and I you know I I don't like using the word violence but and I would sort of split hairs there and make sure that people are aware that being aggressive probably makes people less likely to understand the glasses even if they put them on the more resistant but I think the point that he was saying is you are communicating this just like all those other things are communicated if the other parts of ideology communicated that the keys to unlock and see things can be communicated to they can be given to one another and sometimes people aren't going to be incredibly appreciative of the fact but you know you can still work your damnedest to do it and you know sometimes it's a struggle it's very important part of the movie because it represents the struggle within the oppressed class to understand their own exploitation yeah that's not something that can come just like you said automatically or or freely even if it is given it's a struggle that needs to happen and probably most effectively a struggle of ideas and words but in the movie represented by a like you said two beefeaters just its laga tee shot an ally over and over just yep um I think I mentioned the black lives matter thing earlier and I think that's a good modern contemporary example of that is that there are people who see the big problems are in the criminal justice system and especially you know how different people are treated by the police and like confronting people with that like the the reactionary that's the that's you know it's not actually vine but it's the fighting against accepting this true yeah and in a lot of ridiculous ways and like contorting themselves to uphold that you know because it's scary to think that you know if something bad happens you want to be able to call the police and have them take care of it if somebody's breaking in your house you want to be able to call the cops and know that the cops will come and arrest them yeah and stop that you don't want to be like oh I'm worried about something I'm going to call the cops and they might kill me because that's a terrifying narrative that the people were there to protect you are really not necessarily going to protect you and I'm not saying that that's exactly how it is but you know like even just that they have motivations that are outside their advertised motivations that they're not necessarily there for your best interests at all times is yeah you know they don't have protect and serve tattooed to their soul I like thank you for bringing up and like a real world example because I've wat when watching this I felt like one of the things that would be the strongest addition to it is that sort of extension and I don't think you could do it then one if he was using timely examples for the time it would it would date the movie very quickly but to like what he does is is relate them to pop culture and I think that's a great framework to do so because there's a lot of shared ideas like a shared experience that we have a lot of people have seen these movies so it's a really great way to explore these themes but any anything that you guys can like use to to connect it to things that are happening I really appreciate that so thank you it helps me understand it welcome one of the themes that g-shock often talks about and that comes up in this movie is the following the problem today is how to enjoy this would be compared to in the past that you wouldn't have the ability to get the things that you needed or wanted but now the problem is how to enjoy the things that you really should enjoy or that you're supposed to enjoy you know the previously we had I think I mentioned it the work ethic was part of who you needed to be you needed to work hard and that's how you were a good citizen yeah nowadays we also have that you are supposed to enjoy certain things and that's also part of being a good citizen and I think this is very interesting because it ties in with a lot of modern functions including those of us who work in salaried positions where more and more you're staying later or coming in early or taking work home with you this I think is a part of the problem of how to enjoy because it's it's the the creep of work into your regular life it's the function that you know because of your own guilt you can't stop working but because of your guilt it's hard to stop working and also enjoy like you're supposed to stop and enjoy yeah there isn't a time for enjoyment like a weed mentioned Nicole shippens or we did an episode of the coal shipments book decolonizing time yeah that I you know hits on its in just the fact that we don't have time to do what we want anyway yeah we don't have time and yet commercialism sets up commodities to he talks about this with coca-cola I think he just plays a commercial right and then hex but but how commercialism sets up you to desire to desire to just to continue to want things and to want things in the abstract and you talking about this makes me think of how the the old the model you know life liberty and the pursuit of happiness used to be life liberty and the pursuit of property and they're not that different really when you think about it but there is an ideological shift their property in a lot of cases nowadays in this culture is related to happiness having more stuff is is part of pursuing happiness enjoying yourself is because you consume you know entertainment or you know whatever your hobbies are in those kinds of things but that was a really interesting idea to me that in order to keep this this commercialism engine running you need to sell people on the idea that they will always desire and desiring to desire is a good thing and that kind of blew me away because of course that's never said it's no one would say that explicitly one it's a complicated weird kind of an awkward thing to think about like or articulate at least for me maybe it was good for he was easy for Dziedzic he articulated pretty well but but also you don't want people to realize that's what they're trying to do that they they have an idealized form of satisfaction that they can never reach that that idea of the perfect sip of coke that you're looking for probably doesn't exist and you'll never get that but you keep taking sips because you are you're sold a bill that says that's what you're looking for and that's what you'll mm-hmm fine question work yeah yeah on this same topic there's a great book not even a Marxist book but um one that might be interesting to leftists is one of Naomi Klein's first in earliest books she's the person that did the book on disaster capitalism and now she has a new one on the environment called this changes everything but one of her first books was called no logo it was kind of about advertising and consumerism and also like the sweatshops that are actually tied to the real production of commodities one of the interesting things about that book is she goes through how in the 80s and and kind of around that time there was a big shift in advertising where you were no longer really selling a commodity you what you really had to do was sell an idea a lifestyle yeah and and part of selling an idea or a lifestyle is you never have enough of an idea or a lifestyle you can have enough shoes you can have enough you know beverages or whatever Kansas soda but you can never have enough of a lifestyle you can never be too successful to athletic too sexy whatever you're trying to be that's what they have to sell you as the commodity in the morn City aside the converse of that is like with cologne it you you're selling the lifestyle of being more sexually attractive and finding more more potential partners but the the sneaky underlying message is that right now that you are not sexy enough and you lack something that's yeah I think it's a good one to bring up like because you can always get somewhere he couldn't you can always kind of feel bad about yourself for not having more especially when it's out there and other people can just go get it to and they're getting more than you are you there getting those things and you can visit we're very visual creatures you see them in those commercials getting those things right and it's big it's I can see why is motivating I want to be interesting therefore I will drink dose a kiss because that will make me more interesting yeah I think it's a sick part of our culture that we've developed a society that relies so heavily on advertising and that what advertising now inherently tries to do is to tell you that you're not good enough in all these different ways like a major part of what makes our economy run is convincing people that they're bad right now and that they need to fix something about themselves that they may or may not actually really need to fix and yeah yeah diet fads that's that's one that i always think is interesting because i am not the shape list of people I'm you know I'm not in great shape but I was having a conversation with a young co-worker who was taking some diet pill that was supposed to be like some plant fiber stuff is supposed to expanding your stomach to make you feel more full so you didn't eat as much whoa and I'm like okay that's insane you're starving yourself to death with that also eat slightly less healthier and get regular exercise Mike it's not like you don't need the secret diet pills there's a formula if you want to be healthier and lose weight you just consume a little less calories get a little bit more nutritious stuff and regularly work like it's not it's you know it's something people have known for ever I've guessing but it's always sold as you know a different oh you need you're never than enough you never gonna do it let's take all these expensive pills and whatnot that aren't actually going to solve your problem because they need to try more another one and I mean people exist with body dysmorphia where they I'm sure that is a very complex state of mind board but there were they can't they literally cannot see what their body looks like and they'll they will not be able to they'll always think that they're too fed even as they're dying in nutrition and and that's I bet I mean sort of a social extension of probably some of the outcomes and I'm sure that when that happens there's a lot at work there's probably very complex condition but you you there's a line you can drive between those two dots when you have a culture who's constantly saying these things and then we also have a culture who constantly we're worried about girls be like being objectified but we we see them pushed constantly to be pretty and to feel like being pretty is one of the main assets that they should consider part of their self-worth like these things have connections in the real world and they don't like that's what I think it's important to talking about these like it's a commercial people see commercials all time were normalized to it you don't think that it actually has a practical part in your life and actually like hold sway but it really changes we can change who you are what you do yeah whether body dysmorphia is caused by capitalism who knows why that's there certainly it's not helping and it not only is it not helping but it's it's sick the way that it takes advantage of people and and tells them that they're bad and wrong and should be ashamed and that only if they achieve some ridiculous sometimes unachievable ideal can they really be a good and accepted person and they're going to make a good buck off of you while you don't try to do that sometimes I try to think about these larger abstract concepts as a person in my life and if a person in my life acted this way manipulated me constantly made me feel bad to do so that I would be more apt to do what they wanted and get money off me that's a sociopath that you don't want around you and it's certainly not a on in like a categorical sense something you just want a part pervasive part of your culture and I don't know it probably is very reductionist for me to put it in those terms but it sometimes does help me when you especially when I'm thinking about like larger decisions like like the refugee crisis right now where we have a lot of Governors I basically towing a party line of pretending like they can stop refugees from coming and trying to get into fear mongering and and and appeal to their constituents without actually doing anything because I know they don't have the power to keep people out of their states to me I try to think about that if there was a person in my neighborhood and like and there were people I was going to help and and and when you know the facts you realize that the refugee crisis is refugee crisis is not a national security risk I mean fifty percent of them are children and thirty percent are women and their vetted usually for more than a year and we're going to take eleven thousand of them and that's very very small like if I thought of a person acting like that on my street I would really really not trust that person anymore like it's little things like that and sometimes it helps me and in this movie he puts it into terms of pop culture but sometimes just helps me put it in the terms of what if a human acted that way like if you had somebody was like oh man you're kind of fat though you won't you give me five bucks you don't go by that burrito and you know I got to move some boxes that's some exercise like something like that another way that advertising plays into the support of capitalism is not just by the selling of commodities but also to reinforce the idea that problems are solved on an individual level so when an advertisement is made it's saying you individually have a problem and the way you solve it is by buying this thing well that plays into the fact that it's your choice whether or not to solve the problem that all all problems and or at least the ones that are worth talking about are all individual problems and the way that you solve them is by working hard to make enough money so that you can afford this thing and that translates into people not understanding social problems so that when we see something that is a problem at a societal level so many people want to look at it and say well why doesn't that person just act the way there's the PO to act or why don't they just work harder or why don't you know why don't they get a different job you know you can apply it to almost anything you know why why did that person get assaulted by the police well maybe they weren't doing everything that they were supposed to do or why why does that person want fifteen dollars an hour well maybe they should work harder and get a better job you you can basically make any social problem disappear by pretending it's an individual problem and I think advertising plays into that it reinforces that it's really interesting I never thought about that also I gotta say on a very literal level for what he's talking about after the first time I saw this movie I can no longer have a beverage I enjoy without thinking about how it goes from the sublime to excrement elytte never can hit that that idealized thing in my head and that kind of drives me nuts yeah and when I there are times where I have had a very good soft drink non brand specific stuff drink and I and I really there are times where I'll think that well that was really good but it's always after the fact and I was kind of just thinking about there's never there's really is never that moment where you're getting a painting what you think like what you are being sold as what you'll attain yeah he talked about the ode to joy on one point and the thing I thought was interesting here and I don't remember how he connected it to this maybe you guys can recall but he was talking about how ideology can't just be meaning it can't just be like a set of thoughts about the world it has to be open enough to encompass anything that happens it has to be able to be a complete world view complete filter you see everything through like like and they live anything that would enter that world it has to be able to translate it into this current ideology so it's sort of like an amoeba seeks to encompass anything that gets into its environment and that is dangerous because ideologies are almost it'd be fine if they were neutral if they were just a certain way that came about of seeing the world but they're almost never neutral is the point he makes they almost had always had a slant to want you to believe something in a particular way to maybe your disadvantage definitely to the advantage of someone else and that's why it's important to realize that you have this filter one of the interesting parallels with ode to joy because one of his points with it is that all of these different groups that felt very very differently all appropriated it is their official theme from the far right wing to left wingers and and all folks in between it was just such a compelling composition that so many people took it on and and used it as part of their ideology I think the film that's the parallel with that is jaws where he mentions that Fidel Castro thought of it as a wonderful anti-capitalist movie because jaws represents American capitalism and see all these poor Americans being eaten alive by their system whereas people in America saw it as oh you know it's the immigrants or whatever or it's you know the the mother on welfare whatever you can take anything that you don't like and say that's jaws and we're all afraid of it because it's going to tear down our society because even one of the strongest evidence that it's a critique on capitalism in jazz is that they keep the beach open to not lose money from tourism because they want to close the beach to save people's life but I think the mayor says they want to keep the beach open because you got to keep those businesses making money and so you're like oh that's an indictment of capitalism but it also if you're just anti-fascist it could be like oh one man shouldn't have that power it isn't like you could say like oh this is like an anti-fascist movie but you can see it in about a lot of different ways and yeah that was very interesting yeah the basic idea of that cuz it took me a while watching especially was talking about Rammstein Aram Rammstein mmm did really get exactly what he was meaning there it's just that you need something that's universal and generic like joy bad you know like the shark is bad ode to joy is joyful no one's against good or yeah no one's against good and no ones were bad like especially in their own mind oh yeah um and that's all you have that's what it is you just have something that's so generic or I think with Rams Cheney was you know like the step movements in life sort of way they move outfits yeah the outfits but it was just sort of like it was generic outfits you know they didn't have like swastikas or anything right I don't know if I agree with him that that's the way to undermine fascism okay specifically with them but I I do think that's interesting and I think that that also really trips people up how ideology is really sort of amorphous like that because you have like Fox News doesn't understand that Hitler was not a communist and that communists and Nazis aren't the same thing National Socialists right exactly there can like they I think some of its hyperbole yeah but I think a lot of its just honest confusion with them like they don't understand you know Hitler took over a party that was like a worker's party like they don't understand how that can be different right and I think that's sort of yeah just a product of the amorphous nature of ideologies another thing I liked about the film was slave boys definition of fascism which I've summarized in my notes as there being a clear hierarchy with modern industry so hierarchies like feudalism in the past and things like that most social systems that have that clear hierarchy are from the past but married with modern industry and that there is no class struggle in a fascist society and the and that's why you need to pull in the the scapegoat because there always is going to be something that's not right in society you know you can never have people that are one hundred percent satisfied all the time when you know and we know just you know from our experience that people reset expectations when when they are happy all the time or when they're when they're you know beaten down all the time people find happiness in the smallest most surprising places in fascism you the scapegoats of course you know the minorities Jews homosexuals and it was not the white race yeah including socialists and communists that was a definition of fascism that I just hadn't thought about before that it's this ability of having a strict hierarchy married with modern industry and no class struggle yeah it makes it I feel like that makes a good starting point for anyone who wants to call uh the places like China um a form of fascism poor Donald Trump yeah because I mean that's that's what he's arguing for a to go with the American personal it's all personal things so there's never a class problem for him the problem is what he normally said there what he's been saying lately is Islamic people Muslims and Latino people and then that's that their scapegoat and he's in charge he loves everyone now he's smarter than everyone more clever more successful that's why he should be in charge he should clearly be the person on top but yeah anybody very clearly defining an enemy or or another that we can get behind together yeah and that's that jumps back to what um gee Zack mr. Z says about jaws 2 is what he was talking about was that so like we all fear as humans we just have fears and the function of the shark in the movie is to unite all the people's fears together and and so that they can trade their actual fears for the shark many what he was saying was that this is what the Nazis did like what we talked about with the Jewish people were you trade this you you create a scapegoat to simplify fear you take a very complex national situation post-world War one and you trade that nuance complexity for something very simple concrete that can be acted upon but bet more important than that gets people on the same side they're not thinking about the the superstructure at work they're not thinking about the government they're not they're not even worried about their their most of their neighbors they're worried about this particular type of person and they can direct all their energy in this very simple laser-focused way but one the point teammate is that they're not really even closely even though they they're all bunching together on the same side of the field they're not really connected with you know each other because they're not actively thinking about this and they're not seeing the world in the complex way it deserves and they're actually sort of detaching themselves from each other in kind of dangerous ways I thought and I thought that was really interesting here's a question I have for you guys about fascism like specific with the Nazis so when I think about something set up like that my thought is okay so if the Nazis BB if they weren't beaten and they completed their genocide wouldn't they then eventually have to move on to something else to be the enemy like isn't that a system or something always needs to be the enemy because you never actually get rid of the class antagonisms that exists there you just pretend they're not there and you've gotten rid of the scapegoat so wouldn't that just breed like perpetual like oh now what's this in a higher and higher scale perhaps too yeah you guys have seen or read Watchmen if we're talking about pop culture anyway here ya seen the movie okay wonderful graphic novel by Alan Moore and the movies is quite good too but the spoiler for this by the way jump ahead like 30 seconds if you don't want to hear this but the main conceit of the villain that movie is that he wants to fake an alien invasion to unite the entire world together and this invasion requires him to make it real to destroy all of New York there would be no actual enemy but it would unite the whole world and stop all wars it would cost millions of lives and people would be lied to and it would be to control them but it would be to cause fifth piece so it's it's fascists on a very global scale but it has that sort of idea that he couldn't probably unite the whole world by just using like idea a certain race not everybody would get behind them he has to you have to keep upping the stakes to the point where oh it has to be something from outside this world how do you night the whole world has to be something that's not us that other would constantly have to kind of expand and in a really dangerous away so yeah I don't know it's kind of interesting yeah and I mean that goes into like what he was saying about Dark Knight because that's that's exactly like the same thing that he says that the movie is making the point of with diamond and face is that you know to in order to save the people you need a noble lie in a villain as a scapegoat yeah and that that that's the whole ideology behind that movie is that it's it's okay to lie to people if it makes them yeah quote unquote better safer yeah and the implication there which points out is that people are too dumb to know the truth they can't handle the truth they can't handle that truth so they don't deserve to be told it and that's that's what he says like this is an old conservative notion he says that the truth is too strong they need somebody to know it but mask it is well as how he puts it and and yeah I mean that is really just treating the people as if they're your your cattle and they're too dumb to know what they want for themselves right well it's the way our intelligence services operate to lie cleaning everything like with the military stuff it's all classified even some that doesn't make any difference and they're the ones who get to decide what we should and shouldn't know they're the ones who get to decide when they want to let us know about like Isis or something like that not like when they're helping set them up or things like that but and once they become a concern and they want us to be concerned so they can do you know it's the manipulation of truth and information so that they can get the desired result yeah when they want popular favor to support something the government does now in a wider scale they'll tell us about it but yeah they won't tell us about when we're actually supporting the people they won't give it and I would say that they probably can't have complete transparency if you want you know in intelligence network to work but the fact that let things stay classified for decades yeah it's probably not a security risk at that point guys like it and yeah I'm sure there's a lot that they could be telling us and they just don't they get did they get to control that information so yeah well like with chelsea manning the stuff that she was thrown in jail for leaking is nothing that posed any sort of indulgence risk anymore made stuff that people desperately needed to know is that you know we had people who were just murdering people who they knew were innocent and laughing about it literally laughing about it as a do it and you know like those sort of horrible terrible revelations like then it just gets buried because we don't need to know it and then people are like I can't understand why we're not greeted as liberators right yeah our narrative of America is very different than the world's narrative of like a cool because they don't see the things we see right well and then those people must be you know lesser people probably because they're Muslim because that's the only reason they wouldn't do that it feeds into that racist fascist yeah as well this episode is part of marxism today podcast series Marxism today is recorded mixed edited produced and maintained by Tony Schmidt and red Wagner it is distributed freely in licensed under the creative commons attribution-noncommercial-share alike three points to find out more about the Marxism today podcast visit our website at Marxism today podcast wordpress.com where you can find archives of all of our episodes available for download thanks for listening and we'll see you next time | MarxismToday | UCaqqzB_ojb8J-uvMAY9oKEg | 2016-02-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,658 | 40,607 |
EuLnhVOgzAQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EuLnhVOgzAQ | Late Game Fafnir VS Late Game Anubis - Grandmasters Ranked 1v1 Duel - SMITE | yo what's going on sexy Samuel ever spotted his tank Tuesday you know that means it's a tank on a Tuesday let's play five flat flat let's flap it up boys oh my cave lukewarm chocolate what cup is that one oh all right um let's see I think I gotta go warriors blessing because he's completely tick damage based I'm never gonna go bad cross and probably just like cuz I have warriors blessing I'll go more mana pots I think you've got to go beads right I got a message no high res employee time we're gonna hang out our worlds all right there yeah well I got a squad out worlds if you guys are going to the World Championship of smite high res Expo make sure to hit me up because I'm gonna be there with like a lot of people so I'm ready for man I'm ready i'ma just follow this guy beat his ass you know let's give like normal ass beaten things yo why is he actually almost dead though I do a lot of damage oh this is my cup I [Laughter] don't I don't know if a lot of people know this but uh clearly by the cup you can tell I'm an ass man I got to get my - well he didn't actually do red I was fully expecting him to commit to red buff all right I gotta get level 5 before him or I swear to you I will die and it's over I'm dead a level 5 please please please please oh [ __ ] run I'll be honest a little closer than I would have liked no my off [ __ ] Oh ooh got first one he got first Plateau dammit dude that was so close that was so close poop I'm getting reinforced crease every time you are damaged by a god you gain two stacked-up rights three physical magical protections up to seven give me 21 magical protection that stacks up pretty instantly against an Anubis so I'll take it haha he wrapped one and I actually stunned him before a tick of his one hit me that's funny I will not be able to kill him straight up like actually ever until the super late game he's probably got his alt up again he wants to like wrap me in the covers and put me to sleep if you know what I'm saying well he missed the covers so that's good I almost have my own my alt gives me a hundred mana back so I don't have to worry about Alton well out of mana I'll have my mana back oh oh give me 200 mana I'm so dead dude yeah he has bad crops he has bad crops and I don't damn it and what I really thought I had it really thought I had it it's all right not that far behind it does take me about 16 years to clear above but other than that I think we're doing all right because my clear on a wave should be pretty good it's all right it'll get better right now it'll it'll work oh man when we work if I hit the actual minions dude I'm sitting here like a dumbass punchin minions you didn't go cool down boots which is surprising to me oh my god I got deleted okay fair enough fair enough Anubis there enough any divine ruin any pestilence I need something else but I'm forgetting the item name 1.2 K down I can do it I just like I need to be able to clear is the problem like to clear away without using my entire kit but I can't do it yet it takes literally my entire kit to clear waves so right now not a good spot plus he heals a lot so using my mana to poke him is not gonna work this right is gonna be up soon can't really do anything about it though I would die let's go get thrown pestilence this give me anything fifteen protection I mean it's something it's not gonna make a difference right now but no actually mad on all right he doesn't have enough mana to kill me right right no he has enough mana to kill me I don't have in a minute to kill him either though all right let's see if we can get this blue buff holy [ __ ] we got it but I can't kill him though alright that's alright I'm just trying to hold my own right now do my best how much is it 1,600 yeah expensive just keep living just keep I'm backing get away from me you got spear good item choice stupid okay alright I'm gonna get a divine ruin I got thorns he has bracer and he's Anubis so getting the vine ruined next is gonna be really good her stock would have been pretty good but I figured maybe tone without me actually killing they shouldn't jump they're taking a lot more damage than they should have probably you know we're 10 minutes into my Tower is still alive so I really can't complain that much besides all of my complaining the course you rap to me and he did that boss quick as [ __ ] oh no I really am just like trying to scrounge up as much XP as I can why do you want a chalice but it's too much gold how much is divine 1650 alright I wonder if I'll be able to get his blue box I have my doubts I got it I'm a genius he got a full ginji's guard he's taking that okay so I can't kill him all right we're not gonna kill him just try to live here the wave try to survive that's the play sure turn into a dragon doesn't bother me doesn't bother him either [ __ ] all right he missed a rap so he can't keep chasing I can clear this wave and then I'll have enough money for my divine ruin if I don't die clearing the way I don't have enough yeah I really thought I would I have to wait for fifty gold I might lose my tower if I wait though I don't like that play I just did I don't like it at all I lost like five hundred six hundred damage on my Tower for that could even lose my tower because of it yeah I did [ __ ] I hate that [ __ ] play I just made man I even said I was gonna lose my tower for it stupid stupid stupid mistake holy [ __ ] can't catch him so fast I'm pretty sure you can kill me whatever you guys right now pretty sure I'm dead here on OU's dead here you got it all right can I get the tower I'm in dragon form with my tuba pretty sure we got it all right so I lost my tower but he still took the fight anyways and lost his tower and he should lose the red buff too so as much as I hated the play it ended up working out for me but it would still the wrong play okay then we go void Stone here reduces their protection a little bit gives me some power somehow some protection I'm at the Viper Room - I think he's going obsidian shard right now spear and obsidian shard it's a weird combo I normally if I'm going obsidian I always saw my spear of it I know some people like dines van + executioner but that's only if you have like 300 protection I only have 206 like I'm barely over the obsidian shard mark if these are I don't I don't know if I can kill him because the thing is maybe I could if okay so this is the plan he wraps me and alts me I beat the rap and alt assault so that I'm taking no damage and he has no Walton and then I just kill him in dragon form and he has no cooldowns up that's the plan how well that plan is kind of come to fruition I don't know but at least now you know my plan I think my go spear I need pen do I get the fence I'll get the fence for the more gold I have right that my passive yeah alright I'm gonna try to i'ma try it all in here he's way too far though well that side so I'm gonna just cancel my all now just can't why now so I get the cooldown back faster is just gonna auld me he's holding his alt so much I missed that that's [ __ ] nuts I just get right off you can't just going to fair wave come on give me the red bow red buff down let's back whoo that was really bad I used all my cooldowns and he used nothing he just kept trapping me and using nothing which is a good idea I mean a lot of times to outplay your opponent just do nothing and they'll play themselves take a Amy having a million IQ sometimes backfires I think I think with my finished spear there's no way that he wins a fight unless he like wrap alts me and I die within the combo in which case guys and miss that convo I would like some cooldown reduction there you go sorry about that had a stream pause in the background and when you host someone all of a sudden their voice comes through really annoying but it happens let's see if we can get him here [ __ ] if you want to jump up I say you know I think if you wrap alts me I die okay hear me out this could be super super dumb but trust me just trust me ready or even we're 21 minutes into this game and work even with an Anubis I don't think this is Anubis has altered since like the eight-minute mark you just hold the salt so much Anubis is absolutely one of those gods are you just chuck that [ __ ] and hope for the best not him well he got bull demon which would be great for him except for the fact that he literally won't ever fight me so oh here we are I can this mess this might be the most passive player I've ever seen in my life are we got a voice no hacker voice I'm in we got him we got him we're winning he actually won maybe I don't know I don't know how much damage this thing does this dragon for him apparently a hundred and five hundred and fifteen I don't know if that's a 45 to 55 it's the thing for 50 so I mean it's not bad though someone's doing that fast can I solo the Titan I don't have my dragon form beat it's a speed it's a speed uh sighs all right I can't wait can't wait not yet all right we'll be back or maybe I'll just hit him with this circle it worked all right the victory was mine oh dude all I had to do was just like catch him off guard a little bit one time and we went thank you guys so much for watching the video if you enjoyed it make sure to like comment and subscribe and until next time guys peace | SamDaDude | UC282uhJeFPfF2ANGnzzhuMw | 2019-11-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,935 | 9,424 |
ObugmLNkJog | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ObugmLNkJog | The role of Plants, Microbes, and Non-Corporeal Entities in Determining Human Consciousness | okay all right greetings everybody I'm in the garden again and I'm gonna make a video to talk about consciousness which just happens to be one of my favourite subject here gardening consciousness so not often that you hear those two terms put together but so bear with me here because it's not like I figured everything out when it comes to consciousness I don't know that anybody has and ever will figure it all out due to some pretty obvious constraints I can't see the eye the finger can't point at itself but um I'll I'm going to share with you some of the some of the things that I've been thinking about recently and so um overall the in it from a general point of view people define consciousness as the state of being aware of fill-in-the-blank awareness the the capacity of the of a human being to being aware or any being of for that matter of being aware of itself and the environment that it is in so this it doesn't say very much really because being aware you know what does that mean being awake aware you could you could have two people in front of you and they're both conscious beings they're both conscious they're both aware but to what extent are they aware and what does it mean to be aware how does one become aware and what are we aware of in the first place and how does this relate to the garden okay there's a plane in the background I hope that won't make too much noise here so having having a reflected and pondered this for a while and I and it's going to be like a lifetime quest but I'm at the point where I'm contemplating defining consciousness for myself as being the interplay of four different factors for different things I'll go really quickly through them as one of them is the obviously the the influence of the self of the the eye inside of deep inside within the eye of I you know the you that makes you you deep inside the spiritual self the eternal presence that you are you okay that is a very important aspect in consciousness the brain chemistry and everything related to that I will I'm gonna talk a little bit more about it after I finished here my definition but uh I certainly can't go into all the details there's way too much and a lot of it is speculative too and it's it's like correlations and not necessarily causations is what this whole materialistic science is about you know as far as I'm concerned so the eye inside the spiritual the spirit self the brain chemistry and here I put in the gut bacteria the microbes that are living inside of you also have a role to play in consciousness in human consciousness the being aware of the self and the environment and and for is the external factors in the material but mostly non material realms the the noncorporeal entities things like what people call God the Archangels the angels the demigods the jinns that the demons the lower vibrational beings include like other spiritual beings the including like what the shamans call plat spirits the beings inside the plants thought-forms archons egregores those things that are ideas you know things that are maybe not living beings per se but exist in the non-material realms that can influence you like ideas thought forms so that that is a the fourth element is the influence of the noncorporeal entities okay so the interplay between the spiritual self the self that I the brain chemistry the gut bacteria and the non corporal entity entities all of these how they interact impact your awareness of of yourself and the world around you your reality what you perceive as being real so if we take them one by one there's the brain chemistry is very complex you know the science of it all there's the psychoactive substances that some people call there's a class of them called n throw gens basically it's the chemicals in your brain that generate the divine within it's like a doorway to the divine there's the different types of psychoactive substances there's the lider lysergic Emmons the tryptamines the finial ethyl Emmons the cannabinoids like the marijuana there's a better car ballons synthetics things like there are many many different types the morphine types and deal but the admins are constitute a large part something something I'm in you know like LSD T mescaline there's a TRO pains the alkaloids and like the datura plants like atropine scopolamine these these ones they're a different class but they're also psychoactive there's um all of these can be generated inside the human body from precursors and some of these precursors are found in plants and then some are generated from the bacteria in our guts and there's an interaction there between what's going on in the guts and the bacteria what they're doing and what we what we take in as far as plant alkaloids and substances a psychoactive substances in plants now there's a for while the a lot of the science denied the that the body can produce like those antigens but now they're they're pretty much like agreeing on the fact that the the human body can produce DMT which is one of those antigens that put us in communication with the divine hand and the noncorporeal entities and some of like this DMT and this um there's another important one called bufotenin Bufo comes from frog the origin because frogs on their skin can produce this psychoactive chemical if you lick certain toads you could get high which is probably why the witches they would put you know toads and frogs like in their brew for magical purposes right so these are DMT can be formed by the serotonin and tryptamines inside the body with help of a certain enzyme I won't get into too much of the detail but it's like it's called AI n empty and enzyme it's just a short for a long scientific name these the this DMT that is synthesized in your body with an enzyme binds to these serotonin receptors that that are in the brain and your nervous system like the vagal nerve which is very important nerve linking the gut back to the gut microbiome to your brain and to basically your entire body the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous system so these are this is regulates the these receptor serotonin receptors regulate the hormones and psychoactive chemicals that affect your mood things like anxiety depression it also affects memory sleep your consciousness so it basically basically just this is just a one oh one on brain chemistry to to emphasize the fact that there are all these chemicals that affect our mood our our awareness our consciousness and our state of being and that the these chemicals these psychoactive chemicals inside of us are are related to the gut bacteria and precursors that are found that we eat so these microbes that can synthesize the these the DMT and the bufotenin in the in our intestine and the in the the cell walls and it generates all sorts of things like not only these are the DMT but um norepinephrine dopamine acid so : etc etc etc and to a certain degree we're not we're not very well educated on how we can influence our gut microbiome there's trillions of bacteria have microbes inside living inside our intestines you know in our guts and for the most part we're pretty unaware see first for conscious beings who are aware have awareness we're pretty unaware of what's going on there but if the eye deep inside the self is aware of that it can then therefore interact with that by choosing to eat and drink certain things or not eat and drink certain things but we don't really do that so much maybe some people eat yogurt right like or they eat sauerkraut or they they'll eat the prebiotics like the Jerusalem artichoke or the they'll make themselves a chicory root tea but you know because their bio hacking into their mood but for the most part people are unaware as they guzzle antibiotics and kill their microbiome and create dysbiosis and therefore have mental health problems it's related to consciousness this is where I'm going with this here and so the question also here and I'm going to move on and we're gonna walk a little bit around and I'll show you some plants here in the garden talk about more like I'll relate it to the gardening experience but this is just before a little bit of theory before before walking I'm going for a walk about these noncorporeal beings you could choose to believe in them or not I mean if you believe in God then obviously you believe that there's there are non Caporal conscious beings out there and if you believe in the devil also you know believe it or not you know but it's a I know I know myself personally that this this these noncorporeal beings exist you choose not to believe it then then there's a part of your consciousness that you are negating you are not taking into account certain aspects if you if you cling to the materialistic paradigm in your laboratory and you want to understand consciousness and you're not factoring in the influence of noncorporeal beings well you're missing one of the four elements and you and so I mean for example like those people who want to program artificial intelligence and say yeah one day computers will have consciousness I I think not it could be partial maybe but not really it'll be like an emulation of consciousness it won't be consciousness so these noncorporeal beings really the question is to what degree are we being influenced by them okay because if you face it let's face it you're you and I are being influenced by non kapal beings constantly now those people who have faith and religion they they can't deny it because they're like well yeah I mean I'm under the influence of God right God God has a plan and and I'm part of the plan and therefore I am influenced by this non corporal being called God or Jesus or Allah or whatever like Krishna right like the Hindus they have aided they certainly believe in the fact that non corporal demigods and gods are influencing the everyday life and therefore their lives but if you don't believe in God you know then there are still other other things like thought-forms you know ideas egregores are cons these are the this is how you influence people through ideas right an idea is almost like a living being it's it's it doesn't have self-awareness but it it can propagate and disseminate and influence life living beings ie humans and they reproduce it's like it's almost like a living being an idea which is why you know like this whole manipulation of the mind through suggestions you know marketing TV adverts music politicians speeches you know everything all of these is words words ideas infecting minds influencing the the consciousness the awareness and the reality of people so in any event let's just take it for let's just start with the concept that there are noncorporeal beings that influence influence of us okay now how do they influence us well it seems it seems to me that there are some people that are much more influenced or influenceable than others now there are certain people that are schizophrenic and they are hearing voices in their heads there now there are some doctors out there very few but some that have the experience and have talked to enough of these schizophrenics that they know that the voices they hear in their heads are are noncorporeal beings whispering to them and they are very very persuasive and others are like no it's just chemicals in the brain well they're linked they are linked see because the psychoactive chemicals in your brains these entrance entrance intrusions they can or po they open portals and put us into communication with the spiritual domains these chemicals that are inside of us are regulating our relationship with the noncorporeal beings and this is scary because it's not just good for the good it's not like oh yeah you know we've got DMT and therefore we're we're in then we're in the relationship with all these good beings no there's also the the noncorporeal douchebags out there that are that are playing the whatever they're playing their games whatever they're doing is not necessarily beneficial for for you for me and it creates quote mental illness right which is which is just a deviation from normal from typical I mean if everyone if everyone had these portals open constantly our reality would be completely different and we would all be quote schizophrenic and then that would be completely normal but it's the fact that these portals are closed and force for the most part that we don't actually know we're being influenced and we're all pretty much on the same page and we're dialing in the same the same reality but these were aware at the same level now so these one of the things that's very interesting here is how the gut bacteria are actually playing a role in preventing the opening of these portals and which means they are protectors of your of the sanctity of your of your integrity the self within the eye who's at peace and living a calm reflective awareness not being so much under the direct influence of all these beings so so yeah the gut bacteria they are they play a role of not only do they synthesize precursors enzymes and all and whatnot in order to produce mind-altering psychoactive chemicals which means they're influencing your mood your anxiety and all that but they are also at the same time preventing psychosis they are also preventing certain chemicals from overdosing you and those are the that's because some of these gut bacteria are producing what they call em a OHS the mono Abid oxidase inhibitors no mono amid oxidase and this this mono a min oxidase basically it clips the Amman part of a lot of these psychoactive chemicals and so it's like the but there it's like the gut bacteria are produced are producing scissors that are cutting the tops off of a lot of these chemicals that would that would influence your your mental health to put it bluntly so they're kind of like a a buffer now if you don't have these bacteria then you losing that regulation like the regulating aspect of that and so whatever whatever it is that you are ingesting it or whatever it is that it's produced by another series of microbes it's just it's unregulated is uninteresting and it produces or your brain and it produces whatever whatever impacts in your state of awareness in your mood your consciousness your and and because there's a link there between the non kapal entities and these chemicals these spirit opening chemicals then you lose a certain you learn you lose the buffering capacity of your of the system to the influence of the external beings all right i mean that makes sense right now there are certain things that okay for example people who take ayahuasca they know about this stuff because there's the when you take ayahuasca it's a brew that's that is very complex to make but it requires a vine and another plant that has some DMT in it and the the vine one one is the DMT which is the antigen but the other one is a mono I mean oxidase inhibitor okay and M a oh I and that inhibitor what it's part of the brew and when you when you ingest this ayahuasca brew basically it's it's in activating those enzymes that would cut the admins of part of the DMT and then you wouldn't have this psychedelic experience okay basically if you were to take the DMT without the moai the vine that's in the brew if you were just to take them the DMT you wouldn't trip you wouldn't have a divine experience you wouldn't it wouldn't be psychoactive because the bacteria in your guts would be like uh-uh they're like they're I'm not having any of this there would be clip-clip snip snip snip snip and then that's it it would have taken away that the psychoactive portion so these bacteria inside of you are regulating your relationship with the spiritual realms it's a big thing this is huge I mean it's huge to us the fact that we're we're unaware of it it's all happening at a certain level all this is happening in small doses and whatever doses it is your body is doing whatever your constitution is is happening for you and it makes you a spiritual being aware of certain subtle dimensions and you don't know what's going on and so I wonder if some people are more spiritual than others because of some because of the bacteria or not right and it's not only that it's also how it's also the influence of the other beings if you're calling in Ganesh on a constant basis through prayer and worship and your I don't know you're eating a lot of wild mushrooms that just happen to be you know have psychoactive ingredients well maybe you know you are really tapped into the Ganesh consciousness and also chanting you're chanting you're chanting you know all these a chance maybe that's also like producing some vibrations and your pineal gland it's producing more precursors that are necessary to get you to open some portals alright so in any event let's go for walk I'll show you some of the some of the plants here growing in the garden and let me unhook this mother tripod all right now oh sorry about that okay we were looking here while I was talking at the this is a turmeric you know that yellow powder that you you put in your doll your Indian dish or that if you know anything about medicinal herbs you know it's like regulates pain it's a natural painkiller especially if you use it with chili chili flakes was that I can't remember the name anyways it's enhanced by de chile you got them some more over here this thing grows like you just go to Whole Foods or any store that has some of these wash it out because they might have sprayed it or something and then hey put it somewhere in your garden and you barely need to do anything you could almost just drop it on the ground huh and it'll do it'll do it has to do by itself it's got no no worries okay now let me go for a little walk here I want to show you something here's some Chia to j'tia it comes back by itself every year bug chia bug some fig fig tree poke helps with the lymphatic system all right why don't show you apply that it's a very interesting story it's I've been here in this area in the south of the deep south of the United States for for four years five years and I saw this plant and every year I tell myself I'm gonna figure what out what it is and every year I go on the internet and I try to find what it is and nope can't find it and I'm really good at finding like identifying plants and I asked my friends that are into plant medicine and herbalist and they're all - nope they don't know one said it's bindweed and I looked up bindweed and it wasn't because this flower is a composite flower and bindery doesn't have a composite flower show you now this thing is like a vine well let's see the person was not wrong because it's in the family of the vine weeds come bubula see see it's a composite flower it has many meat ramiz has many many many flowers like maybe ten or twelve bundled up in a little pack and these are blue flowers and they make each of these he may each of these flowers makes a seed it's a it's actually a big seed and this vine climbs and it lets be fricassee here it climbs and it's got a heart shaped leaf it climbs the climbs and it wraps around other plants this is a an okra plant see and and it wraps and it and it wraps itself around itself and it'll it it'll I don't know get to like eight eight feet maybe long sometimes if there's a lot they'll just wrap around the thing and they'll they'll pull it down it's actually pretty aggressive and this thing when it grows it grows like it goes and it's a pioneer plant so if you till the ground and and this there was some seeds and that's all you're gonna have it's very easy to grow okay now this here I I found finally after many attempts and it was because of the African website in Tanzania the government there had put a picture of it and I was like what and so yeah it's a plant that grows in Africa also my and Marv a lot of these places also like it's it's an international plant but it's also indigenous to here it's interesting right indigenous to here indigenous Africa what is going on well it turns out this is called hairy cluster vine because they these are hairy and may you see when once it turns the seeds it's just like this brownish hairy little cluster of flowers cluster vine and so in Africa like they have their own names for it like Bala Walla Walla off something like I don't remember but um the Latin name is Jack Monty ax tammini Flo folia Tammy folia Jacques like Jacques Jacques like Jacques Mont Oh Monty Monty ah tammini Floria so it's in the family of the morning glories and it's edible the leaves are edible you just stir fry them you know or steam them which means oh my god it's just now I have even more wild edibles in this garden and it's also used medicinally for to help with the snakebites and uh other things too much i forget what it was for but um I wanted bacterial and like all of them but I'm not going to talk about that I'm going to talk about the alkaloids now let me see here each of these flowers will make a seed now the seed if you know about the convolvulus a family you know that the seeds contain ergo tine now these are these ones here have a different percentages of the different alkaloids compared to the let's say Morning Glory but they have the same alkaloids as the Morning Glory they have the agro carmine ergo vines the Ergo Peugeot sigh nines Canada la mines in any event that is the same family as the LSD okay and you could extract if you if you eat these seeds basically you're gonna have a quote divine experience it's gonna regulate your consciousness however it's also going it's a medic so it's gonna regulate your you're puking capacity you're gonna vomit it's it's not gonna stay inside you very long so but there are ways to like to process the seeds so that you could remove some of the the fatty constitutions of on the husk of the seed that caused you to vomit alright so anyways it's not a course on how to prepare seeds but I'm just saying that this here is another one of those plants that that regulates your awareness your your consciousness mind altering is what they say huh antigen the divine within now I maintain that almost every plant in the in nature have chemicals that interact with humans to regulate their their mood their minds it could be at very very very small my new levels but all of these things act together to make you who you are to make your reality what it is to make you your consciousness what your consciousness is everything these are some morning glories and they grow here wild that you started off one plant and ended up being many many plants now I don't know this this species some of them don't have as much of the curtains I think there's in this garden there's more than one kind and so there are some one kind that looks more like a vine the leaves look like a vine or not don't contain the alkaloids or the some of the alkaloids and others do so there's I've got two different species here or at least hybrids now what else I wanted to show you I've already shown you this plant but I'll show it again this grows everywhere and it's called Siddha Okuda I did it was in my last video I was talking about it as food and as medicine I did not talk about it in terms of consciousness but because it's a it's a topic on its own I mean okay so what why am i showing you this iron weed is because in the roots of this here and I think to a small to small degree in the in the leaves and stems in the bark but mostly in the roots is something called Epogen now for those who know of what Epogen is and it's a stimulant basically okay and there's some more it's everywhere to all of these little plants here these are all this is all Siddha a CUDA and it's growing in a matrix of chamber bitter which is just another healing herb for the fatty liver disease liver for the liver so here it is again it gets tall this one this is pretty much how tall it'll get maximum there's a seed pod right here it's about like four four five feet in height and so it contains the epidural which reduces fatigue improves concentration also there's also some noir pseudoephedrine in there which is psychoactive and so in Mexico they smoke the leaves they dry the leaves and they smoke them like and it's uh it's a little mood enhancer it's like you know brings a little zip into your walk I guess like college they would chew the coca leaves you know so yeah so it's it's psychoactive now of course all of these come with contrary contraindications because if you take too much of this you got yourself a problem okay now see here it is again that's the other one and it's growing and the cluster vine here is growing in a patch of gosh-darn stevia this is stevia okay this is like the the sugar like the sweetener I grow stevia here so we don't need to be using sugar I've made a powder the leaves and then I also make a syrup yeah it's pretty strong stuff now what else would I want to say here there's also something else growing in here which is um passion flower now this is some hasn't flowered yet but there are some one in the other side more in the Sun that have flowered now passion flower is very interesting because people who herbalist know about this and they said yeah it you know it'll help you sleep it's it's a very good medicinal plant and but if you read up on this here passion flower is one of the three main plants that contain these em mo mo are mao eyes right no backtrack a little bit this a monoamine oxidase inhibitor is inhibits the enzymes produced by your gut bacteria that are regulating your the amount of psychoactive chemicals inside of you okay so if you take if you take make yourself a very powerful tea or extract the alkaloids with an alcohol extraction and then you evaporate the alcohol to keep the the active ingredient if you make yourself a tea with this passion flower you're basically telling the bacteria on your gut stop doing your job and let the psychoactive chemicals through to my brain to my receptors that are going to impact my consciousness awareness they're going to alter my mind so this is basically a way you could okay so if you were to take something up that has DMT or if there's DMT being produced in your guts because you ate certain tri means or and here you've got the right population of gut bacteria then you take a tea of this you're gonna trip you're gonna trip because your bacteria are not protecting you from tripping so you can be using passionflower and this is like this is what passionflower does so there you go now I'm not gonna go into details but this mimosa growing around here there's a lot of other types of plants growing out here that are that can alter your mind so anyways there you have it this is um I guess right now just say a short introduction into some of the thoughts that are that are coalescing inside of my mind this is a patch of nettles I've fallen in love with nettles it I have to come here on a regular basis and cut the flower tops off and then they start again oh boy these boy oh boy man let me show you this these are musk now they're wild they're uh I mean heirloom cantaloupes okay and there there an old heirloom variety and so they don't taste exactly like cantaloupe but they but nine eighty percent taste like cantaloupe but they grow very well you know in this area which is a hot and humid and oh and the other cantaloupes don't do so well look at this I mean okay and there's one two three four five I see here right six seven this one's ready look at that whoa you know it's ready when hey bug good okay get off my finger you know they're ready when they ooh when they snap off but almost by itself you just touch the the vine here the the connection there you just basically touch it and Boop it falls off and it's also like brownish like more yellowish it's kind of ready but I'm bringing this one home and they smell musky well I probably fermenting a little bit inside okay so there you have it folks some thoughts about consciousness and yeah the four antecedent determinants of consciousness the the I within the spirit self the gut bacteria the microbes in your body the brain chemistry and the non corporal beings all of this huge dance that influences your alters your mind your perception your awareness and and the point of all this is to give you some keys into doing your own research so you can become an actor in this play right and because ultimately your mental health depends on all of this and your spiritual journey depends on this - these are Lantana's aren't they beautiful and to a certain extent what you are being influenced by the level of which you are being the voices are whispering to you and you can't distinguish between your internal will and the will of the non corporeal beings the capacity to distinguish between the two is is fundamental because you know whose will are you willing if you're like a god believer you're like I'm willing God's will but God gave you free will and also and that free will depends on your consciousness which depends on your awareness of things which - which is related to your capacity to influence the system the decisions you make the things you choose to eat or not to eat the things you choose to drink or not to drink and and I also know that we're for the most part we're pretty much all all suffering oh look here's a wild lettuce this has a white milky sap and then this is has some quote opium opioid related chemicals that help with pain relief so opioids huh think about think about that one so yeah just end the you are basically in charge of this play and you and and and I know I don't have the answer like whose will are you willing but to a certain extent maybe it's good to have a little bit more awareness of all of this so that you can prevent certain mental anguish including anxiety depression bipolar schizophrenia and demonic possession you know like so and I know I was saying okay so saying we're suffering there's a lot of suffering so people tend to administer certain medication to ease the pain like alcohol people get drunk because they can't deal with the suffering and they want this pleasure some other people are dying for the spiritual they're just there they feel this is not something's not right in their life and they this whole superficial mundane plane of existence with Hollywood and all whatever their nine-to-five jobs is so boring and uneventful and not meaningful at a spiritual level that they can't wait to go home and smoke the bong to get the cannabis cannabinoid alkaloids in there to regulate their mood into something maybe more connected to the spiritual realms because they they want that the they are in need of a conspirator election and so and then that's why people go and take ayahuasca or in search of the LSD and this and that but I'm saying is uh where it's happening all the time our connection or disconnection and we can on smaller levels smaller doses in influence this so that the overall baseline of our existence isn't so much suffering okay it's like biohacking into your spiritual into your spiritual satisfaction okay so that's it do your research this is a very fascinating topic I'll continue to make videos as I gain more awareness and insight into this stuff all right but I won't make too much because I don't want to end up in the FEMA camp okay there you go all right bye bye folks take care | Sacred Agriculture | UCv6Qgmse6qeYGLG294m-0kg | 2018-08-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 5,801 | 31,365 |
i9J-FvtRXU0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9J-FvtRXU0 | Haiku Debugging Tools (5 of 5) | yay okay m is really jerky um you get a list of all threats and um the scheduling decisions for those and you see um there are different cols used there green which means that R I can zoom in I think you two other colors oh this yeah there's orange and there's red orange means um the B was preed the tool CH some some information about that period of time there's was R it is would like to run but couldn't run because some other I think those are the cars and this view is quite interesting people want to get the relation between the different threats so which threat R when and which threat was interrupted by which and why this made for which other side it's very nice to see you and usually the nons of of orange for are a probleme of red are problem because that means the really just wake up and wanted to do something and and didn't didn't get the time so that's something my wants to look at in some case it's really just that you have a threat that that used a lot of CPU time and other threats didn't get the time but in some cases um you really have to take um it's really ins of yeah and the final list is a list of all the weight um objects weight objects are s force condition variables um takes this the smooth um yeah condition um Al this here yeah you have for broadcast event and this object was waited on uh 19 times and for a total of 38 seconds yeah interesting information if you if you want to find out which um which locks high content for instance that helps a lot for for the C optimizations there the main the main window and there's also a sub window for for each you can just s this for the thre and also the list of we objects this thre rated on specifically and this is the the I main application FL surprising it made lot on on the reads obviously for the for the this what that's and um the fin thing you have this nice graph of the activity of the over the time you time it's time can also Zoom to see better you can also displ other preemption how muched when it had to wait one and yeah all very useful tool but still rough interface you want to show the the problem debug and analyzing just yeah I don't find questions now be the time on points yeah the setting user settings somewhere okay for this application for each there's this Variable View um it's already um I know that it saved State at one point and then this feature got broken by some refactoring is it already restoring the Variable View like which once you collapsed and expanded and when you same point I thinko was was that like based on the place in the code that you look at is that based on the on where you are on which source you looking what it's based on the the range of St yeah that's of course indirectly associated with the yeah um I think once you work on a eage value type or something is that works but basically nor if you look at message all you would see is just the raw dat basically pre that and it actually tries to analyze show you what vales has in it so work uh message message has oh wait you don't haveb need debug it can only do that do that for for struct work information for if it's a class that comes from a library I know that this message and just code message you I thought you implement it this way that you know that this is a b message type and just decode it as a actually short circuited earlier on because well still still need to work information to be able to find M location there's different dat some D so has to be look at the addresses can't do that without sorrys areed and how do then yeah well there the feature that you can tell the CPU to set a bre somewhere also watch that's why and whenever theam switches or the switches on and off the team then the bre are enabl disable and that's basically how it works these are the hardare those are limited to four and you can also emate software like take go to the location of the code and replace the instruction by an interrupt instruction when the code is instruction so if you Rec table um no no this replacement of the of the code is um transparent the application doesn't know anything about about it it's not written to the to the file just in memory and it's dynamically allocated so sometimes um the userland debugger doesn't know anything about whether this is a software backround or Hardware back just the break point and the kind allocates the hardware break points out as it makes sense so it we just a break point at a certain point it probably uses a hardare but it isn't then sets the software back and when the bre is you have to replace the instruction obviously again for the original instruction so that actually does and at that point it replaces the the break point the software break so it SWS using software and points as need yeah okay thank you | HumdingerB | UCaPe-jrNZ3csASI3X8IDe1g | 2012-12-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 931 | 4,772 |
i5-CesSqRDs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5-CesSqRDs | National Synchrotron Light Source II | Wikipedia audio article | the National synchrotron light source to NSLs - at Brookhaven National Laboratory BNL in Upton New York is a national user research facility funded primarily by the US Department of Energy's doe office of science NSLs - is one of the world's most advanced synchrotron light sources designed to produce x-rays ten thousand times brighter than BN ELLs original light source the National synchrotron light source NSLs NSLs - supports basic and applied research in energy security advanced materials synthesis and manufacturing environment and human health NSLs - is a state-of-the-art medium energy electron storage ring three billion electron volts the facility enables the study of material properties and functions with nanoscale resolution and exquisite sensitivity by providing world-leading capabilities for x-ray imaging and high resolution energy analysis the facility is open to researchers from academia and industry NSLs - fuels major advances in new energy technologies such as nanocatalyst based fuel cells economical use of solar energy high-temperature superconductors in a high capacity and high reliability electric grid and advanced electrical storage systems for transportation and harnessing intermittent renewable energy sources topic users and partners you topic users in 2017 and SLS to served over 1,000 researchers users from academic industrial and government laboratories worldwide any qualified researcher can submit a peer-reviewed proposal to use NSLs to topic partners NSLs to partners with public and private institutions to fund the construction and operation of some of its beamlines its partnerships include BNL center for functional nanomaterials and the National Institute of Standards and Technology among many others NSLs too is always open for new partnerships topic beamlines NSLs - currently has 22 beamlines experimental stations open for user operations when the facility is complete an SLS - will have at least 58 beam lines in operation the beam lines at NSLs - are grouped into six programs hard x-ray spectroscopy imaging and microscopy structural biology soft x-ray scattering and spectroscopy complex scattering and diffraction and in situ scattering these programs group beam lines together that offer similar types of research techniques for studying the behavior and structure of matter topic hard x-ray spectroscopy 6bm materials measurement be mm7 id-1 spectroscopy soft and tender SST one under construction seven ID to spectroscopy soft and tender SST two under construction 7b m quick x-ray absorption and scattering QAS a tidy inner shell spectroscopy is s8 BM tender energy x-ray absorption spectroscopy tes topic imaging and microscopy 3id hard x-ray nanoprobe hxn 4bm x-ray flourescence microprobe XFM 5i d sub micron resolution x-ray spectroscopy SRX 1/8 ID full field x-ray imaging FX i under construction topic structural biology one six ID life-science x-ray scattering licks one seven ID one highly automated macromolecular crystallography beamline am x17 ID to frontier micro focusing macromolecular crystallography FMX one 7 BM x-ray foot printing for structural studies of biological macromolecules xfp one 9 ID biological micro diffraction facility mix topic soft x-ray scattering and spectroscopy to ID soft inelastic x-ray scattering six to one ID electron spectro microscopy ESM to to IR one frontier synchrotron infrared spectroscopy fears under construction to two IR to magnetic trois copy ellipse Ament airy and time-resolved optical spectroscopy Smet under construction to three ID one coherent soft x-ray scattering CSX one two three ID to soft x-ray spectroscopy in polarization CSX two topic complex scattering one OID inelastic x-ray scattering IX s11 ID coherent hard x-ray scattering CH X 1 1 BM complex material scattering CMS 1 2 ID soft matter interfaces SMI topic diffraction and in situ scattering for ID integrated in situ and resonant hard x-ray studies is r27 ID high-energy x-ray diffraction hex under construction to a tidy one total scattering beam line PDF under construction to a tidy to x-ray powder diffraction XPD topic storage ring parameters n SL s2 is a medium energy 3.0 GeV electron storage ring designed to deliver photons with high average spectral brightness exceeding 1021 PHS in the 2 to 10 keV energy range and a flux density exceeding 1015 PHS in all spectral ranges this performance requires the storage ring to support a very high current electron beam up to 500 milli amp ere's with a very small horizontal down to 0.5 nanometer rod and vertical 8 p.m. rad immittance the electron beam is stable in its position topic storage ring lattice the NSLs to storage ring lattice consists of 30 double bend Akram at DBA cells that can accommodate at least 58 beamlines for user experiments distributed by type of sources follows 15 low Betar ID straights for undulator Zoar superconducting wigglers 12 high beta ID straights for either undulator z' or damping wigglers 31 BM ports providing broadband sources covering the ir v UV and soft x-ray ranges any of these ports can alternatively be replaced by a three Peter Watts port covering the hard x-ray range for B M ports on large gap 90 millimetres dipoles for very far IR topic radiation sources continuing the tradition established by the NSLs NSLs - radiation sources span a very wide spectral range from the far infrared down to 0.1 electron volts to the very hard x-ray region greater than 300 keV this is achieved by a combination of bending magnets three pole wigglers and insertion device ID sources topic history construction of NSLs ii began in 2009 and was completed on time and under budget in 2014 NSLs - saw first light in October 2014 the facility cost nine hundred and twelve million dollars to build and the project received the DOE Secretary's Award of Excellence | wikipedia tts | UCGajAfZZjyDnyA7YQU0xpOg | 2019-06-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 927 | 5,838 |
GtZXfljssMw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GtZXfljssMw | Topic 8 - Metadata Standards, by Leen Vandepitte | what I will talk about right now is metadata standards and before I start a little bit forward looking to tomorrow and Thursday when you will be working on your own data sets I suppose everybody brought some kind of data with them just keep in mind if we go through this presentation the data set that you brought with you because a lot of what I say you will also be able to use when you start processing your own data set because if you quality control or standardized your data it's not just about the data but also about the metadata and metadata is basically data about your data and I will just go through some metadata items that are important and that should be documented if you provide the data set to someone or if the data set goes online through afro bees and obese so you might wonder why do we need metadata if we have the data why do we need any other information the metadata is there to help you understand your data in a better way and it's also important that if you have metadata that you try to store it together with your data if you would have for example your data set in Excel then it's very easy to keep your metadata there too just by adding an extra sheet and storing your metadata there start working the metadata that are of importance can actually be summarized in the six double use of information and that is you need to know who has processed or collected the data what has been done when it has been done where it has been done why has it been done why has a data being collected and then how also happen has w but at the end how has the data been collected if you look at those six double use of information you see that you need to be thorough because none of those questions can be answered by a yes or no so you do need to be a little bit elaborate on the information that you provide so for example the the why could include the objectives of the original research or the experiments that was conducted it could also contain some information on the limitations of the data for example if your data set is about threatened species then it does make sense that you don't want to give the exact location of where you have observed that species so a limitation of the data might be that you are not providing exact coordinates but derived coordinates to a grid or something like that and also important is that you include a citation each data sets shouldn't have a citation and that citation is something that you can compare to the citation of a publication the reference that you add for example in a publication and also if already there's publications existing on the data that you have then it's also good to document that because that publication will most probably contain additional information on the sampling methodology on the how and the where and the when of the data so I'll just go through through some metadata guidelines disco both for afro bees for obese 4gb for any place where you would submit your data to make them publicly accessible and the first thing that you need to look at is a data set title each dataset should have a title and this title should be as descriptive as possible because the title is mostly the first thing that people will search on they won't necessarily directly search on specific data but they will search through keywords or through a part of datasets name and if you have a good data set title then that provides the users already with some very valuable information before they actually look at your data so just to give you some examples these are data set titles that we received within Jurgis and I don't know how good you are at guessing but I wouldn't be too sure what the first two data sets for example would be about because that is this is what has been provided as a title and it actually says nothing the second one okay we know it's about benthos the third one sorry the fourth one I have no idea and the fifth one can be anything okay so what we do as data management team is try to make a more descriptive title but always in collaboration with your data provider because he does need to agree with what you get or with what you name the data set so after some consultation this is what we got and that's a bit more descriptive and more clear what the data is about so that's what I mean by a good and descriptive title that your title at least contains what it is about is it been ptosis at plunked on is it fish is it invertebrates is it birds mammals that something is there something on the location is also already very helpful if you know it's a North Sea data set or in data set from Namibia see if you can get that in the title because it makes it more descriptive and sometimes they also include something on the time frame if it would be a long-term data set it's very easy to add that the data has been collected from 2002 2010 for example so these are all things that you can keep in mind and you can actually use for the data sets that you brought yourself or that you deal with now very important if you get a data set from a provider you cannot just change it yourself you do need to consult with the person that gave you the data set because it's his data and he does need to agree with the changes that you proposed and then another very important one is if the data set has already been published elsewhere you cannot change the title no matter how bad it is once it's published for example 3g beef or it has a certain do I which means that it's unique and it's searchable then you cannot change it anymore that's something you need to keep in mind okay other important things that go together with the data set is the contact information it's good that you get a data sets and that you can provide it to a focus or another initiative but you do need to have the name at least the name and an email address or telephone number of the person that gave you the data set also for yourself if you have any questions on the data set while you are processing it you need to have a contact person you need to have someone that knows about the data and that can help you to correctly interpret the data to see how you how you need to use them or process them also for the users of for example of robisz if they have a contact person they are listed in the metadata they can easily contact that person to get more information perhaps there's more data available that just doesn't fit within of robisz but that is available with the original data provider and also the contact information can help if someone wants to collaborate with that specific researcher because he finds that data set really interesting or wants to do something similar then it's a broader research that's possible collaboration for your data provider with someone else an abstract or a description everybody knows what an abstract on the description is it just gives some basic information should be short should be clear and should really be related to the data set and by that I mean that's in some cases you have data sets that are collected within a certain project it doesn't make sense to describe the project as an abstract it does make sense to specify what the data set is about within the context of the project so be specific be as specific as possible on that then citation given the public access of the data within of robeson august and citation is basically the most important thing that is they are for data set and as I said earlier you can compare it to a publication reference that makes the data sets I table and makes it traceable and the format of the citation can differ I'd also differs within different journals how you build your citation but it should contain at least your data set title the good one not a short one the authors which could be the data managers the collectors or the responsible researchers of the data set and also interesting is the name of the data holding Institute because that Institute carries some kind of responsibility to make the data available within your own Institute if you create citations for data sets then it's good that you use a specific standard if that is possible so as a data manager you could decide yourself if you put the initials of the authors before or after the name if you use commas or periods or any other separators you just need to be consistent that helps and standardizing and then and further distributing the data and also make a decision on whether you want to use the full name of an institute or the acronym or both full name is of course more descriptive than an acronym but the acronym might be more familiar to other people than the full name so that's a choice you can make yourself these are just some examples so you can have the persons that were responsible for the data collection in the first example then the year between brackets is in this case or in these cases that's the year when the last sample has been collected just to kind say this is the closure of the data set so the last sample in this case was collected in 1992 or the next example 2002 so then you have the title which is descriptive or as descriptive as possible and then in most cases you also have the Institute's and if the data is already available somewhere or you have a very thorough metadata description available somewhere you can also add the link most metadata systems and also the one that Clovis is using the ipt allows to give keywords to your data sets and keywords can also help and discovering the data keywords can be anything but they mostly relate to the tax the geography and the temporal boundaries or the bounding boxes of the data sets then the usage of the data set is basically the provider saying how his data set can be used by someone else so you should document how or under which conditions the data set can be used in most cases or the most easy ones are the creative commons license which means that it's freely available if cited some datasets might have a restricted use I'm going back to the example that I gave if you have endangered species within a data set or commercially important species then the provider might say okay you can say that my species is present at a certain location but you cannot say how many did I find so you just go for a presence data set instead of an abundance data sets that might be a restriction and then in summary just giving the overview here so you just check if the relevant metadata information is there if it is completed and you pay attention to a title a contact person citation and so on if you did not receive that information then the best thing is to go back to your provider and ask him about it now it's 5 w's it was six so it should be six and then very important is check if your data set title is understandable and I'm giving examples here in a sense of the western movie everybody probably knows the good the bad and the ugly so you have good data set titles which would be the first one you have bad ones that say nothing and then you have the ugly ones which do say everything they need to say but in a very cryptic way so the ugly ones are very easy to format and to come to the good example this is a very small change that you could propose to your provider and then also try to assign relevant keywords because this helps really helps in the discovery of the data and if the data are easily discovered then there's more potential that they will be used more often by other people is there any questions on the metadata toe in any case what what I just told here you will be using in the sessions where you will be preparing your own data set for submission so if you have any questions we can still get back to that but it's to create the one is if you've got an ongoing project I can want to do in project house what's the best way to submit the data like it's you know if you will get more data if you thinking minds away yeah yeah what you do in that case is it can do several things first you can ask your provider is it okay if we share part of the monitoring data and what they mostly will do is say yes but not the data of the saying something two or four most recent years because they might still be processing that or they are using that in publications so you could be able to share let's say the first 10 years of the monitoring and then you have a time lag each year you can make addition so you just update the data set within a through this every year every two months maybe it's a little bit a lot this is a lot but if you could agree it was my second place so you can flag fly what do you mean my flag but can you submit data but you don't put it on the database now the moment you submit it goes online so it's the provider that needs to cut in his data and only provide what he wants to be available online appear is one dataset or whatever here be a new data set it should be as one data set because the metadata will mention that it's a monitoring data set which automatically implies that if it's monitoring it's continuous so updates are made an example what we have with in yoruba says the data from Isis the fishing troll surveys we do updates I think about every six months so they just send us what they have for what they want to make available and then six months later we get a new additional batch of data that go online to fish data for example if you if you submit your data and it's fine to make the species available but not the abundances so you're basing addictiveness you just submit the positions and the species yes and metadata you say basically requirements if someone is interested in yeah yeah yeah and that's why the metadata are so important you can also mention that you only provide the presents data but the metadata can say like the original provider also has abundance biomass length weight frequencies for fish for example and then it's the user that needs to have the reflex to to go to the original provider to see if there can be a sharing of data or some kind of collaboration okay yes that's okay that's no problem no that's okay that's okay yeah the minimum Mike we'll talk about that in a minute about the minimum information that is needed for obits so i'll leave the answer to my k okay you would need the scientific name if you know how to translate from the code to the scientific name then you just do that before you submit the data because we cannot work with codes we have no idea what c 1 p plus whatever means so we do need the translation to the to the and by scientific goats you and that means the first four letters of the genius and the first four letters of the species name is that yes okay but still okay yep okay that's good we'll have a look tomorrow in the exercises okay | OceanTeacher Global Academy | UCI9bCuLFiDJ6fb7tCCW4ElQ | 2016-07-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,800 | 14,700 |
DoyD5Z0FSgQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DoyD5Z0FSgQ | What Predictive Analytics is All About | DOUG PETERS | Automotive Digest | GE fleet is aligning with a broader GE goal of connecting all assets in the Internet of Things using predictive analytics and bringing more value than ever to their customers the nice thing about where we're at with fleet right now is if you look at the broader GE and where the broader GE is going with the industrial Internet around connected assets and the what was referred to as the Internet of Things GE fleet probably the first for the first time in its history is directly aligned with the broader GE goal of connecting assets using predictive analytics and providing value to their customers so we have a lot of great leverage and resources right now that are aligning with exactly what the larger broader GE wants to do around connected assets and where we're headed is in that direction of connected vehicles once vehicles are completely connected they become just another device on the internet giving us data that we can turn into valuable information and by able and insight for our customers you | AutomotiveDigest | UCLscTdiHLphtLQRmTKCNQOw | 2014-08-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 177 | 1,010 |
6ECSc0Py-C0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ECSc0Py-C0 | Epcot’s Space 220 Restaurant Dinner | 24oz Bone in Ribeye With Coffee Space Rub | Walt Disney World | hey friends tonight we are hanging out at Epcot in space 220 Walt Disney World's newest restaurant opened today and they're doing a standby line No Reservations so we are gonna try to have some dinner and I am so excited it might take us a couple hours but I think we're gonna make it anywho's let's go do this I got here just about an hour after the park opened and the standby line to get in for dinner service is officially closed and they're saying that it could be anywhere from a four to five hour wait but we're here I mean I'm committed and I'm excited to try Disney World's newest restaurant and it's gonna be amazing I'm pumped just about an hour and 20 minutes in we started at the back of the line and now we are actually approaching mission space so hopefully not too much longer and I've already been told we can't do the lunch even though we got here around 12 o'clock at 12 o'clock is lunch is officially all sold out and booked up we are in line for dinner and that is even better because I wanted some din-din oh boy we are getting so close we passed the space 220 sign and now we are queuing up here and then we have one switch back there so hopefully not too long it is now three o'clock we have been in line for three hours and we are basically in mission space and lunch officially ended at 3 30 so now we are at the dinner service and I think the line opened up again and more people have joined but it it's it's been a long journey and I hope it's worth it I'm pretty sure it is going to be worth it I have some friends that are going to hold down my spot for me and I want to give you guys a look at the line of people that are waiting first you have this whole entire crowd over here which we've made our way to and then it's going all the way down my friends hi friends definitely a long long wait and like I said where we are at now I've already waited three hours for it so like it's it's getting very intense here hi look at that oh yeah I think it's going all the way back to uh test track here wow and I don't know if they're letting people in still we're gonna find out I mean so if it's three o'clock now I waited three hours and I started back there most of these people would be dining probably around uh seven eight o'clock once we got back to the end of the line it is still officially open so you can hop in line and wait it out just like I did if you wanted to so probably uh back there you're looking at maybe seven o'clock to get into the restaurant so I don't know how much longer they're actually going to keep it going because they can't stay open past the park close you know what I mean it's gonna be interesting but I think we're gonna make it and just around four hours later here we are ready to embark on a space mission a mission for food and I am excited oh boy [Music] oh the race to space this looks so cool in here once you actually check in they give you a boarding pass for your adventure to space and they're all different color coded for the different zones and I'm excited I'm excited to see which one I get once we receive our boarding group we get called to this elevator and it's basically a space elevator that's going to take us 220 miles up into the sky to the space station and it goes 10 000 miles per hour so we're going to be traveling pretty fast to get to outer space and that's where we're going to have dinner but on our way up we're gonna see some iconic things like Epcot because we're coming from Epcot here it is the Centurion space station depart from Earth arrive at the CSS we're on our way up we're going all the way up are you thank you oh wow this entire space station make sure we're all holding on we're gonna send it about 10 000 miles per hour let's see the latest in space elevator design and Technology today you'll have a spectacular view of Florida at the Eastern seaboard why thank you guys if you look above you'll see Centauri space station coming into view once we dock gather your belongings and exit through the open air log a space 220 agent will be waiting for you wow this is so so cool okay I'm impressed already it's kind of like an attraction inside of a dining room or inside of a restaurant [Music] that is so cool [Music] feel like that I feel like it now I mean oh wow look at this oh this is cool I love it [Music] and now we have made it to our table and would you just look at the view in here look at this it is so magnificent it literally feels like we are just floating around in space just as it is intended and I think it's just beautiful now it's time to decide on a drink and we're going to be doing the dinner menu here and all the drinks have like a special effect to them kind of like Olga's Cantinas so I'm gonna have to look through it I've seen one that has pop rocks one that has cotton candy one that has dry ice so we're definitely going to want to get one that is kind of fancy you know fun fancy and Spacey the best part is definitely to cut [Music] too cool I like it I'm glad thank you for the recommendation because that was awesome it's also the best tasting one of my oh really oh so this is going to be the atmos Spritz and it looked really cool didn't it and I'm excited to try it [Music] oh yeah much too good that is that's good now that we got ourselves our drink we need to start looking at what we're gonna get to eat uh because we're doing the dinner service it is 79 and we start off by picking a liftoff which is basically an appetizer they have cauliflower and calamari which both of them were highly recommended and then they had the star course where you have some amazing selections but they have a space station selection where it's a little bit of an up charge and you can get some other entrees and one of them is a 24 ounce bone-in rib eye and it's an additional 18 and I think I'm sold I'm all in on the 24 ounce bone-in rib eye I decided on getting the calamari and it looks so good holy moly it also comes with a spicy marinara sauce and uh yeah I guess I'm just gonna Dive Right On in It looks like it's nice and crispy you know you don't want soggy calamari you want the good stuff look at that calamari doesn't that look so so good I think I'm gonna try a plane and then I'm gonna try it with the uh spicy marinara next or actually you know what I'm gonna try the spicy marinara first and we're gonna see if it's really spicy or not so here we go I will wholeheartedly tell you guys that is the best calamari I think I've ever had the breading is so amazing very crispy and the spicy marinara doesn't really have a lot of spice to it and that's good because I really didn't want a lot of spice but this is the way this is the way and I can't get over this view like oh it's so beautiful is there a space man right there there is where is he going [Music] honestly I think I like it just on its own I mean the spicy marinara is okay we didn't get a little swirl swirl but just eating it the way that it is is perfect it looks like there's a spaceship actually coming into orbit here [Music] so cool as you actually sit here you start noticing different people or different things out in the universe you'll see spaceships you'll see astronauts and uh even possibly some lightsabers hopefully we catch the lightsabers it also looks like they have a bar area so I'm hoping that in the future there might be available walk-ups where you can actually just come sit at the bar because I wouldn't mind that either just to sit in here and take in this amazing view and also to ride the elevator is such a cool experience and oh my Lord the steak is here and it is so beautiful I mean honestly look at that oh much too good and you can kind of swap out your side so I ended up getting some brussels sprouts and fingerling potatoes and I cannot wait to just cut into this and like having a steak with this View it's it's breathtaking actually this is literally probably one of the coolest dining experiences I think I've had in a while we're gonna Dive Right on in and cut into this bad boy this is a big big oh no oh no it should not cut like that oh boy this is gonna be amazing holy moly it cuts so easily I am so happy and this is one of the things I think you can only get for dinner time so we really really lucked out waiting like we did here we go my first ever space steak thank you [Music] and I can't believe I'm gonna say this but I have officially found a new number one steak at Walt Disney World right here at space 220 and I was not expecting this I mean this is absolutely amazing that first bite it was like just a rush of like amazing like flavors and I I can't get over the coffee rub is perfect the steak is cooked perfect so juicy and I love it like I said number one right here I cannot wait to try all the other menu items when I come back eventually might not be for a while but I'm gonna be thinking about the steak after I eat it the coffee rub literally just seals the deal for me honestly best steak at Disney right now I can say I know I keep going on and on about the steak but it is just that good and the Brussels sprouts are amazing the fingerling potatoes are amazing this is this is a home run right here I'm not too sure I can't speak on the lunch so like I'm not too sure how lunch went or any of the other entrees but I'm telling you what I'm eating right now it's one of the best meals I've ever had like I said and it's definitely the best steak at Disney hands down now there's going to be some other places I will visit in the future that might take the number one spot but we're gonna have to wait and see foreign this is going to be a challenge to eat all the steak it's 24 ounces but that's what the bone in and uh just picking away at the Brussels sprouts they're good brussels sprouts and the potatoes are good like I said uh but I need to save room for dessert because that's included in this as well look at all the astronauts out there looks like they're taking off and they're going somewhere beyond I really love it you got to keep your eye on constantly yo obviously I can see a satellite right there too always something happening in the universe out there [Music] I'm throwing in the towel oh so much food and like I said we still had the dessert to come I just can't finish it I might end up taking a box to go because that is just so good I mean I want to finish it but I mean these desserts oh my Lord we have a lot to choose from they've got carrot cake they've got sticky toffee pudding cake I think I'm just gonna get the sticky toffee pudding cake [Music] I did pretty good but like I said you're coming home with me those astronauts are at it again look at that that is so fun looking oh and they got another spaceship over on that side I really can't stop staring out at Earth okay so this is the Tommy cake with terrible drizzles [Music] fancy that looks good thank you and here it is the sticky toffee pudding cake dark chocolate sauce caramel crunchy pearls salted toffee drizzle and all of the space dreams kind of looks like a Milky Way oh wait a second oh there we go too bad they didn't make a Milky Way dessert because that would have been excellent and I'm pretty sure that looks like some bananas on top there and you know I love my oh boy you know I love my bananas so we're gonna just a little scoopsy right there make sure we get some of these pearls because you gotta get the pearls on there oh yes you love your pearls don't you and right there perfect bite now it's time to try it and Kaya and Macy's dad who recommended who works here uh said it's probably the best dessert he's had so I'm excited to figure that out or find that out oh yeah wow that is too good much much too good holy moly so so delicious now they do have like a lemon mousse a chocolate cheesecake they have some sorbet they have a carrot cake and uh I think this is my favorite probably out of all of those choices like this is probably going to be the most like appealing to me I don't like the cream cheese on the carrot cake if I didn't get this I'd probably get the lemon mousse but happy I did get it so I'm taking home the rib eye and I demolished the sticky toffee pudding cake didn't stand a chance but it'd be nice to get a little leftovers like 24 ounces a big big steak like honestly uh and I think I probably ate a good like 75 of it and I got a couple brussels sprouts and potatoes but now I am so stuffed so full and I don't even know what to do I guess I'm gonna try to travel back to Earth try to get all the way down there so it's gonna be a long journey oh my Lord that one astronaut has an X-Wing in his hand I don't know if you can see it oh no he's he's going away it happened so quick but there was one astronaut who was carrying like a toy X-Wing and then he just took off I would have loved to see it so I don't know if I caught it it happened like that and then they were gone so you got to keep your eye out like I said lots of Easter eggs now we're gonna have to take the space elevator back down to earth and uh hopefully it's gonna be a different scenery there were so many cool Easter eggs inside this restaurant like floating in space you've seen the one uh space man with the X-Wing and then the X2 from Mission Space was floating around and uh I was hoping to see the lightsabers but looks like I I didn't I didn't catch them you know it might have happened so quick but it's really hard you have to be fast you have to always be watching always watching now we're moving a lot faster to get down all right so 13 000 miles an hour down before it was 11 000 miles up an hour up much faster now so enjoy the ride now as you can see beautiful Florida below and a beautiful Centauri space station above wow we're about to enter atmosphere it's gonna get really loud [Music] oh look at spaceshipers that was so amazing honestly like I said best steak the dining experience and just sitting there staring out at Earth or just being in space so so cool and now I think we're gonna do something else that's kind of really really cool I'm having a fun day I hadn't waited a long time outside but uh it's gonna pay off now because we enjoyed a great meal at uh the newest Walt Disney World restaurant and we're about to do another little Adventure I'm gonna bring you on so we're gonna head to the yacht club and uh yeah I don't want to ruin the surprise but I'll show you when we get there we have made it to the yacht club and now we are gonna grab some drinks at Hurricane Hannah's and we're gonna go on a firework cruise for Epcot forever how awesome is that now this is a separate firework Cruise not like the one I did for uh happily ever after that was a fairy tale cruise this is a separate pontoon boot pontoon boot pontoon boat that you rent out and then uh you get to have like endless snacks no alcohol so we have to get our own drinks and we just kind of float around in the water until I've got forever we have a nice group of friends tonight going out on the boat and we've got our drinks all lined up and look at that this is gonna be a lot of fun I am excited we've got all of the players here it's gonna be a fun fun evening I'm excited everybody Cheers I've got forever all right we're ready to head out on our boat adventure oh my gosh oh I'm so excited got beers and hands gosh I got a banana I mean this is just stunning I cannot get over the boardwalk with the refrigerator oh my gosh oh boy thank you thank you have a great night they're all fancy fancy bring them all back tonight [Music] oh boy we're taking off look at that [Laughter] speed of this boat oh it'll go pretty good can we punch it that's where we're gonna go where we're going we don't need roads [Laughter] oh give us a little taste oh oh oh wow Captain Ron [Laughter] wow look at there's the boardwalk over there [Laughter] a part of the firework Cruise includes all these snacks that you see here and also soft drinks like soda so we actually brought our own drinks from Hurricane Hannah's and yeah I mean there were some good snacks in here I got some rice krispie treats down there some beaver nuggets from Bucky's some popcorn pretzels all the snacks that you need now not only do we just do the fireworks but we take a nice little boat ride over to Hollywood Studios and then back on over to Epcot to finish up and it's just really cool to see it a little bit on the like a little different like route like I don't think I've ever came through here on a boat unless you've taken the boat from Hollywood Studios to Boardwalk but I don't think I've ever done that oh look at that now we get to see the Hollywood Tower Hotel looks like somebody's dropping in oh did I mean Hollywood Studios closed because look at everyone boarding the boat back there that's a big line for the boat yeah Magic Kingdom fireworks ahead of us oh look at that gray gray sky that's cool see some fireworks glistering glycering glycerin the Glycerine we're making our way into Epcot now look at everyone on the bridge hi friends hello thank you we're passing underneath the Skyliner and look at the Eiffel Tower there oh wow this is it we're getting ready to line up [Music] and here we are now we're just waiting on the fireworks less than 10 minutes to go just sitting here in a boat about to watch Epcot forever I think it's really cool I actually like it I like that the music is really loud [Music] it does got to go with that only uh seven minutes to go I am so excited like this is really really fun a unique way to possibly say farewell to have come forever because I don't know if we're gonna be back [Music] [Applause] experimentally [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] ergy [Music] foreign [Music] set free amazing [Music] every day give it a reason taking pictures of time veggie veg first veggie veggie fruit [Music] s foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] it will never cease to be a living blueprint of the future foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign now we're heading back to the resort but that was amazing I loved it it was so good to see Epcot forever like that and I guess with that we are gonna call it a night here what an amazing day I had so much fun and I'm just so happy to be here in Florida and having the ability to actually come do these things uh a friend of ours actually rented the cruiser for the fireworks the firework Crews and it's one set price for up to eight people so he invited a bunch of people and we all had a great time and it was a lot of fun and it was a great way to cap off a great restaurant reopening or a restaurant opening any who's I hope you enjoyed the video I enjoyed making it we'll see you next time bye | Paging Mr. Morrow | UCscn2aSpMrS2U_mf7OF-UwQ | 2021-09-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,735 | 18,775 |
e1I8l739tn0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1I8l739tn0 | Chio's School Road Questionable Moments | go ahead and act polite but i can see your true colors we should take a video and post it on the internet yes make sure you tag me i'm gonna tag everyone in her class [Music] yes just keep doing that i'll have to scare her all right come on i i i i i i'm sorry so um how uh was it huh how was what um i don't know what you're talking about i mean i do i don't i didn't notice much i mean you know what i mean what could i slash she do to make money go hot school girl thanks that's 20k cup of the cupboard company company comedy comedy comedy if you're in the raider position you keep yelling comedy while in the enemy circle wait they actually say that and here i thought that was just a joke as soon as you stop struggling i can let you go hold the pool this is not what she described earlier this is good keep trying to get away we'll continue to hold you she down not messing around saw the twinkle in your eye when you attacked monona i recognized it and used it to my advantage your sucker for the ladies nothing wrong with that and then when jose cowell was raiding you got completely distracted looking up her skirt i wish he could have seen your face full on pervy smirk wait what [Music] i can't just thinking about accidentally groping her again is making my body totally tense up i can't i can't move please you're grabbing my butt i admit defeat can i please ask you a question sure how can i get my jugs to be as big as yours are of course of course you would choose to ask something completely random and horrifying that girl is sick in the head [Applause] [Music] oh my gosh [Music] i thought if i could have one more minute to absorb that youthful energy i could keep living if i could breathe that breath feel that spirit if i could touch her i would have her energy [Music] with every glorious grope it's as if i'm standing at the top of mount fuji breathing in crisp minty mountain air it makes me want to play comedy so that i can manually explore the bountiful bottoms of the other girls aren't you interested in my thick full lips keep your voice down please oh [ __ ] where did all these people come from this does not look good i'm playing butt games with a child come on give me your ass kid i'm gonna put my fingers in it they're gonna think i'm a criminal hey momo what do you uh smell like yeah tell us or show us i don't understand where this is coming from mr g since you're always standing by chicks you care how you smell right gotta keep that man musk in check actually i think i kind of enjoy the natural scent of a hard-working well-dressed thick-necked older gentleman older gentleman i was curious about the word streak in kill streak so i did a search i would have looked up the whole word what the hell is a kill streak it's whatever the point is that i ended up on the word streaking so so it's the societal protest thing where people run around the city completely naked i mean at least what i'm eating cool aren't aprons supposed to protect your clothes so either she eats or meals in her bedroom or she's wandering around her entire house in the nude i'm pretty sure there are lots of people who'd be into the naked life sounds like she's a bad influence my parents love this lifestyle too adore her parents i wish i could at least stop wearing underwear to school [Music] [Laughter] here undies are like a conscience they restrain your wild side so you don't end up arrested or pregnant if you throw them away then then you're welcoming new life experiences check it oh bring it on okay [Music] so there's a story about someone being fined 300 000 yen for showing their junk on the street recently that's so much hmm so wait that's all it costs um i've been holding on to my new year's money for a while i bet i have enough to pull it off at least once i can't hear you when you talk out your ass so sweet they're always radiant passionate and energetic high school girls are the best geo school road um [Music] you | MidnightKate | UCvqQUKWaz2KQakxkl_qC5DQ | 2021-08-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 773 | 3,970 |
QPbSraogf3w | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPbSraogf3w | Understanding Masturbation: Health Benefits, Myths, and Mindful Practices | Hola! Welcome to my channel, Clear Vision. My name is Simon and I'm a psychotherapist. All the videos you'll find on this channel are based on my experiences as a psychotherapist, and I discuss certain challenges and issues that people may have along their journey of life. this week's video is going to be all about masturbation, dispelling some of the myths around masturbation and some of the contrary advice, etc., and information that's out there on the Internet. So stay tuned for more. As always, if you like what you see here, please hit that. Subscribe button. Please hit the like button. Leave any comments in the comments section below. Any feedback? Anything else that you wish to know more of and I'll endeavor to get back to you Hitting that subscribe button really, really does help the channel and keep things moving. So without further ado, let's move on to the subject So the aim of this video is to dispel some of the myths surrounding masturbation out there. And when you trawl through the Internet and through YouTube, there's an awful lot of contrary advice, So when you trawl through the Internet, look through social media, self-help stuff and YouTube video channels, there is so much contradiction between information given on all sorts of subjects. I mean, just to go off on a slight Segway, if you're looking into fitness or diet or psychological help, whatever it may be or your sport, there's always you can always find the answer that you're looking for. So if you if you want to try a vegan diet, you'll find a whole ton of videos about how beneficial a vegan diet is. And if you want to eat meat, you'll go and find a whole load of videos which will tell you that a meat only diet is fantastic. I'm not I don't want to get into who's wrong, who's right. But some of my videos are about giving you some useful information and some true facts and allow you to make up your own mind. So in this case, masturbation. We can find lots of videos telling you that masturbation is terrible, that masturbation destroys relationships, etcetera, etcetera. And we can also find a whole load of videos that tell you that it's it's a healthy thing to do. so let's begin. First of all, masturbation is a normal, natural part of life. It is a healthy act. It is a healthy thing to do. It's a great tension release. It's a great stress release. It helps build self-awareness. helps build self-exploration. You learn how to turn your self on. And if you know how to turn yourself on, you'll be able to help someone else and guide them through. Now learning how to turn you on and vice versa, they can you if you're in a and when you're in a relationship, masturbation or orgasm also releases endorphins and dopamine, which is fantastic for the body and the brain. So all in all, masturbation is not a bad thing in and of itself, and I'm not going to tell you is bad either. And so given all of that information with the chemical cocktails that released in your brain, self-exploration, happens with regular masturbation is you get an improved mood and you get relaxed action or an increased sense of relaxation. So all in all, it's quite a healthy thing to do. So let's address the self-exploration, first of all. because it releases dopamine, oxytocin and various other chemicals within the brain, it's you can see it as part of a bonding and a self-exploration and kind of a bonding process. So you're actually learning to bond with yourself. First of all, you're learning to become familiar with your body. You're learning to become familiar with how your body reacts to certain sensory stimulation. And you also get to use your imagination. A lot of people get to use their imagination. Generally, it starts with the image. It starts with a feeling of feeling turned on. Sexually excited. There might be bodily sensations, vivid heat, rising, things like that, blood flow, maybe an erection, whatever. and then from that, people often dip into fantasy in their imagination and then they masturbate. And then they have an orgasm. And it's all very wonderful and fantastic. So it increases your bodily awareness, it increases your bonding with yourself. So therefore, it increases self-awareness, which are all great things. unfortunately, within certain areas of society, masturbation is quite a taboo. It can be quite sinful and it can be something to be ashamed of. Often people are filled with shame when they masturbate, and it tends to be looked down upon in some circles as you're unable to get a sexual partner or a romantic partner, you have to masturbate. Therefore you're lonely in your isolated and you're no good and you're a failure. And all you're doing is sitting in your room and masturbating and these messages are not healthy because they create this taboo of some kind of inadequacy within the individual that they are unable to have sex with somebody else. So they're resorting to masturbation or that masturbation is far too much self-pleasure and therefore it is a bad thing to do. again, I would strongly disagree with these opinions and these suggestions that come from certain areas of society. and I would urge you to question the motives behind such messages. Often for young people, adolescents, it's you know, there's this kind of peer pressure. Have you have you go to are you having sex? Have you got a girl? Have you got a boy? And how are you? Are you adulting? And you know, you can't masturbate because that just means that you're useless. So again, these are all things that ought to be, frankly ignored. And again, masturbation is something that you should do at your own pace and begin to explore your body as much as you feel comfortable in doing so. What happens if we extend this into a sexual relationship? Masturbation creates what would we call it? Masturbation creates a confidence in your body. You go confident with your body. You can be confident in your nakedness. You can be confident in your vulnerability. Also, if you engage in mutual masturbation with your partner, you can, as I said at the beginning of video, begin to explore each other and help teach each other how you like to be touched, how you like to be turned on. And there are so many ways in which to do it and so many ways to learn. So again, this becomes part of the bonding. You your your vulnerable. Because masturbation has this stigma. You you make yourself vulnerable. You connect together, you masturbate together. And this creates this, again, releases of dopamine and serotonin and oxytocin and helps and helps cement, if you like, the bonding, the bonding ritual and bring yourself closer to your partner and also increase the and and increase the effectiveness of your sex life, if you like. I mean, if you can learn about yourself and then you can teach the other about yourself and you can learn about the other as well, if you will, you have to be willing to learn. Your sex life will just grow and be and become more adventurous, more exciting, have a deeper connection, You will share more and that will spill out into your relationship as well, and then spill out further into your external world. So all in all, there's absolutely nothing wrong with masturbation. It's quite healthy. Now let's move on to some of the more negative aspects of masturbation. well not really masturbation, but increased masturbation. And I'm not going to tell you how many times you should masturbate a week or anything like that. So I'm going to go down two avenues here. I'm going to go down isolation into fantasy. And I'm also going to look at the porn industry, or using porn is an aid. Let's go down to self isolation, first of all. So sometimes people find themselves and it's not necessarily reserved for adolescents, but it can be increased within the adolescent demographic. It is if you are perhaps a little bit socially inept, not so great at connecting with people, not so great at And you're not so great at obtaining yourself a sexual partner. Sometimes people find themselves, first of all, isolating anyway, so they withdraw from society in general. I think the Japanese refer to it as Hikikomori which is quite a problem amongst young people. The world out there is too complicated. I'm a little bit socially awkward, a little bit inept. I lack a little bit of confidence, I lack a bit of self-esteem. So therefore it's easier for me to stay at home and delve into the world of my computer or my work or my art, whatever it is I'm doing, I'm going to isolate and become introverted. Now, within that, sometimes people find solace within masturbation because it gives a dopamine release, etcetera, etcetera. It's a nice feeling having an orgasm. This can become too habitual and become an escape from actually getting yourself out there because the fantasy world you create in your head during masturbation or outside of masturbation. Let's just I just I'm known for going off tangents, so I'm going with masturbation. The fantasy world that you create through masturbation to stimulate yourself, to turn you on where your imagination takes you is far more appealing than the real world. And so one finds themselves having several factors playing in here. First of all, you know, I'm socially withdrawn, socially excluded, which brings tension, which brings stress, which brings feelings of inadequacy, and then I masturbate and I feel better. And then the feelings come back. So I masturbate again. And then I feel better again before I know I'm masturbating. Three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten times a day, whatever it may be. Because my fantasy world is much better and my real world is quite stressful, quite lonely, and I alleviate myself from that through masturbation. That's one avenue that you see that people can go down, which is extremely hard to break because that's a lot more appealing than what is out there and having to go out into the world. Build your self-confidence, build your self-esteem, connect with people which are going to be quite disappointing compared to your master, compared to your fantasies in your head and self isolating at home. The other avenue within that is within a relationship where masturbate where the sex is decreasing and is less satisfying or less fulfilling for one, or maybe both of you. Perhaps it's the original spark and passion that you had as a couple is gone, you know, for whatever reason, and it's probably nobody's fault. And masturbation then becomes, again, an escape from the mundane, and it becomes an escape into the fantasy world where you can play out your fantasies with other partners in your head or even fantasize about your own partner in your head. And then again, that world, that fantasy becomes far more appealing than real life. And you, the more you lose, the more you move into that. The same as with the isolation. And when you move into the fantasy and the act of masturbation, the further away from reality you move into the further away and the less appealing reality seems. And also sometimes you can then actually kind of influence your reality. So your relationship starts to break down because there's more distance put in or your relationship with the exterior world begins to break down because you're putting distance, because your fantasy world in your head is much more interesting. Added with the fact you have an orgasm at the end of it, which cements it all with the release of the chemical cocktails within the brain. That's the isolation route. The other routes to be very careful of is porn. And I'm not going to bash the porn industry. That's not what this video is about. So we're moving from natural sensory to an imagination inducing orgasm, which is pretty much the same orgasm as you having sex, which is bonding emotional. Like I say, oxytocin is release. Dopamine is release this chemical cocktail of this kind of melding of bodies, if you like, or melding with yourself. It's a more fulfilling and orgasm When it comes to visual stimulation, your orgasm is much different and the brain, the areas of the brain, which during a normal orgasm to do with connection, empathy, stimulate feelings, stimulation, sensory stimulation, moves to different areas of the brain and it moves to the same areas of the brain as risk and reward, which are the same areas of the brain as addiction. So it's it's risk taking. So now there's this dopamine pump. Now the dopamine hits big time. You are visually stimulate. Now the orgasm can be way more intense from the use of porn because you are visually stimulated because the brain is bombarded with these images in this this it's playing out in front of you, this taboo, this this nakedness, this whatever fantasy. You can see it, you can see it, you can hear it. But I really like the way Jordan Peterson puts it. It's it's Tinkerbell. It's it's a fairy. It's it's not real. So but what it does do is it, like I say, is it activates different areas of the brain. So the orgasm is completely different. The orgasm is based on the same stimulation of risk and reward. So like with using various substances, gambling, adrenaline, sports, it's the same kind of senses that start lighting out. Your oxytocin is gone. But in particular, you know, this kind of bonding has gone. This is now all about full on stimulation, which in and of itself personal, I wouldn't say is a particularly bad thing. In again, I'm going to go with a I'm going to go with a kind of a Chinese philosophy here. You know, everything in moderation. There's no harm in dipping into that. But it's when we start to do it. And the trouble with it is, is it has this addiction building tendency with porn, with the use of pornography. Now, the wonderful thing about pornography in a kind of ironic way is that pornography is extremely inclusive. It doesn't matter what your fantasy is, how, you know, obscure, taboo, depraved, whatever it may be. But if you want to see porn has a porn has a channel for it, there is an outlook for it. So ironically, it's quite inclusive, possibly one of the most inclusive things in the world. I think we took stand. Who said that or Ricky Gervais said, can't remember. Anyway, so now you're visually stimulated. Now the orgasm is way more intense, except and the dopamine hit is high. And as people like Dr. Huberman and various other people point out exactly from neuroscience, what then happens is the baseline of dopamine starts to drop. So like any addiction or any addiction process, now it's starting as you are having a spike and then you're getting then you're getting a trough. And the but the whole time, the dopamine baseline is lowering. So you need more. So sometimes people find themselves, well, I started off watching porn a couple of years ago and now I'm two years into it and I'm watching hardcore extreme porn to get the bigger hit of dopamine to get more from to get more stimulation. The other thing as well as it's a complete it's it's your fantasy almost almost in a visceral way but it's in a very extreme in-your-face way. And there you are. You can you can search and you can find whatever you want to find. And again, for a lot of people, it can be more appealing to real life. There's no effort put into it. It's completely by yourself and your you. But your but you are operating on a visual stimulation system. Now, what can happen that is so many avenues where this goes quite bad, I'll try and during them in order. The first one is expectations from a relationship. So if you get yourself far too much into porn, you begin to change your expectation of what you am, of what happens within a sexual relationship. And often that can become more extreme, more demanding. And actually sex is quite can be quite difficult to get. It's not something where it depends, but I think you understand what I'm saying most there's for a lot of people it's not like, I can now go out and I can very quickly search myself for a partner who can fulfill all my sexual fantasies that I've seen on porn. Because I think that's normal, because we tend to normalize stuff the same as we do of any addiction. It becomes normalized. And this is quite detrimental to the health of especially adolescence. And again, I'm not preaching, I'm not lecturing, but a lot of what comes through my door are people who are feeling extremely pressured in by peers that they meet and they engage in and they have sexual encounters. And I, I didn't want to do that or they think that's normal, you know, and this is for both females and males. So that's one avenue. You know, if you're in a relationship and you are delving into porn by yourself, again, you can go back to the isolated thing. Perhaps that's more exciting than your relationship or your sex and your relationship, in which case it would be better to work on that and work on yourself and etc., etc., and communicate that and have those difficult conversations then to keep delving into porn. But a lot of people do that because it's easy. And then again, what happens is the adverse effect of sex becomes more disappointing or masturbation becomes more disappointing when you start to only need the visual aid. This is another avenue. Once that kicks in and you need that visual stimulation, it can affect your libido, it can affect your sexual arousal and performance. And again, you would have to find every person's limit as to what limit they hit. And then this begins to happen is going to be different for some people. They can, I don't know, masturbate to porn once a day and still have a healthy sex life. Other people can't, you know, or other people then just keep building it up and up and up and up. So again, this is a bit like when it comes to any addiction, alcohol, drugs, gambling, sports, whatever, you will have your own ceiling, at which point you tip over or which point you go through and then you're past the point of no return without help. But everybody's different and everybody's scene is at a different level. And you don't know that ceiling or where that ceiling is until you hit it. So to continue now, then there's the other side to porn. When it comes to stimulation, where you are being stimulated by witnessing other people having sex or masturbating. So now your brain will begin to change your brain. It will begin it does actually begin to influence the architecture of your brain and your your responses to stimulus changes. So once upon a time where you were stimulated by being next to your partner who was naked in bed and having kisses and finding that stimulating, and then at least to one thing to the next, and you're having sex now you're stimulated by watching other people have sex And so you're it's it's again, it's distancing yourself. You're happy. You're actually isolating yourself. You removing yourself from the act of masturbation or from the act of sex via watching someone else do what it is that you probably want to do but feel inadequate to or can't do or what When you do, do it, it's not fulfilling enough. And so your you are pulling yourself away again without realizing that you're doing you. both the isolation route, the delving into fantasy and the use of porn end up at the same result, which is more and more isolation, more need for stimulation, less feelings of fulfillment within your sex life and a general general kind of difficulty. And again, this will spread into your world. And if you speak to anybody who's become addicted to porn or who who's ended up withdrawing completely from society, it's quite a long road back and it takes quite a lot of self-discipline. So and a lot of people didn't realize they were slipping into it. They didn't realize they were sliding down that slope into that. And then they would have to crawl out of that pit and do an awful lot of work on themselves. So, again, as an overview, porn, visual stimulation is not necessarily bad. I'm not going to go into the ethics of the porn industry. It's a minefield, but there's nothing wrong with visual stimulation. Again, if it's used in moderation. and my last point I'm going to draw from some of the more philosophical Eastern religions and practices Buddhism, Buddhism and Hinduism, which don't particularly have a moral judgment on masturbation or indeed sexuality. What they do kind of point towards is and I think it's a really, really valid point. Your intention behind and your stimulation, your intention behind your masturbation, your intention behind your sex life, your orgasm. What is the intention? Are you looking for release from stress and therefore end up using your partner or yourself to do that? And you do that more and more rather than addressing distress rather than addressing the reason why you're stressed. So you use it as a kind of a fix. Are you isolating yourself and using masturbation and to to help alleviate the feeling of isolation, etc., etc.? So it's the intention behind it. Are you looking to use and abuse and gain some kind of I mean, we're all looking to gain satisfaction, but it's very, very egotistical egotism, egotistically based and a very selfish pursuit. And I'm talking more about sex, but masturbation as well. So is it actually damaging you then? Second to that, there's another message on the Internet which goes on about, you know, if you masturbate too much and you lose your drive, it's distracting. You lose your kind of your creative energy. Now, this this moves more into kind of the Chinese based idea of QI, which is the life force theory that the life force that flows through you, this kind of creative energy, this life force by creative, it can be creative in terms of artistically and also creative in terms of procreation. So and again, you hit, as I understand it, there's a limited amount of life force which you have. And with each orgasm, with each ejaculation, you lose some of that life force. Well, I'm not sure if 100% if that's true. But what it does kind of point towards, which is the same as the neuroscientists point towards as well as psychology in general, is that too much masturbation, too much stimuli again, lowers the dopamine baseline and you keep needing that hit and that hit and hit, and then your energy becomes focused on raising that baseline and you find yourself less driven in other pursuits within your life. Energized, you could say, too relaxed and these are points also worth looking at if you are trying to drive your life forward, if you are trying to achieve more, but you are masturbating as a distraction, you could say it's like Netflix and chill with yourself, then chances are you might need to pull back a bit. Hold on to some of that creative energy. And if you're into chakras and things like that, you know that kind of sexual chakra, that creative chakra, hold on to that energy a little bit more and use it somewhere else. You might find your actual need for stimulation. Your libido starts to calm down a bit because it has a creative outlet. There is a kind of country side to that as well. And again, it's all about finding balance and equilibrium, where actually some of that explosive or gas orgasmic, some of the explosion within the brain and the orgasm produces in the relaxation in the body and the endorphins in the dopamine and everything flowing around the body actually also induces and feeds the creativity process. So again, it's finding that balance between being driven and ambitious or moving your life forward or whatever it is that you're trying to achieve and want to achieve. Balancing that with the pursuit of orgasm or sexual satisfaction or self-satisfaction, whatever it is, how you want to term it. And again, it's about finding that balance. So we've all of these is finding the balance. And if you find yourself tipping the balance into isolation, more porn, more fantasy in your head, and it's better than reality or it's holding you back because it's actually energizing you, then maybe it's something you need to look at. And again, everybody's different and everybody will reach that point, and that point will be at a different price for different people. So it's about, again, becoming aware of yourself, checking in with reality, really being quite honest with yourself. You know, I masturbate in a lot. So actually I'm it's it's now to the point where it's I'm completely distracted. I'm not doing anything or I'm masturbating so much that, you know, I'm not particularly interested in my partner because sex is a bit blind or so overstimulated by porn that you find yourself, you know, running home as quick as you can to jump into bed with your tablet and and watch some porn and have that release. Then you need to look at other areas of your life which may be feeding into that cycle and learning how you can break them. so I hope that helps. As I said, please subscribe button. It really, really does help the channel. Have a look through the playlist. I talk about other things, such as narcissistic relationships, abuse, healing from a broken heart, moving your life forward, or various other things. I delve into mythology and certain issues that people face, like grief and bereavement, depression, etc. So have a look through the channel. I look forward to seeing you again, and I look forward to responding to some of the comments in the section, some of the replies in the comments section. Until I see you again, please take good care of yourselves. Adios. | Clear Vision | UCfW3oIXyDp40gFMhMK-wZQQ | 2024-02-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,520 | 25,451 |
gR1Ip8N-cH4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gR1Ip8N-cH4 | Preventing Stress Fractures | SEALSWCC.COM | hi i'm lieutenant commander jim cowan the physical therapist here at buds to talk to you about our most common injury stress fractures historically our stress fracture rate were some of the highest in the world here around 15 to 18 percent roughly six guys out of a class of 30 develop some type of stress fracture with some prevention strategies that we've been putting in place we find now that our stress fracture rates are about four or five percent which is acceptable but i think we can still do better so i hope to put out some information in this segment on probably our most important prevention and strategy which is preventing stress fractures the most important thing is to make sure that you go to a running store in your local local town there and have somebody that knows about footwear fit you for the right kind of running shoes possibly some orthotics that you need for your for your boots it's important to start off with really good footwear for all your training and we recommend that you change your running shoes every six months or 400 miles now if you're running 40 miles a week as we recommend comfortably that may be a running shoe change every three months so it's important that you're changing your shoes regularly on a 400 mile schedule that somebody is looking at your foot somebody that knows what they're talking about whether it's a physical therapist or a podiatrist or somebody at a local marathon triathlon store that is very good with shoe wear they're evaluating your foot and putting you in the right kind of footwear now we run approximately 45 miles a week here and all that running mileage is done in boots and pants i don't recommend that you do 100 of your training in boots and pants but you should also be doing some familiarization runs in boots and pants to get used to the added weight and how things are a little different in a boot and a pant the next most important thing beyond proper footwear is calf flexibility i tell people here all the time that if you were only to do one stretch for me when you came here to buzz to prevent a majority of our injury it would be just a good calf stretch and you should be doing that two or three times a day if you're sitting on the table with your foot pointing straight up all right you should be able to pull your toes back about 15 to 20 degrees that's for normal running biomechanics to happen if you're extremely tight in your calf muscles and you can't pull your feet back right you compensate by your shin bone and so that loss of flexibility in your ankle joint because your calf muscles are tight really makes you at a higher risk for stress fracture in the bone because some way or another your body has to get that 15 to 20 degrees and you really want it to happen in the joint like it's supposed to be happening instead of your bone making up for it so it's extremely important that you stretch your calf muscles two or three times a day religiously before you come here another thing that we highly recommend and we've mentioned before is proper nutrition before you come here for stress fracture prevention the nutritionist that works with special warfare recommends a thousand milligrams of calcium on a daily basis that's simply three glasses of skim milk a day if you can't drink milk then chewing a couple tums tablet is another way that you can supplement with calcium but you should really be trying to get a thousand milligrams a day now don't go overboard and take three or four thousand milligrams a day because that could lead to kidney stones but we really do recommend at least for bone health a thousand milligrams on a daily basis of calcium to help your bones stay strong and prevent the stress fractures as well and as always eat a good balanced diet with a lot of different colors on your plate a lot of different vegetable colors and avoid any kind of a illegal supplementation like creatine or protein powders all right we mentioned about the importance of calf stretching to prevent stress fractures you have to have adequate toe up ability to run and if your calf muscles are tight this bone will compensate and break so what we recommend is that you do at least two or three times a day two or three repetitions of a minute stretch and it's important and most people tend to know how to stretch your calves but they neglect doing it in both positions so the first position really is with your knees straight okay this gets your true calf muscle that attaches behind your knee and that's a very good way to stretch it but also you need to bend your knee about 30 degrees all right and this now gets the muscles that attach below the knee joint the deepest muscles that affect the ankle range of motion as well and you can see here he has very good calf flexibility and really you should be able to strive for about a 15 to 20 degree toe up position like that so stretching these calf muscles leg straight and leg bent position is your goal two or three times a day okay i want to talk a little bit about the motions that the muscles around your shin bone do and some of the exercises that you can do to help strengthen the bone and keep it from breaking so the muscles around your leg do four main motions they point your toes down right and that occurs in more your calf muscles they roll your ankle in that also involves these backside muscles here okay they pull your toes back which involves this front lateral portion here and they pull your ankle to the outside which involves a few small muscles out here and so stress fractures occur either because you're ramping your mileage too fast but also if the muscles around your bone don't have sufficient endurance and strength it leaves the bone vulnerable to fracture so one thing that you can work on is trying to work these four motions around your ank your shin bone and keep them just as strong as you can through a couple different ideas that i'll show you right now so if you can go to a local sports store or if you have access to a physical therapist or any color other kind of sports or athletic clinic or even sports store they should be able to give you some exercise band like this one thing that we have our students do is to use band for the front sided strengthening motion where they can anchor it on and use it to really focus on this this anterior lateral compartment right here pulling back and forth for sets here and this is very important at buzz to keep this strong both for the running and for the finning requirements we have a lot of students that have a lot of problems with the strength of this front compartment here in in the fitting requirements as well as the running protection of their shin bones so you can use the band to work the front side and you can also use the band to work the lateral part working this side as well really focus in on this lateral compartment of the ankle and this is also a very important muscle for sand running because it helps with unstable striking on unstable ground and it's also good if you've had a history of ankle sprains to really stabilize the lateral ankle this is probably one of the most neglected yet important muscles around the ankle joint that we really work hard around here for the sand running so you can use band to work the front and the lateral compartment another exercise if you don't want to use bands to work the front compartment of your legs are heel walking it's a nice endurance exercise that is so important for that front compartment for the finning strength as well as the protection of the bone by having a strong anterior group of muscles it works a lot on endurance you could do laps around your gym with dumbbells like we're showing here if you can see that front compartment is really working it's like i said a really nice endurance and strength combined motion that you can work on probably one of the easiest backside calf strengthening drills is just a nice calf raise doing on a slightly elevated platform is a good idea it really lets you get to the full stretch at the bottom as well as the strength work at the top so with weighted dumbbells you can do uh high rep endurance type sets are good and just nice slow control this is a good good demonstration of that so we've shown you how to work band for the front and side muscles we've shown you some ideas with dumbbells on how to work the back compartment here with dumbbell raises as well as heel walking to work a freeway version of that front side of the compartment so all these muscle strength exercises for the groups of muscles that surround your shin bone are extremely important to prevent stress fractures having strong muscles with a lot of endurance to protect that bone as you slowly ramp up your mileage is your best prevention as well as having a nice flexible calf muscle group and hopefully that will keep you out of our clinic so the last exercise we're going to talk about here for stress fracture prevention as well as our knee pain prevention videos is what we call monster walks here this works a lot of the lateral hip strength that is very much neglected for by guys before they come here and it becomes a big problem for them having a very strong lateral hip muscle group has been shown to help prevent a lot of running knee pain as well as i feel some of the stress fracture problems that we have here so once again using some band around your ankles and in this case we're using some nice overhead medicine ball work here to simulate his portion of the log you can start some lateral hip hip drills and it's important while you're doing this to really not let your knees collapse inward the knees stay open while he's doing this and then at the end you can actually integrate some squats at the end of the shuffle here once again making sure that your knees stay open and they don't collapse inward we really want you to make sure that with your run pattern that your knee strike is much better so that when it becomes unstable sand here that your your lateral hips are nice and strong like i said this is probably the most neglected muscle group that guys failed to uh to work out before they come here to buds and it really does become a problem for for many of them as soon as they get an unstable sand running so make sure that you're incorporating some glute medius lateral hip work so to wrap up the stress fracture portion i think it's important that you are investing in some good footwear that somebody evaluates your type of feet and make sure that you're in the right kind of footwear that you're changing that footwear every six months or 400 miles that you're making sure that you have a good diet that includes a thousand milligrams of calcium that you are in stretching your calf muscles for an extremely flexible calf group that you are running 40 miles a week and that you slowly progress 10 percent no more per week as you get to that goal and that the muscles around your shin bones are extremely strong with good endurance so i'm lieutenant commander jim cowan wrapping up here at buds and wishing you good health | NAVAL SPECIAL WARFARE CENTER | UCu_2MGOmb09ztJbBPA6cKDw | 2015-03-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,063 | 11,106 |
L-yGx4BBk5o | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-yGx4BBk5o | Understanding COVID Variants | Coronavirus Explained | Mutation | Animated | [Music] viruses are microorganisms that require hosts like humans to survive as a virus enters our body it binds to our cells our cells react by reading the genetic code of the virus and creating viral copies sometimes a piece of the genetic code gets lost or changed during the copying process this creates a mutation in the virus many of these mutations will do almost nothing but some can help or hinder the virus's ability to survive if a new version benefits the virus it can become the dominant variant by out-competing the old one that's why we get a new flu vaccine each year which is updated to fight the new variant the virus causing covid-19 is also evolving but because it is larger than the flu virus each mutation causes less change this is why our current coded vaccines still protect us against serious infections these small changes happen continuously to create new sub-variants but sometimes an Abrupt shift can happen when mutations build up or two subvariants merge when this happens the structure of the virus changes creating a new variant globally in the covid-19 pandemic Delta and Omicron Remain the two major variants of concern but each variant also has subvariants or sub lineages Delta for example is an umbrella term for more than 200 sub lineages they're all closely related genetically and derived from a common ancestor many current covet infections in Australia are caused by an Omicron sub lineage known as ba.2 new variants and sub lineages will keep emerging as people continue to become infected that's why scientists are pushing for higher vaccination rates and for strategies such as physical distancing and mask wearing to help slow Global transmission [Music] thank you foreign [Music] | The Lazy Doctor | UC3R9F0zAQ95nVwB-pm9d8dw | 2022-10-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 292 | 1,728 |
T39ofOzg7Bs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T39ofOzg7Bs | The Untold Story Of Coca-Cola Part 1 | do you know a bubbly caramel colored Elixir promising to cure your headache and even bring back the dead believe it or not this wasn't some witch's potion but the original Coca-Cola back in 1886 meet Dr John pton a pharmacist with a grand ambition curing headaches nausea and even hangovers with a bubbly Elixir his brainchild pemberton's French wine coca a potent mix of coca leaves and colon nuts hence the name but fate had other plans Atlanta's temperance movement swept through outlawing the very ingredient that gave Dr pemberton's drink its kick undeterred the ingenious pharmacist transformed his alcoholic tonic into a non-alcoholic Marvel | David Wong - The Frequency Expert | UCEVmJqk64ikXhNpJpLr0azA | 2024-01-18 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 106 | 648 |
n12G90Cj4u8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n12G90Cj4u8 | Is the name Muhammad ﷺ mentioned in a jewish holy book | yeah yeah who'd be as money say if I may Oh Susan loudly well sangganim Mohammed mowjood I got up his topic mentis today didn't keep on watching [Applause] this will layer of money Rahim assalamu aleikum you all and peace upon humanity my name is dr. musicianship and I welcome you all to my channel Mary Jean M set PR Omaha Brucella made it a month and achillea Jobi are jamming observe very family him agar apni and burn him to mokuba Dada Chile is channel Purim Islamic must be a loose jogger karta or J did science attend cooker on with these kiddos new page get them to get up is topic minister day then you can see the subscribing to tell you about the broth or chicken now let's get started with the video Jessica asked if we do cater to talk about that yoga asanas topic by discussion can I did yeah I could see you who the as malinka table me rasool salah salem cannon mohammed module songs of Solomon via clear who Diaz money sci-fi Johanna canopy as a cinema a Lisa Lampanelli is say if we make them CD Shirey module a discernible a honky apne Mehboob Cherokee Lima Baca is her system silly shy remember vodka it neither a yahoo Dilma is kita she can SH catotti Yehudi with my chemo topic is shining me heart will keep until you who do Kelly delay or my booty table you seen a lotta luckily the eonni Lake a yahoo do Catholicism her burka is hurry this I okay new topic is shy read me honky-tonk seen as at easily Salam Kelly on mabuki Tom sale on icky Oh Matt Kelly bigger the enemies are the solanki until matzo more bizarre key again a booty auras are you kiss kiss anguish idea bought a no cure a g-body mugger Sufi a cranky huh huh me a schism key position area miss Deane Jessica Punjabi masseuse official has a Baba Benicia a Metallica egg mature Sharon I'll say no well do Nevada never paya Ranjha my Yanni a que ma dos por el mozo Mubarak Bardo Yemen Iran Jada Somalia AC Sharia a geek shake a beer Chaka very shackle Bona meri mehbooba nature Vanessa Rupert pyaar kiya while para techadon Sharia make Sofia Quran at Nehru keep'em silkily hot Winky missile detain is leaving a room on a or maboob yet survey item SIL results illallah wa sallam he lividity inna Sharma Sophia Karim thus Wilson Lawson on semi rouhani more vodka is har kirtan yatra is Shari caciotta Sahu Lhasa a bad car take a Skyrim a muhammad's allah la ilaha mohammed Judith is Shari milk McCampbell Jerusalem anime Salaam honkey Magoo Qataris karate tobu couch you get a Jew NACHA Psalms of Solomon chapter number 5 verse number 16 memo Judy hey c'mon top M V ho no Mohammed m0d Vaser AIB no Jerusalem Tajima Oscar Saban was at a hotel in EA or Hamer dosto a badge on lo que vous served muhammad sallallahu alaihi wa sallam a Ameri my boo boo me reduced a beauty o Israel marking the Tabak she loves her Yama solemn killing mr. Malloy okay take Eskimo beauty boss sodomy Bobby Braun is a banker Qaeda Mohammad Karimi do you mean here yeah enjoy yay giman was a courtesy la hora brownies abandon me GCC Boozer cobertura ski budget a toast Optima conveniently did llamamos occur Casillas tamargo data is Celia woody Elahi Cobie Elohim katha Observatory Bob is love scheming inky case come at La Paz Adam a butcher's who died to his holistic hadees marcus i'm a peshkov down geometry music he didn't break he get up number 46 year this number 3616 mary susan loudly release alumni shot for my I kept be shocked man a lock on my boob mugger Mesbah trabajar nahi cartagia-- matka rosemary hot me Laval hummed Yanni a key hunk agenda Oh God Megumi Encarta Mahalo she fought carnival on dis Keisha Fatma bulgogi muhammad farhan me encanta allah subsidy me religion up get the rose whoo emojis medical firma de Gama Gama harmony Goethe on Avellino remake of says Dada is a problem magnification Goethe Subhan Allah today happening Mohammed M Kimani boss Adam my boob shots Quixote to Smith we shock they get a suit unless Allah Allah value Salam aleykum a booby always bad guys are what we have is my foot bigger joking that I think songs of Solomon has its anomalous language and it's a the suits a lower level in celebrity bargain a pesky generally not a disco a lot of velocity bargain with Chef Emma Julieta tawa que el árbol easily accept me as Monaco toka his sub an idea if he gets at this videocast a tomcat a a get up committee video a chilly give us a like a jig as a shaky comment section appear a psychic is a comedy channel subscribe belacan could be press Karen or Jackie's attitude is about awkward alotta channel with a gimmicky primo skillet you know allah rabbul izza paramesha tava krpa almost karate should not be a sacred area bianca spot he looked good too this is mid-october signing off assalamu alikum you all and peace upon humanity [Music] | DrMoiz Jamshed | UClDBuzuxUxmLXGE1AxewgAg | 2019-11-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 888 | 4,748 |
RVHuRLfsOoQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RVHuRLfsOoQ | Inglés Corporativo-14/10/2022 Day 4 Shoud HAve + Past Participle | today Friday is the last day of class my body knows oh really know know that that tomorrow is free yeah okay evening teacher good evening teacher hi tomorrow's not free tomorrow is off yeah okay tomorrow if is off yeah thank you thank you teacher all right cool how are you how is everybody today I'm doing great everything good everything normal yeah today is Friday my body everything is bright what okay Patricia is that um you you do you have your uniform from the Social Security or your clinic yes this is a uniform wow oh nice oh you look very nice look comfortable yes um I don't have any time to change my clothes no that that's good uh what is your speciality are you a pediatrician I am gynecologist gynecologist yes oh okay oh nice nice very nice all right hey welcome Rafael D hello good evening hello jaier hello good [Music] evening Javier alas hello hello do you know how to say alas in English alas AKA AKA AKA H do you know why is AKA usually AKA I don't know usually I heard hip-hop music they use that word yes um AKA means also known as nobody known Spanish is is so it's also known as known as not known by aw no no no I mean known by yeah but AKA means that the abbreviation also known as okay that's that's great I like watching the um Facebook news when they capture a PTO a gangster because it's like it says Roberto Benitez alias the Alias are so funny man alas is SC no uh excuse me my God you remember that one no no no they made M memes about him they CAU too that was his AKA or there was one that um doctor what is that when your your your skull CR is it's not it's deformed I saw that new yeah that was so funny was like a a nickname he looks like the Apple iPhone like that his head yeah great imagination yes that that's why you know oh my God man that's so cool the security the security in in my neighborhood so do that he only has one ear only one ear I don't know what happened to the second I don't know so I remember the first day hi what is your name oh Antonio [Laughter] hia oh my God no but I I can't I can't call him Tas I always call him Antonio yes no that that's why I like I like reading in I like reading the um the aka's yes all right welcome everybody thank you for being here on a Friday uh Miguel Antonio corz where do you work I work in a c Cafe oh yes I'm sorry I forgot the reason why I asking is because I see behind you you have many ties oh because uh I use Tha when I go to the church Sunday and I was a missionary in Costa Rica uh for five years ago oh really you oh okay oh I now I understand yes uh how many knots can you make sorry how many knots H only one only one yeah the basic the thir I don't know how to say three turns three turns you can do the one here then the one here then the one here and the one yeah yeah this type yes oh okay Wendy hi Wendy how are you welcome hi thank you hi all right Sandra Rasel welcome welcome to the class who else is here let me seean yanita hello teacher how are you you can hear me teacher yes Andra I can hear you very good thank you very much Lastly lastly fin finally finally finally all right let me see let's finish this so we can do some activities Oh yes I am I am using my my cell phone that's why I cannot show my face oh no problem but your cell phone has a very good microphone yes thank you thank you let me see so we did the listening exercise yesterday now let me share my screen with you do you see my screen it says in this class participants will learn adjectives for discussing behavior and personality yes yes I do yes yes I do teacher yes all right we do understand what is a adjective correct yeah what is an adjective I uh describe a a announce all right good and what is an adverb adverb are describe a nouns adjectives and nouns I think verbs sorry verbs no other [Music] verbs describe verbs noun and AD okay good so so you're giving me the grammatical explanation so what is the difference between okay so give me a difference what is the the difference between slow and slowly one is a des a describe and the other is a action right maybe maybe maybe um um adjective is before the noun okay let's do one thing don't give me don't give me the grammatical explanation because okay because sometimes it's easy to get the grammatical explanation because everybody said an adjective describes a a noun and but no one no one's giving me the difference between slow and slowly for example uh the turtle walks slow or walks slowly the turt Works slowly why the [Music] turtle walks slowly okay why because slowly is not describing the turtle it's describing verb walk the movement walk the action it's describing the action of of of the subject of the ver of the turtle very good so if I want to say slow I say hey the turtle is slow or the turtle walks slowly it's another okay thank you yes so let's listen to uh adjectives discussing behavior and personality H let's see this where we're about to study some objectives which will help you talk about Behavior personality yes ambitious argumentative Carefree conscientious naive pragmatic rebellious sensible sophisticated can you tell us how you behaved in your teens in your 20s how do you behave now try to be as honest as possible in your teens okay listen to this when I was 20 I was very in my 20s in my 20s I was very very young yes I was very no yeah but young I was very stupid no but you know I mean I can't I can't think of another adjective because I did everything possibly bad and I am alive no um no you know I I did many many stupid things you know like party too much go out with my friends the next day oh my head I don't want to go to work I didn't go to work I changed jobs I was not I was not responsible nothing Carefree I yes I was Carefree but no you know Carefree I I was yes I was very but you know I mean ah things I will never do of course now I don't do and I will teach my son not to [Music] do it's nice yes you know and I and I will explain to my son what I did so he doesn't do yeah because you know when you're young many people you're people tell you don't do that don't do that but they never tell you why and and um I lived alone that's the problem I didn't have a mother a father I lived alone so so I did many stupid things if when I in my 20s but now do you excuse me do you regret for all the things that you did yes well yes and no yes and no because um now you learned something I learned I learned a lot from that yeah and now I have friends my age doing that and you see them yes you know now that they're married and they're old and now they're going back to that and yeah so now you say this will be me it's funny because my wife all her friends tell her oh my God your husband is La Maximo he cooks he cleans he never goes out because I don't wow you he only wants to be party and no you know but I tell them the problem is because I did all that when I was young yeah so in my 20s I did that and then um you know how sometimes especially women they don't like to say the age well let me give you an example uh yeah how old is naiv Buel oh teacher I don't know I how old do you think uh I think he is 37 years old okay 37 good thank you for the example good I don't know either but in a situation like this in Spanish we say I don't know maybe 37 we always give an exact number in English we don't we say early mid late for example how old are you Jackin I'm 24 years old teacher so listen she is in her mid 20s yes Jacqueline how old is Jacqueline I don't know maybe maybe her mid 20s so what is early 20s 20 21 22 23 what is mid 24 25 26 late 27 28 29 yes so in this case in Spanish that's how we say it normally in English you don't say that I don't know 38 we saying I don't know maybe his late 30s yes so I can say me in my early 20s no I think in my complete 20s I did many stupid things that I regret and I don't but I did fun things too yeah all right let me see how are you ah Miguel Antonio how are you in your 20s what I am I am in in my 20s yeah oh you are yeah I are I am how were you how were you listen to this I'm not saying how are you I'm saying how were you in your T in your teens oh what really I am very quiet people I I don't like it go to the parties or or any type of this I only study and pass time with my family oh okay very good have you been a Mormon all your life sorry you are a Mormon correct yeah I am Mormon all your life all my life yeah oh okay that explains okay good good for you okay thank you okay yes you you have to be good yes in my teens I was bad too all right let me see why what you doing in your team when you are a teen no I mean I wasn't bad but I did many things you know like I had long hair I never did drugs I never did drugs or gangs though that's good okay but you know I had like purple hair green hair red hair I painted rious person person oh yeah I have tattoos all right but I have like agnostic tattoos um I painted my nails I put makeup but now I'm normal yes let me see Betto it's hard to it's hard to call you Betto because I see Javier Martinez but okay Betto how old are you um I am 34 years old all right do you remember your 20s what did you do not I'm not in my 20s but no I said do you remember your 20s ah yeah no my 20s uh I was a shy boy when I was younger than I am because I'm other okay you were shy in your 20s oh good all right but um I have a lot of friends that love to have parties and everything I'm 34 I'm 34 years old but I think I'm a little bit older and but I had a lot of fun I play basketball I like to play football and I think I'm I'm in the point of my life that I can say I enjoy my T very good when when when you can say that you're good so you like soccer who is your favorite team um I love soccer but I don't have a a favorite team I can say Real Madrid is good team I can say Barcelona is good team I'm not a fanatic person oh okay I just love football what do you say fanista in in English fan is in English I think a fan but fanista say when you not not have a a specific ER favorite team you are excuse my ignorance what is a fanista I I never heard that really I never heard to be honest I don't know you just say I'm a I'm just a soccer fan I love soccer but not then you give an explanation but not in a specific team okay okay Raphael how were you before you were married were you a good boy bad boy I'm fine really um I I I got married when I was 21 years old and I need to to be respons responsible oh that's good I needed to be responsible I needed yes yes yes you got married very young oh good for you really yes when I was 20 I I was easygo and F foolish but I think if you're not wrong you can improve yes you need something in life that will wake you up boom yes some people it takes one opportunity some people takes 20 opportunities but you eventually it happens yes all right but you know what class yes or no before back then it was I don't know was nice I mean there wasn't so many deportados I think you know so well now now it's going normal like again but now everybody has a gun or everybody is uh in gangs or something okay Les anend objective it says by the end of this class participants will learn understand and practice expressing regrets and hypothetical situations use should have and past participle okay before we we use should what is should a moral ver verb sure yes possibility it's for a possibility yeah it's advice exactly it's advice um Sandra there's a big difference between deas sh yeah and I will explain that real quick if we finish this today I will explain to you the difference of the pro of the um of these type of words okay should have so it's a hypothetical situation this never happened yes so for example remember I told you I I did many stupid things in my 20s I should have listened to the advice people gave me I should have listened that means I didn't it's a hypothetical situation let's see the video should you have learned English before stay and learn how to express regrets and describe hypothetical situations page 75 exercise 8 grammar Focus expressing regret and describing hypothetical situations expressing regret I should have studied something more practical when I was in college I shouldn't have waited so long to choose a major describing hypothetical situations if I'd been more ambitious in college I could have learned another language if I hadn't wasted so much money last year I would have my own apartment now when we want to express Regrets We need to follow the rule subject plus should have Plus past participle it's important for you to know that you should have to speculate about or imagine things that did or didn't happen for example I should have paid attention to what I ate as a kid when you want to describe a hypothetical situation we need to use this rule if plus subject plus had Plus past participle comma subject plus could or would have Plus past participle notice the use of could or would have shows what didn't happen for example if I hadn't wasted so much money last year I would have bought my own apartment in other words I didn't buy the house because I had no money can you put yourself in the following hypothetical situations write them on our discussion box we want to express Regrets We need to F okay let's start with regrets first all right so I should have past participle let me see um Wen what is something you regret in the past please it doesn't have to be something Dramatical it can be like oh man I should have bought the car and I didn't I had a big opportunity I should have bought it can you tell me H regret in the past I don't understand you ask to your question tell me about a past regret you have uh um for example for example I have I I should should have should have um a study to start study um before before 20s I don't understand you're giving me two verbs start or study I what what do you want to tell me start okay I should have started to study before 20s yes so you you didn't study yes but you're in accountant no if for example if for example no no but give me like a realistic example you know because I don't understand if you understand or you can say this I should have start I should have studied English in my 20s yes maybe yes yes no okay Wendy give me give me an example please I should have have eaten a lot last night eat ate a lot last night eaten eaten why what happened I didn't sleep very I didn't asleep very well okay hey good example she didn't sleep very well she she shouldn't have eaten very much all right nice uh Daniel give me an example sir that looks like Dave novaro if I had learn English I could have been English teacher nowadays excuse me what can you repeat if I had learned any English I could have English been English teach what okay if I had learned English learned very good all right all right good good good uh May the rundo are you there Sandra areli give me example okay give me the example please could you repeat the question please that's what we're doing right now we are every what what king did what Daniel did what I did tell me a past [Music] regret ah maida you're not paying attention this is why insa forb gets angry no joking yeah because you see this is what insa forb says we don't know if you're really paying attention to the class or not MAA so a past regret what we're doing do you understand what we're doing um what is the B okay you see M this is for the past 10 minutes the video it's on the screen were you paying attention in class yes I what to okay a pass regret I should have okay don't worry I'll come back to you let me see who has who haven't I asked today Patricia I haven't heard you speak very much today I only saw your uniform yes my uh my well I should have got married when I was younger gotten married got married gotten ah got okay thank you I should have gotten married when I was younger did when did you get married what please when did you get married um when I got married I I um I was 33 33 oh that's good that's that that's the new normal today oh my God yes today people get married at 35 and they have children between 35 and 40 yes but I think that I I haven't got uh pregnant because I you waited too long I uhuh yeah oh okay okay so class listen so I should have and you can also say negative I shouldn't have I mean there's also a pass regret with um with I shouldn't have for example I shouldn't have smoked so much when I was young K teacher yes Andra excuse me um may I may I give you my example yes please I'm sorry go ahead I should have lived in the USA to have a better future but I never was brave enough to live El Salvador okay good all right but are you happy now um yes I am okay yeah I happy that's important that's nice yes all right now um Rafael D can you give me an example but using I shouldn't have I shouldn't have I shouldn't have let me see I shouldn't have wasted my time let me give you an example remember yes I shouldn't have buy a Bitcoin bought a Bitcoin you shouldn't have bought Bitcoin yes okay very good hey I should have bought Bitcoin I remember I remember maybe 10 years ago I took a taxi Pata but it was a very nice car I remember the driver this was like 10 years ago maybe yeah maybe or maybe less and the driver he had a very nice car hey this a nice car he told me oh yes I worked in a bank for many years and um I quit or he had a problem and with the money he received from the bank he bought a car and he told me and the rest I invested in Bitcoin really how is that Bitcoin yeah could oh yeah and he started explaining to me in that time Bitcoin cost like $28 one Bitcoin and I was thinking my stupid Bast you know like he he he invested his money in Bitcoins now Bitcoin is what $220,000 one Bitcoin yeah something like that it goes up and down yes but imagine so but he he looked like he was a smart man imagine how much Bitcoin he had now maybe now he's a millionaire and I said I should have listened to him very good or I shouldn't have listened to him yes okay uh Wendy can you give me an example please using shouldn't I shouldn't [Music] um I shouldn't have bought a machine that I never use very good all right now let's use a hypothetical situation so this situation never happened correct hypothetical hypothetical situation hypothetical situation yes so um let me give you this is a funny story the day I got married my family was staying my family came I have family that came and they were staying in a Continental Hotel no no what is the one by La tor the hotel uh today is Crown Plaza Crown Plaza Crown Plaza my family was staying there and I didn't know that that day was the ton so I went to visit my family in the morning and I saw many people and I tell all okay and then the elevator opens and marel wardia was coming out only her wow she like in the morning she was very she I mean she's very elegant yes and I said hi are you Mar bardia and she hi she was very very nice and I was with my brother can we take a picture oh yes hi thank you this and I remember I told her I get married today she says oh good for you but it was just and she laughed she laughed and she says no no no please get married please okay so I always tell my wife sometimes when we're watching TV and I see Mar so if she had said no I wouldn't have gotten married example I tell my wife hey if she had said no I wouldn't have married you so you're a very lucky woman yes she is very small yeah she short she's very short um so that was a hypothetical situation it was a real story I did see her in the in the elevator but the hypothetical it would have been if she would have said no no don't marry it okay then I'll marry you all right so hypothetical situation yes can you give me a we always we always give hypothetical situations maybe ER in politics in sports who was if he would have those are hypothetical situations right yeah okay so can you give me a hypothetical situation Amar or maybe you tell me if if you think it's easier tell me a story like like the story I told you the day I got married you know I saw what yeah this and this so if she had said no then I wouldn't have married my wife okay so okay and a story on I don't know tell me a story but give me the hypothetical situation oh okay H I have a sentence here I shouldn't stop studing to to follow learning we're in hypothetical situations we use if I have ah if she had if we if he had if I have learning English I I go okay do do you see my screen yeah yes yes I see okay if I have no if I have oh ver the verb is a past participle you're telling me if I have studying so look at the example tell me okay this case will be if I if I learned English okay look if I had learned English okay if I had learned English I I I would get h a better job I would have gotten a better I I got a better job yes thank you is it raining I will very good or I I will uh I got a better salary a better salary okay okay very good who can give me an example okay go ahead Walter go ahead okay um I'm study uh I'm studed Business Administration in a university but if I have started a accounting I will have have a better job very good all right very good who can give me another example may I teacher please go ahead okay if I had started French if I had if I had yes that's what I said if I okay I'm sorry I heard have now I hear no if I have studed French I would have won a scholarship to study in a in a French French University okay okay very good thank you who can give me another example uh who said first go ahead W okay if I if I had broke broken Brooks in with my girlfriend I will be happy wow you're right wait so you're not happy I don't understand can you tell me the difference okay if I have a br with my excuse me if I have or if I have if I have broke broken up BR broken up okay with my girlfriend I could be happy I would be happy I will be happy okay very good so I imagine in this situation you did not break up with your girlfriend correct yes you are still with your girlfriend and you are not happy describing hypothetical no no no I understand I I just want to know I just want to see if I understand what you're trying to tell me so so In This Moment excuse me so In This Moment imagine right you are with your girlfriend and you're not happy hypothetically speaking cor right yes okay okay good and yes is correct uh Janette give me an ex please okay um if I if I hadn't start working in such a restrictive office I would have start college much earlier very good if I hadn't been so bad with money when I was younger I would have very very good credit today yes too welcome theom no I I you know what I was I was in theom but not because of me because I was a co-signer we cosigner coer what is it mean sorry cosigner yes coer Daniel go ahead please okay um if Gerard P hadn't fail so much maybe barcel Barcelona would have gone would have won yes very good example if if P hadn't played that day for Barcelona yes if P hadn't played that day maybe Barcelona would have won all right very good all right so those are hypothetical situations what is your C in the play honestly honestly I am a Barcelona fan but really I think in this moment um really I think Barcelona has a better team than Madrid yeah they are more complete in this moment but but you know Madrid always pays okay no read each okay knowledge ch let's do the knowledge check read each statement rearrange the regret or hypothetical situation given in order to complete the information No period is necessary but remember the capital letters so number one if I listened to my parents blank I pragmatic with more made have have I will have I would made more pragmatic deis excellent yes I would have made more pragmatic decisions yes good let me see number two if I've been more active overweight I wouldn't IB wouldn't so if I had been more active I wouldn't be overweight correct yes yes number three if I've been more ambitious gotten I have good promotion I could haveo gotten a promotion good if I had studied harder in school learned I a lot more I have could a lot of learn a lot more a lot more a lot more if I've saved money broke now i b as am would as I I wouldn't I wouldn't be as broke as I am now do you understand what broke is yeah but in this case it's an expression I am broke is I have no money yeah yeah yes I'm broke yes I'm broke but in Spanish we say right I'm clean yeah all right yeah yes [Laughter] that was funny that was funny funny Okay let's listen to this example the reduction of have and been hi to wrap up this section we want you to work on your pronunciation please listen and practice notice how have and been are reduced in these sentences I should have been less selfish when I was younger if I'd been more ambitious I could have gotten a promotion you may complete these sentences and practice them in class pay attention to the reduced form of have and been okay um one thing here I don't recommend you to do that example why because I recommend you to speak the formal way first and then speak and then speak informal now I do apologize have have okay maybe but in my in my case y have and let me tell you why what happens is that the difference between Spanish and English in the accent Spanish is from the stomach English is in the lips yeah my is my name yes my n and I tell him no it's my name it's impossible to say the M name name yes but excuse me I'm sorry Sandra I put you on mute because I hear some uh television or or something so sorry but but please feel free to speak when you need to speak no problem um English we use our lips we don't Ben [Music] Ben because it's all in my lips [Music] so for example when we want when we want to say boss boss boss boss yes no there's there's there's much more like hobin hin wow and there's a different yes yes yeah I listen someone sometime I listen to a a person who is uh American who said Spanish is too much uh uh to difficult to learn because we have this this uh issue because we we write uh words in another form and we uh pronounce the words in other form yes but you know what yeah yes and it's true because but in pronunciation if you want to pronounce good use your lips the two lips not only one the two because maybe in Spanish you say laio Tong langa that's correct so but in English use your tongue uh use your lips oh yeah use your tongue okay now I understand use your tongue and that will finish defining because in Spanish we use the stomach cido oroo in Spanish in English you define in your lips yes and that's why many people always say um my is my and that's an M it's impossible to it's impossible to pronounce the m without closing your mouth yes so I don't recommend you this I have if I had been the see if I I recommend you to pronounce the correct way first and then use the contractions yes right what isot you will not understand until you understand what is a young man yeah okay so so remember if if and sometimes if you cannot pronounce use syllables use syllables like I should have I should have I should have I should have I should have say it in three and two and one yes okay so before we finish let me do you have any questions Sandra do you have questions no teacher thank you everything's clear everything clear cool nice thank you yes uh any questions class no teacher no teacher teacher do you want to hear something interesting tell us okay do you know please let me finish okay yes do you know the word what yes everybody yeah I will explain no not socks you never heard people say Hey you f f yes I have heard it okay and I think I think everybody knows the meaning correct okay but do you know the origin of that word no no okay it's very interesting on to no wait Betto before you read okay no I'm not reading I heard it before but no no there there there are many theories what is because really it doesn't make sense you it's like have sex with yourself what okay so Back In Time Medieval medieval time remember how Europe is always in war all the countries simp yes so imagine I was married and I was a soldier and I went to fight I told my wife by my love I will go fight for England yes but I never returned yeah do you understand me yeah yeah okay yes what happens to my wife she doesn't know am I dead am I a prisoner did I escape and the problem is that women don't work in that time so my wife is like hey what do I do I need to continue my life yes but you're married but you're married so the woman my wife she has to go and cancel her marriage and talk to the king and say King I unmarried David BTR is my husband he went to war he never returned I need to continue my life okay so then the king I don't know it's a if it was a certificate a diploma or something that said f u f do period U period C period K period fornication under consentment of King my go oh my [Laughter] God sex outside as fornication you know and says but she had consentment of the king can you imagine that know Fus the origin of that word it was more interes nlex the origin of words Nicholas K so that's for a me my love I'm [Laughter] back oh my God yes what the what the yes uh excuse me do you know uh what okay means in a in a battle or in a war zero killed oh yes that's right yes yes um yeah that's good thank you Sandra okay means secret codes you know like imagine I am here I am captain here and in santaa he I sent my messenger hey how are you IM and then Sant we are okay and okay zero killed yes do you know where Gringo comes from this many people knowen yes those are very those are very oh here's an interesting one sandwich do you know where sand sandwich comes from no no dund du the sandwich that was his name he according to the story he was a he was addicted to table games know like poker dominoes what so one day he invited all his friends to a mini mini Casino in his mansion and it was time to eat but the game was good they did not want to stop because the game was good so he told his servants look we will eat here oh my God what I don't know put bread in the meat inside the bread the ham what yes so then they put the ham or the meat inside the bread and they serve that to everybody so everybody was eating and playing and this this is a good ideaa that's that's where the word sandwich because that was his name very good cardig The Cardigans okay The Cardigans are sweaters with buttons a cardigan is a sweater but it's a sweater with buttons because normally sweaters you pull correct yes and the story was when he pulled he was the again you know hey make the sweaters with buttons it was a good idea so that that's that's the word cardigan oh that's why yes normally the the majority of words like that they come they come from there there has to be a story like hamburger yes like hamburger you know Hamburger comes from Hamburg Germany the story is that people saw them and they they cook the meat in the boat and M and the engine because it was hot the grill and they put the meat in the bread like doto that was a Hamburg hamburgers like McDonald brothers and then they start putting a tomato all around but you know I'm sorry teacher I I've gota leave because H I have to go with with my husband to to make a travel right now no I understand I have to go too everybody uh I will see you Monday thank you course know culture it was General culture thank you byebye see you Monday see you Monday | Ingles Corporativo | UCy6kNcD4r60QWpcf5jCuSMg | 2022-10-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,382 | 31,323 |
fwh-cJrDYZY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwh-cJrDYZY | Recall Roundup: August 23, 2013 | This month on Recall Roundup. Wilton Industries recalls Chefmate tea kettles. Teavana recalls glass tea tumblers. And Big Lots recalls tabletop torches. Music...Music...Music.... Check your kitchen to see if you have these: Wilton Industries is recalling about 716,000 Chefmate 2-Quart tea kettles. The steam can travel up the handle or water can spill from the spout, posing a burn hazard. In addition, the leaking steam can cause the kettle to fail to whistle. If water completely evaporates from the kettle, the aluminum bottom can melt onto the stove and that's a burn hazard. They were sold exclusively at Target from January 2006 through May 2013 for about $9. Stop using the recalled tea kettles immediately and you can return them to any Target store or contact Wilton for a full refund. Don't use these Teavana glass tea tumblers for your tea. Teavana is recalling about 445,000 of the tea tumblers. They can break of shatter unexpectedly, posing burn and laceration hazards. There are more than 300 reports of the glass breaking or shattering, including 6 reports of lacerations and burns. Certain models are involved. Check our website, saferproducts.gov, to see if yours is included in the recall. Stop using the recalled glass tea tumblers and return them to Teavana for a free replacement tea tumbler and a package of tea. Finally, Big Lots is recalling about 30,000 tabletop torches due to fire and burn hazards. Once lit, the table torches can flare up and emit burning lamp oil onto consumers and property. This recall involves large and small tabletop torches with these item numbers, multi-colored glass and a wick. They burn liquid citronella fuel. There are two reports of serious injuries involving second and third degree burns and 7 minor burns have been reported. Stop using torches and return them to Big Lots for your money back. That's Recall Roundup. You can find out more about these and other recalls on our website, SaferProducts.gov. Music.... Music....Music..... | U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission | UCeoiFCC2wVc0f8dScwtvsgw | 2013-09-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 326 | 1,996 |
4uZVMb8_Cmo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uZVMb8_Cmo | naps are taking over my life | well good morning it is a Brisk one outside today oh my goodness actually honestly compared to the last couple days it was it was okay even like last night I got into bed and I was so cold and I was so cold and I was so cold and then all of a sudden I was so hot and so hot and so hot which is wild because I have my window open but anyways had a rough time getting to sleep because of the too cold and then too hot and then too itchy and but then I got to the point where I didn't want to take allergy medicine cuz I was like oh if I take allergy medicine I bet um I'm going to be really drowsy in the morning and so we just kind of persevered finally got to sleep but I definitely will likely probably be napping later and that is okay um stream went pretty well last night it's very chill like not a lot of people showing up and I'm like is just a Monday thing or is everybody just over Sandrock which I get Sandrock has kind of taken over this entire month um and that's okay cuz I'm really enjoying it but I think we're getting near the end so I have to start thinking about what we're playing next and like getting back to games like Animal Crossing that need my love and attention and stard New Valley and but like also I want to play other games but like there's just not enough time in the day but anyways I'm here I'm at the theater it's my regular admin day plus some post show stuff so hopefully it won't take too long so I can get home and I can have my nap and then I can get some froga stuff done and also wrap some presents hopefully fingers crossed but we'll see so I laid down for a post work nap and I said it was like 12 just after 12:30 when I laid down and I set an alarm for like like 3:30 to 4:00 somewhere in there turned them all off there were multiples and I woke up at like 6:30 whoops anyways I'm up now um I think it might have been the allergy medicine I took because my eye was doing the allergy thing and also probably cuz I was tired but yeah I'm up now also my room is just an absolute mess because yesterday I was looking for a piece of clothing and I couldn't find it um and so I tore everything apart and then I found it not in the hamper so I think I'm going to put on some clothes that are not my pajamas and then I guess make my bed I might as well do this so I'm going to do this do this right and then throw all the dirty clothes back in the hamper [Music] m [Music] oh my goodness okay so I spent like an hour and a halfish 2 hours I don't even know how long wrapping presents so I have almost all the presents that I need to send to the states wrapped and good to go so that's exciting and then I came up and I continued to convert Clips which is what I was doing before then and I converted like 60 plus so that's good but oh my God I'm exhausted I'm so tired from St staring at a screen and I've done a terrible job of vlogging today I mean the 6 hour 5 and 1/ half hour nap will do that so I'm going to continue this tomorrow because otherwise we have zero content basically and um right now I'm going to get myself ready for bed because we need to I also have like crumbs all over my shirt because I was eating the crackers um but yeah it's bedtime now for me it's like 120 which is wild that I'm tired um but good I'm going to take advantage of it because I think so tomor I'm streaming I don't work Thursday um and I think I'm gonna try to get up kind of early on Thursday so I can um get stuff done and then nap if I have to but that's where we're at it's going to be a whole frog Miss day on Thursday and all that jazz but I'm going to go now and I'll see you in the morning guess who's back it's it's cold I I have the song Back Again Shady's back tell your friends that one it's stuck in my head anytime I like think the words like guess who's back it just goes it just goes anyways it's um the morning it's Wednesday morning it's brisk outside I had to one close my window last night which is a rare occurrence kind of all year round it's only usually like December January is that it starts to be like ooh I need to close this but then I'll be like o I need to open it because now my room's taking and ooh I need to close it cuz it's freezing and I had to turn on my little heater because it got cold last night so I was nice toasty warm as a bug this morning because I had done those things um and it really made getting OED a little bit easier you know when you like have to get OED and everything's glacial and you're just like no not today anyways I slept pretty well I got to sleep probably around 3:30ish which again not ideal because that's only like that's like 4 hours of sleep like that's great for me um but I'll probably have a nap day like I'll go home I'll do my daily dadish and then hopefully have a nap that is not obscenely long I think allergy medicines were which really screwed me over yesterday leading to like the 5 and 1/ half hour long nap but I'm think if I don't take allergy medicine today I should be able to get up when the alarms go off and maybe we'll just set like 50 alarms and it'll be okay um today I am here obviously it should be a short shift I'm thinking it's probably not even going to be the full 4 hours um so I might just kind of cut and run but we will see um today is the day when my boss comes in and so like I sometimes try not to like just abandon chip before he shows up because feels kind of like but then also I don't have like a t to do so anyways I'm going to go get myself ready I'm not ready to take off the sweater yet like it's kind of warmish in here but I'm not ready to take off the sweater yet nor the touque and then we will do the thing well hello there it was crazy at the theater day so many people were there a bunch of volunteers cuz they were decorating um the lobby for for Halloween for Christmas um but I'm home now which is exciting and I also just remembered that I don't work tomorrow I'm so excited to like maybe sleep in or I don't know we'll see how things go tonight if I like yes am I stripping while I'm talking yes we'll see how things go tonight if I um if I stay up super late or whatnot I would love to ideally get up like by 10:00 at the latest and then which I know is still sleeping a lot and then get things done but we will see anyway I just did my daily dadish and then afterwards I was like that was kind of a fun level I think you go faster and I came in second on the leaderboards which is awesome because yesterday came in second as well so she's a professional and I'm like maybe I should play like there's this one game called Celeste which is like I would say it's pretty close to a Pixel Perfect platformer um from what I've seen like it looks extremely difficult I'm like maybe I could do that so we'll see anyways I'm taking on my socks I'm about to put on my pajamas and I'm going to go have a little napperon so I will see you post nap so I woke up from my nap and I was like um oh good I don't I don't have to wake up today it's a day off um and then I remembered it was still Wednesday so anyways it's just after 5:00 I'm running a little bit late cuz I stayed in bed until like 4:30 and that's usually when I start my makeup but makeup is done now and I'm going to go downstairs I'm going to make myself some grilled cheese because that's quick and easy and then we'll come back up make the bed get the forest set up and all that fun [Music] stuff is it all right if I waste my time and I lead myself to a mistake when I roll on by won't ask why out just stepped and walk [Music] away all righty we are are live I need to get my face or do my last social stuff get my face on camera and then it's go time so I'll will see you post stream oops I almost forgot to end the Vlog it is it's qu after 5 in the morning I streamed until like 3:30 3:40 somewhere in there because oh my God and this is not sponsored I did get the game my time at Sandrock for free so I will you know uh lead with that but oh my God my time at Sandrock the story the game The Twist oh my God oh my God I just if if you liked my time at Porsche or if you like like crafting uh RPG farming type games there's not a lot of farming to be honest there could be if you want it to be you need to check out this game I'm 85 hours in I'm only 2/3 of the way through the store it is phenomenal and I can't wait to play more and I wanted to play more but I'm like I need to sleep which is what I'm going to do now I'm in bed I've got Brooklyn 99 on cuz that's what I've been watching I'm going to Tik Tok for like 15ish minutes and then I'm going to go to sleep so thank you for watching make sure you subscribe because we are posting pretty regularly I think I've still been going 3 days a week which is awesome and um yeah I will see you in the next one [Music] bye Pride oh is it all right if I stay | Tiffany Lynne Caprice | UC6caIEgs53RJUroDQNOVCxA | 2023-12-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,850 | 8,828 |
k3POA6Z5mTU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3POA6Z5mTU | Scrapin' the Coast Prep | Lightweight Pulleys, Front Lip & Changing Spark Plugs | what's up YouTube PJ's back with another video for y'all and as you can see I have the car in the garage I don't have it jacked up or anything because I don't plan on going under it but I do have a quite a few things I need to get done before I go to scraping the coast I was letting the car cool off for a bit because I'm gonna be taking the intake off because I need to change the spark plugs on it well I don't need to but I think I'm gonna go ahead and do that and by the way I did get my resonators replaced with some new ones and now my car sounds quite a bit like a Subaru but I'm gonna let y'all hear there and just a bit but like I said I'm gonna take the intake off so I can change the spark plugs and I also have to change out my pulleys that I've had for probably about two months now that I've never gotten around to putting on so uh please do that and then we have some other things we need to get done but let me go ahead and get started with this and show y'all what I'm about to do alright so first things first to get this intake off [Music] all right so now that I have the intake off I need to work on getting up intake manifold and that's just gonna be a couple bolts here and there holding it on and then like loosen up stuff like this it's a little clamp on this hose and just loosen it up and getting it all up move the intake manifold just set that's to the side because it is still connected by the throttle body down here but that's not too much it's not hanging by the throttle body it's just sitting over a little bit but now I can see all six spark plugs and I only took it off because of these spark plugs over here which you can't see all of them right now because this is in a way but I'm about to change those out get those changed in with some fresh new ones and then probably in February when I get tuned I'm gonna change them out again which is probably about what 70 something dollars in the hole but I don't really care about that because I need this car to be running good and scraping the coast in case some of y'all you know try to try me or something like you know what I'm saying all right so I just changed the first plug and this is the new plug and the old one and if all the plugs look like this then I pretty much change them up for nothing cuz this looks pretty good but I'm not sure about the gap on it this gap looks like it's a little bit bigger than this one if I can get into focus this is gapped down to 40 thousands of an inch and I'm not sure what these are hopefully these make it run a little bit better because I think this is closer to what it's supposed to be then this one I believe it probably opened up a little bit we're about to get the rest of them and start on here this is the one I changed out by the way but we're about to get the rest installed on here so I can go close this look so nothing gets in there and I just might pour it and polish the intake runners myself all I'm doing the change screw take that out of there and then you should be able to just pull the coil pack straight up and take the spark plug up one thing I noticed about my car is I need an oil catch cam very bad because of the old vapors that have condensed in the crankcase they're getting all inside the intake and all down the runners and I noticed that so if you have any suggestions about an all cash can that I can get for this Genesis then let me know in the comments section and I'll greatly appreciate it because I've been looking for one of those for like about a week now because I know that was something that could happen but now it's time for me to go ahead and install these light weight pullers of mine this one should be easy to get off the alternator pulley I should be able to get off with an impact or either an air drill or something like that and this one down here may need a little bit more effort one thing I noticed that I don't have is a short 22 millimeter socket and so I'm gonna have to try to get something to get this thing off but first things first I have to loosen up the tensioner which is a little nut underneath the tensioner pulley and I can't actually show you all but just know that there is a way to get this tensioner pull it off and get the belt off all of these pulleys all right so now I have the belt removed as you can see I loosen up the tensioner got the bill removed a little bit not all the way but now it's time to remove the crank political and as you can see I have well this boat is actually a 22 millimeter and I don't have that so I have another socket that fits on here along with my breaker bar and I'm just gonna use this breaker bar to try to break it and before you do any of this make sure your car isn't sixth gear if it's a manual and the ebrake is pulled all the way up but now I'm just gonna remove this thing by spinning it counterclockwise and hopefully the boat will break [Music] oh I broke it that just lying off and it's actually I'm pretty decent shape still probably because I change to another motor I knew a motor but it's different good shape if anybody wants this let me know but here's the new stuff it's all sticky you know I like my stickers torque solution got the light lightweight bullet kit and I know some of y'all are gonna be triggered because I have a lightweight pulley kit but I really don't care cuz I have this on my previous Genesis the whole kit and nothing went wrong with it and like I said I had that on there for well I had this on there for probably about a year but let me go ahead and throw this on there and then show y'all the end result [Music] fingers crossed and hopefully this tank starts up good [Music] goodbye normale now there's one last final thing I want to get done in this video and that is to install his lip that I just bought and that should be fairly easy there's just some self-tapping screws to go along here they just screw right into the bumper so let me go ahead and get that done and show you how to outcome of death [Music] I hate that it started to rain oh well but costly needs to be running funny fast me still sounds like a Subaru but we're gonna take this thing down the road right quick the only thing left that I have to do is change the oil and get my wheels rebalanced as it before scraping and I'll be mine plan it all so that's pretty much gonna wrap up today's video if you liked the video go ahead and give it a thumbs up leave some positive vibes in the comment section below subscribe to the channel if you haven't already and I'm gonna catch you all in the next video but always remember to do more be more believe more and achieve more and I thank you all for watching [Music] | PJ Morrison | UCVlsAZWMYBcbQXpyO8ilyhg | 2020-06-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,363 | 6,669 |
iz_hv5y1-60 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iz_hv5y1-60 | Interview - Kathi Browne | we're going live and this hangout on air is definitely alive and i'm with joined by kathy brown kathy thank you for being so patient in juggling three different devices to be able to get here this morning and have a chat well it's your evening isn't it yes and thank you for having me i'm not at all the privilege and an honor um kathy which part of the us are you located in in knoxville tennessee aha knoxville and i have a straight up question for you kathy why do you think healthcare should be social and do you think that glass will in any regard have a profound positive impact on those who suffer from mental or physical ailment well those are two sort of separate questions and assuming that you're you're asking me because of my title of the healthcare social media evangelist um i really do think that healthcare should be social because our whole lives we spend investing in our health and everything we do socially impacts our health so when we decide what we eat when we decide how we exercise when we decide all of the things that impact us 24 7. that should be something that we can communicate with those who are helping us stay healthy so we don't have to wait until we make a bad decision or or don't take care of ourselves and then we have to seek some kind of fix it up rather than preventative medicine yeah and as you'd be aware kathy there is an explosion of the the reason i put glass amongst that is the context but there's an advent explosion of wearable technology particularly those pardon me those devices that can feed data back to medical um or other agencies or organizations to assist but in your context you're talking about class being social as in the communication with others or the distribution of information yes yes i'm sorry i didn't mean to interrupt yes and the reason i limited to that is right now it's it's really a difficult time for health care because those who want to communicate whether it's through sharing of data and information whether it's clear access to that information or just easy channels to talk amongst ourselves with our providers it's really not feasible yet because of the privacy issues that the way privacy is handled especially in the united states it's just very difficult to do that and even though glass brings so much opportunity at the table we're really having to break through that glass ceiling and it's it's going to be a real battle that could be the moniker for this recording couldn't it breaking through that glass ceiling particularly in the medical industry well speaking of which we have kathy reed who's a brisbane based brisbane australia based uh aged care and uh pharmacology uh pharmaceuticals related industry person as well within the healthcare side what is it about this disruptive technology you like best or do you consider it to be a disruptive technology kathy i certainly hope it is um what what i'm so excited about is up until the point that glass was in the conversation with healthcare healthcare bodies the decision makers were were way too comfortable being comfortable being cautious and when glass came to the table and people started seeing what it had to offer for the first time compliance officers and ceos and cmos and it folks were all willing to work really hard to make it work because they saw the potential and that's where i got excited so it's like a catalyst for conversations between generally disparate groups even within one organization i apologize i'm just going to turn this window this way we've just had just had about 300 students arrive downstairs in my building so we'll actually keep that to a minimum so um cathy are you a person that thrives on change and cool tech or is it uh do you think that glass is really just you know it's been a catalyst for thinking differently i definitely think it's a catalyst for thinking differently but i think it's more than that um i have always had the ability to gravitate toward those things that were on the cutting edge before they they exploded and i really attached to glass and i can't tell you exactly what it is that i found so intriguing because i really don't have that much of a technical background i'm not a developer but in my gut the reactions i saw and what little i knew about glass and even if it wasn't a feature of glass now the potential that i saw in glass because of its overall design and purpose was so exciting that i had to be a part of it and i wanted to be a part of the people who wanted to be a part of it um and hence your engagement with the explorers community that's right especially in the healthcare glass explorers community and there are there seems to be a segmentation of yeah not only geographically but also with various champions and various areas and occupations so more personally cathy i note here that this is a personal question if you feel comfortable to do so can you give us an idea as to whether there may come a time that facial recognition technology will be an integrated feature in glass and so in asking that question does google have a right in your opinion to ban the use of glass for it's banned from pornographic representation that's being banned for facial recognition technology do you think that's a fair thing to ever happen with a technology like this that that is a very perfect clas question for me um what a lot of people don't know unless they read my bio is i am i am face blind i have prosopagnosia and i honestly cannot tell people apart unless i can really zero in on a particular tick or a mole or something that sets people apart unless i can really attach to a personality so one of the things that made me really excited about glass initially was the opportunity to have facial recognition software and to the point that i was reaching out to some of the scientists that could help make that happen and when i found out that it was going to be banned i was less than pleased because i knew that that would set it on the back burner for anything in the future and now i understand why and i think we've had to be very careful as glass explorers to go above and beyond to respect the privacy or the paranoias of people who don't understand glass and i have not been told this by google but i think that a good part a good a good part of the drive behind banning that is simply to keep people sensitive to the privacy concerns that people have i will admit now that i downloaded a facial recognition app that was developed and was not allowed for us to download because i just wanted to see the potential and it didn't work so you couldn't get it sneaking in and i think part of it was probably they didn't invest a lot of time in it when they realized that it wasn't going to be blessed yet however i know that it can be done and i even know some of the people that could develop it so i think there's a lot of potential down the road but right now we're at a very delicate point with glass and the public and i think we have to respect that until the public is ready to allow those kind of things in there speaking of privacy and particularly around facial recognition and those more sensitive areas of of technological innovation i note today that i've got it here from mashable congress asks if google glass will be a privacy nightmare so i i understand that um that larry has been asked to provide answers to a series of questions and one of the questions in there will will glass offer facial recognition to identify non-users and display information about them how do you feel about those sorts of questions being asked directly through us congress of the main provider of class um i think that there should be a lot more to talk about than just glass and privacy i'm not going to pretend that glass doesn't have the ability to pull together a lot of information about people but so have a lot of other technologies if you remember in the past we had the app that basically told where people were at any given time on on the computer and it wasn't until somebody panicked and they they pulled it off and and there was a lot of good that could have come from it just like there was some bad and that's the case with anything but we have cameras everywhere we have cameras in places you wouldn't want to know where cameras are when i say we i mean the world the government even so i think that the the conversations that congress should be having around privacy should be far beyond glass and i think that it's it's just a very safe place for them to go without going into the other areas where we really ought to be talking about privacy in general and that would be concurrent with many people's thinking as well on a more humorous note was the choice of brand nose email derivative a purposeful self-parody or is there something else at play here is that a company name or because i found it quite humorous when i looked at it i thought now that's funny at the same time hang on how why would cathy use that it was inspired by a hot tub and that is my personality i i do like to be creative and i like to be creative with a lot of thought into it and the reason i picked brown nose is brown is my last name of course and nose of course is a different spelling which is intelligence um the k-n-o-w-s but because even if you take it under the original context of being a brown nose or bring it being a brown noser people who are brown nosing are doing for other people to the extreme they're giving the other person exactly what they want whenever they want it and that's really what i wanted to convey about brown knows is that social participation social communication and especially my business of teaching people that is giving people everything they want all the time making myself accessible to do that to the extreme and that was the play on words that i i hoped to convey and it's a nice story to be able to tell people if they actually say it out loud and they go a true representation of your character which is that's that's good so tell us about your leadership profile in general because you you have a very strong presence with other people very impactful a lot of people respect you so where does that desire to kind of sort of circle you know and lead people come from have you have you learned that throughout your life or is that something recent i've always had uh that kind of a personality i've always been one to get up and be willing to be the first to do things probably because my mother raised me to be that kind of person she was always that kind of person and and that's never been something that that i have not wanted to do but probably the actual professional experience that i have i would have to give kudos to my husband for sharing with me when i left the workforce many years ago to raise children and for him to climb the ladder in his career we couldn't both do it we just couldn't because his career required so much and so i stayed as a stay-at-home mom and really invested most of my tech my skills into his career wherever i could and in turn um i was kind of his my first business was wing spouse i was his wing spouse his right hand woman and he taught me a lot about management and and leadership and all of the things even healthcare up until the point i was ready to start a second career when my children were grown um and it's you're on a trajectory like this um threatening to smash through their ceiling which is fantastic um glass has been described by some as an elitist sort of fanboy or fangirl type of technology or club is this you know do you think that the price point that was chosen originally was to sort of um you know keep out the riff raff or do do you consider you're part of a bigger social experiment here because something like randall yesterday was saying he feels he's an ambassador for a product hacking back in my thinking to andrew van gaal then vanden hubble's um um his interview he also said he felt like he was an ambassador to this but do you see this being a club or do you think this is going to be a global phenomena oh that's a loaded question well first of all let me ask your question if i handed you if i handed you a watch and i said this is the best watch ever and it does things that people only imagined until a few years ago and with the touch of a few buttons it'll do things that are really cool and i'm going to give it to you for thirty dollars and i want you to take this watch and i want you to try it out and really push it to its limits and and think of exactly how it could change your life are you really going to invest that much time in a 30 dollar watch when if you push a few buttons and things don't turn out the way you think are you just gonna put it aside because it was just thirty dollars and you don't need to waste your time with a thirty dollar item and i think that is where we were is there were people that did fundraisers to get these they didn't have the money and when you put that kind of money into an item that still needs to be tested and tried and challenged and feedback given and you're really a lot of investment a lot of energy and and backing you're going to do that when you spend that kind of money and i think that was what they weeded out they weeded out those who wanted a cool gadget that they could push a few buttons and set aside and they wanted people to invest in it to a degree that they had skin in the game and i think that's why that's why i think our community comes together we we all have skin in the game and we've all invested so much time and energy that we appreciate that in each of the people that have chosen to do that it's a it's a well to answer your question it's a value proposition and it's one where people see the broader um value for their lives not just in the in the capital spend um a number of people you know have um associated themselves or become involved in the community in far from fanboy and fangirl sort of environment that actually some of their behavior is quite remarkable the opposite way but let's not dwell on the negative side of it if i had glass how was it that you became involved in the glass project itself what triggered you to want to become involved well before they ever offered anybody to have it other than a few very select people and mostly at google when they first came out with the concept of google glass and i saw the video that was released after the i o conference or oi conference or whatever the conference was that was too techy for me to go to um i really latched on to that and in my healthcare community i started talking about it and and i posted a blog post long before they offered people to have it on how i would redesign it very very audacious of you yes i wanted to be a headband and i wanted the glass the portion to be rotating so it could be up and out of the way and i wrote a blog post on it and then i started talking about how it might work in healthcare and because the community that i had built was such an interactive community we all started brainstorming about it and before i knew it it started to take over the community and i had to start a new community for healthcare glass exploration just about the time they said yeah we're going to let people have it tell us what you would do with it and we'll pick some people and so we had to do the hashtag if i had glass and i said if i had glass i would use my healthcare community to crowdsource all of the great minds to come up with a number of ways that glass could really benefit healthcare and make a difference and they chose me and i did exactly that and we now have a separate community it's incredible really isn't it it's such a powerful statement and and self-prophesizing and that's that's that's you know that's remarkable on another more personal note also on the 20th of july 2013 this is within quotations speech marks here i had fun sharing google glass with my niece she brought another perspective i'm interested kathy what perspective she brought or what do you think young people will bring to glass and you know should glass be developed for all demographics what she brought to the table is something that's hard to explain and i've seen it over and over again as i've been talking to high school and middle school groups when i bring glass to the classroom and what it is is my niece approached glass in a whole different way than i did and here's a simple example when i put glass on for the first time i'm still at that generation where i watched computers being created for the home i was one of the people to have a home computer and so i remember when we had search engines mama yes you had to put the keyword first and then you put the secondary words next and you didn't want any unnecessary words because you wanted to hone in on your search my niece just started talking to it like a best friend she would say okay glass google what time is it in africa and questions like that and those questions were being answered and to her that was completely normal she thought in a totally different way and i realized then that there are probably a lot of things that i don't intuitively do that the younger generation will automatically do and challenge glass to do so i think that there's probably an awful lot of discussions yet to be had about intergenerational or generational differences as to the way that people treat the device as a as a technology different to what we do we're very much still at keyboards they're in a haptic environment where they're playing the wii it's a suggestive movement rather than typing away like this so things have changed um where do you think glass is going to head next oh goodness if i can figure out where glass will go then it hasn't gone far enough um i hope that this is the beginning i hope that glass is a wonderful first step and i'd like to see it smaller i'd like to see it less i want to say less invasive i want to see it small enough that we don't even notice it but moreover i want to see it accepted in everyday life so that we can start taking advantage of some of the things that glass does bring to the table one of the area one of the areas that i really like glasses and driving and that's a real taboo subject and i don't understand that because with my boys could have glass i would get them glass so that they could drive with glass because i know darn well that everybody including my husband when they get a text message glance down to make sure it's not something that they want to see with glass you never have to look you never have to be distracted when a chime comes in that you get a message you can nod your head immediately and catch it while it's still coming in you can say okay glass read aloud and never skip a beat and you can even say reply and then dictate your message and never skip a beat how much safer can that be than a text message that's on a phone that's being hidden in the dash when you're trying to drive and look down and they're the same questions that are being asked by um a number of companies such as navman and other navigational companies as to how they can best integrate and perhaps all these onboard gps and phone-based interactions with cars will disappear it'll become headworn instead um are you aware aware of any competitors that are biting on google's tale in the same space any other similar products well i have seen articles about similar products other glass eyeglass forms of technology but i think the more exciting technology technologies are those that are not like glass but have the potential to integrate with glass there are some companies that are playing around with some of the other wearable technologies and other things that haven't been developed yet that people are just talking about that i won't talk about them because i've said that i won't but there are some really smart people and some really creative people that are going to push the limits of wearable technology that is really exciting to me and it in it it has the potential to go mainstream not to the fire departments and you know the individual industries but to really become a part of our lives and that's really exciting so in terms of those that boundary pushing and and as some people call it a normalization of the technology much like smartphones were a very foreign device uh phone in general and then now it's everybody's carrying them everywhere people like randall levreck claim that they are representative of google in fact as an explorer they they are a an ambassador and that the technology itself really isn't the actual issue really the explorers should be cognizant of the needs of other people that they're in contact with do you think that glass is again changing society or more broadly across humanity it's a game changer period however you want to look at it it's it's going to stay this is not a fad it's going to stay and it's a matter of how easily it gets integrated into the everyday life but it will certainly be integrated into those industries that can take advantage of it now healthcare being one of them because even patients realize how much benefit there is to having a doctor wearing glass in the office but taking it beyond that we have to be ambassadors but i also think that society has to be a little bit open when you think about a smartphone right now we have smartphone apps that track our heart rate heart rate that track how far we walk that can give us diet calorie counts and do all those things why wouldn't you want a device that can track it for you without you having to feed it into a phone why would you pass that up for some silly argument that that it's too invasive if it's your information and you're plugging it in that information is going out to the to the phone app you might as well be taking advantage of it and really embracing technology and and being healthy because of it kathy for something that claims that they're not an engineer or a tech head i i can see some parallels there with some of the discussions i have had with engineers about how they think of occupations and betterment of humanity and the way that technology can facilitate that i really appreciate your time this morning this evening for yourself and i can see some huge parallels there with with where these types of technologies are going to have a a profound impact on particularly as you mentioned there the health uh health and wellbeing industry so thank you very much for your time i appreciate the opportunity and i love your accent the nasal tang of the australians of course of course kathy thank you very much for joining me i look forward to connecting with you in the explorer community of course and i would welcome you to please distribute this to and farawa as far and wide as you as you feel happy to do so thank you very much you | Alexander Hayes | UC8ClJmXSIAhGOeBFC0QKFIw | 2014-04-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,325 | 22,842 |
NgjxgevPUio | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NgjxgevPUio | Winter Kickstart 2021: Concluding remarks | okay the recording is stopped and well we're still on the stream so thank you to all 11 people that have stayed with us until the very end i hope that this has been as interesting for you as it has for us um we've certainly learned a lot yeah any other last words or should we just go take a break yeah like if just like if you have any any problems then tomorrow at 13 there's the usual garage so we are there yeah and uh if you have any any questions arising from this course and it's well if you're still listening then just remember that that this is the starting point and if you have any any like ideas that come into mind because of this course then that's a good idea good thing and we hope that we can help you flesh out these ideas into actual practical solutions for you so that you will get your stuff done faster and more efficiently yeah okay well goodbye then yeah | Aalto Scientific Computing | UCNErdFO1_GzSkDx0bLKWXOA | 2021-02-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 174 | 879 |
in1CK8X9Hm0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=in1CK8X9Hm0 | Modern Chinese History 19th Century, Series on the US & China (Week 4/9) | [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] good evening i would like to welcome you again to tonight's fourth educational webinar sponsored by the coalition peace initiative and co-sponsored by 11 other other organizations which are shown on the screen while you are waiting for the seminar for the webinar to begin my name is don powell and i'll serve as your host and also the moderator for tonight's program tonight's program is modern chinese history 19th century as we discussed in our first three webinars the most important question facing the world today is whether our world is moving toward peace or moving toward war and the key to answering that question depends on the relationship between the us and china to understand current u.s china relationship we need to understand the historical relationship between us and china and therefore we need to understand modern chinese history especially in the 19th century and the 20th century how china was treated by the united states furthermore how china was treated by the united states is very much related to how chinese americans are treated in the united states and therefore we need to discuss the experience of chinese americans in the united states that's why this series of webinars revolved around the three topics chinese american experience in the united states modern chinese history and u.s chinese u.s china relationship we are organizing a series of nine educational webinars to help the people understand that the united states current policy of demonization of china must not be left unchallenged otherwise we will never achieve our objective for moving toward peace we hope that these educational webinars will help people understand the current u.s policy united states policy of demonizing china is not based on facts but on fabrications and there's such propagated demonization in china is not good not only for chinese americans but also not good for americans in general and not good for the citizens of the world because he will move the world toward war instead of peace the consequence would be that critical funding will be allocated to the military and for wars instead of using those valuable resources to improve our economy rebuild our crumbling infrastructure to work on global problems like climate change pandemic terrorism poverty illiteracy discrimination and promote peace we hope that you'll join these peace promoting organizations like our co-sponsors to help move the world toward peace thank you that's my summary of the background of this webinar series now we will start to nice program on the topic of modern chinese history 19th century we are very glad to have our speaker who's professor ken hammond from new mexico state university professor hammond has been a student of chinese history for more than 50 years he lived and worked in beijing from 1982 to 1987 handling arrangements for educational delegations from the united states to meet with their counterparts in china he received a master's degree in east asia's regional studies in 1989 and his phd in history and east asian languages in 1994. both from harvard university he has taught in new mexico state university since 1994 and is now professor of east asian and global history at new mexico state university he has written and edited five books on chinese history as well as more than two dozen articles and the 36 lecture series from yao to mao 5 000 years of chinese history for the greek courses series he's also an associate editor a journal of chinese history purposed by cambridge university press and he leads a research team on chinese local gazetteers at the max prank institute for the history of science in berlin he's an activist and pivot to peace working to promote better relations between the united states and china to advocate for peace and to oppose war between our countries as you can see professor hermann has long history of studies and research in chinese history so we are very happy and glad that he can be here today and share his knowledge with us professor hammond the floor is yours so if you want to see this thank you john it's delightful to be here i'm uh i'm very pleased to be part of this webinar series and i think that it's it's very important for us all to try to understand not just the complexities of the present moment but how we have arrived at the at the situation in which we find ourselves today so i'm going to go ahead and and bring up some slides that i've prepared to go along with my presentation tonight if i can if i can do that let's see here we go there we are okay um i think that it's it's good for us to to start thinking about modern chinese history by taking a kind of a kind of large overview of what has been a a couple of centuries of development a way in which we can see what's happening today as the not the culmination but the latest phase of a long long process so i i put up this this little chart here this graph here which is all about the proportion of global economic activity being produced in different parts of the world and you can see here in the united states western europe china india the middle east if we look back we can see that as late as the early 19th century china was responsible for somewhere around 30 sometimes even more than that of global economic activity in other words all the wealth all the value being produced in the world a third of it almost was being produced in china but as you can see from the early 19th century there's a dramatic decline a long long drop in that proportion until by the middle of the 20th century china's share in global economic activity had dropped to perhaps five percent and then in more recent times this this particular graph only comes up to 2003 but if we project these lines of development we can see that china is is now in the early 21st century returning to a position perhaps not quite as preeminent as what it had occupied at the early 19th century but still somewhere around right now around 20 maybe a little over 20 percent of global economic productivity is coming out of china so this is the this is the cycle this is the the the historical trajectory that i want to i want to try to begin to unpack a little bit tonight okay so in the 18th century the 1700s the world was already a very complexly interconnected network of trading relations and within that network china played a really central pivotal role because manufactured goods whether it was it was ceramics or silks cotton textiles tea other kinds of of of metal or wooden products all kinds of of of demanded goods in in demand were being produced in china the western countries europe the the western hemisphere had a great desire for these products for these goods and so trade a lot of global trade was a network of relationships which culminated in china china was the great source of a lot of the highest value goods that were in demand around the world we can see on this map if we look at the at the sort of left edge of the map we can see a big red arrow heading west across the pacific and if we go to the other side of the map we can see that arrow coming in to the area around the philippines this was a trade link between the spanish empire and the new world and the philippines and beyond that china that shipped silver from the new world over to manila where chinese merchants exchanged that silver for chinese products which then made their way back to mexico some stayed there some went on to europe beyond that we can also see trade routes coming around africa into the indian ocean much of that trade made its way up to china as well china was the source of great wealth china was the source of products that were in demand in in europe in the new world in other parts of of eurasia and africa as well so at the end of the 18th century as it had been for many centuries before that for perhaps a thousand years before that china was the great economic powerhouse of global trade the goods that were produced in china were in great demand were traded out there was a dynamic economy within china itself but it was also linked into these larger global trading networks in 1793 great britain sent a diplomatic trade mission to china at that point in time in the 18th century china had a highly developed system for international trade what's often called the canton system canton being the western name for the city of guangzhou in southern china which was the the interface between china's economy and the global economy western merchants who wish to trade with china could come to guangzhou and engage in in economic exchanges they could buy they could sell this was the this was the the great market the great intersection between these these two sectors of the global economy but the british who were the leading western economic power at that time didn't really have a lot of goods that they could sell to china so instead what they had to do was bring silver to china china was happy to trade with foreigners but they needed something that they could they could exchange for chinese goods they didn't really want the heavy woolen textiles that were produced in britain or other kinds of foreign goods what they wanted was cash what they wanted was silver excuse me ken can i just in the can i just interrupt for a second well part of the audience said can you expand your slides a little bit larger so they can see it better or i'll do it can you do that like i already expanded on mine but i don't know if i'm affecting other people's i'm not sure how that would be done actually for those people who have problems you can actually expand on like on my screen i exp i can expand it by just moving my cursor to the edge of the slide and just move it to the right so i make it bigger so you want to try that for the people who are asking that question yeah the two parallel lines on the right edge of the power point you move that to the right as post-onset okay so sorry for the interruption can continue no problem no problem i want people to be able to just do these as clearly as possible the mccartney mission that is sent by king george iii of england was intended to try to get china to open up to a more flexible trading system to open more ports to allow british merchants to trade directly with chinese merchants rather than through government intermediaries to create a diplomatic representation for britain in china in the chinese capital at beijing but the chennai emperor who we see pictured in this drawing from the time declined the british initiatives his view and he wrote this in a letter to king george iii was that china basically had everything it needed china produced all the goods that that the chinese people required and the foreigners didn't really have anything that the chinese wanted or needed so thank you very much for your interest but basically we're going to maintain the existing relationship and that was a relationship in which foreign merchants could come to china acquire chinese goods take them home and sell them and make a profit but they had to do so within the the established order uh that that the qing dynasty in china had had created and was maintained now the british were very frustrated with this and what they were looking for was a way to have something they could sell to china that would generate money for them which they could then use to buy chinese goods to sell and make a profit on elsewhere they didn't want to have to be bringing silver to china all the time well as it happened the british who had recently been taking over parts of india came up with a solution to this problem that led into a whole new era of the relationship between the west and china and that was opium opium was grown in india the british in india were trying to undermine the indian cotton textile industry so that britain could become more competitive in its textile productions they drove a lot of farmers out of raising cotton and into raising opi and they took that opium and they traded it to china where it was illegal right so it was a smuggling trade of bringing opium into china in order to sell it and make enough money to then buy chinese goods which they could take back to the west and make a profit on there well this period of time in the early 19th century when the opium trade was developing with china was also the period was also the moment when the industrial revolution was radically transforming the british economy suddenly the british were able to produce low-cost products in huge volumes okay especially things like let's say cotton textiles so now they were on the one hand undermining the indian cotton textile industry and promoting building up their own industrial textile industry but at the same time they were developing the opium production in india and they started selling more and more opium in china and as i say it was illegal in china it was it was a banned product so they had to smuggle it in but there was sufficient demand growing demand in china for this and it became a serious a serious friction between the british and the chinese the british demanded payment for opium in silver so now silver starts to come out of china for centuries it had been flowing into china now it starts to come out of china this creates serious economic problems for the chinese economy for the chinese government and so they try to gain control over that situation they want to try to stop the illegal opium trade that the british are bringing to china and it should be noted that it's not just the british the british were the biggest players in this but the americans the french also took part in in the opium trade as well a lot of uh american especially new england trading families made a lot of money from the opium trade but the british were far and away the biggest players in this the industrial revolution though changes the equation in two ways one is that it it gives the british the capacity to produce goods at much lower costs much lower unit cost and the second is that it gives the british new industrial military capabilities more powerful weapons steamships the ability to project power in unprecedented ways and all that happens in tandem with the rise of the ideology of free trade what happens then is a great collision between the chinese the ancient chinese imperial system and the the modernized industrial revolutionary system of of trade and military power coming out of britain and the british now interpret china's resistance to the opium trade as their challenge to the principles of free trade and the british parliament debates this and they decide in 1838 that china must be opened up to free trade they don't say we're going to go to war to defend british drug dealers they make it a matter of the principle of free trade so the opium war sometimes we have to say the first opium war because there's another one we'll talk about in a little bit but the opium war of 1839-42 sees the royal navy the british navy go to china sail up and down the chinese coast bombarding chinese port cities killing many many people destroying property all in the name of opening up china to free trade which really means at this point to the opium trade to the trade of drug dealers in the e in the english east india company shipping goods from india to china okay the british defeat china in the opium war and in 1842 china is forced to sign the treaty of nanjing which opens up a number of ports uh places like uh ningbo and uh and trenzo but most particularly shanghai to british traders and it it starts a process it starts a a system of what come to be called the unequal treaties because these are not treaties that are entered into by equal parties who can just reach an agreement about things these are treaties that are imposed on china by the industrial power of british militarism ramped up by modern weapons modern warships by the ability of china to militarily humiliate i'm sorry the ability of england to militarily humiliate china in in this first opiate war so the unequal treaties open up a whole series of ports along the china coast and that sets in process uh the the undermining of china's domestic economy suddenly cheap industrial goods produced in the factories in england and and later in other european countries start to flood into china destroying demand for locally produced goods which admittedly were of somewhat higher cost because they were produced in pre-industrial ways they were perfectly good products perfectly well established production systems in china but now these cheap industrial goods from europe are undermining their market undermining their competitiveness and this has devastating effects on the domestic economy in china as a result of that there is there's a lot of hardship there's a lot of suffering on the part of many chinese people and that leads to among other effects to the outbreak of a great rebellion a huge rebellion against the existing order in china what we call the taiping heavenly kingdom the taiping wall and this is a movement of poor people it starts in southern china who have been displaced many of them have lost their jobs lost their livelihood because of the the new unequal treaty system the opening of ports the influx of british and other european manufactured goods this starts out first in the countryside as as kind of a rural commune movement but because of difficulties that arise with with the imperial authorities by the 1850s the taiping movement becomes a military uprising a rebellion against the qing dynasty against the the weakness of china against the intrusions of western imperialism the taiping rebels marched to the north you can see on the map here they carve out a significant space in the very heart of china they establish a rebellious capital at nanjing one of the old imperial centers of china and for over 10 years they they try to create an alternative order uh they were strongly influenced by christian ideas they sort of wanted to to create a kind of primitive communalism to share wealth to share property the taiping rebellion was put down by the qing dynasty with a little bit of assistance from the foreigners but largely by the actions of of domestic officials domestic military forces the taiping rebellion is repressed but at great cost some 20 million chinese lose their lives in the course of this rebellion and its repression it's a huge disruption a huge challenge to the stability and the viability of the qing dynasty okay while this is going on while the qing dynasty is fighting for its life the foreigners the western imperialist powers are continuing to press their demands to try to increase their advantages the concessions that they can ring out of the chinese the chinese government that finds a particular expression right in the middle of the taiping rebellion in what we think of as the second opium war in 1856 there's there's an incident on the yanza river where a ship called the arrow a ship with a british registry but which was entirely uh operated as a chinese vessel a chinese trading vessel was stopped and inspected by qing government forces this was seen as an affront to the power of the foreign imperialists and it leads to a big diplomatic controversy that is followed by a new treaty yet another unequal treaty the treaty of tianjin from 1858 which mandated the the the the admission of foreign troops foreign diplomatic representatives into chinese cities including the capital at beijing the chinese although they had been forced to sign this treaty were reluctant to fully implement they didn't really want foreign diplomatic representatives coming into their their capital so they dragged their feet on this and because of this the british and the french launched a second military invasion of china this is what we call the second opium war in 1859 and 1860. this involved the military occupation of beijing the imperial court the emperor and and and the imperial officials had to flee the capital they left the capital went up north to the uh to the city of chanda uh the manchu secondary capital and once beijing was occupied the foreign troops the british and the french carried out one of the great atrocities of this whole period which was the looting and the burning of the imperial summer palace in the northwestern suburb of beijing they went in this was a beautiful complex italian architects had been brought in in the 18th century to help construct it it was a blend of western and traditional chinese architecture and and gardens and and just it was a lovely lovely compound and the british and french troops looted it it took them days and days to carry out all the wealth that was in the palace and then they burned it now you can see here in the picture at the bottom uh this the ruins of the summer palace are still an important kind of uh iconic symbol in beijing of this legacy of of of what the chinese call the century of humiliation the repeated invasion occupation defeat and humiliation of china at the hands of western imperialism the second opium war is ended with yet another treaty the convention of beijing from 1860 which finally opened the capital the chinese capital up to western diplomatic representation so now the western powers begin to establish their embassies what in this context they call the legations within beijing they were they occupied a particular quarter in the southeastern part of the city but all the western powers join in this process they established their diplomatic enclave and and now uh uh you know the the sovereignty of china is further eroded further uh compromised uh by by these activities by the 1860s the later 1860s the 70s into the 1880s the chinese government or at least significant elements within the chinese government finally begin to take seriously the need to try to respond to these challenges from from the western powers and individuals like lee hong jiang zhang judong zorton these these kind of provincial level chinese administrators begin to put together a program that we call the self-strengthening program where china would would reinvigorate itself would strengthen itself would build up its capacity to resist and stand up to the western powers and this involved a number of reform initiatives um on the one hand they created a new institution within the chinese state called uh the doliyamen it's sometimes uh it's sometimes characterized in in western scholarship as a sort of the new foreign ministry of china uh it's really a set of offices which were designed to deal with the threat from the western powers okay so it included things like a translation bureau to translate texts from the west so that chinese could learn more could understand more about what the foreigners were up to what they thought they were doing it included initiatives to begin to develop industrial enterprises in china chinese owned and operated modern productive capacity it included a a bureau for training chinese to speak foreign languages so they could engage with the foreigners more efficiently and more effectively and it also involved descending of delegations to western countries to study and to learn about how the foreigners operated what made them so powerful what could china do to try to strengthen itself um a lot of the leaders of that's only yaman and of these initiatives were figures like the three on the left there who were who were chinese officials not members of the manchu ruling aristocracy but but sort of uh pragmatic chinese officials who who wanted to solve the problems facing the empire and of course central to all of this was the question of military modernization building arsenals building shipyards developing a domestic capacity to produce modern weapon uh this was the only way by strengthening china militarily that it could even begin to hope to to stand up to the power of the west the western powers had made it very clear that they were happy to deploy military force to subdue and humiliate china so the self-strengthening movement was all about trying to develop a capacity to to resist the power of the west on china's own terms well that process while it was pursued with great enthusiasm by some elements within the qing state it faces its its most serious test in the first sino-japanese war in 1894-1895 and it has to be said that the self-strengthening movement which was an admirable effort to try to [Music] strengthen china to give china the capacity to resist outside aggression it was never the predominant policy orientation within the ching state there was a strong and dedicated core of officials who worked to improve china's capacities but in the overall span of the chinese government the qing government there was there were a lot of officials a lot of institutional interests which simply couldn't couldn't quite get with the program they wanted to preserve their own power their own privileges they wanted to stick with the way things had always been and what that what that results in is a kind of half-hearted approach to self-strengthening so that when japan which had been singularly devoted to its own modernization its own westernization to the development of a modern industrial economy and military when japan and china come into conflict in 1894 japan defeats china uh not without any effort but but it's a pretty decisive uh loss on the part of the chinese there'd been a rebellion in korea the tonghak movement an anti-western movement in korea the qing dynasty wanted to intervene to support the korean monarchy they communicated this to japan and japan in secret diplomatic exchanges said sure that's fine but then when chinese troops entered korea the japanese publicly denounced this as a chinese invasion and sent their own troops in to fight against china the war was fought mostly in korea a little bit in the audum province in northeastern china but also in in the sea between china and korea and it culminates in a pretty decisive victory for the japanese the modern japanese military is able to defeat the only partially modernized chinese military this again is an even further humiliation for china not just to be victimized by the western barbarians but now to lose a war to japan which had traditionally been seen as a kind of secondary culture within the larger east asian context that triggers a final effort a serious effort at reforming the qing dynasty what we call the hundred days reforms in 1898 as soon as the sino-japanese war was over in 1895 which happened to be a year when candidates for the imperial examinations had gathered in beijing 5 000 highly educated patriotic chinese examination candidates sign a petition calling for reform of the imperial state and figures like kanye way liang chichao tan satong all become involved in efforts to modernize and update the chinese imperial administration in 1898 the guangxiu emperor brings in these three and a number of other reformist officials as part of his imperial advisory body and for a hundred days the emperor issues a series of edicts trying to modernize trying to reform the chinese state trying to make it more efficient uh changing the educational system opening up the the government to the input of ordinary citizens but all of that is brought to a halt in september of 1898 by the empress dowager sushi who throws in with the conservative manchu aristocracy with the reactionary elements amongst the chinese imperial officials and calls a halt to these efforts to reform and modernize the dynasty that was probably the last real chance that the imperial system had to adapt itself to these changing conditions but instead of reform what we get at the end of the 19th century is an anti-western rebellion the boxer rebellion this was a popular uprising beginning in shandong province in eastern china um shandong had been a sort of sphere of influence of the germans there was lots of christian missionary activity and there were a lot of frictions and tensions and resentments that built up in rural society in shandong the boxers were a a traditional kind of martial arts society that was also very patriotic and they wanted to expel the foreigners at first the qing dynasty wanted to to sort of stop the boxers because they were afraid that they would upset the foreigners but after after the the suppression of the reforms in 1898 the empress dowager decided that maybe the boxers could be a lever to try to resist the further demands of the western imperialists so then the qing dynasty begins to support the boxers and encourage the boxers and by 1900 a large contingent of boxer rebels come to beijing they're welcomed into the city by the chin government and they then besiege the foreign diplomatic neighborhood the the legation quarter as it is referred to in june of 1900 and they besieged it for almost two months wanting to to suppress and expel the foreign powers from china not surprisingly the foreign powers respond to this with yet another military expedition what's called the eight power expeditionary force an alliance that included everybody from russia and japan the united states britain france germany even the austro-hungarian empire sends a contingent the eight power expeditionary force comes to beijing they lift the siege they impose a a heavy burden on the qing government and indemnity a huge financial burden that the the chinese government was going to have to pay off all the way down to the middle of the 20th century they further humiliate the the qing state they execute a number of officials for having collaborated with the boxers it's it's yet another defeat and humiliation for the old imperial system and not surprisingly in many ways it marks uh kind of kind of the last moment for that system in the first decade of the 20th century there are a few late efforts to reform the qing dynasty the old imperial examination system is abolished in 1905 they make some very modest efforts to developing broader political participation provincial consultative assemblies in a couple of places are convened but they're not even looked to as significant participants for another 10 20 30 years it's a very long term slow process of reform that was envisioned by the ching but by this time the dye has already been cast figures like sun yat-sen who was the founder and coordinator of the the tung hue the the the sort of umbrella organization over a number of revolutionary anti-chain anti-imperialist movements sun yat-sen leads the movement for overthrowing the old imperial order seeing it as having been become not just incapable of modernizing but but a dead weight holding china back from being able to become a part of the modern world in 1908 both the guanxi emperor and the empress dowager sashi die uh really on on the same night uh in somewhat suspicious circumstances but that leaves the dynasty adrift a little boy isin giordo puyi is named as the emperor he's only three years old uh a a a council of regents of manchu nobles is appointed but they're unable to salvage the the dynasty and in 1911 in october of 1911 the shinhai revolution uh breaks out military mutinies in beginning in in hong kong in what's now wuhan in central china and spreading across the empire spell the end of the old imperial order that's where i'm going to stop tonight and uh next week we'll pick up the story with the efforts to find a new way a new path forward to build a new china that are going to animate the first half of the 20th century so at this point take down my slides and i'll be happy to answer questions okay dr hammond there were two two chats directed to you directly with questions submitted by the audience sure i see 53 entries in the uh okay maybe you could pick out one that was sent directly to you was time 544 from may from mainland to you at 5 44. i can read the question to you would you like me to read just just read the questions this is a question from dr russell jones who was the presenter moderator for the webinar session one and three he asked how the british legitimate legitimized legitimate opium production and trade given they given they knew it was illegal addictive and seemingly morally wrong did they have just economic free trade agreements or did they have other rationales well if you if you read the parliamentary debates um in uh in 1838 when when parliament was trying to decide what to do the the british opium traders in in in canton in guangzhou had petitioned parliament uh to say look the chinese are interfering with our trade they've confiscated some of our opium and destroyed it we're we're suffering great economic losses help us out when parliament debated what to do they didn't they didn't debate it in terms of oh we have these drug dealers that uh that want to make sure they can make a profit they debated it in terms of of the ideology of free trade they said look a british merchant no matter what the product is should be able to go anywhere they want meet with whomever they want and make whatever deals they can so it was constructed as a as a principled position in support of this idea of free trade now of course free trade itself was only popular in england at that point because finally the british had something that they could sell effectively in other markets for centuries for the 16th 17th 18th century the british practiced what we call mercantilism which was government protection of capitalist trade right because the british didn't really have a lot of goods that they could sell out in global markets so the government created monopoly structures and other forms of protection to ensure profitability for bris for british businesses but now when british businesses were more competitive suddenly the idea of free trade was very attractive so they that's how they articulate they they legitimized themselves they said we're just defending the principles of free trade what that meant of course was opening the door for the opium trade but also for all other kinds of british manufacturers right so it was a it was a it was a confrontation that was triggered by the opium trade but it soon grew far beyond the opiate trip okay well thank you dr hammond that was very uh interesting and uh enlightening there's another question from the audience how much did china have to pay japan for losing the first sign of japanese war of 1894 well the the the treaty that ends the sino-japanese war the first sight sino-japanese war um doesn't actually involve a significant financial indemnity but china had to do a number of things that were that were very damaging first and foremost of course they had to renounce the long long historical uh special relationship between korea and china korea had been very closely bound up with china korea had its own version of the confucian examination system and at the very top of that uh the chinese and and korean systems kind of merged korean the highest level korean examination candidates could actually go to beijing and sit for the chinese imperial examinations which gave them even more prestige back in korea uh china was obligated to help korea with its its military defense and of course this went all the way back to the imjin war back in the 1590s when japan had invaded korea then so there was a long and very intimate relationship between korea and china and that had to be renounced the chinese were forced to say we we will no longer give give korea our support our defense our our our our care you know um taiwan the island of taiwan which was a province of china itself uh had to be ceded to japan uh became part of the japanese empire for the next 50 years um so it wasn't so much a strictly monetary or financial indemnity so much as the concession political concessions territorial concessions and the beginning of course of of the dramatic erosion of china's relationship with japan which which would culminate later in in japan's direct invasion of china itself okay thank you among the questions submitted um there were several very interesting questions one of them i just want to bring out and that is the british colony of uh colony of hong kong actually involves the small island of hong kong the island across the land across the bay the kowloon and then the new territories which is the large piece of land connecting kowloon and mainland china so how was that became part of the colony of british during the 19th century can you elaborate on that and say yourself which treaty actually is more than one treaty right that's right it's a it's a kind of piecemeal process the island of hong kong is ceded to britain uh as a result of of the first opium war as a result of the treaty of nanjing in 1842 the british wanted a base of operations uh that would allow them to to develop naval facilities and to uh to have a permanent uh trading presence that was separate from what had been uh the the the canton system up at guangzhou on chamian island right there off outside the the city of guangzhou and so they they they forced the chinese to seed uh hong kong island to them uh right away kowloon was added a little bit later around the time of the second opium war as a further concession by that point britain was developing its trade developing its naval facilities there and they wanted control of both sides of the harbor so not just hong kong island but also uh the the area immediately adjacent to that on the north side the mainland side of the harbor so kowloon is is acquired at that point eventually as the population in hong kong grew and as the economy developed they wanted they needed more territory for residential development and more territory for they wanted a kind of agricultural hinterland if you will and so in 1897 the new territories were added to hong kong uh on a 100 year lease and it is of course it's the expiration of that hundred-year lease in 1997 that was the uh the trigger in a sense for the negotiations that led to the return of all of hong kong to to chinese sovereignty uh without the new territories the the little strip of kowloon and hong kong island would have been pretty unsustainable and really by that point uh the chinese were just sort of done with with you know with tolerating the british presence so uh the the the end of that lease the end of the lease on the new territories was was a a perfect occasion for saying look let's just put this historical problem you know to bed let's just let's just pass this back and that led to the agreements uh that that returned hong kong to to chinese sovereignty yeah that's this is a minor minor correction of the date it was actually in 1898 it's a 99 year lease not a 100 year lease okay very good okay thank you so that's very good so the hong kong situation is actually very complicated involve three different treaties as you explain yeah okay you another question and you mentioned that the americans were also involved in selling opium to china as a matter of fact they make so much profit and you mentioned that especially in new england territories a lot of reaches were made which went to the new england now the quote one of the question was that did the united states have to go to war to with china in order to get some of the benefits that greek britain extracted from china you know did they have to go to war with china you know some of the americans the americans um you know once once america becomes independent of of britain in the in the 1780s america american uh commercial interests were very eager to develop trade with china the first american ships going to uh to to guangzhou to be part of the canton trade uh go in in the 1780s right and and that trade uh uh uh develops step by step uh over the the rest of the the late 18th and the 19th century as the opium trade begins to develop as the british begin to develop the opium trade the americans see that and and they want to be a part of that they can't be sourcing uh opium in india because that's a monopoly held by the english east india company so the americans start buying opium from the ottoman empire in turkey the port of izmir on the uh on the aegean sea in in turkey becomes uh the the the source where american traders go to buy uh by opium and they bring that opium then out through the mediterranean all the way down and around to china uh and they and they become part of the the opium trade itself so they they join in to to that trade and they become you know important players but not the dominant players it's always the british who are the biggest players when the opium war takes place the americans are not belligerents the americans don't the americans don't become part of of the war between britain and china china is forced to sign the treaty of nanjing in 1842 two years later the united states signs the treaty of wangsha with china and part of the whole unequal treaty system was a clause that was included first in the treaty of nanjing and then in subsequent treaties with all the other countries that's called the no most favored nation clause and what the no most favored nation clause says is that there shall be no most favored nation no country is going to get a more favorable position than we are right so the british do this first the americans do it later and i like to think of it i like to characterize it as kind of equal opportunity imperialism right the british signed the treaty in 1842 and that gives them particular concessions and agreements with china but if a later treaty is signed with anybody else any concessions in that treatment which weren't in the original treaty with the british automatically come to britain anyway so the british do this the americans do this the french do this everybody does this so that whatever one imperialist power gets from china everybody else gets as well so the united states doesn't have to fight a war with china because they get the benefits of the british war with china when they sign their own treaty because they get the same concessions already made plus a little more which the british then get as well it's a it's a from the point of view of the imperialists it's a wonderful let's all share the booty kind of kind of system okay in in light of the late lateness but there's one more question i would like to ask sure and that is uh it was mentioned in one of the earlier webinars and it will be mentioned again in the later webinars i just want to ask you whether you want to say anything about the interesting period of the burlingame treaty around 1868 well the burlingame treaty it's an interesting moment in in the the relationship between the united states uh and china the burlingame treaty extends to china um certain certain concessions certain uh almost privileges of of diplomatic equality the burlingame treaty uh facilitates for example immigration from china to the united states it's going to be overwritten very soon by by reactionary agreements by restrictions on on immigration as early as the 1880s so 14 years later 1882 we begin to have chinese exclusion acts and things like that but for a brief period the burlingame treaty seems to be a moment when the united states was trying to kind of advantageously position itself vis-a-vis the chinese government and this is a strategy that we see the americans pursuing from time to time the open door notes for example in 1900 where the united states tries to uh push back against the potential um uh you know a partition of china because the united states wants to be sure that it has access that it has the ability to be trading to be to be engaged with china without having to carve out and protect a particular sphere of interest so i think the burlingame treaty is an interesting moment uh but it uh it is overridden by you know protectionists and racist attitudes that that reshape the american chinese relationship in the later 19th and and on into the 20th century okay thank you very much since we are running our time i'm sure we can continue the discussion for a long time but i would like to thank again professor hammond for giving us an excellent summary of the critical events involving the opening and the interaction between china and the world starting near the end of the 18th century and throughout the 19th century and you'll continue to talk about in the 20th century next week it really helps us to understand better why this period is known as the period of unequal treaties and see clearly how injustices were dealt to china for very early on and has continued to today as we discuss in the next four webinars in the last minute i just want to show what is coming next wednesday and the other four webinars so i think your stop screen scare so i can share my screen right absolutely okay okay see your screen okay next week professor hammond will talk to us again he will talk about modern chinese history uh 20th century and then on the farmweek october 27th julie tang will talk about hong kong and i'll talk about xinjiang and then the following two weeks after that george cool will talk about u.s china relationship first it talks about the 19th century and then he will talk about the 20th and 21st century and then the last webinar will be on november 17th xiao will talk about china is not us enemy so um i hope all of you will come back next week and listen to the rest of professor hammond's recollection recall of the modern chinese history in the 20th century once again i want to thank professor hammond and the audience for participating and good night and see you next week good night to you all pleasure to be here thank you you | CODEPINK | UCSTEGsYwuvPpwjtIufg7gzA | 2021-10-16 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 8,183 | 45,680 |
XjCBiaaOvHQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjCBiaaOvHQ | High school girls all-star basketball: Tina Hosea (Cottonwood Colts) post-game interview 03-24-12. | to be honest um when i first got the call to being the all-star game um it was an amazing feeling um just to be able to play with all the other great players in our region it felt really good senior year was definitely difficult just because we had a ton of seniors leave last year about like seven and they all started and it was really hard to kind of get that chemistry going with a ton of freshmen and sophomores but we kind of pulled through it um we have our ups and downs but we we pulled through it and i i feel um with our region we were successful what are you most going to take from this experience playing high school basketball this is the final year that you're eligible to play i mean what are you most going to take out of this i'd have to say i'm going to have to take definitely leadership my coach once said a reflection of your leadership is service and i feel like if i take that with me to the next level then um i'm well on my way what are you going to be doing next you know speaking of the next level what are your plans coming up as far as you know college or what i'm actually going on a visit for central wyoming i'm talking to a couple of other jc colleges and coaches so we'll just see where it goes from there but for right now i feel central wyoming's my best bet it's going to be hard for you you know yeah to move on is it just kind of just going through the motions or you know what are your thoughts it's going to be a big change just from the girls and everything in the atmosphere and living in i don't know i guess potentially riverton wyoming it'll be a big change definitely but i'm well in adapting to those changes so we'll see | Utah Sports Action - Utah's Source For High School Sports | UCU6ZO3Rvf_bT4Fx8iYLsIvQ | 2012-03-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 337 | 1,671 |
4ITfbSTZ2qw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ITfbSTZ2qw | 70 Years After Doctors Said Her Baby Died, This Old Woman Received A Life Changing Phone Call | [Music] mystery of stuff puritan was living a fairly solitary life at her retirement home in florida all her immediate family had sadly passed away and she believed that the only child she'd given birth to it died soon after delivery almost seven decades ago but then she received a note that would finally help her to uncover the truth as a teenager peerington became pregnant with a married man she was single and yet to graduate from high school back then in the late 40s it was frowned upon for a mother to have children out of wedlock as a result it appears that puritan's mother and father didn't approve of the situation in which she'd found herself at just 18 years of age puritan gave birth to her daughter in indiana in 1949 however she would never get to hold her little baby that's because nurses at the hospital informed her that she'd died in december 2018 puritan told nbc news i asked to see the baby and they said she died that's all i remember at the time pierington had no reason to doubt what hospital workers were telling her they'd said outright that her baby had passed away so it didn't cross her mind to ask to see her daughter's birth certificate instead she accepted the fact that she'd lost her child and focused on getting her life back together without that baby girl puritan found herself feeling isolated her mom had warned her that her dad would kill her if she returned home so instead she went to live with her grandmother she finished high school before leaving her home state of indiana for a new life in florida puritan reportedly arrived in her new home without knowing a soul however what she lacked in companies she made up for in grit and conviction she carved out a life for herself in tampa but she'd never go on to have any more children following a hysterectomy to treat a tumor despite that health scare puritan was destined to live a long life however the downside to that was watching all of her eight siblings pass before her as of december 2018 purington was 88 and believed that she was the only one remaining in her family consequently she lived a simple existence at a care home in north tampa as parents and wild away the days at her assisted living facility she had no way of knowing that she would soon discover a new relative one which would ultimately lead her to a whole new side of her family that she never even knew existed it all began in september 2018 when puritan was handed the phone number of a lady called connie multrip moltrev was raised in santa barbara california after being adopted as a baby she was always aware that her parents weren't biologically related to her nevertheless she loved hearing about how they came to welcome her into their family and the fact that they chose her to be their own no doubt made her feel special maltrep revealed how her parents would talk openly about her adoption in 2018 she told inside edition my favorite bedtime story was how my parents walked up and down the halls of the hospital looking at all the babies until they found me and then they stopped it was sweet however multrip's happy bubble was not to last sadly her adoptive mother died when moultrip herself was a small child her father subsequently remarried but he too fell ill and soon passed away as a result multrip had lost both her adoptive parents by the age of five in 2018 moltrip's own daughter bonnie chase revealed to cnn her adoptive mother died of cancer and shortly after her adoptive father was diagnosed with a heart condition plus to make matters worse moltrep's stepmother was reportedly abusive as such hers was not the happiest of childhoods with no major maternal influence in her life moltrip supposedly always fantasized about meeting her real mom and she did actually look for her biological mother during her thirties but her efforts prove fruitless eventually it seems life got in the way of moltrip's quest to find her family as an adult multrip settled in richmond vermont enjoying a career as a nurse and then a massage therapist she had just one daughter bonnie chase who herself went on to have two children as a result by the time she was in her late 60s multrip only had three blood relatives that she was aware of but all that was to change in 2017 when chase bought moltrip a dna testing set as a christmas present after all she thought her mom might like to learn more about her genes however chase had been interested to learn more about her own heritage so she also got a kit for herself chase could relate to moltrip like her mom there was a whole side of chase's family she didn't know in 2018 chase explained to yahoo i never met my own biological father and growing up it was just me and my mom i remember mom trying to find her birth mother and it was hard seeing her go through that but while chase and moultrip both long to find out more about their family backgrounds neither of them took dna kits seriously chase would later tell nbc news it was just a cool christmas present in fact moltrip felt so laxed towards her test that it took her some time to even send it off for analysis but of moultrip had known how the test would change her life she might have completed it sooner she explained to cnn it took me a while to use it but when i finally got the results i went from having only three known relatives a daughter and two grandchildren to 1 600 relatives i was floored among the relatives that the dna kid had linked mole trip to was a long-lost cousin who introduced her to her biological family for the first time the pair struck up a conversation and mole trip quizzed her newfound relative on her family tree that's when things took an unexpected turn multrip knew the name of her biological mother and so she divulged this information to her relative online recalling what happened next multrip told cnn i told her my mother's name was genevieve purinton and my cousin said oh that's my aunt and she's still alive living on her own i couldn't believe it in a shocking twist it turned out that moltrip was the baby that purinton believed she'd lost in 1949. it seems that her nurses had lied to her and the child hadn't died at all instead she'd been taken to an orphanage ready to be adopted into a new family later multrip reflected on why she may have been taken from her mother in such a callous way she told cnn because she was an unwed mother she was told that i had died she continued with her life not knowing i was still alive and sadly puritan was not alone in this kind of experience ann fessler is the author of the 2006 book the girls who went away in it she explored the pressure that pregnant single women felt to give up their babies during the period between the close of world war ii and the time in which abortion became legal in 1973. she interviewed over a hundred women who'd begrudgingly surrendered their children to protect themselves from the shame of being a single mother during the 1940s and 50s illegitimacy was usually considered the woman's fault a symptom of her psychological shortcomings as a result it was often the view that it was best for them to be separated from their babies often unmarried mothers had little option but to hand their offspring over receiving no support from society to help them raise their children themselves forced adoptions were disturbingly commonplace in the era in which puritan gave birth to moultrip and the fact that she was told her child had actually died as particularly grim assessment of social attitudes at the time as puritan herself put in the daily mail in 2018 things were different back then as for moltrip it seemed that now age 69 she was going to finally meet her biological mom this was to be a reunion she'd been dreaming of since she was a child as maltrep's own daughter chase told nbc news she'd fantasize about her mother rescuing her since she was five years old it's truly a lifelong dream after receiving puritan's contact details from her cousin online moltrip reached out to her biological mother leaving the ball firmly in puritan's court she simply sent her a card with her phone number in it that way parenting could get in touch with her long-lost daughter if and when she felt ready the moment that moultrib had waited most of her life for came on september 8 2018. it was then that she answered the phone to find puritan on the other end finally she could hear her biological mother's voice for the first time in her living memory and it seems that multrip believed fate played a part on that special day in an interview with cnn moltrep revealed i was at church that day and i never want to leave early but on that day i did literally 20 minutes after getting home my mother calls the conversation had been almost 70 years in the making and so the pair had a lot to catch up on recalling that first phone chat moltrip told nbc news how pure and jenna told her i think i'm your mother then recalling the atmosphere of the call boltrep added you could have heard a pin drop she wanted to remember if i knew my original name margaret and mitch as it happened she did the initial conversation was to be the start of a meaningful relationship between moltrip and puritan indeed they subsequently began calling regularly and it was during these catch-ups that the two women realized just how much they had in common as a result moltrip was in no doubt that she'd finally found her mother joking moltrip said of puritan she couldn't deny me if she wanted to we look exactly alike with the same facial features bad knees and we've both had heart attacks and strokes she added my mom has always wanted to be a nurse but couldn't afford school so she became a cook i was a nurse for 34 years and my passion is cooking maltrip finally got the chance to meet her mother at purington's retirement village in florida in december 2018. she later recalled the moment she first set eyes on her biological mom to inside edition in her words i walked into her retirement home and i knew it was her because she walked with a walker ball trip revealed there was only one woman there with a walker she turned around and it was like looking in the mirror i looked just like her we just walked over to one another and both of us started crying and from there it seems like there were a lot more tears shed chase's recollection of the meeting echoed her mother's memory she too described an outpouring of emotions as moltrip and puritan reconnected she told nbc news we're criers we just cry a lot there are a lot of tears and there's been a lot of tears the entire time since then it's been really amazing between her tears moltrip was able to fill piernson in on the 69 years since they parted this included telling her mom that she was also a grandmother and great grandmother in 2018 moltrip told fox 13 it's been a lifetime of wanting this i remember being five years old wishing i could find my mother given the positive experience moltrip had in finding puritan she encouraged others to seek out their biological parents with that in mind she told cnn not everybody has this kind of outcome when looking for their parents but i recommend you give it a try you don't know what'll happen commenting on the heartwarming story a spokesperson for ancestrydna the company which manufactured the dna kit used spoke to nbc news jasmine jimenez said we're thrilled that ancestry was able to play a part in helping to connect genevieve puritan with her daughter after 69 years we wish her and her family the best and that this is only the beginning of an enduring relationship and multrip's journey of discovery into her biological family didn't end with meeting puritan that's because she also had plans to reconnect with her two half-siblings on her dad's side in the month after a reunion with her mom as such moltrip was watching her family grow before her eyes for multrip's daughter chase the journey that the dna kit she bought for herself and her mom had taken them on had been life-changing she told cnn we knew nothing about our family it was just us three now through ancestry we see related to over 4 000 people | Mystery of stuff | UCW8zbDP5xY7UiJEJe_cALHw | 2021-04-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,224 | 12,128 |
PbEixJ_3AyM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbEixJ_3AyM | Command Ops: 6. Monitor and React (Tutorial 6 of 7) | welcome back this is tutorial movie number five monitor and react I assume you've already completed tutorial movie number for review AI plans if you haven't done so already please launch the game and load the save game shoot review AI plans zoom into the action and let the game run at normal speed until the assaults start hit the pause button or the spacebar and you can see here that the assaulting units are now in assault they have the big fat arrow the assault arrow note that the battalion headquarters and mortars are in the reserve position if we lesser the assault units we can see their route and each of the units has its planned tasks in succession remember we're attacking in successive lines you can tell that they're in line by the shape of their occupied area and to confirm that click on be company select its planned tasks and here we can see that this formation is in line another thing to note is that the first three 18th battalion is yet to start its assault the reason for this is that it's on foot motorized units move and organize quicker than non motorized next time we can try coordinating start of it the assaults by setting their HR but we'll leave that for next time run the game again and pause as soon as the first 318 to start to assault now it's time to bombard the forward enemy position select the 22nd field artillery battalion hit the B key for bombard and click just about here this will place a bombard task and drag it slightly so the forward edge now overlaps the enemy position the area within this box is known as the bombardment zone we position it like this to give the maximum time for the artillery to fire on the target artillery fire automatically lifts when friendlies get too close there is a safety zone around the bombardment zone and that varies according to the caliber of the weapon in this case it's around about a hundred meters note also that the start time is set for two minutes from now that's about the time it takes to coordinate the artillery fire note also the duration is 11 minutes and that should be fine and that's about the time it'll take C Company here to advance to within the safety zone now you could have ordered the bombardment at the same time as you ordered the attacks but it was best in this case to wait until we knew when the 318th was going to start its assault you want to make sure that your bombardment is as close to the time of arrival of your forward assaulting troops that suppresses the enemy for the longest portion of time while your assault troops are vulnerable in the assault as I mentioned before we could have coordinated the timings of the two attacks and then coordinated our bombardment with those but we'll leave that for another time another point to note at this stage is that so far you've committed just that one of your two artillery battalions the 66th is still under AI control as a general rule I recommend you always leave at least some artillery under AI control of course you can override this but you'll probably find that as the action develops your focus is drawn to a particular area and by leaving at least some artillery under a lie control it can attend to matters in those areas that you're not focusing on click off and then select the FS or fire support tap now that we've given an order to the 22nd Field Artillery Battalion it appears in the fire support tab you can select it and you can notice that it's Ettore ammo is at full strength you can see details here about the unit from now on you can simply select and order the 22nd directly from the fire support tab without having to scroll to its location and select it on the map now let's just check on our overwatch units B battery and the company here's B battery and if we select it you can see that it's moving along the road up towards the objective on the hill if we click here again the tank company is also there so our coordination was pretty good but you notice that the company is advancing directly after the hill the AI chooses different routes according to its own logic and that's fine it looks like at this stage both units are going to arrive on the objective after 51st battalion has cleared the hill so all is good from here on the game as it runs on your machine may vary to what happens on my machine the reason for this is that the AI is not prescriptive it doesn't run to a set script and because it makes its own decisions based on the situation at hand and because of the random probabilities involved things can take different directions and so the gameplay may end up being slightly different please bear with that as we proceed things are going to odd up now so let's zoom in on the action hit the spacebar to start the game running as we can see our bombardment is happening with over here in the classical tab pause the game on first contact know a company 24th engineers has a blue engagement indicator at the bottom right of its icon select a 24th go to its log and we can see here that it's been engaging a blue light means the unit is firing if we see an orange light it means unit is taking fire a red light and it's receiving casualties and a white light means some of its men are surrendering which is not good note in the log for a company that it's halting which means it's reacting faulting is a rout status hit the f2 key to show the route status in the unit information box normal units have an upright green arrow faulting units have a green square retreating units that is those units who are falling back under control have an upside-down orange arrow if they're retreating in place meaning they're still in control but they're staying put because too dangerous to go anywhere else they will have an orange square if they have an upside-down red arrow it means they're routing which means they're no longer in control and the minute is fleeing as best they can and they'll go back a long way and take a long time to recover a red square means they're either routing in place or they're recovering from route either way they are for all intents and purposes not effective now we also have other units that are halting the company here and the enemy unit you'll notice on the enemy unit here now that we have a better Intel report on it its current and it's excellent and we know enough to know that it's from the second company 27th Fusilier regiment another indicator of engagements are the fire lines they emanate from units run the game slowly and I'll try and pause it as the fireline occurs there we go as you can see the firelight emanates from the fire to the target the color of the light indicates the type of fire in this case it's red which is anti-armor fire most likely a rocket-propelled anti-tank weapon being fired at a vehicle inside that company the thick of a line the greater the firepower an orange line would indicate antipersonnel fire ie machine guns and rifles and a gray line would indicate bombardment such as mortars or artery run the game at normal speed again notice the firing continues and the intensity increases as the enemy is encountered pause the game at O 701 you'll notice that the map has lightened indicating dawn roll the cursor over the weather display and you can see the details there clear skies it's bitterly cold -6 degrees Celsius and there's snow on the ground sunrise or full full daytime is not for another hour with increased light comes increased spotting range and your units previously advancing under cover of darkness will now be fully exposed and start receiving long-range fire but it also means your long-range artillery and your over what to group on the hill should now come into their own things are about to odd up let's check on our overwatch group and see what they can now site click on the tools tab on a lot of site tool and drag from our overwatch group towards Mama's feeler and as you can see now they have an excellent sighting along the road remember the brighter or lighter the color the better the sighting another way of looking at this is to use the arias line-of-sight tool again click on the forward edge and if we zoom out we can see that all those areas that are colored with a light shade can be seen very well those with a dark shade can be seen but poorly and those without any shading can't be seen at all so from on top of the hill here we can see right across to Mars felt over to Lomas feeler but not down into the river valley double click to end the tool zoom back in note there are two German units on the road between Lomas Vela and Steinbrueck select the forward unit it's an assault gun unit with some spoke threes ten of them in fact they'll cause us some real concern double-click the entry and here we can see the data for this stub 3G it's an assault gun so it's a numbing fighting vehicle but doesn't have a turret that gun in fact is is fixed Minh has limited Traverse it maneuvers by maneuvering the whole vehicle to line up on its target it's 35 millimeter gun is effective against any personnel and Andy armor the f5 key first to show deployment pitted again to show facing and yes it is heading down towards the the crossing hit the f4 key and this will now show combat power in the unit information box this display is an amalgam the background color is indicates route status so green is normal orange is retreating and red is routing but the number is a representation of overall combat power value of two is twice as effective or powerful as a value of one and a 3 is twice as powerful as two so this is a fairly powerful unit and we need to be concerned about it reaching a crossing if we hit the range rings we can see that it has a very effective range and can start engaging all our units close to the crossing particularly from the 51st battalion here so what about our overwatch group if we select the company here have a look at its log it hasn't started to engage and neither has B battery if we select the threat tool and you click on a unit it will show you lines towards what it believes are its primary threats the brighter the red color the greater the threat we can select the B battery and notice the B battery doesn't have a line of sight to these units as yet but the company does we should expect B company to open fire shortly unless of course it's distracted by this unit closer to it in general a unit will engage its highest threat but priority will be given to units that are closest double click to end the tool you could wait to see if B company and B battery will engage these units however I would recommend at this stage also committing your artillery to interdict them as well there are two units of high power concentrated together moving in a known direction this would be a good time go to the fire support tab select the twenty second hit the B key to bombard and we need to estimate where these unit will be in a couple of minutes I would it I would say that around this location here should catch them and we'll leave the bombardment for just five minutes so right click the duration tool that will drop it back to six minutes that will be fine so let's run the game now pause the game note the artillery is taking effect now on the targets also note the enemy here is routing if we select that enemy unit and we hit the f5 key we can see that it's routing towards the west and away from our units elsewhere the enemy is still our standing firm we may have to consider as soon as the artillery finishes its bombardment mission on the road shifting that fire down to this position here the 227th to try and dislodge it as our three a teams are not making great progress at the moment let's run the game for a bit longer pause again now artillery from the 22nd has now finished its bombardment note also that the company now has started to engage the enemy if we check it threats we can see that its primary threat now is definitely the still company on the other side of the river it's safe now I think to shift our flyer for our artillery on to other targets select the 22nd hit the B key now we could target we'll try and target the to 27th directly but given the distance between it and the forward edge of our friendly forces any artillery father which place that will overlap the 227 would be too close to our units but what we can do is we can target these other unit here which is providing mutual support to 227th so we'll select that and again we'll just let it fire for a short period around 6 minutes and we'll see what effect that has now run the game I'm pausing now because I've just noticed that the fifty first assault gun pattern here is routing or is route recovering selected and we'll have a look at its log we can see that it's taken taken some casualties and is routing and if we have a look here we can see it on the personnel bar that it's at start personnel was around the 30% mark whereas its current the lighter blue color current personnel strength around 54% so it it's only a small unit so when it loses a few men it takes a fairly significant chunk out of it and this affects its morale in this case if we have a look at the morale you can see it's already started to drop it's a very high quality unit though and it should be okay for now it will probably take the unit around about an hour to recover and that it will rejoin the battle hit the spacebar to run the game again not the enemy retreating poor thing again we have a situation here where our engineer company is now are treating if we select it and have a little bit of slog we can see it as taking casualties but it's morale is still high and it's only taking one or two casualties so it's in pretty good shape it will withdraw that 300 meters it will deploy and recover there for around 10 to 15 minutes and then rejoin the battle notice also briefly we would have seen the headquarters here retreat we now have an Intel report here of an enemy unit supposedly a company that's routing most likely that is the headquarters that has withdrawn but because of the heat of the battle the smoke and everything else the sighting report on that is not very good reliability is poor and so that's probably a misrepresentation of what was in fact the battalion headquarters for the enemy first 27th battalion note also that the enemy units that were heading towards the crossing from Lomas Villa are now in trouble we have a sighting here of the enemy artillery company here routing and the other unit has not made any progress so it looks like our overwatch group here has had a good effect we'll run the game I've just paused the game note we've received a report at the top of the screen at Oh 740 C company 35th tank battalion has reported to have destroyed the headquarter battalion unit the one we talked about just a minute ago also and most importantly note that the unit that was in front of the 318th is no longer it looks like it's routed off in this direction here this now opens the way for the 318th to Steinbrueck we can deal with these units here with our artillery so the question is do you now commit to Phase two and order the 35th tank battalion to attack from Steinbrueck - Lamas Vela I would counsel to wait until the 51st has secured Steinbrueck the reason for doing this is twofold one by securing stein brucke here you're actually securing the the forming up place for the 35th and to the 35th at the moment does not have any of its heavy tank units in B and C Company C Company is attached to the 51st and B companies in our overwatch group we don't really want to release the overwatch group while the enemy still company is still here however once 51st - secured Steinbrueck the attach C company can deal with it and then we can release the company and then we can order the attack select the fire support tab again select the 22nd Sartori ammunition is still good hit the B key and bombard this position here we'll just drag a little bit back this way to try and catch the retreating routing unit here as it flares back again right-click on here just six minute bombardment will be fine and will now run the game again no this is now despatched both these units and they'll be out of the action for quite a while 51st is approaching the town so the time is nearly there we'll just let it run for a few more minutes note the 318th is now making progress towards the town the 80/20 fourth engineering companies recovered and rejoining the batter li Hao I controlled artillery is bombarding the enemy's food company and we pause the game now as we've received a message saying we've achieved the Steinberg bridge objective well done well let the game run for just a few more minutes until the bulk of the fifty-first is over the river excellent you might have noticed the stub company routing off here under the weight of Tillery and direct fire if we select it now and have a look at its equipment we can now see that our estimate is it only has six stores left so it's been badly mauled and be out of action for some time which will be excellent but it is also an imperative why we need to order the attack now so we can take advantage of that now it's time to save the game beside this as toot phase one achieved feel free at this stage to peruse the battlefield have a look at the enemy Intel reports and have a look at your own forces and check the logs you may be surprised at just how active and inactive some units are and when you're ready open up tutorial movie number six phase two see you then | Panther Games | UCMyo3cXPNrcoY9-u-lezVEQ | 2013-12-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,309 | 17,487 |
h5pWNZdhMs0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5pWNZdhMs0 | Drone Employee | [Music] hi everyone if you haven't watched my previous videos I'm Kate and I am a junior research assistant at era lab today the topic is partnership err lab is open for collaboration it cooperates with many companies and today I'd like to share user information about one of such companies ladies and gentlemen John employee this organization helps companies hire John's Donna plane is a software for business owners who want to use Jones to film their clients monitor their facility or deliver goods they you fully autonomy to the drone no need for pilots because a drone flies itself but even more so the John is economically out enormous as well it can safely accept payment from a client create contracts with partners and it can even order air pair from a service company drone employee team uses etherium smart contracts to facilitate the process of creating autonomous drone bases so today we have an opportunity to ask a couple of questions to the chief marketing officer of drone employee vitaly hello thank you for a time so there is enough information in the internet of what drone employee has already reached but what is your team doing right now hello Katherine yeah thank you for inviting me and I'm always willing to share information about drone employee especially with our partners so drone employee is a software company that helps business owners higher drones for it could be for tasks like filming inspections and even delivery and our vision is that it should be as easy as possible for the business owner to start using a drone preferably as easy as hiring a human you just give a task to the human and then your she deliveries the value so that's that's what vision is for drone employee and to achieve that we believe that there are two things are necessary first the drone should fly completely on its own so business owner shouldn't hire additional pilots to manage your drone or things like that the drone should be able to take off and fly completely on its own but second thing in probably even more important is economic autonomy so the drone should be able to organize the mission completely on its own for example approve the route with a regulator then buy insurance for the plot for the flights check the mental conditions and see if the weather allows to fly right now maybe buy additional software for analysis if it's an instant complex inspection mission or if it's a delivery then transact with an autonomous landing station where the delivery is getting dropped so all those things we built in drone employee software and that is what we do vitally and the veil as a secret how many orders are planning to receive what demand I expect him well the drone market is pre nascent right now and all forecasts are adjust as functions of my opinion I would say currently the drone market depends a lot on licensed drone pilots and in US for example it's part 107 and those licensed drone pilots are the moving force for commercial drone industry right now but I personally believe that this is a short-term approach and manual flights will become irrelevant as soon as autonomous technology matures but this doesn't actually mean that Jon pilots will lose their jobs or anything like that actually I think that they will be the major driving force for creation of an autonomous drone stations and this is something that John employee software allows to create and this is just a natural natural step and the market will evolve as the pilots will have to evolve as well and so those licensed pilots will actually convert to drone business owners who will run a fleet of drones and offer a drone services to their local community think of it like a taxi park right now but with a fleet of autonomous drones and well if you want some numbers in yours for example there are 50,000 licensed drone pilots right now so it's 50,000 drone businesses already and by 2021 FAA expects there will be half a million children businesses each of each of them will be running a drone fleet and so they will though those companies will need tools to manage and automate their autonomous drone stations and this is where a drone employee could help them how have you managed their problem of John's economic autonomy well supply chain of a drone service is pretty complex and that is why achieving economic autonomy for a drone is pretty hard and there are a few sets of problems that we need to overcome before the economic autonomy is achieved and first is identification and verification of a drone so how do we make sure that this particular drone that is in the air right now belongs to our little company that is not doing anything prohibited and is actually providing value to the society and we believe that blockchain technology is actually ideal ideal to solve this problem because we could have an identity for a drone essentially digital license plate for a drone on let's say stadium blockchain and anybody in the community will be able to verify the job and nobody will be able to hack it the second set of problems is air traffic control so there are a lot of variety rectory sticks on the drone flights including material conditions and also topography data that needs to be stored for example for the city at locations where there are a lot of high-rises and the Jones should be able to avoid those obstacles for that we believe that ipfs network is an ideal solution where private and state companies can actually share information all together about the topography and weather and anybody in the community will be able to get access to it and to ensure the safe and legal use of drones well the third set of problems is communication how do you make sure that communication between drones and humans happen fast and secure and for that there is a protocol called whisper it's under development right now but drone employees believe that this is something that we could use in our products and it is essentially a p2p protocol that allows Jones to communicate directly without sending messages to any kind of central server and this ensures that messages will be sent fast and also securely and finally how do we create a framework so that human clients could order an autonomous drone without having to actually contact them the owner of this drone and for that we use smart contract mechanism which allows to give tasks to an autonomous robot in our case it is a drone and guarantee that when this contract is created with a drone that the drone will take off and goes delivers the parameters in this contract accordingly and the payment will go through only when those parameters will be achieved so this allow us to guarantee that missions will be flown safely and also all the parameters that the clients wants to achieve will be delivered in hundred percent of the cases what is your interest in using the technologies of air project why are you cooperating with us so as I mentioned we use blockchain technology and some other decentralized technologies to solve a wide range of problems on the drone market and smart contracts developed by our lab there they lie as a foundation for drone employee product we we believe that our lab is the most advanced company that is working on robot enemy and even more so IRA love actually shares our vision for robot autonomy and this is exactly the type of partner we need to build a global network of autonomous drone stations what opportunities can you get in the future what AMS do have now what results will receive in the near future well currently the drummer is freemasons and our company is going through proof of concept stage we are working on a few pilot projects with companies of all sizes from small businesses who wants to use Jones for filming and to corporate clients who wants to drone delivery and complex inspection missions so in the next couple of months we will do a pilot project in Saint Petersburg for eat more University where the drones powered by drone employee software will deliver packages from one campus of a university to another campus this is one of the first applications of drones for for delivery missions and we believe that this pilot project will be interested for our potential partners on a global scale all that is left is to thank you for your time thank you for inviting me I'm always willing to share information about drone employee and I wanted to especially thank our lab for being our technology partner and helping us creates the future we all wants to live in | Robonomics.network | UCrSiho1uB-1n6F8cZpCLhjQ | 2017-09-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,510 | 8,498 |
KqmOAtYdkyg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqmOAtYdkyg | We're going to stay warm | oh my goodness you're a little hippie chick you out and you played pants can I have these okay do we have everything including our cocktail system y'all every time we try to leave the house it is I get halfway down the road we do got to stop um the girl that works for us and we gotta drop her payday off and we got to drop off a hard drive that's got new prints for no shirts going up on the website the end did you tell them what we're doing no I just showed her a little hippie chick marker yeah he loves it because I got her bail bottoms it's so cute plaid bell bottoms at that found them at Walmart that was like 348 so score Win For Mama and CeCe we are heading to Lowe's right now you guys seen our window or doors in our big living room the front door and the back door to it is nothing but glass it's got those little we got to get some thick blackout curtains because it is letting so much cold air in with the linen curtains that I got up so you know times are crazy bills are high aggressors everything's high and if it'll help us in the slide to save on our electric bill throughout the winter we're going to get some hardcore blackout curtains if we can find them we are also trying we've got to get us a bigger propane heater because the one we have just ain't cutting it it's very tiny it was in the house when we bought it we're actually going to move that one down here to our shop and we got the split unit in the shop we're gonna see how it goes keeping it warm enough but I'm thinking January it's probably going to need a little bit of propane so we'll probably put that one down here so we got to try to find us a um propane heater too that at least 32 000 BTUs to keep our entire house warm if the power goes out the little one will not do it it just won't it don't cover enough square foot so that's the mission for today we're trying to find curtains and uh a propane heater I don't know what the deal is like it's supposed to be in the 40s all next week and you guys nobody here locally has propane heaters out like I don't know what's going on there's memo hey you going bye-bye tell me why look how handsome you look so pretty and Cece's got Bail bottoms on I'll put it right there I wanted to show you guys this will be up on the website by the time y'all see this video Peach Bella and canvas [Music] well not you because you just interrupted me wow she's just mind-blowing by all the Inflatables you see more so you sure about this yes I mean it's an investment but we'll have it the rest of our lives and see here this one's 30 000 BTU and it does 1200 square foot so that will keep our entire house warm if the power goes out our whole house will be warm power went out and we only had our little one water lines freezing and everything that'll help keep the floors warm everything all right little ones only 10 000 BTUs and it's got this little grade over it so it'll definitely keep little turkey fingers out of it yes that too yeah I'm talking about you buddy what are you throwing a fit about over here I see you I see you you're silly are you gonna you gonna go help your mama look for curtains that's his way of saying yes so we sat there and talked and I guess we've agreed we're gonna get the big one the smaller one they have it's 20 something uh those 800 square foot we always use propane electric heat is just not warm enough to me electric heat is costly so I would much rather use my gas we'll end up over the years saving money by doing that but me and Colton are going to to find curtains while Dad and sis we got to go all the way back to the house and Sean has to come all the way back and get it so we didn't bring two vehicles and we should have it's too big for my car I always run into this problem where we have those two bigger windows and then the two big doors I like my curtains to match because I'm OCD and that's just how it is these they have four of that will do the two big doors the family have four so I'm trying to find something that will match this color but that to me is just two different things going on driving me crazy but that's the problem I'm running into and I want to stick to blackout on all of them did you get it yes oh you're all done you should just want them down to run [Music] you just walked down I need somebody's trying to get past you oh oh you're fine sorry all right I'll hold you you're not getting down well you guys we decided to try Bob Evans This Time come on little girl this idea what the suckers was a bad idea you reckon yeah he's sticky well she is too so that's okay we are going to grab some food here and then head back to the house because Sean has to get the truck and come back over and get the heaters the last one that they had I don't know when they're going to get more I don't know what the deal is this is a cute little restaurant I don't think I've ever been in here before if I do I don't remember I got these quirky little straws for the kids they're cute Shawn's face says it all right now still sitting and wait 30 minutes yeah it's been 40 years I ain't a complainer but yay yay her patience is wearing out too Colton would you quit eating the crayon the shoe Well that took an hour and a half the food was okay it really was the food was okay it was just I think they're really understaffed and it's at a point where it's just struggle it should not take an hour and a half but they wasn't when there was like four people in the whole restaurant eating four tables that was it and it took an hour and a half to get our food and eat and get out well every single person was either going to the like I got one drink when I was in I think they only have one waitress and um it's struggle bust right now I kind of feel bad but at the same time I feel like everybody was like kind of spaced out and didn't know what they were supposed to be doing because I waited tables for years and uh I could have had yeah I could have everybody would have had their food might have just been one of those days I hate to put any business down you know how that is could have just been one of them days that could have been severely understaffed people didn't show up but we are heading back to the house now that's a good 35-40 minute drive then Sean has to get straight back in the truck and head straight back over here another 45 minutes pick up the fireplace and drive back so he's going to be gone till probably six o'clock here's the deal with the curtains it got a little chaotic there as well Colton was getting tired of sitting there I found four panels to go over the big front doors and the big back doors that I'm hoping will be wide enough to cover it I felt enough to go over the big Long Tall windows but they didn't have enough so like that is always my problem at Lowe's with the curtains I love Pikeville y'all it's like Sean does it because the traffic and I don't either we just neither one of us like heavy traffic at all I'm getting to the point I don't even like leaving the house oh yeah well we can't become just pure old hermit crabs okay I can no you we have a business to run and things to do well I know and then every bit of that can be done right from the house or on our property no we have to come to Lowe's to get things for the business quite often we I'm thinking from now on you got a mouse in your pockets hey for to be a woman Lowe's is one of my favorite stores Walmart's curtains their blackout curtains are okay but when you go to wash them the ones I got in the past I haven't bought any blackout curtains from Walmart probably like eight years because the last pair I did get I washed them and the whole back side of it it's kind of like that foamy plastic stuff but it destroyed them and I was like yeah I ain't doing that no more I blame you for this that's why I look like this and I'm not ashamed I'm in jogging pants too my phone ain't even out here well you need to get it and turn the ringer on they're supposed to call them it must be in the morning y'all let me just tell you the reason you're here now with us on a different day is because that thing would not fit in my car so we had to drive 45 minutes back pick up the truck drive 45 minutes back pick that booger up and drive another 45 minutes back home so we were on the road just until nine o'clock last night and it was way too late the kids they stayed with Davey the second trip back because they were done being in the car so Sean's mom kept them till we got but when we got home they were like I'm done with this damn ready for bed so that's what we've done this morning has been a trip though you guys garbage since the flood they lost trucks it's hard for them to keep workers right now and stuff this place is still missed but they haven't picked our garbage up in two weeks I finally got a hold of them it was a new driver I guess we're the last house in the hauler and so he hadn't been coming up here the last two weeks but they're going to let him know and hopefully they will be here tomorrow to pick up our two weeks worth of garbage besides that one of the machines this morning oh well not one both of the machines was acting crazy this morning so Sean was down there for four hours working on them and went through hundreds of dollars of ink and finally got them fixed a shirt order for some of the orders I kept looking and I'm like okay I told Lori I said send me the inventory list weren't there I called it kept trying to track the package it wouldn't work kept taking me to a blank page so I called the company and he was like yeah it's doing me the same way these are backup orders because this is twice twice he's like I'll try to get it figured out he's like we're working on it but it's already been took out of my bank account you guys have already paid so this is just frustrating they're supposed to call us back in 30 minutes and let us know what they figured out here's my solution repack my stuff and send it out because we never got it oh I feel like sometimes like why is everything just extra difficult anymore it used to be so simple you want to talk about extra difficult this thing has to be put together yes it does you didn't know that no Sean most of you got to put the fire pit together oh wow it is in sections Mercy foam can I tell you how much I hate foam especially the one that beads up and blows everywhere do you need help thank you [Music] I was half thinking that this was all together in the box and now all we had to do was take it out of the box and set it up look Ikea 2.0 here all right so I guess I'm putting this together [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] oh my God you broke it already that one is 32 000 BTUs so it will do a heck of a lot more than that teeny weeny little thing wheel propane is our main source of heat so this right here score now to be hooked up tomorrow hopefully that one's getting removed and going down to the shop for backup in case the power goes out because we got the split unit but if the power goes out we definitely need backup because of the ink and lines on our machine so Sean can sit down there and babysit propane if you had to they'll be here tomorrow or Thursday he said he's pretty sure Wednesday if not he'll be here Thursday to run the new lines and hook that up and it's supposed to be in the 30s and 40s next week so just in time okay so hours later we decided we didn't like the um mantle here the fireplace here because it looked bulky sitting out because of this dip here so we we've done a thing we removed the entertainment center put the TV on its stand and now the fire going with the TV it looks better it's not as bulky the TV is leaning backwards a little bit because of the standout but it's fine we're happy with it ain't no cords showing and everything is in its place for good because I think Sean will lost uh his mind if we had to do anything else but as far as my curtains you see they are the same I put the new ones up they're the same exact link but they're those The Grommet rings and it made them shorter and I didn't have enough to do that one and that one so we're either going to swap out or go return those and swap out or get more so that is the deal with that I'm super excited for them to get here and hook the fireplace up but now it's smooth selling it's not saying it was sitting out like way out here it just looked funny it has been 48 Hours nearly trying to get all this done and dealt with and a lot of other things with business but I'm tired Sean's tired we're gonna figure out what's for dinner because that what should have took an hour ended up turning into four ish by the time he had to go to Frazier's had to run to Walmart we tried a TV mount did not work because I think there's brick behind that wall so it's just been one of them so it is time to feed these kids and get ourselves bathed and get in the bed we will see you on the next one we love y'all stay positive Stay Country and stay true To Your Roots bye bye bye | The Hillbillies | UCZBJgKvfNYUeVNZehmjYLRg | 2022-10-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,648 | 12,993 |
ucos2gf_avI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ucos2gf_avI | Hairdresser Reacts To Box Dye Bleach Fails | hi beautiful look at you how long has it been since you washed your hair and somehow you still look stunning wow thank you for being here how we feel it we're doing good violin I think I'm extra excited today because we're watching some bleach fails you know you're fun to watch I mean I think I always had fun watching them however nowadays I get excited when I see a new one let's see just how ratchet these bleach files get today let's do it [Music] our first girl dip in her hands into some bleach is Mady sire and this is bleaching and dyeing my hair in quarantine huge fail I spent like 25 minutes looking at the shelves and all the colors and then after 25 minutes I turned around and I found these guys which are the Manic Panic okay this is exactly what I was looking for so I'm good now I have all the supplies I need and what oh wait her hair is so pretty to start it can only go down from here probably know her hair is absolutely gorgeous I love this color on her I feel like her ends are just slightly highlighted or her hair just grew out from highlights she had previously I love it it looks so good with that wave she has going on that formation oh we're going in with the box dye baby nice and bright then I got ah a gray kind of hair color it's okay Oh to do so this one it's cool to just like make it turn gray they didn't have any colors for some reason I really no okay what I have never seen in that box that kid ever in my life however I don't see a lot of bucks that kiss that one I've definitely never seen which is weird but also not weird because I don't frequent the box i aisle however that said 8s which means a level 8 probably silver I didn't know boxed I did silver now concerning is that permanent color I have so many questions that are not gonna get answered but that's okay let's move on okay looks a girl for a purple moment here I'm like the colors of them so once very very vibrant the other ones very dull but I think I want to do is like have one transition to the other which I do happen have word that sounds like a plan I've heard that if you mix these with conditioner they become lighter because like I correct that pastel kind of purple but this is very much though it's not pastel I'm hoping that I can mix it with something and then it'll become sure can I feel like I'm scared I think that's the emotion I'm feeling right now so she's a mixing up this color I think I just saw powder go in there which is weird I actually never knew these people did bleach these box dye companies okay so she's starting on the ends which I love to see you guys know me you know I love the ends colored first if you're doing something like this and GE we used to color ends first cuz you know if she hits those roots first they're gonna get really light really bright really fast and it's not gonna be good however what happened to sectioning we're just not going to section anything yeah playing games not going this is not correct don't do this no no what is she doing we gotta take sections we gotta go in there we gonna be we're gonna have some precision with this man she has so much hair too and they're not putting enough bleach yeah you need a lot more than that girl there's no bleach in this girl's hair at all this is going to be so spotty and it's terrible but this will pandemic is over I can just get a hairdresser face it no no no that's not how it works no you can't just get a hairdresser to fix it uh well you can but it's gonna cost you a lot of money cuz color Corrections are pretty much the most costly thing you can get done at a salon actually I would say they are besides like hair extensions and like you know things like that but color Corrections oh boom pay me all that money make the band's what is it make that make him make the band's pay the bank what it's so dry probably do a mixture of these guys I don't know yeah we'll see how the police turns out first oh there's no hope right now yeah I'll see you then all right I'll see you so now okay I like the little technique we are on here we're doing the weirdo in the ends first we're waiting like 20 minutes and then we're doing the roots I love that I mean it's better than like nothing you know I mean I didn't have the wait that long I mean your ends were already light but whatever I'll take it Oh baby baby girls Oh get it you have to get it all into my hair like into the roots just no okay my anxiety is kicking in a little bit apparently starting to look good in what world is it looking good you know we're all in the galaxy I'm not trying to bring up friendships here but I think your friends lime do you oh shoot oh shoot oh my god people do that all the time oh that works me even hairdressers do it too a little bit on the hairline always like gets missed I don't know what that is like I purposely go over that three thousand times to make sure that it's not miss like Oh baby Jesus Oh baby oh you did it girl you ruined your hair oh it looked so good before what happened [Music] don't put purple over that don't tell me you're putting purple over that don't don't do it she is such nice hair it could have been so good after like crying I had cooked the terms gonna be a lot worse you know that's true we've all seen our fair share of those videos where they go bald at least you didn't go bald okay hey bull it's not gonna be okay girl you're gonna try and put purple over that yeah like the dark blue and the purple that's so definitely a plan at least we're doing the darker to lighter gradient on her hair that will help the unevenness I don't think when you put the purple over the orange just gonna turn like a brown color but my hair is dry now so I guess it's time to move on to color okay looks good in that light actually it doesn't look horrible in that way glad we're learning from our mistakes that's all that matters we're gonna suction it better this time it was recommended to me and I'm not gonna do that okay yeah that color is definitely not dark enough to go over that orange I mean you could probably get away with putting a purple over your hair or a blue and making it work as long as it's like really dark blue or really dark purple um however the color you're using is not dark enough oh yeah your roots where your hair is blonde the rest is mucky and gross Oh figure out how many minutes that's not dark enough that's not gonna do it for ya bachchi [Music] it's so bad I already know it it's gonna be so bad oh my god it looks ten times worse it looks ten times worse than it did before I thought the top was gonna be easier to color than the bottom but clearly her ends are very dry and porous and sucked in that purple color and the roots are very healthy and they were just like nope we need something stronger and darker thank you oh hey yeah and it's look kind of good okay and make it look good so for some reason only half the dive stayed in my hair it makes sense for the top not to be colored you know because it's healthy hair but the color literally just fell out of her roots that's kind of weird and her hands are like actually purple which I'm surprised about so just the bottom part stayed in the blue just decided to like peace out it was like yo I ain't staying here it's not fun here I know what the blue kind it is it kind of toned it like the top is a little bit less orange you know kind of more like a toned we're not gonna fix it you leave me like this like on camera and stuff it doesn't look terrible but in person it looks so squatchy and just like hockey and everything I've heard that this stuff never comes out well that's where she leaves it guys with those orange roots and the purple ends listen you could actually make the orange roots work why don't you just color them brighter orange that way it looks purposeful like you wanted a orange root and purple ends that would actually be cool and very unique and fun I think you should go for it with that yeah that's the decision thank you for making that video next time oh do a lot of things different please your hair could have fallen out so I guess it could have been worse but it went pretty bad all right let's move on all right up next we have Angela a boss and this is bleaching my hair at home part one disaster ooh it's a saga I love those all right let's see what happens to go from this which is pretty and dark there's a little bit of brown in there but it's okay side part you want my gay that I'm going to first lighten my hair what is that die soon I'm going to go in with the bleach everything about the box I come with it's official I've ever known she said she's going to first dye it with the color the Box die color and then she's going to bleach it after because for whatever reason in her head that made sense I'm not judging you because a lot of things that I say in my own head make zero sense developer it comes with the color and it comes with a little packet of conditioner to wash your hair afterwards and consulate direction it also comes with two gloves my mixture seems pretty good if there's this little tip thing on the top you have to cut it off so you can squeeze out the dye there you go the diet guy goes on your head not in the box check your hands dying on them and from staining your hands also if you're bleaching and protects your skin from pretty much kind of legs burning off put it on my hands like that created my hair okay not covering my forehead because that's a big forehead and I'm really self-conscious but it doesn't leave on pretty show your forehead is I will come back in 30 minutes and we'll wash it off I mean I was hoping that it was going to lighten a lot more it will attempt to go in so assuming that what the hair you were starting with was your natural hair color assuming that what you just did was put artificial color into your hair which is much much harder to lighten than natural hair color so you basically took one step back instead of one step forward from where you previously were originally and you just made this all twenty times harder and you go girl once you open the packet it comes with the developer and it comes with the highlighting powder that's enough for a toddler's head it's harder then once that is mixed you have to mix in the protective cream and then we have to shampoo our hair and it actually comes with a toner why are we starting right there I mean at least we're not going on the route first I'll take that we are going on the road we are all the way here so you should not go that close either that's not gonna make a difference you got to go at least like an inch and a half away from your route I'm kind of freaking out because it looks I'm kind of expecting it to come orange listen girl I know we all have insecurities but I just have to tell you that your forehead is normal-sized and you've a beautiful forehead I know that might not change anything because that's how you see yourself but girl your forehead looks hella normal I got to tell you also if you're insecure by your forehead try a middle part and doing some side swept bangs that'll really help you I'm sure I feel a little more confident about your forehead that's how my hair turn a business suit you know I was expecting a really ugly color uh-huh really prepared to look at it but this is just the process of going from really really dark to platinum blonde I for sure need to do another leak yes we do we do do do do do a lot better I already kind of heal the damage so I'm really really scared the worst part I think is that our ends are four shades darker than our roots we see it time and time again guys please tell me she's gonna start on the end or ahead so I'm using the Clairol foliage one I don't know like I just don't know I don't know if people are aware that there is like bleach you can just buy like a you can buy like a tub of it and you can buy developer for it and that's all you really need but instead people decide to like go and spend like twice as much money on things that don't work for their hair like these box kits I don't even have enough color in them to cover your whole head is there something that I'm missing is it me I don't know whatever and I bought two boxes they didn't have greats toner toner because on the purple shampoo perfect through Thor and I just went to like hair section but they did have the brass Tomy purple shampoo and conditioner saturated all of my hair I used up every single drop of and I had my boy help me with the back this time so it's a little bit more even is there bleaching her I felt like it wasn't enough we each should have got two boxes nothing happened I feel like it's a little more yellowy like I see more yellow peeking through worse still quite boring just the end the purple shampoo and the purple shampoo comes out really that's not gonna do anything on before yeah purple cancels out yellow blue cancels out orange you have orange hair you be blue when the purple shampoo was in my hair Mayer look nothing happened what is it brush the conditioner was actually blue and when it was in my hair looks really good okay fast-forwarding she's doing another box died believe it or not I were using foils now we love incue bation let's get it heated up fun she needs that heat from the foil on the ends for sure you know if she was Miss law at this point I would slap her hair with some 30 volume and some bleach put it every little piece in foils why would you think most clean little sections and the little tiny foils that hack them onto her head you like 200 of them then after it's all processed her ends are nice and bright white all the foils out slightly do her route get all that really white tone at the hook up and it'll be perfect it's lighter yes we did something not platinum like how I wanted it but I think it might be ready for a toner my card no and until another week your hair has to be a level 10 to tone it your hair is at a level 8 right now you got two more levels to go up before you can tone it to platinum there is blonde there's orange and then there's like some icy part Oh those ends are crispy evenly I try let's go into part two real quick and see what happens and we'll go to part 3 yeah bleep the orange pieces and avoid like the very few very she's back out in the cabin guys and fall off and then I and covering up all of my at least we are not touching the damaged ends you guys were so great you left a lot of comments so I bought some stuff as per your recommendation oh thank god the 40 developer and I bought 2 packs I think I'm just going to use one this is the Loreal quick blue ok I approve of the quick blue not of the 40 volume 30 volume would've been just fine but that's ok 218 like a swan toner and the developer I'm creating a blonde toner and retiring all I'm gonna do I'm creating a blonde toner and retiring since everybody in the world seems to just grab t18 some freezes she's starting on the top of her head still start on the bottom and work their way up it'll make it a lot easier I'm a lot more organized because you are laying the hair on top of itself as you go up and not trying to flip it over I don't know I don't think my hair is going to lift like any more than this without completely frying yet I blabbered on conditioner oh it's starting to fall out it's starting to come out it's starting to come out oh shoot no more leaking whatever color it shall be but I am going to go in with T 18 and 20 volume that's not good t 18 doesn't work on orange hair do I have to scream it from the rooftops ok so she's put the T 18 in and let's see how it does nothing in a second we're gonna walk it out and then we'll see so this is it did nothing but it surprised time and time again you guys it doesn't work it's still not gonna work ever there's not the toner did such a good job a light color I didn't do anything excited about this part 3 let's hit it what could she possibly do in part 3 that she hasn't already done so you guys remember my first bleaching my hair on video I think this looks a lot so this was like the third time I bleached my hair is when I use this one and I'm sorry I don't mean to live like that lift it gave me I'm hoping that since I'm so light already I can finally get to this platinum blonde why are we buying the box die again I could not tell you why we resorted back to the box die I really couldn't I felt like really saturated like that actually looks very well saturated I will say that maybe we're onto something do I have my oh wait show me it again Billie like this toner and thus far worked really well laughing okay her hair has actually add a pretty decent color now the thing is she's gonna have to use the right toner and t18 is not the right toner for her in order to get that really nice blond color I would definitely recommend her doing a root shadow in this situation doing like a level 8 ash on the top of her head and then doing like a level 9 neutral on the bottom of her hair would be best probably this t18 is not gonna cut it girl Wow amazing like you're giving t18 way too much credit right now girl yeah kinda like peeling off and I know that sounds really really disgusting but I think it was because when I was bleaching my hair I was lathering the bleach on to my scalp like so much please struggle over trying to get rid of my group and I think I just lather too much on makeup guys bleach doesn't love her bleach doesn't lather which doesn't bother with just my other up and it really irritated it I didn't say it in the video while I was leaking my Scout look kind of very like sensitive alright alright alright alright so this is basically the outcome I don't think she looks bad at all I think it's definitely wearable could it be a lot better yes could it have been and done a lot easier yes here's the thing girl right now at this stage I really wouldn't recommend doing it at home but if you're gonna do it anyways then go in with some 30 volume and Lightner on those dark spots okay please avoid the hair that is super light going on those dark spots use those foils again don't use box dye then go in with actual toners and not permanent color like t18 it'll really help you need something a little darker try like a level 9 probably be good for you you made a lot of progress from that dark hair to this pretty proud of you but boy was it a struggle you look fabulous all right wow those were some wild bleaching I'm still not quite over it but that's all I have for you today guys don't forget to follow me on all of the social media and networks around the world you can follow me on Instagram and Twitter and tik-tok at brad mondo my is si you can also see my facebook page and my snapchat show under Brad mondo and if you would like to get the hair of your dreams check out ex mono hair and calm for a beautiful fabulous amazing care products that are made and created by me and it makes you check out ex mono hair on Instagram to stay up to date with new product launches happening very soon that's all for today guys thank you so much for watching it don't forget to live your extra life and I'll see you next time bye guys this is Viper smoothing oil this oil is a combination of all of my favorites it has boba oil argan oil carrot seed oil now what sets its oil apart is it really penetrates the hair cuticle it goes deep inside instead of just laying on top of the hair and adding a greasy film it's gonna actually go inside helps apply nutrition hydrate and add a lot of shine | Brad Mondo | UCoc_XJPj6YLMQDWtPDQcDtA | 2020-05-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,916 | 19,506 |
wFUVhbC1ziE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFUVhbC1ziE | Lessons from Kobe Bryant! Dr. MarcK Abraham #1 Success Speaker in the world! | [Music] foreign [Music] hey you all this is Pastor still listen I'm so excited about my friend's book Dr Mark Abraham listen make sure you get your hands on this book I believe this book is going to be life-changing we had such an awesome time with hearing that Kingdom Church she did an excellent job speaking about the book and I really believe that education can literally help break the back of that spirit that that tries to stop us from learning so make sure you get your hands on that good morning good morning good morning good morning good afternoon good afternoon good afternoon good evening good evening good evening buddies no chance buenos dias bonjour but we was happening how your mom and them how your auntie them how you come to them how your family them what's good family listen it's a little earlier than the time that we usually get on on Saturday but I got a 6 a.m flight tomorrow morning so I got to try to get everything in in a couple hours so um you know I got to I got to move I got the move I got the moves I'm sorry I apologize if I'm early and you if you if you come on time and I can't early if you came late and I came early you didn't show up and I still showed up my bad my bad so 274 days we've been here 274 days um well we praying for Jennifer's travel emergency should get back safe we've been here for 274 days every single day only missed one day 274 days live didn't miss a beat didn't miss one turn and we are here so what are we talking about who Who Am I who are you what were we talking about what what it is what what are we doing on this Saturday if you do not know who I am my name is Dr Mark Abraham I'm the president and CEO of mea Consulting Services LLC the fastest growing consulting company in the country and I am the number one numeral Uno number one success speaker in the world and I'm so blessed to be here with my success family somebody said what's the success family this is a group of individuals that always win always have success always overcome always figure out a way to make it this is some of the most amazing people in the universe and I'm so blessed to be here with my family somebody said who's that that's you you part of success family that is you you are the success family so listen family I was reflecting over this yesterday I was reflecting over this because sometimes people ask me they say things like man how have you had so much success so quickly and I thought about this I thought about this yesterday I said man huh I've been I've been working with young people I've Been Working for with young people since I've been oh 22 22 to 23 hours I started off as a a mentor uh for kids who are troubled youth will go into their houses and and do one-on-one mentoring with them um and then and then from there um I I work for I work for a company called uh Southwest keys where if kids were finding themselves in in trouble I would be the one that would be like the conduit that prevented them from going to jail um and then doing that I obtain my master's degree um and then I started working as a school counselor at schools and then from there I went on to become uh a dean of students at a high school and then I became an assistant principal and then I became a principal and then I did while becoming a principal I did research on you know successful strategies principles use to increase graduation rates for young men of color then I wrote a book then I traveled up and down the state of New York helping principals on successful strategies to turn their school around then I wrote at least five nationally published articles and then from there uh in the last two years have traveled all around the country working with school leaders and principals on you know how to perform and help kids be successful so um in the midst of that you know we got about close to 700 YouTube videos up uh talking about success so when people say things like you know how have you been able to do something in such a short period of time yeah we're talking about we're talking about it was 23 22 of the 15 16 years of of work with 15 16 years of work and continually developing my skills and and and and and and in a host of education and and and and and constant putting in effort so so when you see me here um don't don't don't get it twisted I've been doing this for a long time I've been I've been I've been doing this for a very very long time um and and so this this isn't somebody who just showed up on the whim this is somebody who's been here so so when folks when folks say things like how did you have such how did you create such success so quick there ain't nothing quick about this like like this is there's nothing quick about you know what I've been able to to do thus far and and just because I I'm not in a physical building or I'm not an employee anymore that doesn't mean that um I I I I have left the profession or left the field so so so that that's that's really um really uh the the the the the the the the the truth of the matter that's really true for matter that that that that I've been doing this for a very very long time so don't don't think in your mind that you're supposed to just have something that just comes quick because things that come quick things that things that that come to you quick often you haven't built enough of a foundation you haven't poured a deep enough foundation for there to be sustainability um in in boating they have something called a Kill when you see boats that have like um like like uh you see speed boats but then you have sailboats you you might see a sailboat that's in the water and the sailboat is just kind of just cutting through the water and you see the sailboats and you say well how's that stuff all this you know that subwo just looks like it's just getting through the water and it's amazing there's there's something under the boat called a kill it it it is a it's like a it so say this is the boat you see under the boat there's like something that goes under the boat and it's a kill and that kill helps the boat get through the water the the kill is oftentimes on a good boat like six feet so you see the boat here but Six Feet Under the boat there's a there's like a a let's think about it as like a large metal um pipe a large metal thing that is allowing um that is allowing the thing to act the boat to actually cut through the water so you wanna when you talk about the foundation the foundation is having enough depth that you can sustain the storm because that depth when the wind blows allows you not to be moved when you don't have that level of depth when you don't have that level of foundation when the storms hit you get blown over so so people a lot of people want success but they don't want success when no one is looking and no one is around that's your foundation right everybody likes the the nice pretty house on the on on the on the surface but but what really is sustains that house is the foundation is what's under and so when I tell you that I've been doing this work for a long time we're talking about you know 15 16 years of doing his work and and and and and in a host of you know degrees and accomplishments and obtaining the things that I've obtained over the the course of this time that's the foundation that's the stuff that I was doing when nobody was watching when no one was there when no one can see but God right and so that's the foundation and so when you see people jump out and say well this is what I want to do you have to be careful and be mindful of trying to just trying to jump out real quick to just do something because you jump out real quick to try to do something without the foundation when the wind blows you're gonna get knocked over when the waves hit you're gonna fall why because your trunk and your base isn't strong enough to keep you through the hard times so when I talk about those sailboats that have to kill under that's six feet under and the boats that I ride in that are just you know little speed boats me and that sailboat will go through the same way through the same wind that sailboat will go through it gracefully and get through it and my bow to be all up and down all around why because I don't have anything under me keeping me so so what am I saying the thing that keeps you through the storm the thing that keeps you through everything that you have been through is your foundation it's your trunk it's your base it is the work that you have done that nobody saw it's the work that you put in before you showed up so when you show up you you can you can have enough strength to withstand the pressures of the day I titled this a lessons for Kobe this ain't the lesson that I learned from Kobe I talked about it yesterday while I was at a boat but this is a this is a profound message but this is a powerful message because because our success does not happen or development our development happens before the Applause comes our success happens before you get the flowers before anyone shows up before anybody says great job before anybody says oh you're the man before anybody says that's not when your success comes your success happens in the back of the booth where nobody's watching when you're developing your character when you're doing things like like like you know you're working at the organization and and and you started from the bottom and you know everything about the organization so that when you get to the top when you get to the top there is no there is no you feel trepidations about certain things because you you don't feel equipped to be there why because you know everything about this situation you know everything about this organization because you you were built you were built from the ground up this is why when I walk into any room any state any country anywhere that I go I stand there confidently and speak confidently and speak boldly without any trepidation without any fear I might get nervous because you're in the front of a new crowd and there's a little bit of an entertainment but but there's nothing that shakes me when it comes to what I do and what I know because I've done it for so long and I've done it for so long from multiple different facets and most multiple different angles I've seen it from this angle from that angle from this angle from that angle and and I examined it from this angle and that angle and this angle and that angle so so when someone says well Mark you know you seem to just have so much success so quick to say quick Man this ain't quick and I'm still trying to you know uh get to the next level I'm still pushing to get to the next level I'm still pushing to try to get to that place where it's like you know um the the man it's it's comedy man it's comical that the people that I get around that says well you know people have to see you as as this or that and you have to Brand yourself as this and that and I don't I never get interested in that though I never get as I said enough oh well you got to Brand yourself as a as this person that person or this person um yeah I I don't get interested in that I I I don't get interested in trying to force something to to try to you're trying to make something right like like oh yeah I just looked at my um my Facebook page and said it has 6400 people following me and um you know four thousand four thousand forty nine hundred friends on Facebook you know I don't know if the 64 is included in the in 49 or vice versa I don't know but say say it's not you know that's a lot of people I remember when I only had like 500 Facebook friends I remember when I had like a thousand not even a hundred Instagram followers like I remember that that one too long ago that's probably like two three years ago and and I didn't go out to try to like you know make my own reputation like trying to hire all these marketing people to try to Brand me as this and get me in front of this camera and get me in front of this person I'm trying to do that I I I I I I truly believe in in an organic growth in a in a growth that is Brick by Brick step by step hard nose you know build it build it from the ground up build it you know it might take longer to get there it might take longer to get to the end it might take longer to get to the to the destination but but when you get there you solid your thought why because you'd have been through so much like like I I could try to get somebody to put me on and try to force somebody to put me on and say hey just put me on your YouTube page and just help me grow or pay to play give somebody a couple thousand dollars say put me on your YouTube page so that my girl my but for what for what oh only so that somebody can get in there and then be disappointed because I don't have sustainability sustainability says is I'm doing it every single day and I'm getting hard and I'm getting tougher and I'm getting stronger your body is getting harder and getting stronger and getting tougher your skill set is getting stronger and getting harder and getting tougher so when you are encountered with whatever it is you're encountered you can stand in the midst I think that's the difference between um the following God's plan and and then trying to do and you know people say they sold their soul to the devil like I think that's the difference I think the biggest difference is the devil wants to give it to you easy without sustainability and he wants to pull it right back from you I I I really think that's the trick that let me try to give it to you easy without the work without the effort without doing it every single day without without without the the the pain that comes with doing it all the time every time versus God's way of saying that once you get to the end once you actually arrive that you are fortified and certified verified and no one can take that from you because you work for you work for you put the time in for it you put the ever I went to a football game yesterday all these young people every time they see me they gapping me up they're showing me love why because I put the work in and put the work in I put the work in and and and so and so you know for for whatever it is your craft is for whatever it is that you want to do with your life whatever it is that you are seeking to to accomplish put the time in you know one thing I love about my older sister my my godmother she's in Tennessee right now working um she's been an extra attack I mean she been an x-ray text for about 20 years ain't nothing you could tell her about about that that field there's nothing she she know she didn't seen all of the new x-ray machines that came out she she can travel from Georgia to Tennessee to to Atlanta uh Georgia to New York all around the country showing people how to do this stuff and that's what she does now she travels up and down the country showing folks how to you know how to be good X-ray tech right but nobody can't tell how to do that she knows that she doesn't seen almost every type of patient there is he's been doing it for about over 20 years she'll be doing that forever nobody can't tell her about that you know and if somebody tries to to try to say well hey Luke can you come over here and train uh x-ray text that that there would be no like no she can of course she can she's been doing it for so long so that's all I'm saying this is Is We I think sometimes we want success but we want it quickly we want success but we want it right now versus saying we're willing to do the work over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again and keep developing our skills and keep moving up and when I think about it every step that I went to the next level is is it's been God taking me to the next level and and ascending to the place where I'm at now was like I started off as a as a mentor and then a counselor and then an in-home therapist and then a school counselor and then the dean of students the dinner assistant principal until the principal to now our coach principals every time I got to the next level God has taken me there and because I was faithful and I cared and kept my vision and kept my mission intact and kept my why intact and make sure that I did it for the right reasons he keeps taking me to the next level so I don't know the next level after this I don't know the next level after this but but I know that you know I I did I I wrote down yesterday if you look at that post um I remember the post you know I said I I think in the last two years I've spoken in over 12 to 13 different states and consultant from from from from New Jersey to New York to Utah to Alaska to Florida to to Georgia to Texas to Kentucky to you know uh uh uh uh Pennsylvania to to just just all over the country just spreading a message and and and interacting with so many people but but that's only God that's God that's God and God Alone so the message was a lesson from Kobe and I was going to tell you the lesson from Kobe but I just think we went on on the tangent on this one and um someone said we you went on on a tangent um yeah the the message a little bit but but I you know I really don't have a title for this um I think I think if there was a title it would be something like um the you know the the the the the the foundation for success I don't know um but hear me good your foundation needs to be solid your foundation needs to be solid so that when you build the house when the pressure comes when the waves come when the storm comes when the it doesn't just topple over because your foundation is strong your foundation is strong the foundation if you came on late I apologize I got here at 8am I got to I got to move I got like you know there's things I got to do today is first of the month you know how that goes um so I'm just trying to get up out of here because I gotta I gotta I gotta I gotta be at the airport tomorrow at 4 30 A.M so I'll be flying in I'm going back to Cali Going Back to Cali Cali Cali and it's just I mean it's just so so amazing man one thing I think is amazing is I think it's amazing that I can travel to all these different states and I haven't gone into Nashville yet haven't gone into Nashville yet but I'm coming I'm coming whatever country you want to bring me in I'm on my way if you want to bring me to Uganda I'm on my way but you know it's just the thing that is just it's just a beautiful thing to be able to travel to all these different places and God opened up the door for for these things to happen and so I said to you I say this to you for real real talk um man whatever it is that you do whatever it is that you're passionate is doing keep doing it like keep doing it like keep keep keep after it because your foundation is being built and and don't try to get you know don't try to have quick wins quick successes quick quick quick quick because quick anything is not sustainable it ain't sustainable you know it's not sustainable I feel like there's so much more I have to say but I'm I'm gonna end it I just want to make sure I'm not missing anything no I think so I don't think so Lord if anything else you want me to say before I get up out of here God loves you um stick with it and and never give up because because when I was mentoring young people I never thought that I would be a president I never thought that I was going to be a principal of a school I never thought that I would be assistant principal but I never thought I was going to be a Dean I was just kind of growing I was just growing I was just developer now that I'm a coach of principals I'm a joining us I enjoy this I enjoy the process I enjoy the hunt I enjoy seeing them change I enjoy being that that ear for them and I'm impacting you know probably about close to 20 000 kids around the country one kid to having a a group of ten to then having having uh 500 kids to having uh uh 600 kids that then responsible for you know uh a thousand kids then 1200 kids then now we're talking about cost 20 000 kids around the country that impacted educators are touching over 20 000 kids me me Mark Abrams it's wild man but God but God so let's make our affirmations and let's get up out of here uh have an amazing Saturday I know how to do my prayer at the beginning I know I know forgive me forgive me but let's make our affirmations and get up out of here y'all ready 2022 is my year I am blessed I am the header not to tell I am above only and not beneath everything my hand touched prospers wealth and riches are in my house I'm a multi-millionaire for the kingdom of God I'm blessed in the city I'm blessed in the field my mind is whole my body is whole everything I touch prospers in Jesus name amen yo family do not give up on your dream do not give up on the place that you're in right now don't give up on yourself and enjoy Where You Are don't be touching the haste to try to look to the future of what's coming next be in the moment be present love what you're doing in the moment stop looking to tomorrow like oh well what's tomorrow tomorrow's going to take care of tomorrow do what you're doing right now all right all right family so um I don't know I gotta figure out what I'm gonna do for tomorrow because um maybe I think I get to Atlanta about nine A.M I get to Atlanta about nine a.m so I don't know how we'll figure this out but we'll figure out tomorrow for more the affirmation but 8 30 8 30 tomorrow look out for me put the alerts on I think if you put the alert for me it'll pop up every time I get on live or something like that so if you put the alert on that might be easier for you so you won't miss it all right love you peace [Music] foreign [Music] | Dr. Marck Abraham | UC68bMuNu85Yq3XrR7hDJgEw | 2022-10-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,345 | 21,683 |
V04VOPcHKVw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V04VOPcHKVw | Aloy Gets Jealous of Varl & Zo Kissing Scene - Horizon Forbidden West | perfect um hmm i found [Music] it's okay i'm here i've got it [Music] hey easy easy there hey hey hey hey it's right here and the way you were clutching it when i found you in knew it was important where are we an outpost of the uttaru tribe not far from where you fell how long two days there's no time i found something yeah i kept watering it while i carried you okay whatever it is that you found you're in no shape i will crawl if i have too far okay fine but before you do that there's someone you should talk to an utaru named zou and she told me there's been trouble in those mountains a cave spitting out deadly machines can't be a coincidence right why do we need her let's head for the cave it's in uttaru territory her territory she can help us you'll see fine let's go see this marvelous [Music] so she should be in bed alloy doesn't really do you're so right we're all said i should talk to you about the machines in the mountains west of plain song i am a grave singer my place is here we can talk once you've healed [Applause] what's wrong with it her name is rey not it she's one of our land gods and she's dying but not just dying she's suffering her condition is not your concern so if anyone can help it's a loy may [Music] so what i'm about to do might look bad but it will help [Music] spear [Music] hmm i still need to talk of course but this way [Music] [Applause] the mountains west of plain song no trouble out there the otaru have trouble everywhere our fields blighted our settlements abandoned but the cave in the mountains is the worst of it it is a sacred place far another of our land gods went inside weeks ago but she hasn't emerged killer machines pour out instead threatening to overwhelm us it's never happened before wouldn't be your first sacred cave [Music] i need to get into that cave what no one does that well it's time to make an exception it belongs to the land gods luxo there is something inside there something that could solve problems all over the world storms the derangement maybe even your broken land gods what could possibly do all that a spirit yeah something like that i could journey back to plain song assemble the chorus tell how you soothed rey ask their permission to go inside great i'll get my thanks she needs a rest you don't have to tell me i'm fine [Music] assembling the chorus will take time heal first then join me fine bed rest i got it she does not need you to help her heal you could come with me to plain song lend your voice to mine as i try to persuade the chorus it might help her cause i'd like to but i'm afraid she might run off really very well later then so wait it's not uh that i don't want to go with you it's just [Music] is that what you were trying to say um [Music] yes then i look forward to more conversation uh yeah me too you're supposed to be resting oh you should go with her i'll get better on my own you're trying to get rid of me so you can no not this time i'll meet up with you in plain selling when i'm ready you sure about this yes go get out of here okay [Music] so wait [Music] who are they [Music] okay all held up | LunarGaming | UCmF3ZcCBFUD-mcwg-r3SMyA | 2022-02-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 618 | 3,121 |
GVgNysMBPWM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVgNysMBPWM | Uncivilized Profits - What it is and How it Makes You Money | hey there this is Glendon Cameron founder of hustlers kungfu welcome to uncivilized profits I know it's a different name but I'm going to get down to what you really want to know well it's this course about and how will it help you first of all we're going to discuss something very very important in terms of making money online and that is audience many people think that Donald Trump soul people on certain attributes of his campaign that is entirely false what Donald Trump did was find an audience and give them what they want it very important distinctions very important nuances and you learning these techniques will make you money and we'll give you a few examples when i started in 2009 online my audience was very small and i knew that going in one of the reasons that i had such a high price point on my product but my income goals were pretty pretty small 50,000 a year that's all going to make because i had other ambitions i found an audience and this is how i found it i went to youtube and i started looking up for people doing storage auctions craigslist garage sales and found out there was maybe three people talking about the subject matter at that point i went in and i dominated so anyone that was looking for that type of information they found me because there weren't many people serve an audience then due to sheer circumstances not one not two but three television shows came on which vastly increased my audience but the thing doesn't change what we're going to learn taking some of the tactics from Donald Trump is how to find and the audience observe that audience analyze that audience and then give them what they want now one of the things that I do is I teach in cell which is very hard but I'm comfortable with the rigors of that an easier path is to find an audience that already once within just give them what they want the second example is I write erotic literature this is a very good example on audience I just wrote some books in publi didn't have an editor look at it did it all myself throw it up on amazon and i got a sale on my first day why romance the biggest segment of literature is so huge there's so many people always looking for new material that I could take a okay book self publish it put it on amazon and make money in a very short period of time because the audience is so big and in that audience there's so many categories so that's a few examples of the power of audience now let's talk about Donald Trump and we're going to get to what you're going to learn in this course and the outcomes 2011 and this is part of the course i did this video titled the new BMW beach white males and this was things that came from my observation of how the marketplace has shifted because typically from a demographical standpoint white men haven't really suffered as much as other people in certain categories due to the history of America which was rooted in racism and other things so imagine my surprise 2011 I'm having conversations I'm having consults on since all of these white guys 2009 to two thousand twelve ninety-five percent of my audience were white men and why was my audience composed of white men at first I thought because of being in the storage auction business that it's just other people really weren't interested and as I talk to people they lost their jobs they lost their opportunities they had to make money they had kids to have wives they had child supports they were going through all kinds of Hell so when I put out there to hate for little money you can get in this business and you can make a little more income very fast looks like hey magic potion pointment on wounds they were coming and coming and then later on after I kind of sat down and looked at it and they looked at the video again and it hit me that audience that I found in 2011 it's the audience that propelled Donald Trump to the highest office in the land and the reason is those conditions that happen in two thousand six cuz the recession will start in two thousand six I saw it in my business in terms of my clients demographic change many of these people have never recovered they've never recovered and that audience continue to get bigger and bigger and bigger and they were frustrated and what you know and once again don't trunk didn't sell them anything he and his research team reached in there they talked to these people and they figured out what they wanted to hear and they said it that's what he that's what he did he didn't sell him anything he just gave them what they wanted that's why they didn't care what he did that's why they didn't care when he said grab them by the and all that they didn't care because he was the only person that was speaking in a language that he understood and appreciated and they were tired and weary now that's the mechanics of this right the reality is he cannot fulfill many of these promises but let's pause doesn't matter when you find your audience and you find out exactly what they want and you start to give it to them just a promise of giving it to them it's enough to make you money now if you have the ability and we're going to talk about that to actually fulfill those desires and once we're talking millions to billions of dollars if the audience is big enough and another thing like some of you move in bloggers and you started writing about your passion if your passion or your or your hobby is in alignment with a large audience you can make a lot of money youtubing blogging vlogging any of these things but if you're passion is an in lineman with an audience that is of enough size to pay you you can do everything perfectly you can do SEO you can do all of this stuff and still not make a penny because the money is in the audience not the service or the product what we're going to do here is teach you how to find an audience how to analyze an audience and put together a plan to serve that audience for profit that is the outcome of taking this course do you need to be in business to take this course know if you're in business I will say this course will drastically erratically enhance what you're already doing do you need to have a degree or in no do you need to quit your job no the course is going to be laid out like this you're going to have modules and you're going to have real homework the first module includes reading a few articles watching that video and writing a thousand word paper of what you learn now the purpose of this is many people passively consume content by actively going through those articles watching that video and writing a papal a paper you will dramatically enhance your learning and enhance your retaining this information thus you'll move faster and finding your audience then we get to module 2 we're going to discuss Donald Trump is some other things because there's many things that I've done in life and I'm going to get into some very esoteric stuff some x-rated stuff that once you find that audience and you give them what they want amazing things happen this course is going to probably take 10 weeks to develop and it's going to be a lot of work but you will no longer be in that situation of being online doing this doing that and not making any money because here's the thing that many people missing just the thing a lot of gurus never say you could work your fingers to nubs you can grind and you can hustle 12 16 18 hours a day but if your efforts are not congruent with the desires or align with the proper audience and not going to make any money you're not going to make a penny so it's not really hard work that's going to do it it's hard work married to the proper audience and that is what uncivilized profits is about and there's many more things to come but I want to overwhelm you because this is self-paced you'll be taking the course at your own leisure our own pace and I will be grading your papers each module you will have to write a paper this is to help you facilitate a bit of understanding and implementation of the information now I am currently working with a few clients and we're doing this very thing and I have a business that's developing that's going to be using these same tactics which depending on how fast i do it I may put in the course I mean I'm not going to make any promises but I will be sharing you with you real world results active stuff that works now because once you identify audience that's a few more things they have to do so with that welcome to uncivilized profits and i will see you on the inside | DeadMan | UCrbEnJbQrpIZtzrHElQMEFw | 2016-11-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,610 | 8,518 |
fNipnZJzxDk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNipnZJzxDk | 21 SAVAGE PUT ME ON DEMON TIME | Y what is up guys I'm D Fred welcome back to another Call of Duty war zone video and yo 21 can you do something for me today I jump in with the 21 Savage skin and Slaughter gang on everybody in the lobby check it out let me know what you think of the skin as well as how I did in today's video let me know in the comment section below like you guys know I answer all comments so let's have that conversation down there if you're new around here consider hitting that subscribe button videos like this every day talking Call of Duty fortnite Pokemon wherever I feel like dropping the Vibes on I drop it here on the channel so again consider hitting that subscribe button also hit the like button it does help me out a ton as far as moving the videos into recommended so other people can check out the videos peace I love you guys I'm going see you guys on the next one men today men today need to be stronger bro these hoes need to be strong [ __ ] yeah n both ends bro both I I go [ __ ] like I going [ __ ] like we perfect you feel me team like that you know what I'm saying we and that's a big fact that's a big listen especially if you getting treated right bro see see the problem is the problem is right being a th is promoted so bad right now right and it's sad like I took grown ass women to their face it's sad y grown ass women and y'all falling under this stupid ass spell like y'all don't understand the difference between what to do and what not to do or what what makes a woman y'all want to be ho now it's all right like E I was just here what that is right y'all know what that is right that's the agenda to push Gaye they trying to push that gay [ __ ] on people enemo into the that's what that is it's the agenda pushing they trying to push the gay the gay agenda bro and then this is how they're doing it bro God damn destroy your this [ __ ] is sick Bro this country is yo this whole world sick as [ __ ] bro just these [ __ ] that's up above us somebody in here somebody else is in here they trying to push the agenda that's all that [ __ ] is bro disrespect your woman samex marriage them [ __ ] on some weird [ __ ] in this country armor box on the roof roof I'm with B I'm with B oh he tried to blow me up out of regroup regroup regroup I'm in I'm in the building oh I was about to snatch n no relax that old boy come up here enem me de got one down on the roof across [ __ ] on the floor flooring on me on me one more behind you watch it he your he coming in good [ __ ] redeploy done playing Fat Bastard yeah I got you fat [ __ ] [ __ ] thought he was going to stay on that roof and I was [ __ ] him up from that roof through the window window smoking him should the sweat drop down oh [ __ ] [ __ ] me okay we're together we got to go we're not in the make all Fales Wait For Me O yo somebody coming y'all somebody coming damn [ __ ] they got me pick up my money oh he just jumped off the behind you bre oh damn they [ __ ] up he smack you in the back of the head watch out there's a fat [ __ ] right there oh no two of them two of them B two two Batman Fatman good [ __ ] it's another one he going oh right there right here be right here right here up up up earn this let's go get up get get get get get get get out the smoke get out the smoke oh no me out a smoke I got both of them though [ __ ] that good [ __ ] bro it's all good I had to get them [ __ ] my bad I didn't even know I was in a smoke I so focused on killing both of them you got reinforcements inbound that's how you play right there see I need a lot more of that more of that all right I got an armor box inside this building said I let's get this dub from pubg yeah I love a pubg your back on station Lo hurry up for the storm get it y'all load load hurry up hurry up M somebody's dropping in [ __ ] everybody ran though gas isbound Maring a new safe Zone mother he ran behind this wall y'all he up here up top up top watch up top keep watching over top I'm going around come on we going to climb up p b he right here he ran to the next building oh [ __ ] watch out he's running to his teammate he's running to his team or to another team I son still get this ammo I need this [ __ ] yes I [Music] do what we doing St live going right going straight think we should go in the circle the ammo box I was about to say we should play the storm where the Box up check inside this building brother oh n yeah that ammo box I said I need one I said I need one you need one I'm go to BU station quick the one that's behind us buy grab a ammo box got up here ammun you money together give me money hold coming right now I'm going drop the ammo box here sh where you at I mean I'm trying to get to Y right now cool say that three should be good my gas ising in on we up Mega pass the rest of your money bro oh it wasn't here here n n that's the rest of it right there I thought he had it already my bad you scared the [ __ ] out of [Laughter] me n said hell to the dog I think my tactic now let's go [ __ ] some [ __ ] up I mean I have my load already I just there's a um most want it in front of us watch out we in resurgent so that that is a whole team somebody jumped in the circle rush them that's not somebody by them the um um Most Wanted we on UAV we on UAV there's a bomb in there there's a bomb on the floor see B ass [ __ ] good [ __ ] B watch oh I down somebody down down him I'm pushing push down got himp good have reded good [ __ ] y i feet coordination great coordination we're not in the circle I'm reloading real quick I'm reloading real quick get thank you anybody got sniper ammo there's gas sniper where you at wait where you yeah I got it right here I got some B drop drop it sniper I dropped eight this window I got you B there eight here hold on be look look B there's a gas mask outside somebody need it's marked there you go oh [ __ ] all right we not in the circle we got to go on this UAV you should pop it yeah I want to go to this um B station to end it count the buy is up I think yes on top where is it where is it's on top it's on top got gas moving in where the [ __ ] I get it's up here oh okay I seeu buy self revive all right your squ in the safe zone no can't I'm going buy a UAV and hold it yeah you me too oh there we go St I'm [ __ ] an idiot all right anybody else need more cash here some GRE Chase get some get a self you don't have the plus next to your name so you can revive yourself just down damn just case sh you got one shase hey look look take that now now now get a self-revive on there take a coffee sip [ __ ] he dropping down yeah I can't see that way has deact this is the end game enemy soldier incoming enemy soldier incoming let's go oh he on he on PE he took you out he didn't take me out [ __ ] team WIP team WIP all right oh damn I don't have no money sh she coming back right now no he's not you got to buy him back hold on I'm going back up right now let me see M I'm I'm running like crackhead right now come on climb [ __ ] oh that's not even that come on bro up stairs there we go here there we go here's the station got it I got you chill chill n that [ __ ] that big ass Circle confus [ __ ] that [ __ ] I saw a box next to that opening Gap I thought it was that same one but it was a wall I'mma pop a UAV we can see if anybody's Clos to someone dropping broke them this get in the circle as much as we can we got mad at them on this building right here to the left oh we got one we got one he running around over here UAV let your ass up [ __ ] one yeah I just killed one too there's one in front of youe in front of you Breezy that [ __ ] yep now finish him watch out the window shooting him watch out behind you guys in the building with the a this building right here the purple oh oh oh gas is closing in get to the new safe Zone fold them enemies [Music] dropping remain you're almost done here no no no [ __ ] throwing the smoke on you oh D that [ __ ] bounced somebody right across somebody behind oh sh watch that [ __ ] be Shas get the other side oh now move over y'all move over follow what's go oh [ __ ] he's up up he's shooting me he's shooting me yeah gas ising in relocating y motor strike will be perfect right now gasing come on boys come on boys there's one more oh he down here he down here got him got him I hit him I hit him let's go the cats dumpling look at this my T AR look look at this I laid down oh both hit that [ __ ] we both was shooting that [ __ ] I lay down in the water start shooting that [ __ ] byebye yes sir we pack the blood1 can you do something for me something H do something for me damn we nice Dam [Laughter] czy that's all I know dancing with the devil H that's what I'm talking about let's review let's review kept your team alive good work kept our team alive alist speed and violence great team [ __ ] naked Commando someo your thunder huh watch said I was the gods guess how many kills we got a total Squad kills we got 21 can you do something for me coming he had a nine piece you know n nine piece chicken good [ __ ] Bro n piece I can't you a nine piece man I believe [Laughter] you I can tell [ __ ] sound [Laughter] good see we don't got we don't got pops out here man I mean you know what I'm saying iing I be thinking about it no Breezy yes I am yes I am [ __ ] yeah mother I know what I just for a biscuit bro I I eat a dry ass biscuit right now that [ __ ] yo that chicken it don't yo yo P you heard popey chicken and all that [ __ ] don't taste the same no more that [ __ ] Bland daddy gamer Fred trash you trash Freddy your mama | DaddyGamer Fred | UCyInBXGo8f4LbdpG5uKGD7g | 2024-04-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,997 | 10,124 |
Nsp2Jq5lQlg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nsp2Jq5lQlg | Kingston Hyper X Beast DDR3 32GB Ram Unboxing and Overview | I you hey guys and welcome to another unboxing and overview and this I hope to be a very quick unboxing and overview because there's not much to to see so i have here not one but two kids of hyperx kingston ddr3 memory and these are kids of 16 gigabytes each four sticks of eight gigabytes and let's open it up one thing before I open it up I was really pleased is that when I make the order I wasn't sure if it was if they were going to send me the the ones with the cream PCB which is an older model or the ones with the black PCB and I was really happy to see that I received a new ones with a black PCB that i'm going to show you at the moment so let's open it up and see there's not much seat it's ramp but anyway I would like to share with you so here it is two new hyperx beast kingston ddr3 so this is 1600 megahertz on see online and one thing that i would like to share with you is why did i choose these ones one of the reasons i'm using is the asus z87 expert motherboard and it's gold and black color so i wanted to to place a memory that it didn't run out of that color so in this case black i even ponder it to choose the new corsair vengeance pro gold color but a stupid too risky and the gold color because it would look really nice on that motherboard which is cold and black but once i upgrade in the future and it can be a near future I don't know which motherboard I'm going to get then and black will always be followers be looking better than than than the goat so I've used in the past corsair and I've used Kingston both of them very reliable and one of the things that I researched more was was it worth it to charge the kit of two thousand four hundred megahertz with cl11 and for the benchmarks that have read the price difference and the performance is not worth it because the performance of the CL 11 on two thousand five hundred megahertz it's pretty much the same as this kid here 1600 megahertz on CL 9 which is the latency of the memory so once I set up this on my rig I will post some I will make some some benchmarks and will let you know how these are going but hey pretty happy I'm jumping from twenty four gigabytes of RAM 232 which is great and I will see how this will work guys thanks for watching just wanted to share with you the memory that I'm going to put on my on my new build and not much of help I guess but just keep pictures and my opinion about it so if you find it useful thumbs up if you didn't thumbs down and thanks for watching my name is about the judge | Roberto Jorge Tech | UCwAMahiZ4RQb3i6BdQ1cOGA | 2013-12-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 516 | 2,513 |
CnJzp77QAgY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnJzp77QAgY | HG⚡Transient Gundam Glacier⚡Special Weapons Set from Hobby Japan Magazine⚡MOBILESUITMAS DAY 10⚡ | [Music] what is up guys welcome back to hobbyvolt my name is skylar and today is mobile suit miss day 10 day 10. here we are you know what my outfit reminds me of one of those aliens from that star trek episode empath you know the ones that can like control everyone's brains all right i digress i digress so i want to talk about something really cool today uh back in 2017 i went to boynton beach florida and there's a super cool comic book store that also has a bunch of pop culture stuff gundam star wars star trek literally all kinds of collectibles if you ever get a chance to go to boynton florida or you're near there go check out tate's comics coolest place ever anyways as i was going through the gundam wall i will put they have they have this statue of rx 78 that looks like an sd gundam i'll input those right here that was that was so cool it's probably my favorite part of the whole trip aside from the beach but they had this hobby japan magazine but it was wrapped in in clear paper and this was attached to it now i would not know until i opened up the magazine and i found the feature and i looked at the back and translated it that there is a weapons part specifically for a gundam that i had already built it was an hg transient glacier gundam from build fighters hano tri now i have not watched many of those series i have particularly not watched the episode with this guy in it but i picked this up because it was so striking on the box that i was like no i have to build this hd i mean look at the box she already looks cool and it took me like no time at all to look at the sides and be like you know what i gotta build this bad boy don't know very much about her pilot you know when it comes to these series they they build their own gundam models and they fight people with it uh but her name is lindsay anagozi lindsay anagaozi there's literally only two pictures on the entire internet of her one of them comes from the actual manual right here that is her that is it i have not seen her episode but i highly suggest if you have a kid or like a girl or a brand new beginner i suggest this hd for them to build it is very fragile i will tell you that the wing set right here be very careful with it and i also broke the beef in not the beef in itself but the attachment from the head to the beef in so if someone's gonna build this just watch them make sure that you have the tamiya cement ready for it but i just thought it was so cool it's a mix of clear parts and non-clear parts which is so funny this is the second clear parts kit that i featured and that's literally all that i have i have the chiwagu which you saw the video for and then i have this i also have one more clear parts thing which is kind of a funny story uh it's a pg clear parts p band i set for a pg double o razor that i don't own i think my intention was it was a good deal i bought it and i thought i was gonna buy the pg razor but i never did here's the box right here is super cool if you guys have the uh double o razor pg and you guys have been looking for this let me know because i'm not so sure i'm gonna buy it but i might just buy the pg just so i can put these clear parts on it because they look pretty cool you can tell like i literally i open the box once and that's it so if you guys have the double o razor or you have it built show it to me uh i might just get the pg double o razor just so i can do this and then it'll be another clear parts kit that i have on my channel here that's it that's all i have for clear parts i don't have any other clear parts uh unless they're on a unicorn back to what we were talking about uh it's called the hd build weapon calet wilch better i don't know exactly what that translation is i might have to look it up but i opened it up before i saw that i had the kit for it and i saw that they were these blue clear parts my thought process on it was even if i didn't have the kits or i didn't know what they went to i would end up using this for something but i'm very glad that i actually already had it without even knowing now when i opened the box there were no instructions not on the back not anywhere in it there's no instructions it wasn't until i actually went through the hobby japan magazine look at that jagdoga this kit's awesome by the way it wouldn't be until i went through the pages that i would realize that the assembly guide for it is inside the pages there's also a really cool feature about the glacier um in here if you guys want to see the inside of this magazine let me know there's some really cool stuff that some of you might have forgotten about because i sure as heck forgot about it when i was looking through it again inside the pages i found out that this weapon set is for three different kits or interchangeable between three different kits one of them would be the hd wing gundam zero hono the hd wing gundam zero hono 2 and then my transient gundam glacier here so super cool i do not have those other two kits but i think i'm going to pick them up just so that i can have the full set full manual is inside the pages and that is what we were going to use today to make the pieces that are for the glacier here is what the weapon looks like for the glacier and we're just gonna put it together so [Music] gosh i had like no intention of like actually adding footage after i built it i was just gonna put it into the video but i just have to talk about how i don't think is this is this putting it into perspective look at how freaking big this thing is holy crap like this is my face are you kidding me what it's so cool i was not expecting it to be this cool here's transient glacier are you are you are you kidding me right now it's it's bigger than she is it what what what it's gonna look so ridiculous hold on a second let me put it on her holy crap oh my god look at it i forgot i used the hands that actually closed for it with this particular weapon i'm able to put it on and do that because i knew that this hd was going to be so fragile that i went ahead and used the hands that actually hold the way this one works is this front part of the hand is gonna come off let's try to put this bad boy in so here's the original hand hold it there this is going to severely uh outweigh this model kit are you kidding me a little tiny hand with this big giant weapon holy crap um what i love it oh my gosh i was not expecting it to be this cool like here's my head this is an hg like it's not it's not a big one here's my head look what are you kidding me like what what the heck that is so cool anyways uh so i did find this kit online uh this actual weapons kit uh but it was 45 so i'm gonna try and see if i can find it for a cheaper deal um because that's a little insane but honestly i think the weapon itself is worth the 45 dollars to pay for it like literally that's its original weapon looks like the spear of longinus from evangelion but then we got this bad boy that's just cool i think that's really cool that turned out way better than i thought it was gonna turn out the weapon was already a pretty big deal but i think this one blows it right out of the water so in other words uh i'm very glad that i made it because now this is super impressive and i can't wait to put it on that shelf there whoa and that is it guys thank you again as always for all the support and if you have any questions leave them in the comment or send me a dm on instagram another day of mobile suit miss down and in the books we have another clear parts kit that we had featured that's amazing i might get the razor who knows let me know what you guys think and thank you as always for watching i will see you tomorrow for mobile suit miss day 11. day 11. that is wild to me i will see you guys tomorrow [Music] bye you | HobbyVolt | UCw9NQ8ye8fqVU43C-Wn2PNA | 2020-12-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,616 | 7,806 |
NpHkG84zpfo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpHkG84zpfo | DevOps & SysAdmins: automatically authorize teamcity agents (4 Solutions!!) | [Music] eat more mango and drink more apple juice now this question this video this video is about i kind of forgot about this video oh yes yes yes yes this video will help you out technically it will show a question and then possible solutions and why should we eat more mango and drink more apple juice well because it's good for your brain although i keep forgetting things in this video anyway enjoy the video and please like and subscribe because that would be really really really helpful for me and my family god bless [Music] do [Music] please click subscribe thank you thank you for watching and may god bless you always | Roel Van de Paar | UCPF-oYb2-xN5FbCXy0167Gg | 2021-03-31 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 115 | 629 |
-ieHya8eNV4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ieHya8eNV4 | Mass 2nd Sunday Advent 2022 | Welcome to St. Ignatius Chapel. Today we celebrate the 2nd Sunday of Advent. Our celebrant today is Jesuit Fr. Bruce Botha SJ. In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. [Amen.] The Lord be with you. [And with your spirit.] As you can see, our 2nd candle is lit. We’re one step closer on our Advent journey to celebrating the birth of Christ. But still we have a ways to go, reflection to do, preparation and penance maybe. As we prepare to receive this Prince of Peace in our lives, we bring to mind those times when we have not been agents of God’s peace and instead we have brought division and harm to others. We ask for forgiveness. Lord God, your Son came to teach us how to love and how to serve. Lord, have mercy. [Lord, have mercy.] Your Son came to bind up our wounds and to forgive our sins. Christ, have mercy. [Christ, have mercy.] He came that we might have a new and abundant life. Lord, have mercy. [Lord, have mercy.] And may almighty God have mercy on us, may he forgive us our sin, and bring us to a new and everlasting life. [Amen.] Let us pray: Almighty and merciful God, may no earthly undertaking hinder those who set out in haste to meet your Son, but may our learning of heavenly wisdom gain us admittance to his company. Who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. [Amen.] A reading from the Book of Isaiah. On that day: There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch shall grow out of his roots. And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of the Lord. And his delight shall be in the fear of the Lord. He shall not judge by what his eyes see, or decide by what his ears hear; but with righteousness he shall judge the poor, and decide with equity for the meek of the earth; and he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips he shall slay the wicked. Righteousness shall be the belt of his waist, and faithfulness the belt of his loins. The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid, and the calf and the lion and the fatling together, and a little child shall lead them. The cow and the bear shall feed; their young shall lie down together; and the lion shall eat straw like the ox. The sucking child shall play over the hole of the asp, and the weaned child shall put his hand on the adder’s den. They shall not hurt or destroy in all my holy mountain; for the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. In that day the root of Jesse shall stand as an ensign to the peoples; him shall the nations seek, and his dwellings shall be glorious. The word of the Lord. [Thanks be to God.] In his days shall justice flourish, and great peace forever. [In his days shall justice flourish, and great peace forever.] O God, give your judgment to the king, to a king’s son your justice, that he may judge your people in justice, and your poor in right judgment. [In his days shall justice flourish, and great peace forever.] In his days shall justice flourish, and great peace till the moon is no more. He shall rule from sea to sea, from the River to the bounds of the earth. [In his days shall justice flourish, and great peace forever.] For he shall save the needy when they cry, the poor, and those who are helpless. He will have pity on the weak and the needy, and save the lives of the needy. [In his days shall justice flourish, and great peace forever.] May his name endure forever, his name continue like the sun. Every tribe shall be blest in him, all nations shall call him blessed. [In his days shall justice flourish, and great peace forever.] A reading from the letter of Saint Paul to the Romans. Whatever was written in former days was written for our instruction, that by steadfastness and by the encouragement of the scriptures we might have hope. May the God of steadfastness and encouragement grant you to live in such harmony with one another, in accord with Christ Jesus, that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Welcome one another, therefore, as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God. For I tell you that Christ became a servant to the circumcised to show God’s truthfulness, in order to confirm the promises given to the patriarchs, and in order that the Gentiles might glorify God for his mercy. As it is written, “Therefore I will praise you among the Gentiles, and sing to your name.” The word of the Lord. [Thanks be to God.] Alleluia! Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight; all flesh shall see the salvation of God. Alleluia! The Lord be with you. [And with your spirit] A reading from the holy Gospel according to Matthew. [Glory to you, O Lord.] In those days came John the Baptist, preaching in the wilderness of Judea, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” For this is he who was spoken of by the prophet Isaiah when he said, “The voice of one crying in the wilderness: Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight.” Now John wore a garment of camel’s hair, and a leather belt around his waist; and his food was locusts and wild honey. Then went out to him Jerusalem and all Judea and all the region about the Jordan, and they were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming for baptism, he said to them, “You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the wrath to come? Bear fruit that befits repentance, and do not presume to say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our father’; for I tell you, God is able to from these stones raise up children to Abraham. Even now the axe is laid to the root of the trees; every tree therefore that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. I baptize you with water for repentance, but he who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry; he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and with fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into the granary, but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire.” This is the Gospel of the Lord. [Praise to you, Lord Jesus Christ.] Today we wear the purple of Advent, a time of reflection, a time of preparation, a time of purification. We prepare ourselves to receive, to welcome the Prince of Peace by examining our lives and asking ourselves what obstacles are there in our lives to fully embracing the new life heralded by Jesus. Saint Paul spoke about the weakness of our human nature, of doing what we do not want to do, even when we know it is wrong. He said the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. We can all resonate with those sentiments. We know what it is to be flawed human beings, wanting to do the right thing, but often finding ourselves doing the complete opposite. That was the experience of St Paul, and I suspect that is often our own experience. None of us are perfect, but what matters most in the face of sin and failure is that we keep on trying to live a good life. When we are confronted with sin in our life, when we are confronted by our very own personal sin, there are four common responses that we tend to make. The first response is to ignore it, to pretend that our sin is not sinful. The Pharisees and Sadducees tended to be like that. That’s why Jesus called them hypocrites. The second is to minimise it by saying that it’s ok, because everybody else is doing it. Well, that’s how corruption takes root in our hearts, in society, in our businesses and our political parties… because everyone says it’s alright, because everybody else is doing it. The third response is to believe that our sin is so bad, so terrible, that we cannot be forgiven. This leads to a despair that turns us inwards, away from the love and the grace of God. Satan wants to win our souls for himself. He will do it by making us believe that the bad we do is actually good. If he cannot make us believe that, then he will try and convince us that we are beyond the love of God. So, either through pride or through despair, Satan will try to turn us away from God. And either way, he will have won. The fourth response to sin in our life, is repentance. John came baptising and preaching a message of repentance. It’s a word which means turning away from sin AND turning towards God. Nelson Mandela famously said, “A saint is a sinner who keeps on trying.” John the Baptist gave quite an aggressive response to the Pharisees and Sadducees when they came to him for his baptism of repentance. He tells them to produce good fruit as a sign of that repentance. He says produce the evidence that you are truly turning away from your sin and turning towards God. In other words, if you and I have truly repented, truly turned back to God, then that should be visible through the choices that we make, the values the actions of our life: the fruit of our lives. To quote Nelson Mandela again, he said that what counts in life is not the mere fact that we have lived. It’s the difference that we’ve made in the lives of others that will determine the significance of the life that we lead. This then is the true mark of our repentance, the mark of our shared sainthood: that we learn from our mistakes; that we don’t give up, not on God and not on ourselves; that we will leave the world a better place because we have lived and walked this dusty red earth of Africa. And now in the words of the Apostles Creed, we profess our faith: I believe in God, the Father almighty, Creator of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died and was buried; he descended into hell; on the third day he rose again from the dead; he ascended into heaven, and is seated at the right hand of God the Father almighty; from there he will come to judge the living and the dead. I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and life everlasting. [Amen.] The Lord Jesus is always near to us, always coming into our hearts. As we await the revelation of Christ’s glory at the end of the ages, we ask the Father to hear and answer the prayers that we make in the name of the beloved Son. That the Lord will give wisdom to those who shepherd and teach the church. We pray to the Lord… [Lord, hear our prayer.] That the Lord will give comfort to those who live in the agony of warfare and violence. We pray to the Lord… [Lord, hear our prayer.] That the Lord will give healing to those who are weakened by sickness. We pray to the Lord… [Lord, hear our prayer.] That the Lord will give perseverance to those who are persecuted for their witness to the truth. We pray to the Lord… [Lord, hear our prayer.] That the Lord will give salvation to those who have died. We pray to the Lord… [Lord, hear our prayer.] We pray with Pope Francis that volunteer non-profit organisations committed to human development may find people dedicated to the common good and ceaselessly seek out new paths to international cooperation. We pray to the Lord… [Lord, hear our prayer.] Lord God, ruler of all times and seasons, we ask you to fill these days of waiting with your saving love. Help us to grow in our love for you and for each other and to be at peace in your sight. Bring us to glory with Jesus Christ, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. [Amen.] Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation, for through your goodness we have this bread to offer: fruit of the earth, and work of human hands, it will become for us the bread of life. [Blessed be God for ever.] Blessed are you, Lord God of all creation, for through your goodness we have this wine to offer: fruit of the vine, and work of human hands, it will become for us our spiritual drink. [Blessed be God for ever.] Pray now, brothers and sisters, that these gifts that we bring will be acceptable to God, our almighty Father. [May the Lord accept the sacrifice at your hands for the praise and glory of God’s name, for our good and the good of all God's holy Church.] Be pleased, O Lord, with our humble prayers and offerings, and, since we have no merits to plead our cause, come, we pray, to our rescue with the protection of your mercy. We ask this through Christ, our Lord. [Amen.] The Lord be with you. [And with your spirit.] Lift up your hearts. [We lift them up to the Lord.] Let us give thanks to the Lord our God. [It is right and just.] It is truly right and just, our duty and our salvation, always and everywhere to give you thanks, Lord, holy Father, almighty and eternal God, through Christ our Lord. For he assumed at his first coming the lowliness of human flesh, and so fulfilled the design you formed long ago, and opened for us the way to eternal salvation, that, when he comes again in glory and majesty and all is at last made manifest, we who watch for that day may inherit the great promise in which now we dare to hope. And so, with Angels and Archangels, with Thrones and Dominions, and with all the hosts and Powers of heaven, we sing the hymn of your glory, as without end we acclaim: Holy, Holy, Holy [Lord God of hosts. Heaven and earth are full of your glory. Hosanna in the highest. Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord. Hosanna in the highest.] You are indeed Holy, O Lord, and all you have created rightly gives you praise, for through your Son our Lord Jesus Christ, by the power and working of the Holy Spirit, you give life to all things and make them holy, and you never stop gathering a people to yourself, so that from the rising of the sun to its setting a pure sacrifice may be offered to your name. Therefore, O Lord, we humbly implore you by that same Spirit, graciously make holy these gifts we have brought to you for consecration, that they may become the Body and the Blood of your Son our Lord Jesus Christ, at whose command we celebrate these mysteries. For on the night he was betrayed, he took bread and, giving you thanks, he said the blessing, broke the bread, and gave it to his disciples, saying: TAKE THIS, ALL OF YOU, EAT OF IT, THIS IS MY BODY, WHICH WILL BE GIVEN UP FOR YOU. When supper was ended, he took the cup, and once more giving thanks, he said the blessing, and he gave it to his disciples, saying: TAKE THIS, ALL OF YOU, AND DRINK FROM IT, THIS IS THE CUP OF MY BLOOD, THE BLOOD OF THE NEW AND EVERLASTING COVENANT, IT WILL BE POURED OUT FOR YOU AND FOR ALL PEOPLE SO THAT SINS MAY BE FORGIVEN. DO THIS IN MEMORY OF ME. Let us now proclaim the mystery of faith. Save us, Saviour of the world, for by your cross and resurrection, you have set us free. Therefore, O Lord, as we celebrate the memorial of the saving Passion of your Son, his wondrous Resurrection and Ascension into heaven, and as we look forward to his second coming, we offer you in thanksgiving this holy and living sacrifice. Look, we pray, upon the offering of your Church and, recognizing the sacrificial Victim by whose death you willed to reconcile us to yourself, grant that we, who are nourished by the Body and Blood of your Son and filled with his Holy Spirit, may become one body, one spirit in Christ. May he make of us an eternal offering to you, so that we may obtain an inheritance with your elect, especially with the most Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of God, with Joseph her husband, with your Apostles and Martyrs and with all the Saints, on whose constant prayers in your presence we rely for unfailing help. May this Sacrifice of our reconciliation, we pray, O Lord, advance the peace and salvation of all the world. Be pleased to confirm in faith and love your pilgrim Church on earth, with your servant Francis our Pope and Buti Tlhagale our Bishop, the Order of Bishops, all the clergy, and the entire people you have gained for your own. Listen graciously to the prayers of this family, whom you have gathered here before you: in your compassion, O merciful Father, gather to yourself all your children scattered throughout the world. To our departed brothers and sisters and to all who were pleasing to you at their passing from this life, give kind admittance to your kingdom. There we hope to enjoy for ever the fullness of your glory through Christ our Lord, through whom you bestow on the world all that is good. For it is through him, and with him, and in him, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, that all glory and honour is yours, Almighty Father, for ever and ever. [Amen.] At the Saviour’s command and formed by divine teaching, we dare to pray: Our Father, [who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name; thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us; and lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.] Deliver us, Lord, we pray, from every evil; and grant us peace in our day. By the help of your mercy, keep us free from sin and safe from all needless anxiety, as we wait in joyful hope for the coming of our Saviour, Jesus Christ. [For the kingdom, the power and the glory are yours now and for ever.] Lord Jesus Christ, you said to your Apostles: I leave you peace, my peace I give you, look not on our sin, but on the faith of your Church, and grant us the peace and the unity of your kingdom in accordance with your will, who live and reign for ever and ever. [Amen.] The peace of the Lord be with you always. [And with your spirit.] Let us share with one another the sign of peace. Lamb of God, [you take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us. Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us. Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, grant us peace.] Behold the Lamb of God, behold the one who takes away the sins of the world. How happy are we who are called to the supper of the Lamb. [Lord, I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word and my soul shall be healed.] Although you cannot receive physical communion with us now, we invite you into a moment of spiritual communion. The great medieval theologian, St. Thomas Aquinas, defined spiritual communion as: “an ardent desire to receive Jesus in the Holy Sacrament”, and “a loving embrace as though we had already received him.” His words are echoed by the great mystic, and fellow doctor of the church, St. Teresa of Avila, who wrote: “When you do not receive Communion, and do not attend Mass, you can make a spiritual communion which is a most beneficial practice. By it, the love of God will be greatly impressed on you.” At this moment we invite you to focus on Christ, and your longing for union with him. Express your desire to feel his grace coursing through you, giving you strength and courage, particularly in these difficult times. In your desiring union you are united with us, and to Christ. In this moment we experience the reality that is already here. Let us pray. Replenished by the food of spiritual nourishment, we humbly beseech you, O Lord, that, through our partaking in this mystery, you may teach us to judge wisely the things of earth and to hold firm the things of heaven. We ask this through Christ, our Lord. [Amen.] The Lord be with you. [And with your spirit.] Almighty God bless you, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. [Amen.] Go now in peace to give God glory with your lives. [Thanks be to God.] | Jesuit Institute South Africa | UCI7-yew-mIfWV02tpfBywFQ | 2022-12-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | detection | en | 3,700 | 19,661 |
shgodaRH4YQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=shgodaRH4YQ | Republic of Negros | Wikipedia audio article | the Republic of Negros hiligaynon Republic assange Negros cebuano Republic asan Negros Filipino república a Negros Spanish Republican to Negros was a short-lived cantonal revolutionary republic in the eponymous Visayan Island and later an administrative division which existed while the Philippines was under Spanish and American sovereignty history from November three six one eight nine eight the Negron says rose in revolt against the imperial Spanish authorities headed by the politico-military governor Colonel Isidro de Castro the Spaniards decided to surrender upon seeing armed troops marching in a pincer movement towards the colon the main city of the island the revolutionaries led by generals one Araneta from vago and a nice atoll accent from talisay were actually carrying fake arms consisting of rifles carved out of palm fronds and cannons of rolled bamboo mats painted black on the 5th of November Spanish officials surrendered themselves to native leaders a provisional government was then established with a nice atoll accent as president and a notice of this was sent to Emilio Aguinaldo in Luzon on November 27th 1898 the unicameral Chamber of Deputies Spanish camara de de patatas met in Bacolod and declared the establishment of the cantonal Republic of Negros Spanish Republic a cantonal de Negros the Chamber of Deputies acted as a constituent assembly to draft a constitution eventually the proposed constitution of the Federal Republic of Negros was not implemented with the looming invasion of the United States Army President ani Sato laxen raised the American flag in the Casa reel to welcome the army as a friendly force despite the initial protests from the Negros Oriental deputies the Republic was surrendered to US forces on March 4th 1899 and came under US protection on April 30th 1899 as a separate state from the rest of the Philippine Islands on the 22nd of July 1899 it was renamed the Republic of Negros however on the 30th of April 1901 it had been dissolved in the island of Negros was annexed to the Philippine Islands by the United States which retained control until the Japanese Imperial occupation in World War two On January 1st 1899 the Federal Republic of Negros was proclaimed as a state or Canton with two provinces notice of its establishment was sent to General Aguinaldo on March 4th the island of Negros was surrendered to US forces Republican leaders the leaders of the short-lived Republic were commemoration in vago City the event was chronicled in a historic marker found in the public plaza which bears the following inscriptions November 5th has been observed as a special non-working holiday in Negros Occidental through Republic Act 6000 709 signed by President Corazon Aquino on the 10th of February 1989 see also Negroes revolution Negros Island region save 1o Visayan state references Kalaa Maximo Mangat 1921 the present government of the Philippines oriental commercial ISBN one 406 seven four six three six three note 1 the book cover incorrectly lists authoress Maximo and Lala - originally published in 1921 by the McCullough printing Co Manila external links the opposition to the Americans and the Canton Republic of Negros | wikipedia tts | UCzarwQFaTMe7t6SoGgLHBwA | 2018-11-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 520 | 3,199 |
lwBbWAg26V8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwBbWAg26V8 | Getting Closer To Aeternium Armor In Modded Minecraft | welcome back everyone to this world So the plan for today I want to get aternum stuff aternum like armor and all that it's better than netherite so I'm not going to get netherite there's no point but there are a lot of holes that I just don't know how to fill for example how the hell do I get these I don't know I there's no crafting recipes I'm like I'm clicking I nothing I don't know how to make these um so that's fun well I know how to make this but like these I this this is this is the only recipe that it is I I I don't know and the wiki doesn't have anything at all so I'm kind of confused but I'll figure it out maybe I don't know but for tum I need netherite I think it works kind of the same as netherite so I need like four for this and then the these are somehow made I I don't know um again the only recipes are these I don't know and I don't even know how to make these I just know that I can make them oh wait I have two oh my God that's plus seven armor what the [ __ ] I didn't notice that before holy shitty but all of that means that I need to go to the Nether and the ends most likely but one thing I can do is make this okay so ter oh you can use terminite blocks oh my God yes oh awesome so I don't need this God my so loud and then none of those going went in there we go and that will make AUM holy hell that takes forever also I regret doing this this sucks this is horrible to maneuver with I hate it my first piece of aternum okay okay does this pop up with anything I don't see any more recipes what is this orc I've never seen an orc we need this here this here and this here and then I can make this boom now that I think about it I should just go to the end and get kill those things that the you know these things the annoying things I I I should kill these they give me the skin or whatever the the thing warthog sh pieces but I don't know if it's actually EAS easier to do that or not I I don't I'm not sure it is actually probably let's be fair it's quite a bit easier H okay let's I guess go farming yay I'm going to need like over two stacks of it or something like that oh God okay I have a bowl somewhere a good bow over here yeah sounds pretty good do I have anything like better for it I have soul flame actually that would be cool okay maybe this one as well cuz it could be better I don't know we'll test it 16 go [ __ ] yourself should I golden carrots actually now they think about it cuz I have like a lot of carrots and I have a lifetimes worth of gold oh my God that's a lot of gold I don't know what to do with my dragon egg but I do actually need more arrows cuz I am lacking in arrows that that's not good I I don't have any gravel I think even I don't even have any Flint I don't have absolutely anything for arrows God [Applause] damn what the [ __ ] was that I don't think I have any gravel so I need to go get gravel then I can make arrows and then I can uh then I can do stuff stop it okay is there any gravel here let me grab a torch any gravel I would like some gravel please it would be Mighty kind of you to give me gravel ooh gravel okay there's quite a bit of gravel here that's really cool cuz that means oh yes oh yes oh wonderful it would be actually pretty cool if I could see something you guys can probably see something I can't see anything and I know I just jump into the seaing that's all I know I hit my head every time it's a miracle that I'm alive we in a way it's actually pretty nice sometimes it's actually pretty useful most of the time not really oh like that this was supposed to be where I got slime but I just decided not to do it I'm calling it good I got over half a stack uh that's good enough I don't know what I'll do about feathers but I'll figure it out do I even have any feathers no that's an issue you can use Mammoth tusks I don't how do you get Mammoth tusks H wait let me let me let me let me let me take a look God you're loud so M have spawn in Gold biomes makes sense I just don't know where a cold biome is but I can make arrows well Ivory arrows I don't know what those are but they make a lot of arrows God there's so much an Orcs for the handbook I need orc skin an Orcs spawn in the plane biomes or ples biome and I don't know where a PLS biome is I don't remember I I generally don't remember I think I've seen one or two but I don't remember where they are and I don't know if there's any other good way to actually fight the warthogs i i i gen have no idea the only way I know of is going up like four blocks and just hoping for the best and then bow and arrow that's all I know I there's no other way of like found to actually kill them which is a bit of an issue cuz uh I don't have any chickens well I can get chickens it's just going to take a long time of me just farming chickens to get a enough feathers to get you know all the stuff but there are chickens around I've seen quite a few they spawn around here so I should be able to get some chickens and I'll put them I don't know where I'll put them but I'll put I'll put them somewhere oh chickens friendos may I may I interest you in being my friends please of course when I want chickens there are no chickens around also it turns out that the warhog and a lot of the other things I've seen like the piglin you know this thing uh turns out they are all part of the adventure Z mod I didn't even know I thought they were part of like better end than better better better nether that was very hard for me to say I don't know why yeah it turns out they're just part of that mod so that's cool oh chicken oh hey chicken and another one is here cool let's go home also uh looking around the wiki for the Aventure Zod it turns out that I can get a pet dragon and you need like a dragon saddle I think it was or something to ride around on it which would be sick come on how cool would it be to have my own pet dragon I'm going to put the these ones with the piggies for now you guys have fun I'll bring food you guys baby you guys baby so let me place down the dragon egg wherever it is here it is [Music] um I where do I put it I I don't know there so it should spawn a dragon in 10 minutes I I think uh oh yes Dragon saddle so I need orc skin for that so I need to find a plain spot what the hell are all these Dragon Tree chest what I haven't even seen that what so orc skin and iron nuggets uh Orcs I have not found a single one I like how every episode I do I have a clear plan and then I have like 20 different side quests I like how slowly they come in like oh and here I am come on okay I actually have some Phantom membranes now as well like a decent amount nine of them that's not bad at all I'm willing to chance it now and hope that I get something good on my elytra which would be pretty freaking cool what I oh my God you need the tum ingots for it oh that's even worse okay okay okay oh my God that is that is horrible that is not something I wanted to see but I don't have a KN for these guys anymore so sleep ah good night's rest finally about time I got I got sleep it's been like a week I just need to wait around so I get feathers cool in about like I don't know 5 minutes this should actually hatch as well which would be cool I should go and look for a planes biome I don't even know where to look it' be cool if I found like a cold biome as well but who knows when I'll find something like that cuz CU everything around me is hot which you look at this brown mushrooms the things that I needed I actually think I don't think I've been here now that I think about it ah neat a new place wow this is one big ass swamp like a really big swamp chicken yay the problem with like um biomes of Plenty or CH I actually yeah CH I think is the one I have or I don't know something I have the problem with this is yeah it looks really pretty there's a lot of really cool biomes but there's none of the biomes that I actually like need cuz like I need planes for example I don't know where one is I I found almost everything well not everything else but I found so many other biomes besides planes ah yeah that would have been useful a long time ago check out this Village what are we gone place I can just destroy completely if I want to but I won't I'm not that mean I'm I'm quite mean because I'll take everything I can find well not everything but most things I can find so I'm a bit meme but like not oh jeez you ran at me God that was unexpected that scared me God when did Minecraft become a horror game God this guy is living some fancy life here look two doors to get in and out what a wonderful life maybe he uses a specific door for getting in a a specific door for getting out you don't know he might probably probably not but he might question for everyone who's watched this entire series and remembers why the [ __ ] did I get so many emeralds I don't remember I just had like Stacks and stacks of emeralds and I don't know where I got them from definitely not for mining cuz I I found a few Emerald ORS only so I'm kind of confused on where I found them oo what is here oo this place looks cool should have made home here look at this God this looks pretty oh wow what kind of party is going up on over here huh neat I going leave you guys to it oh my God that was close this Village is in um you know pretty interesting spot on top of a mountain a cats a fat cat I think that was like I don't know if I have like a mod or a resource pack or something but something I have it makes cats fat and I I like it that's the first like fat cat I've noticed but it's still cool oops it like makes them feel like they're you know fed actually oh there's another Village and that thing what is that oh my God don't tell me there's a villager down here we we you guys really Tred to take over this entire Mountain I see you didn't succeed well considering you like well this is actually pretty nice you know this looks nice it's like lighting up this area and you want to climb a mountain just to get down that's kind of neat hi villagers I invaded one of your places now I invade another one of your places well it's not technically yours oh more emeralds cool it's technically not yours but like you're kind of homies they pretty close by I can see them from here I bet if you scream oh no I set my respawn Point okay whatever I bet if you scream loud enough then you can you know talk to them what the [ __ ] are you doing I'm pretty sure I can't actually find any Orcs or anything unless I get like super lucky and somehow manag to find a normal PLS biome which I I highly doubt like yeah okay I'm looking for chickens and these but I highly doubt I'm going to find a pl's biome chickens yes ples probably not oh I should sort my inventory that's a bit better power free that's actually useful when I come around no one has any privacy because I just enter every single home I'm just like hi what you God Broski nice this is just floating sand how are you doing this WOW reminder I'm looking for a PLS biome and or a cold biome which I am finding neither of I am finding everything everything else besides those how cool um you're pretty accurate for a skeleton ooh big long oh never mind I thought it was like spires or something that would have been cool I think spires is the correct word right right yeah probably what's this how did you miss me coming at you wait what that's it okay oh my God fre spiders ROP phobia my ass oh this is the the biome oh be Nest ooh uh God uh um okay I know I I have an idea okay okay okay okay get up here and J Jump yeah boy yeah boy I see purple leaves or something pink though that looks pretty or purple purplish pink I don't actually know what what is what is this color good question whoo did I just say good question question Lamer Forest oh this looks pretty look at that this looks nice how nice it would be if I found planes just plain plain old ples such a cool biome it is actually it isn't but like it in this situation it's one of the best biomes it it actually like you know cool content for once beside not not in the real game not in the real game it's kind of boring but like in it in with mods it's good what the hell is this what happened here you guys like really close or something oh feather like why I don't see any other reason to live this close by to each other good God don't worry it's raining you can sleep in it's okay it's okay oh I thought those wood mention that would have been cool well I'm going go there then bye one guy is sleeping in what is that biome God that looks cool let me go there next let me first read this entire BL place and nothing cool ooh ooh oh my God it's blue what's this place Moonlight Grove oh this looks so pretty there's amethyst Ah that's not fully grown really what it was what are you oh or Roots cool these aren't fully grown I don't think they actually grow over here but eh they might are there actually any fully grown ones CU I'm not seeing any what's this what are what are these AAA okay well it fits in with the theme of like the bark or the this layer of it fits in with the plate but the inside of it doesn't oh there's orange flowers wait this is like my Biome my profile picture is like very similar colors how many feathers do I have 27 doing pretty good on those can soon go home well by soon I mean like in about I don't know an hour cuz that's when I get home okay I I can go home now that's probably enough feathers for now I still didn't find a ples biome but that's fine I'm going to look around for a bit more but if I don't find anything then I'll be home coal biome please be vanilla for the love of God I can find mammoths then oh it is vanilla Minecraft but it I don't know if it's a correct one I don't know if they spawn here not sure I don't think they do which sucks they might they might but only during the day I I don't know God that sucks but at least I found one that's you know a normal Minecraft biome that's cool uh that's something it's better than nothing dum dum yeah I don't think they spawn here God that sucks really wish they did really really wish they did maybe they spawn during the day but it's such a tiny biome that I'm just not sure that they would I think they might just not spawn here because of it just being so tiny God I'm taking so much damage [ __ ] Jeepers Creepers yeah I've waited here for a few minutes now and absolutely nothing that's sad damn it well I have enough feathers to make a decent amount of arrows anyway so it should be fine it would have been cool to find one at least okay I'm back home I sorted everything this still hasn't hatched that's hand well it was away so it might I might need to be in the same chunk probably so that's okie dokie but what I can do is put Soul flame on this maybe get power higher level power maybe yeah I should be able to get it I hope unless it's like ooh yes cool it's a really good bow now now we need some sticky boys and yeah we should be good then like this no yeah okay that's plenty of our arrows for now at least so now after a long time of just wandering around and not actually finding anything horrifically useful well besides the feathers I can now go to the end and farm warthogs and then get a tum finally it's this going to take a while probably ah I'll be I'll be I'll be you'll see me killing War Hawks most likely it's going to take a while I've gotten one piece of netherite by now and I've I've been here for like I don't know 10 minutes I feel like going to the nether is actually better I'm going to use all my arrows over here on these [Music] and and then done then I'm just going to go to the nether because I don't think it's actually worth it and off into the vo it goes I need eight per Ingot and killing eight of these guys is not a fun time and they don't always drop their showell pieces and if they do they drop one so it's annoying to get them the Homing is actually really good when it works like most of the time it focuses on Endermen and then it shoots them and it does it really randomly like I don't understand how the targeting system works really like look I'm looking directly at it and it's just not wanting to do it look I just aimed at that it just was on the warthog and then it just completely Mis aimed it I Wast a lot of arrows just because of that but at the same time it guarantees a hit when it does work so in a way it's good wait I just thought of something okay let's say I find uh the netherite thing neite or I don't remember the name of it let's say I find that and if I put it in the endstone smelter do I get free ingots or free scraps I mean that's a good thing to test out because I should oh my God wait I just thought imagine just like uh in the new like 1.21 update there's the hammer I you know that hammer what if with like whatever mod gives you hops what if I you just did that like used that hammer with the hops that would be so cool you doal so much damage constantly um down to 46 arrows I had two and a half stacks I think something like that oh my God okay that scared the loving crap out of me okay so I have some is it like this right I think yeah so I have two now that's something I can make two more atum which is neat and then well I actually need to make ter and I forged plates as well I I don't know how I make them you just do this oh what I really want because they're direct upgrade which means that if I upgrade them then I'll have to reforge them using aerum I'd much rather use terminite to do that so I can make termite that that's not a big issue okay prepare your ears I'm going to take my headphones off yeah if I put ancient debris in you know that I should get threee per two I should okay that's really good ooh that is very good oh that's not bad as well oh wow okay okay that is phenomenal that is really really good wow unique so that's probably the best one plus six Max Health Plus four armor and 50% durability holy hell getting these to a better level it's not going to be fun I either need netherite or terminite when I upgrade these I don't know that's not that's not fun that's terrible okay so if I if I put this here okay so this makes nothing right now so I need I need um this take this uh go to the smithing table no that's an anvil smithing table like this then I make Anum [Music] anvil boom and then if I put this in here then I can make an attum hammer head only huh how do I make do I need oh my God I need to tanium hammer and then I can make that okay how do I make the tum Hammer okay now I've got the tum Hammer okay so I got all the these are good I got an atonium Hammer now next I need if I use an atum Hammer inside of this with atum I should be able to make atum forg plates which I need four of and then I can use this to get to make these oh my God that is so much that means I have to go back to the end anyway to get uh the the the the thing the more of those templates oh my God that is so much effort okay but that will have to be it for today I just just don't have more time right now um yeah we actually got some stuff done a lot of farming next time hopefully this thing hatches and yeah that would be really cool if I actually got done and hopefully next time hopefully very hopefully I can get atorium armor finally which would be super cool yeah I thank you so much for watching watching I hope you enjoyed like And subscribe if you didn't and I will see you all next time bye-bye | Colder | UCWhIrX4XktDn_8g4yStrl8g | 2024-04-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,033 | 19,474 |
_8Ay9svuXBI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_8Ay9svuXBI | Whispering Streets - The Suddenly Soft Heart | Whispering Whispering Whispering Whispering [Music] Street and here is Hope Winslow we re-explore many Whispering streets when we begin to write our will as Serena Landon sat down to think over the terms of a last will in Testament her mental attitude belii her name there was nothing Serene about her a rich woman rich with inherited money a poor woman poor because of the scarcity of her contacts and the non-existence of close ties she sat at her desk a beautiful desk polished until it was like Brown satin she chewed the end of her pen thoughtfully she was almost glad of the interruption when her maid entered the room yes cor it's the seamess man' she's brought back the dish towel she was Hing in the damis tablecloths oh well tell her to come in Cara oh and warn her that I won't pay her unless every Stitch was done by hand yes ma'am oh by the way Mr I said muffin she ate all her lunch good good one CH it's another I was complely Ming cor I do worry about muffin what'll become of her if I die yes this will I should leave nothing to somebody the High girl sent me in Miss Landon I hope it you okay oh yes I've forgotten your name Mrs is uh Wilkins ma'am I did the damous tablecloth real careful if you'll just look at the stitches maam I'm sure you'll be satisfied M very neat very good and the dish towels that didn't take quite pains with them but I'm sure you'll be pleased even so MH well [Music] man yes I'm both pleased and satisfied thank heaven I need the money to bad always day to day with me really tell me why didn't you use the same amount of care with the towels that you did with the table Lon when you're working on something fine is it well it gives you a little this D black silc almost with sort of a a sacred trust was like all the things in this apartment of yours this land and the rugs and the draperies and the pictures and the China and and you yes ma'am fine even the cat that muffin with a long soft bur a plume of a tail different from other cats but a dish Tower that's like me Miss Landon something plain something to get hard use no we have a gift of expression Mr where do you live just off third avenon a railroad flat but there's sunlight new room where I sew when I do hand sewing the sunlight makes the needle Flash you're a m your husband he died man 20 years ago don't seem like 20 years though he've been real close to me every day things he said and things he did they keep coming back to me you know how it is ma'am when you've loved somebody and lost me too soon you're clouding up man I'm sorry I didn't mean to hurt you really I [Music] didn't in just a moment hope Winslow will be back again but first for centuries the word aoy has been an indispensable part of the Mariner's vocabulary it's an attention getting hail and a nautical hello generally heard with interest and sometimes pleasure a thousand and more years ago the word a Hoy yelled in Fierce chorus by the crew of a high proud Galley was heard with dread it was the war cry of the Invincible Vikings in this complex world for word meanings are constantly changing it's easy to be misunderstood that's why it's a good idea to know your [Music] word and now back to our story with hope Winslow yes Serena Landon was clouding up but it wasn't because she knew how it was when you loved somebody and lost them looking back across a life which was painless peaceful and passionless you could think of nobody she really loved and lost living alone with a maid and a cat the typical spinster she overp paid the little teamsters and sent her on her way rejoicing and then she sat alone thinking thinking [Music] thinking and suddenly she was a starched little girl standing behind a portier her father and mother were in the middle of the room facing each other angrily I'm divorcing you Al I'm glad there is only this I want to see Serena as much as possible after the final decree you want to see Serena you want to see her I'm divorcing you ala don't forget that you'll never see Serena again not if I can help it as long as you live Serena will be completely my child from now on and if that happens and she falls and skins her knee and cries there'll be little icicles sliding down her cheeks poor Serena poor lost [Music] youngster as time went on Serena heard bits of gossip about her father from below stairs cook had seen him on the street with his new wife laughing she was all the time laughing and her lips red as red later Serena heard that the Laughing woman with her red lips had been seen pushing a baby budy must be a girl cook had said the carriage cover was pink years later Serena read an item in the paper her father was dead the item called him a widower Serena said aloud and it was the first time she'd ever said it somewhere I have a half sister I haven't loved her and lost her cuz I haven't known her but somewhere she [Music] exists she reached for the telephone and dialed a number Okay calendar speaking oh Mr calender uh this is Serena Landon M Landon it's nice to hear from you how are you I'm very well thank you Mr calender I'm uh I'm coming to you with a strange request yes uh could you recommend a discreet firm of private detectives oh no this is a surprise I wish to locate a woman her name well she hasn't married her name is Landon and she must be about 12 years younger than I maybe you should handle the detectives for me Mr calender I haven't had very many dealings with detectives and I I might find myself at a lost I'll write out the few small Clues I possess and send them to your office do that and in the meanwhile that will of mine you'll be one of the beneficiaries I see um a missing relative yes well I'll do what I can Angels could do no more thank you so much Mr calender well I'll say goodbye now and I'll send you those Clues by special messenger but I must again warn you that they're very inadequate [Music] and Serena dropped the receiver into its cradle seated at her desk she tapped nervously on its Brown satinwood surface with thin parchment fingers and suddenly a little panel in the back of the desk clicked open she saw an envelope no there were two envelopes they were held together with a bit of faded ribbon she'd almost forgotten about the envelopes she put them there so long ago almost 50 years ago she untied the ribbon she opened the envelope which bore the earliest dates and red set her [Music] aloud I'm asking you to marry me Dar I know it will be like asking a lily to transplant itself to a swamp the slums are very like a swamp they have quick sand and ugly undercurrents I haven't the right to raise my eyes to you I'm only a settlement house superintendent but I love my work and perhaps I can make you live [Music] it Serena slid the letter into its envelope the CIS had almost worn through the writing was faded but it still had Authority she opened the second letter and once again she read aloud this time her voice was low almost a whisper though you've rejected my proposal of marriage s even though I think in your heart you love me for you've admitted that your man I give up settle his house and take the job with the city trust C but Dar you know what my decision must be the mission is in the center of a very bad neighborhood many of the young men are drifting in the wrong direction some will end up in prison but perhaps I can keep a few of them from looking out at the world through barred Windows I'm sorry dear that we too must travel in opposite direction I think we might have been very [Music] happy Serena slipped the second letter into his envelope she tied The Faded ribbon returned both letters to the secret panel and pushed it shut gently s why she had loved and lost somebody after all not in the way Mrs wilin the seamstress had meant but in a mission Far downtown a saintly man with white hair still worked tirelessly she'd leave money to the mission in her will no she wouldn't leave it she'd give an immediate donation she looked up a number in the directory once again she reached for the [Music] throne gateway mission uh may I speak with Mr El Blake please I didn't know yes I understand how you all must feel I wanted him to come up here I wanted to give him a check for his work well I'll send the check anyway in his name yeah it may help his assistant to carry on the work i' called a week ago i' SE I'd SE again if I decided to make my way with you girly just one short [Music] week a lonely woman sitting by her desk muing the cat came by and rubbed against her leg she stroked the silken fur absently the cat made a little chirp and jumped onto her lap and she sat there stroking it she was remembering a woman who had Stood Beside her while she stroked the same cat then a Kitt it's my sister's girl my sister that's been dead these many years ma'am sure my niece was going around with a boy and then there was married yes yes go on and now he's gone ma'am he just disappeared and there's a baby coming and she finds that they wasn't legally married that he had another wife somewhere oh well that's a great pity I'm sorry that your niece was tripped I suppose you want money for her all right I'll give you a check it's more than a check I want ma'am more than a check well we have been house here if I could have the girl with me so young she is and and no one and expecting mother no CLA that would upset me terribly I hope this request of yours won't spoil the very pleasant servant mistress relationship between us cor no maam it won't I'm sorry I brought it up so am I Cara but we'll forget it from now on shall [Music] we in just a moment hope Winslow will be back the traditions of a country are part of each Citizen's culture and something he can be proud of take for instance the traditions of the United States Navy did you ever wonder how the Sailor got that broad collar well listen to this around about 1780 it was the Vogue for seen to wear their hair in a long heavily greased pigtail a neckerchief was worn to keep the grease off the jacket in time the Neer Chief was replaced by the extra long collar but when Seaman stopped wearing greased pigtails the long collar remained as part of the uniform and it's a distinctive uniform that every Seaman can be proud of because it is a part of the Great traditions of the United States of [Music] America and now back to our story with hope Winslow Serena Landon's hand slipped away from the so confer of her cat and the cat gave a disgusted little sound jumped off her lap and trotted out of the room reaching over Serena pulled the needle point Bell cord there was a far off tinkle and almost immediately a door opened yes Mr Serena you rang I rang Kaa do you remember a time 3 years ago when you came to me with a strange request yes I remember I've changed my mind about your niece oh but miss Serena you may ask her to live in this house it is a large house and you have plenty of wom in your apartment the baby would be about 2 and a half now of course you're going to have to keep in quiet the little Jimmy is 2 and a half M we're not far from the park his mother can take him to the park every day my niece died in Serena when the baby was born they said it was worry and heartbreak all mixed together the child I board him out man' I go to see him every Thursday afternoon and every Sunday afternoon that I'm free Miss Serena are you feeling all right Miss Serena I'm feeling perfectly all right that woman who hem the towels I want to get in touch with her immediately or did she do something wrong something wrong certainly not she set me on the right path cor by reminding me that I'd lost a great deal I'm going to put her on a salary I'm going to find dozens of things for her to S I should be that Rel Sam going along doing peace work day by day she never knows what will come next well she'll know from now on you don't have to wait until Thursday this week CLA you may go this afternoon but go where missena to pick up the child a child in this house might be like a fire at which a lonely selfish woman could warm her hands and her heart Serena Landon sent a wreath to an old man's funeral she sent a huge check to a mission in the slums she made an arrangement it was in the nature of a trust fund or a sewing woman she talked long distance with a half sister whom she'd never acknowledged before she Stood Beside a sleeping child's crib and looked down at him the maid who had been with her a long while Stood Beside her isn't he a handsome child Miss Serena his lashes and like buttered my wings against his cheeks he has a stubborn little boy chin but his hands were their dimples are still baby hands you'll go to a good school to college now don't cry cor you'll have me cry [Music] to slowly Serena went back to her lovely room with its polished desk as she entered the room the phone was ringing she lifted the receiver from its cradle hello this is McKay calber oh Mr calendar uh you're calling me about the will that's right look Miss Landon I don't know what's happened to you but I'm a bit worried you're you're doing such strange things money's running through your fingers like water are you feeling well miss Landon there's nothing the least wrong with me either physically or mentally I think I'd better come to your house and have a talk with you uh will this this afternoon be convenient I come to dinner if you'd care to but um I have some shopping to do early in the afternoon I must buy a few UNH him tablecloths and uh between 5 and 6 I look at picture books with little Jimmy this is too much Miss Landon if you go on the way you're going you won't need to make a will you'll have nothing to leave you're absolutely right Mr calendar dinner will be at 7 Mr calendar and I'll enjoy having a [Music] death I wish I could have seen the K Calendar's face while we were talking it must have been a [Music] stud why are people with suddenly soft Hearts almost invariably accused of being [Music] feebleminded the world in which we live is a funny one but essentially nice when Serena Landon found a settlement house she learned that the man she' loved and lost at the age of 25 not through death through life had been called to his reward and that an assistant one Martin price had taken his place and now Here's Hope Winslow to tell you more about the settlement house and Martin price sometimes no no I'll ADM that almost always the superintendent of a settlement house guides the Des desies of a whole neighborhood but when you meet Martin price he'll be guiding the Destinies of a woman who came from across the sea and met with disillusionment and failure until then this is Hope Winslow saying goodbye from the whispering Street today's program was written by Margaret e sster featured in the cast where Peggy Weber Paul dubar Helen CLE and Virginia Greg Whispering streets was directed by Gordon T Hughes and produced by Ted Lloyd your announcer is Dan cly Whispering Street has come to you through the worldwide facilities of the United States armed forces radio and television service all [Music] | A Room With A View | UCkoE32Upgd2IT90-KXPeioQ | 2024-03-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,915 | 15,041 |
0lvIRVPCyFo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lvIRVPCyFo | Men never rest in a relationship (Dante Nero's Man School 202 meets the WHOREible Decisions podcast) | oh you already kind of just gave it to us but our hors d'oeuvres segment is the sex tips and we'd love to leave it to the guest do you have any one blanket tip that maybe works for everybody is it men for women women for men i think um so one of the things is i say you can't whenever a relationship doesn't work it's and i get in trouble for this a lot of times because it's always the man's fault and i'll tell you why because it's um if you have a woman that's too strong you can't tell a woman yeah i mean and all of y'all have done this oh girl he's nice give him a chance what you're really saying is he's not strong enough to handle you so be weaker so that you can give him an opportunity and you can't do that that that alleviates the attraction the attraction is the fact that he is stronger like a woman only finds a man attractive who she thinks is better than her and better is a is a relative term i'll agree with that he's too nice or give him a chance right but what if it's because someone is being good to us and we're not used to that it's still it his inability to recognize that he's being too nice is is his deficiency okay so even the fact that he's he's deficient in his ability to perceive what's going on and so you like i say if you want to be a man there's no vacation days in manhood you got to show up every day this is a toxic episode you you don't this is interesting because i agree and don't agree so i but i also just kind of had this conversation last night as well like to the fact that when you date someone um you need to allow them to show you who they are yeah my relationship is crazy you also have to look at so when you're a child and your mom is around that is the true depiction of what you see womanhood at i mean if you think about how many people you know that are just garbage they're garbage because they're upbringing people you know you have children and you you yeah you're not raising them how you want them to be as adults you're raising them just as it ha my mom tells me all the time that she's like i couldn't have had another one she's like i felt like there was a lot of energy and a lot of things i wanted to teach you and she was like and i couldn't balance myself like i think one was it like she always says that she said i don't think another one could have came out and i i think also it's a situation where you you know it's it's sort of like buying a new laptop and then you back up the laptop from your old your old um computer old backup you know what i mean like you forgot all this [ __ ] no i'm saying like you have viruses and malware right and then you you just download all your [ __ ] into this brand new laptop and then you wonder why you like love analogies [Music] i'm not a beta male either i'm just a better man better man put your happiness first cause if you don't they won't you | Man School 202 | UC28mF5VvBWgAM-DCfpymhiw | 2020-12-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 585 | 2,884 |
AtnjXKqSMiY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AtnjXKqSMiY | Q&A Session with AI2 on CORD-19 Datasets | according now ok recording is on so yeah let's start I'll try to make the notes in accordance and anton if you could just help me with fixing this stuff I might get wrong and Anton would you mind if you're adding if you are here in session from your laptop would you mind sharing the screen with the questions just for convenience Oh perfect just for everyone to see the same the same document and layer let's start I mean I'm so sorry I mean there are obviously questions in the yeah basically a Kyle who is no you know everyone first of all Kyle is actually one of the two people who are leading the effort on AI to and in terms of data maintenance data sets house and all the relate that you so basically hear they're very busy with that day in and day out as far as I understand and Kyle are on this call right now there are most of the team leads we currently have working on particular challenges for you know this this activity and so we didn't we didn't join a lot of other people just to keep the audience controllable let's say but I think that the the people on this call are aware most of the questions which are raised within the teams on daily basis ok yeah let's start and Anton would you like to technically facilitate what it wants to be the first questions you know I would appreciate that so like so since we have a list of questions from the community so essentially we're just like voicing them etc and also the people so let's start with do anyway like in the audience right now have the questions to Kyle ok let's start to the little list so some have to release tension or yeah let's do this ok any any any plan any plan changes to the data sets just briefly so that we understand very worried so all moving direction overall yes so currently - what we're focusing on four core 19 is we're trying to move to daily updates that's sort of one big thing one big request that we've gotten to move it to daily updates we've had to build out some pipelining stuff like reuse some cements color pipelining stuff and so the sources of the papers will also change somewhat just because so that instead of pulling directly from like disparate sources and trying to harmonize them into one unified thing on a daily basis we're repurposing more and more tools from cement scholar to do this so daily updates should be coming fairly soon but I'm trying to do some quality checks to see if like using the different pipelines source the sources causes some sort of fundamental change in like the papers that are included in the data set I don't think it will that's one big change and I guess like this Friday will be the release that sort of pilot tests that transition with the new sources and so we'll see what happens there beyond this we're looking at sort of our most requested features and this includes tables yeah so tables we're trying to add soon what we were we're currently working with about three to four different tools that can provide tables to which aren't publicly available there like through partnerships and such so we're working out sort of contractual like like like what is it called administrative stuff have to see if I can use that and for each of these one of them tool is public and then the other one is basically just like trying to release raw XML from publishers which was on another Avenue if we can actually just get the rocks and also the papers then the tables are well represented there but all of these things basically take because they come from different sources we need to work out sort of legal and administrative agreements around how to release that and then how to keep it up to date and we're also trying to decide how we want to sort of consolidate efforts to make use of those tables so that should be coming soon as an addition but we don't really know in what form or what mode of distribution those will be made available beyond this citations incoming and outcoming should also be be made available pretty much as soon as we have daily updates because of the pipeline that we're using citations would also be part of that metadata now citations would be linked to semantic scholar papers and if you want like data for those particular papers you can query this eminent scholar API for that metadata yeah so I have I'm just this my notes I had to put all of this together because we're we're writing to or trying to put out like a little preprint that documents these things cuz if there's a lot of like common questions well actually actually it Kyle after this conversation I think if you find beneficial to share this list of answers or questions we will oh yeah of course this is gonna go up on our YouTube so it's gonna be accessible for everyone who I need it solve you know just for the yeah I think these are the main things these are the main things that we are actively working on and of course which is adding more papers and more full-text as we find them um so those are the main things there are several other sort of planned features augmentations of the data set that we would like to do but we don't necessarily for and that's probably something that we might want to talk to you guys about since we had that last call where we talked a little bit about like what's like a good what are things that we could sort of mutually benefit via yeah and so I thought about that a little bit and that thing to have some ideas you're absolutely there but specifically to answer the question I think those winners there aren't currently being actively plant from the least cool his question is yeah just let me let me do a quick check why are you with us iíve seen you disconnected for some reason just checking I'm sorry yeah sure yeah it's a very general question maybe it's a little bit stupid but dealing by cons are closely with data set was a little bit confused on the logic or by beach as the papers were selected connected some are suddenly in these researches only children in a certain climate so that that's not really kinda you know crystal clear to me and my team what was the motive behind the grouping these papers together so the logic from creeping these papers together I can tell you specifically how we constructed it so the the data set is constructed from papers issued via query to PubMed Central and the query is specifically like the strengths Cova 19 coronavirus and 2019 and cove Sarsat cove mercy cove severe acute respiratory syndrome Middle East respiratory syndrome these sort of terms that were I think we created from one of our collaborators was basically like these other search terms we probably want to start with four initial set we issued this as aquaria diploma central we did notice that later on after the fact that there are some papers that somehow match that query but didn't have anything to do with that and I think there might just be some issues with like the tool I guess yeah there's definitely some papers that don't match because there's been ones about horses dogs and cats research where you have for example viral disease and a special species when he did testing but then there are some kind of a social researches and kind of a climate researchers that have actually nothing to do with a viral diseases and then I've got are completely confused yes yes so I think so I can tell you what like exactly what we did and then there's like also some general thoughts about what should belong in the day so what should belong out of the data set so in terms of the specific things that's in a set it's composed of articles from pmc that matched to that particular query when when you issue like a search on pmc it also comprised of articles from bio archive and med archive curated by i think the buyer archive has a feed a specific dedicated Cova 19 so we're sort of defaulting to whatever they think is related to Coba 19 there's also a collection from Elsevier we didn't really vest the papers that come from elsewhere with Elsevier basically made open a collection of articles that they've deemed to be related to cope in nineteen under their specific license and we've harmonized that but we've also found like papers under that set to also not be particularly related and then there's finally the sets from the WH o so WH o has a Koba 19 database where they have hand curated articles about Co V 19 and those are being organized and provided by CCI by matching them to like licensing information via unpayable so basically the short answer is there's a lot of different sources that are providing what they respectively think is related Cova 19 and we're responsible for harmonizing this well because we've noticed that there are like issues with particular sources giving us papers that are nestled a coke 19 or even like vaguely current virus SARS MERS related one new thing that we're analyzing right now is with this upcoming release we are pulling papers under a more strict query from Symantec scholar specifically so we'll see and basically in the process of doing some sort of analysis to see how closely those papers match the query versus the previous papers that were that were a part of the dataset is that does that help with like understanding like where these like random papers are come from yeah thank you so much in terms of the general larger question around what belongs in coordinating or not this is actually I got a pretty open research question so we've been working with we've been talking with people from Microsoft Research around around this question and this is one of those situations where it's not like these are the papers that necessarily you have to look at and these and everything else is should be excluded if you actually just Traverse from citations like if you imagine like court 19 and the you go for all outgoing citations from these papers because they cite other papers you immediately start getting to like a set of papers that's like millions of papers um and then if you go one more hop again for citations you go into like the tens of millions of papers and presumably two hops away citations could still contain relevant information but you can't possibly release like one it's like just really really difficult to talk to each publisher to get an okay on full-text release of millions and millions of these papers and from a practical perspective if we release a data set that is basically like all of science and ask people to sort of work on that data set that sort of isn't very helpful even if there is a chance that there's like some slightly related Bing snippet in some like sort of disconnected paper and so trying to find that right balance is sort of an open research question as to like if your purpose is to study coca 19 what is considered relevance well we there so there's a technicality issue of like what we want to make sure that we have the right search terms that were matching the articles accurately to those search terms including those but what about things about like social distancing which probably won't exist which are probably totally relevant and by you might have to look into like social psychology literature those aren't included in court 19 but maybe there you there's relevant questions that we want answered and there's helpful snippets of text that we can extract from that literature but if we start including all social science like social psychology literature then what else are we including you know like it's gonna get it's gonna get big quickly isn't it's gonna multiply in in size exactly so almost yes and so that's why I guess this is like this really interesting research question around specifically for for issues like Cova 19 what papers can we should we definitely include and what papers come with your fort to exclude for the purposes of basically practicality I'm making progress does that does that help also that's like a another I don't have an answer for that and that's something that sort of we're still actively thinking about I'll worry somehow we're all kind of doing that yeah yeah that's true it helps a lot and it's the same question buffets like if it's relevant to a viral disease then up to which degree it's relevant to each kind of researches it's relevant so yeah that's that's a normal process and thank you so much for explaining cool actually publish the paper pretty much about this topic where I I went out in and out to have some citations and try to rank the papers based on the relevance to a given topic so if there are more discussions happening I would love to to be in on those but I can I can get in touch with you Kyle Oh later yeah I also had a specific question about the wh o date papers within core 19 yeah are those identifiable by looking at the whe o confidence column and seeing if there's a value in there or its class okay okay thank you okay shall we move to the next question number two sure thing from the test data sets and quartering I think is basically a question it's a questioner on collaboration and not to placate an effort because we've quite different quite large number of people are turning up and going some other group is doing something but we don't want to duplicate the F all the work because I think of a more ground and I see I think we want to make sure that we're and you talking from the same sheet so we don't double up work yeah so yeah but this also came up this also came up this also came up with this win in our previous chats yeah exactly this is something we discussed you know because Corona Y team has enriched the dataset significantly and remember we discussed whether it's possible to share the in which data sets but you know for good reason it's hard for you to do because you're like energy sources and maybe what we can do as far as I understand this question is just make sure that we are you know kind of maybe enhancing the original data says you have something like that yeah sure yeah I mean so I would definitely if people want to contribute back to the original data set I definitely welcome it I'm still trying to figure out what's the best way to do this so like creating a dedicated slack channel that handles these sort of like to look to be able to like discuss these specific data set changes seems like one good direction the other one and another thing to also do would be to add more and more of a code into some like open github repo that people can contribute to yep so I think there's that's basically so basically I'm like Pro incorporating changes back into the original dataset how's it how it creates a positive feedback loop that improves the whole system and everyone's job gets easier but how do we do it is the problem what is the best way for people shall they just reach out to you indeed join channel or you know just people to understand how they shall appointees how about this I think what we need to do is I need to put together the github repo and start adding some code there and then I can point you guys to the github repo and then have everyone just contribute to that and then the other thing is probably to actually start this slide Channel I would normally use my a to slack but it turns out that we have like these some like slack has some odd security think we're our IT group group has to like approve every single person yeah we have that we add to a shared channel so I just to create anyone any workspaces I'm gonna say that would get clunky quick cuz population grows yeah fast sometimes yeah so I think just like a new workspace I'll probably just do that and then we'll see from there I'm not super worried about I guess I'm maybe a personally a little bit less worried about duplication of efforts at this stage it's always gonna happen and there's worry about like spending too much effort to then reduce your education and it's like right yeah yeah there's no point - there's no point point so much effort to stop duplication that the effort to stop the duplication is more than the duplicated effort anyway yeah I would I would actually say that it's not it's not I would reformulate the question actually it's only about duplication it's it's rather laboratory because if is the team is producing something which might potentially available to the wider community how we made is accessible and the best way is actually to collaborate with you initially since you own the data set but the original data set if the enrichment or additional code is which is done is failure you can just quickly expose to the public rather than for you to redo this for new level yeah yeah perfect so question number three then copper is duplicated to filter data expose every time never get through the reference for one aha yes that is correct that is the assumption right now I guess a content the question continue since the next line or something oh yeah yeah sorry I got some and I was like is them all yeah I see I need to scroll it could the broad broad as possible Saturday with the best developer there so ha I think maybe so I would say probably not I don't think we where we will be providing a notion of best JSON because not I think little because we don't know we just don't have the bandwidth to do the to be able to build like junk detectors or even like even if there's like even as beyond junk detection if you have to correspond JSON and like one of them the PMC parse misses something but the other one the PDF parts get something like how would we possibly know it's just like it's a it's a substantial amount of work and at some point we would like to be able provide this so that people don't have to do it but I think at some point we just made it soon where it's like what we're doing right now is that's it's already too much and we can't also support this bit reliably so yeah I think at this point for basically identifying what is the best JSON for each paper sort of leaving that up to the community at this point now if that's something that people sort of converge on like a good solution and want to contribute back kind of building on question to maybe yeah probably that that might be one one direction we probably wouldn't remove those Jason's just on the off chance that those are that can still be improved but we could add like a pointer to like this is the best community agreed method for identifying what Jason's to use if you really only want to use one of them and this is the pointer to which one that is per pork or your daddy quarter UID yeah I guess like contributing that back and adding that smu metadata field would be reasonable does that answer the question and also I think the in terms of the logic we haven't we have an FAQ on our discourse forum that sort of details how we think people should be using the data sets so I'm hoping hoping that got people are reading that we were mainly hoping for people to work with the metadata file as that sort of denotes units of papers yeah I guess that's basically what it's described here which is just like working on the metadata file for each row or for each court UID in the metadata file there's a bunch of pointers to augmentations of that data just because we couldn't save them all in one CSV or we didn't want to save them all in one CSV and then you can pick and choose what text what JSON text to also pull in at that point in time to do your inference so um how can you can you restate what with the form for this course oh yeah I hope it's linkage to the main page but it's I can't just paste it into zoom has a chat thing right yeah yeah there it is thank you yeah so there should be a there should be an FAQ and I've been adding to it as people have been asking questions so hopefully that answers sort of what hopefully the FAQ answers any sort of confusion around why there are multiple Jason's why there are multiple PDF Shaw's cetera cetera basically they're all artifacts because scientific publishing it's really messy there's multiple PDF shots because PMC for example allows has a PDF for the main paper and also a PDF for the supplementary files and we don't know which ones which and so it's like you parse both and you conclude both and hope people figure it out or when we do paper clustering because we get a paper from Elsevier that is basically the same paper from PMC we don't necessarily want to include two rows for that because that sort of isn't very useful so we but the PDS look slightly different because one of them has a watermark so now the hash of that binary looks slightly different so it gets a different sha we have include both so it's like things like that interesting a lot of complexity just in in many basic things it looks like yeah it's a central publishing is is is a little bit rough to work with and I think I guess the core 19's aren't exposed that a bit well hopefully there might be some lessons from it and some documentation process that starts to become like standardized I think yes we do we have been talking about standardization to sort of support this but this is fennel this is like not a new thing like people in the library senses have been studying this for four years and it's it's a tough problem to come up with like a thick schema for defining these are the fields for representing a scientific document especially now with newly publishing like pre printing and it's and people can upload multiple drafts updated drafts of the same conceptual paper but with different contents to the same IDs on Paillard Kevin might archive at that point like do you even consider them for same paper anymore or what's the deal yeah yeah that's complicated yeah actually this is a great challenge for Qur'an a way to take or maybe make standardization happen across English okay maybe layer let's stay with one problem at a time yeah likely with let's do it ten problems at a time cuz he's even then it's still one problem number four actually quickly rephrase number four because like some of this stuff already happened within current away so we run into issues that Cagle that the said platform has this limit of 20 gigs for their data sets like storage and since we're in reaching we already like unbounded limits and now regarding the like AI to encode nineteen dead that I said is also can get in up and up in terms of size so to you guys is there a path forward what you plan to do in terms of how the core 19 will get put into Cal communities I I do not know the answer to this yeah so I think the extent which we're doing the coordinating with cackled has been around the provision of the coordinating resource Cagle fake basically put a lot of this stuff together it's and the questions I think they're handling the questions are coming from the West EP and the curation and evaluation they're sort of the ones who are driving the evaluation or working with medical experts to do the evaluation so in a sense I I personally consider this to be like haggles task that's near to and people are helping with I don't really know the details of like the 20k limits well it's it's so just like limitation of a platform for our for us as users to upload our data etcetera so I think for coordinating if coordinating becomes to be Callaghan had just could bump the limits on their end but obviously they can do it for us that's why when it becomes problematic on our end for creating where the data source etcetera is there any other way to get co19 are currently cannot just go directly to a i2 website oh yeah I mean we host we host or not in our own website too so yeah I'm the worst move it might be if it's not already being done in my be worth moving all of there was you know where it's coming from just yeah in the middle rather than the middle man that's not adding anything to it for us well Cagle adding a yeah that in the questions itself which is which is definitely awesome yeah we've already got the questions now so new questions for us okay yeah we have we maintain the basically the the way that we do data sets a download situation is we point them to this page which is where we directly upload the data set and then cackled I think basically pulls from that reorganizes it and then hosts on their platform okay so let's move to next question again Mike added other questions over here okay yeah so we didn't know why - Michael yeah but anyway so - I think they're concerned oh I don't understand this question I guess I feels like my opinion is that you could do whatever you want don't it say it again I guess my position is like he is whatever tool you want I am NOT but regarding like if we ask this question in the context of collaboration right do you guys have some qualities restriction in terms of what what is used regarding Mike Howard process the data yada yada I see if that's my question we personally I guess it's on a case by case basis is really tough we try to release everything from a a - under like an Apache 2 license so any dependencies on that we sort of want to make sure that it they're also under a similarly permissive open and source license um that's sort of why we've just intended to stay away from proprietary like enterprise software mmm plus - special circumstances such as like PDF parsing my tea might just be fundamentally really tough to do it without like buying so yeah yeah I guess again general we try to go for like more permissive open access licensed tools mm-hmm okay sounds good I do whatever you want yes no I mean yeah we just again just kind of like this guidance we're trying to figuring out what is the good way to pass forward for our community that's why we kind of touch invaders with you know obviously with with you guys yeah I guess like even on just because there's going to be stuff that we're not going to integrate that's coming out of your community and which is holding mine because that's sort of like your community's owned like own contribution thing and my recommendation there is in the past we have we have had a software that was not open X open sourced or depended on like more enterprise software and like within like months or even like a year like maybe like worst like a year the other tools that had it more like open source open community around it basically surpassed like those other tools in terms of per moments just because they had like a large pool of people working on it so I would just lean towards anything you can immediately please we we lean towards open as a general rule yeah as a value system anyway because we're very transparent and we're very transparent in everything not just the dare would've dare in the creations we have without record all the calls and people can see what we talk about it's all very open mm-hm cool so six no it's fairly settled wishing papers to add and change updates oh I I guess so just asking for greater specificity in the changelogs because right now for the change laws were just counting diffs in terms of like these are the number of papers in each of these sets that have changed added deleted it's like that so is Mike requesting like there are all the IDs maybe just something more specific I think we're starting to integrate and guide ease and referencing IDs from the IC um I don't know the I guess I don't really know coordinating last modified dates so and I guess I guess we already have the version tag though like don't we already have a dates for each of the versions I yeah I think like in recent versions something got added to it again this questions get crowd sourced from like first week or something so some of the I there's no problem yeah yeah okay I think I let me know if this is still a problem I feel like we have the versions now and I and the changelog should be sufficient if you want like these specific IDs that are different I don't know if we actually want to do that because there are going to be specific times in which yeah so I can tell you like well where this pain comes from our end like every time they knew like datasets get you know released it's kind of like a like a huge frenzy for people to rerun everything they had and some of our pipelines are already kind of generates like you know out the four gigs of data you you have like 20 gigs of data so that that is kind of a painful process for those folks so some form of like I mean synchronization needed to essentially how to make that process not to redo the redundant work that was already done and things like that so I guess it comes from their end and so I'm actually kind of curious can you give me an example of like what specifically is breaking from weak weak ah okay I'm not the right person but yeah we'll follow up with that okay I think in parts we are hoping that like people expect yeah I guess like the to expect potentially breaking changes once it moves to daily updates I guess on a day to day basis there might not be anything that's fundamentally breaking okay can you kind of expand on this was this like plan so right now it's a weekly updates yeah no you guys when do you plan to transition to kind of likely builds of data set when I don't know what the deployments there yes the plan is there yeah it should be in a couple weeks okay this Friday is sort of a pilot test of like what the form of the data looks like we've been trying to yeah I guess it's hard for me to answer I like to talk about issues around breaking changes without knowing exactly what's breaking like for example are things breaking because the data says size is increasing and then in terms of the provisions like machines that you guys are using are big enough to support that and so it runs out of memory like that's like one type of thing to address versus yeah EEMA changes versus there's a new type of paper with like a specific thing for which a regex fails on like those are all sort of different and so I don't quite know well there's a family compound problem is both an optimization and our and our pipelines right and then again it's it's the input so will that disk or what the disk or slate that you like message in the chat is a good place to kind of follow up this plans to transition to nightly builds well yeah if yeah if you want to have like very specific this thing broke because of this change from this week to this week hmm on this like specific paper or something that like if you can just like have those then I can look at each one of those and figure out ways what's happening there and then yep it looks like seven and eight are addressed so yeah thank you and any additional question steam just any Chinese question question about on the the ai2 website that hosts the coordinating data said yeah we're it offers the metadata file it also offers the Microsoft ID by yourself academically yeah can you do you are you aware of exactly where where that's coming from and how you guys process that file at all because I've been using a file hosted by [Music] microwave at uh what's the file close to by Microsoft no problem ok so I mean like you can share that with me later the in terms of the file that's hosted on our and that is basically we're working directly with the Microsoft research team that handles the Microsoft academic graph to get those IDs I believe they're providing that they're providing the mapping on their end and we're hosting it on our end anything in the future we are going to be keeping that as a supplementary dump the reason is because they are trying to do some like citational stuff it's a point to like a larger set of papers that they think is relevant beyond core 19 and it's just like there's gonna be two distinctive use cases which is one is people working on this specific or 19 set and another is people who want to actually work on this like much larger pool and are willing to let go collect that data themselves because we're not gonna be providing it we want to keep those separate so we don't like flood the metadata CSV file with like a lot more rows so yeah supplementary dump like we know about supplement dump from Microsoft that is on our page I don't know and they get help one that you're referencing okay I guess can I talk to you separate - yeah totally cool I guess I had if there aren't if there aren't any more specific questions I had a couple thoughts that I had since our last chat sure I guess pertaining around working together on like something that's not necessary duplicate so there are a couple things that we haven't been able to do and one of the major ones is around foreign language papers so there's a lot of literature in China for example and but definitely being published in other foreign languages and our processing pipelines don't work well with non-english language text that's just the nature of a lot of the tools that we're using and and also just like our expertise and being able to do like junk filters the identification of authors and whatnot authors title parsing paragraphs and so like that it's like we know how to do this for English and we can iterate on doing that for English we just don't really know how to do this for a foreign language and or even like papers that have a mix because there are definitely papers that have like a mix of like bilingual papers and so we're definitely missing like we know for sure that we're missing Kovan relevant copa90 literature because of this this is a substantial effort that I think we don't have the bandwidth to take on but we sort of know what needs to be done so if there's interest on your side to working together on something in this space I'd be happy to talk more with whoever wants to help out with that we have been in chats with the Internet Archive who are scraping a lot of the Chinese papers the reason we want to do this scraping now is because we know that these Chinese paper repositories for community are going to be unavailable at me like they're taking them down they're looking to move basically yeah and so if we want them we want them we need to get them now we probably wants them yeah we probably as yeah we probably wanted them yeah yeah yes and so and so that's why we've been talking with Internet Archive around around collecting these PDFs and then first sort of what the biggest hurdle to overcome we also need collect any sort of metadata so see you at the PDS just because if you have the gold metadata we don't have to worry about bad PDF parsing and we also want to collect licensing information because you know we have to adhere to like legal restrictions on what we can can't do with those with that data so collecting all that data is it's a pretty substantial effort in archive is doing some if you guys want help out there's probably some coordination there around how to do that and then yon debts processing the data is another substantial space just because we don't know how existing tools work on those papers and where the failures are and that's one of those things where just having a large set of people working on it will identify a lot of palms more quickly then like me working at it by myself or something like that so is there a chance you would love to discuss possible extract and relevancy cluster mechanism there are B's us sorry can you say lammeter is there a possibilities it's like you're open to a discussion on our village kind of methodology you use to extract papers oh yeah absolutely all right I'm sorry so what do we do yeah sure yeah we should totally we could we could only chat about that yeah so that is one space it's just basically foreign language papers and then the third thing after that's kind of look the final thing after that is basically wondering about how to get translations and I think the translation space is very very tricky it's not even obvious to me that it needs to necessarily exist I imagined the truck I mean we're already struggling with the digitization and I like the digital translation of the language translation of scientific literature is probably just as complicated I I would say that like it's probably something we don't want to tackle outside of some sort of like expert crowd-sourced translations bit so we probably don't want to tackle this from an automation aspect or from like a I think it's possible to actually copyright of our efforts with a huge are translators databases and they would probably like to take it as that fight against could be nineteen effort so probably I think there's going to be two components one of which is the language barrier to be able to translate into into other languages and the other bit is actually maintaining the scientific like the correctness of the information just because there's technical language so like even English to English like a non-technical Ike I can't read any of the Cova 19 papers and really understand what they are so I imagine relation that preserves that is also difficult even if you're a native language speaker so yes that's great yeah yeah right yes yeah so I guess like that sort of the those three points collecting the data processing the data and then translating data are sort of three big areas where we sort of have a lot of opinions on how to do it and we know sort of who's been looking into this but we just don't have the bandwidth so maybe you guys would be interested in this space because it's definitely not something that we're actively doing right now another area for this is documents about Cobie 19 that aren't scholarly in nature that aren't publishing so published papers so what we sort of know how to do semantics color is process and handle organization of scientific articles so these are like preprints public journal publications etc but there's a lot of information about coca 19 that doesn't exist in scholarly articles for example around like testing let's say early on I guess like even still now but like early on especially like maybe like few weeks ago testing was was such a huge question and people didn't have time to write their testing finding up in like nicely formatted worded preprints or they definitely dropped you you've had a conversation about that visit the main experts yeah and say claimed unpublished works might have a tremendous weight yes yes so that's sort of that's kind of what I was trying to to point to which is we know that there's a there's a missing component here which is we are handling a lot of the scientific publishing bit and I think the lot of the value will be will be in processing preprints and finding relevant historical literature that people can't draw upon because there are still open questions but in terms of like the very very recent like the most recent findings about copa 19 that is not going to exist in pre prints and it's definitely not gonna assistant articles that we have in core 19 it's going to exist in technical reports maybe forum posts maybe ran like blogs or sheets from various groups who are working on like on the field for this maybe they're just work in the in the form of notes that they're taking and divine and unpublished works that actually are just appending peer review and approval and this works might be have a crucial influence because they are very recent and none of these works are included so that's one of the problems absolutely yes and so I think that's another space that we don't have been with to collect I think the collection bit here is is the toughest bit because we don't know where they're coming from so we have a little bit of like we have a little bit of an easier problem problems here which is we can look to PubMed which has a long history of partnering with a lot of journals to collect information so we just work we interface with it via search we can talk to our publishers because we have a long history working with them which is why we have like the Elsevier collection but where are the notes or like the technical paper like the technical report so with like the white papers being published being like printed abouts like the the most recent findings like we don't know where they are so finding that and then collecting it on a consistent basis is a lot of effort that we just can't do but maybe you guys could take on that's another area that I think I'd sort of like to see some group working working at that there is I'm see that translation I think those are the two because I might have forgotten one but those are so the two biggest ones on my mind right now outside of sort of general text processing of the existing coordinating Getty said getting like fixes back into the original data set that's sort of like the other thing that's on my mind where it's like he's much better if we can get a large community people working on chess as opposed to just yeah of doing this yeah okay Kyle let us yeah thank you for for responding the question section it's it's very helpful to the community and let us internally group and listen to you with the help of proposals for these questions right I am pretty sure that we will be able to provide you with the you know contribution announcer thank you very much thank you yeah all right stay in contact yeah absolutely thank you very much bye-bye everyone thanks everyone thank you thank you again how highly appreciated thanks | CoronaWhy | UCEeuBPsfGE3fceAN3yL5Gig | 2020-04-22 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,684 | 41,137 |
ep8Qjm5c42Y | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ep8Qjm5c42Y | Guy named Garfield says he wants to KILL Rastafari⁉️🤔Is Haile Selassie in the Bible❓🤔@RasIadonis | weekend and then we have we're going to talk a little bit about kimet is black and what type of debat can we come up with for kimet we're going to talk about Sumer stuff and Ethiopia I do want to debate pitar though P if you out there listening I want to debate you on is high salassi connected to the biblical to the to the Bible is high salassi connected to the Bible we need to just kill this whole rasa fire and craziness right now all right so here we go family let me put this to the to the Bible is high connected to the Bible we need to just kill this whole rasar and craziness right now is high elassi connected to the biblical to the to the Bible is highi connected to the Bible we need to just kill this whole raster fire and craziness right now | Rastafari Israelites | UCNQ5cEWhlkp8drNK1ghdIMA | 2023-09-18 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 153 | 756 |
0B2IPlnm7qg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0B2IPlnm7qg | The J-16 is an advanced version of the J-11 with an added ground attack capability | the j16 is a Chinese twin engine tandem seat all-weather multi-role Strike Fighter it evolved from the j11 air superiority fighter it is a more advanced version with an added ground attack capability it is broadly similar in terms of capabilities to the American f-15e production of the j16 began in 2012. this aircraft has been in service with the people's Liberation Army Air Force plaf since 2013. the j16 is still being manufactured and of 2019 more than 128 j16s were in plaf service the Chinese military has been looking for an offensive defensive multi-role aircraft and had the jh-7 as its close air support aircraft however the jh-7 did not have radar-guided air-to-air missiles which makes it vulnerable to other Fighters common in the region such as the F-16 China sought an aircraft with multi-role capabilities and in 2012 acquired from Russia a total of 76 soon 30 mkk for the people's Liberation Army Air Force plaf and 24 su-30mk2 for the Navy the j16 is a product of Shenyang aircraft Corporation its design was based on the j11bs a twin seat combat capable trainer version of the j11 and the Russian Supply 230 mkk the j16 has improved avionics and uses Chinese ws-10b engines production of the j-16 began in 2012 and in 2013 the first j16s were introduced in plaf service the aircraft has an indigenously designed and developed modern active electronically scanned array aesa radar infrared search and track irst a new electronic countermeasure systems the aerodynamic design of the j16 stresses maneuverability rather than stealth the Jets camouflaged coloring makes the aircraft blend into the sky and sea this makes it more difficult to detect by naked eye although the j-20 is China's more advanced fighter jet the pla Air Force still needs the J 16 as the two types of fighter jets can complement each other the j-20 can use its stealth capability to destroy hostile anti-air installations and win aerial superiority first but it cannot carry as many weapons as the j16 because the j-20 hides its weapons in smaller weapon Bays to ensure stealth capability Composites are used throughout the overall construction of the aircraft to promote strength with weight saving measures the j16 has a long range of 3000 kilometers and can be refueled in the air this aircraft is armed with a built-in 30 millimeters g-sha 30-1 cannon with 150 rounds of ammunition it has 12 underwing hardpoints and can carry up to 8 000 kilograms of Ordnance including air-to-air missiles 8xpl 12 medium range and 4 xpl 9 short range anti-ship and anti-radiation missiles cruise missiles Free Fall satellite guided and laser-guided bombs and Rockets in 2018 AJ 16 was seen armed with the new appeal 10 short range and pl-15 long range air-to-air missiles the pl-15 is an active radar-guided long air-to-air missile with a range of over 150 kilometers and a speed of Mach 4 for 939 kilometers per hour most types of Chinese air-to-surface weapons currently in service with the plaaf can be installed on the j16 variants the j16d is a electronic warfare aircraft variant noted by its wingtip equipment pods and other equipment add-ons this version has a shorter radome and also lacks the internal 30 millimeters gun and irst the j16d completed its Maiden flight on the 18th of December 2015. it is broadly similar to the American EA 18g growler | Main Battle Tank | UCnZG2SBvPrhCilZuqiMEUYA | 2023-06-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 569 | 3,340 |
AO3NGeQpBR0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AO3NGeQpBR0 | I Am The Doorway | [Music] you are the doorway you were sure you killed the boy you didn't just dream it i didn't dream it but i didn't kill him either i told you that they did i am the doorway you buried him yes remember where yes if you want to see it you'll have to get my wheelchair you can't roll it through the sand not yet tell me again all right last night at 7 i was out here looking at the gulf and smoking just like now and further further tell me about the flood richard we've been through it in through it there's nothing now you may remember do you think so possibly and when we're through we can look for the grip it doesn't matter what you got all the gadgets plus five suit up cameras and a nice little telescope with a zillion lenses and filters find some gold or flat barrier find some nice dumb little blue man for us to study exploit and feel superior to anything you should probably know that diesel found something dessa what's that an experiment that never panned out deep space antenna we were broadcasting pie in high frequency pulses for anyone who cared to listen same ideas that radio telescope in west virginia you know the one that listens to the stars only instead of listening we were transmitting primarily to deeper space saturn jupiter uranus if there's any intelligent life up there it was taking a nap we thought probably dust particles but it was near mars little blue men only cory went out yes and if he brought in any interest of a plague no scans detected it still it doesn't matter only the here and now matters they killed the boy last night richard it wasn't a nice thing to watch or feel his head it exploded as if someone had scooped out his brains and put a hand grenade in his skull finish the story what's the tale [Music] liftoff [Music] uh [Laughter] [Music] i came to back on earth they hadn't even had a chance to roll out the red carpet yet i was bleeding bleeding over a red carpet that didn't look anywhere near as red as i did i would have made a great prom date for carrie i know show your hands no i can't let them see i told you that it's been two years why now arthur can you tell me that i don't know i don't know maybe whatever it is is a long gestation period or something or who's to say i even got it out there whatever it was might have infected me when we were in fort lauderdale or right here on this porch for all i know i'm trying arthur i don't want you think that you're going crazy if i have to i'll show you my hands it cost me an effort to say it but only if i have to i'll get the car we'll look for the boy thanks richard have you cut some towards an ivy i guess it could be just nerves keep our eye on it dr fun is fishing but if it's urgent when will dr flanders be back doctor flyers will be back after tomorrow afternoon at the latest never mind all right artie it's your party where's the body where's the boy arthur they moved him they knew they used me they're getting the upper hand richard they're forcing their doorway open a little at a time 100 times a day i find myself staring at some perfectly familiar object a spatula a picture even a can of beans without knowing how i even got there with my hands out showing it to them seeing it as they do as an obscenity something twisted and grotesque sir are there dogs standing in front of something you said moving the boy's body you said but you are dead from the waist down your car is dead too but when you enter it you can make it go you can make it kill it couldn't stop you even if it wanted to don't you understand that i am the doorway they killed the boy richard they moved the body i think you better see a medical man let's go back check on the boy and find out you said you didn't know his name it's a small village ask whoa whoa whoa arty calm down no one has been reported missing you know him don't you he's a local artie have you been drinking so what you don't believe me you think it's all in my head don't you you ever heard of a.a already i know i drink i do but these hands would make you drink too richard so ain't no other way around it butt through i gotta show you you have to see them if i don't see them will you come with me to a meeting tomorrow i've been sober for five years now you must promise me one thing richard you must run if it seems i try to hurt you do you understand that yes you see them and they see you so i'm sorry it's all right i don't see anything you'll come with me to the meeting tomorrow let's go all right that should be the rest of it you're alcohol free now no temptations i'll make an art piece out of it to remind you what what it looks like see you tomorrow thank you richard [Music] ah [Music] how long has it been two years i'm in the program too it's what happened to you and corey that sobered me right up his hands his heart and his hands like eyeballs we never seem to find his head i am not crazy you must shut down the zeus project mars is infected by them i am doing this to save everyone the doorway is opening again i must close it forever arthur nelson former astronaut now a doorway to another world why is a nice dumb little blue man for us to study we are officially closed for business hi i'm karina kucha and this is snn news i'm kyle king and this is s n n news in space news the zeus project have successfully launched its first mars expedition colony while they've reported some infections similar to poison ivy the latest diseases are no more harmful than a mosquito bite no more harmful the name mosquito bite thank you kyle [Music] so [Music] so you | Futures Explored Film Studio | UCOIoLO0Ggg6LCmsEHILnPmg | 2020-08-18 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,101 | 5,551 |
s0aWoh1VYxY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s0aWoh1VYxY | How A Sushi Chef Achieved the American Dream and Shared Millions | Taro Arai | my dad woke up one morning he said hey I had a dream we're opening a restaurant together and the economy crashed today's guest is taro Arai and next thing I know we were down 11 million in debt so I told my dad I think it was not a dream it was a nightmare the principal asked me to go up to the podium and he started hitting me in public and on a Podium like that yeah on a Podium oh my gosh a family restaurant of five grew to 1000 employees from having no fish we use 52 tons of seafood every month we did about $75 or $80 million in sales last year you've raised over 3 million for the local community in Charities what do you think the importance of giving back is we don't even know who he was he sent us $300,000 tell me a little bit about your childhood okay my last name Arai means wild my Taro means first son so I was wild first son that's what my dad named me and then yeah I was in trouble everywhere I went and I don't know I was too unique I had a reverse Mohawk not a Mohawk but I just shaved the middle and like a landing strip Pretty ugly and my teacher didn't like it he used a Sharpie to paint my bald spot anything I did I got in trouble for in Japan do you think you got in trouble because you're a troublemaker or just because you're very eclectic and authentic what do you think that was hmmm interesting but without that I'm not here so I'm I'm thanking God for that too but yeah I don't know I just wanted to be different than others I just couldn't follow I don't know rules I guess for example my parents didn't have much money so shoes my dad couldn't afford it he was a pastor all his life and Japan is less than 1% Christians and so I found these red shoes for $8 I wore them in my first day of School Junior High School School morning assembly 2500 students were there principal asked me to go up to the podium and started hitting me in public and on a Podium like that yeah on a Podium oh my gosh so that's when I said wow okay I give the shoes to my principal I didn't wear shoes for a year because I didn't want to ask my dad to buy me another one people are really nice there but they have to follow the rules which maybe I should have learned well maybe not we might not have the creative brain that can come up with things like that what do you think was the most notable experience as a kid that shaped who you are today well Coming to America opened my eyes different culture different I mean everything was different we all talk about in Japan is be respectful be polite be punctual yes honor and then I went to Johnson High School which is kind of South area kind of hood okay we'll get I mean first thing I heard was what's up I said what's what's up there I can see only Sky I mean English was one of the hardest things for me and I didn't speak English I didn't have any friends or money so somebody said if you don't get it just say no problem so I kept saying that you know who's your favorite teacher no problem you kwhere are you going no problem so they started calling me Mr no problem and that's the attitude I had you know what I'm here I just take it as no problem and just do whatever I can that's all I was thinking about it yeah because I wasn't smart I had no talent so just keep smiling and keep telling myself no problem what was the biggest culture shock Coming to America I mean there's so many I don't know where to start for example you know I'm from the country side if somebody asked me would you like a Coke I have to say say oh no thank you as a respect thing and they have to ask me again are you sure you don't want it and then I have to say no I'm good and they have to ask again would you like a coke I said okay if you insist I'll take it oh wow that's how I grew up and then I came here I was thirsty middle of the summer one of my friends mom said would you like a Coke oh no thank you and he she closed the I'm thirsty I'm Dying I got to change this I yes please thank you very much right so different cultures I wanted to adjust as soon as possible so I don't miss out yeah how quickly after you guys got over here did you open Mikuni so two years I did a newspaper route with my brother collecting cans and cowboys and sell futons my mom and sister did housework we did everything we could we moved 10 times for year and a half like looking for a cheaper rent and stuff I only had one suitcase it wasn't that hard but then my dad woke up one morning he said hey I had a dream we're opening a restaurant together my dad never cooked in his life hes never had a business he had no business plan still today he doesn't know how to use a microwave and he's telling me we're opening a restaurant together after one dream one night one dream one morning he just told us we're going to pray about it I said Dad we don't even have any money thow can you even imagine this he said hey God gave me a vision it'll happen that's incredible that's back in ' 87 but then he said you know we prayed about it and we met a Japanese guy we don't even know who he was and exchanged phone numbers and then he sent us $300,000 to a bank account we had $2,000 so where did you meet him we originally we met him on the street in Roseville actually that's why I moved to okay so he was buying old houses so we asked him if you have a house if we can rent that'll be great because we're looking for a house and back in the day was about $1,500 to rent the house I still remember I drive by all the time and he said how about 750 I give you half off I said oh great sure I had about I don't know how many people lived in there with me my cousins all together about 10 people lived in the house little house and yeah he told my dad what are you doing and we shared the ideas and he decided to send us $300,000 so what did your dad say after he had the the vision you guys were probably like we don't know how to cook we don't have money did he just say hey we just wait and the right things will come to us yeah he said Miracles do happen you know with God and so I mean location is important he didn't know where to open we live in South area first and he goes to Roseville where there are no Asian people back then I was one of the three Asian kid in whole school back then and he opened the map he's a runner he said hey there's a dam out there I run around the dam so we picked Fair Oaks that's how he decided he had no idea where to open and gold river back then had no asian population right no they're not and of course I'm the Mr no problem I had no idea how much everything was worth so they said hey this hood is $50,000 I have no idea okay so "no problem" so within 6 months we ran out of money and we called that guy sorry we lost all your money and he said well let me send you another $100,000 he did and we run out again did he say why did he no he think it was a good investment I think there's got to be more I don't get it maybe he had a similar Vision I don't know Maybe but no I would never give to a pastor who has never done business and can't cook that kind of money and yeah we lost all our money and more we worked feels like we lost our money our goal was to raise $300 in sales a day that was our goal we couldn't reach it most of the time so after six months of not paying rent or lease they kicked us out they try to and then theres no vendor to work with no Bank to work with so I said Dad here I am I I was turning 21 we hit the wall and then I love basketball broke my ankle cut my hand wide open I was taping everywhere because I didn't have money to go to the doctor during basketball you cut you no I'm sharpening my knife Im working like 700 a.m. to midnight every day no Days off Sunday my dad you know has a little message if you listen to you get free food so we had to cook for the church so we're so tired every moment and uh yeah I cut my hand wide open and I was having ulcer because of so much stress because we're the only sushi bar in the whole world that didn't have any fish to sell because we couldn't afford it what did you sell nothing like avocado cucumber roll whatever we had and we didn't have very many customers anyway and then my dad is kind of a perfectionist if four people came in and ordered four rolls he has to make one by one by the time he gets to the third one they're gone they say I can't wait so we didn't know how to run a business that was my gosh so I told my dad I think it was not a dream it was a nightmare why don't we pack everything up and go back to Japan I begged him I cried at him because we had no future it seemed like but my dad kept saying hey let's enjoy sufferings and suffering bring patience patience brings good character good character to Hope and God will not disappoint and he said just keep digging deeper I said how deep down do we have to dig ourselves look at all these buildings deeper the foundation God can build something amazing upon it and he kept saying that's serious faith I mean okay so I couldn't doubt his faith because Saturday night after after work midnight whenever I stop by his room 3:00 a.m. or 4:00 a.m. 5 a.m. doesn't matter he's always awake never slept even a second to prepare for the Church sermon I mean he had a living faith you know did you ever have doubts about that faith it was a nightmare oh we had so many not fights but he disagreements he fired me I don't know how many times but I told my dad you can't do it without me but he said no if you don't like it if you don't believe it just quit and get out of here he's a very hardcore Japanese father so we clashed a lot incredible but seeing his faith and also let's say he came to my high school one time in his life I said wow you care about me he said no I just have to borrow money for vegetables I said okay I have some and um you know he was getting $450 pay from church every month and the he was giving $500 borrowing money from me I said Dad that's not 10% that's more than 100% tithing wow how could you do that my dad said hey there's no business that closed because of too much offering I said nobody's that stupid come on dad and he said you know I made a deal with God I just have to bring it up the percentage of my uh offering God promised me that God will bless the restaurant I said wow what was the turning point when did that when was it obvious like oh my gosh we're getting blessed so when I you know my dad was very strict so he said no sex before marriage right so I called my girlfriend in Japan you have to move here right now we have to get married I can't wait anymore we wrote each other for seven years I knew who she was she knew I was who I was so I I told her come now and as soon as she come I give her a ring boom boom boom boom four kids in 5 years so when I my second baby my dad woke up one morning again he said I had a dream I said no I don't think I want to hear this he said I'm gonna name your daughter 千羊 sen'yō means 1,000 sheep I said why do that to my daughter well God gave me a vision dream that we'll have a thousand customers a day there's no way 30 people can't fit in a little restaurant he's telling me we're going to have a thousand then I said you know what we'll see and then yoga shop closed down video still closed salon closed and we asked owner of the shop to move yo the other side where we started serving thousand customers on weekends wow yeah so my dad said what year Was this Miracles so late like 90s start going boom boom boom boom like 96 7, 8 we had about a couple hour wait you know hours wait on the in the weekends now and then my dad said let's move forward with gods plan so 1992 3, 4, we open new restaurants and family restaurant of five grew to a thousand employees over thousand from no fish we used 52 tons of seafood every month thank God for the big ocean right right yeah I think we did about $75 or $80 million dollars in sales last year congratulations more importantly my dad always said said give back to the community give back to the give back to God and be humble that's three things he told me over and over be humble be humble yeah you guys I'll never forget that well it it shows he ingrained that into you and you are a very humble man even out there when I was trying to compliment you the way you handled it was a lot of Grace more you know about me I have no Talent it's amazing I don't I don't know how I got here other than God's favor and the community that we have you've raised over three million for the local community in Charities can you what do you think the importance of giving back is well for me of course without our community we're not here and and I love sports so we did a basketball tournament tried to raise for church first because we had a little church we had three members it's you know first generation people and then it's hard to raise money with basketball tennis ping pong we did every Sports and somebody suggested why not golf I said well I never touched a golf club ever he said just do it anyway I said all right we're having a golf tournament 50 people showed up and we raised $500 and then I didn't know how to play I just hiked around and people laughed at me raise money I said this the easiest thing just get laugh at so we said let's do it again next year and then we raised like $12,000 what and then 50,000, 100,000 and last year we did about 300,000 whatever $20,000 so that's how we raised $3.5 million just through the golf tournament that's a getting laughed at I mean getting laughed at and then yeah the thing is again I didn't do much we just have a golf tournament and our community get together to do amazing thing for example like have you heard about rescue rolls we had a tsunami in Japan 2011 it was very personal to me so we created a local rescue rolls why not we sell those rolls these rollss and send 100% of the proceeds to Japan I know you know people don't have any family members there but people in Sacramento is just amazing we raised $180,000 from that roll so since then like Houston was flooded I said you know what we do one week for Houston $50,000 campfire even what first day we raised 26,000 by the time we get to a Paradise fire people already knew about it so they call me hey are we doing it I said yes we're going to do one week we don't want to close the restaurant but $75,000 were raised recently Maui fire in two weeks we raised another $100,000 too so everything we do we couldn't have done it without God or without people in in this uh Community they're the one driving us to do amazing things so you want to give back I love that you have to yeah I agree you've come up with 300 unique roles right can you talk about your creative process okay I guess I'm going to embarrass myself again go for it because I didn't have any um how do you say a training or nothing one day my dad said all right we're going to build a sushi bar without a permit my uncle came and build a sushi bar I said who's going to make sushi anyway my dad said who else I said okay let me get a book I had a lot of books like sushi for dummies and all this stuff and my sister was horrible because we had no idea how to make it the only thing is you know people came in they say back then nobody was eating sushi one guy said I like hot dogs I hate sushi I said okay no problem I go liquor store 3 door down get a hot dog I made a hot dog roll for him served with ketchup mustard one guy came me I like hamburger no problem I made a hamburger put the little miso in it miso happy Burger roll that was pretty good and Marilyn one of the customer say it's my birthday can you make me special roll okay Marilyn Monroll and then Johnny he was a dentist he was crazy said I want spicy and sweet all together so we made a spicy Johnny roll for him so I just keep creating whatever customer wants to eat next thing I know they're they're bringing their family their friends to show off their own rolls and next thing I know we had a 300 rolls that's another way of giving back so you're giving to the community with beautiful roles and obviously finances and then they're gifting you the ideas meanwhile our chefs as we grow we have 200 chefs now but they say we can't memorize all 300 rows we had to really cut down to a yeah a small menu but how many do you offer total I don't know about 60 70 I think the other day one customer say I want every roll on the menu that's why I heard 64 or five or something like that well I appreciate your uh how outspoken you are about your faith can you talk about a situation or a time where you prayed or you saw a direct miracle from God or evidence or a situation that showed you my faith is real I can rely on it God is real that's not arguable for me do you have a story like that oh yeah I mean too many I don't know where to start but for example like when I struggling my dad said one thing was it's not about what you know about who you know because I was going to school that day my dad asked me to quit school I said asian parents never ask your kids to quit school right but I wasn't that smart anyway and then he say it's about who you know I said okay I have to know Jesus to go to heaven I have to know right people so I start talking to every customer that's when I said you know what I'm gonna just introduce myself with my broken English I don't care and they helped us so much and then second thing was do your best and let God do the rest it's keep you know in me right now because my best might not be good but that's all I can do and the rest of it it's all up to him the results yeah okay so if doesn't work out I'm gonna blame God you know he's he's capable of everything so that's that's how I keep it going back then and then everything was going so smooth 2006, 7 so I don't know my I told my dad to retire and everything was fine I told my dad is it okay to have a partner he kept telling me no but I I wasn't listening hey you retired let me move on with my plan right and then 2008 we spent three and half million dollar beautiful restaurant in Denver and the economy crashed we lost half million dollars a year and then um my goal was to spend time with my kids you know they're playing basketball football golf here I am in Denver I said losing money I don't get to see my kids play is it worth it and next time I know we we were down 11 million in debt right oh so yeah everybody said it's time to file the bankruptcy so I told my dad I'm sorry I made a mistake you know I thought building I thought Fame all these things would just keep carrying us to the next level end up being broke so we asked our team to cut down 40% of their pay and a lot of people left and then yeah we tried to sell everything we have but we didn't have much many things to sell and I told my dad I'm sorry and what do we do he said you know what just remember start digging again keep digging I said again he say yeah it's God's plan he'll finish it just believe in God so that's a time I say you know what I ask my brother-in-law to become our CEO my brother to become our CCC which is a chief creative chef and then that we learned the word Kaizen do you know Kaizen mean I do but I want to hear from someone who practices it it's basically getting incrementally better like every time you do a you try to get better at that task right continues to improve and change for the better so we we decided hey let's change whole attitude toward work how run it back to basic back to God get back to people you know it's not about building let's do it all over again so we start brand new way we have a uh m i k u n i core values motivate ourselves to do our best eyes for inspire others care for for uh kaisen ourselves in every way you for United mik United mik mean kingdom of God United mean once under god with one human race we should love each other help each other and end for never stop dreaming and then I last one increase God's love increase love so our mission statement is to be the most loving and loved company in the world we don't have to make the best of this year we don't have to have amazing building it's about we love God we love people and we want to be loved by them so we changed whole attitude toward work and business and did that get back to a more customer Centric like loving the customer yeah in 2011 we opened the restaurant called Kaizen and then after that we paid off all the debt and opened the fome store along the way I made so many mistakes but every time I make mistakes and I don't know confess myself to God what I did wrong and he used that to get to a next level like I think Denver was the hardest lesson yet best lesson we had because of Denver we know how to make money now yeah we learn so much from the Denver store so that's it worked out one of many stories that's why K on this is a Denver coin and um you know keep reminding myself to be humble and purpose that's our logo you can keep it purpose and praise that's our logo means so your your title is Chief dream officer what are you dreaming up next oh I mean dreaming is free so why not dream big right I have so many dreams I don't know uh for business my CEO is crying but 50 50 50 why not 50 businesses by 50th Anniversary Mikuni with 50 family members I mean God can do whatever you know he wants but it's okay to dream so I have dreams in every way so that's part of the one of the business dreams how do you know what God's guidance is so when you pray or you say hey God told us to do this God told us to do that how does he communicate to you so in the past I really I depend on my dad because very spiritual he's close to God now now he has Alzheimer he's in the care home I mean he's the best golfer around you know why he hits SP in the Water by the time he get the uh green he's pting for birdie because he forgets everything he's the best golf he never he never lied he suddenly start lying I said what happened here I didn't know he had Alzheimer but now he's a care home I see him every week I take him out yesterday he was praying for a a sick uh patient out there and every Sunday he preaches to those K home patients he says same thing but for them it's a new new story every Sunday so it it's working out very well that's awesome yeah my dad didn't have to say much he showed with his action so whenever I have a question um what do you think about this and then well what the Bible said about this okay it goes straight to the Bible huh yeah applying that though so okay we're we're out of money like we have this vision and I'm I'm not grilling you I'm genuinely curious how do you keep your faith we came from nothing so if God takes everything that we have that's where we began so I don't dwell in Earthly thing too much I always say life is great but eternity is better so our focus is eternity that's why what my dad is going through is nothing to us we're so happy for him he did amazing till now you know his face is theirs he's gonna be in heaven anyway so like my mom too she's very happy right now she's the happiest woman well she doesn't have to cook for him every day anymore we take her out every week um yeah our focus is different than just this world so all the suffering it doesn't seems like suffering to us it's more of an opportunity to learn something or um what God teaches us we can see I like that I don't know I don't know where to go from here but yeah no I that answered the question do you have any input or advice for young men in their 20s that want to become entrepreneurs well I'm the best example right I mean I don't have anything to show like for example I had a um Japanese business magazine came to the interview me which school did you graduate I said well Mikuni University right my school and they said all right what did you measure in anyway I said well I teach Sociology class I'll say sociology right they had I don't know 10 20 questions I couldn't answer even one of them I didn't have anything that oh yeah I'm good at numbers or I'm good at this that nothing and then I thought myself God why you didn't give me anything but because of that I get to trust 100% to God at the same time I can't be proud of myself and I learned one thing is delegation delegation okay I used to have 26 keys that was a record for this restaurant door key back key yeah roof key you know all this alarm key I said wow that you know I have so many smart people around me got provide the best team out there so okay why don't you have key you're good at night if Alam come and call you good luck uh you're only person can you open the door for me I start giving away I have no key so you built a team essentially and you you asked for help so maybe don't be afraid to ask for help yeah I don't I'm not a a control freak because I know my capability ability so yes I think my thing was I God gave everybody different unique you know talent and then purpose too you just have to figure out what you know like for me definition of success is to do God's will so you just have to find it so last two months my encouragement video is all about purpose I'm asking every Chef on eval what is your life purpose and then I want them to think about it and pray about it and then come up with something that motivate you be passionate about you and then all these small well I shouldn't say small but a lot of obstacles have become smaller because you have the goal higher goal the purpose that you can live what is your life purpose I have too many like I have goals every year too like one time Kaizen right yes I told my kids you have to do this this this this this I was preaching them and then I thought to myself maybe I should ask them how can I be a better father wow that was a wrong question they kept right in they wrote a book oh yeah I asked my younger son I said hey can I start with one tell me one he said why don't you follow your own advice I said oh like what well you said don't text and drive I see you doing it well I'm very special yeah that rules just for you no I I'm sorry maybe I should show with my actions so since then I want to show with my action and set the goal so I can achieve it so I asked my wife too how can I be a better human she said well you you know you talk a lot I I love you know sharing she said why don't you think before you speak I said that's so rude h t h i n k t is a true H is a helpful I is inspiring n is necessary K is kind if not don't say it whole year that year I couldn't even talk anymore every time I think should I said this to this guy no that's not necessary so following year I told my wife hey it's not fair that I'm the only one talking why don't you talk Al lone you know she said well if you ever learn how to listen so that year my goal was to be a better listener it was not easy for me but I learned how to listen so I can listen to learn that was a great lesson and then two years ago was be humble servant so how can I show my love to everyone so I asked my wife she said you can pick up the dog poop every morning that's what I do for her if that makes her happy I'll do it and neighbor um I pick up the garbage once a week and for my team I do the encouragement video every month last year my goal was to give him while living cheerfully so my time my gift little gift I want to use for charity and also money too I told my one of my son he's a financial advisor here's the money I want to give and then I want to raise 5% every year for next 5 years it's weird more I give the account grew yeah it's crazy but anyway it's interesting the way that works yeah and then uh this year my goal is to a walking wisely daily I'm one step away from stupid I can destroy my family like that one mistake so every morning I wake up I read that walk wisely daily how can I do that I mean there's so many things you can do hang out with the right friends wise friends that start too but that's what I do this year I already have a next year's goal too do everything in love everything not just few thing what do you mean by that do everything I do that's what the Bible verse came up to me about last week I was praying about it what's next year's goal and then the Bible verse I have to see I haven't WR wrote it down yet but that came up to me and God spoke to me hey do everything in love because I can do just to looks good or something like that too right but I want to do it from my heart yeah that's awesome well that's going to be a great year but I I'll quit something every year too make sure I'm not addicted to anything okay I quit coffee for one year last year was no alcohol for one year it was it was not easy for me because I host so many parties and I do a lot of private parties and this year is no shopping so I haven't bought any shoes clothes nothing this year yet wow good for you I love this always growing you know I'm not I don't know what kind of things are you passionate about outside of sushi outside of sushi I'm all about I don't know family people I just love people so I want to be around people I want like I said I don't deserve to be where I am at so I'm going to keep giving back as much as I can and um I just want to spread my joy to everyone I meet I love that yeah I love that well I felt it when you walked up the uh the pathway it's just this this energy of of good yeah I don't know what to do with myself if I don't feels like uh I'm going to blow up if I don't share it's weird the more I share my joy somehow got filled even more from inside people say your glasses always have full they have no idea I have a bucket and overflowing 247 that's how I feel like every day do you have a daily practice to induce those kind of feelings like prayer gratitude I mean I wake up first thing I do is I want to thank God for everything that I have because you know I was born naked and everything I have is all rental I can't take them with me so I want to thank God for everything that I have and I always ask God how can I be useful for him this was great this is exactly you're you're what the show embodied I just full of gratitude I love that I'm very appreciate it guys if you enjoyed taro's journey of success from Japan to the United States with nothing but a dream check this video out right [Music] here [Music] | Vibe Full Episodes | UC6JHRvv1ArtSGc4ip3Pm1cA | 2024-03-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,227 | 35,645 |
_7_wFKIAPVg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7_wFKIAPVg | One Off the Checklist ✔️ Yankees Expose Red Sox Bullpen, Price Next? | why from New York New York it is Felix from my news.com what up Yankees fans like always all like almost us how about that game last night yes the Red Sox or a 100 win team do I believe that the Red Sox are the best team in Major League Baseball no they have more holes in them than a saltshaker they have so many holes like I said in my previous video their record is inflated because they took advantage of the teams that they were supposed to beat so if you were paying attention to this channel I clearly stated that the Yankees need to expose the Red Sox bullpen and they did just that it is not me saying oh I was right it's just common sense yeah the Red Sox have a horrible bullpen so today for this game they need to do the same to price they need to humble him down and bring him back to earth the Yankees have this series and they're going to close out with the Red Sox over there in Beantown so like I said the Yankees need exposed price they need to treat him like a rag doll they needed demoralize the Red Sox with a sweep remind them that in the beginning of the season people talked about how the Red Sox couldn't be good teams so I can see it now the Yankees are we want to remind them that hey Red Sox either even though you're a 100 win team oh yeah that doesn't mean much you know why because you inflated your stats beating teams like the Orioles and like I said your bullpen is horrible and you got starting pitchers like price that's really a big crime baby and can't handle losing and has a horrible record come playoff time like sale so the Red Sox have a whole bunch of question marks but if the Yankees could capitalize and sweep them and play a good series over there in Boston to close out the season that's a good way to make the Red Sox question themselves so Yankees I've seen Aaron Boone catch fire he seems to be more into the game showing more passion so that's a plus so yeah the eggs you know what they have to do tonight go out there manhandle price put a dent into his ego you did it last night putting a dent into the Red Sox bullpen all their fans are saying see we told you so our bullpen sucks make the Red Sox and their fans question their team under wind so what so what we all know they beat on horrible teams and this is why their record is inflated like that so Yankees fans leave your opinions in the comment section below do you think the Yankees are going to beat David Price around like a rag doll make him cry like a little baby have them do postgame interview saying that there's some sort of conspiracy against them at Yankee Stadium let him question himself like always hankies fans share alike i subscribe and now we'll check you out next time | NYYNEWS | UC-wI39tFM-omBDovxjjCe0g | 2018-09-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 532 | 2,700 |
HYX_ia8iD4g | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYX_ia8iD4g | Linear Models: BVP's | in this short video we're going to look at linear differential equations which can be useful in boundary value problems the first application we're going to look at is the deflection or the bending of a beam so a beam is a long thin member which is normally placed horizontally so the long part is going horizontally you can think of them as joists in the floor or rafters there's many many different uses when they build steel buildings the girders are acting as beams so we're going to assume that we have a beam it has length l it's uh homogeneous meaning that it's made up of the same material throughout same material properties and it has a uniform cross section there's a line that imaginary line running through this centroid of the cross section and that we call the axis of symmetry and we're going to assume that the load is applied in the vertical plane that passes through the axis of symmetry when you do that the beam is going to have some deflection it may be very small but that curve is called an elastic curve or the equation of the deflection and to model this we're going to assume the x-axis is running along the axis of symmetry the deflection is going to be measured by y or denoted by y and we're going to assume that downward is positive now the bending moment so the bending moment is really the force when you have it that it is a twisting force uh it's the force that's trying to restore the uh beam to its original equilibrium position it there's an equation relating that to the load per unit length so w of x so the you can imagine that generally you may have some pressure load if this is part of a building and we're going to assume that the load per unit length is given by w of x so there's this second differential equation second order differential equation which relates that loading to the bending moment now the bending moment is related to the curvature of the elastic curve so this makes sense intuitive sense that if you had something and you tried to bend it the more you bend it or have that displacement there the stronger the force would be to try to push it back now we say it's proportional to the curvature the greek letter kappa is used to represent the curvature uh of a curve so uh curvature is a pro it's a geometric property of a curve and the constant proportionality is actually written as the product e i and the reason for that is that e is a material property called the young's modulus you could really think of it as the analog of a spring constant uppercase i is a geometric property of the cross section it's the moment of inertia of the cross section and you may have calculated moments of inertia in one of your previous calculus classes the product of these two constants is called the flexural rigidity of the beam if you've not taken calc 3 or multivariable calculus you may not have seen this formula before but we're just going to take it as a formula that if you have a curve y equals f of x that the curvature at any point x is given by this formula uh it's a fraction on top you just have the second derivative on the bottom it's more complicated it's 1 plus the first derivative squared and then you take that quantity and raise it to the power of three halves so we're going to make a big assumption it's very important assumption and it's true in many many cases that you're going to have small deflections so you're going to have a very stiff beam you put it relative to the load you put a load on it and it does make a very small deflection uh meaning that the so for example the derivative at the anywhere along the the the so the slope let me put this way so the first derivative the slope of the elastic curve anywhere along the beam is much smaller than 1. so if you haven't seen this before when you put less than less than together like that that means much smaller than one and so if it's much smaller than one when you square it we're gonna and add it to one we're gonna assume that that really is just essentially one it is it has a negligible impact meaning that the denominator in our curvature formula is one so the curvature would just be equal to the second derivative so our model now is going to be built on small deflections and so now if i start with our formula that the moment is proportional to the curvature which now we're taking the curvature to be just the second derivative i can differentiate that formula twice with respect to x and that will tell me that the second derivative of the moment with respect to x is proportional to the fourth derivative of the displacement with respect to x and remember that the second derivative of the moment equaled the uh u equal the load per unit length so now we have a fourth order linear differential equation describing the displacement we need to be concerned about different types of boundary conditions so one type of situation you may have is where the beam is clamped maybe it's embedded in a wall it's held rigidly against that wall so rigidly means that it is not going to have any displacement at that wall or embedding point and uh the slope of the elastic curve is also going to be zero so it's it doesn't bend or rotate about that clamp point we call this a cantilevered beam or cantilever beam the other type of boundary conditions is when we have something which is simply supported and what that means is that at the end points there can be no displacement and the second derivative is going to be zero but there could be the first derivative could be non-zero and one other function that may be of interest is the shear force so that's the force that's passing vertically through the beam so in the same direction as the unit load or perpendicular to the axis of symmetry the x-axis that is our shear force and that's just found by taking the first derivative of so rather than the second derivative we take the first derivative of the bending moments and we get a third order term in terms of y so let's look at an example we have a beam length l it's embedded or clamped at both ends and we're going to have a constant load of w naught so this is going to bend in the middle slightly but at each end we should see that the slope of the elastic curve is going to remain zero so our boundary conditions then would be that both the displacement and the slope at each end so when x equals zero and when x equals l they should be zero so we're going to start by solving the homogeneous equation so we'll go ahead and just have the right hand side zero we're going to get an auxiliary equation with a whose only root is zero but its multiplicity is going to be 4 so that means i'm going to have e to the 0x which is just going to be 1 but i'd have that exponential times x times x squared and times x cubed i'm going to have a total of four terms so let's clean that up and so my solution to the homogeneous equation is just a third degree polynomial to find the particular solution i really don't have to do any serious differential equations i'm just going to use basic calc 1 i'm going to start with my differential equation and then integrate both sides and until i get to a i'll integrate both sides again until i finally get to an expression where i have just y with no derivatives and so my particular solution is going to be after anti-differentiation i'm using the power rule each time right so that's why the denominator is 2 then it's finally 6 and then 24 when i have x to the power of 4. so it's just a constant times x to the power 4 that's my particular solution so now i need to find all of my parameters in the homogeneous equation using my boundary conditions so the boundary conditions when x equals 0 are fairly easy to to determine um i do need the an expression for the derivative so i went ahead and calculated that derivative and the boundary conditions when x equals zero tell me that c one and c two are both zero and so if i impose the boundary conditions when x equals l i'm going to get a system of equations and you can solve that to get your uh two coefficients or values for c3 and c4 now what's interesting is that you can do some algebra with those coefficients and get an expression here which says you're going to take the unit load divided by 24 times e i and that gets multiplied by x squared times x minus l squared and the algebraic representation tells us that your displacement whether you measure it from the left side or the right side is going to be the same so there's some symmetry here it's going to be symmetric about the line passing through the midpoint and that's as well that is what we would expect so let's talk about eigenvalues and eigenfunctions this is something that's very important if you've taken any basic course in linear algebra you will have studied eigenvalues in eigenvectors here we have eigenfunctions and for the moment if you have not studied them don't worry about it all we're going to do is consider an eigenvalue to be just a parameter in an equation you can learn about that later and what we're looking for is the values of lambda which makes a boundary value problem have a non-trivial solution so here's an example we've got a lambda is just a parameter here so we've got a boundary value problem and we would like to know for what values of lambda does this boundary value problem have a non-trivial solution so it's easy to solve and we're going to consider three cases where lambda is negative positive and zero so if we just look at the case where lambda is zero with these boundary conditions the only solution is y has to be identically zero and so that's what we call a trivial solution so no eigenvalues there remember we're looking for values of lambda which makes the boundary value problem have a non-trivial solution so what if lambda is a negative well to simplify the analysis we'll rewrite lambda as negative alpha squared where alpha is some positive number of course that would make lambda a negative number and then we could write this in terms of exponentials but if you recall back in chapter 2 i believe we saw that we can write this using hyperbolic sines and hyperbolic cosines in any rate if i impose the initial conditions i'm going to find that certainly for c1 has to be equal to zero if i impose the second initial condition when x equals l i'll get that result that 0 equals c2 times sinch of alpha x so either c2 is 0 or cinch would have to be 0 but cinch is never 0 member cinch is the difference between two exponentials and so that will never be zero so c2 has to also equal zero and again we only get a trivial solution so far no eigenvalues let's look at the third case which would be where lambda is positive and again for convenience we'll write lambda equals alpha squared where alpha is a positive number our solution in this case is going to involve sines and cosines if i impose the first boundary condition again i get c1 equals to zero but now something interesting happens the boundary condition when x equals l would tell me that c2 times sine of alpha l equals zero now that could mean c2 equals zero but we're not interested in that that would give us a trivial solution but we could have sine of alpha l equaling zero and that would be true when is the sign equal to zero well when its input is a integer multiple of pi so alpha l would equal n pi or alpha is n pi over l so since there's going to be an an infinite number of such alphas we're going to put a subscript on them and so we're going to look at them as a sequence alpha sub n equals n pi over l and so lambda then would be the square of that those are the eigenvalues so lambda 1 would be pi squared over l squared lambda 2 would be 4 pi squared over l squared and so on now corresponding to each lambda so it's lambda sub n there's a function which would be the a solution to this boundary value problem which is non-trivial so corresponding to our first eigenvalue we'd have our first eigenfunction y sub 1 which would be sine of pi x over l remember the input is alpha l whereas the eigenvalue is alpha squared and so on we would also have the y sub 2 a y sub 3 and in fact there would be an infinite number of them so with this knowledge if i try to solve the boundary value problem y double prime plus five y equals zero with the initial conditions that the displacement at zero and l is going to be zero then we can say right away that five is not an eigenvalue we know what the eigenvalues are they have the form that we saw in our previous analysis the only solution must be the trivial solution so let's look at an another application here we're looking at what's called buckling of a thin column so my diagram doesn't show a thin column but the idea is that the the width of this column is going to be small relative to its height that would call it make it a thin column and you're going to have an axis of symmetry and you're going to be pushing down on that axis of symmetry and it's supported from below and if your force is of the right size then the thin column is going to bend or buckle this is really exaggerated usually it's a very small displacement so again we're going to have the x-axis running along the axis of symmetry so the x-axis in this diagram is actually vertical and the y-axis is horizontal and i'm just going to give you the differential equation which governs this that we have a force of p pushing down on the top of the column and not it's not no surprise that the e and the i appear here again it's going to depend on the material the e tells us a material property and the i is a geometric property of the cross section this is a second order equation and we just like to find the deflection of this simply supported column of length l so i can go ahead and re rewrite the initial original differential equation in standard form uh to simplify the analysis we're going to replace the p over e i p is a constant force so this whole thing is a constant we'll replace that with that parameter lambda and remember that the eigen functions then of this second order differential equation have the form of a constant times sine of n pi x over l and our eigenvalues are the squares so we would have the n squared pi squared over l squared we can solve that for p sub n so in this case we're putting this subscript on our load and those gives me my critical load so i if i'm not at that critical load i don't expect to see any displacement or any buckling in the column so the first critical load is called the euler load and its corresponding eigen function is called the first buckling mode so we talk about buckling modes we're talking about elastic curves so i hope you found this discussion useful on eigenvalues and eigenvectors it's just barely scratching the surface i said eigenvectors eigenfunctions i hope that at some point in the future you will take a course in differential no i meant linear algebra and you'll learn more about eigenvalues and eigenvectors and you'll learn that eigenfunctions and eigenvectors can be treated exactly the same way | Tom Kowalski | UCE5FyJWAk2LQH5dtDVJDZTQ | 2022-07-13 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,860 | 15,045 |
lTrSqt2pMUE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lTrSqt2pMUE | Wiley - Bait Face Ft. Scratchy (Official Audio) | Grime Nation | [Music] my face is bait i can't hide it i make the beat sound better when i ride it where the top of the game they don't like it i hit the road every day like a cyclist they can't battle with us we're like vikings freestyle [ __ ] off the brain with no writing when i get off the plane i'm still flying the manner at the bottom of the food chain one stage looking for a reload with your best [Music] for some reason they're thinking that type all they want to do is send here who they like i've been killing sex in the middle of the night my lyrical flow is flying height like a kite that's why you can't touch it cause we are not alive i walk in a place like everybody's better than me yeah that's high i can ride with him as good as i ride bikes small bikes mountain bikes and power bikes but if i act just for the wheelie and drop down bro that's i even though i'm used to doing what i like some of what i do is right i risk hype my face is bait i can't hide it i make the beat sound better when i ride it where the top of the game they don't like it i hit the road every day like a cyclist they can't battle with us we're like vikings freestyle [ __ ] off the brain with no writing when i get off the plane i'm still flying the manner at the bottom of the food chain crying there's only one of me there ain't two it's a donny you don't like me but your mates do scratches are bad stay tuned take that sharpest knife in a draw cutting straight through if you go looking for war you're gonna find it but i ain't scared of what i don't mind it don't try read my mind you're not psychic next time think before you start typing next time think before you start hyping i'll make the car look better when i drive it i make the bike look better when i ride it face followed by strings and violence my face is bait i can't hide it i make the beat sound better when i ride it where the top of the game they don't like it i hit the road every day like a cyclist they can't battle with us we're like vikings freestyle [ __ ] off the brain with no writing when i get off the plane i'm still flying a man around the bottom of the food chain crying this die from water live life from dry life i've got the words flowing from my right hand man i generous never been a tight man if you got a problem step on the grass and backpack swag got me off serving up that i drinks on my chair i'm a scrap man do it solo i don't wanna hate man i can make a song off top i rock and ride fam anytime i speak that's fast for the fans i've been on a high note from my starting my plans gotta wasting any time ain't part of the plan it's about man grabbing in the dots like it's fat man be your own boss so my man can't slap man drop the first one drop the sequel you might last long in the game just like lethal my face is bait i can't hide it i make the beat sound better when i ride it we're on top of the game they don't like it i hit the road every day like a cyclist they can't battle with us we're like vikings freestyle [ __ ] off the brain with no writing when i get off the plane i'm still flying the manner at the bottom of the food chain crying [Music] you | Grime Nation | UCa6kl5ZL_t2f19L1jeHHOrQ | 2020-08-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 653 | 3,180 |
WLSd5CyEFCo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WLSd5CyEFCo | Is that really doing too much by being positive!?!? | talking to a student about that same thing I was like why don't you say you did an amazing job they like oh you decent it was cool like why can't y'all say that was amazing that was Fant I ain't going to be riding them like that I ain't F to that's doing too much and it's like why is it encouragement is doing too much like why is the bar so low that when I talk about you I have to minimize my enthusiasm so you won't feel weird because I'm talking positively about you we didn't messed up because I can't even express myself because I'm doing too much but then when you get older somebody in therapy because people didn't do enough that's a whole another sermon | Speakseeds | UCv2KZsPz6VE-RALJXH_jUTA | 2024-02-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 131 | 664 |
GSbi6JhnDg0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSbi6JhnDg0 | Sherlock Holmes The Case Of The Perfect Husband -full episode In English! | [Music] tree [Music] the warmth and guilty of a successful party the pleasure of friends amongst friends the anticipation of new and interesting people to meet these are the elements of an enjoyable evening these are often the memorable occasions in life this is a story that started at a party gay joyous festive this is a story of a party that ended with fear and horror it was a cry for help sherlock holmes will never forget lovely party [Music] wonderful party janet good night russell no one deserves happiness more than you and russell thank you john good night wish that john were just one half as a tent of his russell you ever want to get rid of him send him to me good night louisa nice good night i love them all but is it unkind of me to say that i'm glad we're finally alone not unkind at all [Music] just leave everything until tomorrow susan thank you madam good night [Music] you made me very happy this evening darling i really am the luckiest woman in the whole world our first anniversary i wanted you to be happy this year it couldn't be any other way with you it might have been impossible there may be a deep and dark side to my nature of course there is darling all interesting men have dark sides to their natures possibly even black almost certainly black i'm a murderer of course you are more than once innumerable times i'm sure seven times and are you going to murder seven times again once again anyone i know you are wonderful and will you give me warning i'm giving you warning will you kill me with with kindness no like this you're hurting me whatever came over you i told you might i tomorrow at exactly nine o'clock i will strangle you as i have strangled seven before [Music] you're serious about the art of murder i am always serious i've used it as it suited my convenience death is my only true friend russell don't talk like that you don't believe me now my dear but you'll think about it you will come to know and to fear then you'll fly to the police and tell them what has happened they may believe you they may not tomorrow at exactly nine o'clock i will kill you [Music] good night [Music] oh yes happy anniversary my dear [Music] suppose you tell us the whole story has it happened it might be easier that way of course i'm mrs russell partridge your husband's the art collector that's right ah he's a wonderful man your husband i first had the pleasure of meeting him when we were guarding the french collection that came over he's a wonderful man everyone says self now tell me what's troubling you mrs partridge you can rest assured that for your own sake as well as your husbands scotland yard will do everything it possibly can it was nothing nothing i was mistaken i can see it now probably the result of too much party last night and an overactive imagination well perhaps you care to tell me about it anyway it may help to dispel any doubt you have it isn't necessary really i'm sorry to have taken so much of your time inspector i'm sure you're a very busy man mrs partridge i'm very pleased to hear you feel this way now what do you mean your husband told me of the incident last night he was afraid you wouldn't be able to overcome the delusion my husband told you yes he was here this morning what did he tell you only that you were suddenly overcome by the idea that he intended to harm you you're over that now i see my husband told you that may i say mrs partridge that in my experience here at scotland yard i've met many people who thought for a short time that they were being persecuted but it passes your husband will help you i'm sure i'm sure thank you inspector [Music] well what do you make of that sir [Music] follow very good [Music] yes oh is this the platinum yes mr holmes has just gone downstairs to the forgotten this won't you please come in thank you oh please excuse me would you like to sit over here um would you care if anything i i have some fresh tea mate no thank you you say mr holmes will be right back oh yes oh oh forgive me i i'm dr watson how do you do i'm mrs russell partridge oh you're your husband the art collector yes oh i met him not long ago wonderful man thank you of course i not much nor authority or not myself i just like what i like you know but i understand he's one of our leading judges yes that that's true yeah wonderful man interesting too yes i think perhaps i'd better leave i was wrong to think that what a beautiful day watson perfectly exquisite we really must make an effort to get out and about more often and see the beauties that i go pardon madam i didn't realize we had a guest may i present mr holmes this is mrs russell partridge i do forgive the exuberance of my entrance madam i am delighted to meet you once you sit down i think that i i realize the situation is a delicate one how do you know because uh you didn't wish it had been known that you'd come here so you left your carriage at the corner of the street and walked you saw me no no as a matter of fact i didn't but i observed that the hem of your skirt has picked up a certain amount of dust from the street and though you undoubtedly came by carriage because your shoes which are extremely fashionable ones were not meant for comfortable walking mr holmes i need your help in what way mrs bartridge i believe my husband is going to kill me russell partridge why do you believe this mrs partridge he told me he would last night what that's impossible i had the same reaction at first dr watson it couldn't be true not by russell as everyone tells me he's such a wonderful man and when did he say he was going to do this tonight at nine and then he said he said something impossible mr holmes he said i would be the eighth excuse me hello inspector what did i do for you hello there guys now i want to speak to mrs potlitch how do you know she's here i had a followed from scotland yard oh i see i'm sorry to have to do this mrs partridge but i was afraid you might still think you were in danger i see now that you do i'm sorry but the straight mrs partridge has just told us that her husband is going to kill her tonight at nine o'clock mr partridge came to the yard this morning to tell me that his wife was going to call on me how did he know he said you told him you're going to call it's not true i decided to do it this morning it was 10 o'clock i remember mrs partridge at 10 o'clock your husband was still sitting in my office mr holmes i don't understand i don't understand how russell knew i would go to see in specialist trade i swear i never told him everything i told you is true exactly as it happened do you believe that uh excuse me my name is partridge i believe my wife is here yes indeed years are you coming russell i'm sorry i'm late my dear i was detained at the gallery are you ready to leave how did you know i was here how did i know you were here yes how did you know but you said you'd be here you told me to meet you yet have you forgotten i i must have forgotten excuse me forgive me for interrupting you gentlemen and thank you for any consideration you may have shown my wife good day well i'd say that young woman was heading for a complete nervous breakdown i've seen these delusion cases before hmm a very interesting man and a very distinctive one when i went down to the tobacconist i wondered why he was standing at the corner of the street watching this flat so intently and now i think i know why it's indeed a very very interesting man [Music] well astray there were two incidents in the romantic life of russell partridge in the first case his fiance ran off with another man and was never seen again she ran off with an american didn't she was this confirmed or assumed lestrade well i don't know and in the other case he was uh left at the altar i believe the expression is yes that's right was that girl ever heard of again she ran off for the south american i believe but really homes it just isn't logical if arsenal partridge really intends to kill his wife he's not going to tell her about it first that people putting a rope around his neck would it be do either of you really believe that it isn't logical homes it isn't usual astrayed but this man is just amusing himself he's an insane fanatic unless you get a warrant out for his arrest i for one won't be responsible now look here holmes i can't ask for a search warrant every time a man's left at the altar what would you be looking for anyway the evidence of the seven other murders he told his wife he'd committed holmes you must understand it well or the eighth will be on your hands [Music] going completely against his own judgment lestrade had the search warrant issued and scotland yard entered the partridge house and searched with the thoroughness and efficiency that only that organization was capable of [Music] from basement to attic no wall no object was left without meticulous examination holmes directed the entire investigation i have never seen him so intense so insistent and at the end so completely frustrated if partridge was the criminal homes believed there was no question he had won oh naturally mr partridge the yard will assume responsibility for putting things back as they were thank you inspector i i do hope you'll forgive us bursting in like this it's uh mr holmes who i understand mr holmes very well i suppose i'd feel the same way under the circumstances what time is it watson a few minutes after seven five minutes since you last asked me it's there watson it's there i'll swear it's there what's there the evidence of mrs party isn't lying but her husband is a murderer it's in that house somewhere i'll swear it but you've searched all over the house home you've measured every inch of it i know watson but it is there i've overlooked something unless i can find out what it is that girl is going to be murdered in two hours he said nine o'clock even if he intends to murder the girl he doesn't have to do it on schedule but he does that's part of his disease that man works like a clock he tempts the police by having the victim report the murder in advance and then he has to complete his game by murdering on the moment the exact moment now where are you going out that i can see but where for a walk we believe we searched every inch of that house now i've got to find the one place that i missed [Music] so [Music] mr holmes good evening mrs partridge i realize the entrance is somewhat unconventional but then so are the circumstances i believe i made the climb unseen what are you doing here i want to prevent you from doing this i can't stay here you must if i stay here kill me mrs partridge i know your life is in danger but if you leave here i can't guarantee your safety if you stay and help me we may yet have a chance a chance yes it's my theory that your husband will try to [Music] hello my dear he was so caught up yeah i thought perhaps something was wrong are you planning a trip no going out perhaps i was [Music] then i changed my mind why did you change your mind because i think you're lying you're insane russell but i don't believe you're dangerous i shall stay here tonight and leave in the morning i'm glad you feel like that janet it shows you have great strength of character where did you kill your other seven victims here in this house how did you dispose of their bodies the bodies are still here but the police searched the house i know i watched them very efficient especially with mr holmes to guide them a very clever man mr holmes it was a tremendous temptation not to tell him where to look it's a quarter to nine you have 15 minutes why don't you run away very well done indeed mrs partridge i must apologize for the oversight what do we do now now we wait [Music] i only one foreign [Music] at last i remember it what is it mr holmes for one place i forgot to look i get a step outside now and i want you to count up to ten go to the head of the stairs and then start slowly down will you do that for me i'll try don't worry i'll be there ten seconds remember [Music] i admire your courage aren't you afraid no i don't believe you i think you are afraid no i'm not the others were afraid don't take that last step how did you get in the important thing is that i'm here and that your wife is safe and because of your premature revelation of yourself so am i i'm sure it is not against the lord of england to walk up the stairs in one's own house besides my wife is completely unharmed and the other seven mr partridge what other seven mr holmes you searched this afternoon the other seven exist in my poor wife's sick imagination yes and in mine too i know where they are now really [Music] what's happened get the burger from the fire watson poker yes the poker [Music] i imagine there is a way of opening your unique coffin mr partridge and if not dr watson here is more than capable of breaking it open [Music] oh good god [Music] the mortal remains of his seven victims watson each step a coffin and each coffin a monument to the most insane killer i have ever met [Music] so [Music] um [Music] you | Bell's Books | UCMcSK8h44eEBWgWfP3k1LQA | 2022-08-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,529 | 13,077 |
Gmp0yiiiO7Q | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gmp0yiiiO7Q | #6: A Naturopathic Approach to Supporting the Immune System with Dr. Shelese Pratt | [Music] hello everyone thank you for joining us on this little bit cloudy saturday afternoon here in boulder colorado but hopefully where you're at it's uh sun is shining i am joined by not only a colleague who i highly respect but a dear friend dr shalish pratt and just so excited to have her on today to talk about naturopathic medicine and if you have maybe experienced that before or you haven't hopefully you'll learn a lot more by the end of this zoom call i would love for you guys to share if you find this interesting um and write your comments because we'll be either during the call looking at those and trying to answer your questions um or we'll come back later and answer questions give resources as much as we can so just know that those will be read and uh we will be answering those so i'd love to just start by introducing my friend formally and then we'll jump right into the conversation so dr pratt believes in integrative and holistic medicine we totally share this mindset her practicing clinic are focused on neurology and complex medical conditions relating to metabolic disease she is so brilliant i know you guys will notice on this call i know when we talk pathways and stuff it's so much fun but i'm always impressed by her ability to really look at all this stuff in the complex level that we need to when we have these kind of patients she uses functional medicine and her expertise in biochemistry and methylation and physiology to help patients get to the root cause of their symptoms through a strategic approach the modalities she uses we're going to talk about you're going to hear a little bit more about what she does our nutrition diet nutritional supplements botanicals environmental medicine classic homeopathy and hydrotherapy many patients come to her office after seeing other doctors and are scared frustrated and looking for answers that no one's been able to figure out she's a sorry detective like i am she often tells people that she looks at medicine like a detective she looks for clues that have led to the current health situation and looks for a strategy to find figure out no matter how complex your illness what the root cause is and as you can see on her website we'll be sharing this to all of our both of our social media outlets she's been featured on some really great other interviews and i'm just delighted to have her so thank you for joining me today shalise it's it's such a a wonderful experience to be here and and it's so much fun to spend time with you again so um i look forward to it yeah it's kind of like us having coffee only live exactly we're just missing a few of our friends that often join in and i'm just going to before we proceed i'm going to make sure that i see this on the page it looks like we're live but i'm going to i would like to double check before we get in too far sure everything is on board and that you guys can see us and hear us and yeah we we're on okay cool so um i'd love to hear um well first of all i just want to tell people a little bit about how we met um and i'm trying to remember i mean we've both been in the boulder area practicing and i know from my perspective i heard your name and i always had great respect because it's funny word of mouth really is our best advertising and i would hear from if you know patients families that maybe saw someone for you and me and we do a little different things which we'll talk about today so we do have some patients in common at times that get benefits from both of our different approaches but i just remember like having this great respect and thinking you were not just a great practitioner and brilliant but i loved your spirit and your heart and the way you approach medicine and i remember having coffee in my office and kind of getting to know you and the kind of kids that you saw and really all ages but a lot of the um you know kids on the spectrum and that kind of thing and just being really impressed and then later we've gotten together for coffee and become very close friends and what i love the most is we really not only think about mind body and spirit which you'll talk about in a few minutes but we live that like on a spiritual realm it's really important to kind of incorporate that into who we are and how we practice and it was such an encouragement to me to share on that level with you as well so it's been a real world joy to call you friends and and someone i respect so much so i'd love to hear first before we talk about naturopathic medicine i kind of want to hear everybody loves stories of like why did you get into medicine how did you get called into it i'd love to hear a little bit about your background and how you got into naturopathic medicine sure um so how i got into naturopathic medicine was i started out well i started with some health concerns early on in life we had a cat in the house and my mother thought that i had lots of allergies seasonal allergies to many things well you know later we found out it was the cats that we had in the house but i had had lots of alert allergies and then in my in my later teens around 19 i developed pretty sincere severe asthma where it really started taking away the function of my life at 20 years old just walking up a flight of stairs was i would put me out of breath and i would get every cold and flu that came through i was constantly sick and um and i remember one day you know being on so many steroids um to to manage the amount of of asthma that i had and these these respiratory infections that i just couldn't shake and i you know i was really frustrated and so i was started looking for other answers and i read a book by andrew weil oh yeah spontaneous healing and in it he talked about naturopathic medicine and for me it was like a light bulb went off because i had been looking into medicine i had thought about maybe a do or going to md but i was feeling frustrated in the paradigm that i was in i i i remember having such being on so much prednisone that i broke out in shingles and when i asked the doctor why do i have shingles they said do you have a computer and i said how did my computer give me shingles and she said no go look it up and she walked out of the room wow and this is just primary care like they don't have a lot of time you know i understand that now but at the moment i was like i want a kind of medicine that's going to help me understand how this happened why am i so sick all the time and um slowly but surely i did regain my health i i kind of left um all the things that i had grew grew up to believe that i needed to do like take a lot of antihistamines take albuterol i mean eventually i didn't need those things i i didn't go off of them until i had other um symptoms that had abated right i didn't have the asthma problems anymore so i no longer needed it but i changed my diet that was a big part of it i i found out at you know just my early 20s i i couldn't eat gluten and dairy i couldn't eat soy um and and that made a huge impact of me recovering just being able to breathe deeply i also needed to look at you know i had wonderful amazing parents who wanted to keep me close and i needed um psychologically mentally spiritually to understand you know the feelings of being a little bit repressed like i i wasn't allowed to go away to college and i think that played into my asthma as well so i started i started going down all these avenues preparing myself and healing myself in the process before i went on to medical school at national in portland so um that is is kind of my journey as as i started changing my diet i started thinking differently i started um really you know blossoming in my ability to fledge after college and i did like going to portland oregon was probably one of the best things personally that i could do in order for me to have confidence and know that a i really wanted to help other people that had illnesses like i did that didn't know what to do i wanted to be a voice of compassion and love and encouragement and let them know your body can heal but this i i hold that in my heart for you so that's that's how i got there oh i love it and i i we've never really talked about this you know over coffee but it's so fun to hear your journey and what's interesting is i have such a parallel journey because when i was a child on the farm i had horrible allergies i didn't have asthma but the same mechanism of atopic diseases right i had eczema and allergy asthma and those are the three things in this whole and you also mentioned something really important as i've looked at my past there's a piece of this i think we came into the world as very intuitive sensitive souls right and that's why we want to be healers like i was called into medicine as i know you were too we maybe didn't know it but we were this is a calling it's not just a job for us and part of that is this sense this nature that is actually very sensitive and with that comes a great ability to connect with people and understand complex detective work which we totally align with but at the same time so that's the gift side of it we are sensitive intuitive souls and we bring to medicine a ability to really look into this the patient at the soul level and at that at the whole environmental level and then to really understand a deeper level because we see details that other people will miss like you people have seen a lot of other people before they get to you and they're looking for answers but on the other side of that the blessing and the curse is that we are super sensitive to our environment so whether it's chemicals or allergies or asthma and any of you listeners out there if you have struggled with allergies or asthma or atopic it's probably because you're going to be one of the canaries that's also more sensitive to environmental chemicals into and even emotional stuff right like i'm a little more sensitive but it's so interesting because there's no um coincidence about the fact that we both had these allergies and atopic conditions and then the calling into medicine and even though that was tough as a child it's been a blessing to the things that we do today because we have this gift of being able to really see at a deeper level yes absolutely so i'd love to hear as we told everybody like tell us a little bit more about what is for those who don't really know about naturopathic medicine and naturopathic doctors what's your training what are some of the principles of naturopathic medicine so we have six principles in naturopathic medicine that define us and the first one i mean in functional medicine you've adopted many of these so some of them um kind of stolen them from you really right yeah it's beautiful because lots of people are getting really wonderful care um and it was born out of a lot of um of this nature cure and these principles so the first one is the healing power of nature and the body has an intrinsic ability to establish maintain and restore health so we as endies believe that if we put if we put back into balance what's in excess or what's in deficiency and bring you into balance then your body can restore itself through physiology through biochemistry uh so that's that's the first one is is healing through the power of nature and using um less invasive means we try to use um the least uh invasive means possible so that may be through nutrition and diet it may be sunshine it may be clean air all of the environmental medicine you'll see is part of our mainstay of how we look at medicine so we identify and treat the cause that's our second principle and symptoms are expressions of the body's attempts to heal itself we see if you start to have a symptom it means your body's trying to show us we need something's out of balance something's not working correctly and so like jill we we go to the root cause um and that may be you know all the way down to a cellular level and how nutrients are shuttled across a cell membrane or how genomics are functioning within our body so treating the cause first do no harm you know all doctors i think have this one this principle but you know my first and foremost and my patients all know this is i'm a fairly conservative nd and that i don't want to do anything that harms you right so um any that could even be a side effect of a nutrient or a supplement or homeopathic so that's the third is do no harm treat the whole person so as jill alluded to earlier we look at the interaction of the physical the spiritual the mental emotional genetic environmental and social factors all of it together makes up your health and we're gonna we're gonna dive into some of these other some of these individually i'm sure in this talk but we believe that all of these parts are your health your your mind your body your spirit all need to be healed and have healing and then we have doctor as teacher so my first you know principle and oath to you is if you see me in my practice i want to empower you i want to teach you i want you to walk away knowing how to take responsibility and making different choices that heal you on all of these levels and then prevention right how do we prevent whether it's through um epigenetics like finding ways to prevent health issues that have plagued your your your ancestry or whether it's you um you know you didn't even know something in your home like toxic mold was making you so sick and it could end up really harming your health in years to come 10 20 years from now so it's finding all of these principles and treating on all of these levels gosh thank you for explaining that because i have been around a lot of naturopaths i have such great respect um what's neat is i um you know our allopaths like we call it training i remember at least i don't know if you know this or not but before i was in undergrad and then looking at what professional schools and i knew i wanted to go into a healing profession and kind of like you i didn't know exactly what and i remember actually applying to naturopathic school applying to chiropractic school applying to traditional chinese medical school and then applying to the allopathic schools and it's funny because i always like didn't really quite align with them and when it came down to it my decision was only based on the fact that sadly our system as we clearly can see nowadays is so predominantly out and say i want to do mission work it's still more allopathically minded to go overseas and do that kind of work or even just the reimbursement system and stuff and sadly um you guys are getting more and more accreditation ability to practice in any state and all of that um and you're considered a physician which is awesome um but i know it has been a hard battle and i remember my decision was just like okay if i want to change the system i'm gonna actually go into the system and infiltrate and i joke because i'm like i have the heart of a naturopath like i feel way more aligned with you and your training and how you view the world and patience you've just said like hopefully how i i practice as well not common and so what i get excited about is if we can train and educate not only patients to know that they could see someone like you and get great benefit um and then second just even other doctors like um allopathic physicians to know what else there is it's almost like my toolbox gets to be a lot bigger um and so we can you know hopefully bring that today so thanks for sharing all that background of course and and that's the beauty is we we are integrative right whether you're functional i mean i've studied a lot of functional medicine as well like the level it which i went to with biochemistry and methylation specifically you know studying with jill james back in the early 2000s um you know that that set me up to have like really wonderful conversations with any any discipline of medicine and i truly believe we're all working for our patients right we're all my heart is that if if i'm not if i don't have the tools in my toolbox which i'm very confident of the ones that i do have but if i don't have that i want them to have it and that's the reason why many many uh we've shared several patients over the last probably 15 years or at least 14. i remember going back yeah um just us being in the same i think you were with bob roundtree back then um and bob roundtree i remember him saying that too i remember him coming to meetings and saying i have the heart and soul exactly and so there is going to be like you we were like we're like we want to we really want to be like you but you're you're absolutely right when i remember um my my graduation um my keynote speaker he basically sent us out on our graduation day knowing we were climbing a mountain for the rest of our lives so it takes a certain personality to not take offense yes um to know that um we we are doing um good work and um even if if we have to educate people so doctor his teacher is really big in my and the medicine that i i use because we're constantly teaching we're teaching about our education we're teaching about our licensure we're teaching about our you know the authorities that we have we're teaching about how we are we are we should be integrative we should work well play nice in the sandbox with everybody um which i i'm i'm committed to doing that when i first got out of school i actually went around to some of the most um allopathic old school practices like the rocky mountain cancer treatment center spent two weeks uh with with a doctor there and you know from the moment he was he just knew my mother and i just i wanted to get to know the other side that that sometimes didn't believe in my education or didn't know about my education and by the end of those two weeks whether it was him or at the pediatric center or some of these other very traditional practices they were all comfortable with referring to me so it's building bridges not building um ravines so gosh i love that because even though i was out in alpha medicine i was back in illinois for many years practicing and i remember i got out of residency went to the ceo of the hospital and said hey you need integrative medicine i'll be your director and so they hired me i don't know what they were thinking but um created a center there and i remember like the dachshund town the gastroenterologist the rheumatologist and the all the specialists were like what in the world is she doing and they did not they just didn't they weren't sure um and what ended up happening i definitely had visits but even more and i'm sure you've had this as well the patient with arthritis from the rheumatologist would come to me and they'd get better and they'd go back and then the gastroenterologist i'd see a crohn's patient and they'd come to me and they'd get better and they'd go back i didn't really have to say anything but after a few years they were calling and saying uh what are you doing over there we don't understand this we weren't taught in medical school that crohn's is reversible or that arthritis is reversible or that autoimmunity in general so it was interesting and i'm sure you've had that too where it's just you live your practice in your life and you do the right thing and you help people heal and the proof is in the pudding right because these patients are essentially like our best advertisement for both of us is word of mouth um because people get well and um then they tell their friends and family and um that's exciting so i want to shift gears just a little bit because i know there's something we share and um i i often do talk publicly about it but it's like we talk about the mind body spirit and especially nowadays with what's going on to me it's so hard to imagine if people don't have some connection to a higher power and a spiritual belief system and you and i both know like we're we're super open-minded anyone out there listening doesn't matter if you don't believe in a god or you do um but this piece of of who we are and what we bring to medicine is actually really important and we don't necessarily we might ask patients questions to find out where they're at we don't always share what what we believe but i would love to know a little bit about how your spiritual practice and beliefs have have flavored who you are and what you bring to the table because i think that's so important for us to be real and authentic as practitioners and how it's in our life because for me it's it's the most important thing in my life is my faith and the power of prayer and all of those things yeah so i um i was raised christian um catholic actually roman catholic and i i still am a very devout catholic um so when i very first started my practice i remember getting very discouraged when uh the the the plan didn't go as well as it should have gone and i remember at one point having a conversation with my mother and my mother basically said who are you to believe that it's you and in that moment she shifted my whole perspective of what i was doing in medicine i'm in service i'm in service to my my faith and the grace of god and so anyone that sees me it's it's their higher purpose to get better and it's god's plan and i'm just holding space giving them information and knowing that they're going to um get better and i hold in my heart and pray in my heart with every for every person i've ever seen that that what we're doing is going to bring them to their highest purpose right that god can can help them and and and bring that through and i get to be in the front seat of all of these amazing miracles i've seen over the last 16 years and i i don't take credit for a lot of it even though a lot of times i will get credit but it's not really mine it's really my faith and it's really that i'm serving through my spirit their spirit uh so i and like i said before in in my in in this medicine as an nd we believe that your spiritual health is just as important as your physical and mental health and it provides us with so much a richness in our life if we have a faith tradition it doesn't have to be a religion it doesn't have to be executed one way or another but finding a finding a a moment where we can surrender and get and get a touch of grace is is so important to our health especially in times when yes this virus is out there and yes there's lots of suicide and alcoholism and pain that's come to or that has come with this social distancing right we should really call it physical distancing but but this is it's really hard on our psyche it's really hard on our spirit to be away from our loved ones to be away from our friends and the encouragement and the and the way in which we embrace each other um both physically and emotionally and spiritually and we're not able to do that right now and so i think this conversation is really important to have today while we're still in this situation how do we foster more grace in our life how do we foster surrender and as you talked about i've watched several of your wonderful um interviews that you've given with other people and what i've noticed is is this idea of resilience and i believe that it's our faith and whatever tradition that is that brings us resilience i know for a fact that's true in my life some of the hardest situations i look back on and i truly thank you know god for the reason why i got through some of that with the resilience that i did because yeah and and same with you know whenever somebody gets through something you know i wanna i just wanna celebrate with them i want them to know like you are you are being watched over you you aren't alone um my my heart is with you and i know that there's there's there's something whatever you believe in that's also with you yes oh gosh this is so beautiful and thank you for being so if there's ever time for us to show up and be so authentic and real because a lot of times this isn't really talked about and yet it's so critical i i mean i remember in the pandemic first started and a lot of the stuff was new and there was so much fear and there's still fear right but if you think about our health is at risk we don't know if we're gonna get sick or die um finances for many many people listening out there they've lost jobs they've lost security they've lost their relationships are in jeopardy not that they're going to lose their family but they're not in connection like they might be used to or their dear mother who's older they might not be able to be with her because she's at risk for getting the virus or so and children might be separated or there's just so many different things here and pretty much on all level of what we perceive as our security um it's all shape it's all shaken up and for me i realized oh my goodness if i didn't have a belief that there is purpose in all things and there is good things that come even through suffering and difficulties like i have such a strong i know you do too a belief in that through any adversity or through any circumstance there is good and there's purpose and meaning and it's almost like um what you were saying too resilience really if we tried to define that word it would be about finding purpose and meaning and suffering and i didn't realize that 25 when i had cancer but when i started to see the pattern shortly after i had cancer i realized oh goodness my life is supposed to be about experiential suffering and then sharing the lessons i've learned and so now i'm like bring it on god i don't know what's next but i'm not afraid i mean you could i shouldn't say i'm not afraid we're all human right so there's like oh that might be hard or am i painful but i know i know now suffering uh cancer crohn's mold illness loss of loved ones pandemics there's nothing that my god and i can't handle and the same with you out there it's like this beautiful sense of after having been through this thing pandemic whatever i've been through cancer i've been through you know i know i can handle this because i have a sense it's almost like they talk about you know a ship that's tossed to and fro about the the um ocean and if there's an anchor plugged into some source that's greater than the purpose of just our own lives and ourselves then you can stand strong amidst the waves and the storms and um and i love that we can bring that to our patients because you know as well as i so many people who walk in they're at their last wits end and they've been other places and they have symptoms that no one's been able to explain and i know you share this with me when we just bring love and hope like we just sit there and give them space to be heard and look at them and sometimes i'll cry with patience i'm less not even shy about that i'll look at them they'll be stranded here i'm like yeah i feel you and i'm like wiping tears away it's funny because in medical school they're like you should be objective and you should not shed a tear and you should you know remain and like screw that because because i really i mean we're human beings and so when we can feel and interact in that level that starts the healing and then when i can say you know what i'm not perfect i don't have all the answers but i will do everything in my power to help you and to facilitate healing and i loved what you said too because it's not really about us we're just creating this space and this environment and often it's like taking out toxins or adding back in nutrients it's really simple that's a funny thing people think it's complex it's not really complex and if we get it if we get those things those basic things right the body will heal it's like miracles every day we see because we just allow and then i do believe both you and i bring love and hope and our faith which we don't ever push on anyone else but we just bring a place there where we know where we stand and we know our purpose and our calling and we know that for that time we are there with you and um holding space for you wherever you're at and even if you don't believe or don't have that's okay there's no judgment but it just does not have to be one way it can be it can be multiple ways but i want to encourage people right now you know with the amount of stress that we're in of all the things that you talked about earlier whether it's economic or whether it's this social isolation that we're in um it it creates you know quinolinic acid it creates our our our mao a creates more peroxides right for just being in stress makes us more um you know susceptible to disease and and our and our inflammation goes up and our detoxification systems start to crash and then our immune system isn't working so well so we're talk i'm talking about um the the importance of just simple things of having gratitude and knowing that that you are taking care of you know or or finding ways to tiptoe into that grace if you're if you're um not so comfortable with it and it it doesn't have to look like one way or another but yes my heart um and my and my giant spirit want want everyone to to feel better and i i think what i get um criticized the most for from my family is i really don't like suffering i just i really want to help in some way so um so people don't need to suffer but um we've got some pretty amazing tools in our tool bag and and this is one of them you know that we bring our heart into our practice and we truly care and we would never ask them to do something that we couldn't do ourselves so i love that because that's the thing too the model the teacher has that i mean we both the same thing we need to actually live and model um what we you know practice what we preach or or teach our patients about let's talk more practical then about um i definitely want to talk about fever because that i know naturopathic let's talk about that and then i want to go into a little bit of the immune system and everything from mind body spirit of how we can actually support immune function during this time but let's talk about the enigma of fever so what does a naturopath believe about fever and how would you treat it or not treat it or tell me more about that so we look at fever as a as an a vital force in your body that raises up so children often can run really high really fruitful fevers if given the opportunity against any kind of virus or bacteria or infection and so there are parameters right and you should work with your doctor to know what those parameters are i'm going to say a fever over 103. we probably should manage it and i'm going to give some examples of how we we would look at that so if you're running a really high fever or even 100 degree fever that's still considered that's a low-grade fever we often use something called hydrotherapy which um one of the one of the ones or one of the treatments that i've used on in my practice gosh for 20 years now is you take um socks cotton socks and you put them in tepid water not cold not super cold not warm at all just tepid room temperature water you wring them out really well you put them on your feet this is if you have a fever and then you put wool socks over them and then you get into bed and what that will do if you have a head cold it will bring the mucus down the inflammation out of your head it will go to your feet and warm up those socks and until those socks are dry it brings down the fever and it helps congestion and inflammation in your head and your upper respiratory system so that's one way we would manage a fever we can if it gets really high sometimes we put people in tepid baths to bring down the fever and then we also use uh homeopathy right so some of the best remedies to use for really high fever it would be belladonna for a lower greed grade fever it would be pheromophos but these are these are different techniques that you can do to manage a fever rather than just giving ibuprofen or tylenol which can really deplete us of our glutathione which is our master antioxidant so we usually encourage fevers to a point right and and at that point we don't want a febrile seizure we don't want um we don't want elderly people having really high fevers either so we will we will use whatever means we can to bring down that fever but the importance of letting the fever run which i don't think i've discussed but i think you know is that it it dis dis dis assembles that virus right or it kills bacteria when we are when our cytokines and our body can run that inflammatory response so what most people don't know is a lot of times it the virus of the bacteria isn't making you feel so bad it's your body's reaction to it and we want to manage that reaction but with it with the intent of it's doing a good job of dismantling or killing bacteria dismantling a virus and that makes so much sense as i was in switzerland the last two years with their biological medicine and they i love that their typical allopathic physicians really incorporate homeopathy and so it's almost like a combination of the us it's almost like if you and i had both of our trainings combined that's what typically the german swiss physicians do is they bring this all together and one of the treatments they have there's called hyperthermia it's basically causing a fever and i've had many of my patients who have gone to europe who've gotten treated for lyme disease or tick-borne infections or viral chronic viral infections that are almost in a curative state afterwards after they get several sessions of hyperthermia and of course it's controlled it's under medical supervision because they'll go very high um they're like extremely high but they're watching blood pressure they're watching vitals they're watching oxygenation they're making sure that it's safe but it's penetration yes and hydration to see that and we don't typically in our u.s hospitals have hyperthermia but in europe standard of care for some of these patients so it actually makes sense to me they've used nature cure in europe for centuries yeah so yes um sauna you know helping people initiate because some people with chronic epstein-barr virus right this is we're just trying to find a way to help the body again get rid of the pathogen the best way it can when sometimes our immune system we need to support it right with either nutrition or diet or lifestyle or reducing environmental toxins or all of these things help the body be able to handle how the immune system is going to create an antigen and an antibody um to to manage these infections and so we manage fevers we don't discourage fevers and yes it is a little uncomfortable and it's another whole other conversation as a parent to have to tell you your child is not going to feel so great when they have a really decent fever and i just had to explain to my son when he was little we're going to do these socks you're going to feel better real soon just wait here's some homeopathy and and we got through it and he he definitely um didn't feel well when the fever was really high but when we managed it and put the you know the warming sock treatment on and used fear and foss and that was the remedy that always worked for him um you know even at 17 he'll come to me and say mom i'm sick i need these things i love it wow oh let's talk about like practical ways so immune system obviously that's the big thing now and and i'd love to just talk about like people listening what are some practical ways that they can support their immune system in this time well i think you've covered it um but it's really important i think you had another nd the one that's in your office come on and talk about stress you know managing stress is key right now really important most of my patients that are coming to me in the last couple days and saying i'm starting to come down with something had something really stressful that made them feel that way so because when we get really stressed our immune system goes down our natural killer cells go down we just can't fight infection as well uh diet is really important sugar do you do you i know that there's a study out there saying something like your immune system goes down for six hours after a significant amount of sugar so staying away from sugar right now is probably a really good idea and it doesn't mean forever more um i'm i'm all about moderation meaning if you have a birthday coming up do all the other things to support yourself but maybe you can have a piece of your favorite whatever with sugar in it just don't go eating that cake for seven days right right um i was just you read my mind on sugar because i was thinking sugar is such a toxic thing for the immune system i mean like you said the studies show natural killer cells go dramatically down for the time after and interesting just this morning i saw someone post something on uh cereal cells like uh boxed cereal cells are up like by 24 and as people are home i'm like oh gosh box cereal is probably one of the most if you have breakfast box cereal please please find some alternative because it's not only gmo crops like corn and soy there's glyphosate sprayed on most of those and then it's refined and it's high sugar there's so many things about most box cereals that are just like not a good breakfast in addition to all of that there's also a film that they put on the inside of your cereal bag that's i think it's a flame retardant that actually creates a lot of toxicity for you too so it it it drives your insulin to wacky levels it it brings down your immune system so it might be a good time to break up with cereal i know it's a common food but and i say that with love you know like i know that it's comfort people are looking for any kind of comfort let's just find other beautiful ways to you know getting up first thing in the morning and going and going outside and hearing the birds you know maybe that would bring you more than than the cereal but i i understand why people are eating more cereal um but yes so so it's it's it's eliminating or reducing sugar intake is going to really help immune function staying away from foods that you might be sensitive to right if if for instance i can't eat gluten in dairy i will end up with sinus i'll start getting a tickle in the back of my throat with just even eating a little bit of dairy i have a friend that whenever i'd stay at her house in connecticut if i had dairy she'd call me out she's like you just had dairy i can hear it in your nose because it happened so fast for me um so it's avoiding those foods that we're sensitive to because they cause inflammation through our whole gi tract which then spills over to inflammation throughout our body do you want to speak a little bit well with the dairy it's a mucus producer so not everyone but for you for me as well i completely weigh that when you get that mucus produced in your sinuses or your gut it's actually harder to clear pathogens like viruses so you're actually putting yourself at a disadvantage from the immune perspective too because you've got all this gunk sitting there that can kind of trap the particles trap the viruses and it makes it harder to clear and i would love to just talk really quickly about like what what's a typical breakfast for you and i'll share mine too because maybe some people are wondering what in the world if i can't have cereal what do you do dr pratt for breakfast you know i try to switch it up i i'm i i am a true believer that we should have different nutrition rotating through our diet but like anyone else my life gets really busy and i fall back to certain things and one of those certain things is i have medicare by thorn research and i take two scoops of that i add some coconut milk or almond milk or hemp milk and then i add a mixed berry just some mixed berries with that and that usually is great and it has my multivitamin in it it's just a great it's just a great way for me to start my day otherwise it it would be i can do eggs so i'll do eggs with some sauteed vegetables um if i have time in the morning or um every once in a while i i do i am also sensitive to histamine so i have to watch how much histamine i can take in uh but if i if i do have something that's higher histamine i may do like a chicken apple sausage or something like that too what about you what's your background good good good well i love that you said the variety because i get in i get in habits where i'm eating the same thing every day because it's easy and um i've gone i love the smoothies i haven't done them lately but i've been in the past have frequently done i like the thorn vegalite but i like the medically that dr pratt is mentioning is kind of like a detox shake so it's really great because it has all the n-acetyl cysteine and the glutathione and all the precursors uh it's chocolate flavored well it comes vanilla chocolate chocolate's much better i take the vanilla yeah yeah either way but i would often do that with some leafy greens and then some chia flax like you said very similar coconut milk what i've done lately is i'll do a grain free cereal that's very low sugar and there's one that's sprouted from i think lark ellen farms and the other one i like is purely elizabeth which now costco carries so it's so cool and they're both organic grain free cereals and i'll put a little coconut milk on them or just eat them plain if i have time it's that's my simplest go-to um and uh and it works i sadly can't do eggs so um and a lot of you out there you might be doing more ketogenic or you might be doing more intermittent fasting so some of you might do like a bulletproof coffee a clean organic coffee with some brain octane or some mct oil or um or just i like my coconut creamer in there that's super clean from i think vital proteins makes a really good coconut creamer um so all those things are great um and if you're intermittent fasting a lot of times you won't eat breakfast when you first wake up but you'll have your first meal at like 11 and that works sadly for me personally is i've never done well on a high fat diet i'm one of those two people i have pancreatic insufficiency so i i can't really do a super high fat diet so i have to kind of balance the lower glycemic carbs i often do berries as well so organic berries with whatever other protein and fats that i'm eating but a lot of you listening might do well with the breakfast that's fat and protein based like eggs and organic turkey bacon or sausage or those kinds of things tend to keep people going really well and i often say especially with adrenal issues to have more of a fat and protein in the morning and have your carbs in the evening like rice or quinoa or sweet potatoes as a side versus our sugary cereals in the morning they just set us up because if you start with a sugary cereal your insulin spikes up your blood sugar spikes up that insulin tells your body to store sugar so three hours later you're ravenous and you're looking for the brownies um so and your cortisol gets messed up right and then your cortisol is also in there playing tricks on you and lowering your immune system so that's one of the reasons why i think we're talking about fiber and protein and good fats are so important to balance that blood sugar yeah so that people and it'll help your immune system dramatically how often people are following all day long that um that and they understand when you tell them aren't you three hours later are you like ravenous looking for like yeah you know what's up with that it all depends like really your first meal of the day whether you're fasting or not is the most important meal for both cortisol and blood sugar and insulin and even if you want to lose weight or be metabolically active and healthy um that first thing that you put in your mouth in the morning is really critical to think about so cereal sadly not a great idea yeah yeah um but chia pudding chia pudding would be a great you know with some berries i think you you had a recipe too with avocado um chocolate uh it's like chocolate pudding it's so good and it's actually healthy it's on the website we'll have to find that and post it because it's so it tastes like chocolate pudding and you're basically eating avocados it's so good so so this lifestyle doesn't have to feel um really restrictive in that way when you start to to gain an appreciation of different kinds of sweet right um using some of these alternative um just the berries become sweet yeah what's your favorite recommendations for sweeteners for patients if they're making a recipe or doing something what do you usually tell them for alternatives i i mean i still believe honey and maple syrup are still a good idea unless you're really restricting carbs like on a specific carbohydrate diet or gaps um but monk fruit would probably be in there um xylitol you know uh that also helps kill yeast uh those would probably be my favorites what about you actually i totally agree i do use stevia a lot because it has has had some studies it's a biofilm disruptor in chronic infections and things and it tends to not affect the gut microbiome which is really important xylitol love that probably my second favorite i do agree with you with honey and maple syrup if you're going to use sweeteners use real use real if possible just don't use the refined cane sugar totally avoid that one and monk fruit and palm coconut palm sugar tend to be a little lower glycemic but there's still all those things if you have pre-diabetes or really watching blood sugar even the honey or maple syrup is going to affect but it's still more natural and nutritive it has nutrients than your white table sugar and then like someone who's really low glycemic for either diabetic reasons or otherwise the stevia the xylitol don't have as much effect on the blood sugar so that's kind of the range and they're all available i do notice with the sugar alcohols if someone has underlying gut dysbiosis until you treat it they tend to get gas and bloating because those sugar alcohols stay in the lumen of the gut and they don't get absorbed so the bacteria have a party and you'll have gas and bloating if you have like these xylitol brownies and need a lot of them you're gonna be like what happened to my gut right the whole fodmaps kind of idea right um speaking of gut like tell me a little bit about how you put i mean we both like gut is the core but how does that relate to immune system and what are some core things people could do to have healthy guts well first is probably finding out if you have any kind of infections whether it's in your oral microbiome your nasal microbiome your gi you know in the large intestine do you have do you have a small intake intestinal bacterial overgrowth in your in your small intestine so finding those infections are really important to work with a doctor like jill or i because 80 percent of your immune system is it is 80 isn't it 80 of our immune system comes off of that lymphocyte those lymphocytes all through our gi tract so we need a healthy microbiome whispering right that's what it does it whispers and it gives it gives feedback to what the environment is what kind of environment we're building in that gi so if we have you know things growing in our garden that weeds growing in our garden they're going to take nutrients they're going to create inflammation they're going to create a different environment that's going to invite other things in so i don't know jill if you see this but a lot of people will have some dysbiosis they'll have bacterial overgrowths or maybe some yeast overgrowth and all of a sudden it invites in a protozoa right that they get exposed to that normally you might not hold on to that protozoa so when i see a protozoa in somebody's you know gi workup i'm thinking wow we've probably had some leaky gut and some some dysbiosis going on for a while so what what are the things that i do you know probiotics are important but knowing which probiotics as jill speaks to beautifully for microbiome labs and some of these other companies knowing the right kind of probiotic is pretty important if you have histamine or sibo you're going to need a different kind of probiotic than if you have just an overgrowth of some bacteria in your large intestine so probiotics are really important managing the diet right eating the right things that are not going to feed these overgrowth are going to all help the immune system in the gi and then something that naturopathic doctors like myself do a lot of is dry skin brushing to help move the lymph system because that lymph if you move it all over your body with just short little uh strokes with a either a loofah or a dry skin brush that you can get at any of the natural food stores all of that moving that lymph really helps us detox helps the the gi actually um and then also castor oil packs i'm a huge fan of castor oil i don't know about you jill but i love castor oil and specifically over the gi and over the liver and all the way up if you have fibrocystic breasts or if you have ovarian cysts you can actually get a clot that goes all the way from your clavicle bones right here all the way down to your pubic bone and you really want to saturate it in castor oil and i have all of this on my website um that i can share with you and you lay with that on and you can either meditate or say your prayers or do deep breathing exercises and you lay for that for 45 minutes and what it does is it brings down inflammation in the gi so it's an oil great and not expensive and practical and so simple um and i know um the dry brushing i've recommended to patients again we've kind of stolen that from our naturopathic friends and if you've been around lately you've heard me talk about coffee enemas because i'm such a fan um this requires a little more equipment and training but when i was in switzerland i just saw patients doing so well and they were not necessarily young and healthy and part of the treatments there in the biological medicine center was coffee enemas and i think of it as really really simple because what you're talking about with with detox we have excretion of toxins and mobilization of toxins and excretion and so basically when we mobilize uh whether we're doing glutathione or ivs or any of these things and we can't excrete we start to get sick and a lot of people have heard of a herxheimer reaction all that is is these things aren't in balance and we're pushing the mobilization so hard and we're not getting excretion or we're killing off organisms that are causing toxicity and you're not eliminating that from your body and what i love about naturopathic medicine is you have a lot of things for excretion it could be the castor oil it could be coffee enemas it could be colon hydrotherapy it could be um epsom salt baths it could be all of these things because just taking another pill won't necessarily help the binders might help a little on that side but a lot of other things like giving glutathione giving n-acetyl cysteine giving some of these agents that push and mobilize toxins that could make them worse if they're not excreting so i love that you bring a lot to the table on those therapies we we call that the hum we have to open all the homunctaries love it and so do you have you ever heard this term before it's very from you but it's not common vocabulary for me so so the hamantaris would be how are we at elimination it's all elimination the monkers are elimination so whether it's through your breath or whether it's through your sweat or whether it's through your urine or your feces it's it's all trying to move things out and we have to open up those humong trees and so a lot of the the treatments that we employ are to open up those hemong trees and yes we do we give we give things like bitters to help the gallbladder move better we give all these antioxidants or anti you know anti-inflammatory herbs or different herbs to move toxicity the more you know about what kind of toxicity or what your exposure has been the more specifically jill or i can you know help you to what humongtory do we need to work on in order for you to move that out and so yes so deep breathing is so important even for detoxification hydration so important for detoxification through the kidneys right fiber so important for detox phase three detoxification now we call it but as nds we've been thinking about that the whole time like how do we get detoxification how do we get that hemongtry of the colon working to your benefit right how do we get your kidneys to work to your benefit how do we clean your blood and get um and get all of these things out yeah so that reminds me there's some of the you know gurus on television talking about these ice baths and there's other you know there's all these things with hot cold water therapy from a naturopathic perspective tell us a little bit more about that whether it's use in the shower like going cotton cold water or going into an ice bath what does that do for the body so what it does is it increases circulation which is really going to help you both detox and get vitalized meaning your cells just get more nutrients when we circulate our blood better so one of the um one of them is constitutional or or hydrotherapy going from hot to cold so you'll if you were a patient of mine you know this about me i tell people to always end their shower with cold um and it would be best you know or or sits fast where you go between hot and cold or even in the shower you can go between hot and cold and so sometimes i'll say you know three three minutes hot and then you want to turn it as cold as you can i don't want to shock you um but you would be sh you would be amazed at how invigorated you feel afterwards because all of a sudden you're going to feel this throbbing in your body and so what we do is if you have a certain area that we're trying to increase circulation to we focus on that area or it can be a whole body experience you know if you have the ability to go from a whole immersion of hot to a whole immersion of cold that's going to give you a whole body treatment and what it does is it vasodilates you when you're in the hot and when you get in the cold it faso constricts and pumps your blood through all those little tiny capillaries in your fingers and your nose and your toes so we're increasing circulation to get these nutrients to get all of the things that we need for vitality moves throughout our body right our chi moves better so um in in sits fast so if you have pelvic issues let's say you have you have recurring infections in your pelvic area or you have pelvic floor dysfunction or you have bladder infections on a regular basis or you have gi problems you can sit in hot water and then you want to go sit in cold water and again it's the contrast if you can make it as cold as you can take it and then go back to the hot for three minutes back to the cold for a minute back to the hot and you always want to end on cold because that's where you get the good when you when you vasodilate you're gonna pull blood so if you just take a hot bath and you don't end on cold sometimes you can you can be a little bit more swollen after a hot bath so it's this idea of pumping your blood through your body more efficiently by using contrast hydrotherapy and colon hydrotherapy is fantastic too and that's that's what jill was talking about before where we use coffee enemas or different things to create this um basically a new microbiome and also help pull out toxins so um and then of course drinking plenty of really great clean water we forget how important to all processes of the body you know being really well hydrated that's going to help your immune system immensely as well yeah thanks for explaining that because i've always known i do feel invigorated with that cold at the end there but it's people i know want to know and it's something you can do at home you know it's really practical um i can't believe we've been talking an hour and we we could talk another hour this is so much fun um i wanted to ask you two things before we end and the first one is just what would you leave like what if there were one piece of advice what would you leave listeners with on advice for this time like um to find a beautiful rhythm again in your life so many people are struggling right now for a rhythm and our hormonal system our immune system our nervous system thrives on structure so the more we can get up in the morning and go out into our backyard nature anywhere we can to get sunlight on our face and help our melatonin because that's how our melatonin knows we know to make melatonin at night is because of sun exposure in the morning and then you know trying to focus on the best possible messages um you know find or tiptoe back into exploring with wonderment your spiritual self your your your ability to connect with your higher um with something higher that is watching over you that loves you that will sustain you that will give you resilience at this time and end your day by watching the sun go down just letting your body know like the day is over and now it's time for rest like we're not going to turn on our blue lights we're not going to turn on all of our lights and over stimulate ourselves and watch really pretty horrific news outlets that are going to make us stress so then we can't sleep well you know just watch the sun go down have some a beautiful cup of tea talk to people you love in any any way that you can and just know that you are connected oh that is such beautiful advice and where can people find you dr pratt where can they find you we'll link this up too but sure um so i have a website called the pratt clinics with an s on the end so my name um and we can put a link in this for them too i am here in colorado but just like jill we see people all over the world so we're lucky enough to do telemedicine and and be able to help lots of people in lots of different places yeah oh this has been so fun um thank you all for listening and thank you dr pratt for joining me today and we'll have to do this again because there's even more stuff we didn't get to cover i'd love to you | Jill Carnahan, MD | UC-Tg7FE_TgHuCLGrHgP8sdw | 2020-06-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 11,212 | 58,262 |
_OfJV6HtzsA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OfJV6HtzsA | Mission Darts Available in the US & a Look at the KURO | hey everyone welcome to atomic darts i'm your host matthew in this channel we take a look at darth starch related materials and other items that your subscribers ask us to review so today we're going to be taking a look at a particular product but i want to tell you about this product line it is the mission darts product line so we have things like the hero the quadrant the paradox the flint's product lines that's the case we have the taurus light this is a portable light we have of course this samurai dart board and many many other cool products shirts these are all now available at dart brokers so dart brokers is in illinois they are a us-based supplier of darts mission darts is out of the uk and their first u.s supplier is dart broker so you can find the mission product lineup that's available here in the u.s over at dart brokers.brokerage.com there's a link down below here's their logo so you guys know what i'm talking about it's the dog dart brokers over there if you're familiar with jason the bearded dirt guy he works over at dart brokers there you go it's my psa just letting you guys know that mission product is now available here in the us and you can get your hands on it but we're going to be taking a look at the product that mission has that's available at dart brokers we've got barrels we've got the samurai dart board which we'll be doing here in a future review we've got lights they've got multiple light systems they've got a travel light system they've got a mounted light system they've got all kinds of cool product uh available through mission or that mission manufacturers you know as a manufacturer of dirt all right i thought we would go ahead and take a look at the curo barrel on today's episode focus focus there we go all right let's get a close-up look at it here's this barrel little close-up look at it we've got an interesting flight it's a full flight and it's got a nice little design kind of on there it looks like a samurai and the point just a standard point it's a much shorter barrel than i think i was expecting when i went to open the box but a good looking barrel uh it's pretty smooth at this cone then we get into some really nice etching and wings nice push point in here little concave push point really good looking barrel i actually like this a lot i like the the potential feel it's got some grip for sure um from a grip standard standpoint i don't know i'm gonna kinda i'm gonna give that like a two and and my reasoning for that so we get a close-up look again at this is the rings are close together which gives you a nice amount of grip but it's not an intensive amount of grip it's not really other than just that standard kind of ring but because they're close together you can feel it it's kind of like that fish scale shark skin type of grip but it's i like it all right let's go over it give it a throw and i'll give you a final wrap-up on it [Music] all right there you have it it's a quick look at the curo by mission darts this is really a nice barrel i like that it's a little bit smaller personally the it's a 95 tungsten do you want to state that i like the grip on this i love this um little bit of concave that it's got right here at the front it's got this nice little concave these grip this is just a really good looking barrel and feels really nice this is a 21 gram again 95 tungsten barrel i personally um may want to go up a gram i don't know it just it feels it felt really good it felt like it was just easy to throw quite impressed we've got some etching in here the mission logo right there on the barrel these flights are really pretty cool um all in all ah this is an eight plus for me i'm very impressed with this barrel it's the first mission barrel that i have thrown the machining on this is incredible they've done a really nice job with this barrel if you're looking for something that's a little bit of a shorter barrel so not necessarily pencil shaped this has a pretty even weighting going on there uh it doesn't feel like it's front weighted or rear weighted or so it's more kind of center weighted which makes a whole lot of sense but it's got a really nice even weight it's a slightly smaller barrel so if you like that uh say the phil taylor style but you don't want it as thick that bomb shape this is more straight shaped with a little bit of concave at the front just a really good feeling barrel with a really nice look to it and feel and grip again not a heavy grip but you can tell that there's grip there but i like the concave uh it's just a really nice push point so all in all this is an a plus for me uh again first time i've thrown a mission barrel quite quite enjoy it well i would really certainly like to recommend the mission product um first time i played their barrels and taken a look at them really nice looking barrel 95 tungsten cuts look really really nice a very clean barrel looking forward to trying out some more of their product and taking a look at the samurai dartboard which is right behind me highly recommend that you check them out and if you're here in the u.s of course check them out at dart brokers dart brokers dot com they are the only supplier here in the us that's carrying this product line all right guys thanks for watching this review of atomic darts and well it's not the review of atomic darts but this review by atomic darts by me matthew the host of atomic arts thanks again for watching and we'll see you on the next one | Atomic Darts | UCMLAwVnRiuig9RnEd18YT3g | 2022-01-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,065 | 5,482 |
HT90ZhIOkn0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HT90ZhIOkn0 | Cars 3: For The Love Of Racing | Children's Books Read Aloud | cars free for the love of racing cruiser mirrors and lightning mcqueen sprinted around willie's butte crews used to be a top-notch trainer of next-gen race cars but now she was a racer and lightning was her crew chief they were back in radiator springs getting ready for her next big event cruz pushed herself hard but she got frustrated over silly mistakes ah my tires are sliding she cried relax crews said lightning you're doing fine lightning believed in cruz he knew she had all the skills to be a great racer but she was having trouble believing in herself trust you're the best and let your tires do the rest lightning told her cruz wanted to believe that but deep down she still wondered if she could be the best these small mistakes were taking a big toll she knew she could drive better than this as lightning watched cruz do laps he could see that she was preoccupied and over correcting for every little slip finally cruz pulled over why are you so tense and upset lightning asked i have to be perfect she said i have to prove to everyone that my win at the florida 500 wasn't just beginner's luck pushing yourself this hard isn't the answer he said come on let's go get some rest later lightning met up with sally and mater at flows how's the crew chief and going ask mater tougher than i thought lightning replied cruz is racing to prove something to the world but i think it's holding her back it sounds like she doubts her abilities said sally that was never your problem lightning mater said in fact you thought you could win all by yourself till all dock set you straight that's it lightning shouted mater you're the best early the next morning sally drove with lightning to willie's butte the two watched crews do lap after lap lightning could see that she was still pushing herself too hard just like the day before eventually crews pulled over and approached her friends i don't know what's wrong she admitted it seems to me you've hit a wall and not the kind at a track said lightning no amount of practice laps will get you through this in fact overthinking it can make things worse follow us we want to show you something lightning and sally led crews to the hudson hornet racing museum which showcased mementos posters photos articles and film reels about the legendary razer racer when dog was in his prime no one could touch him lightning said he won three piston cups at its alley crews looked at the trophies and awe doc loved what he did but to him these were just a bunch of empty cups explained lightning nice to have but not really important doc helped me see that real racing isn't just about winning lightning continued it's about teamwork sportsmanship and enjoying the thrill of doing something you love i've been so focused on my mistakes i almost forgot how much i love to race crews said with a smile why don't we all go for a drive sally suggested sally led lightning and cruise on a beautiful ride through the mountains of carburetor country it was the same route she'd shown lightning years before it's nice to get out here and have some space to breathe isn't it sally mused somewhere along the way something shifted in cruise lightning as sally watched how confidently and skillfully she maneuvered through the twists on the winding road you're taking those turns like a champ lightning told cruz i'm not even thinking about technique she said and it's pretty great it's all about trusting your instincts lightning replied by the time the friends returned to town cruz was happy and stress-free it was clear her confidence was growing this was a good day cruz said lightning go get some rest and we'll resume training tomorrow the next morning cruz woke up and found a note on her alarm clock it read meet at flows when she arrived cruz was surprised to see that the whole radiator springs gang was there we want you to know that you're part of the radiator springs family said lightning we're all behind you honey said flo well shoot matter added of course we are me and sheriff even closed the stretch of the old highway so you can practice somewhere new cruise was touched but she didn't want to dart off to practice just yet so she enjoyed a court of oil with the gangs at flows then she joined luigi and guido at lucy's casa della tires i think it's time for a new set of light years crew said guido quickly put the new tires on cruise they looked great and she never felt better out on the highway crew smiled at the open road ahead of her come on mr mcqueen she said let's race lightning and crews race down the highway fender to fender as they approach the curve lightning called out trust you're the best and let my tires do the rest shouted cruise as she whipped through the turn at top speed they came to a stop and looked back to see the gang cheering you've got what it takes said lightning i sure do said cruz i have the skills a crew chief who believes in me and friends who won't let me forget how much i love racing lightning smiled spoken like a true race car if you like this video please leave a comment and don't forget to subscribe | Ririro | UC-NczBDnxzLFr18mS0DdUeA | 2019-07-31 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 942 | 5,098 |
2EOrOD9yWIA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2EOrOD9yWIA | How anyone can beat Shuro Chi in the Last Wish Raid in 2022. | the next encounter is searching now Sergi is one where a lot of teams can get messed up and can fail and so this one can be a little bit complicated I would say you're going to need some people who are good at kind of thinking on their feet in this but if you practice it enough you should get good at this encounter so for this encounter you're going to want to use a lot of roaming supers because you'll be able to you have a lot of ads you have to clear out and you can get orbs to give people their supers back you'll need a couple Wells that they encounter just to help with DPS but this is not a heavy DPS encounter this is more of a puzzle and clearing ads encounter so as you go into the first room you'll notice there's just a ton of ads kill the ads and you'll see Syracuse search you'll be sitting on a plate and you'll notice that on the the plate there are three glowing areas that'll show up you don't want to stand on those yet so basically kill all the ads once you kill the ads there'll also be an eye of Riven that drops we don't I don't typically use that in the encounter anymore you can use that to extend the encounter because you'll notice there's a timer that accelerates that shirt to wipe you if you don't finish that portion of the encounter but again the I've ribbon will potentially extend that but I don't use it these days it's pretty easy to do without that so you'll see the three plates and you'll see three nuts that show up once you see that again this is something you should probably call it before you get into the encounter three people are going to jump on at the same time until those plates and grab the nuts the reason at the same time is the minute you drop you go on those plates you're gonna start dying so you have to be really quick about this so you jump on the plate you grab the nuts what we do is we typically you can do it either way we shoot to the right so whichever nut you have you shoot the person to your right and you're trying to form a ring around sure g once you form that ring and you'll notice it because there's an effect that comes up that shows you that it's complete then you'll be able to do the DPS at that point you want to put a well down we typically do is we'll use swords or use shotguns things that are close that's typically the easy way to do it and again you're not trying to completely kill her you'll notice she has six phases you're just trying to get her to the next phase so you'll do that in one area then you'll go and you'll do it again you'll kill ads grab the nuts shoot everyone and then do damage to again so once you finish those two phases you're going to get to the next interesting Wrinkle In This encounter so in this next encounter you're gonna need four people that you called out the beginning of the encounter and so those people will be labeled one through four when you go into the room the other two people are gonna do they're gonna use roaming supers or things like that to kill all the ads where possible they're there to protect the other four for the other four as soon as you get in the room look to your left and you're gonna see a you're gonna see a thing on the wall okay and you also notice there's nine plates you can stand on on the thing on the wall you're going to notice there are nine sectors so if you think about it again same concept first row left to right second row left to right third row left to right that's the order again if you if you're older like me you can remember a phone like this it's kind of like the phone right you know if you think about it's like the number pad one through nine and so what we do is again you have one through four one the person is one is the person's gonna go and get on the first plate first second person on second play Third on third third plate fourth and fourth and what I mean by that is the order again which it shows from left to right on the first left to right and the second left to right and a third so again if you're the first person you're gonna have the first one and again one through four once you're clear with that what we do is we just have everyone call the ready with one ready two ready three ready four ready once everyone is ready once you've heard that there's probably one person you're typically coordinating with that says okay everyone jump on so you all at that point jump on your plate okay once you do that for long enough you'll notice the plates fill up and you'll see a message show up and once you do that you get off the plate what's gonna happen then is you're gonna have another wall show up and again it's going to do the same thing and you're gonna have to do the same thing one two four now one key thing is is you need to remember which plate you hopped on previously and there's a reason for that you can only get on the same plate one once you can't get on it twice so because of that and that will basically that that will stop the encounter from completing you you won't be able to fill up the the plates so what you need to remember is if you for instance if one has stepped on that plate already right the one that you rotate to what we typically do is we set up like a rotation of people who rotate with each other like maybe one and four two and three again you guys can work that out but it's going to be something you have to do quickly on the Fly and again you're going to do that a third time and then that portion that puzzle portion encounter is going to be done now it's also really important when you get into this room the first time if you have around a minute left on the timer you're usually pretty good shape if you have less than that it's just going to be really tight so just keep that in mind so once you do that three times then you're gonna see almost like these teacups that's what I call them because they kind of rotate um but they're basically platforms that are going to show up and you have to jump on now you have to be very careful about timing once everyone jumps on them they're actually going to fall so you do have some funny things where someone jumps on the end is everyone else is jumping up and the thing rotates and then it's hard for everyone to get up the other piece of this after you get down the second one there's going to be a night that'll Boop you off once you jump through the open areas so a lot of times what we do is when we get the last one we'll throw a couple grenades up there to kind of kill him so we can get on to the next part of the encounter so again you're going to do this a total of three times and towards the end it does get a little progressively more difficult at least I found as you finish up the encounter but as long as you control the ads you're doing the plates correctly and then doing the puzzle correctly then when you get to that last thing with shurichi you're gonna kill her and you're gonna be done with this encounter a couple things to remember ammo economy is really important so having Finders on and things like that's gonna be really important because towards the end it's kind of hard to have enough uh ammo to finish up that's where you could have some other supers but again just make sure you have different options that if you do run with ammo like maybe a shotgun and a sword or other things again depending what your fire team does but you've finished that and you go on to the next encounter so again guys if you like these videos feel free to check out my other raid guide videos I have an entire list where you can get those if you're struggling with other raids but that's a video if you like it feel free to like the video subscribe my channel check my Discord and I'll see you Guardians in the tower foreign [Music] | Part Time Guardian | UC2fY2_bc2TZPWGocNCS1nyw | 2022-11-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,536 | 7,730 |
6-J_AxhFY80 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-J_AxhFY80 | She asked for souls and this happened | [Music] Jesus Jesus Jesus Use Me For Your Glory Use Me For Your Glory Jesus I want to take territories I want my voice to be heard in the nations of the world I want the Kum Man Too use me use me Jesus use me calm down my daughter I have given you the grace already it is up to you oh Jesus I want the tangibility of of your presence RMS and dimensions I want to walk on water like you I need Souls Souls Jesus okay okay okay okay if that is what you want yes I'll give you Souls I will start with you from tomorrow thank you Jesus thank you Jesus I'm taking territories I tap into territorial me Jus Jesus Jesus are you trying to run into the church you harot don't touch me blood of Jesus how can if a girl walking in flesh trying to touch a woman like me that has ascended into RMS the blood of Jesus I spr the blood of Jesus on top of you what you want here you harot I'm not a harot what are you it's my boyfriend friend he wants me to commit a de abortion for him disagreed he speakes I came to church to cool off sh you want to cool off you want to come and cool off inside the church like the church is a club you want to enter Church the holies of holies dressed like this you have wearing W go home and change your Harlot dress I don't have a home it's my boyfriend I used to cabit my boyfriend cabit cohabitation Jesus you are dead in sin and your place is in Hell Fire a very hot place in Hellfire Jesus Christ the reason I'm coting is a long story you will not even understand I don't care does it look like I care your place is in hell and you will be there to perish asai you will die there you already condemned and consumed in case you don't know hey that is why I came please tell me what can I do I will do anything ready to do anything I can't help you my pastor cannot help you not go seduce them Jezebel get up from here fornicator M please I will go please I'm very thirsty can you give me water water I cannot give you water souls are perishing you want to drink water souls are perishing on top of that you are fornicating I can't give you water you don't even need water you get out from me get get out I said you should get get from me fornicator candidate of hell hey hey hey God have mercy give me the grace to take over territories I don't need this oh Jesus use me I need Souls why don't you want to use me I'm a you I'm a woman of Purity Use Me Jesus but I keep sending you Souls you keep condemning them no I did not see soul I didn't see any soul I need tangible Soul Jesus tangible Soul how about the lady that came to you that you met in front of the church lady lady lady that prostitute that Jezebel spirit seductive spirit that want to come and seduce people's husband hell is a portion have placed her where she belongs wow Jesus you don't know her let me give you gist she's a prostitute Marine Spirit came to church with waste bead she has committed two abortions and she's about to commit the third one she's even citing with her boyfriend and fornicating 247 look at a listi and a earring Jesus you have patience oh because if I be you people would have judged and Ed fire to consume in this world Jesus said you get this your patience from cuz if it's me a i stand for Purity Purity is all that matters my dear but there are the reason why I came to die I came so that they will have life and have it more abundantly that is the good news and that is what you should share not condemning them back to Satan the Sinners they irritate me Jesus have you forgotten that you were once a sinner and that you were saved by grace have you forgotten where I picked you from if I should Mark iniquity who will stand they are the lordship and I came for the lordship Jesus Jesus by your grace that I'm still [Music] standing my you may not have fornicated like ah but your mouth is clean you lie you curse you hate your brother you gossip you backbite these are sins as well too before you judge people have you judged yourself that lady would have been you if not for my grace my dear you truly cannot win so if you do not have compassion for people they are the lordship and I came for the lordship Jesus it's by your grace I'm still standing I shouldn't be boosting shouldn't be boosting at all Jesus hey family thank you for watching our video yeah do well to subscribe on our YouTube channel Facebook and Instagram at thewi for more videos yeah you want to make a donation or you want to support our ministry the account details are on the screen thank you so much God bless you bye | The Winlos | UCS3HaOm0opcyM9i5RGeyO2A | 2024-02-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 911 | 4,521 |
FrVEh7CGkrw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrVEh7CGkrw | How To Securely Destroy/Wipe Data On Hard Drives With Shred - App Pick | hey guys so today I'm going to be demonstrating the use of a program called shred the purpose of this program is to make sure that files are completely removed from your hard disk drives and external hard drives because some people don't know this but when you delete a file from your hard disk drive or external hard drive the quote-unquote usual way you're not actually removing the contents of your file from that device you're actually just removing the reference to it from the file system but the actual physical contents of the file still reside on your hard disk drive or external hard drive until they are overwritten so the program shred basically over writes every single space on a hard disk drive to make sure that there is no possibility that your old information can be recovered should you sell the hard disk drive on somewhere like eBay or give it to someone else and there's of course a lot of sensitive information that you can find on your hard disk drive or external hard drives most notably information that could get people to basically hack into social media accounts or banking accounts PayPal accounts that kind of thing so it's always a good practice to make sure that your personal data is kept safe and this is a tool that we use to make that so-so shred as far as I'm aware is available on most Linux distributions installed as part of the the overall operating system the overall distribution however it is a command-line utility so I'm going to be demonstrating the use of this program using the command line this should be OK for every person to follow it's not a particularly advanced program but it is one I find quite useful so I'm just going to use this virtual machine that I've spun up this is Manjaro marte edition this is just the first ISO that I had to hand but you just simply go to whatever operating systems it is a command line terminal so in Manjaro marte it is simply down to system tools out of applications and then the marte terminal here so we need to go into super user mode and you want to be very very careful when entering this command to the administrator password because you are messing around with shred it is very possible to accidentally wipe a hard disk drive that you don't want to wipe so you want to make sure that you know the exact device you're referencing because there is no way to undo this so we can list our drives by just typing f disk - L or F disk space - L and this lists two device here s da and s DB now I've created s DB specifically just for today's demonstration as you can see it's only seventy five point five megabytes so the wiping of this hard drive is not going to take a very long time at all however if you had like an external hard drive or even an internal hard drive that was 500 megabytes to a gigabyte it could take several hours so we are 100% certain that the device from this information that we want to shred is s DB if you require any further divide information go and look for it you can perhaps find more information when it comes to using the operating systems File Explorer here for example but you just want to make sure or gparted is another way that you can actually take a look at the information on all of your hard disk devices just to make sure gparted is installed on many distributions but not always in marte I believe it is gparted is just a partition manager and it can demonstrate the usage of all of your devices so at the moment it's got slash dev slash SDA here and it's listed basically how much of the hard disk has been used s DB which is seventy five point four five point five megabytes here this is a completely blank hard disk drive but we are 100% certain that given the circumstances slash dev slash s DB is the hard disk drive we want to wipe so the command in the terminal is pretty straightforward we type shred and we type - V and this is for the verbose output so this basically lets us know the process and how the process is going every step of the way and then we simply just type in slash dev slash SD B and then enter so it's overwritten three times as you can see here pass one of three passed two of three pass three of three and although specifically you really only need to rewrite information on top of other information at once for it to be incredibly difficult if not impossible to recover shred does it three times by default just to make sure that the information on that device is completely unrecoverable so that is basically the demonstration you might want to then just make sure that you're exited from super user mode just by typing exit there and as you can see my cursor goes back to the usual user cursor you want to be very careful when entering super user mode and you only ever want to be a super user mode or route as it's often called when you're doing something very important that requires you know special privileges but it's certainly something that you don't want to use on a you know day to day kind of basis unless you're a system administrator so that's about it for me today thank you very much for watching this tutorial there are a few other ways that you can use this program a few other commands you can use you can adjust the number of times that information gets overwritten in fact what you can do is you can type shred - - help and it gives you all the additional commands and information that is required for other options to be explored with the Shred program so for example you can just type in - - iterations equals and then a number to change how many times how many overwrites that you do so that's about it for me today thank you very much for watching if you have any other requests for these kinds of tutorials please let me know down in the comment section below and until next time I've been Chris Ware and you've been awesome take care now you | Chris Were - Linux • tech • open source | UCAPR27YUyxmgwm3Wc2WSHLw | 2016-06-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,105 | 5,836 |
5bN57hkJ6Y4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5bN57hkJ6Y4 | Remembering New Jack: Figure Four Daily w/Lance Storm | the passing of new jack reportedly the result of a heart attack and it's all over the various social media platforms right now impact wrestling tweeting about it and lance you could talk for hours about new jack so floor is yours dude yeah i don't know if i could do hours but you know i i think his two most high profile runs you know was you know the gangsters in smoky mountain and then obviously you know as you know the gangster new jack in in uh ecw and i was there for both of those so you know i shared a lot of locker rooms with new jack and you know it should surprise no one that we are you know polar opposites and we didn't hang out beyond the locker room but oddly enough we always got along like i never had an issue with new jack and you know i was there i'm trying to think i guess it was it was uh either the first or second smoky mountain show that we did in marietta georgia i think it was the first one um that cornet brought you know jack and mustafa in to talk to them about you know coming in and i remember meeting him then and i remember he had a brand new green corvette which for you know most of the guys working in smoky mountain wrestling at the time we were driving much more modest cars uh than jack was i assumed due to a side job he may or may not have had but he you know he was brought in right away and and i remember the first taping you know we're up in the hills of you know kentucky or tennessee somewhere and it was like i wonder if he brought his his corvette and he had a beat up old van that was uh he had the back filled with spare tires because jack was planning on getting some heat and he was planning on being prepared and man that dude could cut a promo like the the gangsters in smokey were were so great and new jack you know when you create a list of you know the great promos it's like i don't think new jack gets on that list enough the charisma and presence and believability of what he said and the way he could rile up a crowd you know i remember the the in-ring promo i think it was it might have been the first yeah his debut i think was in uh was uh the knoxville coliseum for the night of legends he did an in-ring or they did jack did all the talking uh in-ring pro promo with jr and you could just tell the charisma of this guy and the ability to speak and obviously rile up a um a a audience that was not as welcoming to a racially diverse uh uh population that you know he he knew what many people in in the south you know thought of people like new jack and new jack was more than willing to embrace that and and get as much heat as he could and his promos were incredible and mustafa was a good part of his act and it's like again i remember going into harlan kentucky which was the murder capital of kentucky and there's like one road in one road out and it's like there was debate ahead of time whether it was wise to book the gangsters there because whether they could get out or not it's like you know new jack had his van with his spare tires and a gun and it's like he was he was going to get in and he was going to get out and he did not give a damn and it was awesome and jericho and i actually worked a bunch of shows with the gangsters in smokey in the summer all of the county fairs would you know every county had their summer fair and cornet got booked as one of the you know attractions at the county fairs and they were just the fair shows and it was you know very much what you would call spot show type shows and we did at least i would guess at least a half a dozen of them you know thrill seekers versus you know the gangsters and i remember and again i was always i could take it or leave it as far as working snug i preferred working light but i didn't care if guys wanted to get physical but jericho liked it snug and the gangsters liked it snug so you know we were working with probably well done most of our time there who wanted to work really really light and work you know memphis 101 and the gangsters are still working by any chance are they available for and the gangsters were brought in to work with the rock and roll and obviously the rock and roll wanted to work nice and light so these fair shows were the chance for the gangsters and jericho to to get their snugness out of their system and we had matches but you know both could work and we had good fun matches and they were a lot of fun and again new jacks promos you know again he probably got smokey mountain kicked off some tv and i know he had protesters out in front of the building and stuff because of some of the stuff he said but he was awesome i remember too to get heat because tracy smothers was the wild-eyed southern boy so he had you know he would sell connect uh confederate flags i remember one show new jack come up to him he's like you know you know could i can i get a couple of those from you and she's like yeah why he's like would you mind it's like you know i think he wanted to tear it up or blow his nose in it or wipe his ass with it or whatever on a show and trey's like yeah sure no problem but he gives him a couple and new jack goes out and cuts his promo and tells the you know the people of kentucky and tennessee what he thinks of the confederate flag and wipes his ass with it and the you know the place was just about ready to riot and of course at intermission at the end of the show tracy smothers gimmick table is just jam-packed with rednecks wanting to buy confederate flags to you know show new jack that he doesn't get to do that and it was so great because the next show we get to and new jack shows up and puts his bag down and tracy walks over and gives him the two complimentary confederate flags with you know go to it brother and you know new jack be like want to pay for those he's like no it's all right i'll make it back and i think too that it turned into a point where tracy would give you know jack and mustafa a slight cut of his confederate flag sales because new jack was convincing a lot of uh rednecks in kentucky to buy confederate flags to wave it at those evil black guys and you know new jack was just happy to take their money and get people hot and then obviously we crossed paths again in ecw i don't think i ever worked them in any form in ecw but i was obviously did you manage that well we work different styles brian well everyone worked a different style than you and well i shouldn't say that but uh no i worked with the shane douglasses and the rob van damme chris candidos and the jerry lynn's i mean it was hardcore promotion i'm also not sure a lot of people work new jack style no but the the new jack i used to call it you know like he it was a point where at some point he didn't even do matches anymore he just did run-ins but we didn't cross paths we shared locker rooms and it was always a lot of fun now granted i was there for the new jack um sandman locker room fight that was an interesting one i think they were both under the influence and i was there the night that um he punched out or at least slugged once jyd in marietta georgia i think jyd had an outstanding bill for supplements and new jack took offense and took a swing at him that was also the night that um bam bam bigelow he worked uh jack and and jack uh blew up so bad in the match that i remember jack's doing the dive off the the balcony in in marietta and you know he bumps you know bam bam or whatever he was so blown that he had to put an arm around each of the atlas security guys and the atlas security guys had to walk up the bleachers helping new jack climb to the the the upper deck balcony part so that he could climb over the guard rail and basically let gravity take its course and fall on bam bam and then bam bam legitimately had to pick him up throw him over his shoulder and walk back to the ring with jack on his shoulder to hit his finish and pin him in the middle of the ring and it was just like i just remember laughing well maybe if he hadn't gotten a fight with the um jyd before the show he would have been able to have a little more gas with fighting with bam bam but i always got along with him he he was funny and he was charismatic and the was it waltham i think it was waltham pa we used to run a show with ecw it was a hoe show and it was a church or a temple or something we eventually got booted out because it was a new religious order that was going in that didn't want wrestling there but we changed in the back and there was a piano and um knew jack was not a shy man and he would often win in this building um not just walk around naked but he would play the piano without using his hands and i ever remember thinking i think was sitting there with bam bam one time with it's like i wonder what the nuns are gonna think when they come in tomorrow and they're playing the piano knowing that new jack had just played this piano without using his hands if you enjoy these videos for just 7.99 per month you can enjoy full length editions of the brian and vinnie show wrestling observer live figure 4 daily with tom lawler and landstorm plus hundreds of archived shows all in beautiful hd don't miss out join us today | F4WOnline | UCPcc1MbakHpB8F1vIDvUJBg | 2021-05-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,864 | 9,163 |
bmRJ0q-cHSQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmRJ0q-cHSQ | Articles A and AN | Kindergarten Lesson in Language | let's learn articles a and n article a is used before a single countable noun that begins with a consonant a bicycle [Music] a drum a kite [Music] a doll a top a jumping rope a teapot a cup article n is used before a single countable noun that begins with a vowel an apple an umbrella an orange an ant an indian an elephant an ax an octopus now let's have drills are you going to use a or n a house or an house right a house a door or an door [Music] right a door a octopus or an octopus write an octopus a ant or an ant an ant correct a bicycle or an bicycle a bicycle right a apple or an apple [Music] an apple correct a bear or a bear a bear right a drum or an drum a drum correct good job kids don't forget the use of the articles a and n good luck in answering the drills in your | Teacher Beth | UC1497IQ6RBadT2BnK0IoFMA | 2021-10-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 168 | 784 |
1u2CdciCSME | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1u2CdciCSME | 1000 Ancient Orbs Headhunter Gamble 3.9 Metamorph league Path of Exile | what's up what's up today for my first youtube video I'll be doing a thousand ancient orb headhunter gamble as I'm sure most of you know an item level 4243 belt and a nemesis mode map has the chance of an ancient orb turning it into a headhunter yesterday I had some insane RNG and I decided that going all-in with all the profits I made and sharing a video with everyone would be the most fun way to do it I spent about 1 egg salt per two point one two point three ancient orbs for a total of a thousand the total ended up coming out to be about 470 exalts we have five belts in the inventory and a thousand ancient orbs I mean go down into the map see what we can get I think that my maps right I need about five headhunters for 475 eggs alts make sure its nemesis had really sucked a blow through all these have it so if we get five head owners you make five eggs alts every other head enter from there's just I'm on the top I'm gonna start down here in the corner and we'll see how it goes alright be pretty sweet to just pop off like right on the top when I've been doing these I've been doing like this weird pattern kind of from what I got from other people would have done similar videos makes it a little more fun and helps me make sure that I don't double-click the same belt I actually have a clip from yesterday where I almost clicked on a bell after I triggered the headhunter and that will just be extremely unfortunate super crazy when you're clicking these just how fast you can dust these ancient orbs into basically nothing like I said add some pretty crazy orangey yesterday I woke up I did like a thirty ancient or gamble and I ended up getting um so what is that were forty fifty five ancient orbs into our first set owner so that's definitely a good start let's let's Bank this guy down here in the corner we definitely don't want to click him off I mean that that's that's really lucky I'm really pleased with that so we'll keep going here hopefully we can turn all five of these into ancient or into headhunters before this is over I do not sure if I mentioned it I do have a few extra belts in my stash just in case we have some really good luck it would be great to have to go grab those and try and make more either way I will use all of these orbs unless I run out of belts and then if I run out of belts will Bank the other orbs but I mean that's really wishful thinking isn't it so this is my first video I like to do a ton of gambling and most of the video games that I play so hopefully we could do more degenerate videos after this hopefully you guys can help me come up with more ways to gamble NPO II this is actually my first league playing this game and I'm super hooked coming from Diablo 2 so we'll see what else we can come up with sitting here thinking about how loud my mouse much must be right next to my mic must be why so many people kind of hang from the top well we're not getting the same odds as we got on that first one that's for sure it's always funny when I sit in here doing this I always start like sweating like does the league table change if I get a head on her should I be up in the quality I don't know how many of you guys have done this gamble or if you have little superstitions about eye level or what map you do it in but I've kind of played around with it every time so I came in and sank about a hundred X into one belt about a week ago one of the first times I did it and I thought it was rigged and then I started worrying that I messed something up and that was really suck I think it's just orangey you know you see the videos of people that do a ton of these and they get one or two belts that's always a possibility so not sure if I mentioned it already but if I do go on a decent Hanjin or sit here and we don't get anything for quite a few X just to not waste anyone's time I probably will speed that clip up we'll see sure what to expect after re-watching this click it's kind of hard to do a test run and then be out a hundred ancient orbs so it's kind of a one-shot my mouse is right next to the mic I probably should have moved the mic to the other side say we'll move these around a little bit see what kind of results we wonder if there's a luckier spot in the inventory kind of funny man we fired off we got one in the first 55 and now see where we're at so we did 55 we had 5 left 20 40 60 80 100 20 260 265 so we had the first one in 55 orbs and now we've gone 265 bulbs and we have got another that is not the best oh we saw plenty more to go so let's see so much better if the game would just let you tell it what you didn't want to click past so I could go a little faster a little more comfortably super scared to shift like these like past certain colors I've wanted one shifting and I just be devastated if if I click pass their headhunter and he'd be the absolute worse so what are we at now forty sixty eighty huh sixty sixty and do math three forty I did five does four hundred orbs then with one see let's make the belts all the same got the same belt this is about to be the best rise and fall story made ton of X off making the headhunters and now I'll lose a ton of X trying to make more head owners RNG is not on my side but maybe it does give you hope you know that you can buy 60 inch in arms and come into a map and make a head on there maybe it doesn't I don't know it'll be on to your risk reward it's so sad when you don't see them you just watch it going down well if this ends up being the only belt we get will have to divine orb and blessed or baby see if we can roll some awesome stats I was trying to think of some other Gamble's that I could do in game I don't feel like trying to six-link things would be too fun I really hurts my my fingers to click that time vampa some stacked guards sound fun but going through my life or isn't trying to resell them in case it goes well is also pain and we're gonna need some super numbers I don't think these are the good position so we'll put it in the position that we made the first one after G all right so we'll go back here we'll stick with just this belt now let's see nope alright well hopefully if anyone else has spent a ton of ancient I'm just trying to make pet owner sees this video please share your pain we're gonna gamble to get some of this currency back it's been a really good first season for me I've had a lot of friends really helpful and I've had a lot of friends and super helpful teaching me the game and watch the tiny videos should've helped me as well and doing some of these Campbell's and getting real lucky can be very profitable as well as very not profitable I'm so sad when I watch back to this video I see that I did click faster I'm going so fast but it's pretty hard to miss like once you see it you know wonder if there's like a wood one headhunter per prim map like once you roll it you got a leave that'd be pretty hilarious should we make a fresh map for the last 100 or see what happens super close super close on that click alright so we got to now we somehow need to turn let's see where we're at here we somehow need to turn 141 ancient orbs so even if we're as lucky as we were the first one we don't even have the 55 so I guess we need to go we need to go for maybe a third a third would be good there'd be a small loss we could all enjoy the gamble probably do it again to be honest if if we can get a third one if not I'll probably Wow what a turn of events guys what a turn of events all right all right let me rearrange just a little bit my OCD I think moving it around so what's doing it for us right here we'll spread these guys out to give it a little headhunter we'll head under circle here all round well good thing we didn't switch maps that would have been pretty pretty silly superstition of me but like I said Wow Wow all right I don't even think I can speed up the middle I feel like you're gonna have to go down my my sad journey of six seven hundred without a head hunter and then this recovery here just absurd come on let's get the fit just just for the video let's get v peanuts we get we get them in 145 it'll be absolutely absurd the Miss clicks I'm getting I'm getting palm sweaty right now to get that alright here we go a final 40 of the final 40 I'm not even sure how long we do this for about 18 minutes in I don't think 20 minutes is too long I will probably cut a little bit I do want to keep it like oh he moved it move it around or whatever I don't want anyone to try and claim I like cut it in or cut it out so as long as everything looks good and sounds good this is gonna be one solid clip come on last 20 man do it with like the last orb that would be absolutely nuts okay so I'm not upset I mean headhunters right now I want to say they're around 100 ex like I said we did spend oh you know what I have 10 more orbs in the stash and more orbs in the stash let's go back down there by enemies he's 10 orbs and do our final headhunter it was the excess I got on my last raid okay so we didn't do it that's fine so let's see we've got one two three or I don't know why it took me so long to count that so what I think I'll do real quick or does the end of this video is we'll take one of these that we'll spend a few divine arms and bus rips I don't want to stretch it out too far since it's already been you know long first video for me and I'm not sure how it turned out but if we could spin the worst one some better cestus once this one's awful besides the max life roll and maybe we could get close to a hundred X on each one I'll only lose about 70 X for the video and we'll all have a good time we'll reinvest the 400 X in the video like I said if you do have ideas please please let me know I'm more than interested and try more Gamble's in this game I'm not even sure it's actually profitable to try and we're all like perfect stats these orbs can be pretty expensive I bought like a absurd amount just to make sure I had a ton I was trying to figure out crafting all right so we got 40 and now we'll - I'm just gonna set a limit remember what I paid for divine orbs I want to say it's like 15 for X I think I'm not entirely sure we'll do 15 of them to see what we get a ball a roll well I'm what I like to look for when it comes to make it selling it easier is 30% rare 60 max and then 250 stats like if I could get 50 plus 60 at 30 like that's that's a good head on it for me 16:30 like I said is what I'm washing and then 15 armsie does seem pretty helpful I've already gone past alright will do will do I think that was a all right I'm gonna stick to it I don't want to dump too many ex grantee into these I do want to resell them get the currency back so I can make another video if you're somehow still here watching my first video thanks for coming if you want to see more be sweet if he did subscribe like I said comment below with other video ideas more than interested in doing the Gamble's even if they have bad odds I'm always down to chase that big chance like I said thanks hopefully you enjoyed this hopefully you don't go gamble all your currency trying to get ahead on her I do have a couple characters fully built so I'm at the point where I'm just trying to have fun with the currency for the rest of this leak and then hopefully next week I could do it again real early when when items are extra rare thanks again | Kevin The Degenerate | UCxNdvKx3lYHu8mssxzNFGCg | 2020-01-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,372 | 11,372 |
mkyWFD6OBHo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkyWFD6OBHo | oldest geocache in alberta | I didn't bring boots we're very lucky with our timing coming to this one because about now this is late October they usually have snow by now in this part of Alberta and this is up near the middle to the top of the province so we're gonna get this one before it snows could be tomorrow [Music] thank you completed the trail portion now it's time to bushwhack and there is a bit of a trail so let's go [Music] got it hey there's a moose trackable well I think I'll take those tonight because they're gonna be stuck out here all winter yeah there's three so this is the first geocache in Alberta and the second one in all of Canada yeah and the first one was placed in Halifax just outside the city near Peggy's Cove and we got that one too yeah we do there are several uh trackables that we're gonna pick up and take with us because we're having an event uh this evening in Edmonton so rather than leaving them here for the winter we'll move them along and uh that's pretty cool oldest in Alberta very first we got the Olin in Alberta yeah pretty cool to get and uh we kind of had to bushwhack out because we Trail yeah we couldn't find it but we used our GPS to find this main trail and we made it out yeah and we didn't get eaten by a bear no not yet keep watching there's more caches to be found where will geocaching take you [Music] thank you | Cache Canada | UC2q7ZAIRJOrl4gZyLtFeYHw | 2022-12-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 266 | 1,346 |
TmYkTg9XZoI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TmYkTg9XZoI | Firefighter training in Afghanistan | Organized firefighting has a history that dates back to ancient Egypt. Specialist Jannelle Sennert introduces us to a soldier passing his knowledge of firefighting on to Afghanis. [Sennert] Stepping into a burning building takes courage that few people have. But one soldier says it's in his blood. My grandfather was a volunteer fireman, and my father is currently the deputy chief in Georgetown, my hometown. [Sennert] Today he carries that tradition all the way to Kandahar Airfield, where he's helping train a new generation of firefighters for Afghanistan. Moyer and the soldiers of the 323rd Engineer Detachment are teaching the basics to their Afghan counterparts. We're always training in the fire service. There's no such thing as knowing it all. [Sennert] Moyer feels that his father and grandfather are proud that he carries their legacy to Afghanistan to help train those who will keep the developing country safe. | Soldier Media Center Videos | UCpjZXaf-S7UbWiDIimXwKmg | 2011-06-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 148 | 926 |
u5Lv_HXICpo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5Lv_HXICpo | TailsOS Guide For The Ultra Paranoid | what's up guys today I'm going to be teaching you how to use the Amnesia Incognito live system or tails this is a Debian based operating system that is meant to be booted off of a USB stick thus the live system and this live system is set up to be Amnesia meaning anything that you do inside of Tails OS is going to be erased whenever you reboot the system so if an adversary were to steal your laptop or steal the USB stick that you have tails installed to they're not going to be able to get any of your sensitive data off of it or if they forensically analyze it they won't be able to trace what you've been doing and finally the Incognito functionality of tails is provided by the fact that all of the os's traffic is routed through the Tor Network by default and every single tail system looks the same to servers out on the internet so it's very difficult for anyone even a nation-state to track you when you're using Tails which is probably why it's the favorite operating system for people that spend a lot of time on the dark web and really just for anyone that needs to have top-notch anonymity now even though Tails sounds like a foolproof anonymity tool kit there are still ways that you can screw up with installing tails and using tails that will completely ruin your op SEC so make sure that you do thorough research Beyond what's covered in this video now to get started with installing Tails when you click on this install Tails tab at the top of their website you'll be brought to this page that takes you to different instructions depending on what operating system you're using but really the only difference is between installing tails on Windows Mac OS or Linux are the tools that you're going to use for writing to your USB stick writing the Tails image to your USB stick and the tool that you're going to use to verify the image now since this is a guide for the ultra paranoid obviously I recommend using Linux to download write and verify your Tails image because there's a lower chance of any Shenanigans taking place since most are all of your software and Linux is going to be free and open source but again if you want to use Windows or Mac OS most of this guide is still going to apply just different software for writing to USB and verifying the image now most guides um that tell you how to install tails and you know even what they have here on their official site will recommend you download Tales from the website directly from you know download.tails.net directly now there's a couple of reasons why you don't want to do this if you're Ultra paranoid okay number one um some of you might have noticed that I'm visiting tails.net in the Tor Browser okay so if you if your adversary is say a nation state or it's somebody that is able to get records from your ISP and basically view what type of websites you go to you probably don't want them to know that you know about Tails because then they might start watching you a little bit closely you know you might make your way onto a list I mean there's some people out there that think your name will get put on a list just for downloading and using the Tor Browser if that's true you're definitely on the list if you're using Tails okay your name's going to be underlined highlighted and bumped up probably a couple hundred rows if you're using Tails um so if you wanted to download it directly from the website do it over tour but what I really recommend doing is downloading it over BitTorrent um you know with a free and open source BitTorrent client like qubit torrent and make sure when you're inside of your torrenting application that you're using a VPN or that you're using public Wi-Fi somewhere to mask your IP so that way you're able to download the image file without your adversary if it's a nation state knowing that you ever went to tails.net and another benefit to downloading Tails or really any Linux ISO over BitTorrent is the file is being shared in a distributed manner so it lowers the chances that you're going to end up downloading a backdoored ISO because in order to do that through BitTorrent what a hacker would have to do is first compromise the tails.net website here and they would have to post a corrupted magnet link or you know a hacked um torrent image and then they would also have to spin up a bunch of machines in different countries to seed the iso so at the very least creating a fake BitTorrent download is going to be more expensive than creating a fake centralized download and it's much harder to man in the middle than a centralized download and since Advanced Linux users tend to download their isos this way there's probably an increased chance that people are actually verifying these images that are downloaded over BitTorrent or that people are going to notice quicker if something happens you know if a hacked uh image somehow makes it into the BitTorrent download now once your files have downloaded we need to do a verification on them to make sure that they didn't get corrupted or Modified by your adversary in transit if you downloaded the file with a torrent then this is actually already done for you in a way with the info hash but since this guide is for the ultra paranoid we might as well do some additional verifications with pgp now it is worth mentioning that on the tails.net site they have an additional way to verify I think this is also the way that they recommend it since it's got the big green button where you can use JavaScript that's running from this site to check and make sure that you know what you downloaded was legit but since this is an ultra paranoid guide using JavaScript is probably not something you're going to want to do so we're going to use openpgp or I'm actually going to use gnu or what is it called gnu privacy assistant I'm pretty sure GPA something like that just for purposes of the video but you could use openpgp and then if you're on Mac OS or Windows there's some other kind of software you're going to use for verifying pgp signatures um so what you're going to need is the signing key so we'll go ahead and download that and the signature should actually be um in the torrent if you downloaded it that way but you're also going to need yeah this is the signature right here so if you just downloaded the file through Tor in your browser or you didn't download it through a torrent then you're going to also need to get that uh signature Okay so we're gonna go into gnu privacy assistant now if you don't know anything about pgp I just suggest looking up another guide real quick because that's something people get tripped off tripped up on a bit but you need to have a key that you've created for yourself already so I've got that and the next thing we're going to do is import that key that I downloaded and let me see it's going to be in here browser downloads tail signing key okay so now that key is imported into gnu privacy assistant or you can also do it in openpgp I'm just using this because it's probably better for a tutorial probably look better on video um as you can see the validity and the trust of this key is currently unknown now this is just a key file that we downloaded from this tails.net website and if we're Ultra paranoid we're not just going to trust the file downloaded from here because if somebody hacked tails.net and they gave us a corrupted file or they corrupted the BitTorrent or whatever it's very trivial for them to also put a corrupted signing key that when you run it through verifications it's going to look legit so we want to now go to a third party pgp key server that has the Tails developer key on it as well and make sure that the key on this third-party server matches the key that we just downloaded from here okay so what we're going to want to do is and this is um pgp.mit.edu it's one of the older or maybe oldest running um key servers still in existence and it's a very very simple one um it doesn't I'm pretty sure it doesn't even require JavaScript because it's just HTML so why don't we just go ahead and do that since you know we're Ultra paranoid and um you see verify that it's just yeah so it's just loading some HTML very basic website so anyway what we're going to want to do now is search for this key and we should be able to just do Tails developer for now copy that put that into the search string and do the search oh we also want to show EGP fingerprints for keys now this is going to return multiple results but that's fine I'll show you guys how to deal with that and it's going to take a while since we're using Tor but that's the cost of being Ultra paranoid okay so like I said we got multiple results but the one that we're really looking for here is the offline long-term identity key sure enough if we bring up gnu privacy assistant we'll see same thing here in the username Tails developer offline long term identity key and we can copy this fingerprint which is basically like a summary it's a unique sort of signature for this key and we can see that it matches so we don't actually have to download and import those like just checking the fingerprint should be good enough and so we can now be fairly certain that this key here is good because it's very unlikely that our adversary would be able to compromise both tails.net and pgp.mit.edu and you can also check this against additional key servers as well generally people who develop software that's really popular will upload their keys to multiple key servers so that you can triple quadruple quintuple check however much you want to do to make yourself feel comfortable that what you've got is legit okay so now since we believe that this key is good we're going to go ahead and sign it with r key we'll hit yes and then we're going to have to put in the password for your private key all right for some reason the video file got corrupted at this point but whatever I'll just record it again so after you've signed the tales developers key the validity should say fully valid and now we can use this validated key to verify the signature of the image files so to do that click on open the file manager and click the file folder icon to select a file and you're going to want the IMG dot Sig file from the torrent or if you downloaded it directly from the browser you can grab that file from the same area where you got the signature file or where you got the signing queue rather so import that and we want to select check signatures of selected file all right and it's going to say valid as long as everything's good so now you can be certain that that Tails OS image file that you're going to write to your um USB is valid it hasn't been modified at all down to the byte level so for writing to your USB if you're on Linux I recommend using DD because it's already going to be installed on your system but you could use gnome disk or of course if you're on Mac OS or windows then you're going to end up using something else entirely different but anyway the command for Linux is DD if equals uh and this is going to be the name of the file that's and that you downloaded the image file and you also need to know the device name for your USB stick so we'll run lsblk to get that real quick and looks like sde is the name for my flash drive now so you want to make sure you get the right one there so you don't accidentally delete any data and command is going to be DD I'll just clear my screen real quick DD if equals Tails image file of equals Dev sde pretty sure that's what it said right yep sde and we'll put BS equals 16 m o flag equals Direct status equals progress and of course we have to do this as root and this should only take a few seconds to copy the data over boom and now our Tails USB is written and if you wanted to boot into tails on the same computer you can just reboot and then select it from the boot menu or you can remove the USB stick and then put it in a different laptop to boot from Tails like I'm about to do so let's go do that all right hopefully there's enough lighting for this to look good so as you can see I've got an old ThinkPad here a x301 look at that Windows Vista sticker my my this is an old laptop but perfect candidate for running Tails OS so I've got my Tails West flash drive here which is actually kind of cool it's got both USB and USBC but we're going to be using USB because this old girl she'll know nothing about the USBC so we're gonna go ahead and put our USB drive in and power her on I've just done some basic cleaning to this uh laptop but I haven't really done much testing to it other than that all right so it looks like we were set to boot from USB by default so we'll just go ahead and go right into tails um if it doesn't do that you know if it if you've got a laptop with another OS already on it you have to just go into your bio settings and change that um but yeah I'm not even gonna bother showing that because it's different depending on your uh manufacturer and while this is booting up I might as well mention um I'm installing this off of a flash drive but it is possible to use different kinds of removable media like say if you wanted tails to run a little bit faster you could install it to an external SSD um like you know one that you plug in via USB or actually I have one sitting around here somewhere um like this all right so you could probably run tails off of this Samsung USB and get uh slightly better I O um you could also run it off of things like a CD um because this does have a CD drive or you could also run it off of an SD card that might be handy if of course you've got a laptop that can take SD cards I don't think this one can but if your laptop can accept especially a Micro SD card if it can boot from MicroSD that's really small really easy to conceal and might be handy for uh people that are using tails although if that's the hard drive failing it really doesn't matter for this uh Tails OS video it's just going to be a little bit noisy but everything's running off the USB so no problems there it almost sounds like there might be a CD in there the tray is not opening so that might be something to look into later but anyway we're on our Tails welcome screen so there's this additional settings I might as well just show you guys this where you can set an administrator password um that's probably one of the only things that you would need to change in here everything else is already pretty much set for um optimal anonymity and you can change your keyboard here and your layouts too if you need to your languages but anyway we'll go ahead and start tails and this might take a couple of minutes on your computer definitely a couple of minutes on this computer here all right so now we've got our desktop loaded I believe this is gnome let's see yeah so it's using gnome and it's using Wayland okay interesting I did not know that Tails had switched to Wayland so you can also see here in my system overview that this is just a Core 2 Duo uh 1.4 gigahertz and it's only got four gigs of RAM so this is obviously a very low spec system but it is able to run tails and honestly as far as um very private secure and Anonymous systems go tails is probably the only one you can really run on a computer like this um I don't think you would have a good time running uh who Nick's KVM since that's going to require you to run a host OS and then also Unix workstation and the hunics Gateway if you're running cubes OS on this then you'd be running um Dom zero who Nick's workstation who next Gateway Network VM and a firewall VM so yeah you'd you'd have um a pretty bad time you know this is not going to be able to run multiple virtual machines at once but again it can run Tails just fine so that's kind of one benefit of uh Tails over everybody else um so let me go ahead and connect this to Wi-Fi real quick and show you guys a couple other things okay let's see here's Wi-Fi okay so now I'm connected to Wi-Fi and this tour connection comes up so this is another thing that you might diverge from depending on your um your requirements you know if you're like it tells you right here if you're in a country um where a lot of people use Tor to circumvent censorship and it's not really going to make you stick out then you can just connect to Tor automatically and then you also have the option to configure a bridge here if you want or you can just hide to your network that you're connecting to tour and it's going to try to obfuscate the fact that you're even using Tor at all so you know this might be what you'd want to use if you're Ultra paranoid but I'm just going to use this for now and um there's only a couple other things I'm going to show you within the OS because uh obviously depending on what you're doing there's going to be a lot more research that you're going to need to do outside of this video for how to remain anonymous online uh some things that I recommend of course this is going to have you using the Tor Browser and we're going to see if it already has a very secure connection it might just take a little while for this old girl to start up a browser I think I should definitely give her some more RAM because uh let's see system monitor yeah some of those or some of those one of those CPU cores getting hit kind of hard um Okay so like this is an example here of um some things that you'd want to change so uh you would of course have to change this each time you start Tails because that's how the OS is it's Amnesia although there are some there is a way to create persistent storage on your Tails USB stick but I'm not going to do that for now uh okay so for onion Services we want to always use an onion site if we've got it available and we want to have the safest setting so that's going to get you pretty good um pretty good privacy like just browsing the web from here on now another thing you may or may not want to change I mean there's probably some debate on this whether or not you should leave u-block origin enabled because on regular Tor browsers which that's what the majority of people out there are going to be using you know people using Tor just going to use the Tor Browser and probably windows but if um you have ublock origin enabled it's going to make your browser fingerprint look a little bit different so that might be a way that an adversary could tell that you're using tours or using uh not tours Tails or I can't remember whether Tor in the hunex workstation has ublock origin or not if it doesn't then that really is going to make you stick out a little bit so that's kind of the case for disabling it and the case for leaving it on is um it's going to block ads although if you're using the safest setting in um intor and if you're mainly browsing to dark websites and stuff like that then I don't think it'll really make too much of a difference blocking ads with ublock origin that might actually be an interesting thing to test whether all those weird like uh I guess CSS or like those weird gifs and stuff that pop up on some of the tour search engines if those can be blocked with u-block origin so yeah this is your browser and there's a couple other really good utilities installed on Tails by default so this is where you would set up your persistent storage if I was going to do that and it basically creates a I'm pretty sure it's a lux encrypted persistent storage so it is encrypted like if somebody stole your Tails USB it's not like if you have persistent storage they're going to automatically be able to get that stuff they're just going to see an encrypted container on there and then they have to try to decrypt it as long as you have a good password then they're not going to be able to get into it we've got Thunderbird so this is a pretty good email client to use and you can also configure pgp keys with that too now that you have a pgp keypass XC this is of course the my recommended offline password manager and most of the people recommend it as well that's why it's included with tails and we can start going through some of these other um so this is a way to back up your uh persistent storage because since it's encrypted you could back this up into well you still might want to avoid Google Drive and Dropbox depending on your um security plan but because it's encrypted it doesn't even necessarily matter too much what cloud storage you put it in as long as people don't have the keys and then this way when you're using different tail systems you can kind of recover all of your documents or whatever you were using download it over tour down onto this system and then continue working if say you have to pull a Mr Robot and you feel like you've got to destroy your laptop and microwave your USB and stuff like that I mean hey this is a guide for the ultra paranoid so wouldn't be surprised if some people out there want to do that stuff um electrum Bitcoin wallet so that's going to give you probably some of the best privacy you can have with Bitcoin although having privacy and anonymity with Bitcoin would really warrant a video in and of itself so this uh onion circuits should just show yeah onion circuits um built for various connections so different ones are going to be built through um I believe different sites in tour and like definitely if you're like curling because anything you do over uh Tales I mean I know I've said that already but everything is over tour so if I if I do this to try to get my IP address gives me a random one and uh yeah so you see it builds different circuits for like different curl commands or different uh connections to various things out there on the internet and let's see um so you've got image viewer I I also believe there's a thing on here to remove um um metadata yeah here we go a metadata cleaner so this is an important thing to use if you're going to be sending files or especially videos or images to people because if you just take a picture with your cell phone there's going to be metadata associated with that possibly even your geolocation and if you send that it doesn't matter if you're using Tails if your adversary intercepts that they're going to have your real location so this is definitely a program that you might end up using depending on what you're doing with entails um LibreOffice so that's a good free and open source Office Suite um there's a tool for unlocking veracrypt containers and oh onion chair so I did a whole video about this this is a I believe it's a bundled um yeah chat room or well you can share files receive files publish a website and I believe there's a chat room functionality too maybe they don't have that anymore um so yeah this this can let you I mean this can literally let you set up your own hidden service like your own tour site and host it from this laptop or from whatever you want to run tails off of me and if you're gonna be hosting a real serious hidden service you probably would want it on a server instead of a laptop but hey it's possible to do this and let's see let's maybe talk about one more application um I think I saw in a Monero wallet yet um uh huh seems like there isn't a Monero wallet that comes with uh Tails well that's something that you might want to install so maybe we'll save that for another video additional software to install after you've installed Tails but you pretty much get the basics here I mean now you see how to browse the web you see how you can send and receive files and how to remove metadata from those files so that should have you covered for most applications within tails and like I said I'll just make more videos about Tails if you guys are interested but for now be sure to like and comment to hack the algorithm follow me on Odyssey have a great rest of your day | Mental Outlaw | UC7YOGHUfC1Tb6E4pudI9STA | 2023-09-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,568 | 23,757 |
-dN0Lb5dVgk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dN0Lb5dVgk | Plastic barrels are NOT cover- Frank Proctor Shooting | barrels as fake cover when we try to hide about hide behind on forever I just use them for four obstacles to have to move around and from vision barriers this set of barrels here it's not cover it wouldn't stop bullets if those steel targets were shooting at us and those steel targets aren't shooting at us so now from a tactical shooter standpoint if if you're in a place in life where being small makes sense you don't have to teach that you don't have to teach you do is like hey there's bullets coming through that doorway maybe I shouldn't just jump out there and stand in front of the doorway I don't believe you got to teach that if if you got to teach that to somebody they're probably in their own profession just say it okay so when getting small makes sense getting small make sense okay there's things like the thing to do and you find another way to win perhaps other than jumping down their front that but hey man we're on the range we're using this looks like being in a gym you know you don't go to a gym and get in a street fight with somebody every day to work on to being a better fighter you know you work on some particular skills so here we're here in the gym working on being better shooters | Frank Proctor Shooting | UCeMUgZjimtJ_lDqKFc1b_Dw | 2019-05-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 236 | 1,215 |
2_Ar0ttl0zs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_Ar0ttl0zs | Summer Vacation | Ep. 2 | Honeybees Adventure Time Camp Week 1 | good morning everyone welcome back to another Vlog so this is going to be week two of summer vacation for the Valdez family um I know it kind of seems like it's more like me vlogging hi cash you can't really see him back there but he's back there um so it is June what's the date fifth it is Monday June 5th and cash and I are on our way to our first week of honey bees Adventure Time summer camp so I think I mentioned it in the last Vlog a little bit but my sister her name is honeybee and she runs an outdoor adventure program for kids she's also an outdoor Enthusiast and specialist she is a Wilderness first responder and she has her own little micro school it's like an unschool um Forest school if you will um it's really amazing what she does and I'm so proud of her but for the summer I get to actually work as one of her staff for her summer camp and so um today is day one of summer camp yesterday or not yesterday Saturday in our last Vlog you guys saw that we went to um just a Saturday day camp and so what baby you ate the whole piece oh you ate almost all of it it was good huh is a good waffle hey good job eat baby oh did you drop it okay well we'll have to get it later um so anyway that is what we're gonna be up to so um throughout the summer camp time I will be videoing as much as I possibly can without destroying my phone because a lot of summer camp involves water um but it's gonna be so much fun you guys are gonna see a ton of kids on camera um all of them have video releases what baby okay you don't have to oh y'all like we're not going through it though um so anyway we're gonna have a blast and then so we'll be at Day Camp from eight in the morning to 3 P.M every day and I'll be working for her three out of the four weeks of summer camp the last week of summer camp actually falls the same week as my return returning teacher um new to the district trainings so um I won't be able to go that last week but cash will be able to go so um yeah so let's get this week two of Summer Vlog started [Music] thank you [Music] what is your favorite thing about Miss honeybee's camp [Music] us oh my God [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] yes [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] foreign [Applause] [Music] thank you [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] | Apples & Tiaras | UCbWIPo7DXZPs8_NpHroF5SA | 2023-06-16 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 479 | 2,420 |
DkM8fBkj2JQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkM8fBkj2JQ | Rebelchump - Saberbuilding announcement and more. | everybody rebel chums here this is a quick new video from the brand new camera that we were gonna use going forward I also got the brand new microphone already attached to my shirt basically and this is gonna help me tremendously to give a proper audio quality even if I'm walking outside and it's a bit windy or I'm far away from the camera and it's not gonna really matter anymore because the audio will always follow me and that's gonna make a lot of things easy going for it tomorrow we're gonna do a toy hunting lock with this camera and audio setup so if you have any questions or would like to see anything for me to delve into like a certain shop or certain things from Star Wars or another franchise that you would like to see let me know and I will go hunt for it tomorrow we also have lightsaber review videos and I actually gonna delve into or venture into the actual lightsaber building scene of it so what I will do once I'm in Holland I will get all the proper equipment and start building my own lightsabers once that is done and I will get some improve for hopefully from some of the renowned people in the industry that built lightsabers themself like sort of a green light then it will start building lightsabers as commissions but there will be free of charge because I'm given I'm gonna be starting doing this kind of hobby basically to complement the videos on this YouTube channel allowing me to make more lightsaber reviews for you guys and building them at the same time during my live streams so everybody can see for their own Commission the entire installation process from A to Z with a with a zero Commission fee so you just provide your own Hill to your own electronics and I will install it for you or I can order it for you and you just pay the costs that are associated with those items and the shipping cost and that's it no further costs associated with it of course you need to understand when you do a commission with me that I'm a brand new installer so it takes some time to get all the kinks out of there so I'm gonna mainly focus on first stumped Sabre setups because these are easier to wire up and secondly they are much more affordable as well so that allows a lot more people to actually consider Commission with me and allow me to review your hilt that if it's inhaled for example that I have not reviewed on a YouTube channel plus it allows me to be more crafty with my hands together with the Bandai Star Wars model kits I think that's going to be a really nice circle coming together so yeah that's basically what we're gonna do this is a little video update basically I want to really keep coming with two daily videos now it's either gonna be a vlog toy hunting video livestream gaming livestream a review of a lightsaber review or from Bentham Star Wars model kits and who knows what else comes in the future but I'm excited for it hopefully you liked this little vlogging video updates video for the channel let me know in the comments what you think about the new audio and the camera itself maybe you have some feedback or suggestions let me know thanks for watching and hopefully I'll see in the next video | Rebelchumps | UCoEtSkEiFUducdbYpLBp7xQ | 2019-05-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 596 | 3,163 |
DtxfZSR-PUQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtxfZSR-PUQ | Angular Cross Training_D4 | yeah yeah so I want to hear I I know prashan walked again from me last night okay I just want to hear from rest of the person because we have around 70 80 people in the call okay so unless and until you practice it I'm again telling you because project has a lot of extraction from you okay so these expectation can only be math if you get your hand dirty into angular foreign but the purpose of this training to make you full step okay so this is an opportunity for you people to get your hands dirty with the angular Stars if you do not practice right now probably it will be very hard for you in the project works you won't be able to get that kind of confidence okay I will be able to deliver the front end tickets as well as my backend tickets it will be I mean waste of time for everyone the training the person giving the training the people who are taking the trip yeah I have shared this document with many of the people I mean who are there in this mail chain and I will give them I think editor access or commenter access so that you people then get through with those documents but these documents is okay to start with but at the same time what we are actually discussing you need to stretch yourself okay at 7 pm or maybe 7 15 we are closing this call right so probably you have to sit with your your system for another two hours to complete that task that is the I mean prime time to involve into the coding part of angular if you think that okay we have done for today we will see again on tomorrow it will never happen so person can you show me what you have done yes and my screen is visible okay okay so first of all I just review the demo over here and again I just go through the code if you so if there is this is the input finding when I click here those patterns changing the child uh component as well so and output is the vice versa means the child uh value is referred to the parent means if I write here over there with you being textually like if I write anything here I just restricted maximum pain so after pain it will be in the country we can make it let's leave this game foreign output property yeah so first I have to I need to change in four files to uh case File and remove HTML file from in work experience changing the uh child component tsp so first negative declare an event as you do the system you need to consider event limited for the output stuff and now and I just uh here over I guess please one event here and here I just write one method get here a call to one method create hero name and here is like this is behave like a ID property remaining HTML HTML so you can increase like a ID property so this here only you can give it any kind of again so I believe it hero name has your name so you need to ask you need to for ID we need to Wilson has anything below name and then using that ID or video name dot value we are passing that value here so why you need to add this why we can't directly use this value over here so as per my understanding if I use directly this value this is a step this is the default first value foreign this will take from the field itself via ID so for that we need to calculating system like that in runtime you can catch those value over this method and then it is Method what is just as it is a screen here is the event emitter and this is a type which type we should pass with the through this even emitter you can pass real number anything so I pass as it is a string you know as a string this one is the screen so we need to pass key name over here and then you have to pass the value from a hero name which I get from here in runtime in the event enter like and eventually I name it you know it Main Event you can give any kind of name so you need to pass over here please don't okay so parent HTML if you check it uh here you can just call the event name using this first bracket parenthesis within the parenthesis so this is [Music] you know name of the event you don't name event and then there is one variable this is default variable molar event we can't change this like dollar personal dollar should go to like that way so this is the default variable so dollar event variable is catch the value from the event of the child TS like uh this one so here we cache the value that means whichever which one will write in this next week it is fetched in the dollar event then in the case um in the component we have to write that Set uh hero name and over there we need to set the value so how can we say kilometer and as we said this is the steel value so you can put the Genome of any variable over there until so here one condition I added like if this selected you know why because if I do do not have this condition then first time when we don't see it any kind of value like every time a pass where the page is known I uh there is no value selected so selected window is not uh these translations Amplified so that time it will give error so for that you need to check if the value is defined or not or if we handle see anyone values at least one values so we need to check uh condition so like that you can use uh output parameter instead of engine model to an UI binding tools so anyone has any question regarding this because just think about being before replacing in the model how many areas we have to modify and how many extra lines of code we have to write okay the NG model is the simplest way to deal with that parent child communication so yesterday I think one lady was asking me about the registration form so have you ever able to complete the assignment of a registration form the link I have shared um are you talking about me hi yeah yeah actually I just started uh creating uh uh the application so I'm still on the variable session so I think by tomorrow I'll complete that session because I missed the two sessions of yours no yesterday okay so anyone from this meeting are able to complete that registration form because I am what I am talking about there are a couple of things okay I I maybe gone through a training on specific notes that I have created but apart from that there are lots of things are there in the angular whenever any question would be raised I will probably Supply you the restrictive examples and everything in those cases you have to practice it okay you have to practice it then you will be able to understand probably grip the project code quickly so that is my expectation activity you people are very senior an expert either in php.net Java or maybe python okay and you need to spend time and you have to tell me if you are facing any kind of problem so that I can give a suggestion that this will be the more better approach to learn because otherwise output of this training will be almost zero okay okay so let me share my screen so today we will talk about services okay so what are what is services suppose you need to give an API call okay and before we start the services there will be one important topic will be there that is rx Js so let me take you to the rx6 so RX is a I mean it's a similar thing like uh can say like typescript itself it's a separate Library to drill with the asynchronous things okay but he has his own documentation website we have our access library for angular okay so main reason behind this thing I'm sharing this link with the main reason behind this thing to understand rhjs we have synchronous and asynchronous calls the people who are working with jQuery if they know that what is what does it mean by sequences in angular we have two things okay one is observable another is called Promise so what is observable what is stocks observable is a stream of data okay think about your API responding back to a certain request from the fabric side it is sending a huge data so there might be two options one is get the data in one shot or another option will be add the data in streams okay like a video streaming these stream concept comes in observer by default observable is very basically and promise is very fast promise to understand two things one is reject another is resolved you get response then the result if this response will either from API again or Whatever It Is by any condition then it is rejected it's in one shot there is no middle uh approach will be there okay so in that case what happened observable comes in pictures and in in our angular application most of the cases we will deal with observable observable comes from rhjs library okay each observable we can handle stream of data okay and there will be an option say for example I send a request to the back end okay maybe back and Fields of first time so I want to retry maybe another two times or maybe three times to check whether I can get the response or not yes so those things can be achieved through the observable and observable has two three functions okay so main discussion is that when we talk about services okay so you can read these things with observable promise and rxs okay uh from here or if you can also search with Google to get some imports now the question is We There is rxcs is a huge Library okay if I open the rhjs library uh it is a very big Library and this Library can large run independently with anyone okays.net this is an independent site of rhjs while we talk about observable Observer subscriptions and subjects and behavior subjects and everything okay but we are using and we get to know that which rxcs operators we need to use frequently with angularly so I think this particular example is there they have given this is engine only tap module okay it is an interval rxcs operator so interval rsjs operator it is not very important so what it is required an observable to me data it required subscription okay so unless and until the I told you at very beginning of the rubies are very lazy so unless and until you subscribe any observable you won't get the data so here with numbers they are generating a certain numbers now they are subscribing this number so in this subscription they will get a list of values the list of values it is showing over here okay so that subscription 0 1 2 3 5 6 7 8 so if the data is coming like a stream and you can break down your entire response into a stream if you are using Observer now take take is one of the important operators of the rx6 so I told you that uh I just keep on printing forever we just want first three items so your API is giving you entire data you need only first three items from the response you can use this Tech operator with your rfjs subscribe this number and take three five is what is price think about a pipe a water pipe or whatever it is holding the stream of water the same thing Pike is holding the stream of observable data that is the concept of daily there is a map very very important rhs operator for everyone so you are used with the for Loop for each Loop something like that okay the difference between for Loop or foreign things but map will allow you to modify your iteration and get the modified value as an output so what you have to do say for example you are iterating through an array if you want to do that thing you write for Loop then you probably contact certain values against this element and then probably you need to push those data into an another array and then you get the desired data right so map will do same thing in one shot so map will be used to modify your value into the Loop there is the another operator available I don't know whether they have given you here or not uh no so you can note it down the tab operator okay so one tap operator I am giving you or anyone can note it down okay the map the common mistake people generally ask and people frequently ask these questions what is the difference between map and tap both will consume certain data but map allow you to modify certain data and tap doesn't allow you to modify anything where we use map map can be used anywhere in our angular application map can be used anywhere okay if I am interested I can modify if there is no requirement I should not modify but tab has a specific let's pick this well say for example we are collecting data from login form user input email and password okay so in those case we have to use tab operator so that whatever value we are receiving those value cannot be modified at any state why we should use tab we can use map also yes we can use that the reason behind using tap is angular comes with a I mean rhqs operator provides an extra security layer over without any hacker because login form registration form either very sensitive areas of the application when people try to have say I get the login credential probably I will be able to access the entire application right so hacking possibilities are there so this tab operator basically capture the modification if anything modified then tap will widget and tap should not work so that is the specialty of using tab in that specifically in the login purposes so these are the basic operators okay map take tab I think there but at the same time there are other operators also and then sending this link probably right now this link maybe a little bit at a harder stage for you okay but going forward when you will be able to little bit on stable size I mean confident in angular you will get this link very important okay so this is the thing validator right the concat of of basically transfer into our array into an observer okay one cat is simply concat this is then just read this section can you please open this link in your own and go to this link rfjs1 catnap operators I'm asking everyone yes I'm there if we are there right so there will be a situation in our real life example when we need to have nested API calls and sometimes what happens that one API call depends upon another API policy so you are getting this from from the first material call and then you are sending certain data uh to the next API font okay if in any situation it may happen that your first API delayed some for certain user to give you the data since JavaScript is very fast what will happen it will try to jump into the next subscription and in that case application will throw an error to overcome that thing okay we are using concat map hey and then there is an option for switch say for example you have multiple API call this okay and uh merge map is there much map also marks the responses so you need to understand the difference between contact map and command map which map is similar to the switch case but what happened that you given multiple APK equal but you collect the data into a single response okay so I will tell you probably it will be little bit at a harder stage to understand these things okay first of all you have to understand the RX yes you can practice it in any angular application you can practice it okay and there are uh in this particular site you will get everything okay and inside observable operators okay there are lots of operators you'll be there this is the module switch all I'm talking about March Maps which map okay there are also lot of operators available but one thing is like that when you start using a little bit experience with those things that time you can play with these operators because you can you can actually search for your examples and you will get that so now I am coming back to the main content yes hello hello I have a question yeah so uh this rfjs is a extension of JavaScript right not typescript yes yes RSG is an independent Library yes so we are using it for asynchronous programming right so where we are basically subscribing to a screen so if you don't subscribe there is no realization subscription can be done if you are dealing with observable for promise there is no subscription promise one shot request and one shot response if response is there it will resolve otherwise it will go in between path was there so promise is very fast in your application when you create any service and probably dealing with API okay you have to think about whether I need these observable or I can deal the entire stuff with the props because promise is definitely faster than observable okay so in that cases you need to put your code okay you are whether I need to use bromines and whether I need to use Observer but in most of the real life examples people generally play with observable because the plus point is you have lot of scope to modify or maybe play with the data okay or in between time I can say the playoffs to I mean data of streams or streams of data is independent Library it comes with angular framework by the and you need to import that because it is there inside your angular CLI you have to import rx3s library and then use it in the angular application there is that is not like an external package that you have to use or install okay in case of promise we continue async and await functions is it not allowed in angular like it does the same thing as promised right think and have it basically where we use we use async and have it when we think since JavaScript is very fast okay but it is always better to use promise rather than async energy okay okay but what is the downside of using async in a way to over promise click if we had to really go by that if you're saying promise is better in that way your promise is better in that way because uh generally you wire where we use probably I have a uh multiple function written into a component okay correct now I am I'm calling and it might happen that my first function is taking more time and my second function getting executed executed so so in that case probably we use asyncavit and then we use our second second function call okay so I mean the benefit of using promise is that when you get resolved when your data gets resolved then only you give a call to the function function second function okay so that benefit of using promises promise I think of it sometimes asyncavit also fails okay in real life scenario sometimes I think how it feels it is always suggests uh stick by the experts and try to use promise when you have that kind of scenario in your angle so what you are saying is basically asyncavit structure is like if there is a there are multiple function calls and they just say there is one function in the job that is running and it is taking too much time so it has to wait for that function to execute and then it goes to the next function but in case of promise only when it gets the result it will take that function up otherwise it will jump is that what do you say yes so that is why you're saying promise is way more faster in that from which is faster and always it is advisable always it is advisable to use more promise rather than async current people who are working with node they yeah the worst experience uh using asyncavity probably those developers most frequently use asyncavit functions okay node is very fast okay so they have to use asymptote function to handle this mistake uh I mean nested conditions or conditions or functions because it is always better to use promise right yeah okay so today we will start with the service so first of all we will create foreign dependency injection Services always injectable I can create one service and I can check that service into multiple components as and when required okay so service use cases are service can be used with sharing data between two sibling components all service we can use to get the I mean our API calls for maybe inside upgrade delete whatever it is we write our methods in the service we call Api we get the data then we from the component side we call that service method to get the data in the TS files or component file and from there on we can plot the data into the Bluetooth that is the cycle entire lifecycle group of services you can see earlier angular earlier version before angular 7 angular does not provide these injectable properties into the service okay so all the service generally inserted into our root areas so we need to add Services inside the provided sections of the app modules so whatever happening that's probably in your application we have maybe uh I can say 15 20 services so all services generally loads at initial stages in the provider but now after angular 8 angular gives us an example and ensure that we will create a service and we will inject that service from here so provided in root means it will go inside the root okay root means root doesn't means that app module truth means that specific component that is using this service okay it will be inducted to there not in the app module which we need in the home component as well as in the contact test component so service will be injected in the home component and the contact as control but it will never go into that app module if you go into that app module it will happen that you hit that particular data in the service will be available all across the application so automatically increases the bundle size to reduce the Abundant size and make angular mode faster service came with this dependency injection and right now it is provided in root root means where it is going to be injected so I have documented this information okay so if you read those things so you can understand those things so now I am going to use my mob data into my service file okay so what I have to do I have to import these two steps I have to import my model and I have to import mine of data because right now we do not have any respect here okay so we have to rely on this mob data and this is a function you can see that there is a slight difference in service right service also has a Constructor component also has a Constructor right but component comes with books that where and which condition this particular roof can be utilized in the different life cycle hookup but service doesn't have any books it has Constable here but it doesn't have any protein so what we have done we have written one function okay it will return hero array you can check here this is a void and it is the what it will return it will return hero type of array so that is the specialty of the typescript so I have explained everything routine root what it is here now I am going to import this service into my Heroes component.ts file foreign where is the heater service I have imported it is not accepting this so I have to include it into the Constructor why I am using this Constructor now because Constructor loads first okay so whatever Imports whatever service we need to inject we need to put these steps into our Constructor file so that it will be available for rest of the life cycle now so far I have created this method right but this method is now not even called this entire rendering process it's a syntax error I am using hero service that's why I do not have initialization so they are giving me error but I never call this thing get Heroes so I have to call this thing so where I will call I will call in the Indian life cycle now I have my data into my view page okay so this data right now coming now the data we have earlier what happened that we are getting those data from directly from the mob data now we put this entire stuff in a service okay and we are collecting this data in a service same thing just like this function you need to give an API call over here the data you receive over here and then from the component side you have a function which will call that particular function in the service and get data into the TVs file now we have this these dot Heroes and we can plot these data into our features so far we do not have any API okay now I am going to put Observer so observable comes in their rhcs so I am not going to and put anything from the outside it is already there so I'll go into that hero service and put import this observable and I will modify certain things into server so I'm just now see what happened it is started throwing error I have converted it into an observable earlier what happened that it is returning an hero type of array so it is showing started giving an error automatically this is the specialty of the type stream apart from typescript you don't get anything anywhere so right now it is not matching because Heroes that we have declared over here it's an array of arrays okay now we put it has an observable so observable is not matching over there so we have to modify certain things to get the data from the observable we need to subscribe it's done so you have converted into a service you are returning you your data you are returning right now you are returning in in the form of observable that in stream of data is off operator basically converts this is an rxjs operator this off operator basically converts your arrays into an observer okay now you need to subscribe that observable to get the data here so that's why whenever I change this thing from array to observable I have to subscribe otherwise I won't be able to get the data okay so I have explained those things in this particular documentation so far I have to stop today here so you have any question foreign promise we have given example of a service will show the dependency injection I have given you couple of links to I mean play with your observables important observables I have mentioned map pipe take they contain switch map merge map concatenate map contact map another example is fog joint problem is also very important okay so you have to remember this five six rfcs operator these are extremes operators are very important because otherwise if you don't use these rhs operator and you try to manipulate the response in your own you have to write lot of code over here and that is completely unnecessary because rxts provide us to the input function for us to play with those kind of scenarios you have to understand where we should use these are excess operators these six seven operators will frequently okay probably I can say 90 cases will be there which is operators race star and then special cases here and there probably you are searching in Google for a solution and probably you will get that one example where that special operators have used that kind of thing but in 18 to 90 percent cases The rhjs Operators I have mentioned and observable and promise those will be the Practical scenario in the project so I think if you do not have any question then we can stop today's call hello I don't have any questions right now okay then I'm closing this call thank you thank you for the joining | Learning & Development | UCCFFTHgiaRJj6tk97NbE2wQ | 2022-09-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 5,067 | 26,427 |
fOZrZlq5VIU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOZrZlq5VIU | Medieval Plague, Modern Pandemic: The First Day“What was the Black Death and its immediate impacts?” | good afternoon I'm Professor Roger Martinez Davila and welcome back to our lecture series medieval plague modern pandemic the eternal Renaissance humanists giovanni boccaccio pinned his mid 14th century collection of novellas de cameron in the midst of the black death of 1347 to 1352 sprong he writes let me say then that 1348 years have passed since the fruitful incarnation of the Son of God when the deadly plague derived in the noble city of Florence the most beautiful vini in Italy although these words and their phrasing or antiquarian we understand their meaning a devastating disease descended on Florence and now invaded all of Europe today we will follow in the steps of acacho and milady in the literary structure of his de Cameron that spins its stories over the course of ten days these lectures will follow the form of acacho ten days ten lectures Boccaccio frames to Cameron's 100 stories by creating the literary device of a group of young men and women sequestered in the countryside as they flee the plague in Florence to entertain and educate each other both were purposes that were crucial to than the medieval reader this mixed-sex Borgata shared their stories over the course of a fortnight or two weeks the stories explored many things that bridged the medieval world to the Renaissance fortune and intelligence love and sex ingenuity and deception religion and morality to name just a few things and later lectures we will return to the innovating nature of de Cameron but this week we will begin our first day by examining understanding and reflecting on the past and present we will ask on this day what was the Black Death and what were the immediate societal impacts of the plague from 1347 to 1352 first day yes in the year 13 48 the era Samia Pastis bacterium arrived in Italy and Unleashed among the most destructive communicable diseases the plague and a global pandemic that was sixty to ninety percent fatal within three to six days after the appearance of its symptoms transmitted by seafaring flea infested rats to the Italian peninsula in 1347 over the course of six years it indiscriminately struck European and Mediterranean populations the rich Halle rates across Europe were devastating and highly variable approximately 30 to 35 percent in England and Central Europe 40 to 50 percent in Scandinavia and as high as 50 to 60 percent in Spain Italy and France it was the middle ages black death a 1347 to 1352 per every course of human history three plagues the black death was not the first recorded pandemic or an outbreak of disease that occurs over a wide geographic area and affects an exceptionally high proportion of the population that it ever rabbits humanity but it has captured our moderate tension perhaps because it epitomizes the well-worn one-dimensional trope of the medieval Dark Ages nonetheless it appears to have been the deadliest of the plague pandemics over the course of the last two thousand years there were three prominent plague pandemics the first plague pandemic was the plague of Justinian which raged across the Byzantine Empire starting in 541 extending as far north is England and Ireland before subsidy in 750 this plague was not a one-time event it afflicted the Byzantine Empire reoccurring outbreaks 18 major disease events over the course of approximately 200 years the second plague pandemic the focus of this series of lectures came to be known as the Black Death the medieval Black Death first appearing in the qinghai-tibet plateau and infecting China as early as 1331 migrated with traders along the Silk Route now that road is considered more of a network of interconnecting nodes and routes bonding trading communities together into this Mediterranean world as well as another pathway via the militaristic expansion of the Mongolian Golden Horde into Central Asia via the city of kava on the Black Sea scholars of Islamic and Jewish history tracked the pandemics march into the Mediterranean using Jewish business transactions recorded on paper and papyrus records gathered at the famous Cairo Anisa a storehouse connected to the medieval synagogue and few stock Egypt in 1347 or 1348 the plague appeared almost simultaneously in Asia Minor Constantinople and Egypt in Cairo one of the many Islamic metropolis that draw aft cities in Europe an estimated 200 persons perished thereafter it advanced its attack on Europe in the same years some scholars such as mark Welford and Aztecs geographies of pandemics argue that the continuous reoccurrence a plague redirected the European Middle Ages onto a different and consequential path to my attorney he states play gets killed tens if not hundreds of millions of people over the last 2,000 to 2,500 years and yet has been responsible for some of the most critical innovations in public health those of quarantine and disease surveillance plague also helped in feudalism by inflating labor wages and possibly seeded the transfer economic power for mediterranean north to the northwest europe during the medieval period by decimating the trading superpowers at venice digenova and florence plague victims were also catapulted into kapha in 1346 by the mongols under jana bag in an attempt to break the siege and therefore it represents the first use of biological terror weapons while some were well firts positions should invite a healthy discussion particularly that plague was one of the demise of feudalism his overarching position is a fundamentally sound one massive contagious diseases have had an undeniable role in shaping human affairs we are not the ultimate masters of the earth the earth is a global organism that respirate s-- and when it becomes ill him manly is deeply impacted the third plague pandemic which some scholars consider to be an extension of the prior one is the most notable for its initial appearance in Canton in Hong Kong in 1894 and thereafter extending to India through 1910 an estimated 13 million persons succumbed to the illness and in spite of the human toll it did not challenge the mortality of the medieval Black Death that claimed as many as 20 million souls or one out of three persons reflection why do we forget what is it about humanity and the way we perceive time that allows us to forget the difficulties of past pandemics should we have learned something by now to better prepare ourselves tracking the disease from Crimea to Italy when the pandemic arrived in Italy at the opening of the 14th century an estimated 12.5 million persons lived on the peninsula Italian cities were perpetually lacking sufficient grains and other foods to meet the needs of the people Italian city-states often created what were called offices of abundance to manage the importation cereal grains from Sicily to the south Provence to the west and even Islamic Egypt this importation of food via vast trade networks crossing land and sea facilitated the survival of people but also created an avenue for the beste to invade or even the history of this medieval menace of Rossini up st's bacteria in Italy and for that matter in Europe seems to attract with what we are in counting with a covet 19 current of ours in 2020 and on our globe that is three phases of infection phase one involved in zoetic and episodic transfer the disease from rats to humans in the case of corona virus some transfer from animals to humans phase two an endemic phase when the disease took hold and a few households incubated and then spread illness and death from one family member to another and finally in Phase three it became an epidemic where the local officials and villages and cities would not fully understand the presence of the Black Death until five to seven weeks after the first infection it is a macabre repeating of history some 600 years later in Italy let us turn our attention to the first evidence of plague in northern Italy that is near the city of Genoa the history of this plague invasion into northern Italy tracks with another the Mongol invasion of Crimea janab egg the Mongol Khan of the Golden Horde invaded Central Asia and the northern region adjacent to the Sea of Azov between 1343 and 1347 the Sea of Azov sits atop the Black Sea which is bordered by present-day Ukraine Russia Georgia Turkey Bulgaria and Romania the Venetian in Genoa merchants operated crucial trade cities in the region such as at the city of Tana and kapha on the Crimea at the opening of the 14th century the Khanate had converted to Islam and as it moved westward it sought to convert local tartar peoples and push Christian traders out of the region via massive military force by 1343 the golden horde pushed into the sea of azov and eliminated the venetian treating town of Tana our present-day Azov Italian merchants then retreated to a fortified Genoese installation Agathe thus I had started as a collection of warehouses and trading stations but his business had become more lucrative the Genoese converted it into a fortified city when the Mongols besieged kapha in the autumn of 1346 they also brought the plague the disease first attacked the Mongol armies and in one of the most consequential forms of biological warfare the Mongols launched plague-ridden bodies into the walled city using trebuchet x' for the memoir of Gabriella Debussy a genuine notary a recounting and events can be told although there is uncertainty as to whether de moosie was present for the tack his memoir written in in 1348 remains the only contemporary report that presumably was based on first-person stories he wrote the Christian merchants who had been driven out by force from Tana were so terrified of the power of the Tatars that to save themselves and their belongings they fled in an armed ship to kapha a settlement in the same part of the world which had been founded long ago by the Genoese Oh God see how the heathen tartar races pouring together from all sides suddenly invested the city of cava and besieged the drop Christians there for almost three years they're hemmed in by an immense army they could hardly draw breath although food could be shipped in which offered them some hope but behold the whole army was afflicted by a disease which over and the Tatars and killed thousands upon thousands every day it was as though the arrows were raining down from heaven to strike and crush the Tartars or arrogance all medical advice and intention was useless the Tatars died as soon as the signs of disease appeared on their bodies swellings in the armpit or goring caused by coagulating humors followed by putrid fever the dying Tatars stunned and stupefied by the immensity at the disaster brought about by the disease and realizing they had no hope of escape lost interests in the siege but they ordered corpses to be placed in catapults and logged into the city in the hope that the intolerable stench would kill everyone inside what seemed like mountains of dead were thrown into the city and the Christians could not hide or flee or escape from them though they dumped as many other bodies as they could in the sea and seen the rotting corpses tainted the air and poisoned the water supply and the stench was so overwhelming that hardly one in several thousand was in a position to flee the remains of the tartar army moreover one effective men could carry the poison to others and infect people and places with disease but look alone no one knew or could discover a means of Defence as it happened among those who escaped from cough up by boat were a few sailors who had been infected with the poisonous disease some boats were bound for Genoa others went to Venice and to other Christian areas when the sailors reached these places and mixed with the people there it was if they had brought evil spirits with them every city every settlement every place was poisoned by the contagious pestilence and their inhabitants both men and women died suddenly scholars like professor mark wheelers conclude that mutilated diseased cadavers could have infected the community at cava based on contemporary research on plague infection in the United States from 1970 to 1995 20% of these american plague cases were associated with infective materials moreover we understand infected Genoese refugees could have taken the disease home with them historical records indicate that during the spring of 1347 Genoese and venetian galleys escaping kava first travel the constantinople by mae 1347 Venetian galleys reached the Isle of Crete next and subsequently reached their home port in Venice by mid-november 1347 the Genoese galleys first reached Messina Sicily in June 1347 and landed at their home port of Genoa in July converging shipping lanes and trade routes in Genoa subsequently much like a modern International Airport like Newark or LAX espress shipped disease travelers merchants and goods onto Marseilles and on and on and on by 1348 the plague was in France Germany Spain and England onward through 1350 to have reached the walled cities of Switzerland the Low Countries Scandinavia Poland and Russia reflection is human interconnection past and present a good social trait for societies and this new global age we value our ability to experience the club's cultural panorama through travel is this a good trait and what are the pitfalls genoa welcome home swollen bodies and words of comfort Genoa in late 1347 we did find a bustling port city of 60,000 Souls you can almost hear the creaking oka the galleys moored in the city and the laughter of the evenings that welcomed both the native wines and the good cheer of fathers and sons uncles and good friends now home from their challenging voyage the affluent trading families would have enjoyed table set with the bounty of abundant basil plants the sweet fragrance of olive oil and the rich zest of parmigiano coming together in the traditional pesto and pasta of Genoa warm focaccia all varieties of this staple bread with onions and olives sage carrying their delightful perfume to the nose this first nights in day's home they would have been good but then the first day home would become two and two would become three a week and then two weeks would have passed some families would see the odd swellings the buboes appearing on loved ones bodies bodies distorted and swollen lymph nodes on the neck now the size of eggs foreheads burning with fever and finally maybe coughed up blood in the loss of one's bowels skin sores sinning a new disturbing signal opinion death a blackness an evil shade of the dark a black death three weeks four weeks now five weeks later since the first evening uptight embraces when that Genoese galleys had made their way home from kava on the Crimean Peninsula over the course of this first raging black death in Genoa density of 60,000 was perhaps reduced to 36,000 survivors by 1353 among those unfortunate and unsuspecting who were laid to rest and play graves was a nameless woman about 30 years of age in expecting a child alongside of her a child of three years of age another of 12 years and on the verge of the age of majority laid together as an immediate family we do not know but now presenting themselves as a family of the Dead the graveyard is located at the ruins of a small church of san nicolo alongside of it the foundations of a meeting of a hospital founded by the fishy family of genoa during the twelve hundreds an entire site a cluster of buildings originally constructed to spiritually and materially care for traders and Bell crumbs would have been travelling who had been in travelling these lands to the neighboring regions of emilia romagna and Tuscany archaeological work at the site conducted between 2001 and 2006 tells another quite history at the plague for persons laid to rest at this rural site we're not the wealthy merchants of the city their bodies tell another story of deprivation of the most essential needs of life basic food sustenance and they speak of of a poverty of the common people during the Middle Ages we know the site was infected by the plague because genetic markers are still detectable in the cadavers the f1 antigens the bacterium yes plague kill them but that is not the complete history the woman of 30 was of typical height for the region just over 5 feet or 156 centimeters tall at the age of 7 her teeth indicate that it's enamel had not properly formed and said bands a thin enamel point to a Jew childhood malnutrition and illness her body told another story of decay at just 30 years of age you can almost feel the pain she endured as she walked her left hip joint where the head of the femur was shaped like a mushroom she suffered from osteoarthritis it's believed and she was pregnant her unborn child about 30 to 40 weeks old just J's away from being delivered in the most tragic element of this death it appears that after the burial the woman's body experienced what was known as a coffin birth the feed is partially delivered and post-mortem the children buried with the expectant mother showed signs of heart beginnings the 12 year old had bone lesions associated with metabolic and nutritional deficiencies namely a poor diet in fruits and vegetables and vitamin C deficiency she likely suffered from scurvy we cannot know the entire circumstances of their passing but we can understand and reflect on their suffering before the Black Death and with its arrival we can imagine if a Catholic priest was present at their internment that he may have turned to Joe couple deaf Nazis well known collection of 13th century sermons the ligand out Royale or golden legend to remind all those present to remember and take comfort and their celestial Lord the golden legend was a compendium of life scenes lives and liturgy intended to assist busy priests with rich materials for their sermons to the faithful it seems fitting perhaps a mystical communion with those that passed away that a picture may have encountered Jacopo's writings of on st. Nicholas the patron saint to the Church of this location maybe we can imagine those words he spoke that day I leave you now with the golden legends wisdom the life is st. Nicholas was written by learning men of Argos called our bollocks Argos been a town in Greece there came a time when st. Nicholas province was beset by famine so severe that no one had anything to eat the man of God learned that several ships laden with grain were anchored in the harbour he hastened there promptly and begged the ship's people to come to the aid of those who were starving if only by allowing them a hundred measures of wheat from each ship but the replied father we dare not because our cargo is measured at Alexandria and we must deliver it whole and entire to the Emperor's greeneries the Saint answered do what I tell you and I promise you in God's power that the imperial customs men will not find your cargo short the men did so and when they arrived at their destination they turned over to the imperial greeneries the same quantity of grain that had been measured out at Alexandria they spread news of the miracle and glorified God in his Saint meanwhile the grain they had relinquished was distributed by Nicholas to each according to his needs and so miraculously that not only did it it sufficed to feed the whole region for two years but supplied enough for the selling maybe the medieval priests may have added as the grave was closed you are now with the Lord he will provide for you and make your bellies full no longer shall your toils bring a meager scrap of bread no longer shall your sleep be restless because of your hunger no longer shall you want for what you did not have you will no longer need these birth lemurs meds as he will make you full in the eternal sustenance of his spirit [Music] you | Roger L. Martínez-Davila | UCB1ioAHLX1ORfTg41mCzRyQ | 2020-04-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,433 | 19,770 |
E8TBnuYOry4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8TBnuYOry4 | NITI AAYOG Meet | CM Chandrababu Strongly Questions Centre | A Report | rostrum Michele okay and ramchandra supersu stone than to nithya of some obvious and Vedic a mockumentary Chandra Babu press nature mundo gah Mart Laar a Pakistani sad video I'm just gonna see him be with the rostral emoji Mandela some action okay interim chair Yellen on elody sir Vibhishana hemella amylose aha Kendra mayor Otto pérez de la Piedra Donna you bundler no seeum JT Aveda cap I got to go press the venture neatly I hope some of Assam Vedic ago Mookie mudra Chandra Babu que entra y Kearney and a guitar Akshara crime umbra karim moon durga andhra pradesh caleb in China Ibaka sunny said video conscious kana ina vivid Amsale roster and huge Arabic Anna Anna and Avenger mahtim air venom shall apart Oh CME cathartica present on chorus again chair year to new mashaallah terracotta itchiness omnia moves inland to home until Rosanna Singh Chandra Babu present garni at the corner it a JP Sam Massell oprich a chimera one to Chandra Babu present garlic on sagging chair a peope are sittin in ET I hope some of a syllable into aa Chandrababu be with the rostral a mockumentary under ki-yay paper city Artem al oppressing inter Vibhishana am Sally Pradhan and repressed Avenger Kendra Mary Tina Jamica Carter body projec affordable and dementia sir Dakshina dearest Rallo tell incarnate Oh yippee ki airplane Aboudi antral and vibrant self-knowledge a hollow savour angle or ashram de Medicis Neruda a paragon Hello Kitty Scovel Anna koreff aap ki protec of other demand could jati a verdict upon mocumentary a polygraph que la coneja llamada to Lavin Cheney yep we demand a new bahar mockumentary Nitish Kumar's summer pincher Bihar pakoda pratik Hoda Y Bellini is under ponga ina business the chaser bangle cm Mamta Banerjee Satyam Chandra Babu ordinate oye Kiba venture Polavaram panoramas some BMP Toscana denial and um Robert salon ECM demand chaser Lackey on Yannick atanga puta y ella dijo el fuerte de leche Alana Greenfield Rajasthani amaravati pay china - costa rica dennis IAM revenue roto party Pnina Tornai Reagan ma aunty Scoville honor when Katrina pronti alla kannada libre de leche severity score Anita piccata rostral op Rio Salado DST big Hasan Kalki Stone Danny Chandra Babu and a guitar sonica a bundle with in Chaves reporter lake on top when the knee are we then a victim chaser naga de curtis a mercy a new cane dramatically put the apart car Angelica boy in the North Railway zone is someone aha me near a virtually the nerve me guitarist righto Samaras psyche whichever Gucci Ayutthaya colony Cora rain develop addict undo janaballah color add her anger for the hey Novartis uncommon Honolulu pikarin sorry Kidani gender pop appear Conner pradhana Modi Satyam Gaetano mockumentary Hippolytus in andhra rostral am Solano son Kohanga porcelain challenge Chandrababu Karev | ETV Andhra Pradesh | UCJi8M0hRKjz8SLPvJKEVTOg | 2018-06-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 476 | 2,805 |
kTTr7puHNwc | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTTr7puHNwc | Improvising in Public Speaking: How to Do It And Be Kind To Yourself | the official YouTube creators Twitter account in November asked if people were participating in no cut November which I had never heard of before and I said to myself you know what I'm going to do something really kind of uh well unprecedented for me and do a 10-minute improvised video without prompts or scripts or such and that's what this video is it's an improvised video now I don't know if it'll actually be be 10 minutes but uh I'm gonna stick to my word I'm not going to cut out any of the Oz and uh and any of the awkward statements but what I am going to talk about is the nature of the video and that is improvisation because I've done some rather spectacular what I would call spectacular improvisations over the years like you haven't actually lived until you've had to do an hour and a half class of 20 plus instructors looking at you and listening to every your every beckon word for a total of oh like I said for an hour and a half but doing it with 5 min bits of prep and the presentation that you were given it was a very ugly circumstance I won't get into it the point is if you have the presence of mind and you have a little bit of confidence just a little bit of confidence in yourself in a level of fluidity and a little bit of imagination you can do improvisation like that you can do lots of improvisation now that class was a little bit of an unusual case because I have a lot of prior knowledge right you know I've been in information technology and teaching and learning technology for something like uh 20 years now you know if I think back of it in 19 in in 2001 I was working in a newly established learning technology shop at the University that would that I was a student at and it just happens that I forgot how to stop um and in that time I picked up a lot of knowledge that involved uh dealing with technology that involved doing videography that involved lighting I mean I'm not particularly good case in point you look at the quality of my video but the point is I have some knowledge so I have a little bit of information to lie back on and that's probably the first tip that I would offer to people and that is that if you're improvising do everything you can to take a few moments and collect to your collect your thoughts ask yourself what are the bits of information that I already know about this and use those as a foundation of your conversation um that's probably the single most important bit get an image in your head of the points that you want to hit along the way now um right now uh I'm talking to you but before this I took 30 seconds and I assembled the individual pieces of information that I wanted to touch on um because again I've done this before so that's the kind of prep that you want to do you want to get an image in your head of the kinds of things that you want to talk about and don't be afraid if your mind deviates from those a little bit because uh you know if you start talking about the same thing the entire time and you get caught up in yourself you end up uh kind of leading into the same topic for an extended period of time if you're listening to yourself and you're improvising what will end up happening is the topic will start losing meaning in your own mind and when that starts happening you know you're in trouble right so don't dwell on things too long which we'll just go ahead and call important Point number two the third point I wanted to talk about is a matter of Stress Management now I have a little bit of a story to take which I might add is also a good debriefing moment for you if you have little bitty stories that you can interject while you're improvising especially if you're doing a a professional kind of speech if you have little bitty stories that you can interject in the middle to give your mind a little bit of a break to give you the opportunity to change to focus just a tiny bit go ahead and do so it'll extend the conversation it'll pad it out a little and it'll also do a very good job of helping your audience get a little bit more comfortable with you so now that I've done that interlude off the interlude let's go back to the first one the story that I have is that when I was in high school I used to be absolutely terrified of speaking in public now as an adult I know that I have anxiety I have anxiety issues I know that I have some autistic Tendencies perhaps to be diagnosed as officially at some some point and if I had known those things when I was in high school I probably would have received some level of treatment and I wouldn't have done things like blackout while giving improvised speeches but I didn't know that so improv improvised speeches completely losing it completely forgetting what on Earth I was doing because of the level of stress and the way I got around that and and this is the honest to God truth the way I got around that was practicing I kept putting myself in those situations I took improvisational and public speaking and these classes over and over and over I took them several times during high school and I took them a number of times at University as well what ended up happening was eventually I did find my comfortable space and it's that comfortable space that I'm talking to you at right now right now I don't see um millions of potential viewers partly because I know of millions of potential people aren't going to be watching this video definitely just a few and that's okay but what I do see is an imaginary person I've learned over the years to Imagine This every potential possible viewer being one person and that comes from speaking from my comfort zone you know my comfort zone is individual people I'm not an extrovert um the fact that I do this at all is kind of miraculous if you think about it just because of the anxiety and everything um so the ability to um the ability to speak towards one person and visualize that can really help as well that's the thing that I learned in my improvisational classes in my public speaking classes um so that would be the next point that I would cover the probably the single biggest thing I would cover would be to learn to be respectful to yourself in regards to public speaking or any kind of improvisation or any kind of speaking whatsoever uh this is an invaluable lesson especially if your perception of yourself is that you don't deal well with people you know if you have this Sensation that you go up to people and it's always awkward to speak towards them and it's always awkward to talk about the things that they like probably the single most important element to anything I have done has been learning to accept that that is okay that um sometimes the person I'm speaking to also has the same kind of awkwardness they're um they're looking at me and they could very well be going hey I don't know what exactly to talk to you about or hey you look kind of uncomfortable the feelings that you're having could very well be the opposite direction and likewise the person who you're talking to might actually see that on your face and might be willing to accommodate that and you know what in that same vein if they don't that's okay because we don't have to talk to everyone all we have to do is be comfortable with our own sense of abilities so if you're speaking in public like I am right now and you find your thoughts getting too fast or you find that you're kind of losing Steam and trying to figure out where you're trying to go it's okay take a second just stop and in that moment when you're stopping you hear that little voice in the back of your head you feel all those thoughts Shuffle around in your mind get back into a little bit of order it's okay to stop and breathe and give yourself a little bit of kindness a little bit of patience find that thought that you want to get back on let everything else fade away and then you start again that's part of the communication aspect of it that's part of being kind to yourself and that's part of communication not everyone is completely on the ball at all times people drift people need to relax and people will understand if your speaking scale isn't completely perfect and with enough practice like I said and with enough exposure like I said and with enough kindness towards yourself you too can have a level of comfort and improvisational speaking now I kind of uh I kind of have a Wandering mind so I get to interject humor in that so if you can do that too that never hurts but at the very least the point of this video is to well first prove that I can do no cut November even though it's a little bit late you know I'm a few months early or a few months ahead if you will uh but the real idea was for me to take advantage of this opportunity to express to all of you that even if you have significant anxiety and even if you're an introvert and even if you don't always know what to talk about it's okay to show that and it's okay to speak anyway because people are far Kinder than you think and there are many more people who relate to you than you might think actually do my name is David Delgado thank you very much for watching if you have a moment please take a moment to comment to like this video and to subscribe I would really appreciate it I hope you have a nice one | David Delgado | UCU1MAbTaKanYfeDdXF5QQow | 2023-01-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,777 | 9,266 |
HUhz-En8WK0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUhz-En8WK0 | Yumna Patel on the killing of Al Jazeera reporter Shireen Abu Akleh by the Israeli military | is palestine news director for mondo vice it's a news website focusing on palestinian issues she's joining us from bethlehem thank you very much indeed for being with us i'd like to ask you about the kind of conditions that you believe that journalists work under when they're covering this story yeah thank you for having me um i mean i first like to express what a sad and tragic day this is for palestinian journalists and you know palestinians everywhere um as many of your guests have mentioned and some of the al jazeera correspondents have mentioned working on the ground in palestine is often a very volatile situation in my experience in the years that i've reported here journalists who are clearly marked as press often come under direct attack from israeli forces when we're covering protests that can mean that journalists are either tear gassed they're targeted with rubber bullets or with live ammunition as was the case um for shireen and her team today so it is not uncommon in fact it's very common for journalists to come under israeli fire when they're covering events in the west bank i understand that we can bring you live pictures at the moment from shanine of shireen's body being carried through the streets of the town where the shooting is said to have taken place janine is a town in the northern uh west bank um yumna we heard earlier on from stephanie decker a correspondent quoting an israeli for the israeli foreign minister saying the death of uh al jazeera journalist shirin abu akhlee was sad and he'd offered to investigate jointly with the palestinian authority how much confidence do you have in that investigation i would say little to no confidence you know time and time again uh it has been shown that you know israeli forces kill palestinians including palestinian journalists without cause in the occupied territory and it's very it's extremely rare that israeli soldiers captains or military officials are ever held accountable for their actions you know is after sort of high-profile killings like this or for example the killing of children that often get more significant media attention it's not uncommon for israeli officials to say that they will investigate um to express their quote unquote sadness and say that they will investigate these killings but time and time again almost without fail these investigations lead nowhere you know and it's ironic as stephanie was reading out um the israeli foreign ministry's uh statement you know it's ironic that the foreign minister says that journalists must be protected when when you're talking about journalism in palestine israel is the biggest perpetrator of crimes against journalists in in the west bank and so you know since 1967 86 palestinian journalists have been killed those numbers are from the palestinian journalist syndicate and since 2000 it's estimated that around 50 palestinians have been killed i talked to a representative from the journalist syndicate this morning he said that just in the past two years six palestinian journalists were killed in the west bank in gaza hundreds have been injured i mean over the years and according to to beith salem which is israel's leading human human rights organization the use of lethal force by israeli forces of the west bank is a crucial element in israel's ability to maintain its control over millions of palestinians and unfortunately journalists are often the target as they are the ones who are are covering israel's crimes and attacks in in the occupied territory yuma stay with me for a moment there have been a couple of statements that have been put put out al-jazeera media network has put out a statement offering its condolences it says in a blatant murder violating international laws and norms the israeli occupation forces assassinated in cold blood al jazeera's correspondent al jazeera media network condemns this heinous crime which intends to only prevent the media from conducting their duty al-jazeera holds the israeli government and the occupation forces responsible for the killing of our late colleague sharing it also calls on the international community to condemn and hold the israeli occupation forces accountable an official in qatar's foreign ministers also put out a tweet saying the israeli occupation killed al-jazeera journalist shirin abu aklay by shooting her in the face while wearing the press vest and a helmet she was covering their attack in jeanine refugee camp the state sponsors it sponsored israeli terrorism must stop and unconditional support to israel must end um yumna let me ask you about the international pressure that we've talked about earlier on in the program there have been suggestions that the only way that there is going to be any sort of solution any sort of resolution to this particular incident in terms of an investigation would come from foreign governments again how confident could you be that that kind of pressure could be brought to bear unfortunately again i would have to say there's little to no confidence in foreign governments and third-party states at this point when it comes to putting pressure on israel for its crimes as one of your guests mentioned earlier there needs to be a political will but unfortunately when it comes to israel there is no political will in terms of holding israel accountable for its crimes and its attacks on the journalists and press you know time and time again when palestinian journalists are killed when children are killed when unarmed women are killed when anyone is killed in the west bank by israeli forces you know often times you'll see these sort of statements from us or european officials but unfortunately they're often just sort of empty statements followed up by you know lack of action it's one thing to say oh you know we condemn this killing and we you know assert that palestinian journalists or the rights of journalists should be protected but if the u.s were to come out with that sort of statement but then immediately after continue funding israel and continue funding israel's military as it has been for years sort of without any real consequences then then i don't believe that that the situation will change or any accountability or justice will be seen for sharing or the dozens of other palestinian journalists who have been killed by israel yes this isn't as you say the first time that this kind of thing has happened how do you notice a change in the attitude in journalists after an incident like this do you find that people reconsider whether they should be covering conflicts like this um as i believe it was stephanie who mentioned earlier you know this is absolutely devastating you know not only this is devastating for shootings colleagues for her family for friends my heart goes out to them this has really shaken i think any palestinian journalist any journalist that's working here on the ground and across the world that being said i do not think that incidents like these uh shake the resolve of palestinian journalists because as you mentioned and as i've said this is not the first time that this has happened you know palestinian journalists continuously are under attack by by israeli forces in their work this is not the first time a journalist been killed or severely injured and palestinian journalists are you know frankly never deterred and are determined to continue their work reporting on on israel's actions and crimes in the west bank because if they're if they're not here to do it um then then who will be and and frankly that is that is part of the reason as some of your guests i believe have pointed out why palestinian journalists are often targeted it's it's a method of deterrence um that is employed by israel by the israeli government and israeli forces you know these palestinian journalists sharing and her team were clearly marked as press there's no way around it so when journalists are targeted there is a reason for that is to deter them from their work but palestinian journalists are strong they have conviction and despite all the attacks um against them every single day they continue to do their work so i don't believe that you know palestinian journalists will be deterred after this but it is um extremely tragic and devastating news for for journalists and for those who knew shady is there anything more that can be done to protect journalists when they're covering um the conflict in in this particular area or are they pretty much on their own they have the equipment and they have the facilities that they're gonna get yeah i mean i would say unfortunately it often does feel like you're on your own um you have your colleagues around you of course if if the the organization that you're working with um you know has has given you your support that is all the better but in terms of any sort of government or international protection when reporting here on the ground in occupied palestine journalists very much feel that they are on their own especially when we see this sort of lack of accountability and lack of response by foreign governments it is widely just known here as a fact that israel does not hold its soldiers its military its captains its officials accountable for these types of crimes and we also know unfortunately that foreign governments governments like the uh like the us and european governments um also do not hold israel accountable so it leaves journalists feeling like there is really no one to to protect them yuma patel is palestine news director for mondaw weiss the news website focusing on palestinian issues yumna thank you very much indeed for your time you | Mondoweiss | UC7oQL6bXDLVlfRzeF8_KcGw | 2022-05-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,653 | 9,659 |
PbmQurywwhU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbmQurywwhU | Unboxing an AFF 961 Shop Cart | hell guys I'm Chris Bowden and welcome to the Geek Group we're here today with the Great and Powerful Andrew Harwood hello Batman I don't know if we can call you a Batman in videos because like copyright and stuff it's just a name I don't know all right we're here for the latest in our series of videos for American for and Foundry AF today we have the model 961 polypropylene shop cart y this is this is kind of a cool video like there's backstory for this one right because we made the the first three right and when the second one went out one of their directors in the company was like these guys need a shop cart so he's like we're sending you a shop cart so okay cool bonus video I get to use my my Nifty new toy new toy all right do it see it works great for this pretty you got to catch the thing all right that's that's the extent of the abilities of my Nifty new toy that's that's all it's got don't hold on sit it down what watch oh hey how about that now see this would be cooler and and they can do this guys guys at AF look at their logo here see how their logo is like a diamond yeah okay well they need to on the bottom of the cart these are diamonds yeah and they need to put like the AFF logo in each one of these cuz they totally see the bottom all the time it's the kind of nerdy thing I would do if I was a guy designing the thing all right this is obviously the end okay I know I know what to expect now I've seen this kind of cart before yeah casters little stands I KN I knew it was a rollar around cart that's all I knew this is a substantial little cart yeah these are hardcore do you have a bag of hardwood it's probably a there I do not have a bag of hardw oh it's rolling around okay found it this is cool because with this one we can knock things around and not have to worry about it right all right do you have differents or are they all the same they look all the same and there's a screw as well so I'll quickly grab your wrench all right so we got four four four four right and I noticed we had four of the square holes here um the rest is all just screws washers nuts nothing special so really one tool and a screwdriver so yeah all right where's the instructions right here there's an order of operations and we're going to do this properly because we are trained professionals the cart know how to put it again no got are the top and bottom shelves the same they look like it no this one's different yeah it is so that the bottom that's the top this goes with here and the rest is exactly what you expect um neat that side down yep all right um oh we need a mallet we need a rubber mallet keep work area clean cluttered areas invite injuries grab them out real quick all right are you prepared I am prepared all right first thing keep work area clean cluttered areas invite injuries no you can't do that yet we're not we're not anywhere near that the area is clean no you've got Schmutz we got cluttered areas invite injuries somebody bothered to write this down we're going to follow the manual all right observe work area conditions keep area well lighted I think we're good we're in the middle of a video set we're okay for lightting all right store idle equipment when not in use the service cart must be stored in a safe and clean location always lock up products and keep Out Of Reach of children I think a lawyer was involved in this this smells like lawyer use the right product for the job there are certain applications for which the service cart was not designed do not modify the service cart and do not use a service cart for a purpose for which it was not intended us ever you would never use a product in a manner inconsistent with its labeling check for damaged Parts looks fine um replacement parts and accessories do not operate product if under the influence of alcohol or drugs it's a card it's a service card it lawyer definitely wow this lawyer was getting paid by the word that's what it was okay okay um use eye protection you're wearing glasses you're fine um do not exceed the products maximum load capacity of 500 pounds I think we're good good we're fine there um do not allow children to play on stand on or climb upon the service cart the service cart is not for carrying people or animals darn yeah always check hardware and assemble Parts after assembling all connections should be tight and Hardware tightened think about that for a minute always distribute objects in the cart in the service cart evenly so that's that's not instructions that's just that's just warnings there the entirety of the instructions are pictures is is it's all graphic okay well cool that's easy yeah there's weird numbers here that don't make any sense all right the instructions not so much no just it's okay I figured it out all right I'm just going to do it okay and if we get it wrong it's going to happen live on the internet I need that I need I need that a minute it says I'm supposed to Smack That there you go yeah all right wow really this one's a little this is what happens when you don't follow the instructions screw up a three car funeral watch your fingers there we go there it's a manly cart well this has to go on there you we want to do cuz we got to go through all that oh hey look at that I'll stuff them through you screw them on all right well this is nice like it was made for it you going to put the wheel in place oh yeah I got to do that I got excited are you I I got a little excited okay are you on mostly hang on let me get this there you try it now all right you good yeah all right okay there's all four all right now I'll start washers uh just a little lock washer lock washer which I got in this one okay just get them on fingertight yeah that's what I'm doing you know what we need for this what impact that might be too much yeah I don't think it'd be too much and I think it'd be a lot faster F than to cuz we did the other video and it's tedious yeah okay we we can do better and I know you got the impact it right over there just chilling and socket right there we got the socket you can put the socket on the impact there yeah it's still still good bit so go get a bit all right then I can do this for a minute still got you still got to hand tighten everything go go off you go all right okay I'm being entertaining right now this is me being entertaining comment if you're entertained ain't that better all right below you so thrilling this is the most exciting video we've ever done oh wow it's really cool how this like it just sucks together when you do that and like everything just falls into place if you put one of these in your shop don't judge it until after the screws are tight bottom first sure ah go in your hole there you go I want like 50 of these right this is an awesome little cart I was bored hanging back there all alone come on there we go you just wanted to do it it's fun we got we got got til up a little did you imagine if they made this one out a quarter inch steel like their table oh man be awesome I like this just the way it is it's the design of it is Wicked Strong like for anything we're ever going to want to put on it right and it's a lot lighter than it would be if if it was steel and as the guy who has to shoot a lot of videos while you're rolling stuff around this is quieter because we've never had issues with that before hang on get in the hole you got to get them because it's got the little square head they got to be turned right way all right you're good ah the sound guys got got to be loving me today teamwork do it that's plenty good beautiful best skate board ever all right which way you want this to go you want you want the handle end on the spinny end I would imagine right sure that makes sense to me yeah all right and the way this is made if we had to we could easily switch the handle yeah it wouldn't be the end of the world to have to swap it out I know this goes in here yeah I got mine lined up ah okay it just took me a second to figure out you just lift it up that side shut up man there watch your oh and that holds it right in there there all right uh we got all these extra screws no I know we want to to turn it upside down I get yeah we can turn it upside squeeze it here y oh we can't we can't which way you going this way okay a you and now they all fell out again I only my side held in just fine all right this is an excellent job to put a screw do that get a long one hey Batman hey Batman yeah get a number three already did okay I know what I'm doing okay they're they're just they're really big you could do it with a two but a three would probably be a little bit better with a really long extension well number three this is the longest I got for it all right should be good give it a shot does that fit all right yeah good no not really actually that is a number two it is a number two yeah okay grab a number two I'm just getting them started I'm a helper hey this top piece yeah is used for different designs see how it's got the different set of holes in it right those holes match these holes I'm sure they use the same kind of mold see that you can do the someone put them in cockey so hey Batman it's done now always remember when you assemble your American forun Foundry cart now hang on where where was that thing of the rules oh yeah these all right now these say now this specifically States rule number 11 do not allow children to play on stand upon or climb on the service cart the service cart is not for carrying people or animals M okay children children well also says not designed for carrying so I totally get to ride the cart right okay um It also says that you should never put a too much weight in this okay absolute maximum load is 500 pounds and that's equally distributed right you want to see if it'll hold you are you saying I weigh 500 lb not yet but give it a couple months we'll get there can can you balance your big ass on that I'm balancing my big ass on okay now let's let's see how it handles like butter yeah this is this is fine I wouldn't recommend people do this because lawyers but the fact that I can put you on it and it's it's you know it's top heavy as hell I wouldn't want to go four-wheeling with this but I can move this at one hand so it's it's quite lovely yeah quite lovely get off the damn cart so that's it what's the model number we got to show people this is the model 961 polypropylene shop cart and it's 30 by 16 yep so this is great for around the lab it'll fit through any of the doors no problems do you have any SP cuz you're The Tool Guy this will actually probably be more a machine shop with Casey and his Parts yeah and when I I need parts and it'll it'll be Parts mostly I like that seamless mhm if you goopy won't run out so cool all right we want to thank you guys for watching I'm Chris Bowden and I'm Andrew Harwood and we want to thank all the guys over at American forgun Foundry for helping us out with all kinds of fun stuff you can get any of this at their website American forgin foundry.com right there and check them out tell them we sent you guys have fun we'll be back this video was made possible by a grant from the future girl Foundation this video was made possible by thousands of private donations from members and viewers like you please visit the geek group.org for more information on how you can donate and become a part of our dreams of Avalon | Chaotic Good | UCM8Y_V0jqqYS6dLwMoRO9FQ | 2015-02-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,298 | 11,406 |
FRx3BH7a4Wk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRx3BH7a4Wk | LPT Since Roe v Wade has been overturned zygotes are now considered humans and can be claimed as a | lpt since roe v wade has been overturned zagats are now considered humans and can be claimed as a dependent on your taxes i think you could be charged with child abuse for keeping it in the freezer and never letting it age god forbid it dies listen find every tax loophole you can this actually sounds like a good idea malicious compliance apply for an ssn immediately no birth certificate take a photo of the pregnancy test i feel the best way to overturn such decisions is for people to pull these petty loophole tricks to annoy the to them works even more when gupp loses money because of them | Reddit Posts | UCODQZ7j51Cm9Btx23D9YNSQ | 2022-06-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 111 | 596 |
78fUk8D07Jc | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78fUk8D07Jc | Whiteboard Session 1 - Unpacking the Threat Intelligence Practice | [Music] hey guys I'm you see you look like they got cute today we're gonna be talking about a threat Intel practice very specifically how to transition your security operations from traditional to intelligence-led we're going to do that to see how a federal practice plays in the context of all the other security practices speed security operations or insta response or risk or architecture or fraud or any of those things and so first we're going to try and simply unpack what is really a threat Intel practice how does it work and kind of how do you think about it logically and conceptually and then future whiteboard sessions we're gonna unpack that even further and zoom in on very specific things on how you operate a thread Intel practice via the processes or best practices or standard operating procedures or maturity models and things like that for now we're simply gonna start with an introduction unpacking what it really means that in theory and in context so let's start by by framing a little bit in the context of other practices and security so if you think about it the threat landscape is going to be evolved much quicker over the last years than before threats are evolving much faster than most organizations can invest against and so intelligence-led security means something like I'm constantly evaluating how the threat landscape is changing in order to understand how to kind of move my security operations move my fraud move my executive decision-making move my policies in concert with the changing threat landscape and so how do I translate intelligence into business value how do I translate information about the cyber threat landscape into something all these distinct security processes can use that's kind of what we're trying to focus on again conceptually and and logically and so we're gonna zoom in a little bit on what a thread ends all practice means practice being a distinct process and the sync group of people or the same people with different hats on let's say enabled by technology has to be separate from the process and people of security operations has to be separate from the process and people around instant response and so forth and all the other security practices so gonna like this and let's dive right into it interestingly enough so intelligence in the enterprise and in the cyber security domain really follows a very traditional construct around intelligence which is target centric intelligence a guy called Robert M Clarke wrote an amazing book about I totally recommend you to google it and by the name azan or something like that and what Robert M Clarke said he said something like well the traditional intelligence cycle which is like the concept used to kind of explain the logical flow of the intelligence process to be providing direction with that direction collecting information when you have that information prepare it to be analyzed we call that processing and exploitation you just tilt your head to decide a little bit to be able to read this you didn't perform analysis on send information after that an else you should produce some sort of Intel you disseminate that to your stakeholders they consume they understand they judge they make decisions and they have new needs arise from them for intelligence and they provide new direction and so forth so target centric analysis says something like the handoff between providing direction from whoever it is that you're serving with your intelligence and those collecting the information on your behalf and those preparing it for you so you can analyze it earlier and analyzed it and then the analysis itself and the production of the report that the dissemination to the human those are all moments of handoff and so the speed at which the cycle can operate it's kind of limited to how fast you can handoff these pieces of information in each stage of this process so what what Robert kind of says or retargeting in some senses I'm gonna leave that word out we're gonna we're gonna approach it slightly differently we're gonna approach it from the perspective of there's one common pool of knowledge perhaps love is literally but conceptually and in this common pool of knowledge look at it almost kind of like a knowledge base if you will we're going to capture for each stage of the intelligence process all the information in one place connected together and we're going to make sure that all the different stakeholders that are going to be involved in it are going to be working on the same that's a construct of knowledge at the same time so there's no handoff rather they're all evolving your common understanding of the threat landscape and they all can get from it to what they need for their respective mission being security operation and indicators or maintenance a response and something to have to do would be a fraud operations and so forth but at the same time they also contribute back to the same shared picture again conceptually so let's imagine we don't have this handoff we have one let's say central knowledge base where all this information resides in these little blips that I'm depicting here and graph style would be like there's an actor operating some sort of campaign with a certain set of tools which can observe through indicators or signatures in a certain way explain that at this point well I'm sure we'll do a whiteboard session on kind of what the data model of this looks like inside the threat Intel world but we're not going to dive into that now so conceptually what we got to do is we say okay if if if you'd like to serve let's say as an Intel capability all these other security practices you can have to understand what it is that they need and so part of the world here revolves around requirements management and so retention comes in many different shapes and sizes I won't go into all of it now but you have a few access to think about in terms of requirements for your stakeholders and again your staple was being all those different security practices that you have inside your enterprise security operations risk people red team's vulnerability teams and so forth and so requirements management is one acts of what kind of information do you care about in the context of your security process so think about the type of threats or what kind of information you care about tool information you can detect or do you just care about indicators you have to block or if you care about contextual information as a decision-maker you need to make informed decisions on what security controls to invest in and what not and so everybody has from a substance perspective different requirements the substance requirements are cold mostly Intel requirements but they almost have production requirements being the cadence at which in the four month in which they would want to consume so for example an executive can only really consume something every month or any quarter and it's working at landscape style presentation or it's a report that you write or something like that while your security operations people need something you know immediately indicators file once you know something is really bad they need to know right there or security architects need to have a more educated stream of reporting on these are changes in defect landscape and so there's not more strategic reports whatever explanatory kind of current intelligence reports and they might meet that every day or every week instead of every month or every quarter and so substantively in Thal requirements cadence formats production requirements and then you can use those requirements to to dictate how either you are going to collect information or usually that means that as an enterprise or or let's say government that you're going to go and work with you respective sources meet the Intel suppliers that you work with the communities that you work with and so you try and obtain the information based on those requirements by translating something like if my stakeholders care about this topic and I need to produce intelligence and this cadence in this format then I'm deducting back and thinking I couldn't need this kind of data to be able to analyze and deduct my way into providing that that information so there's not always a one-to-one correlation between what your stakeholders really want let's say information about the merging tools in a certain problem space and the date that you need to collect the data you collect might be much broader from which you can derive what you need or you ask the question to your Intel supplier saying I need information about these tools that are emerging in this problem space and they did it on your behalf and so depending what if you're collecting there's some process of collection there if somebody's collecting on your behalf it's more than a source vendor management process that you have there in any case having a central knowledge base understanding your supplier or your stakeholder requirements making sure somebody collects that and as we saw previously you want to do some processing and exploitation meaning you need to prepare data before you can logically analyze it and make it part of this how we analyze and produce I'll come back to a limited but one let's say worlds to understand these if you want to evolve your understanding of the threat landscape and evolve that's a shared knowledge base of everything your organization needs to know about cyber threats then you need to at least be thinking about who are my stakeholders one of their requirements whether their production requirements how do I obtain that information how do I prepared for my analysts or my capability to then add that to my shared knowledge base and a whole welcome exit later once you've analyzed and once you could say and a new knowledge based on this collection and so forth and so forth and growing this picture you need to eventually bring it of course to your teacher stakeholders into your consumers so at some point you are disseminating disseminating or integrating intelligence a difference kind of being a dissemination is more something like words going to people they can consume integration meaning more technical constructs like indicators or signatures need to go at a certain cadence in a certain system like a firewall or an endpoint device or something to that extent the block place there's nothing like that so from the shared pool of knowledge in one of the seven eight intelligence towards your stakeholder and so eventually they're consuming it so either a human is consuming a report I'd say or a system is consuming indicators doesn't really matter your stakeholders are here happily consuming whether it is your jury itself capabilities its producing and so this might be a something the sock is looking at it might be something the fraud team is consuming it might be something your executives are consuming and so forth and so forth and based on that consumption they kind of bring new needs back to the show picture oh wait those new needs you can shave any requirements you collect more information you make it ready for analysis and you man it to the common picture and so what kind of happens is that the dissemination of integration realm takes the subsets of data from the common picture and brings it to those stakeholders that need to do something what that the cadence they want and so forth and so forth but I'll explain more of that kind of form that kind of later the big difference between the take a traditional Intel cycle is there really is no handoff so at any point in time everybody involved in this from those collecting from those working with your stakeholders from those preparing the data from those analyzing for those producing intelligence for those stakeholders themselves they'll consume from the same place and they'll contribute to the same place and so there's very little handoff that needs to have a very informational loss that exists and very little discrepancy between parties what kind of what kind of access to information they really have and make sure they can impart on the same level of understanding let's say so let's zoom a little bit further one if I do have an Intel practice and I do understand my stakeholders and I do and how to obtain information to help them how do I really make this that's a common world of understanding which really is your analysis and production capability so let's zoom in on that a little bit all right so now that we kind of know who our stakeholders are what they want how they consume now that I know how to take requirements from them collected information prepared for analysis and by the way I'm doing this in kind of an asynchronous decoupled way right so these these things can go on all the time no matter when and at what point we do the analysis and production on that which is the power of kind of target centric analysis and intelligence versus the traditional cycle of constantly handing off so let's zoom in on the analysis and production capability so how do we evolve this common understanding of the landscape I think there's kind of different layers of of cadence to be able to do that they all have kind of an added advantage and allow you to do things more institutional and more elaborate so of course even started an automated way right so if you collect information or you update information from community sources or open sources or deuterium sources hopefully based on the requirements that you gave them based on your stakeholder needs let's assume that if you're limited to automated processing of that then there's some automated mechanism and technology that needs to be able to understand what that intelligence is about who each stakeholder that really matches and make sure it exports or sends or the seven days to those stakeholders in that way so the challenge with that obviously is machines could only do so much and so what it's concerned to kind of very technical things processing indicators qualifying them understanding kind of the decay and time in which is irrelevant and so forth those are things maybe machines can do that you can extract from that intelligence the indicators of process them in an automated way and may be sent them out to those stakeholders that can hack indicators of compromise or of attack but once you go up the abstraction level of law I'm not trying to detect I'm trying to understand cyber threat I'm trying to use intelligence in the FIB landscape to understand risk to the company or to determine which vulnerabilities I should patch first and thank so forth there's a little bit more processing an exploitation requirement and there's more analysis and triage and attention from frankly human analysts required so one level up from that is something like what you often hear to be a fusion center or a watch center or something like that you can kind of call it triage in the way you call it immediate action or something like that and so it's really a human helping to qualify helping to categorize helping to understand the intelligence that we're receiving what does it pertain to is it important is it not important is it maybe false positive or without what's the quality of what I'm receiving how likely is it it's going to be true but it's not deducting how the threat landscape is changing try to just understand the quality of the data category evidence so it gives you already the more means to take that intelligence to make sure that other state can have to whom it should be building so you can let's say curate intelligence for digests to human state olders you can improve the quality of your indicators by understanding context better and so forth that's important if you go higher up the maturity curve so it means like at a more time on the problem or analyst type available you get into get let's say a short attention spans and long attention spans so short attention spans are usually investigative in nature so they are I'm receiving something that really looks like it deserves us understanding what that particular thing is about so you take a particular thing and you start analyzing you start understanding it and you start to deduct your way back into which stakeholders need to understand what part of that so this is where you often see people perform an investigation draw conclusions and perform multi actions so out of that investigation calm you know new indicators you can use somewhere comes new understanding of tools and techniques used that you can reach your defenses against my club new understanding what security analysts really look for when they do security analysis or it might be something very strategic and indicates an upwards trend in something of risk towards the company but it's all I'm seeing something and unpacking what I'm receiving and an action in based on that when you spend way more time on a problem you are in a luxury position where you're really trying to track how threads change over time so as you go up you really start to be able to persist new knowledge coming in analyze it on a continuous basis spend dedicated time on processing and understanding what that intelligence means in the context of the knowledgebase you're trying to maintain which contains let's say conceptually at least the institutional knowledge of your organization on the cyber threat landscape it's not a collection of reports it's not a database of things it's your and your analysts are trying to understand how to continuous basis how new information is changing your perception of how activism works how a certain cybercrime campaign works how a certain apt campaign works that and so forth and by doing that on a continuous basis you're getting to be more in control and say and so the higher of the maturity you go here the more control you really have really the deeper the understanding you really have and more institutional the knowledge earliest in the organization because here you just passing through in a smart way right but the higher up you go you need more knowledge of the problem itself eventually you gain enough understanding to be in control of it and measure once you know versus what you do against it if that's sufficient or not again all very theoretical and conceptual but kind of good to understand so if you're building your thread Intel practice think about the maturity to which you want to start we build a maturity model for that and I'm sure there will be a white board session explaining that maturity model at some point highly recommend going into that when we so maybe it look let's continue this so if you look at this picture and it sounds like really the left side represents kind of need in a way right and need usually is infinite there's always people that want to have more information better information higher quality information while the right side how you judge the requirements to be how you collect that information and so forth and the resources you have available for analysis and production really are more your constraint and so it's a pretty hard balance to be able to balance the needs which are infinite and the business constraint of resources that you have and the measure in which you can perform this analysis is kind of the balance between the two and a good Intel practice is balanced in that way we often see if they'll practice is aiming for it's a full capability of the ear meaning I have 10 stakeholders with all these needs I have sources that produce again said a need to build an intelligence capability to translate all that information into institutional understanding and subsets of them or sent to my stakeholders to actually their security processes impossible into here you can't build on the capability but again that's explained in our cannot maturity model I don't don't I won't focus on it too much now but keep in mind that media is infinite constraint is finit so make sure this is balanced and you start with ones a the first few sources and you know let's say short attention analysis or a subset of stakeholders if you really nail that add more sources and more attention span of your analysts at more stakeholders there and kind of be very cautious in how you build up the cadence of your of your of your operations and in a way there's a few more points I want to touch before closing this off so one being let's see some wiping here let's go back to this central picture so they get a little bit more tangible and this is also where technologies like analytics tools threat intelligence platforms knowledge base is knowledge portals wiki's and so forth really come into play and so obviously being a cyber threatened mm for vendor we would highly recommend you so let's say you're maintaining a central knowledge base of these concepts and the measure at which you evolve this common understanding is directly proportionate to the sources that you have and directly proportionate to the time that your analysts spend in processing the information and giving it a place in your common understanding what we often see happening is that organization decouple the common understanding from the intelligence they produce or their stakeholders and it's ashame of resources frankly and so hidden in this knowledge base let's say the actors and the reports that you write and the indicators and the tools and the information about the tools obviously and the actor profiles that you have and so forth really contain most of the information that you need to provide to your stakeholders technology allows you to take subsets of this common picture and automatically produce the intelligence required for your stakeholders so your analysts when they write a report when they write an actor profile when they input information on an indicator they already include all the information required for the entire diversity of stakeholders automation and technology and maples would take subsets of that and produce the intelligence you need I'll give you a few examples so from this when it's a common understanding in this case let's say from a friend Intel platform or something to that extent you have this kind of world of knowledge available to you you might say something like all the indicators in this picture that are relevant in time so that are still relevant to that perspective then I or my machine or by hand listen or my sources judge to be of high value judge to be of high confidence and so forth I'd like to take a subset of those so you say well hold these let's say if there will be indicators like to take these indicators and I'd like to take them out of this picture and I'd like you to do that in a way where you're generating for me let's say respects board and you're generating for me a stick spaced or deep self based blacklist and have liked them to go every hour to my security operations team because they need to use it in their respective processes whereas all the reports that I have actually I want to take all those reports and I want to generate a digest out of that let's say me mill digest and I would produce it every day at 8 o'clock and morning and I want you to send it to distribution list that contains all the people that need to know what's going on in the threat landscape what has change to what's notable and maybe you can cut certain topical base things towards different stakeholders so let's say the more strategic reports that are tagged with more predictive or more trend based let's say you put them in an email digests and sent them to more executive business decision-makers if you have things that are more technical about new tools emerging methods emerging then you take that subset and you build a perhaps on a digest that you take a report streets or heavy report is sent as a separate email let's say out to your security analyst only then the only thing I'm trying to kind of the big here is then oftentimes we see people generate these Intel products separately and it's you know duplication of effort because usually you're curating or you're producing the same content but presented in a different way while if you maintain the central knowledge base properly if you maintain a central platform properly all these outputs automated fashion and so what you effectively do is you're decoupling all these stages as to make them a synchronous in a way right you're the coupling the ability for you to have a person work with stakeholders understand their requirements have another person or at another point in time and than other cadence you capture those requirements and work with your vendors or work with your sources to go out and get that information and the separate cadence they're automatically processing those things that can't be automatically processed another cadence your investigative things that demand investigation another cadence they're constantly tracking certain problems over time in another cadence you're exporting all these different things in different ways so it takes some design whether it ends up being is a much more let's say effective way and much more efficient way of building up a practice like this versus the more traditional intelligence cycle that says every once in a while we have a new table intelligence regarding session we send those to our places that collect on our behalf we have taken in information we analyzed a whole lot we produce intelligence based off of it for different stakeholders over time in duplicate we send it to them and we reevaluate and so forth and so forth so this is all stakeholders see the same thing all the time and every process that enables it is decoupled and then asynchronous way I'll end with practical let's say process outline and then I think it's enough for for this session but each of the things we touched on today so requirements management working with sources analyzing and producing how to obtain Intel requirements from your stakeholders will all focus on that in future whiteboard sessions well really zoom in on that but this is a little bit the bigger picture so what I wanted to draw out is kind of as you build up your Intel practice let's say what steps what processes do you really have and you really should have so one thing you'll recognize is she'll start with the ability to have sources and new source management right you have to obtain information from a open source from the communities you should be part of your industry specific or your country specific and so forth communities and maybe if you have that need because everybody usually has need but if you have the constraint and resources available that you might also purchase commercial feeds or work with parties that produce intelligence on your behalf very specifically towards you but it also means you have a large diversity of sources which means you have to do some level of data management to do some level of normalization you have to do some level of processing as to allow you to access it in a unified way right in a system or something else usually what you also want to do and luckily technology allows you to do that these days is add context do it context meaning if you correlate things together there in context of each other or you can enrich information with other sources like you have a new report that comes out from bist and you have a virus total subscription technology can help you to date that event and enrich it with information for virustotal and so the moment you want to make a judgement the moment you want a human to look at it it's putting context of all the information you have available to yourself and so in the most let's say least mature situation we looked at before you're fully automating what happens next and so you set some sort of policy under what conditions what part of that information goes where you produce the intelligence in an automated way and so usually in automation it's something like exporting it in some sort of way and then you're sending it to either your control stack lock-based detection network based prevention endpoint based detection application level things and or offensive worth or controlling process of sent it to your miss manager sent it to your entity or you're exporting information automatically to two humans and that's where they're consuming reports or something like that but as we described it's very hard to be able to just have this because the measure in which your policy can pick up information and know where to sent what and what cadence with what quality is limited by the automatic processing capability that you might have and so what automation can bring you is limited to what a machine can judge in their behalf right so understanding based on what attributes of information or context of information you judge something to have to go to security control landscape or to your downstream human consumers is fairly limited so for example if if you have no context to an indicator no indication of its maliciousness you simply obtained it from some random blacklist it's going to be very hard for you to judge that use this for prevention should I use this for detection can I safely deploy it to an endpoint or not and so forth so sometimes you simply need that you would in our view many times you simply need a union and so there's some measure of triaging you need to do in some measure of quality assurance that you need to do it so from all the information that passes through you form indicators the tools that TTP's the actors to reports to PDFs that are extracted from which indicators and so forth there's a part that lacks qualification in which case you know it's going to have to go through some sort of triage process you as an analyst need to go through things that aren't qualified and make sure they are qualified qualification means things like isn't malicious yes or no one - what's degree and what time frame is that relevant what topic does it relate to do I have information in my knowledge base that it already relates to and so forth and support but it might also have enough qualification so that you understand you want to pay some attention to it in any case both of those cases need to go into some sort of triage process and so by adding more information to the data the ability for you to determine what needs to go where and what cadence significantly goes up because the quality of your data is going up but usually that's still not enough because you're still passing through information rather than institutionally understanding what it means to you so this is where we get into the fun part of things and there's really two Big Wednesday levels there that we talked about before it was a short attention span I'll start with the short attention span so this is really case based investigative work right so information comes into my company from all the sources that I have it might or might not have already immediately actions it doesn't really matter in mind or might not have already passed let's say first level of triage for qualification I know that for some reason based on of many different attributes it correlates to an actor that I care about or it's about a topic that I care about or it was shared with me TLP rented which I know I want to read it in my board comes from a supplier that I really really value all those things might contribute to you thinking I need to start some investigation on that very specific very specific event for our specific PDF from my side partners very specific a case that was pushed to me from Fox ite who who knows so you work a space then you spend a time about a period investigating what that means to you and you bring the knowledge back into this giant knowledge base a report at the end of it or you add the knowledge base components that speak to new information you've discovered The Associated campaign or additional indicators or new tools that might be emerging or something like that based on that problem but it's case they started to vend based it's a small topic that you expand your knowledge on and enrich or let's say giant pool of knowledge for and exactly the same there that added information goes back into the giant pool their ability to disseminate to a certain place and decide what goes where it goes up and the quality of what you're saying that goes up even more but there's a stage after that step really a good name for it you can call it proactive research you can call it target tracking you can call it really whatever you like I'm going to go with with with target tracking simply because that's the word I'm using my career and it means something like I'm tracking certain sets of problems over time for example I'm tracking hacktivism over time I'm tracking an apt group over time I'm tracking some other thing that I care about over time and I'm evaluating all the information and I'm receiving as to understand how the problem is changing and so it's very different from case based working because it's based on the event itself and you unpack the event whereas target based tracking doesn't start with the event it starts really with the problem that you're tracking and so target tracking means that on a continuous basis you're thinking about how do I let's say did the candle of questions in the pool of data that I have so that whatever sticks there is something I can use to evolve the hypotheses I have around the problem that I'm tracking and so let's say by doing that you have a continuous picture on how things that you care about change over time of course that means to the highest degree you're tracking how things evolve over time it means to the highest degree that the requirements that you have are being met because you're constantly evaluating the information that you have against the problems that you're tracking and therefore the quality of the information you have goes up to let's say the maximum age then and your ability to produce quality intelligence towards your security controls injury your mistake holders that goes up as well well it also allows you to do is you kind of go up in the in the in the maturity there is judge the quality of your sources right because if you're processing the multitude of sources but you're not relating it back to is it really changing by standing of a problem that I care about can you really judge the quality of your source maybe there's some things you can judge like to what extent the day overlap or to what extent do they contain contextual information or so what extent am I seeing depictions based in my control stack and those are relevant things to qualify sources for but the best way to qualify sources is to be able to understand okay so what extent has it really changed my understanding of something that I care about because if most things that you're processing here are about something that you don't care about what why have the sources right and so when you when you would draw out let's say a process architecture of a thread Intel team you can start to think about it a little bit like this you can start to think about the requirements for automated capabilities for a level one triaging qualification capabilities and for more investigative and continuous tracking capabilities and then peripheral to this you have all the other capabilities that you need to understand your needs or your stakeholders one of their requirements are they happy with what they're consuming and understand your constraints right who are your sources actively managed in providing them feedback to what extent can you qualify what they send you it's a 410 support so let's say almost wrapping it up I'm gonna give you the preview of what's next because this is a lot of information let's say the throw on you and it's very theoretical and very conceptual as well and so what we've done I think I think I cues we've taken this kind of wing of thinking that we've said if you want to make this actionable in your organization you're gonna need at least two three three things right you're gonna at least need some sort of some sort of maturity model because the maturity model tells you where am i today across different access access like my ability to understand requirements my ability to analyze the awareness in my company the understanding and support of my executives to budget whatever those things are and how do I go from the place I am today to a step that is in the time that I have an achievable step to get towards I want to have a higher level of maturity I want to connect more sources I want to serve a larger diversity of stakeholders for example what a transition from just providing indicators to the stock to providing executive reporting and so forth and so forth but as they say that's one thing you need to understand is how do you understand where you are and then how do you let's say judge where best to go from there but in order to do that you need some sort of capability model and the capability model is really a Chinese menu in a way of things to choose from so in the world of spirit management in the world of analysis and production in the world of technology neighborhoods what are all the specific capabilities you could be building in order to accomplish a transition from maturity a for maturity fee and so this is one thing we're going to be talking about in future series the capability model is another thing to talk about the division series and the last thing we're going to be talking about is the actual instead of operating procedures any actual process is a very cool one is actually our own Intel team works in an agile way to have an agile implementation of this capability model right so these are very much around if I'm trying to do requirements management if I'm trying to do triage as we said if I'm trying to do qualification if I'm trying to have automation and enrichment in context creation but what does it really look like right and so this is what the actual process steps so this is how you do that for the technical architecture that looks like it so combined with those two things you know where you are you know where you need to go you know the Chinese menu of capabilities you can choose from to get there and you would know how to actually build those processes and systems to obtain their capability and our Academy can actually help you with that as well in any case hope is was helpful as a first introduction to what is it that Intel practice and what does it really mean in the context of the current day thanks for listening so if you like the content cut to kick you Academy is the umbrella in which we publish these things subscribe to the channel check out I think I keep I come for more and and provide some feedback as well because we walk through them all to the point where you [Music] | EclecticIQ | UCIDcVSjblTkz8XteykSIVjg | 2018-06-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,875 | 38,881 |
gRh75BDgppU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRh75BDgppU | Color Coding Your Man Pages - Linux - Shell Script - BASH | well let's have a quick look at a man page here i'll say man bash how about that hey look at this oh you know this might be nice if we color code it let's do that so quit out of that hitting q and we're going to need a program uh called most uh if it's not installed let's do sudo aptitude or apt-get if you're on ubuntu or use whatever package manager you have on your system or prefer and we'll say install most it should ask for your password because hopefully you don't allow just randomly anybody to install software on your computer and once it's download and installed now we still have to you know if we go back into our man page it's not color coded we can say export and in all capital p a g e r pager equals and we'll say most and if we enter now and we go back into our man page we now have some color coding going on some nice little red keywords all highlighted there so if we were to and i'm using terminator here so i'm going to split my screen if i man bash again down here oh it's not color coded but it's color coded up here what's going on with that well we haven't exported the pager variable in this terminal so how do we set it up so that we can don't have to export it every single time well as we've talked in the past in your home directory there should be and if there's not you can create a file called dot bash rc now if you're un familiar with unix-based systems such as linux any file that starts or folder that starts with a period is a hidden file and lots of times these are configuration files so real quick i'm going to use vim as my text editor but you can use whatever text error you want i'm going to say myhomedirectory.bashrc i don't have anything in my bashrc file but you may depending on your operating system and what i'm going to say in here is our export pager remember it's all capital equals most now that's saved that's a little script that will run every time you start up a new bash session so we still have are highlighted up here but if i open up a new window such as this one here and i man bash we now have color coding without having to do that export every single time it will automatically run every time we start a new session and that's for all man files so i can man pv and you can see that it's highlighted we can also man i don't know time out i'm just thinking of programs i've just recently done videos on so that's it i hope you found this useful once again if we uh let's see i'll just cat it out dot rc in my home directory the command is export capital pager equals and then quotations most most is the program that we installed at the beginning and uh you can either run that manually each time or put in your bashrc file and your man files will be color coded keywords will be highlighted uh by default in red i'm sure there's probably a way to change that but i don't know off the top of my head if you enjoyed this tutorial found it useful i have plenty of tutorials over at my site filmsbychris.com that's chris with the k there should be a link in the description if you enjoy this tutorial and you enjoy my other tutorials find them useful and want to help support my site keep these tutorials coming there is a donate button on my website and i would appreciate a donation if you have the ability to donate also um if you have any questions do not put them in the comments on the youtube channel that is a great way to not get your questions answered you can comment on youtube videos if you want if you have something to say but if you have a question please visit filmsbychris.com forward slash irc there should be a link to that in the description as well it's an irc channel that i commonly hang out in there's also a bunch of other very helpful people that hang out in there fairly regularly feel free to come in there and ask questions now also don't think that you're necessarily going to get an answer right away if we are there talking you will get your answered question question answered hopefully pretty fast but where people with things to do other than answer your questions so don't come in answer a question and leave right after asking the question ask a question and wait for an answer if people start talking and they don't answer your question ask again while people are talking hopefully you'll get an answer but it may not be immediately also feel free to hang out in there all the time there are some people who are constantly in there very helpful it's a great way for you to learn new stuff from what people are talking about and from people asking questions and getting them answered and as you learn hopefully you can share what you learn with other people as they ask questions i mean that's what open source is about it's about improving technology learning about technology and helping one another do that so i thank you for watching once again i hope that you have a great day you | Kris Occhipinti | UCf93fPKwotph47H3_KDcRyg | 2012-08-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 950 | 4,889 |
gZEDlVxFVVE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZEDlVxFVVE | THE KEY TO MIDNIGHT, by Dean Koontz - Retro Review | hello everybody here welcome back to another retro book review today we are back on that Dean Koontz [ __ ] with the key to midnight this was originally written under the Leigh Leigh Leigh Nichols name is it late or is it lead I never know it's Ellie I gah let's just say Leigh Nichols but this one was originally 30,000 words longer if you are a writer or you know manuscript format that's usually about a hundred pages of finished material and then he cut he cut that much and then he went back and added another five thousand to it one of the things that I remember most vividly about this book is wanting it to be over I cannot imagine that this already four hundred and sixteen seventeen eighteen nineteen 420 page novel I cannot imagine this being a 500 page novel that is batshit crazy to me another couple things that I remember very vividly about this one is jazz I also recall that in one of my other reviews what was it I think for the vision something like that I mentioned how you you can listen to jazz while reading Dean Koontz and it always seems to fit Dean Koontz himself is a jazz fan a big band era fan so most of his stuff has jazz in some way shape or form it's but it's not as well done as in something like that haruki murakami type of way where he's always talking about music whether it be old classic rock or jazz or blues or whatever it might be when he does it with Dean Koontz it's more of an air pretension it's like hey I know these fancy things and now you do too which brings me to another thing that I mentioned in my written review which I'll link down there in the doobly-doo King kinks yeah kinks of course kinks why not Koontz Koontz goes on and on about food in this one there's the whole sections about dishes and that are named French its French cuisine and he's talking about these things I think one of them is duck in prune sauce but it's written in in French so if you don't know French you have no idea what he's talking about and this book way back in the way back was originally published in 1975 this version it was republished in 1995 1995 is still before Google and all that stuff or you know the majority of the internet I remember the internet coming into I remember I remember the internet about 97 98 I could be completely wrong but that's about the time I remember first having AOL and beer uber so that even if it read to republish this in 1995 imagine not knowing French imagine not knowing what the hell he's talking about and him going on and with this foodie nonsense and you having absolutely no idea what he's talking about because the memes of these dishes are in French he never goes back and lets you know you know what these dishes are now if there are popular dishes that I that I don't know it's still ruined the read for me as a reader well that that's not the only thing that ruined it for me but it's just one of those things that I didn't know so I can't enjoy that aspect of the book this one also occurs in Japan so that one kind of threw me because Dean Koontz usually writes about America not only that but he also writes about Southern California normally the Newport Beach area that's usually where his books are located somewhere around there anyway so it's usually Southern California with the book and Villa plants and all that nonsense this one has a blonde love interest lead character I remember that much it doesn't have any dogs as far as the Koontz checklist is concerned it has the typical psycho killer that is also handsome it takes off some other things as far as the Coons checklist is concerned if you want to read my review I will link down there in the doobly-doo and other than that I can't remember a damn thing about this book the lean Nicholls name I remember really really enjoying when I was younger like shadow fires this one the key the midnight I remember vaguely vaguely from liking the house of thunder but I'm reading that one right now with Deeley and that one spoiler alert probably the worst Dean Koontz book I've ever read I can't believe that I was just telling her tonight I can't believe that the same person that wrote that book wrote phantoms or Watchers or lightning or the bad place or dark fall or any know any number of his good books but with the key to midnight is another one of those and I don't remember anything about the actual plot I know it happens in Japan I know there's a lot of fluff there's a lot of buildup and lean Nichols name seems like the type of a pen name where he tried to be a little more literary he tried not to just have the punchy dialogue the punchy narrative he tried to be a little deeper than normal and it didn't really work too well because he's not that kind of writer I don't think he does that very well whereas you know like a Stephen King can go off on a tangent about you know someone sits the family history or whatever and he makes it entertaining with Dean Koontz it just always feels like he's cut he's going through the motions like he's just trying to trying to fill in you know a word count which is funny because he cut thirty thousand words and then added another five thousand words back to it um this era of Stephen is not stinking this era Dean Koontz is odd also because it's around the time that he started pumping out the rewrites so you had all of his normal stuff coming out in hardcover you had phantoms you had midnight yet all these things coming out on its own and then you had these odd paperback book also you had the mask which was in the own West book you had let's see here the funhouse which oddly it was a paperback only oddly enough about the funhouse is we'll talk about this more when we get there that was actually a movie that he wrote I think he wrote the screenplay for under another name but I'll talk about that when we get to when we get to that review the last time I tried to read the funhouse it was a DNF but did not finish and I don't know if me and Delia are gonna get back to it again this time or not or if we're just gonna call it quits next up on our while we're reading the house of thunder right now but next up after that one is one of my all-time favorite Dean Koontz books and that's phantoms so you're getting at least one more negative review from me unless somehow there at the end the house of thunder turns into an epic read which I highly highly doubt but I've been surprised before so you're getting one more negative review before hopefully we get into the fun stuff again but have you read the key to midnight if you have or you just want to talk talk trash or talk good stuff about being comes down there in the comments below please do but until next time I have Bini yuvan you there's been another Dean Koontz review I'll talk to you guys later bye bye | Edward Lorn | UCn3bPNog-8zWeen14diT-IA | 2019-06-27 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,309 | 6,789 |
7JCReOQDeN8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7JCReOQDeN8 | POINT BLANK INDONESIA - LUXVILLE 2022 | [Music] foreign mission fail oh [Music] fire in the hole foreign [Music] foreign has been planted headshot okay let's go [Music] fire in the hole foreign [Music] [Applause] foreign has been planted foreign exploded Mission success let's go foreign fire in the hole [Applause] go go go this bomb has been planted [Music] all right let's move out fire in the hole foreign fire in the hole [Music] foreign [Music] success okay let's go foreign [Music] fire in the hole [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] foreign has been planted bomb defused mission fail fire in the hole [Applause] fire in the hole fire in the hole fire in the hole foreign [Music] fire in the hole fire in the hole [Music] fire in the hole foreign [Music] the bomb has been planted Mission success fire in the hole [Music] fire in the hole fire in the hole fire in the hole fire in the hole okay let's go in the hole fire in the hole fire in the hole [Applause] [Music] red team win [Music] | YTB_LINBILI97_CH | UCxu38QmkeWMllVoabGV9OGA | 2022-09-18 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 174 | 956 |
Zn9r0WDBk9s | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zn9r0WDBk9s | Jennifer Stagg: The Epigenetic Role of Phytonutrients on Human Health Trajectory | SNC 2018 | so I'm so excited to be here this year is my first year here I am not that far away about an hour's drive in I live in West Hartford Connecticut my practice is in Avon so a little bit about my background I started out in a bachelor science program in nutritional biochemistry and I thought I wanted to continue to pursue that so I went to the University of Iowa and I was in a ph.d program and biochemistry there but my interest started to change so I realized one late night in the lab that I didn't see my future 12 o'clock at night checking a chromatography column and I thought I would better serve by working directly with people but obviously with my background I knew the importance of nutrition and so I did want to be in the health care realm and explored my opportunities and naturopathic medicine was a perfect fit for me so I went to Bastyr University which is in Seattle and yep you did - yay any more natural paths here we just got to the two of us okay we're usually a small group let me just say and I I do speak and educate health care providers around the country and it's usually a pretty diverse group but there's not a lot of n DS so in the state of Connecticut and now in Massachusetts as well it depends on the state you live in naturopathic doctors may not even have a license in your state so in Connecticut we work as specialists we accept insurance we can order diagnostic testing we just have a different view on health so we the core of what we do is bring kind of the fundamentals into place and so food as medicine is at the core of what naturopathic doctors believe and there are pillars of medicine so in our practice we have a number of naturopathic physicians my as a chiropractor and trained acupuncturist and then we also have a gynecologist who specializes in integrative women's health so but today I'm going to talk to you about epigenetics and so with my background in biochemistry and then learning the traditional naturopathic medicine the two are actually a very good fit so what the science that's emerging around epigenetics which I'm going to explain further really validates the traditional methods that naturopathic physicians have practiced for over 100 years like why food why herbs work so well and what is happening now is that there's a what I would call a paradigm shift and so the disease crisis in the United States the healthcare crisis and why is a disease crisis is because we're so focused on chronic disease and finding cures to diseases when we have the answers and they're focusing on what promotes health and now we're starting to see this sort of sea change in the scientific community where we're looking at genes that are related to resilience and so what factors in our lifestyle actually affect you know which genes get turned on and off which I'll explain a little bit further but basically the this paradigm shift is of we're in the middle of it very much at the leading edge of it middle leading early middle and then I also want to talk about the specific components in our food that impact our genes and relate to some of these big processes that are happening in disease and dysfunction like oxidative stress and inflammation so I ended up a couple of years ago writing a book called unzip your jeans it's found in the health section not in a racy area of the bookstore basically this is this is the premise that I wrote the book basically helping us that the emerging science that we're in the middle of this transformation in health care and that the choices we make in our entire lifestyle I know we're focused on nutrition here and I had a moment to pop in at Ellen Palmer's talked a little just before and I know there were some questions about energy and emotion and spirit and that does affect our DNA as well I'll point that out a little bit but as this is a soil and nutrition conference we're very focused on nutrition but those aspects are also very critical in DNA expression so a little bit about genomics so in my clinical practice we I started using what's called genomic testing a couple of years back and basically with when we think about genomics it's actually the study of analyzing and sequencing entire the entire genome and that carries all of our DNA in a single cell but studying that variability within it which is what what why we're unique helps us to better tailor what we call a treatment plan or a health plan for a patient and so in doing this this is a whole system of medicine now categorized as precision medicine in healthcare now when you hear a lot about precision medicine if you hear it in the news a lot of times they're talking about precision pharmaceuticals and not necessarily precision healthcare so again it's back to that disease care but what we think about when we think about precision healthcare true health care is looking beyond disease and do you know catching things early when it's more of an adjustable in state also at Mount Sinai there's actually a project that's been going out for a number of years now I submit a DNA for this project and it's a project where they're studying resilience genes so you I'm sure you know people in your life and maybe you're one of them but there are people who don't necessarily make great choices all their choices are not great yet they are lively and healthy and they're ninety-five and they're without disease and so these people are what we can call resilient and so studying their DNA can help us to learn more about what kind of sets off a cascade of reactions or manifestations that lead to a dysfunctional metabolic state even more important and this is what I'm going to talk about more in this particular talk is the concept of being able to turn on and off your genes and so although we're born with a set DNA a set code or book of life how you live influences that way more than the genes you were given so this is the power of nutrition when you every choice you make mind matter how you move your body this is affecting you on a deep level at the level of your DNA so sometimes you'll hear this concept of what's called a snip an SNP and so these are the genes that we're talking about that get turned on and off so this is something called a single nucleotide polymorphism what this is is a just a single nucleotide chain in the gene this is what makes us unique so 99% of our genes are the same and then that variability that results in the pheno to when you look around the room of how people are different it's the spaces between genes that produces that variability and that's those those one nucleotide changes now those changes can then also be affected by your lifestyle choices and I'll get into that a minute so this is basically a summary of what I just said about there are these sections that code for a gene with in those sections that those when it when a snip occurs in those genes that's usually when we see more serious health consequences and the spaces between the genes is where you would see less of a health consequence so these changes these not changes or variations we don't like to call them mutations although you'll be you'll hear about them called mutations I don't know if anyone's ever heard of the MTHFR that's probably the most commonly heard of snip and it'll often be referred to as a mutation but really it's just variation in the gene so when I'm thinking about using genetic testing that will just do a saliva test and have an analysis of certain genes depending on what we're trying to target what that does for us in clinical practice is it remove some of this guesswork it saves the patient time and money because we can figure things out more quickly and it can help us formulate a more effective program now what's interesting about genomic testing when we think about wellness so if a patient comes to me and has a strong family history of heart disease we can do a series of gene tests and look at whether they've inherited some of those genes that elevate their risk because we don't know the you know we just have a family risk but now we can actually document objectively whether you've inherited some of those genes now even if you have inherited those genes you can turn them off so it does not mean that now you're destined to go on and develop type 2 diabetes to have early onset heart disease what we find and there are many different scientific studies that validate this is that first of all people who have had genomic testing and find out like there's something called the obesity gene if you find out you have the obesity gene and I routinely see this in my practice and this person sitting in front of me and they're not obese first of all so why is that it's because they've probably worked hard at their lifestyle and they eat well they exercise they meant to minimize stress responses but when people find out that they have what's billed as the fat gene there are multiple European studies showing that they end up being healthier as a result of that so now they're like oh I've got this gene I better take care of myself and they end up making better lifestyle choices so this is powering what we call their epic epic no this is a great example of where we use that where we start to tie together nutrition and genomics genomic testing and I'm gonna stop talking about genomic testing in a minute I promise but this is where we tie that nutrition together so there's a particular snip with a couple of these snips the FTO is that fat gene that I've talked about there's also one called mc4r these snips also predispose to type 2 diabetes and so no so this was a large-scale study 7,000 subjects so that's really big for a clinical study and this was published in a really well recognized Journal and the patients they put basically put them on a Mediterranean diet so that's characterized by a particular ratio of macronutrients so a little bit higher fat but those fats are gonna come mostly from plant sources olive oil is key in the Mediterranean diet and then of course there's a rich amount of phytonutrients coming in as well because now we're talking about legumes fruits and vegetables whole grains all you know dense in phytonutrients and the people who follow the Mediterranean diet basically turned off that gene so their risk goes away completely so if I have patients who come in and they're pre-diabetic already or they have a higher risk family at risk then this is a type of test that I would think about using and then recommending a Mediterranean diet as a result of that so epigenetics this technically you know the definition is sort of a way to view it is just how the environment affects the genome so what happens is your DNA will get chemically transformed so the DNA this is how it can be actually measured so science scientific studies will measure something called methylation as one of the primary chemical processes that basically marked the DNA or modifies it and so depending on the cell type and whether it's a normal cell or an abnormal self as cancer cell whether that particular cell is methylated it can maybe hyper methylated or hypo methylated then that has an effect of either turning that gene on or off so something like a tumor suppressor gene so this would be a gene that codes for cells that go around and Patrol for cancer cells like and basically put them through Apatow s'ti then your body will kill those aberrant cells if the gene is turned off or that you have less control your body is not patrolling as well anymore and that isn't affected by what how you live green tea is a great example of that green tea turns on tumor suppressor cells turns on the gene for them there's some other chemical processes you'll read about sometimes methylation is one of the primary ones as I said a set elation and histone modification are also two other processes that result in DNA modification that would be in that category of epigenetics now what's interesting about epigenetics so this is happening in our bodies your offspring can inherit those marks so I'll talk about this also this can actually be passed on through successive generations so epigenetic changes are heritable as well so there are a number of studies on things like the Holocaust the Dutch famine and people who have been through significant stressful physical stressors mental stressors that gets passed out so you'll see there are articles written about this and it's basically about heritable emotional trauma passed down through successive generations and we see that playing out even with physical symptoms so originally some of these landmark studies that came out prior to that they were thinking offspring of survivors of the Holocaust had certain health outcomes that were poor compared to the rest of the population and they thought it was just you know thinking about being a survivor of the Holocaust you obviously have a lot of emotional trauma and maybe that was that nature versus nurture piece and so maybe the connection they made with their children as a result of that was attributable to higher rates of anxiety or heart disease even but it turns out it was more so genetic based that those Mercs on the DNA from that trauma is passed on to the offspring and now we have a nature issue instead of just purely nurture and we also I haven't seen any Studies on this but I suspect that this is true of african-americans who have higher rates of hypertension and heart disease and diabetes if you think about what has happened through successive generations I think that that is probably one of the primary reasons that they have higher rates of these chronic disease outcomes so just to summarize some of the things stress I put way up there I know again we're at a nutrition conference but you can't underestimate the effect of what stress does to the body and I see this all the time I see patients who are eating right they're eating good quality food they're exercising that you're doing everything seemingly correct they're getting enough sleep they're avoiding chemicals and how are they dealing with stress or what's happening in their life that makes a huge difference in their DNA no they're not they're not right I don't think I have not yet to find a ranking on that so genetics what you end up seeing and you know when a clinician is seeing a patient what we see in front of us we have to recognize that that's a blend of genetics some of this variability but also lifestyle so what their current health status is what their past medical history is what types of surgeries they've had what types of trauma they've had in their life but of course then diet exercise sleep is also really critical and by making these positive lifestyle training changes you can actually impact your phenotype like what you're seeing in terms of your metabolic state so now I'm going to focus more on nutrition and this slide demonstrates how you know we know people should be eating Commendation is five to seven servings of fruits and vegetables so here's the slide looking at vegetable intake the green is how many people are meted not meeting that guideline there below the recommendations so this this like scary statistics in my opinion so you've got it's divided into age groups and then male and female I'm in total on the bottom so essentially what you see here to summarize it is that ninety percent of the UN population in the United States doesn't meet the recommended daily vegetable intake really got ten percent of people actually eating five to seven servings of fruits and vegetables a day and then what is the quality right what's the quality of those foods that they're eating so first of all it's the the challenge is getting people to actually eat those foods so this is how bad it is out there okay and then you have the challenge of poor food quality here's another slide that looks a little deeper in there so this is focusing on children aged 2 to 19 and this slide is vegetable intake and so any vegetable looks like you know basically everyone's getting some sort of vegetable but what I want you to know is that the USDA includes french fries as vegetables they include ketchup as vegetables yeah the juice is considered a fruit so that's not on this slide I'm going to show you for in a second so now when you start to look in here a little deeper dark green leafy vegetables okay so now it doesn't look as good you see that's that next slide right here dark green leafy vegetables or Brep broccoli all of our yummy greens are right here red and orange so ketchup is going to be in here though it's starchy you got your french fries and or potatoes carrots and then this is just other then the issue with fruits so whoops as you can see you know younger kids are eating fruits and then you know they start to become teenagers and it starts to drop off fruit juice is actually on this line so over here you see younger kids are drinking fruit juice and then they stop drinking fruit juice but what do they start drinking soda and then citrus melons and berries are right here packed with phytonutrients but low intake then we got other fruits up here so interestingly as I said 10% of the population is meeting guidelines for five to seven fruits of vegetables just increasing by one serving actually has a 5% reduction in risk of total Kalla cause mortality so by just going up one vegetable it actually does make a difference of you as a clinician take your patient from eating one serving of fruit to two you've just gotten them 5% reduction in all cause mortality like that's such a simple simple intervention but it's interesting how it's interesting how this data kind of levels off at five so I looked exactly deep into this particular outcome but a levels off at five but I can't imagine this is just all cause mortality we're not talking about morbidity here and I think the statistics would look a lot different when it comes to morbidity because we know that that concept I don't if anyone's familiar with the term compression of morbidity so that means that you get sick towards the end of your life is when you basically become kind of like it the disease process is really compressed so you get sick and die at the end of your life as opposed to what a lot of Americans are experiencing that they are sick for twenty to thirty years before the end of their life and that's where the dramatic health costs are with what's accounting for the health crisis the health care crisis okay so this is an interesting topic I want to talk about that points out the importance of how foods are epigenetic modifiers so you'll all agree sugar too much processed sugars bad okay we know that that's bad that's a statistic and of course we all here eat low carbs you shouldn't be eating carbs I think that people should eat whole grains I've written a couple of articles about that there's some nice studies that show that there is improved outcomes when people eat whole grains because whole grains have these bioactive compounds that are not found in other foods so it's really important to have that in your diet so this is a study about blackstrap molasses so blackstrap molasses is this has the same amount of sugar content as white sugar so gram for gram it has the same amount so it has four grams per teaspoon however what blackstrap molasses also has is all the junk that the sugar industry says it's like we just want the waste sugar and all these a big class of what's called polyphenols or in that gives it that rich flavor that black component there's a lot of nutrition in there so this is an animal study where they gave mice or rats maybe I think it was a rat study they gave them both a high-fat diet and then in one of the groups they actually added on gave them extra sugar in the form of molasses so you would think that group would fare poorly right because you're just going to give them some extra sugar and calories so if you boot like if you think calories in calories out is the full explanation this study of disproves that and so what they saw was that the group on the molasses supplement ended up having improved gene expression for a bunch of biomarkers of energy metabolism and they lost weight so you get gave them sugar and they extra sugar and they last week now what they're not giving them is white sugar I'd like to see that study done but they didn't do that but what we saw was that they also had decreased levels of a hormone called leptin which has to do with hormone that metal ISM another great epigenetic modifier that there's a lot of data on is chocolate and so chocolate also has a lot of those polyphenols in there so this was a spanish study were done in humans that they were given chocolate and measured when i talked about methylation status so this is the epigenetic modification in white blood cells they were able to measure a favorable pattern in this case of hypo methylation so in white blood cells low methylation status is an advantage now interestingly people in that study who had the snips the variation who had genes that were variable for MTHFR and mt RR which has to do with b12 they didn't have as pronounced an effect so this is why you can start to see variation in these studies and i would propose also which a lot of my colleagues have is that a lot of times when you're reading research articles and there's a lot of data that directly conflicts a previous study you always want to think about what was the subject pool so think about how much genetic variability and you've got a group of subjects that are more prone to have a particular genetic variant than that might be what skewing the study results this slide I think is fascinating so it was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and while we're on the topic of chocolate I wanted to show that so this is really interesting so this is annual per capita chocolate consumption and the number of Nobel laureates per ten million in the population so if you were to look at this correlation data you would think we should just start eBay up here so but it is really fascinating so look at Switzerland and there you see a bunch of these two European countries that are heavy heavier chocolate consumers and like things like Ireland the population of Ireland compared to the United States and look at all these Nobel laureates and all of these countries really from a populated you know this is per ten million but it's really fascinating and then you see like China is down at the bottom so yeah a great slide for anyone in the chocolate industry I would say eight then what oh yeah yes because it's a core it's a correlation but it was interesting that they published that and a New England Journal of Medicine yes no there yes I know yes so I was exactly right exactly so that's why I was saying this would be a great slide that you can just take out of context in as a chocolate manufacturer so other I've already mentioned some dietary epigenetic modifiers green tea EGCG components specifically has had a lot of study that shows hyper methylated DNA playing a role in affecting tumor suppressor genes coffee also has quite a bit of research looking at the ability to inhibit DNA methylation so that hypo methylation pattern and then tumeric also now this is just a short list but these are some of the more widely published commonly more commonly used obviously tea and coffee tea is the second most drank beverage in the world so next to water if we think globally tea is consumed as the second most strength beverage and then a lot tremendous amount of research on tumeric and components within tumeric curcumin different sorts of curcumin oyd what effect that has on human health so this was an article you so some of the things that impact our health again is stress so if we think about our stress response currently so I like to use this slide because it talks about you know that our response to stress is pro-inflammatory so if we think about how why we had this fight-or-flight spot in response to begin with so we think historically we're trying to get away from a physical threat a predator or you know we're in the hunter as a hunter-gatherer and so we might get injured and we need inflammation to help us heal that wound okay so this this is why those immune response genes that are pro-inflammatory it makes sense that they would get turned on and the problem with that though in our current environment of not a you know a impair or social threats our current stress weird we don't need inflammation to help us heal from psychological stress so that inflammation that is prolonged ends up lowering that host response and lowering our survival so oxidative these these are both thought to be very much interdependent so inflammatory cells will release large amounts of what are called reactive oxygen species and it's this excess of reactive oxidant species that can initiate this cascade of signaling that leads to the genetic expression of these inflammatory mediators so and and then we and the reason we need those are our OS compounds as we need them for our immune system those help us kill microorganisms it helps us with Apatow so the process of answer cells and there was this kind of I don't know thought to be somewhat strange hypothesis from Watson of Watson and Crick that thought that chronic disease was caused by failure to generate sufficient reactive oxygen species so he was kind of like at the other end of the scenario but what does chronic inflammation do so now we start to think about all of these different chronic disease pathways you know what as a naturopathic doctor we see a lot of in practice we deal mostly with chronic disease and at the core of that is inflammation so you you know this is well known even osteoporosis is recategorize as not a deficiency state of calcium it's more an inflammatory disorder so then there's this particular compound called NF kappa-b an NF kappa-b you'll see many studies about various herbs various different phytochemicals that impacts NF kappa-b expression so I'm just putting that out there that if you're reading data or you're being presented with information that is talking about something being NF kappa-b suppressive or an inhibitor that is important because that is kind of like the main player in inflammation it's kind of how you would want to think about that hydrogen peroxide which is something that would be a reactive oxygen species that activates in a cap of 8 and then antioxidants so now I'm trying to get make the link between food antioxidants block NF kappa-b so I feel like in the 80s and through maybe the mid-90s antioxidants were hot stuff and now not so much anymore but I want to point out that antioxidants are under-recognized I would say and just the kind of the dietary pattern of most Americans would also make them very low in oxidant antioxidant compounds in terms of their intake so when we think about these bioactive components that are found in plants they do have broad effects so they are direct antioxidants so that means that they have the ability to scavenge free radicals but they also act as indirect antioxidants so this is where they're enhancing these endogenous antioxidant systems they have the ability to up regulate enzymes and this can happen through a variety of different mechanisms but this is goes back to epigenetics that these compounds not only act as a direct antioxidant now as the science is evolving more it up regulates the ability of your DNA to produce these compounds that actually have an effect on the oxidative pathways this slide is pointing out some of the compounds that are involved in another pathway called nerve 2 so this is the key antioxidant pathway so if you NF kappa-b is your inflammation pathway and then you'll also hear about something called nerf 2 and nerf 2 is definitely works on a DNA level it's a transcription factor and it activates this promoter secrets that up regulates our antioxidant defense mechanism and also impacts our detox genes so some of the more commonly studied phytochemicals I've listed there sulforaphane would be coming from like broccoli stems resveratrol grapes and then even herbs like ashwagandha have that effect as well quercetin is a really important component found in onions found in apples I mean you can get pure extracts of quercetin but this is something found ubiquitous in nature as well obviously it's extracted from nature and concentrate it but elderberry this is a great time of year where people are very familiar with elderberry hopefully but elderberry has strong antiviral compounds in there but it also contains quercetin the other another main component in many plants are the Phenom league content of plants and so you'll see a number of studies showing how the when they look at pull out the total amount of phenols in particular parts of plants it has this direct correlation to the level of antioxidant activity and that is thought to happen through a genetic mechanism as well seems to be multifactorial or multi-process but red leaf from Swiss chard has a higher level of these and I'm not dissing any parts of the plant just let me know cuz I'm just talking directly about the antioxidant activity so very high in the red leaf component weight least a little less this is just for for phenols that can scavenge free radicals and then the stems increasingly lower sorry what's that you don't get no don't eat the sins no no I'm saying even eat the whole plant cuz it the whole the plant and I've been talking about synergy is that whole plants this is the beauty of natures there's so many different compounds in there balancing out what one particular compound is doing and working together in synergy that when you just start pulling out just individual elements and concentrating it it changes the biochemical effect of a plant and this is true traditional herbalists have known this for many years that they might standardize their extracts a little bit but there's such a broad base of knowledge about synergy of plants and which herbs to mix together to get synergistic effects this is just a slide about all the different types of diseases that they're what we find come what are called comorbidity patterns between various different types of inflammatory disorders which is why we see like groups of diseases coming together and like in our practice we rarely see someone presenting for just one condition like our list of health complaints people don't come to us really because they just want to be healthy unfortunately we see Pete because most people are like oh I'm fine I'm healthy people who are coming to us are sick they have a lot of different diseases and it is quite a challenge to get them back to a good state of health but we do that through integrative medicine yes but depending on the different color those are those sets that is probably if this slide is not showing up great for colors but basically it's like a sit so the purple like you can see the Purple's going together so we know like there are links between periodontal disease and heart disease for example like that there are calm and comorbidities that can present no but I think where the slides are going to be they're gonna be available yeah yes yes I think so yes yes well there's a lot there's complexity in there so the colors do link up but they also there are some that link to each other so there are some that are like a triad and some are just like got a triad that was published in Discovery Medicine though in 2017 so there's a whole article written about that okay so let me see how we're doing on time okay so bio actives and human health so another class of compounds that there's quite a bit of data on is anthocyanins and so these are flavonoids that are found in a lot of different plants but particularly very concentrated in dark berries so blueberries in particular are a great source of anthocyanins and they have the ability to not only work on an antioxidant system they also work on inflammatory signaling as well and flavonoids we know have been shown to impact what we call executive function pathways and so there was actual I'm gonna go over another study but this particular one I'm pointing out was about blueberry in tank and mood in children and young adults and so blueberries can actually help to decrease processes like rumination where you can't let go of something something negative that you continue to ruminate about but also just improving positive effect so that was a 2017 study published in nutrients and then this particular study was published in 2016 and the European Journal of nutrition and this was a relatively small study a double-blind crossover study and this is the thing about many of the plant studies there are small because who's gonna find blueberries maybe you know like there's not a lot of money going into us this is the challenge of finding these studies so 21 children aged 7 to 10 who either consumed a placebo or they had a blueberry drink basically was a freeze-dried wild blueberry powder so we know vile berries have a lot more concentrated phytonutrient in there 15 or 30 gram servings and so what happened in this study you say gave them the drinks in the morning and then they started measuring cognitive performance they actually did testing in that morning and the kids on the blueberry powder and it wasn't the increasing dose no actually they even had higher scores had improved word recognition verbal memory their responses were better so just think about the power of nutrition and our children so what you eat for breakfast does matter so I make a like a whole food smoothie for my kids in the morning cuz of data like this I mean I was doing it before that but this just highlights the importance of nutrition in the morning so when you're feeding your kids brain nutrients full body nutrition how they score on a test even that morning can be altered by what they just had for breakfast and then what is very sad as I already present a data about the vegetable deficiency among children especially in the United States as 85 percent of children don't get those essential nutrients for optimal brain development so now we're talking about things like choline Mabry's minerals and vitamins yes so there's still so the amount of recovery I guess is what is not known so we know that making changes in nutrition will make a difference but we don't know if they can recover their entire potential at that point but we know there are very critical phases and development like that phase of like young childhood like prenatally is a very critical phase but young childhood that period of time like six to ten is very critical for health outcomes and you can even see studies that link that to incidence of things like so you don't even even with the trauma it's not just anxiety depression mood disorders that they can be at a higher risk of later in life it's things like heart disease and diabetes but it's consuming our healthcare budgets that those are the risk factors not just cognitive health but yeah I guess the answer is we don't know how much can be recovered but we do like clinically see differences in function and measures of you know the data coming in when we put someone on better nutrition like you can see that right away yeah when I just said trauma I was talking about when I was talking about etre psychological trauma that is heritable that was passed down but also just like trauma in childhood like that you've actually had it in your lifetime not talking about previous generations yes that does impact health outcomes like in your 40s yeah so that you know if it's physical sexual trauma as a child it impacts things like heart disease so yeah so but I didn't mean i wasn't saying trauma about dietary but yes for sure diet in childhood does affect health outcomes yes yeah here's another study about as I said it's really important what kids are eating early in life and so this was a study looking at kids who ate per poem prepared vegetables and fruits between the ages of 6 and 12 months so this is the time where you know you're transitioning babies from breastfed or formula onto solids then what are they eating unfortunately there are kids eating french fries as their first food when they're six months old and this is the reality of our country and what's happening but this particular study looked at kids who were fed vegetables and fruits that were home prepared and they had a higher IQ at four years of age so now you also have to consider this is the thing about these studies you have to consider what the parents are also doing so now you have like socio-economic data that influences that you have just like child care right that whole nature-nurture going on that the parents are doing this but you know I see patients of lower socioeconomic status who like feed their children good food right like so you can't just make that case but unfortunately that you know there are those associations are there and so this is what I would also point out is like okay there's nutrition but we also know that babies who are held more have their impacts on their genetics that last for years and you're starting to see this more and more in the media which is why I pulled that slide up that we even from there are data from babies and orphanages in Russia and the size of their brains later in life that they actually have measurable changes in brain volume because they were not like held as babies well the assumption is holding but there could be other factors as well nutrition so again just pointing out that early stress life stress changes the way our genes function okay so a little bit about bioactive synergy I think I definitely have prepared way too many slides but we won't get to the end of this but so plants energy so traditional concept of plant simran synergy is just that the combined part so if you're not familiar with this it means that if you took two plants or herbs and measured the particular effect on some process biochemical process that when you add the two together you don't just get an additive effect so say something there was a rise by like five points for each of those it wouldn't just be tan the concept of synergy is you combine those together and now you get a rise of like 15 and so this is that beauty of that whole plant and all of its beautiful complexity why those come there there you're hearing a lot about in all many circles about endocannabinoids hemp oil some of the compounds that the phyto cannabinoids that impact our endocannabinoids receptors and I'm definitely not an expert in this area so don't ask me a lot of questions about it but we know that other plants have the ability to bind those receptors to like carrots for example combined and oh can happen with receptors so this is not just this one unique plant that like it's doing something that no other plant is doing it has higher levels of some of those compounds but this is kind of trickles through or the plant kingdom and then as I said the particular component so you'll see a lot of studies where they pull out components so when you see studies about green tea a lot of times they're pulling out EGCG but it also when you drink like most people I'm even less you're taking a supplement you're drinking green tea you're drinking that whole plant and so you will see studies also about green tea drinkers and various different health outcomes and but the colors of the plans me can often show higher levels of particular compounds like red is associated with lycopene whites a lot of times there's a lot of queer certain and Allisyn that you would find in things like the onion family when we think about lycopene there's also studies I don't have a slide on it but studies about lycopene and prostate health and their purpose I think it was in the 1970s there was a company who was going to like have this particular lycopene extract and they were they couldn't reproduce the data it was because they it was the whole plant it was using something like the whole tomato is what made the difference not just like Oh pain alone so the reproduce reproducibility of the data didn't allow that company to produce the kind of product that they plan to produce the other thing that's important and this is an extension of plants energy is the concept of diversity so having when a kind I know that there was a talk about the microbiome so I'm not gonna talk a lot about that today but it in particular with the microbiome having a lot of plant diversity in your diet has been shown to be associated with a healthier microbiome the so this is what I know you know the challenge and a lot of the population is just getting them to eat vegetables so now when you throw on top of that you should eat some type Ursa tea as well it gets tricky but for those of you who are out there eating plenty of fruits and vegetables and you're looking to optimize your nutritional status it appears that you're better off so if you were to get like eat two cups of broccoli you would be better off eating a cup and a half of four different types of greens then you know a little bit more so you could eat a little less quantity but if you have a diverse group so think of like the concept of a green salad so you just have romaine lettuce on that green salad versus you have like five different greens and you get some fresh herbs from your garden and throw those in there too now you've got a beautiful plant soup that speaks to your DNA so I even talk to patients about like if they're trying to get more diversity some of these simple things like start adding herbs and spices to a lot of your meals like that alone is going to enhance the phyto nutrient intake that you're going to end up with in your regular diet and so these plants are affecting not only our human genome but also the genes our microbiome the bacteria that lives with us this is another slide pointing out that importance of plants energy and so a Holt this is a based on a whole buckwheat extract that the antioxidant activity Rutten is a compound those options are attributed to the high level of antioxidant activity in buckwheat and I think buckwheat is one of those plants I don't know if anyone is scrolling buckwheat but it's one of those superfoods that a lot of people don't recognize so much but there's so many great you know compounds in there but the concepts of the whole extract so if you start to look at this particular slide here pure Rutten is the lighter colored bur and then the whole extract so this is increasing concentration of fruit and compared to the whole extract against the antioxidant activity and so right here you can see like if you were doing concentrate of root root and the whole extract is outperforming it here here it's not until up here you'd have to give tons and tons of root and before that whole extract would outperform at yeah meaning like eating the whole plant so this was done and you know as a dish basically like in a study where it was in vitro so not in a person and the point of this is yes like emphasizing eat whole foods no it's just business that would be more so that grout that was yeah cuz this is just pulling out one component of it just the routing well so the whole so the whole plant would be even better as me no like in the hover in the leaves Wow I don't know the answer to that what's the anyone else now that's the whole plant yeah I don't have anything in here about lectins but that's certainly a controversial topic there was a conference where Fasano anyone else so he and Gundry had a controversial exchange on the topic of tomatoes and Gundry had some study that was done on tomatoes from this particular village in Italy and Fasano was like that I grew I'm from that village and we tomatoes and what you're saying is complete nonsense oh it was like it was a very heated exchange but my take on it is not restricting more foods I don't think that that's why people are sick because most people are not eating enough plants right and it's certainly like preparation can make a difference so like we know you know like with beans the way that they're cooked with legumes how they're prepared that can vary and commercial preparations can vary but people are eating canned beans a lot of those are pressure cooked so that would take out the lectins not everything is but some of the better manufacturers like eating I my understanding is that the lectins are taken out I mean their pressure cooked in there right yeah now that was in an in vitro study just to show the difference between again about plants energy they got a whole plant you got one component that is billed as the antioxidant in there but you use the whole plant which wouldn't have that much rooting in it and it Oh performs it that's the takeaway and then there are a lot of other plants that have been studied for tremendous amount of data on this about combining various different gather and just about the whole plant so broccoli and tomato eaten together a more potent this is this concept of food combining I know there are a lot of health experts who have written quite extensively on food combining but like with the combination of broccoli and Brussels sprouts together can up regulate the enzyme systems that have to do a phase two detoxification more effectively okay and then I do want to get because I know we only have 15 minutes left I'm gonna have questions I do just want to get quickly to the concept of micro RNAs so micro rna's are the new topic that is really exploding within the scientific community a lot of it though is driven by pharmaceutical innovation they'll say but we're learning a lot about micro rna's from foods as well but the race now is big Firma getting to have some biotech modifications to manipulate micro RNA so my what we're looking at though is nutria my ro mix so we talked about epigenetics genomics now there's nutria my ro mix and that's the study of the influence of diet and modifying gene expression do it due to modification changes and micro RNA so micro RNA I don't know if anyone is familiar with jiff bland have you ever anyone familiar with Jeff bland a couple of you so he is a thought leader in functional nutrition functional medicine and years ago he was talking about this black box DNA like all this junk and there's something in it and so it turns out and he was you know we didn't know what it was at the time but it turns out that stuff is micro RNA and these micro RNAs are non-coding RNA molecules that have an effect when DNA is getting transcribed and so it basically silences certain things so it'll turn off things that you don't want to turn on and it is controlled also by specific nutrients in our environment in our diet but it's also another one of those instances where stress actually can control how micro RNA is upregulated in your body I want to get to the next slide so some of the bioactives impacting endogenous micro RNA expression some of the big ones that are being studied are again some of these compounds that we have seen in other instances but I think now we're getting even a better understanding of their profound impact and that's in micro RNA expression so this is up regulating our micro rna's vitamins and minerals have the ability to do that as well and then these are some of the pathways that are being described so now you see some of these compounds that I have talked about all already like nerve to which has to do with the antioxidant pathway TNF alpha which is involved in inflammation the cyclooxygenase pathways which again are involved in inflammation we look at these studies now they're identifying specific micro rna's the other thing so really what I wanted to get to is micro RNAs are also found in our food so what we're consuming what plants are also giving to us not only is it just phytochemicals they contain micro rna's these micro rna's survive digestion in the stomach so they're found into the intestine and various plants and so they're found in plants but they're also found in animal sources as well they have differing levels of bioavailability so this is you know this is an area that it's continuing to you know more and more papers being studied on this area and not a lot there's a general knowledge base but there's a lot more to learn here but the question is if it's staying in the intestine not getting into the bloodstream just like some other compounds like the curcumin oeid and tumeric when that stays in the gut and even compounds in chocolate has an effect on the microbiome also so there's increasing absorption of some of these compounds might not necessarily equate to a better biological effect that some of this happens in the gut anyway so then this is a question that would be extended to micro RNA if some of it doesn't get into measurable levels into the bloodstream certain ones do depending on the type of micro RNA it may have different mechanisms of action working on the human genome versus on your microbiome and then this is just a summary slide looking at micro RNAs that are identified that work with different that have been identified in specific different pathways and even disease states like Parkinson disease and this is where you'll see pharmaceutical innovation unfortunately trying to manipulate or or fortunately possibly trying to manipulate disease processes and then of course food our food contains vitamins that it not only do they contain actual vitamins they contain compounds that influence our absorption of other vitamins and when we think about genomic testing we do look at vitamin metabolism as well there okay so oh this is a study about choline which is found in a lot of different food sources so choline is found in dark leafy greens found in eggs and liver and higher levels mushrooms are also a really good source of cocoa lean but choline is very much involved in DNA methylation and gene expression so again back to some of the reasons why prenatal nutrition matters women in their third trimester who were given choline supplements so we also this is just easy obviously they do supplementation because it's easier to study they their infants were then tested for various cognitive processing store scores and they had based measurements that correlate with higher IQ levels at those particular time points in terms of their months of age like after birth higher to take away with higher intake of choline improved those scores okay and I'm gonna end with magnesium so this is probably a big topic for you guys in your community but more than 50% of the population has a suboptimal dietary intake of magnesium and this is a you know this is something we talked about in our community to our patients that people come in and they're like well I'm eating such-and-such I have a magnesium deficiency we're like well the soil is depleted so we have this just so you know we are having these talks with patients about soil quality and this is why they may and and this harkens back to the slide about vegetable deficiency we also have the problem of people eating what seems like enough fruits and vegetables but they're still deficient in various like that they have measurable test results that show deficiency yet they should not be deficient so yes so soil quality is a big issue there so even like old data back from pre-imposed 1968 there was a 20% drop in magnesium content in wheat and that has also been observed for various other minerals like iron and iodine zinc and vitamin A I just let me get to magnesia sorry I'm going fast because we're running out of time so some of the things we think about with low magnesium these are some of the symptoms mild headaches brain fog muscle twitches muscle weakness just fatigue like oh we get so many patients just coming in with a chief complaint of fatigue and we always look at their magnesium levels because we know that could be a potential sign of low magnesium magnesium is also something we consider in patients who are coming in with anxiety disorder as well or irritability and we know that magnesium affects the calcium channels as well and this is really the slide that I wanted to get to that I thought would be really important to see so we think about magnesium there are in you know in the supplement industry there's a lot of discussion about what form of magnesium you're taking or taking magnesium glycinate right magnesium oxide or citrate there was a so this slide is looking at how high magnesium levels get in the cerebrospinal fluid this was an animal study following the administration of various forms of magnesium so the levels we see here so placebo you know didn't really do anything Mack citrate yours you're seeing a baseline mag miss glycinate you see a little bit of a rise then there's mag three and eight which is also called mag teen and that was billed as getting in past the blood-brain barrier and this is the form to use if you're trying to treat mood disorders you know anything that is in the mental health emotional neurological rail using bag three na but this is a pretty recent recent data from a company that is using a plant-based magnesium and look at that plant-based magnesium it's up here and it's an extract of buckwheat and Swiss chard standard process standard process it's a company in Wisconsin and they that would be a great group I think to team up because they one of the course they have there also this is a supplement company that has their own organic farms and they have tons of data on soil quality and they talk about the microbiome they talk about like soil quality and why they're whole foods based supplements to make such a difference so now this is their magnesium supplement that is just plant based very you know not a really high dose of magnesium salts in there and it gets into our class the blood-brain barrier better than any okay the question was about magnesium using epsom salts as skin absorption for magnesium so I don't like I think there are people who are really sensitive the magnesium and sometimes we use magnesium Epsom salt baths for them but I don't think much of it necessarily gets absorbed like it certainly wouldn't get absorbed into CSF from I can't imagine I would get into CSF from bathing in it because you'd have to have a driver yeah so then so the question was about transdermal magnesium preparations so then that's kind of different because in a transdermal preparation typically those preparations will have some sort of driver and so it will it's usually not just like magnesium mixed with you know some sort of like coconut oil or something like that it's gonna have other compounds in there just like any transdermal cream or gel it has tests something that kind of like opens up the stand enhance absorption so depending on why transdermal preparation it is it would have other ingredients but yes so then in that case it's just like transdermal hormones it does those do get in for sure you | Bionutrient Food Association | UCI99ERb9iBmwgrJPbv3iKdA | 2019-03-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 10,021 | 55,135 |
0rrOSS5hiEg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0rrOSS5hiEg | CHIT CHAT | GET READY WITH ME | [Music] foreign [Music] hello good people welcome back to another video I'm Alexi Nicole and I'm living my life by Design this is going to be another Chit Chat get ready with me for work tomorrow video potentially for work tomorrow video I literally literally like I still have on my purse and my jacket and all the things just walked back in the house I've been gone since like noon at 7 43. I always get compliments on this little bag y'all it's no designer bag it is literally just a very nice leather probably handmade bag my mother brought back from me when she went on a cruise um earlier last year and literally every every time somebody sees this little bag they're always like oh I just love it it's cute so let's point that out just in case any y'all planned on asking um but you know what I don't really have a lot to talk about let me put the jacket down all right I had the heat on in the house so it's really hot in here so went ahead and took the sweater off too so don't mind me but um today is Friday January 20. seventh I start another three day am Reserve block tomorrow Saturday the 28th um and I looked at the reserve list I'm trying to find where my apps are like they moved okay I looked at the reserve list and I am number one for and why does this thing keep locking me out annoying I'm number one for three day a.m reserves tomorrow so y'all know what that means they're going to call me or they're going to probably assign me something tonight which is honestly what I would prefer wash my hands so we can get in this kitchen um so as of like 15 minutes ago they hadn't assigned me anything yet for tomorrow um and there's still nothing assigned yet so they may not pre-assign it they may call me at 3am oh which I don't want them to do that I just want them to tell me now you know like what time I have to be at work tomorrow what trip they're gonna give me that would really help me like pack tonight so I know if I need winter clothes or can I bring warm clothes or just whatever but um we're gonna go in in meal prep nothing spectacular y'all um pretty much oh sorry y'all almost out of the frame nothing spectacular pretty much the same stuff that I made the last time y'all saw this type of video I really liked the um pasta salad and I got a different flavor this is the one I had last time and it was so good so I picked up this flavor this is the Sweet Basil um and I just threw some shrimp in there I think I had diced up some like cherry tomatoes um and some feta cheese and that was it I've been kind of off and on sick for the last couple of days so I bought some Sudafed so I can pop some this and this is also really good for just like sinus pressure so like when you're flying you know when your ears are popping and things like that Sudafed is just really good when you're fine so I needed to stack up on some of that and then I'm trying these overnight oats um Maple Brown flavor it's just you just add water and stick it in the fridge and go people always want to call me when like I start vlogging my answer um so I'm gonna try it just whatever try that um bought some hummus this one is a roasted garlic hummus last time I just got like plain flavored original hummus um what else I bought some Celsius now these little energy drinks those to take with me some lady things in there because we weighs a lady um what else I got these little egg bites [Music] anyways um I've got two different flavors uncured ham and swiss cheese egg bites and egg white and roasted bell pepper egg bites so hopefully whatever they assign me um the hotels will have microwaves in the room and I can literally just pop these in there in the morning and go which I don't know because normally when I wake up that early I'm not really like starving for breakfast yet so that may not get eaten and then these are the meals that I got these are all from HEB y'all the mill simple meals this is and I try to get like all low carb ones because y'all know we ain't gonna talk about it because we're gonna drinks it but y'all know um this is crustless cauliflower pizza um 23 grams of protein it's eight net carbs in here that's not bad so y'all know there's kind of keto-ish a little bit right um I don't really want to do keto again but it's kind of like the only like diet that I know um this one is Italian style chicken and broccoli nine net carbs in this one 37 grams of protein I'm really trying to up my protein intake because I've been going going hard at the gym and um you know trying to do a little something this one is a beef stir fry low carb as well 10 net carbs and um 28 grams of protein so oh I almost forgot I got these pretzel crisp Crips pretzel crisp to go with my hummus so yeah that is the food that we're taking with this tomorrow on the trip that they haven't assigned me yet but I know they're going up I would be a fool not to think that they weren't going to give me a trip tomorrow and I'm number one on the reserve list so all I really need to do nothing really needs to be meal prepped except for the pasta salad I do just need to cook that but I bought this because you know my lovely Airline um we don't have ovens on the plane this we don't have sockets to plug in um dang I keep forgetting the name of that thing but that little that little hot plate thing that you can plug in and warm up your fruit I could put it on a coffee maker but I ain't got time to do that so anyways I prefer to have snacks that you know can be eaten cold or a lunch that can be even cold that's why I go for the pasta salad it's not necessarily the healthiest option but I enjoy it and it does the trick so I'm gonna eat I'm gonna warm that up I'm gonna put this stuff in the refrigerator so in the morning literally all I have to do just throw them in my bag and go but but but we got good news say bye bye to Oakland I don't know why I'm my friend really just bust my bubble has nothing to do with what we're talking about but she just that's my bubble yeah say bye bye to Oakland I am now a phoenix-based flight attendant which is really exciting really really really freaking exciting I believe a class graduated today congrats to y'all that just graduated today they got I think four different base options don't give me to lying they got famous Vegas BWI Denver and Oakland maybe five you know which is like lovely like why could not have got that my first month but we are not going to trip on the pass we're moving forward so at my Airline this is why I'm like talking y'all because I don't be moving and doing what I need to do and at 7 52 I really need to be in bed by eight o'clock that's not gonna happen so we're gonna shoot for nine and my Airline which is different from the airlines that I previously experienced you know um you list the bases that we have in order from one to third we have 13 bases so 1 to 13 and you put your number one base and then you list them in order 1 to 13 of what you want the most to the least right every month that we do big vacancies if you are not at your number one base they will every month move you up and up and up and up from your list order until you get to that number one base and once you're in that number one base you stay there of course my list let me look at it so I'm not lying to y'all and tell y'all what it actually is of course Houston is my number one option we're not there yet I did email um crew planning the other day to find out where I fell in the list of people waiting to get into Houston and they said I was like number 273 out of 500 and something which honestly didn't make sense to me because I'm like how am I 273 out of 500 and something and at the time I was still the most junior class so I don't know if they were counting the people that are currently in training okay I said I wasn't gonna talk on the phone but I have to answer this I'll be back y'all okay so yeah back to my it's called our vacancy bed right that's what we call it at our Airline so my vacancy bid is listed as preference from 1 to 13. Houston Dallas Phoenix Las Vegas Denver Austin Atlanta Oakland Orlando Fort Lauderdale La Chicago Baltimore huh so I was awarded my third option which is good so now and why did why is Phoenix my third option I think I already mentioned this Fawn y'all know my BFF uh my flight attendant BFF fan lives in Phoenix and she lives like five minutes away from the airport so by the off chance that I actually do have to go to Phoenix to work I have somewhere free to say you know I really haven't even looked at the commuting portion of it that was just more so my mind said like where can I go where I can just leave you know sleep on somebody's couch and it'd just be easy um so one Dallas because Dallas was well one Houston because I live in Houston Texas I like say Nicole Edwards live in Houston Texas two Dallas is right down the road so that's just easy it's a much easier commute um and then three Phoenix because of fun and then I did Vegas which I don't know why I did Vegas Vegas really shouldn't even be number four um honestly anything else on that list I don't want Denver Vegas Austin has would take but Austin is also a satellite base here so um that'll be pretty difficult to get into it's a small base it's not a full base full operational base it's a satellite base which means all kind of things so that wouldn't work and BWI in Chicago are literally like in the bottom of my list because I don't want to go nowhere cold y'all already know I did my time in New York we are done with the windy in the in the cold honey done with that so those base um vacancy bibs came out on Wednesday or something um so I was like okay that's good like yay but I still plan on doing the same exact thing that I've been doing with Oakland for the month of January and going into February selling all of my um Reserve blocks that I have in Oakland to people that would like to work those shifts I pay them to take those shifts off of my board and then I pick up shifts in Houston so I don't have to go to Oakland same thing that I plan to do in Phoenix get rid of everything that is on my Phoenix board whether I'm able just to swap and trade them out or if I have to sell them and pick up out of Houston until I actually get into Houston um so yeah that's the plan so my actual Phoenix um base doesn't start until March February I'm still technically Oakland based um and then in Fink and then March I will actually start so you always find out like a month ahead when your base is going to change so that's pretty much the good news that I have in regards to flight attendant life um the application did open the other day for a small period of time literally like I think they I it was scheduled to be open for four hours the website always crashes and goes down which is like come on stop playing um so I think it was open from like 10 a.m to 3 P.M Central Time Texas time and um yeah so still hiring lots of training classes I believe people are getting training dates all the way through the end of February right now so we'll be seeing an influx a flight attendance now which is a good thing but it happens how does that actually relate to me getting to the base that I want it's still like a question that I have because although we just had a lot of flight attendants come in I guess let's just say 100 of them I don't know that still doesn't necessarily mean that I'll be able to get into Houston like growth is happening within the company but if there's still no movement really in that base then it might not be um you know I didn't even look to see how many people got into Houston so like I was saying y'all like they told me I was number 237 out of let me look at that email I my heart tells me it's wrong but I mean they the one that do it so why am I questioning them you're right like why would I question what they said it is what they said so one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen Seventeen eighteen nineteen twenty twenty people got into the hou base um for March compared to some of these other bases that have like literally pages long of people getting in so I don't know we'll see I don't really know I I don't know I don't know so yeah as of right now this was this email they sent on a Friday January 20th as of January 20th in-flight planning told me as of right now you were number 274 which minus 20 because we just had 20 people so number 254 out of 534 people to get into hou but I still don't even know how accurate these numbers are anymore because it's been a week um so yeah so if each month only 20 so people are getting into hou and there's 250 people ahead of me y'all do the math before I calculate the math because my brain ain't working I you know like 250 divided by 20 that's almost a year it could potentially take but also people can always consistently change their bid vacancy so they could go from having Houston as their number one to now not wanting to go to Houston so it y'all get my point like there's no point of me even really trying to figure out like how long it will really take me to get to Houston but once I'm there I'm there and they cannot move me unless I change my number one preference to something else which I'm not gonna say never you never know but as of right now that's I ain't doing that what else is there to really talk about y'all I'm not really sure that was really the only update I wanted to give y'all y'all have asked me a few questions um in the comments so let me see if I can answer a couple of those for y'all I feel like I have answered them just like coming to back but sometimes you know everybody doesn't see every comment of course um and I just I like to um just let y'all know what people are asking and what we're talking about one I know off the top of my head is um I was in the last video I was talking to y'all about um me going to the chiropractor and the scoliosis and the back pain and all that somebody asked what about a breast reduction which honey foreign take them take them take them take them it's literally how I feel about that but y'all know I do want children I don't know if y'all know but I do want kids and I just kind of feel like I thought it would defeat the purpose because clearly you know it wouldn't defeat it but I would prefer to do that after the fact um you know for the health reasons and just to have the girls sitting up um so yeah there was that question so I'm definitely not against the breast reduction but I would probably wait until like I was 40. which ain't that far along kids are no kids um someone also just asked tonight if during training when you know people are asked to leave training or they fill out or whatever do they bring somebody in um and the answer is no because you can't miss any portions of training so they can't just replace you and pop you in um during that period of time you would have to start from the beginning of the training process and complete it all the way through um it's it's not just like a it's classes start dates and end dates so you always have to start and end with a full class um that's really it y'all I just need to focus on cooking this food thanks for listening to me talk about not much or anything um yeah I'm drawing the blank so as always make sure you subscribe like and share follow me on Instagram because you'll get a lot more of me chit chatting and talking to y'all I like to talk on my stories a lot on Instagram so follow me at Elixir Nicole underscore yeah see y'all in the next one bye so I was right they signed me a trip right somewhere in between 8 45 and 9 15. uh my report time isn't until 7 45 a.m so that is wonderful at least I can sleep in and more than likely just naturally wake up and not have to wake up to alarm but I'm gonna set the alarm anyway um three day trip two legs the first day and then four and four which is not my favorite but I'll survive all right y'all bye | Alexia Nikole | UCSSb59K7unrvctRE69LT-0g | 2023-01-31 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,222 | 15,974 |
BLuEyw9bu64 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BLuEyw9bu64 | Shoulder impingement and treatment after fracture | Feat. Tim Keeley | No.80 | Physio REHAB | right we are here with Kwan I spelled it correctly and he is in our shoulder rehab ng rehab program not because he said surgery but because he's had a fracture of his humerus and how did you do that forgetting skiing another another skiing accidents there's mini skiing since falling on your shoulder and he's a good skier but yeah these things happen he has fractured his femur so he sent a massive big fracture on the side so he's landed on his shoulder and he's sliced off a piece of the humerus but amazingly he went straight into a sling and its reattached he had no surgery it's remarkable so that's really good but with a fracture what tends happened because the bleeding and the trauma he has developed a little bit of a capsulitis so when he came in he had quite a lot of loss of range and so the whole capsule if you mentioned the joint the ball on the stock of the whole capsule was tightened up so he's lost range everywhere so with physio because the fracture is healed he's coming it's healed it was six weeks six weeks it was healed he goes into a program like obviously with no surgery but he's had a long time of healing so he can start early into the exercises but he is restricted by range so we can't advance him until we get his range a little bit bit until he gets his range a little bit better so with if I show you with his left arm because that's a good one this is his normal range like he's got really good flexion okay his external rotation you know lovely all right so that's your normal external rotation he's just past 90 degrees there he's got full flexion no problems okay there's no jamming it's great if you look at this one when he comes up now he's improved he's been with us for a couple weeks he's improved pretty well but he gets this point here and it just sort of stops okay so what's happening is he's running out of range and the joint so the joint is getting jammed because the tightness of the capsule was holding him too stiffly so when he comes up instead of gliding through in the ball rolling through the socket and the skip moving correctly he's getting the point where it just jams and it just sort of blocks now if I push him any further I'm just going to make him wince in his face so if I push him too hard he's going to squash his rotator cuff and all the soft tissues and jam them and get impingement so he's got technically got impingement when we pushed him up there so with this one you know we're getting him doing you know the pole is to inflexion external external rotation is doing the wall he's doing the exercises but if he pushes this too hard to try and get range if he you know gets in there jeomsun he's just jamming the joint so he's got to work and what we've been doing is working up to his limit so get him to work up to his limit and as he works up to his limit he'll find every week that limit increases a little bit more and so works for that so it's very crucial at this point that if you've got this problem you don't go and try and get as much range as you can out of it because they end up and flaming the joint and making things worse same with letter rotation now to get his flexion and his abduction we need lateral rotation at the moment when he's in abduction here and this is the impingement position he's got letter rotation of about there and you saw on his other shoulder here about 90 so we need to get that full range before even thinks about doing things overhead and he needs us to get over his head anyway because as he rolls up if he's blocked there he'll just roll up through there you see that he didn't like that so we've got to make sure that he when he does the exercise he works in the range that's not saw so his like a circumduction type work needs to be in there and the more exercises to do the weeks that go on the looser he will get but I'm pretty sure he's got a bit of a capsulitis there so my job is to stretch that out so we've been working on going this way and loading him up which he does mine at all so when I can load him up into the air put his ball back in the socket stretches his capsule up I'm taking away from that impingement so I can then rotate him back a little bit further now you see that okay where's before a fetus does it by himself he's not getting very far so if I can glide him back we can actually stretch see that I can actually stretch in the session so this is how we're getting him more range is by you know seeing the physio so this is why we get people to check in with a physio and actually get some treatment during their program especially post surgical and post fracture and post dislocation is because they need a little bit of hands-on work to stretch out the joint and get that moving you can see I'm working pretty high but it's nice and safe for me to do this because he's not injured at the back there okay the fractures healed it's just soft tissue tightness so the pain that he's getting is not from injury it's not from damage it's because his joint is getting jammed and his rotator cuff and bursar and soft tissues are getting jammed and if he keeps hammering that yeah here we end up with another injury but it's funny the more we stretch them out the better he gets and which is great it's awesome for his recovery so he's doing he's doing quite well now again we'll get in here and stretch this out now obviously when you've had post-surgery we go a little bit lighter so I can get into him quite a bit because I'm not worried about any tissues that have been damaged I'm not worried about any surgery that has happened but the sort of the joint behaves the range behaves exactly like someone who's come out of a reconstruction rehab because he's lost all that range to range so because he's got got to capture lightest type sort of feel it's exactly like someone who's had their joint tightened up by the surgeon and had some reconstructive surgery so it's exactly the same so it follows the same guideline the same timeframe as post surgical would which is good we just keep him in a guideline he gets a bit frustrated because he wants to do like he's almost stronger than he is then his mobility so he can do more he wants to do all the stuff but he hasn't got the range and if we let him just run free and go okay do all these things up here then he's going to start creating problems so he's still got to work down below height he's still got to work down here okay you can't come up in here because he doesn't have the range yet even though he's strong he's not damaged in his rotator cuff he's not allowed to come up here until he gets the range okay otherwise he's just go he's going to jam it and he's going to go backwards and that's the frustrating thing about this is you've got to sort of behave yourself and stay in that time frame and things will get better so what would do is have a look at his range I'll show his movement problem range and why we we don't want to do things over here just yet especially in this week because of what will happen to us joint in his rotator cuff if he does that yeah that's looking good right Quan do you only have a stand facing that way yeah so if we look at his movement here you can see me so since temple I've seen that case your right shoulder and so once you do is go forward and up for me all the way at the top okay and then slowly down for me good where you go again well now so you can see what's happening here he is working really hard and his upper trap because his brain is trying to get his shot up because he's running at a range here so you can see how this one's working way harder and to get his shoulders working not too bad he still have to do all the shoulder exercises as far as scapular control and activation come down here for me but what happens is if his shoulder Bates he and his balls here all right he's coming up he just runs out of range now what's going to happen if he tries to go above his head or time he's going to hit the roof of the shoulder and he's going to cause impingement and the only way he's going to get high he's just going to force it and jam it to come up again he's going to use this upper trap here to lift the shoulder up and fit is it his brain wants to say I want your hand to go higher he's not going to get it out of the joint because he doesn't have the range so he's going to jam the joint and he's just going to lift his hand up by rotating a scapular so if you go again for me so from about there he's hitting his jams all right but this one isn't so from that point if you go up again he was going to go jam Jam Jam Jam Jam Jam all he keeps going hi he's this going to lift the shoulder blade but he's not going to get the nice moving of the shoulder like he does on this one and you can't see that and but he can certainly feel that but you've got to understand you know what that feeling means and why when you get that feeling when you can't go and push it especially put load through your arm otherwise you've got to jam the joint and get more more impingement and so that range has to improve slowly over time so eventually he can get see that range there okay so if you look at this one company they want to go down come up again for me this one so when he gets about there there's a shoulder blade there he can get more range out of his joint okay so it's got more range and as join there and it shot obaid moves with this joint which is what we want some people who are winging in a massive problems for the shot about their shoulder it stays there and their joint you can get more range out all right at least his shot boat is moving which gets his range better and obviously needs thoracic range here as well which we'll talk about later but with this one up and here he gets the point where he can't go any further and if I try and pull him up it just doesn't want to go so he's not even letting go here his brain saying don't go any further so very important that we get range out here slowly and not do things over here or not do things above shoulder height until he's got enough range and until he passes the tests on that okay but that's looking yeah it's on target and we'll see what he's like in the next stage | Physio Fitness | Physio REHAB | Tim Keeley | UCV40pJjeDHOu_67hEZsgtvw | 2016-10-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,035 | 10,203 |
l7co3zTVRrc | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7co3zTVRrc | Lecture 31 BI 107 | alright so we've been discussing the regulation of the cell cycle using this thing called the cell cycle clock just great letter to the cycle and progression is regulated base off with the presence and abundance of two different types of molecules 13 kinase is in sight we're going to start out with the kinase so first of all someone tell me what is Penny's ase tools instead it's that enzymes in a tie and all in spots for work so this is an enzyme phosphorylase now these kinase is they are said to be constitutively expressed and this term constitutively expressed genes that are expressed at a constant concentration and they're always present okay so these are not fluctuating anyway they're constantly abundantly expressed some instituted Lee expressed however most of the time these kinase is are circulating throughout the organism in an inactive so you know the present they are considered to be inactive in a really cause anything to happen in order for them to activate it they have to be excuse me but have to be attached to our second molecule approach called siphons so what you can see and you notice it if there's figures i have a couple different cycles i have the thing called in mitotic cycling and then over here I have my key one side it's the Cyclones that are going to be upregulated and degraded and then when they are upregulated they attach to the cdk that cyclin dependent kinase and that activates so at this g one checkpoint what we need to have happen or really in any of your checkpoints so this can apply to any of the checkpoints i'm sorry i'm going to give you an example can't see check you should be able to apply the same kind of rules to this GT checkpoint is love which is a GTM transition so from g-tube transition into em we work with of the things that we would want to be thinking about here as we transition from teens minute we want to know are all of our chromosomes general and we have enough resources go through mitosis which is energetic so these are going to be some of the things that have to be checked so this at busy to check because the CD case that excitement if any constitutively expressed we're going to have cd key level cg k levels constable throughout the whole cycle they're giving constant here as we approach mitosis and our youtube check in response to some of the things that are happening in the set such as increased game chromosomal number as we duplicate our chromosomes collection of additional raw materials that are required for mitosis these events act as stimuli to cause the Cyclones to begin to build up and we're going to begin to develop it into the Express the Cyclones are expressed and as they build up in abundance States what's called a critical point in the critical point occurs because we have a high enough abundance of those cycles and you too favorably interact with the cyclin-dependent kinase so we begin to form a complex called the cyclin-cdk complex so you can see that the mitotic cpk in which is going to be involved here and get you checked way it is going to begin I'm sorry cycling it's here here's our CD cakin cycling it's going to be in to increase in abundance so it's turned on in response to the index that are occurring their essays in their GT as we increase the number of these particular protein molecules of London's increases we begin to interact with ATP to pull off an inorganic phosphate and all of this expanded up to mitotic cdk to form our active mitotic cdk cyclin combo our CD case I promise okay when we form that complex what happens to the cyclin-dependent kinase C okay is it becomes active so this is now active isoform of cdk and when it is active it's a kindness so what is kinase bit if he gets to phosphorylate stuff that's what kind of a system so some of the places that are going to begin to see phosphorylation occurs in the nucleus as the nuclear envelope responds to that active ctk and it will begin to degrade in the way that this works there are support proteins that are incorporated into the envelope and they're called planned I mean you prefer that one where did he hit enter well is that laminate did you see it hahaha okay low-income lamb lamb in it what it did you don't know as soon as I tell you like Louie Louie deeply oh yeah he's kind of voter summon big time sorry to burst your bubble it's literally holding you together yeah hope lies so yeah laminate is a structural protein and they come in a variety of different appearances one of them has a sort of cross shade structure it's not that what's literally hoping that one of laminin is found in a very small number of organizations landed over all this thing called Lana turn this class college is compounded they are structural proteins and they do pull things yet they hold membranes together they will petition so what if i were to phosphorylate Landon Landon anomalies the lemon in all things would be me actually the function or change their shape punch because I mining phosphates so in the nuclear envelope we begin to see that B grade because that active cd8 cdk phosphorylated store the lamina containing the laminate in it supports the nuclear envelope so in the La Nina or lamina the structural proteins including laminate our water actually be phosphorylated by the active CD game again whenever we attach something to a protein high-protein change of shape changes function and by changing the shape when we reduce the support so now the support structure is actually be easy to disappear for the nuclear envelope it's going to be destruction so that's just one small example of what happens the cyclin increases in concentration in response to cellular events creating the cyclin-cdk complexes which is the active form of the cdk and then that cdk goes through using spot fates that phosphorylate a bunch of other proteins including structural proteins in help it was gathered another one earth I could in this so how do we switch everything off so we can turn into the system on what about switching the system to switch off it's actually sort of Assizes them because the CD case themselves have activated her going to be the same molecules that phosphorylate the cyclin-cdk complexes to turn that system off this typically ends mitosis are occurs near the end of mitosis one of the enzymes are one of the protein fifth cyclin-cdk complex activates is a proteolytic so that proteolytic enzyme increases exacted the kids up regulated by the cyclin-cdk complex and it's actually going to attack the cycling so we turn on we're going to turn on the cyclin-dependent I'm sorry boots are not the proteolytic enzymes by phosphorylating vertical it again time it gets the creative side so the cycling begins to be broken apart okay now as that cycling breaks apart it's breaking apart because VR phosphorylating the end top so the enzyme proteolytic enzyme is phosphorylated by the cyclin-cdk and then it goes back to actually begin degrade the cyclin e Mikado box this happens when you get enough of these enzymes phosphorylated so this is a progressive process as mitosis dresses and clothes are most of the end we're going to give you a critical point where this court lytic enzymes beaches the mats active by this point we're now going to begin to doing that begin to do some serious a variation of the cyclic process and that critical point of enzyme activity is what actually results of a patient we do have some additional internal control or secondary control that happens here you know we want to have a lot of redundancy and biological systems of one system fails we have another system so the internal control or cell cycle we create these things called wait sickness in this particular rate signal associated with the GT transition point it basically allows bed base to progressed transitioning what's the metaphase plate as develop so we want to hold off allow the metaphase plate for people begin to split the chromosome because one of the minute big play faces and more time to get a slip the common sauce ghs are going to have unequal distribution i'm going to have one daughter cell it has more chromosomes than its supposed to and one daughter cell that has less multiple cells are not ways and private so i want to have this wait signal to basically say we're going to only go forward through mitosis once the metaphase plate has developed so this whole process of internal control and developing the wait signal is associated with the kinetic so hopefully you remember that the kinetic or is that probations plaque that we find associating the centromere it's actually going to keep the motor complex that helps to move the chromosomes around the south or artosis line up on the faceplate an invitation to the pants split the kinetochore complex if that kinetic or complex is not attached to this thing called anaphase promoting complex in a phase is not going to progress so if we don't have high levels of my time complex cyclin mining up to cdk putting the active compound seek a cyclic complex that wait signal that is always sort of on it's going to prevent this interaction between metaphase promoting complex in the kinetochore and so we're not going to have any sort of separation through anthems so we have to again override that wait signal before we can begin to have that promoting complex interactive nikita car which is that sequel to have an offense occurred so once all of our schedules are attached up suit that can even more in behalf RG team in transition ok we have that go-ahead signal because of the active cdk cycling complex the wait signal is getting overshadowed or we can say that the signal is lifted and that ABC complex is now going to be activated by our cyclist UK complex and when it gets activated the proteins that are involved in holding the sister chromatid together those structural proteins are going to be phosphorylated and when they are phosphorylated the new structure that forms for those proteins in the longer holes become a kid together and i'll make you begin to exactly by the actions of the prototype teams involved in does everybody have a bigger ship uses in two contests take what common asks so this would be rand new lecture for your notes and meiosis so mitosis was occurring in cells that are out in the body what would we call somatic cells you also have a tissue in organisms that are that are called that's called the germ law this is not somatic tissues in the germline this is where the sex gametes are going to be produced the cells contain all the chromosome all the chromosomes required for fertilization to happen and not produce an organism that has the wrong number of chromosomes so the germ line for mammals the germline inhales is the testicular tissue the germline females you found in heel arabic mitosis you start out with chromosomes in humans that number 246 you double that to 42 and then you split those cells apart and you end up to yourselves that have 46 chromosomes in meiosis our end product is going to have to be 23 preppers because what will happen is we'll use the Spurs alfred dad and the a cell for mom to reunite pro 23 chromosomes in each cell to produce the 46 chromosomes to get your first i'll call the consensus ok meiosis is the sistahs dedicated to 14 notes gametes they contain half of the chromosome numbers to somatic cells so for humans 23 chromosomes rather than 46 chromosomes and it's just chromosomes 1 through 23 1 through 22 is the hottest oval chromosomes and then 20 30 APR sex chromosome RX or ry so we want to be able to generate these cells systematically to contain the right number of chromosomes that fertilization conception results a viable cell so meiosis is going to produce for many mammals including humans what are called haploid cells which include sperm and the haploid and over that here somatic cells are all difficult that means they have two Cotton's of these crumbs so two copies of 12 copies of the second purpose oxycontin's third chromosome taking so long so the haploid cell cap is going to be just one copy so you have one chromosome 11 chromosomes and so on and so forth meiosis is used as a part of this thing called the life cycle and i'm going to give you an example of a human right cycle now the human life cycle is something that's pretty common for other million species I'm going to use this very similar life cycle model for your dog or your cat comes from over Calvin those constants people but then there are other organisms fungi protists bacteria that have very different life cycles so I'm just going to get you some generalities focused on the human life cycle we're decimal stuff just so what you can see is the human life cycle starts out with haploid cells that are produced through meiosis to form a conceptus or a zygote really it's 42 cell that has in humans the 46 chromosomes required for Lilly function through mitosis is how we take that individual cell and we have to replicate to produce Road and new tissues as we go through the stages of life and you'll notice that mitosis is primarily used throughout the rest of life to get you or I don't stick not meiosis is still occurring but specifically you're carrying the produce sperm in cell just in particular tissue and ovarian tissue in humans oh you can call the journal so our human life cycle we're going to have two main types of cells and I've already mentioned he was consistent two cell types these are going to be the somatic cells and somatic or so much that just simply is referring to the body som a is a Latin derivative 45 so somatic cells are bodies so the cells of name of your muscles are status on cells and make a few livers mess great songs neurons for some headaches these cells only undergo mitosis and when they somatic cell undergoes mitosis it is either undergoing it for repair purposes to repair tissue and cells that have the boss or to add new cells to accommodate new growth in these somatic cells there are 46 chromosomes in humans and of those 46 chromosomes that are present we refer to 44 of them as homologous chromosomes now a homologous chromosome so 1 through 22 comes up 14 22 those hairs are considered colleagues homologous means that they contain the same genes now even though they contain the same needs and so what I'm saying is chromosome 13 has the pez bejean for the beta strand of humor so both the chromosome 13 jersey from mom that it comes on 13 receive then they contain that same Jeep the game for a beta strand of Pima book but what that does not mean is that the sequence of those jeans and nucleotide sequences it's not identical fact it could be identical or they could be different so not necessarily identical these homologous chromosomes are called the autosomes because they have two pairs of each chromosome we're going to refer to these cells is being deployed so what does it mean to be deployed two pairs of each chromosome so the diploid cell humans is diploid because of the 23 pairs thickness so one of the ways that I can represent the diploid nature of these cells but I can call them to end where n refers to one of the chromosomes pick up hair so that's 44 of our chromosomes how many do we have in games 46 so we know that there's one pair that doesn't fit into this homologous chromosome category and we're going to meet the same now these chromosomes may not have the same genes depends on what your gender for your sexy if you are female you will have the same genes and they will act very similar to our all his problems as you leave a XS Gina permit for males that spot and X chromosome in the Y chromosome very different genes the X chromosome contains an interception so minute we'll have four females will have two versions of the antigen receptor males will only have one version of the integers so not necessarily the same genes are going to be depressed targeted from present on these chromosomes they are referred to as the sex chromosomes in males we represent a mammals XY in females x.x yeah 44 wanna screw cells underneath that contain genes but I'm not necessarily operating with Kinane on the one pant or not the same way for you to say it without has been active yeah so remember that you have nucleotide sequences HTC's deals those ABCs and teens code for individual proteins that produced a frozen so if you have let's say chromosome 1 and you have your chromosome waterfront mom and then you have your chromosome 1 then this may represent a specific deep that gee maybe the aromatization which is the gene and converts testosterone estrogen but when we get down to the actual sequence here so far take a look at the sequence of this gene we may have a GAA here for that particular version of the gym or a GT a here so there's a little bit of a difference and it may not have any consequence but it may actually alter the protein sequence just little bit causing the function to be just a little bit different when you get some mini million kinetics you're going to call those things alleles those are going to be the two different alleles typically one of the dominant one is process if it's a classical medium trip which a lot of our traits are not that action more complex complex trains but that's what I'm saying is that make sense now here for the distinct pair not the same genes and I have something to qualify that term males or females are going to be you're going to get an X chromosome for you dad you're going to get an X chromosome for Mom in the genes are going to be the same we're going to find the androgen receptor I'm both of those chrome with X chromosomes but to get this sequence make you a little bit different but for males will get androgen receptor from mom and then on the Y chromosome we get the sry gene which programs us to be math its Secretariat produces a hormone called testes attorney helps no male reproductive organs that then drive sex development in organization the brains in the out brain Oh Marcus which by the way a fun fact is the amount you know what hormone actually mess analyzes the male brain section on the sauce transaction presentation if you ever take in terminology there's plug for the first class our phone paula is Linus so these haploid cells the cells if you take 23 23 individual homes on pot bears Catholic called sex cells and they are in humans and other mammals sperm and egg they're typically referred to it gametes so the gamete is referring to the sex cell against chromosomes are not paired and we call those half-foot not you will remember what our chromosome number defecation plus four R's egg cells to n when you think about the half-light siloed our chromosome doesn't matter before our habits just ten again you find the sperm and egg selfie produce and contain you specialized tissue called the Carolina that's just a special occasion since if you later dish you so these egg containing n chromosome containing cells they combine during fertilization and they be combined and what happens is the sperm cell that what's called an acrosome is degraded and that deposits the chromosomes into the egg and then that egg in all of my to contract so everybody we've been here to get your mitochondrial DNA mom this is why because we're just depositing chromosome from the sperm into that existing that it's they're going to put me in a meaningful mom in the DNA from them and then all the pumps organelles it written as a kind of a whole complex puzzle vinculum the cytoplasm oh so at fertilization the sperm uses over with the female sex game and the result here is to produce the cell that is now zip line so mathematically how how do i represent fertilization n plus n equals 2 so I get 23 chromosomes from each parent if I'm a human and learn this fusion of permeability delivery of this chromosome paper skirt in the egg this is where I be seen I cupcakes and so now I have pairs at once we can call it dip wait and ultimately what it comes down to is I'm going to take somatic cells containing 46 chromosomes and I'm going to convert them into substance containing 23 so if i use mitosis i'm never going to end there so what we actually do is we use this process called meiosis and mitosis is really in one sense mitosis followed by another type of we're going to refer to the minus s1 minus s2 but basically the same idea is kind of apply here double our own zone which business I do we're going to split that it after teams and 46 we're going to give that we're going to split that and half those two places the game from some other cells and out to get for 2010 campaign so to go from the 46 chromosomes to the 23 chromosomes in our sex elves you can divide those have and that is the whole purpose of the jump that's what happened to determine so let's talk a little bit about a generalized processor for meiosis that's again is happening themselves with the germ line whereas mitosis occurs in our somatic cells so this really isn't a site it really is more of a linear path mitosis was a cycle because we basically used a cell divided into two new cells and to keep your cells divided in to yourselves why do they continue cells over and over and over and getting sicker here we're actually going to take individual cell and we're going to take you through the stages of meiosis and we're going to end up with ourselves have promised ones they are not going to go through a process of getting used to fertilization a most likely not venitian look at the point it could be used throughout the fertilization process so the generalized process basically go through meiosis 1 2 meiosis to each of these is coupled to nuclear division and also a type of cytokinesis and it go from for meiosis having to n to EE as we enter into meiosis we have 4n and then we go through prophase metaphase anaphase the old phase one all of those and that takes our poor end and it divides it up into 2 to n cells and then each of these go through meiosis 2 at in a pod prophase two days too and if it's a low base you in the end result now as for both of these two men contain little cells and so we end up for any tums or cells so you've already looked at this whole process you should know that there's going to be a g1 and an S phase and then we're going to enter into g2 and then going to our mitotic processor are my outer crust I just occurs prophase metaphase anaphase team will paste or once 2.2 cells pro 15 minute base you know you're being interface by the way bass do that if they see you in a fix you and we have to base other pieces of these meant for yourselves Egypt just 22 compares terms of or generalize just time give me about 12 more minutes | Robert S Bowen, Ph.D. | UC_9O676HJfNiUe7Ur0itPmQ | 2015-11-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,147 | 22,663 |
dWOEUS4OK84 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWOEUS4OK84 | Project Challenges, Opportunities, and Remaining Questions | okay thank you John I'm just going to kind of sum up the talented city systems as jaundice discussed people in particular matter is going to be important I see several questions in the chat box about the cost the startup costs to eat is high our colleagues at the environmental finance center are working hard to crunch number but there's and their conclusions will be included in our final report but there's out some questions that we'll talk about in a minute that are going to inform that that we've not been able to dress on our project additional challenges if these technologies require a lot more time to operate in VT in a traditional heating system so they're not going to be a good fit for every farmer also in this makes iguana miss cringe but we are losing the poultry litter nitrogen almost all of it is being converted to n2 in the thermal process and is not available for you know agronomic use locally and that's generally in our area the most valuable component of ultra litoris and nitrogen also while we've made some inroads into establishing ash markets we do not have a consistent way for our poultry growers with ash to connect with end users who are interested in purchasing it and if anyone on this call has suggestions for us we would welcome but there are giving opportunities we think it's clear that authors can be recycled with these technology you can move phosphorous from high-density animal production areas to crop production areas that rely a lot on commercial fertilizer and that that sale can generate new revenue for poultry growers with respect to their existing nutrients on these technologies are able to reduce fossil fuel use specifically here propane for our projects and you think that there may be important opportunities related to bird help almost every poultry grower is incentivized in some way to conserve propane whether they're paying for that a pocket or whether their use of propane is is used as a basis to determine the cost of and you pay for their birds and in the winter bringing in fresh air cuz then only a house to improve their quality requires broken so in the cold weather season growers are grappling with using propane efficiently and keeping the house well ventilated and keeping good at equality in the house if poultry growers have this an on-farm school that abundant and inexpensive they can start ventilating Foley's for air quality and that could have an impact on winter feed conversion winter feed conversion rates typically drop by a few points in the cold weather because of the challenges with ventilating as much as you'd like to I still remaining questions one of the big ones is long-term performance of these technologies if they were to be cost-shared through the equip program the expected life would be ten years to our knowledge there is note there are no systems that have been in operation for that long and again we have questions about how these could be used to improve health care quality and improve bird health this is based on anecdotal evidence so far from poultry go to have been using new systems and he improved treatments and bird health and feed conversion and that raises questions about the carbon footprint because it may not just be propane shavings it feed is the largest car footprint component of producing poultry so if we can improve feed conversion we reduce the carbon footprint and again ash and biochar market development is going to be very important to support additional groups put our existing farmers and additional projects | Livestock & Poultry Environ. Learning Community | UCLObpc9E9ZTivFAmbj3Qazw | 2017-05-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 617 | 3,546 |
pnmlkJ0kTBc | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pnmlkJ0kTBc | Life of Billionaire Bobby Axelrod || Billions | [Music] is no ordinary billionaire he's an icon of the wealth of our age and he is a fraud when did it become a crime to succeed in this country growing up i saw firsthand the corrosive power that big business can have but you won't touch a firm like axe capital you have a very specific conflict of interest right in your own home i'm the goddamn u.s attorney phil i've been working there since before we were married and long before you were in office you're finally ready for a session if i talk it's food with you i'll be able to start digging out tomorrow suspect trading pattern all three firms have links to bobby axelrod start tracking all of his analysts and traders what do you got it's likely they've opened a case file on you [Music] you know what i'm ready which is why i'm telling you to keep it a little more low-key who's more located than me [Applause] the moment i let someone in a boardroom or a government office tell me what i can or cannot buy i may as well close the shop and i'm not closing the shop walk away i should but then again what's the point of having you money if you never say you fbi move away from your computers we have a warrant from a federal court please stay in your seat so thank you for your cooperation you might want to consider recusing yourself from this case the conflict of interest is gonna be an issue you don't get to where i am without tolerating a lot of risk we where we are this is real bobby you're risking our lives you could go to jail we could lose everything and you can make it all go away and you won't this company came under attack by an unscrupulous adversary who will stop at nothing to abuse the authority of the state and close our doors forever you sold me out i tell you something compromising and the next thing i know your husband is up my ass again i didn't sell you out you broke into my computer you stole the evidence you needed pack your the case is terminated look like a winner but it's not it can never work you underhand he can't understand what matters to you the way i can come work on my account i can't be in denial about what this place is what you are i quit bobby [Music] you're not the only enemy more dangerous than a man with unlimited resources is one where nothing allows and that is what you are looking at right here [Music] what i figured out recently is find another way i need roads gone where this will never be over an investigation has begun into your office's methods and conduct i have nothing to hide i am a survivor and i will do whatever it takes let's keep going fireworks [Music] | Miracle Morning | UC4FViYwUPXBiRwCOis8A9sw | 2022-05-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 501 | 2,589 |
GqVUFmwl_F4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GqVUFmwl_F4 | Find your FLOW contributors7. #shorts | and then there's a Kev walls covers uh based around Southport and Maize design covers a former heavyweight world champion for a number of years he's excelled and he talks about the experience of of being in the ring but being so intuitively aware of what's what's happening that he recognized the the way the way somebody moved and the patterns and the way that they were moving what they intended to execute and he predetermined that within his mind because he recognized the pattern and he was able therefore to defend prior to the execution of his opponent's technique it was a bit like a game of chest he was reading the game and he understood the moves and he felt that in that Essence he really was in flow and again Kev explains his story of how he experienced flow | Pain Point Coach John Bullock | UCw6Y8yAJBr9qOyudHQBvxcw | 2022-12-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 142 | 772 |
LxurXujpKSY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxurXujpKSY | Infiniti Q Inspiration Concept Aims for Efficiency, Connectivity, and Autonomy | [Music] at the Detroit Auto Show on Tuesday Nissan CEO Yokosuka announced that all Infiniti automobiles introduced from 2021 on would either be fully electrics or plug-in hybrids that use the company's EE power system that means that drop-dead gorgeous infinity - inspiration we told you about the other day might actually have an electric drivetrain first let's clear up some misconceptions about plug-in hybrids some like the current offerings from BMW and Mercedes and Audi have wimpy little batteries and depend much of the time on gasoline engines to generate enough electricity to move them forward alternate the gas engine is mechanically connected to the driven wheels others like the Nissan heat power system use a larger high output battery that allows for electric only operation during the most routine driving the onboard gas engine is not mechanically connected to the wheels and is there solely to drive a generator that makes electricity to recharge the battery and power the electric motor last August misaki kazuki general manager for research and development at Nissan Motor Indonesia told reporters the power system operates very quietly much like a felow because any power relies on the engine much less frequented its fuel efficiency is comparable today of leading conventional hybrids especially during around the town commute during the acceleration the engine stops running into regenerative power is used to charge the battery until the vehicle comes to a complete stop it doesn't waste energy during deceleration hatsune added and like a fully battery electric car a vehicle with the e power system supports one pedal driving in which regenerative braking can bring the car to a complete stop without using the mechanical brakes that's a feature that takes some getting used to but that drivers of electric cars soon learn to appreciate and form an addiction to the Nissan Note II powered has proven very popular with drivers in Japan where it is now missins best-selling model cycle I did not mentioned the Infiniti q inspiration specifically in his announcement but it usually takes at least three years to take a design from concept to production ready if the car gets built it wouldn't be until 2021 at the earliest and so it would either be a fully electric car or one that is for all intents and purposes a larger more luxurious version of the Chevy Volt Nissan has not been winning many awards for automotive design laban the original leaf is a pretty good car but is rather homely to look at he's just downright beautiful Akane but the infinity Q inspiration who's the company still knows how to design a car that turns head the short car is electrifying if it makes it to production it could alter the electric editor's note I'm an admitted fan of the Juke design and I know another writer on our team who is as well not to say it isn't goofy-looking nissan few inspiration is not electric but was in Detroit anyway [Music] | hy Tech. | UCo4yy-uTz-VsTlkCu8qF4Fg | 2018-01-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 502 | 2,959 |
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