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AMjYfoX2p64 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMjYfoX2p64 | 🎸Stephen McWhirter | Three Struggles of Guitarists | [Music] [Applause] [Music] hey what's up worship leaders pastors and friends thanks so much for coming back to worship team training podcast this is our video podcast where we're going to be featuring musicians singers worship leaders and great friends great artists just like right here stephen mcwhorter that's sitting in the hot seat it's so great to have him before we get to him we want to get to you to let you know what's going down with these videos that we're going to be doing weekly featuring different guests and we're so glad that you're here today we're going to be talking about guitar playing we're going to be talking about uh what are the three struggles that guitar players struggle with the most and uh stephen mcwhorter you've seen him before heard him before in our podcast great dude been friends for a few years now and so great to have him back stephen how are you today bro good man how are you good man it's so great to see you again yeah i love the new color of your um your cap it's gray this time yeah it's great um you gotta have when you're bald you gotta have a large selection of did we call you stephen the gray there you go i like it all right guys check out stephen mcwhorter his new album highest praise that you can find on apple music spotify everywhere else that you get your downloadable music and also uh check out his website that we're going to be featuring in the show links right here and we'll talk more about that soon so steven um you and i were talking before about this whole topic so what what are the three greatest struggles you see in guitar players on the worship team well people's opinions on that would vary um all i do is speak all i could do is speak to the things that i've had to learn um not to do and as a worship leader and i've been doing this a very long time i think early on as a guitar player you know uh the biggest thing was probably uh if i was going to be awesome honest was really working on rhythm and timing uh acoustic guitar kind of lays almost in even though it's a guitar it almost lays in a percussion percussive world and if the guitar is like off on timing it's like a shaker almost that slits like out of the face so really you know being good at like uh you know timing and and paying attention to your rhythm and those things are really important and one of the ways you can get really good at that is play into a metronome or a click uh there's a lot out there a lot of them you can go to the app store and buy one for your phone and just you know uh play along with one you know find the bpm's the beat per minutes for maybe the worship songs you're working on most of today's stuff you're playing a lot of bands you're playing the tracks so rhythm is going to be more important uh than than ever it's really playing along with that click track and learning how to do that well without uh really pushing and slowing down or dragging can you give us an example of good timing good timing well it's perfect timing come on [Laughter] whether or not you know one of the things i use a lot is called um it's called tempo and back in the day i used to use it a lot now i spend a lot of time in the studios i spend a lot of time listening to click tracks so it's kind of like beat into my head like not to get off the grid but um one i use is called tempo it looks like this and you can see the dots here for the timing of like a 4-4 and you can pick your time signature and stuff we'll just do a basic you know 120 bpms right here you can click it in or whatever and it sounds like this right and one of the things you would want to do is i don't know if you can hear this yep but if you know you kind of hear that and the idea would be to stay with this as you're playing [Music] and and in a rehearsal in a practice like this when you're doing this it's not about being fancy it's about playing like a simple chord and uh really just trying to stay locked into that click and the more you do that the more natural will come what's your theory about how people can best stick with a click um again it's rehearsing i would get an app like this i would do it as much as possible uh the other thing is going to be your mix a lot of people have in-ears if you're dealing with click um and you're playing with tracks and it's really making sure you can hear the click and often with your in-ears rhythmically playing along with the click yeah so i would say the the real my my real theory on that would be you know a lot of people are playing with in-ears and they're playing with tracks a lot with bands today and that's a whole different discussion but if you are really learning how to operate your mix and get what you want well and one of the things isn't just so much like the music's really loud and then you turn the click up as loud as possible because then it's going to bleed through your mic or whatever going on around you i would really turn other things down in your mix so you can hear the click well and be able to lock in with it and you know if you're the worst pleater that's what you want if you're not the worst bleeding you're playing acoustic then you're going to hear the worship leader hear the drums well and hear that click perfect all right number two what's the second struggle yeah i think probably the second struggle would be and it comes with some of that i would say it's over playing uh you know you got a lot of people and it's not overplaying isn't always like i'm playing a lot of fancy like you know uh like guitar licks or you know it's not that you're playing a lot of fancy guitar licks a lot of times you're over playing just by playing too hard like you get excited you're playing live and and you're playing really loud and you're just like aggressive and uh a lot of times that's not gonna set really well in a mix it's like you know i could play really really really hard which i used to do and i would listen back to tracks or live recordings and i'd be like oh my gosh it's like i'm so rough i just want to turn it down but yeah it's like everything and i was breaking strings all the time it was crazy but uh so really it was probably you know finding for me that like like just finding the way where you know if you listen to your favorite like guitar like acoustic guitar tracks it's usually not really hard it's like a softer and it's like strummed more and it sounds really pretty and there's this place when you're listening to your guitar where you can hear oh sonically it's like reverberating well it sounds good as opposed to you know me like cranking at it like that and so it's really finding that happy place and even with that it's it's really keeping it simple with the chords even not not feeling like you have to play every little nuance you know you typically are going to have a piano player in a worship setting typically i know not always you might be a solo acoustic guitar player and even then simple goes a long way because you want to be able to sing you want to be able to focus more on being able to lead people in worship but if you do have a piano player they're going to be filling a lot of that with little nuances and if you're over playing it can get kind of muddy sounding and uh this is more for you know the worship setting of course so i think really just playing simple and and some of that is going to be again maybe finding the right pick one that's not you know you're playing a little softer uh also getting your acoustic in your mix where you can hear it well so that you're not um overly playing just to hear yourself like you feel like you gotta play louder so you play harder and that was a deal for me if i got my acoustic at a volume where it was loud this loud esque to me i would play at a more moderate volume and not play as hard and when you start playing really hard because you can't hear you also get off that click which brings us back to the first point good point good point um i i confess um i lead worship with a hernia gurney and i need to stop ever playing plain and simple number three what is it the third biggest struggle that you see yeah i would say is communicating with the other players like learning to pay attention to other people beside yourself and what they're doing um i you know i i think this kind of comes back more to being an acoustic guitar player who is a worship leader and in the worship world i think for the most part that's what you're dealing with you're dealing with people that are leading worship and playing acoustic guitar that's a very typical thing and for that it's being able to communicate with i think primarily your piano player with transitioning uh if you're an acoustic guitar player sometimes it's hard to transition the band unless you're giving them cues like okay here's the song but um there's those transitions where the holy spirit is kind of moving and you want to create space and you want to allow him to do something but the band is kind of maybe like okay now it's time for the next song and you're just rushing in a thong if you're the piano player which i play piano a lot it's a lot easier to control those those moments right as a guitar player it's a little trickier so you really have to be visually and like in sync with your piano player like really paying attention to them a lot of times we'll put the piano players like in the back or something like that but then it's hard to communicate with them visually for those moments unless you've really kind of worked them out in advance a lot of people do that they they prepare and that's good i think sometimes it's the hardest part is the communicating in the moments that we're not prepared there may be more spontaneous and that's going to really demand that you can visually communicate with them or you have some way of talking to them where not everybody else can hear so some people sometimes have these like these uh mics that are extra vocal mics where they click it a stomp on the pedal and it mutes their mic and now only the band hears them uh that kind of stuff that's a technically advanced way of handling it the the more typical one is just kind of keep them in your line of sight so you guys can communicate with where you're going and what you're doing and yeah all these connect with the tempo uh and you playing not overly playing if you're playing simple and you're picking maybe keys even um i do this a lot i'm not saying everybody should do this but i'll try to pick keys that don't drastically jump from each other if i can get a lot of songs in the same key then that's going to make that transition stuff a lot easier but if i'm going okay we're in playing a g and now the next time we're playing an e you're going to have to kind of really be able to communicate with your piano player or whoever is you know pads and atmosphere kind of controlling that so like what's your best recommendation for worship leaders who may struggle with other people in your team that have rhythm difficulties technique issues communication they're not looking they're not feeling you what's the best thing that you recommend for these worship players to handle those kind of uh difficulties in their team yeah um grace uh it's gonna be the number one thing you know you have a lot of churches that yeah uh kind of just dealing with the people that are there you you have who you have and that's that's what it is and it's more about really learning to worship him more than anything and not getting too bogged down in the technical stuff at that place um and allowing people to make mistakes without letting yourself as a worship leader and kissing a hard player getting um getting sidetracked yourself from being able to worship because somebody maybe didn't do something the way you rehearsed or whatever yeah you're gonna have to have grace if you're in that place if you're in a level that's like hey we we have who we have this is who the lord's brought us we're just gonna make this work uh the grace thing's gonna be important and then the helping them um you know i think it's going to be stuff like your podcast it's going to be stuff like this it's going to be um giving them some of the tools we talked about such as learning how to mix your ears better how to play along with the click um but at the end of the day the biggest thing is going to be spending as much time just worshiping together playing together not only preparing for sunday but just getting together and worshiping together yeah out of that place you'll really start to lock in and get to know each other awesome so for people who don't know you what's your story yeah uh yeah no i've just been doing this a long time uh was a pat evangelist son became a drug addict uh throughout a long period of my times crystal meth addict all that had a radical encounter in my late teens holy spirit gave my life to jesus i went from addiction to redemption meth addict to worship leader um and i've been doing this thing for over 20 years now and uh the the primary lead vocal for a band called ironville music for for many years and have been um for several many other years i was a staff worship writer with sony music and uh so i've been doing this for a long time leading worship i've spent a lot of time in those three hour worship sessions with a piano or acoustic with people praying and doing stuff so i'm really i'd say cut my teeth uh in that way and i like to say the thing i i want people to understand the most is not just about me but his worship leaders that made me engage with me and go oh that seems really genuine and it's great you know um you want to make sure that who you are who people see on a stage is who you are in the secret place so the more time you spend at home just worshiping the lord when nobody's watching that's gonna be the thing that's gonna make you um it's gonna be like the overflow like people see you on sunday morning and they're gonna be like man this person has been with jesus and that's the stuff that really shapes who we are as musicians um and as worship leaders awesome thanks for that man and uh where can people find your music your new album that's out yeah highest praise uh is out now i just got nominated for worship album of the year with uh you know nrt new release today congratulations i'm too excited it's very different we went for something different but i've been doing this with a friend of mine who's in gospel music jason claiborne and him and i just kind of locked arms he said hey let's let's see what the bride looks like when we come together that's so cool it's been a lot of fun and we tour we play a lot with like an all-black choir and it's unbelievable like being strapped to a holy spirit mack truck that's awesome yeah you can find out more about us with the link that you're gonna post that'll get you everywhere um but if you look up steve mcquarter um you know wherever music is streaming and stuff you're gonna find us but also you can go to uh on top of the link that you sent which is like a link tree like you know all landing page of links uh for like you know spotify and all that uh you can also go to smjc as in steven mcquarter jason claiborne smjc music dot com and that's our website you can also file us up there awesome we'll post those links so folks that you can get the album and check out learn more about stephen and jason what they're doing how god is just messing up stuff in their lives and and bring that reality to churches and people outside the church who really need to hear that message so i'm so grateful man that we're buddies and it's it's so great to have you stephen on today thanks so much for being here thanks man appreciate you dude all right appreciate you all right guys hey thanks for uh so much for joining us today on the worship team training video podcast check us out next week we got more guests coming can't wait to unveil next because you never know he will be revealing their next top three struggles to help you and your worship team in your ministry love you see you guys back soon next time bye [Music] you | Worship Team Training | UC-hWSfOmWC4aI9dHkICMfEg | 2022-02-22 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,151 | 16,130 |
KNfy4ZVNWiQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNfy4ZVNWiQ | Nada the Lily | H. Rider Haggard | Fantasy Fiction | Talkingbook | English | 1/8 | dedication preface and introduction to nada the lily by age rider haggard this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org dedication some sale for i will call you by the name that for 50 years has been honored by every tribe between zambezi and cape i greet you some seo my father i have written a book that tells of men and matters of which you know the most of any who still look upon the lights therefore i set your name within that book and such as it is i offer it to you if you knew not shaka you and he have seen the same sun shine you knew his brother panda and his captains and perhaps even that very mopo who tells this tale his servant who slew him with the princes you have seen the circle of the witch doctors and the unconquerable zulu impis rushing to war you have crowned their kings and shared their councils and with your son's blood you have expiated a statesman's error and a general's faults some seo a song has been sung in my ears of how first you mastered this people of the zulu is it not true my father that for long hours you sat silent and alone while three thousand warriors shouted for your life and when they grew weary did you not stand and say pointing towards the ocean kill me if you wish men of chuayu but i tell you that for every drop of my blood a hundred avengers shall rise from yonder sea then so it was told me the regiments turned staring towards the black water as though the day of ulundi had already come and they saw the white slayers creeping across the plains thus samso your name became great among the people of the zulu as already it was great among many another tribe and their nobles did you homage and they gave you the bayete the royal salute declaring by the mouth of their council that in you dwelts the spirits of shakka many years have gone by then and now you are old my father it is many years since i was a boy and followed you when you went up among the boars and took their country for the queen why did you do this my father i will answer who know the truth you did it because had it not been done the zulus would have stamped out the boars were not that swire's impis gathered against the land and was it not because it became the queen's land that actual word he sent them murmuring to their crawls footnote i thank my father samsu for his message i am glad that he has sent it because the dutch have tired me out and i intended to fight them once and once only and to drive them over the vowel cabana you see my impis are gathered it was to fight the dutch i called them together now i send them back to their homes message from swayo to satishep stone april 1877 and a footnote to save bloodshed you annexed the country beyond the vowel perhaps it had been better to leave it since death chooses for himself and after all there was killing of our own people and with the killing shame but in those days we did not guess what we should live to see and of majuba we thought only as a little hill enemies have borne false witness against you on this matter samsu you who never heard except through overkindness yet what does that avail when you have gone beyond it will be forgotten since the sting of ingratitude passes and lies must wither like the winter velt only your name will not be forgotten as it was heard in life so it shall be heard in story and i pray that however humbly mine may pass down with it chance has taken me by another path and i must leave the ways of action that i love and bury myself in books but the old days and friends are in my mind nor while i have memory shall i forget them and you therefore though it's be for the last time from far across the seas i speak to you and lifting my hand i give your sibonga titles of praise and that royal salute to which now that its kings are gone and the people of heaven are no more a nation with her majesty you are alone and titled father chief of chiefs lion elephant that is not turned you who nursed us from of old you who overshadowed all peoples and took charge of them and ended by mastering the boars with your single strength help of the fatherless when in trouble salutation to you father paete oh and farewell h ryder haggard to sir theophilus shepstone kcmg natal 13th of september 1891 preface the writer of this romance has been encouraged to his task by a purpose somewhat beyond that of setting out a wild tale of savage life when he was yet a lad now some 17 years ago fortune took him to south africa there he was thrown in with men who for 30 or 40 years had been intimately acquainted with the zulu people with their history their heroes and their customs from these he heard many tales and traditions some of which perhaps are rarely told nowadays and in time to come they cease to be told altogether then the zulus were still a nation now that nation has been destroyed and the chief aim of its white rulers is to root out the war-like spirit for which it was remarkable and to replace it by a spirit of peaceful progress the zulu military organization perhaps the most wonderful that the world has seen is already a thing of the past it's perished at alundi it was shakka who invented that organization building it up from the smallest beginnings when he appeared at the commencement of this century it was as the ruler of a single small tribe when he fell in the year 1828 beneath the asa guys of his brothers and of his servants as he is called also all southeastern africa is at his feet and in his march to power he has slaughtered more than a million human beings footnotes at the commencement of the present century the population of southeastern africa was comparatively speaking dense shaka thinned it end of footnote an attempt has been made in these pages to set out the true character of this colossal genius and most evil man a napoleon and a tiberius in one and also that of his brother and successor dingan so no more need be said of them here the author's aim moreover has been to convey in a narrative form some idea of the remarkable spirits which animated these kings and their subjects and to make accessible in a popular shape incidents of history which are now for the most part only to be found in a few scarce works of reference rarely consulted except my students it will be obvious that such a task has presented difficulties since he who undertakes it must for a time forget his civilization and think with the mind and speak with the voice of a zulu of the old regime all the horrors perpetrated by the zulu tyrants cannot be published in this polite age of melonites and torpedoes their details have therefore been suppressed still much remains and those who think it wrong that's massacre and fighting should be written of except by special correspondence or that the sufferings of mankind beneath one of the world's most cruel tyrannies should form the groundwork of romance may be invited to leave this book on red most indeed nearly all of the historical incidents here recorded are substantially true thus it is said that shakka did actually kill his mother unandy for the reason given and destroy an entire tribe in the tatiana cleft and that he prophesied of the coming of the white man after receiving his death wounds of the incident of the missionary in the furnace of logs it is impossible to speak so certainly it came to the writer from the lips of an old traveler in the zulu but he cannot discover any confirmation of it still these kings undoubtedly put their soldiers to many tests of equal severity as he is named in this tale actually lived after he had stabbed shaka he rose to great eminence then he disappears from the scene but it is not accurately known whether he also went the way of the assagai or perhaps as his here suggested came to live near stanger under the name of zwitte the fate of the two lovers at the mouth of the cave is a true zulu tale which has been considerably varied to suit the purposes of this romance the late mr leslie who died in 1874 tells it in his book among the zulus and amatongas i heard a story the other day he says which if the power of writing fiction were possessed by me i might have worked up into a first class sensational novel it is the story that has been woven into the plot of this book to him also the writer is indebted for the artifice by which um obtained admission to the swazi stronghold it was told to mr leslie by the zulu who performed the feat and thereby won a wife also the writer's thanks are due to his friends mr fb finney i grieve to state that i must now say the late mr fb fini late zulu border agent for much information given to him in bygone years by word of mouth and more recently through his pamphlet zulu landed the zulus and to mr john byrd formerly treasurer to the government of natal whose compilation the annals of natal is invaluable to all who would study the early history of that colony and of zulu land as for the wilder and more romantic incidents of this story such as the hunting of um slopper gas and galaxy with the wolves or rather with the hyenas for there are no true wolves in zulu land the author can only say that they seem to him have a sorts that might well have been mythically connected with the names of those heroes similar beliefs and traditions are common in the records of primitive peoples as in the volsunga saga the club watcher of the fords or to give it its zulu name uno is an historical weapon chronicled by bishop callaway it was once owned by a certain he was an arbitrary person for no matter what was discussed in our village he would bring it to a conclusion with a stick but he made a good end for when the zulu soldiers attacked him he killed no less than 20 of them with the watcher and the spears stuck in him as thick as reeds in a morass this man's strength was so great that he could kill a leopard like a fly with his hands only much as some slopper gas slew the traitor in this story perhaps it may be allowable to add a few words about the zulu mysticism magic and superstition to which there is some illusion in this romance it has been little if at all exaggerated thus the writer well remembers hearing a legend how the guardian spirit of the amazulu was seen riding down the storm here is what mr finney says of her in the pamphlet to which reference has been made the natives have a spirit which they call nom kobulwana or the inkosazana yazulu the princess of heaven she is said to be robed in white and to take the form of a young maiden in fact an angel she is said to appear to some chosen person to whom she imparts some revelation but whatever that revelation may be it is kept a profound secret from outsiders i remember that just before the zulu war nom kobulwana appeared revealing something or other which had a great effect throughout the land and i know that the zulus were quite impressed that some calamity was about to befall them one of the ominous signs was that fire is said to have descended from heaven and ignited the grass over the graves of the former kings of zululand on another occasion nom kobulwana appeared to someone in zulu land the results of that visit being that the native women buried their young children up to their heads in sand deserting them for the time being going away weeping but returning at nightfall to unearth the little ones again for this divine personage there is therefore authority and the same may be said of most of the supernatural matters spoken of in these pages the exact spiritual position held in the zulu mind by the um the old old the great great the lord of the heavens is a more vexed question and for his proper consideration the reader must be referred to bishop callaway's work the religious system of the amazulu briefly character seems to vary from the idea of an ancestral spirit of the spirit of an ancestor to that of a god in the case of an able and highly intelligent person like the mopo of this story the ideal would probably not be a low one therefore he is made to speak of as the great spirit or god it only remains to the writer to express his regret that this story is not more varied in its hue it would have been desirable to introduce some gayer and more happy incidents but it has not been possible it is believed that the picture given of the times is a faithful one though it may be open to correction in some of its details at the least the aged man who tells the tale of his wrongs and vengeance could not be expected to treat his subject in an optimistic or even in a cheerful vein the lily introduction some years since it was during the winter before the zulu war a white man was traveling through natal his name does not matter but he plays no part in this story with him were two wagons laden with goods which he was transporting to pretoria the weather was cold and there was little or no grass for the oxen which made the journey difficult but he had been tempted to it by the high rates of transport that prevailed at that season of the year which would remunerate him for any probable loss he might suffer in cattle so he pushed along on his journey and all went well until he had passed the little town of stanga once the site of duguza the kraal of shakka the first zulu king and the uncle of techchuaio the night after he left stanger the air turned a bitterly cold heavy grey clouds filled the sky and hid the light of the stars now if i were not in natal i should say that there was a heavy fall of snow coming said the white man to himself i have often seen the sky look like that in scotland before snow then he reflected that there had been no deep snow in natal for years and having drunk a tot of square face and smoked his pipe he went to bed beneath the after tent of his larger wagon during the night he was awakened by a sense of bitter cold and the low moaning of the oxen that were tied to the trek toe every ox in its place he thrust his head through the curtain of the tent and looked out the earth was white with snow and the air was full of it swept along by a cutting wind now he sprang up huddling on his clothes and as he did so calling to the cafes who slept beneath the wagons presently they awoke from the stupor which already was beginning to overcome them and crept out shivering with cold and wrapped from head to foot in blankets quick you boys he said to them in zulu quick would you see the cattle die of the snow and wind loose the oxen from the tractors and drive them in between the wagons they will give them some shelter and lighting a lantern he sprang out into the snow at last it was done no easy task for the numbed hands of the cafes could scarcely loosen the frozen raims the wagons were outspanned side by side with the space between them and into this space the mob of 36 oxen was driven and they're secured by reims tied crosswise from the front and hind wheels of the wagons then the white man crept back to his bed and the shivering natives fortified with gin or square face as it is called locally took refuge on the second wagon drawing a tent sail over them for a while there was silence save for the moaning of the huddled and restless cattle if the snow goes on i shall lose my oxen he said to himself i could never bear this cold hardly had the words past his lips when the wagon shook there was a sound of breaking rheims and trampling hooves once more he looked out the oxen had scripts in a mob there they were running away into the night and the snow seeking to find shelter from the cold in a minute they had vanished utterly there was nothing to be done except wait for the morning at last it came revealing a landscape blind with snow such searches could be made told them nothing the oxen had gone and their spore was obliterated by the fresh fallen flakes the white man called the council of his catholic servants what was to be done he asked one said this thing won that but all agreed that they must wait to act until the snow melted or till we freeze you whose mothers were fools said the white man who was in the worst of tempers but had he not lost 400 pounds worth of oxen then a zulu spoke who had hitherto remained silent he was the driver of the first wagon my father he said to the white man this is my word the oxen are lost in the snow no man knows whether they have gone or whether they live or are now but hides and bones it's at the crawl yonder and he pointed to some huts about two miles away on the hillside there's a witch doctor named zwiete he's old very old but he has wisdom and he can tell you where the oxen are if any man my father stuff answered the white man still as a crowl cannot be colder than this wagon we will go and ask wayte bring a bottle of square face and some snuff with you for presents an hour later he stood in the huts of zwiete before him was a very ancient man a mere bag of bones with sightless eyes and one hand his left white and shriveled what do you seek of zweite my white father asked the old man in a thin voice you do not believe in me and my wisdom why should i help you yet i will do it though it is against your law and you do wrong to ask me yes to show you that there is truth in our zulu doctors i will help you my father i know what you seek you seek to know where your oxen have run for shelter from the cold is that not so it is so doctor answered the white man you have long ears yes my wife's father i have long ears though they say that i grow deaf i have keen eyes also and yet i cannot see your face let me hearken let me look for a while he was silent rocking himself to and fro then he spoke you have a farm white man down near pine town is it not ah i thought so and an hour's ride from your farm lifts a boar with four fingers only on his right hand there is a cloof on the boar's farm where mimosa trees grow there in the cloof you shall find your oxen yes five days journey from here you will find them all i say all my father except three only the big black afrikanda ox the little red zulu ox with one horn and the speckled ox you shall not find these for they have died in the snow send and you will find the others no no i ask no fee i do not work wonders for reward why should i i am rich now the white man scoffed but in the end so great is the power of superstition he sent and here it may be stated that on the eleventh day of his sojourn at the crowl of sweta those whom he sent returned with the oxen except the three only after that he scoffed no more those eleven days he spent in a hut of the old man's kraal and every afternoon he came and talked with him sitting far into the night on the third day he asked waiter how it was that his left hand was white and shriveled and who on slopper gas and nada of whom he had let fall some words then the old man told him the tale that is set out here day by day he told some of it till it was finished it is not all written in these pages proportions may have been forgotten or put aside as irrelevant neither has it been possible for the writer of it to render the full force of the zulu idiom nor to convey a picture of the teller for in truth he acted rather than told his story was the death of a warrior in question he stabbed with his stick showing how the blow fell and where did the story grow sorrowful he groaned or even wept moreover he had many voices one for each of the actors in his tale this man ancient and withered seemed to live again in the far past it was the past that spoke to his listener telling of deeds long forgotten of days that are no more known yet as he best may the white man has set down the substance of the story of zweiter in the spirit in which zwaiter told it and because the history of nadal lilly and of those with whom her life was intertwined moved him strangely and in many ways he has done more he has printed it that others may judge of it and now his part is played that him who was named zwiet but who had another name take up the story end of dedication preface and introduction chapter one of nada the lily by h ryder haggard this librivox recording is in the public domain the chaka prophesies you ask me my father to tell you the tale of the youth of um slopper gas holder of the iron chieftainness the axe groan maker who was named bulali or the slaughterer and of his love for nada the most beautiful of zulu women it is long but you are here for many nights and if i live to tell it it shall be told strengthen your hearts my father for i have much to say that is sorrowful and even now when i think of nada the tears creep through the horn that shuts out my old eyes from lights do you know who i am my father you do not know you think that i am an old old witch doctor named zueite so men have thought for many years but that is not my name few have known it for i have kept it locked in my breast lest though i live now under the law of the white man and the great queen is my chieftainess and i said i still might find this heart did any know my name look at this hand my father no not that which is withered with fire look on this right hand of mine you see it though i who i'm blind cannot but still within me i see it as it was once i i see it red and strong red with the blood of two kings listen my father bend your ear to me and listen i am muppo i felt you start you start as the regiment of the bees started when mupper walked before their ranks and from the asaga in his hand the blood of chakka dropped slowly to the earth shakka the zulu napoleon one of the greatest geniuses and most wicked men who ever lived he was killed in the year 1828 having slaughtered more than a million human beings i am mopo who slew shakat the king i killed him with dingan and um the princes but the wound was mine that his life crept out of and but for me he would never have been slain i killed him with the princess but ding on i and one other slew alone what do you say dingan died by the tongola yes yes he died but not there he died on the ghost mountain he lies in the breast of the old stone witch who sits aloft forever waiting for the world to perish but i also was on the ghost mountain in those days my feet still could travel fast and the vengeance would not let me sleep i traveled by day and by night i found him i and another we killed him why do i tell you this what has it to do with the loves of um sloppogas and nada the lily i will tell you i stabbed chaka for the sake of my sister baleka the mother of um slopagas and because he had murdered my wives and children i and i'm sloppergas sleudingan for the sake of nada who is my daughter there are great names in the story my father yes many have heard the names when the impies roared them out as they charged in battle i have felt the mountain shake and seen the waters quiver in their sound but where are they now silence has them and the whites men write them down in books i open the gates of distance for the holders of the names they pass through and they have gone beyond i cut the strings that tied them to the world they fell off they fell off perhaps they are falling still perhaps they creep about their desolate clouds in the skins of snakes i wish i knew the snakes that i might crush them with my heel yonder beneath us at the burying place of kings there is a hole in that hole lies the bones of shakka the king who died for balika far away in zulu land there is a cleft upon the ghost mountain at the foot of that cleft lie the bones of dingan the king who died for nada it was far to fall and he was heavy those bones of his are broken into little pieces i went to see them when the vultures and the jackals had done their work and then i laughed three times and came here to die all that is long ago and i have not died though i wish to die and follow the road that nada trod perhaps i have lived to tell you this tale my father that you may repeat it to the white men if you will how old am i nay i do not know very very old had shaka lived he would have been as old as i this would have made him nearly a hundred years old an age rarely attained by a native the writer remembers talking to an aged zulu woman however who told him that she was married when shaka was king nona living whom i knew when i was a boy i am so old that i must hasten the grass withers and the winter comes yes while i speak the winter nips my heart well i am ready to sleep in the cold and perhaps i shall awake again in the spring before the zulus were a people for i will begin at the beginning i was born of the langenie tribe we were not a large tribe afterwards all our able-bodied men numbered one full regiment in shaka's army perhaps they were between two and three thousand of them but they were brave now they're all dead and they're women and children with them that people is no more it is gone like last month's moon how it went i will tell you by and by our tribe lived in a beautiful open country the moors whom we call the yamabuna are there now they tell me my father was chief of the tribe and his clown was built on the crest of a hill but i was not the son of his head wife one evening when i was still little standing as high as a man's elbow only i went out with my mother below the cattle crowl to see the cows driven in my mother was very fond of these cows and there was one with a white face that would follow her about she carried my little sister balika riding on her hip balaka was a baby then we talked so we met the lads driving in the cows my mother called the white-faced cow and gave it mealy leaves which she had brought with her then the boys went on with the cattle the white-faced cow stopped by my mother she said that she would bring it to the cloud when she came home my mother sat down on the grass and nursed her baby while i played round her and the cow grazed presently we saw a woman walking towards us across the plain she walked like one who is tired on her back was a bundle of mats and she led by the hand a boy of about my own age but bigger and stronger than i was we waited a long while so at last the woman came up to us and sank down on the velt for she was very weary we saw by the way her hair was dressed that she was not of our tribe greeting to you said the woman good morrow answered my mother what you seek food and a hut to sleep in said the woman i have traveled far how are you named and what is your people ask my mother my name is on andy i am the wife of senzangakuna of the zulu tribe said the stranger now there had been war between our people and the zulu people and senzanga connor had killed some of our warriors and taken many of our cattle so when my mother heard the speech of unandi she sprang up in anger you dare to come here and ask me for food and shelter wife of a dog of a zulu she cried be gone or i will call the girls to whip you out of our country the woman who was very handsome waited till my mother had finished her angry words then she looked up and spoke slowly there is a cow by you with milk dropping from its other will you not even give me and my boy a gourd of milk and she took a gourd from her bundle and held it towards us i will not said my mother we are thirsty with long travel will you not then give us a cup of water we have found none for many hours i will not wife of a dog go and seek water for yourself the woman's eyes filled with tears but the boy folded his arms on his breast and scowled he was a very handsome boy with bright black eyes but when he scowled his eyes were like the sky before a thunderstorm mother he said we are not wanted here any more than we wanted yonder he nodded towards the country where the zulu people lived let us be going to dingiswayo the um tetua people will protect us yes let us be going my son answered unhandy but the path is long we are weary and shall fall by the way i heard and something pulled at my heart i was sorry for the woman and her boy they looked so tired then without saying anything to my mother i snatched the gourd and ran with it to a little dongler that was hard by for i knew that there was a spring presently i came back with the gourd full of water my mother wanted to catch me but she was very angry but i ran past her and gave the gourd to the boy then my mother ceased trying to interfere only she beat the woman with her tongue all the while saying that evil had come to our corrals from her husband and she felt in her heart that more evil would come upon us from her son guardian spirit told her so aha my father rejoiced told her true if a woman on andy and her child had died that day on the velts the gardens of my people would not now be a wilderness and their bones would not lie in the great gully that is near and swayo's crowl while my mother talked ironed the cow with the white face stood still and watched and the baby baleka cried aloud the boy who andy's son having taken the gourd did not offer the water to his mother he drank two-thirds of it himself i think that he would have drunk it all had not his thirst been slaked but when he had done he gave what was left to his mother and she finished it then he took the gourd again and came forward holding it in one hand in the other he carried a short stick what is your name boy he said to me as a big rich man speaks to one who is little and poor mopo is my name i answered and what is the name of your people i told him the name of my tribe the langhini tribe very well mopo now i will tell you my name my name is shakka son of senzangakona and my people are called the amazulu and i will tell you something more i am little today and my people are a small people but i shall grow big so big that my head will be lost in the clouds you will look up and you shall not see it my face will blind you it will be bright like the sun and my people will grow great with me they shall eat up the whole world and when i am big and my people are big and we have stamped the earth flats as far as men can travel then i will remember your tribe the tribe of the langhini who would not give me and my mother a cup of milk when we were weary you see this gourd for every drop it can hold the blood of a man shall flow the blood of one of your men but because you gave me the water i will spare you more paul and you only and make you great under me you shall grow fat in my shadow you alone i will never harm however you sin against me this i swear but for that woman and he pointed to my mother let her make haste and die so that i do not need to teach her what a long time death can take to come i have spoken and he ground his teeth and shook his stick towards us my mother stood silent a while then she gasped out the little liar he speaks like a man does he the calf lows like a bull i will teach him another note the brat of an evil prophet and putting down the laker she ran at the boy shaka stood quite still till she was near then suddenly he lifted the stick in his hand and hit her so hard on the head that she fell down after that he laughed turned and went away with his mother unandi these my father were the first words i heard shaka speak and they were words of prophecy and they came true the last words i heard him speak were words of prophecy also and i think that they will come true even now they are coming true in the one he told how the zulu people should rise and say have they not risen in the other he told me how they should fall and they did fall do not the white men gather themselves together even now against untrial as vultures gather round a dying ox the zulus are not what they were to stand against them yes yes they will come true and mine is the song of a people that is doomed but of these other words i will speak in their place i went to my mother presently she raised herself from the ground and sat up with her hands over her face the blood from the wound the stick had made ran down her face onto her breast and i wiped it away with the grass she sat for a long while thus while the child cried the cow loaded to be milked and i wiped up the blood with the grass at last she took her hands away and spoke to me mo poor my son she said i have dreamed a dream i dreamed that i saw the boy shaka who struck me he was grown like a giant he stalked across the mountains and the belt his eyes blazed like the lightning and in his hand he shook a little asagai that was red with blood he caught up people after people in his hands and tore them he stamped the clouds flats with his feet before him was the green of summer behind him the land was as black as when the fires have eaten the grass i saw our people mopo they were many and fat their hearts laughed the men were brave the girls were fair i counted their children by the hundreds i saw them again mopo they were bones white bones thousands of bones tumbled together in a rocky place and he shaka stood over the bones and laughed till the earth shook then mopo in my dream i saw you groan a man you alone were left of our people you crept up behind the giant chaka and with you came others great men of a royal luke you stabbed him with a little spear and he fell down and grew small again he fell down and cursed you but you cried in his ear a name the name of balika your sister and he died let us go home mopo let us go home the darkness falls so we rose and went home but i held my peace for i was afraid very much afraid end of chapter 1 chapter 2 of nada the lily by h ryder haggard this librivox recording is in the public domain mopo is in trouble now i must tell how my mother did what the boy shaka had told her and died quickly for where his stick had struck her on the forehead there came a saw that would not be healed and in the saw grew an abscess and the abscess ate inwards till it came to the brain then my mother fell down and died and i cried very much for i loved her and it was dreadful to see her cold and stiff with not a word to say however loudly i called her well they buried my mother and she was soon forgotten i only remembered her nobody else did not even balika for she was too little and as for my father he took another young wife and was content after that i was unhappy for my brothers did not love me because i was much cleverer than they and had greater skill with the asa guy and was swifter in running so they poisoned the mind of my father against me and he treated me badly but balika and i loved each other but we were both lonely and she clung to me like a creeper to the only tree in a plane and though i was young i learned this that to be wise is to be strong for though he who holds the asa guy kills yet he whose mind directs the battle is greater than he who kills now i saw that the witchfinders and the medicine men were feared in the land and that everybody looked up to them so that even when they had only a stick in their hands ten men armed with spears would fly before them therefore i determined that i would be a witch doctor for they alone can kill those who they hate with a word so i learned the arts of the medicine men i made sacrifices i fasted in the felts alone i did all those things of which you have heard and i learned much for there is wisdom in our magic as well as lies and you know it my father else you had not come here to ask me about your lost oxen so things went on till i was 20 years of age a man full grown by now i had mastered all i could learn by myself so i joined myself onto the chief medicine man of our tribe who was named noma he was old had one eye only and was very clever of him i learned some tricks and more wisdom but at last he grew jealous of me and set a trap to catch me as it chanced a rich man of a neighbouring tribe had lost some cattle and came with gifts to norma praying him to smell them out norma tried and could not find them his vision failed him then the headman grew angry and demanded back his gifts but noma would not give up that which he once had held and hot words passed the hedman said that he would kill norma norma said that he would bewitch the headman peace i said for i feared that blood would be shed peace and let me see if my snake will tell me where the cattle are you are nothing but a boy answered the headman can a boy have wisdom that shall soon be known i said taking the bones in my hand footnote the kaffir witch doctors used the knuckle bones of animals in their magic rights throwing them something as we throw dice end of footnotes leave the bones alone scream norma we will ask nothing more of our snakes for the good of this son of a dog he shall throw the bones answered the headman if you tried to stop him i will let sunshine through you with my [ __ ] guy and he lifted his spear then i made haste to begin i threw the bones the headman sat on the ground before me and answered my questions you know what these matters my father how sometimes the witch doctor has knowledge of where the lost things are for our ears are long and sometimes his echose tells him as but the other day it told me of your oxen well in this case my snake stood up i knew nothing of the man's cattle but my spirit was with me and soon i saw them all and told them to him one by one their color their age everything i told him too where they were and how one of them had fallen into a stream and lay there on its back drowned with its forefoot caught in a forked route as my clothes they told me so i told the headman now the man was pleased and said that if my sight was good and he found the cattle the gifts should be taken from noma and given to me and he asked the people who were sitting round and there were many if this was not just yes yes they said it was just and they would see that it was done but noah sat still and looked at me evilly he knew that i had made a true divination and he was very angry it was a big matter the herd of cattle were many and if they were found where i had said then all men would think me the greater wizard now it was late and the moon had not yet risen therefore the headman said that he would sleep that night in our crawl and its first lights would go with me to the spot where i said the cattle were after that he went away i too went into my hut and lay down to sleep suddenly i awoke feeling a weight upon my breast i tried to start up but something cold pricked my throat i fell back again and looked the door of the huts was open the moon lay low on the sky like a ball of fire far away i could see it through the door and its lights crept into the hut it fell upon the face of norma the witch doctor he was seated across me glaring at me with his one eye and in his hand was a knife it was that which i had felt pricked my throat you welp whom i have bred up to tear me he hissed into my ear you dare to define where i failed did you very well now i will show you how i serve such puppies first i will pierce through the roots of your tongue so that you cannot squeal then i will cut you to pieces slowly bit by bit and in the morning i will tell the people that the spirits did it because you lied next i will take off your arms and legs yes yes i will make you like a stick then i will and he began driving in the knife under my chin mercy my uncle i said for i was frightened and the knife hurts have mercy then i will do whatever you wish will you do this he asked still pricking me with the knife will you get up go to find the dog's cattle and drive them to a certain place and hide them there and he named a secret valley that was known to very few if you do that i will spare you and give you three of the cows if you refuse or play me false then by my father's spirit i will find a way to kill you certainly i will do it my uncle i answered why did you not trust me before had i known that you wanted to keep the cattle i would never have smelt them out i only did so fearing less you should lose the presence you are not so wicked as i thought he growled get up then and do my bidding you can be back here two hours after dawn so i got up thinking all the while whether i should try to spring on him but i was without arms and he had the knife also if by chance i prevailed and killed him it would have been thoughts that i had murdered him and i should have tasted the asagai so i made another plan i would go and find the cattle in the valley where i had smelt them out but i would not bring them to the secret hiding place no i would drive them straight to the kraal and denounce noma before the chief my father and all the people but i was young in those days and did not know the hearts of noma he had not been a witch doctor till he grew old for nothing oh he was evil he who was cunning as a jackal and fierce like a lion he had planted me by him like a tree but he meant to keep me clipped like a bush now i had grown tall and overshadowed him therefore he would root me up i went to the corner of my hut no more watching me all the while and tukakeri and my small shield then i started through the moonlight till i was past the crowl i glided along quietly as a shadow after that i began to run singing to myself as i went to frighten away the ghosts my father for an hour i traveled swiftly over the plane till i came to the hillside where the bush began here it was very dark under the shade of the trees and i sang louder than ever at last i found the little buffalo path i thought and turned along it presently i came to an open place where the moonlight crept in between the trees i knelt down and looked yes my snake could not lie to me there was the spore of the cattle then i went on gladly till i reached the dell through which the water ran softly sometimes whispering and sometimes talking out loud here the trail of the cattle was broad they had broken down the ferns with their feet and trampled the grass presently i came to a pool i knew it it was the pool my snake had shown to me and there at the edge of the pool floated the drowned ox its foot caught in a forked root or was just as i had seen it in my heart i stepped forward and looked round my eye caught something it was a faint grey light of the dawn glinting on the cattle's horns as i looked one of them snorted rose and shook the jew from his hide he seemed big as an elephant in the mist and twilight then i collected them all there were seventeen and drove them before me down the narrow path back towards the crowl now the daylight came quickly and the sun had been up an hour when i reached the spot where i must turn if i wish to hide the cattle in this secret place as noma had bid me but i would not do this no i would go on to the crowl with them and tell all men that noma was a thief still i sat down and rested a while but i was tired as i sat i heard a noise and looked up there over the slope of the rise came a crowd of men and leading them was norma and by his side the head man who owned the cattle i rose and stood still wondering but as i stood they ran towards me shouting and waving sticks and spears there he is scream noma there he is the clever boy whom i have brought up to bring shame on me what did i tell you did i not tell you that he was a thief yes yes i know your tricks mopo my child see he is stealing the cattle he knew where they were all the time and now he is taking them away to hide them they would be useful to buy a wife with would they not my clever boy and he made a rusher to me with his stick lifted and after him came the headman grunting with rage i understood now my father my heart went mad in me everything began to swim round a red cloth seemed to lift itself up and down before my eyes i have always seen it thus when i was forced to fight i screamed out one word only liar and ran to meet him on came norma he struck at me with his stick but i caught the blow up on my little shield and hits back wow i did hit the skull of norma met my caddy and down he fell dead at my feet i yelled again and rushed on at the headman he threw an ass a guy but it missed me and next second i hit him too he got up his shield but i knocked it down upon his head and over he rolled senseless whether he lived or died i do not know my father but his head being of the thickest i think it likely that he lived then while the people stood astonished i turned and fled like the wind they turned two and ran after me throwing spears at me and trying to cut me off but none of them could catch me no not one i went like the wind i went like a book when the dogs wake it from sleep and presently the sound of their chase grew fainter and fainter till at last i was out of sight and alone end of chapter two chapter three of nada the lily by h ryder haggard this librivox recording is in the public domain mopo ventures home i threw myself down on the grass and panted till my breath came back then i went and hid in a patch of reeds down by a swamp all day long i lay there thinking what was i to do now i was a jackal without a hole if i went back to my people certainly they would kill me whom they thought a thief my blood would be given for nomas and that i did not wish though my heart was sad then there came into my mind the thought of shakka the boy to whom i had given the cup of water long ago i had heard of him his name was known in the land already the air was big with it the very trees and the grass spoke it the words he had said and the vision that my mother had seen were beginning to come true by the help of the um he had taken the place of his father senzangacona he had driven out the tribe of the amakkwabe now he had made war on suite chief of the enduande and he had sworn that he would stamp the enduande flats so that nobody could find them anymore now i remembered how this shacka promised that he would make me great and that i should grow fat in his shadow and i thought to myself that i would arise and go to him perhaps he would kill me well what did it matter certainly i should be killed if i stayed here yes i would go but now my heart pulled another way there was but one whom i loved in the world it was my sister malika my father had betrothed her to the chief of a neighboring tribe but i knew that this marriage was against her wish perhaps my sister would run away with me if i could get near her to tell her that i was going i would try yes i would try i waited till the darkness came down then i rose from my bed of weeds and crept like a jackal towards the coral in the mealy gardens i stopped a while for i was very hungry and filled myself with a half-ripe melis then i went on till i came to the cl some of my people were seated outside of a hut talking together over a fire i crept near silently as a snake and hid behind a little bush i knew that they could not see me outside the ring of the firelight and i wanted to hear what they said as i guessed they were talking of me and called me many names they said that i should bring your luck on the tribe by having killed so great a witch doctor as noma also that the people of the head headman would demand payments for the assault on him i learned moreover that my father had ordered out all the men of the tribe to hunt for me on the morrow and to kill me wherever they found me ah i thought you may hunt but you will bring nothing home to the pot just then a dog that was lying by the fire got up and began to sniff the air i could not see what dog it was indeed i had forgotten all about the dogs when i drew near the cloud that is what comes at once of experience my father the dog sniffed and sniffed then he began to growl looking always my way and i grew afraid what is the dog growling at said one man to another go and see but the other man was taking snuff and did not like to move let the dog go and see for himself he answered sneezing what is the good of keeping a dog if you have to catch the thief go on then said the first man to the dog and he ran forward barking then i saw him it was my own dog goose a very good dog presently as i lay not knowing what to do he smelts my smell stopped barking and running around the bush he found me and began to lick my face be quiet coos i whispered to him and he lay down by my side where has that dog gone now said the first man is he bewitched that he stops barking suddenly and does not come back we will see said the other rising a spear in his hand now once more i was terribly afraid for i thought that they would catch me or i must run for my life again but as i sprang up to run a big black snake glided between the men and went off towards the huts they jumped aside in a great fright then all of them turned to follow the snake saying that this was what the dog was barking at that was my good exclusive my father which without any doubt took the shape of a snake to save my life when they had gone i crept off the other way and koos followed me at first i thought that i would kill him lest he should betray me but when i called him to me to knock him on the head with my caddy he sat down upon the ground wagging his tail and seemed to smile in my face i could not do it so i thought that i would take my chance and we went on together this was my purpose first to creep into my own huts and get my asaguays and the skin blanket then to gain speech with balaka my huts i thought would be empty but nobody slept there except myself and the huts of noma but some paces away to the right i came to the reed fence that surrounded the huts nobody was to be seen at the gate which was not shut with thorns as usual it was my duty to close it and i had not been there to do so then bidding the dog lie down outside i stepped through boldly reached the door of my huts and listened it was empty there was not even a breath to be heard so i crept in and began to search for my asa guys my water gourd and my wood pillow which was so nicely carved that i did not like to leave it soon i found them then i felt a bout for my skin rug and as i did so my hand touched something cold i started and felt again it was a man's face the face of a dead man of noma whom i had killed and who had been laid in my huts who awaits burial oh then i was frightened but no my dead and in the dark was worse than norma alive i made ready to fly when suddenly i heard the voices of women talking outside the door of the hut i knew the voices they were those of noma's two wives and one of them said that she was coming in to watch by her husband's body now i was in a trap indeed but before i could do anything i saw the lights go out of the hole in the hut and knew by the sound of a fat woman puffing as she bent herself up that noma's first wife was coming through it presently she was in and squatting herself by the side of the corpse in such a fashion that i could not get to the door she began to make lamentations to call down curses on me ah she did not know that i was listening i too squatted by noma's head and grew quick-witted in my fear now that the woman was there i was not so much afraid of the dead man and i remembered too that he had been a great cheat so i thought i would make him cheat for the last time i placed my hands beneath his shoulders and pushed him up so that he sat upon the ground the woman heard the noise and made a sound in her throat will you not be quiet you old hag i said inoma's voice can you not let me be at peace even now when i am dead she heard and falling backwards in fear drew in her breath to shriek aloud what will you also dare to shriek i said again in norma's voice then i must teach you silence and i tumbled him over onto the top of her then her senses left her and whether she ever found them again i do not know at least she grew quiets for that time for me i snatched up the rug afterwards i found it was known as best karos made by basutos of chosen catskins and were three oxen and i fled followed by koos now the crowl of my chief my father makidama was two hundred paces away and i must go liver but there badika slept also i dared not enter by the gate because a man was always on guard there so i cut my way through the re-defense with my asser guy and crept to the huts where baleka was with some of her half-sisters i knew on which side of the huts it was her custom to lie and where her head would be so i lay down on my side and gently very gently began to bore a hole in the grass covering of the huts it took a long while for the thatch was thick but at last i was nearly through it then i stopped but it came into my mind that balaka might have changed her place and that i might wake the wrong girl i almost gave it over thinking that i would fly alone when suddenly i heard a girl awake and begin to cry on the other side of the thatch ah i thought that is balika who weeps for her brother so i put my lips where the thatch was thinnest and whispered palakka my sister palika do not weep i'm oppo i'm here say not a word but rise come out of the hut bringing your skin blankets now balika was very clever she did not shriek as most girls would have done no she understood and after waiting a while she rose and crept from the huts her blankets in her hand why are you here mopo as she whispered as we met surely you will be killed hush i said and then i told her of the plan which i had made will you come with me i said when i had done or will you creep back into the huts and bid me farewell she thought a while that she said though my brother i will come for i love you alone among our people though i believe that this will be the end of it that you will lead me to my death i did not think much of her words at the time but afterwards they came back to me so we slipped away together followed by the dog coos and soon we were running over the felt with our faces set towards the country of the zulu tribe end of chapter three chapter four of nada the lily by h ryder haggard this librivox recording is in the public domain the flight of mopo and balika all the rest of that night we journeyed till even the dog was tired then we hid in a melee field for the day as we were afraid of being seen towards the afternoon we heard voices and looking through the stems of the milies we saw a party of my father's men passed searching for us they went on to a neighbouring crowd to ask if we had been seen and after that we saw them no more for a while at night we traveled again but as fate would have it we were met by an old woman who looked oddly at us but said nothing after that we pushed on day and night for we knew that the old woman would tell the pursuers if she met them and so indeed it came about on the third evening we reached some melee gardens and saw that they had been trampled down among the broken melees we found the body of a very old man as full of asagai wounds as a porcupine with quills we wondered at this and went on a little way then we saw that the crowd to which the gardens belonged was burned down we crept up to it and ah it was a sad sight for us to see afterwards we became used to such sights all about lay the bodies of dead people scores of them old men young men women children little babies at the breast there they lay among the burnt huts pierced with asagai wounds red was the earth with their blood and red they looked in the red light of the setting sun it was as though all the land had been smeared with the bloody hand of the great spirit of the umkulunkulu baleka saw it and began to cry she was weary poor girl and we had found little to eat only grass and green corn an enemy has been here i said and as i spoke i thought that i heard a groan from the other side of a broken reed hedge i went and looked there lay a young woman she was badly wounded but still alive my father a little way from her lay a man dead and before him several other men of another tribe he had died fighting in front of the woman with the bodies of three children another a little one lay on her body i looked at the woman and as i looked she groaned again opened her eyes and saw me and that i had a spear in my hand kill me quickly she said have you not tortured me enough i said that i was a stranger and did not want to kill her then bring me water she said there is a spring there behind the kral i called to balika to come to the woman and went with my gourds of the spring there were bodies in it but i dragged them out and when the water had cleared a little i filled the gourd and brought it to the woman she drank deep and her strength came back a little the water gave her life how did you come to this i asked it was an imp of shakka chief of the zulus that hate us up she answered they burst upon us at dawn this morning while we were asleep in our huts yes i woke up to hear the sound of killing i was sleeping by my husband with him who lies there and the children we all ran out my husband had a spear and shield he was a brave man see he died bravely he killed three of the zulu devils before he himself was dead then they caught me and killed my children and stabbed me so they thought that i was dead afterwards they went away i don't know why they came but i think it was because our chief would not send men to help shaka against swete she stopped gave a great cry and died my sister wept at the sights and i too was stirred by it ah i thought to myself the great spirits must be evil if he is not evil such things would not happen that is how i thought then my father now i think differently i know that we had not found out the path of the great spirit that is all i was a chicken in those days my father afterwards i got used to such sights they did not stir me anymore not to unwit but then in the days of shakka the rivers ran blood yes we had to look at the water to see if it was clean before we drank people learned how to die then and not make a noise about it what does it matter they would have been dead now anyway it does not matter nothing matters except being born that is a mistake my father we stopped at the crowd that night but we could not sleep for now we heard the tongo the ghosts of the dead people moving about and calling to each other it was natural that they should do so men were looking for their wives and mothers for their children but we were afraid that they might be angry with us for being there so we clung together and trembled in each other's arms koos also trembled and from time to time he howled loudly but they did not seem to see us and towards mourning their cries grew fainter when the first light came we rose and picked our way through the dead down to the plane now we had an easy road to follow to shaka's corral for there was the spore of the impe and of the cattle which they had stolen and sometimes we came to the body of a warrior who had been killed because his wounds prevented him from marching farther but now i was doubtful whether it was wise for us to go to shakka for after what we had seen i grew afraid lest he should kill us still we had nowhere to turn so i said that we would walk along till something happened now we grew faints with hunger and weariness and baleka said that we had better sit down and die but then there would be no more trouble so we sat down by a spring but i did not wish to die yet though baleka was right and it would have been well to do so as we sat the dog coos went to a bush that was nearby and presently i heard him spring at something and the sound of struggling i ran to the bush he had caught hold of a dyker book as big as himself that was asleep in it then i drove my spear into the book and shouted for joy for here was food when the book was dead i skinned him and we took bits of the flesh washed them in water and ate them for we had no fire to cook them with it is not nice to eat uncooked flesh but we were so hungry that we did not mind and the food refreshed us when we had eaten what we could we rose and washed ourselves at the spring but as we washed balika looked up and gave a cry of fear for there on the crest of the hill about ten spear throws away was a party of six armed men people of my own tribe children of my father makidama who still pursued us to take us or kill us they saw us they raised the shouts and began to run we too sprang up and ran ran like books for fear had touched our feet now the land laid us before us the ground was open and sloped down to the banks of the white umphulotsy which twisted through the plane like a great and shining snake on the other side the ground rose again and we did not know what was beyond but we thought that in this direction lay the coral of shakka we ran for the river where else were we to run and after us came the warriors they gained on us they were strong and they were angry because they had come so far run as we would still they gained now we neared the banks of the river it was full and wide above us the waters ran angrily breaking into swirls of whites where they passed over sunken rocks below was a rapid in which none might live between the two a deep pool where the water was quiet but the stream's strong ah my brother what shall we do gus malika there is this to choose i answered perish on the spears of our people or try the river easier to die by water than on iron she answered good i said now may our snakes look towards us and the spirits of our fathers be with us at the least we can swim and i led her to the head of the pool we threw away our blankets everything except an acid guy which i held in my teeth and we plunged in wading as far as we could now we were up to our breasts now we had lost the earth and were swimming towards the middle of the river the dog goose leading the way then it was that the soldiers appeared on the bank ah little people one cried you swim do you well you will drown and if you do not drown we no afford and we will catch you and kill you yes if we must run over the edge of the world after you we will catch you and he hurled an assage after us which fell between us like a flash of lights while he spoke we swam hard and now we were in the current it swept us downwards but still we made way but we could swim well it was just this if we could reach the bank before we were swept into the rapids we were safe if not then good night now we were near the other side but alas we were also near the lip of the foaming water we strained we struggled baleka was a brave girl and she swam bravely but the water pushed her down below me and i could do nothing to help her i got my foot upon the rock and looked round there she was and eight paces from her the broken water boiled i could not go back i was too weak and it seemed that she must perish but the dog cou saw he swam to her barking then turned round heading for the shore she grasped him by the tail with her right hand then he put out his strength he was very strong she too struck out with her feet and left hand and slowly very slowly drew near then i stretched out the handle of my assegai towards her she caught it with her left hand already her feet were over the brink of the rapids but i pulled and gooseballed and we brought her safe into the shallows and from the shallows to the bank and there she fell gasping now when the soldiers on the other bank saw that we had crossed they shouted threats as us then ran away down the bank arise balaka i said they have gone to seek a ford ah let me die she answered but i forced her to rise and after a while she got her breath again and we walked on as fast as we could up the long rise for two hours we walked or more till at last we came to the crest of the rise and there far away we saw a large growl keep hearts i said see there is a crawl of shakka yes brother she answered but what awaits us there death is behind us and before us we are in the middle of death presently we came to a path that ran to the krawl from the ford of umphelotsi it was by it that the empire traveled we followed the path till at last we were but half an hour's journey from the canal then we looked back and lo there behind us were the pursuers five of them one had been drowning crossing the river again we ran but now we were weak and they gained upon us then once more i thought of the dog he was fierce and would tear anyone on whom i set him i called him and told him what to do though i knew it would be his death he understood and flew towards the soldiers growling his hair standing up on his spine they tried to kill him with spears and carries but he jumped around them biting at them and kept them back at last a man hit him and he sprang up and seized the man by the throat there he clung man and dog rolling over and over together till the end of it was that they both died ah he was a dog we do not see such dogs nowadays his father was a war hound the first that came into the country that dog once killed a leopard all by himself well this was the end of coos meanwhile we had been running now we were about 300 paces from the gates of the canal and there was something going on inside it that's we could see from the noise and dust the four soldiers leaving the dead dog and the dying man came after us swiftly i saw that they must catch us before we reached the gate but now balika could go but slowly then a thought came into my head i had brought her here i would save her life if i could should she reach the cloud without me shaka would not kill a girl who was so young and fair run on balika run on i said dropping behind now she was almost blind with weariness and terror and not seeing my purpose staggered towards the gate of the crowl but i sat down on the felt to get my breath again for i was about to fight four men till i was killed my heart beats and the blood drummed in my ears but when they drew near and i rose the asaga in my hand once more the red cloth seemed to go up and down before my eyes and all fear left me the men were running two and two with the length of a spear throw between them but of the first pair one was five or six paces in front of the other this man shouted out loud and charged me shield and spear up now i had no shield nothing but the assay guy but i was crafty and he was over bold on he came i stood waiting for him till he drew back the spear to stab me then suddenly i dropped to my knees and thrust upward with all my strength beneath the rim of his shield and he also thrust but over me his spear only cutting the flesh of my shoulder see here is it scar yes to this day and am i as a guy ah it went home it ran through and through his middle he rolled over and over on the plane the dust hit him only i was now weaponless with the hat of my spear it was but a light throwing as a guy broke in two leaving nothing but a little bit of stick in my hand and the other one was on me he looked tall as a tree above me i was already dead there was no hope darkness opened to swallow me then in the darkness i saw a light i fell onto my hands and knees and flung myself over sideways my body struck the legs of a man who was about to stab me lifting his feet from beneath him down he came heavily before he had touched the ground i was off it his spear had fallen from his hand i stooped seized it and as he rose i stabbed him through the back it was all done in the shake of a leaf my father in the shake of a leaf he also was dead then i ran for i had no stomach but the other two my valor was gone about a hundred paces from me baleka was staggering along with her arms out like one who has drunk too much beer by the time i caught her she was some forty paces from the gate of the crowd but then her strength left her all together yes there she fell senseless and i stood by her and there too i should have been killed had not this chanced since the other two men having stayed one instance by their dead fellows came on against me mad with rage for at that moment the gates of the krall opened and through it ran a party of soldiers dragging a prisoner by the arms after them walked a great man who wore a leopard skin on his shoulders and was laughing and with him were five or six ringed counsellors and after them again came a company of warriors the soldiers saw that's killing was going on and ran up just as the slayers reached us who are you they cried who dare to kill at the gates of the elephant's canal here the elephant's kills alone we are of the children of makidama they answered and we follow these evildoers who have done wickedness and murder in our kral see but now two of us are dead at their hands and others lie dead along the road suffer that we slay them ask that of the elephant said the soldiers asked two that he suffer you should not be slain just then the tall chief saw blood and heard words he stalked up and he was a great man to look at though still quite young in years but he was taller by a head than any round him and his chest was big as the chest of two his face was fierce and beautiful and when he grew angry his eyes flashed like a smitten brand who are these that dare to stir up dust at the gates of my crowl he asked frowning oshaka or elephant answered the captain of the soldiers bending himself double before him the men say that these are evildoers and that they pursue them to kill them good he answered let them slay the evil doers oh great chief thanks be to thee great chief said those men of my people who sought to kill us i hear you he answered then spoke once more to the captain and when they have slain the evil doers let themselves be blinded and turned loose to seek their way home because they have dared to lift a spear within the zulu gates now praise on my children and he laughed while the soldiers murmured why he is wise he is great his justice is bright and terrible like the sun but the two men of my people cried out in fear but they did not seek such justice as this cut out their tongues also said shakka what shall the land of the zulus suffer such a noise never lest the cattle miscarry two itchy black ones there lies the girl she is asleep and helpless killer what you hesitate nay then if you will have time for thought i give it take these men smear them with honey and pin them over ant heaps by tomorrow's sun they will know their own minds but first kill these two hunted jackals and he pointed to balika myself they seem tired and doubtless they long for sleep then for the first time i spoke for the soldiers drew near to slay us oh shakka i cried i am mopo and this is my sister malika i stopped and the great shout of laughter went up from all who stood around very well mopo and thy sister malika said shaka grimly good morning to you mopo and balika also good night oh shakka i broke in i am opposed son of makadama of the langani tribe it was i who gave thee a gourd of water many years ago when we were both little then thou badest me come to thee but thou hast grown great vowing that thou would protect me and never do me harm so i have come bringing my sister with me and now i pray thee do not eat up the words of long ago as i spoke shaka's face changed and he listened earnestly as a man who holds his hand behind his ear those are no lies he said welcome mopo thou shalt be a dog in my hearts and feed from my hand but of thy sister i said nothing why then should she not be slain when i swore vengeance against all thy tribe save thee alone because she's too fair to slay o chief i answered boldly also because i love her and ask her life as a boon turn the girl over said chaka and they did so showing her face again thou speakest no lie son of makidama said the chief i grant thee the boon she also shall lie in my huts and be of the number of my sisters now tell me thy tale speaking only the truth so i sat down and told him all nor did he grow weary of listening but when i had done he said but one thing that he would that the dog coos had not been killed since if he had still been alive he would have set him on the hut of my father makadama and made him chief over the langhini then he spoke to the captain of the soldiers i take back my words he said let not these men of the langeni be mutilated one shall die and the other shall go free here and he pointed to the man whom we had seen led out of the canal gate here mopo we have a man who has proved himself a coward yesterday a crowl of wizards yonder was eaten up by my order perhaps you two saw it as you travelled this man and three others attacked a soldier of that kral who defended his wife and children the man fought well he slew three of my people then this dog was afraid to meet him face to face he killed him with a throwing as a guy and afterwards he stabbed the woman that is nothing but he should have fought the husband hands a hand now i will do him honor he shall fight to the death with one of these pigs from thy style and he pointed with his spear to the men of my father's kral the one who survives shall be run down as they try to run you down i will send back the other pig to the sky with a message choose children of makadama which of you will live now the two men of my tribe were brothers and loved one another and each of them was willing to die that the other might go free therefore both of them stepped forward saying that they would fight the zulu what is their honor among pigs say chaka then i will settle it see this as a guy i throw it into the air if the blade falls uppermost the tall man shall go free if the shaft falls uppermost then life is to the short one so and he sent the little spear whirling round and round in the air every eye watched it as it wheeled and fell the half struck the ground first come hither thou said chaka to the tall brother haste them back to the kraal of makadama and say to him thus says shakka the lion of the zulu kamalandala years ago thy tribe refused me milk today the dog of thy son mopo howls upon the roof of thy hut begone footnote among the zulus it is a very bad omen for a dog to climb the roof of a hut the saying conveyed a threat to be appreciated by every zulu end of footnotes the man turned shook his brother by the hand and went bearing the words of evil omen then shakka called to the zulu and the last of those who had followed us to kill us bidding them fight so when they had praised the prince they fought fiercely and the end of it was that the man of my people conquered the zulu but as soon as he had found his breath again he was set to run for his life and after him ran five chosen men still it came about that he outran them doubling like a hair and got away safely nor was shaka angry at this for i think that he bade the men who hunted him to make speed slowly there was only one good thing in the cruel heart of shakka that he would always save the life of a brave man if he could do so without making his word nothing and for my part i was glad to think that the man of my people had conquered him who murdered the children of the dying woman that we found at the crowd beyond the river end of chapter four chapter five of nada the lily by h ryder haggard this librivox recording is in the public domain mopo becomes the king's doctor these then my father were the events that ended in the coming of me mopo and of my sister balika to the kraal of shakka the lion of the zulu now you may ask why i have kept you so long with this tale which is as are other tales of our people but that shall be seen for from these matters as a tree from a seed through the birth of omslopogas the slaughterer and nada the beautiful of whose love my story has to tell bernarda was my daughter and of slopper gas though few knew it was none other than the son of shakka born of my sister malika now when balika recovered from the weariness of our flight and had her beauty again shaka took us a wife numbering her among his women whom he named his sisters and me shakka took to be one of his doctors of his easing of medicine and he was so well pleased with my medicine that in the end i became his head doctor now this was a great post in which during the course of years i grew fat in cattle and in wives but also it was one of much danger for when i rose strong and well in the morning i could never know but that's at night i should sleep stiff and red many were the doctors whom shaka slew doctored they never so well they were killed at last for a day would surely come when the king felt ill in his body or heavy in his mind and then to the assagai or the torment with the wizard who adopted him yet i escaped because of the power of my medicine and also because of that oath which shaka had sworn to me as a child so it came about that where the king went there i went with him i slept near his hut i sat behind him at council in the battle i was ever at his side ah the battle the battle in those days we knew how to fight my father in those days the vultures would follow our impis by thousands the hyenas would steal along our path in packs and none went empty away never may i forget the first fight i stood in at the side of shakka it was just after the king had built his great canal on the south bank of the um then it was that the chief sweden attacked his rival shakka for the third time and shakka moved out to meet him with 10 full regiments footnote about thirty thousand men end of footnotes now for the first time armed with the short stabbing spear the ground lay thus on a long low hill in front of our impi were masked the regiments of sweden there were 17 of them the earth was black with their number their plumes filled the air like snow we too were on a hill and between us lay a valley down which there ran a little stream at night our fires shone out across the valley all nights the songs of soldiers echoed down the hills then the grey dawning came the oxen load to the light and the regiments arose from their bed of spears they sprang up and shook the dew from hair and shield yes they arose they're glad to die the impe assumed its array regiments by regiment there was the breast of spears there were the horns of spears they were numberless as the stars and like the stars they shone the morning breeze came up and found them their plumes bent in the breeze like a plane of seeding grass they bent the plumes of the soldiers ripe for the assagai up over the shoulder of the hill came the sun of slaughter its glowed red upon the red shields red grew the place of killing the white plumes of chiefs were dipped in the blood of heaven they knew it they saw the omen of death nah they laughed in the joy of the waking of battle what was death was it's not well to die on the spear what was death was it not dwell to die for the king death was the arms of victory victory should be their bride that night and oh her breast is fair hark the war song no more the music of which has the power to drive men mad rose far away to the left and was thrown along from regiment to regiment a rolling a ball of sound we are the king's kind bred to be butchered you two are one of us we are the zulu children of the lion what did you tremble suddenly shaka was seen stalking through the ranks followed by his captains his indones and by me he walked along like a great book death was in his eyes and like a buck he sniffed the air sensing the air a slaughter he lifted his assegai and the silence fell only the sound of chanting still rolled along the hills where are the children of zwiede he shouted and his voice was like the voice of a bull yonder father answered the regiments and every spear pointed across the valley they do not come he shouted again shall we then sit here till we grow old no father they answered begin begin let the uncanny regiment come forward he shouted a third time and as he spoke the black shields of the um kanju leapt from the ranks of the impe go my children cry shakka there is the foe go and return no more we hear you father they answered with one voice and moved down the slope like a countless herd of game with horns of steel now they crossed the stream and now zwiede awoke and murmur went through his companies lines of light played above his spears oh they are coming whoa they have met haagens of the thunder of the shields hearkens with the song of battle to and fro they swing the umkhanju gives way it flies they pour back across the stream half of them the rest are dead a howl of rage goes up from the host only shaka smiles open up open up he cries make room for the girls and with hanging heads they pass behind us now he whispers a word to the indones the indones run they whisper to manziwa the general and to the captains then two regiments rush down the hill two more run to the right and yet another two to the left but shakka stays on the hill with the three that are left again comes the roar of the meeting shields ah these are men they fight they do not run regiments after regiment pours upon them but still they stand they fall by hundreds and by thousands but no man shows his back and on each man there lie two dead wow my father of those two regiments not one escaped they were but boys but they were the children of shakka and ziwa was buried beneath the heaps of his warriors now there are no such men they are all dead and quiet shaka still holds his hand he looks to the north and to the south see spears are shining among the trees now the horns of our host close upon the flanks of the foe they slay and are slain but the men of zwede are many and brave and the battle turns against us then again shaka speaks a word the captain's here the soldiers stretch out their necks to listen it has come at last charge children of the zulu there is a roar a thunder of feet a flashing of spears a bending of plumes like a river that has burst its banks like storm clouds before the gale we sweep down upon friend and foe they form up to meet us the stream is past our wounded rise upon their haunches and wave us on we trample them down what matter they can fight no more then we meet zwie there rushing to greet us as bull meets bull oh my father i know no more everything grows red that's fights that fight we swept them away when it was done there was nothing to be seen but the hillside was black and red few fled few were left to fly we passed over them like fire we ate them up presently we paused looking for the foe all were dead the host of zwie there was no more then we mustered ten regiments had looked upon the morning sun three regiments saw the sun sink the rest had gone where no sun shine such were our battles in the days of shakka you asked of the um kanjulu regiments which fled i will tell you when we reached our cloud once more shaka summoned that regiment and mustered it he spoke to them gently gently he thanked them for their service he said that it was natural that girls should faint at the sight of blood and turned to seek their crowls yet he had bid them come back no more and they had come back what then was there now left for him to do and he covered his face with his blankets then the soldiers killed them all nearly 2 000 of them killed them with taunts and jeers that is how we dealt with cowards in those days my father after that one zulu was a match for five of any other tribe if ten came against him still he did not turn his back fight and fall but fly not that was our word never again while shaka lived did a conquered force pass the gates of the king's canal that fight was but one war out of many with every moon a fresh impe started to wash its spears and came back few and thin but with victory and countless cattle tribe after tribe went down before us those of them who escaped the assagai were enrolled into fresh regiments and thus the men died by the thousands every month yet the army grew soon there were no other chiefs left um fell and after him manchester um was driven north matijuane was stamped flat then we poured into this land of natal when we entered its people could not be numbered when we left here and there a man might be found hidden in a hole in the earth that was all men women and children we wipe them out the land was clean of them next came the turn of ufaku chief of the amapondos ah where is ufaku now and so it went on and on till even the zulus were weary of war and the sharpest asa guys grew blunt end of chapter five you | Priceless Audiobooks | UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA | 2020-01-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 17,215 | 84,085 |
FLk4nr-Amz8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLk4nr-Amz8 | Hunter Biden's Fake Indictment | attention terrorists pulled on here's Tara's daily rant I want you to just get one small glimpse of just one small aspect of Hunter's massive International crimes uh this is from Marjorie Taylor green although in Nancy mace has said the same thing they went in and read the star report this is a guy who was trafficking human trafficking Ukrainian and Russian prostitutes into the country for his family's use and about two dozen other people as well who we don't know I mean this is just this is just a wall this they know about this they have the Tsar reports heck members of Congress have seen them listen to this I just saw evidence of human trafficking uh this involved prostitutes not only from here in the United States but foreign countries like Russia and Ukraine uh this is this is unbelievable that a president and a former vice president uh not only his son Hunter Biden but many more family members extending past Hunter Biden and his immediate family we're going to have to really get to work this is an investigation that needs to be revealed to the American people and not only do we have questions about Hunter Biden himself but this is going to extend into developing a web of uh corruption a web of fake companies uh that's going to reveal money that came in from many foreign countries and went directly into the personal bank accounts of the Biden family where they have financially benefited directly from Joe Biden uh seats of power and we look forward to investigating exposing for this this for the American people and um and we'll see where it goes from there foreign ER [Music] Zero's in on 30 million dollars he's a republican investigator 30 million dollars run through these Biden family llcsworth bribes they're at 10 million right now right and Promises to disclose that in the coming weeks 30 million dollars that all of a sudden hunter gets indicted oh look but no we're we we got him no we got him on the no you didn't get him you didn't you went and got him on some little little silly silly thing um so that you could avoid getting him on this stuff uh text erase Tara how do you get into a diversion program for illegal possession of a gun another texture it's amazing this evidence Trail but no one is doing anything another texture writes diversion for a 50 year old drug addict in human trafficker I think they want him or that yeah where they can easily murder him with a drug overdose to silence him well he ain't going anywhere he's not going in the jail no no there's no he's not doing jail time at this plea deal he gets probation low-level charges Washington Post says so no oh no I y'all I'm that I'm serious the only person on Earth who's a political leader who seems to understand what's going on here and can can articulate it is Manuel Lopez obrador of Mexico the president of Mexico who said look the American is not a democracy don't let them fool you it's an oligarchy Joe Biden is our first oligarch yep perfect he knows the royal son is not going the prison okay I mean maybe in a republican Administration should that ever happen again but no not go into prison are you kidding me this is window dressing and so that when our side says hey it's unfair blah blah blah blah blah blah Trump blah blah blah blah thank you too yeah not on the real crimes not even close listen to this this is from The Washington Post the agreement the sweetheart plea deal agreement that covers none of the real crimes because we wouldn't want to do that the agreement caps investigation that was opened in 2018 during the Trump Administration and has generated intense interest and criticism since 2020. okay what's important in that sense the investigation caps in the agreement caps and investigation it's over we've closed it it's um meanwhile Comer begs them don't don't indict I've got more evidence I've got and they have they have the same thing Comer has come on these people use the NSA database for campaign research illegally amida they know they know what Hunter did this is why they're indicting him on the smallest charges like I'm the gun charge are you kidding me yep close we're done here gotta get that one under the wire before the 30 million dollars worth of bribes which by the way we know he didn't pay taxes on that's tax evasion it's felony level tax evasion because we have his tax returns he had to file them in court in the cases of his baby Mama's secret that seeking the money the terms are the proposed deal negotiated by Delaware U.S attorney David Wise a holdover from president Donald Trump's Administration are likely to face similar scrutiny yeah think terrorists squatted here the terror show weekday mornings on News Talk 98.9 The Voice of the Carolinas | 98.9 WORD | UCqHmLiX6NzmimkM1NRQtmVg | 2023-06-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 861 | 4,728 |
oMar-rYIx6k | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMar-rYIx6k | A&P I Lecture 19 | they're compact mode of the compact bone we're going to talk about it from the perspective of the osteon so that's why I have this picture up here you should recognize this as a micrograph and hopefully hopefully you could begin to recognize and identify some of the structures here like the diversion or the central canal and the lamellae and the glue khooneh and the cannula you lie and the whole thing is in Ostia ok so we take this is just a single asean that we can see here if we take osteons and begin to stack them together we begin to generate this thing's on as compact bone so really when we look at compact bone what it comes down to is that compact bone is a single osteon or made up of single osteons surrounding that central canal things like that two year olds is got this central canal that's not an H it's an end I'm fooling yourself select single osteons surround the central canal and you'd have many osteons that compact it or compact it together or really tightly packed together to form compact bone so multiple osteons plus their central Central canals on our compact bone now the central canal is basically an avenue or conduit for nerves and blood supply so you'd have nutrient flame and that brings in the vessel and then the vessels distribute through the Sun canal's of a variety of different areas or locations and then they permeate smaller capillaries into the surrounding tissue to interact with the individual shots so from the central canal the central canals are connected by perforating canals to allow that blood supply into the bone tissue itself or into the exerciser matrix so the central canal and the perforating canals that connect the appropriate canals are going to carry their supply and vessels blood vessels or nerves breaking engine no because the mineralization makes it extra strong and so we can actually support these small little tiny females it's basically enough room for a capillary it's a slipper so it's not like it's just this big gouge to know the bone is very very microscopic now the osteon itself and you can see that illustrated here very well has these move these concept Rick the Rings that we call lamellae and each of these lamellae is wrapped in collagen fibers and it becomes so you would have collagen fibers that wrapped within each of these lamellae and it becomes really important because those collagen fibers wrapped around each layer of lamb Oleg acts like a screw so it acts like a screw and literally each of these is sort of going to be twisted into the next layer becomes even stronger it's a really nice design you can refer to that as the ASEAN screw looks something like this and you'll notice that we actually go in different directions as we build this osteon out and so we have resistance to twisting forces all so much throw that happening we're just sure she's kidding it sounded like songs maybe spitting up there i'm just getting huge spitball digest enough so the collagen oriented in two different ways if they allow resistance to sort of a twisting motion making it even stronger so each layer layer of the osteon spirals in a different direction and wonder they're all of it like this just one okay why are you thinking about guns this is anatomy and physiology class well me and you're like yeah it's like a shot this guy this replay I mean it looks like a gun my bones are like guns I'll show you the gun show what it's really like is screw that's drilled into a screw that's drilled into a bigger screw and so on and so forth except for they drill in in opposite directions once counterclockwise once clockwise ones got all park lies the other ones clockwise purple you kind of scared okay so that's the compact bone what about the spongy bone and marrow again we've already identified that spongy bone and marrow and we're going to see osteons there as well it's going to be the individual osteon making up the trabeculae the spongy bone is going to be hardened bone tissue and so in name spongy is only what it looks like so spongy bone is spongy because it's of the appearance it's really very hard invitation so if we were to dissect a bone or cut a bone in half you couldn't just like sponge around and that spongy going to be very very hard to the touch it's only the appearance it only looks like a sponge it's very hard tissue itself so just kind of trying to set the stage here that will not dealing with alert will not doing you know compact it's hard mode spongy bone and soft and they're both very hard they're both calcified and they both have the minerals deposited on their on their collagen fibers so spongy bone to get that spongy appearance it consists of thin Network a thin network that we call the each piece of them of the network so if you consider this a piece of the network and then this is a piece of the network here's another piece and here's a couple other pieces those pieces of the network are called trabeculae and it's not illustrated here but what we would find on the trabeculae is there's actually little tiny protrusions little spikes that come off of each of those each of those braces in those are spicules so these will protrude off of the trip in some way and ultimately those are going to provide attachment and instructional support for the marrow itself but the what I'm describing here in this network with trabeculae in the speech spicules is we end up with a large amount of space you know we have all these little tiny spaces in here within our spongy bone so we get this production of space and it's in that space of the bunch spongy bone where we are going to find our marital spaces are occupied by bone marrow and we're going to find that there are two types of boa that can be present within these spaces of the bone tissue now you're looking at just a cross-sectional example of a bone basically cut out a chunk and you're going to be able to identify two different types of bone marrow bone marrow that appears sort of yellow eats it's not real clear in this picture but you get up real close this has a sort of yellow appearance it's very obvious that this has a very red appearance so we're going to have two types red marrow and yellow Mara the red marrow produces our blood cells and it's producing red blood cells that have a red appearance of the red marrow as its red a chance this is very prevalent and kids and part of that is because children are turning over their blood supply a lot more frequently than adults in adults because we don't have to turn over the blood supply as much we're going to find that what red marrow blood producing red marrow in primarily the flat bones Oh son belongs and find it in the flat blows the flat bones and then also in the head of the femur big leg in the bone and humorous the big leg in the farm what I have no little were laughing that is okay I'm literally there might be black on that hero don't you're in well it's not what are you laughing at why are you laughing at me whatever number I grade you yo Mara on the other hand is going to be more of a fatty tissue and it's no longer no longer producing blood so how do we actually get yellow marrow red marrow obviously very prevalent and children and as you age this becomes more prevalent it's very prevalent in adults and it arises because some of our red marrow just simply becomes more fatty tissue gets higher levels of adipocytes interns more yellow as you age it's just a process a natural process of the biology of eight whatever we haven't liked her for something which mirror go together my age how does that work okay um it's a great question my guess is that it's probably red marrow that they get concerned about sunset actions producing tissue yellow marrow um its back so um if bone cancer affects the marrow in the marrow cavity it might get a little bit concerned about red blood cells being produced in a hot enough watch okay so let's begin to talk here about bone development another term for bone development is osteogenesis yes and osteogenesis appears in 2x and the two ways are going to be dependent on the bone to bone type dependent the two ways are going to be intramembranous ossification and endochondral ossification we're going to start out with intramembranous ossification huge so for starters the intramembranous ossification is the type of bone development that we'd find for the skull and the clavicle so the skull bones of the skull and then your collarbone or your cloud cover okay so one of our primordial embryonic tissues and we hit on this briefly was a tissue that was called mesenchyme mezan came against 24 this is just an embryonic tissue and it begins to stratify or mesenchyme begins to later now as the mesenchyme you can see here we have the mesenchyme cells and they begin to form this layer effect and what that is doing is it is forming initially forms trabeculae or what we would recognize in the adult as reticulate now we're going to bring in a blood supply specially fed and so we're going to fit this is going to be fed by capillaries and as this tissue is fed by capillaries that blood supply is going to begin to provide some new cells one of the new cells that's going to be provided will be stem cells and you've probably already guessed that these are going to be those osteogenic or osteo presenter cells so they begin to influx into this stratified nezam so we begin to have the stratification that occurs in the mesenchymal tissue and the blood supply comes in and now we begin to deposit osteo gender cells osteo progenitor cells are osteogenic cells so these stem cells come in and they undergo a differentiation process to form osteoblasts now why should that not surprise me and what I osteoblast you they are bone builders so the stem cells differentiate to bone building cells called osteoblasts now one of the ways that osteoblasts begin to generate bone tissue is they begin to secrete the substance called osteoid so we begin to deposit from our osteoblasts osteoid and that osteoid begins to get laid down over the tissue and provides calcium phosphate or provides the ability for calcium phosphates begin to be collected this also known as hydroxyapatite this is minerals anytime you hear minerals and reference to bone you got to be thinking okay we're beginning to harden that fish so those osteoblasts come in later on osteoid this allows calcium phosphate to begin to collect the bone tissue begins to harden and some of those osteoblasts are going to be trapped trapped so when we trap those osteoblasts they now further differentiate into osteo sex okay and that's what you can see happening here we basically have our osteoblastic come in in this stratification collagen fibers and everything this is what we would call the ossification Center this is where bones actually beginning to develop osteo begins to be deposited by those osteoblast now some of those osteoblasts are beginning to be trapped within that bargaining tissue where we have calcification happening they are now osteocytes trapped inside of those little tiny lacuna just push from the six at the periphery of the mesenchyme so out here along the outer edge of this forming structure we form our primordial Perry awesome so we begin to wrap it up in this collagenous tissue this collagen containing tissue osteoclast now begin to ramon so the osteoclast osteoclast a boner are we talking about reproductive trying to say was it your own builder and I leaving it so the osteoclast might be a little bit red I'm just trying to show you from last week what happens when you have any increase in blood flow to the skin kappa changes your skin bubbles actually I don't really do like that turn all that red because it doesn't really embrace me i'm a grumpy old man he cares i mean pious whatever we're gonna get there and listen we gotta talk longer reproductive system but before we get there we gotta finish the bone so some of the osteoclasts which are bone breaker downers i don't know if that's a real word or not but they break down bone and so they begin to remodel and basically reap organize some of these for me for me trabeculae i think the funniest part about all this is like you all like sort of pause like can I laughing because it should appropriate if I already know what that is okay so osseo class remodel some trabeculae marrow cavity begins to form they basically begin to rip away some of the trabeculae reorganize it and we end up with larger and larger spaces and so we begin to form a marrow cavity we also have osteoclasts remodeling especially for the outer trabeculae and the process goes in the other direction and what I mean by the process goes in the other direction is here we are making it more open forming the marrow cavity here on the outer trabeculae we're going to pack everything together and we're going to make it more compact okay so by the time this whole process is done we're going to have areas where we have compact bone areas where there's cavity and then other areas where there's more compact bone and we get that compact diplo complex sandwich structure that's very obvious in adult flat bones like the skull and the sternum is everybody get alright so our second type of our second type of bone development here is endochondral ossification and this is actually the way that most bones are going to begin to form or most bones are going to form some nice games so for most bones we have growth that occurs from the epiphyseal flee and so we're going to have to basically use this endochondral ossification to form this is a pinta steel plate for further elongation and growth so again working from the mesenchyme this embryonic tissue that will give rise to our bone tissue initially we have production of a hyaline cartilage model or body so that's what you can see here it starts out basically as this cartilaginous model and it's just basically the production of what the bones are eventually going to look like and you actually can see us very early on in ultrasound you'll begin to see what look like tiny little individual isolated bones begins without so those little bone models begin to develop and they develop all over the individual now the cells that make up the cartilaginous model are going to be chondrocytes those are just cartilage cells and the cart or the chondrocytes are going to thicken the cartilage model and help to basically create a very robust model that can be can be used to begin to produce the bone cells by the way we are going to have periosteum that surrounds the hyaline cartilage model just sort of wraps or Roger ok which is what you're basically seeing here we have our cartilaginous model and it would be wrapped up in periosteum now at that periosteum we're going to begin to have the periosteum in its form called perichondrium which is really before it becomes completely bone so this would be perichondrium up here but eventually becomes periosteum that perichondrium is going to be the site the location to begin to produce our bone or building cells osteoblasts most of you didn't notice that I come facades meeting at that time so perichondrium begins producing our osteoblasts once we've produced osteoblasts then really properly we are now very Asti this initially begins towards the center of the bone model that left hyaline cartilage model and it starts out as a bone bling so in the mid section we have the periosteum that begins to produce osteoblasts and now we begin to form a bone ring we begin to actually lay down some ossifying material calcifying material in the middle there and we begin to refer to this part of the bone model is the primary ossification center okay so the primary ossification Center forms in the middle of the model the kind of the sites are going to enlarge and then they die because basically there's a lack of nutrients and as they die towards the middle of this primary ossification Center we begin to have open spaces that form from dying chondrocytes that the cells were maintaining the cartilage not enough blood supply so they die and then we begin to have this cabinet that forms so our cavity begins to form which is what you can begin to see as we transition from B to C here we have the presence of that cavity also notice that there's additional compact bone that's being developed so as that cavity forms eventually we're going to refer to it as the primary marrow challenge and this is what the cavity that forms at the primary ossification center which i'm just going to refer to as the POC a POC now this primary marrow cavity is eventually going to begin to fill with blood vessels and you can see blood supply coming in here and continuing here in the next picture blood supply blood vessels and even some stem cells begin to enter into that primary ossification center in that barrel cavity primer and marrow cavity we also now going to have osteoid tissue gets laid down on edge of the cavity this lay down of osteo a tissue occurs from the middle of the bone so right in this area and begins to work its way out in both directions so for middle outward begin to add that osteoid tissue so as we move on a little bit further you can see that that primary ossification Center you get a well-developed cavity marrow cavity that begins to form and towards the outer portions of the of the bone we actually have very little it's still very very much like a hyaline cartilage model or pieces of hyaline cartilage but eventually we're going to begin to have as more blood supply comes in and we see the changes with the marrow cavity we're going to begin to see that tissue undergo development as well so the diathesis or the bone shaft is going to be well formed and then we're going to begin to see by a very similar process of ossification and trapping the shells and creating that osteo tissue new cavities forming at the ends of the bones and it's going to occur in our long bones at both ends and actually at one end in a couple different places so cavities form at the ends of bones in these cavities form a structure that we're going to refer to as the metaphysis so to the county form of this is the county or the end of the bone yeah the cavity forms it so you have the diathesis that form then you have cavities that form at the end of the bone and we have this whole area where all this is going on is referred to as the mitosis now eventually we're going to have a secondary ossification Center and I'm going to put them in as centers because we have multiple secondary ossification centers and these are going to begin to form and they're going to form even further out towards the ends so we'll go diathesis Matip Issus and then at the very ends those counties as they begin to form of one of those be a fitness now just like with our primary ossification Center we also have a secondary marrow cavity that forms in the secondary ossification Center and this expands in all directions and as the cavity forms which you can see those cavities beginning to form here at our secondary ossification centers we begin to have the diaphysis the metaphysis and then it's little separation between those secondary cavities which are eventually going to become the official plates in the thicknesses it's going to be spongy bone that's for me so spongy bone forms in the cavity but it leaves it doesn't expand into one portion of the of the area at the end of the bone and so we leave this remnant called the epiphyseal plate and unreality this epiphany or plate remains actually really really active and it is going to accommodate our bone growth and so that's what you can see here this is basically where we've made it to this would be the adult bone so the bone goes through its modeling stages you have those two different cavities that begin to form the two different types of cavities and so your left over with a bone that has a marrow cavity and its blood supply in the diathesis and then at either end you have the metaphysis and then at the very ends you have the Epiphany sand between the metaphysis and the piff assist you have these areas that are known as a pistol place or you may already know them as growth plans so those growth plates are going to be regions for growth so as we go from picture to picture f in this direction the bone is not going to begin to elongate and we're going to get positional phone to deposit we've developed the bone it's not going to begin to elongate in a process that's known as bone growth so bone growth is going to primarily occur as elongation at the official plate so there's a lot of stuff that's going to happen at the epiphyseal plate so hopefully this picture helps to explain a little bit more detailed here here is the diathesis the end of the diathesis then we have this region between the diathesis in the Epistle plate that's called the Matip Isis and then at the very end we have the epiphanies and in between metaphysis antithesis is the growth plate or the appendiceal fun okay now we can actually go in and you can see this would be immature and this would be mature you can see that in the immature individual that growth plate is much bigger and that's because you have all of this expansion that's occurring in the adult and as you age this epistle plate becomes thinner and thinner and thinner because we're calcifying it you seen the amount of growth occurs eventually it seals up conclusions so we can actually go and take a look at what's happening at that appendiceal plate and they've done this and looked at it under microscopic observation and what we see when we get to that app if aseel plate is three layers it's going to be hyaline cartilage sandwich sandwich by metaphysis okay so we're going to kind of thinking this is war confusing so let's leave aside the logo okay so we're going to have three layers two of the layers are going to be the tempest is like and then a third layer nope I'm sorry hyaline cartilage like hyaline cartilage and then a third layer in the middle is going to be the TIF assists like and within the metaphysis within that third layer we would find this structure here okay this is a histological section through the Epistle plate to the highlight the autumn on me yeah so down here and then up here towards the resting cartilage in fact this is actually going to be part of the hyaline cartilage okay so within the metaphysis there are five zones of growth and that's what you can see here one two three four five in those five zones of growth we're going to have each of them referred to as the zone of something okay so the first one is going to be the zone of reserve cartilage reserve cartilage and this is just simply going to be a resting zone wrist resting hyaline cartilage so zona reserved cartilage resting heart alert resting hyaline cartilage and that will be here in the what's referred to as the wrestlezone on this figure then we're going to have the zone of cell proliferation and just like its name suggests we're actually going to have cartilage containing cells chondrocytes and there's going to be multiple layers of chondrocytes in multiple ways of lacuna so the chondrocytes multiplied and we get these sort of rows of lacunae that moved through that proliferation zone and it's all by mitosis so from our resting zone we would have a row of chondrocytes that form and then another row and the rose you sort of pushed their way through this zone of proliferation until we get down here where those rooms now begin to change this make sense lacunae rows are rows of the QA which are the sites of the chondrocytes remember those are like the little towns they're the little cabins where the cell says okay so if I were to draw the proliferation zone or the zone of cell proliferation okay you would have this road that would begin to move in this direction okay so then maybe the second row would be a bunch of bread chondrocytes that yellow row the initial role would move it's just leaving down but as it's moving down we're actually causing the bone to get longer maybe we'd have these special purple ones red ones would have moved down so on and so forth and we're actually moving the bone elongating the bone in that direction so now as these move out the bottom of that zone of proliferation you can see here's a row coming out right here's another own another on another row and now the cells are beginning they start out really small another you can get bigger and so this will be the zone of cell hypertrophy in the term hypertech hypertrophy hypertrophy literally means getting bigger in size okay so that's all of hypertrophy chondrocytes that have moved their way out of the proliferation zone are going to undergo an enlargement process in the laws that make up the lacunae that trap the chondrocytes they're going to begin to thin out are going to begin to get thinner as those kind of sites get bigger so everything is moving down in this direction or appears to be moving down in this direction but in all reality the zone of resting cartilage is moving and making its way upward even as the bone deep long gates google the walls that contain the lacunae that begins to thin up so that the cell can expand in size and as these larger cells begin to descend or begin to move into this next zone full of the fourth zone this will be the zone of calcification the zone of calcification and that zone of calcification is going to be exemplified by our temporary mineral deposit it's a temporarily mineral deposition and that's really what you can see here is these cells begin to kind of disappear and the tissue gets a little bit different in its coloration in the staining process and that's the business temporary minerals that are being laid down okay so we're not get to a point where we've actually hardened the tissue enough we're just kind of depositing those minerals now we're going to begin to have for bone deposition in the zone of bone deposition occur and this is where we'll really get some good mineralization we're going to have some bone cells that are present such as osteoblasts deposit the bone and we start out forming trabeculae which really when it comes down to a trabeculae key are a be a cu l8r i think you'll ever know this is actually II ridicula they're really at ridicula it's just going to be an individual Austin right and then you pack additional trabeculae together and you get additional osteon to begin to form your compact o or it can just stay as for regulating you continue to grow spongy bone | Robert S Bowen, Ph.D. | UC_9O676HJfNiUe7Ur0itPmQ | 2015-06-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,845 | 26,541 |
7BB8-2ZkOzo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BB8-2ZkOzo | Healthy Hillsides | the South Wales Valleys feature event rural urban interface a real asset to communities however there can be clashes with this interface such as wildfires which can have serious consequences for the environment and the safety and well-being of the communities living there healthy hillsides is a case study about how we are applying the principles of the sustainable management of natural resources to a key issue affecting these communities this is free habitat and it's a mosaic of habitats you have bracken you have marshy grassland and flushes you have scrub habitats you also have heathland habitats and it sits between the lowlands and the uplands and it's that marginal band of habitat which runs the length of the valleys so we're looking at the bracken here and this is an area land which isn't managed presently so when you look there's a very very deep layer of dead material and it's absolutely nothing growing underneath now this time of year you would expect to see some shoots coming up of the species rich grassland which underlies it so all this layers on top of it the smothering that out completely this all this dead material is fantastic kindling for fires the fire service call it the big fuel load this is what goes up in flames and they can continue right away across the the Freeth habitat so as part of them freeze mosaic you have flushes which be our smaller little water courses which rise in these hillsides and then flow down the valley whilst very small individual ones they all collect down into the river so when these water courses travels through this burnt landscape it picks up all the the dead carbon the dead materials the soils it causes erosion it takes pollutants down into the water course and having this happen throughout the valley and throughout this hillside can have a much bigger effect down in the rivers we've all been dragged into the water courses and all impact on our water quality it can have an impact on our drinking water it costs more money to clean that water up small money to improve the habitats for fisheries or for the invertebrates or the general wildlife of rivers so that knock-on effect from the hillside is noticed in the water courses as well so this hillside is actually quite important for us because I'm in some ways this is where the project began in back in early 2015 we've met in the morning with the fire service with some of the Wildfire officers and we chatted about the recent burns and they told us that this hillside had all gone up overnight and it was a huge fire so we visited the area we took a couple of pictures and as we came to the site actually two members of the fire service were there being filmed by BBC Wales and we sort of hung around then we started chatting and really that was a kind of starting point as well of where we really sort of started to talk about wildfires how we could work together and I still remember what the chief of the fire tips what he said to me when I said we're really interested in this particularly around the environment he said he was music to his ears so as we began working together and we came together we talked about the issues the challenges we were facing early on they were it was sort of ourselves the fire service one that kind of taught for local authorities countryside team but over time gradually we had conservation partners members of community community groups the Wildlife Trust South West Wales and we've sort of slowly sort of came together to really sort of talk about this kind of issue and as we've done that so much has grown around that because what's gone from a sub single idea has grown into this sort of approach really which is on the one hand habitat management but on the other hand reducing the risk of fires as well so what I've learned and taken from this approach is that no one organization could sort of deliver this on its own it's got collaboration at its heart we each bring something different to the table fire bricks natural favourite or clause in app footpaths applausing up through the brambles and the grasses and the Bracken taking over and these fires are now getting larger because it is and this is one of the reasons why the phasers have moved into a sort of land management role because we've got this this mantra that we we tried to stop the arsonists and we can't stop them all we can't control aware there but what we can do is manage the fuel and one of the ways of fighting fire is to remove the fuel and that's what we're now doing and a deal with these fires traditionally we've thrown resources from fire fighters at these fires traditionally it was would be does walking up the monkey dens in structural fire ket and beat them these fires out and we've had an instance where there's been 20 fire engines putting out a grass fire on the Brecon Beacons and now we've moved on and we now start me use fire to fight fire we use fire before the fire season where we're managing vegetation free well we're managing it we created narrow fire breaks we don't burn landscapes we create narrow fire breaks in strategic locations that stop these large fires but it's it's huge it's it's a you know a bit of an eye-opener from our point of view how how many other organizations are actually interested in what we do and how we can all work together there when to protect don't make firefighter safety better certainly to enhance the natural environment for everybody and lastly and perhaps more importantly is to enhance the health well-being of the people in the areas that we work there's a number of sustainable management options for the hillsides conservation grazing if you're looking up all of the benefits of that hillside so all of the functions it provides that's the one that comes out given though most multiple benefits and it manages it retains the mosaic landscape and the complexity of the landscape which is good for both ecology and flood risk and amenity as well so rock and bruising is one of the pilot management techniques that we were trailing and we're really lucky to have a heavy horses come in and the benefit of those is that they can tackle on the steep slopes so slopes that are accessible to to the machinery that we had available and also one of the side benefits was it also brought the community in so it was a very very good way of engaging locally in the work that we were doing and the impact of that brac and bruising is it reduces the vigor so the fires are creating a condition where the brackets coming back stronger and more dominant every year and you lose all of those plant species underneath and all of the diversity around that so by reducing the vigor you get a really broad diversity in and amongst that so we're not eradicating the bracken we're just reducing it so it doesn't become that dominant spread across the hillside and Bracken Bruce has that sensitivity for real ecological gain as well as benefits when it comes to comes to reducing the fire risk so here we're looking at much thinner layer of Bracken this is far more natural part of the mosaic a Freeth habitat so you can see already this is the same time of year and we've got some bluebells coming through here so that Bracken in a thin layer replicates the deciduous woodland habitat so how it is very shaded so you get these species like violets and bluebells coming through in these habitats so this is a lot healthier you have that variety of species and in that comes a variety of invertebrates and reptiles and birds can you tell me what you've learned by being nine principles of a seminar in relation to the project really I think working in that way involving more people having a much bigger conversation has just delivered so much more on the ground and so much more in the network it's definitely opened our eyes to the different impacts of wildfires and has then secured massive funding for research which you know it's gonna be really beneficial long term and how we manage this issue not just here but right the way across South Wales across Wales but it also has you know it I feel that we've raised issues that will have an impact on a local person as well so we've talked about about fly tipping associated to do these sites we've talked about access so I think it really will make a difference to individuals but also our much wider scale so I think yeah it's brilliant way of working in order to make this a long-term sustainable project we need to work with communities to for them to take ownership of this issue in other countries it is quite common practice to manage that area between the hillside and your property to reduce the risk to prevent the fire from taking hold of your cat your home this would also act as a buffer strip for renters if measures for fire service they would know where to go but it would also be a nice buffer for habitat better for various invertebrates for birds to create that nice little strip so in order to do this we're working with the fire service to teach the communities what they can do to manage that so the first couple of years we will be undertaking that practical management but working with the communities so they can eventually take that over so that we can then move on to another site and teach another community about how to protect themselves from fire so what we've learned about the sustainable management and natural resources is that it's not theoretical it's a hypothetical and it's not about box-ticking it's about really challenging yourself and flipping it and thinking about what you're working on and applying those nine principles to what you're doing you | Natural Resources Wales / Cyfoeth Naturiol Cymru | UCFpNZHHXtheW3JSwKqw_ghg | 2018-07-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,752 | 9,638 |
1hawUhu9JMY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hawUhu9JMY | Ending Aging: Living Beyond 130 Years - Yuri Deigin | is this happening for a reason do our genes want us to you know age and die or is it just a bit weren't able to somehow develop longer and welcome back to another episode of a mere proved I got a special guest today and his name is zerah Dagon he's a serial entrepreneur an expert in drug development and venture investments in biotechnology and pharmaceuticals since 2013 URI also serves as vice president of the non for profit foundation signs for life extension whose goal is a popularization of the fight against age-related disease now before we begin today's episode a couple of housecleaning notes number one like always if you're watching this on YouTube make sure to subscribe and hit that Bell notification button so you get all our brand new videos that come out every single week and number two guys and gals if you are listening to this on iTunes please have a please head over to iTunes and leave a review every movie every review helps in fact I'll be picking one to two lucky winners every single week to earn twenty dollars in Bitcoin now without further ado please welcome URI thank you are you doing man it's been a while I think for like a year in a house inside so what's new in the field of life oh actually a life extension as a theme itself has picked up a lot it has yeah and definitely a lot more investment coming in and a year and a half ago yeah I think people are kind of waking up to to the idea that it's it's a good thing to live longer and it's now that we have to like find technologies that will help us do that so yeah yeah I think it's getting much better like if I look back at like even five years ago it was considered somewhat like a fringe topic to be able to be doing research in aging aging-- mechanisms and like even scientists are saying that they were kind of like hiding it aging scientists they were like okay I'm doing research on cancer and people like yeah and if they said aging they'd be like why would you be trying to like live longer shouldn't we don't we have like an expected lifespan yeah natural to age and die and but now people I think yeah like they're waking up you know dying sucks of course it does I do live as long as possible and you think the narrative those changed because I know David Sinclair yes he's definitely like popular I love it good podcast like it's been there twice in the past twice in the past and you know I've been following epigenetics and life extension for a long time as you mentioned I'd like four or five years ago as fringe and Roy was talking people at but genetics like epi' what uh stem cells ha he I'm like okay just wait and see but the thing I like about David dough is redefining aging as not aging eyes and goodbye but aging has a disease right that's a huge narrative shift it is and it's not even like fully accepted in the scientific circles there's a huge debate even among gerontologists whether it's okay to consider it as a disease even some gerontology czar saying that we should prolong life saying no but aging is not a disease and yeah to me I I'm an agreement with David that it disease is just something that you want to get rid of right then aging fully falls into that category although everybody has it it's a disease that we're all born with but it's yeah something which we should try to get rid of as as quickly as possible so in that sense it's a disease it's natural yeah but like a lot of natural things are bad so yeah we should definitely call it a disease and get to funding into yeah get people example like viruses are natural yeah exactly get a virus and but do your thing virus no I won't do nothing I'm just gonna chill here relax why wither away or like yeah I think some harry said it best like getting eaten by a bear is completely natural it's bad for you so it's nothing natural but we should definitely that's why I love the debate it's natural and like [ __ ] poison ivy is natural yeah that's right you can rub that [ __ ] all over you yeah that's right and I think David also had this kind of issue come up and Joe Rogan's broadcast and said yeah like natural is not a good enough justification to tolerate that stuff I mean all we do as a civilization for the past and thousands of years unnatural but trying to make our life better because you know Naturals just not good enough so right now biologically speaking we know that our cells can walk roughly do like a hundred twenty years something like that well some some cells already do like neurons they're long lived and the like you're kind of like born with the neurons that you're gonna die with but other cells divide all the time like it fuel cells and it they have very different life spans like depending on their specialization like cells have very differing lifespans some are like yeah very long-lived like neurons and others even more blood cells they get renewed every year like three month you smell like yeah so yeah but I think cells are capable of living much much longer like individual cells forget about like the cell lines which could be immortal or like even our own like the germ line that the line of sexual cells that we came out of is tracing back for billions of years to our common ancestors so yeah it's not a problem for like the cell population to be supporting itself indefinitely it's just like our organism it just seems to have a very like narrowly defined lifespan for each species that you know you're kind of born with and for each species it depends on its place in a hierarchy of like its consumption that's ecological niche where the like the top predators live longer like we do or I don't know Lions but beautiful like animals on the bottom of the pyramid for some reasons are much prefer lived like mice who only get you know two and a half years to three years to live so I think that's the Enigma that's the secret we have to kind of figure out what are the mechanisms that are making some animals live much longer than others but do we know right now what's the mechanisms in humans that make us age well know it's really I mean we know the hallmarks of aging we know what goes wrong I mean we can see all this kind of systems start deteriorating at like a pretty young age like starting with the immune system the thymus starts to involute like deteriorate at like 12 with the onset of puberty it already starts to shrink other systems are only doing like starting to degrade at a lot of like higher age say your cardiovascular system is like 2530 that's when it goes down like that's why a Thwaites usually retired by age 40 or something some sports even like like age 30 is the limit Ilyn a yeah yeah but you know we see those processes but we we haven't yet gotten to the bottom of why they occur what is it exactly that and wow how can we intervene to not have this occur yeah we're not there yet we kind of see some some patterns and we already I think the field is coming to the realization that it's epigenetic processes that control these kind of changes in what happens to the systems like the gene expression is the mechanism that controls these changes but and we kind of at this point where we have some fruit of proof-of-concept interventions like Yamanaka factors that I'm sure you want to talk about that seem to roll back the aging process but we're not yet at the point where you can say okay like this is how aging works and this is how we can stop it we're only like trying to like figure out like a jigsaw puzzle yeah yeah I think yeah it's like we're you know trying to like determine an elephant in like a dark room we're just trying to see is it an elephant or is it like a is their consensus though on mutations of cells I mean there there was the mutation theory of aging was pretty popular like maybe a decade or two ago there's definitely mutations happening and in different types of cells at different speeds but scientists just can't that they were trying to see if mutations are the biggest driver that they could be the causal role in aging but they just don't seem to be I mean different tissues have different mutational load and for animals that have very different lifespans have very similar levels of mutations so kind of that alone tells us that you know that's not really the answer but mutations occur and they definitely play some role and it seems that at some point our bodies are kind of toning down the ability of ourselves to first of all detect mutations and second of all to deal with them I mean and that's at that point that's when cancer starts to skyrocket which is my debate I tell people I'm like if we can live longer like that's the first piece of the domino that your everything like as you age as your body starts I want to say slow let's say slowing down right you have a high propensity to get cancer mm-hmm and depending on your life so these other factors right but if you can kind of extend your telomeres and keep the health of the reproductions of yourself so you know the copying of the DNA is 100% data dense or as opposed to like oh it's like a photocopy analogy right the first one's good second one's like 90% third one's like video down the line like what the [ __ ] is this yeah definitely like how mutations occur that you know the more copies you make the higher the chance that you can make in there in something that matters because of course you know DNA like only like 10% of it in each cell is like protein coding yes what actually matters but yeah down to some level of you can tolerates like some level of mutations where nothing really changes in the cell it's still operating as if you know nothing really bad happened but at some point if you do it long enough you play that kind of Russian Roulette long enough you're gonna get young mutations and that's the kind of current thinking of like the driver imitation theory of cancer that you need like a few driver mutations to occur in the single cells and opinio slee and that's when the cell becomes cancerous and I mean yes the longer you live the higher your risk of getting cancer but it's just the the question is why do some animals get the cancer much for a mouse it takes it's only two and a half years to develop cancer and die for Elephants even like don't seem to get cancer in in their lives at all yeah worth much much lower rates and whales - I mean where they're mammals - they're closely related mouse but they can live 200 years without cancer and a huge right there like a million times because I'm a human so obviously we understand that genes have certain mechanisms that they could use to you know not have cancer but for some reason we haven't developed them or maybe they're only active up to a point in in our life maybe post reproduction after which they just seem to be toning down and you know that's that's a big question that there's another debate in the journal field is this happening for a reason do our genes want us to you know agent die or is it just that they weren't able to somehow develop mechanisms for a longer period that they have developed up to now st. the bacon me for cancer what why does cancer even exist and there has to be some reason it exists yeah well I mean in in I guess in biology everything is kind of used for the lens of evolution and it's obviously preserve energy though for looking at nature I I guess it could be yeah I mean one of the one of the reasons that it's I mean it's good for the species or the evolution of the species maybe because it it helps them you know kind of die and clear the way for the new generation or it increases the turnover of generations and it helps like adaptability of the species so that if the environment changes there's enough generational turnover to make sure that the species doesn't die out right because you know if you live long enough and you don't have enough turnover and you you might not be as adaptable as your you know competitors who can adapt much faster and that's one of the theories that you know what could be like aging could have evolved like what is the benefit of aging to not an individual but to a species and this kind of terms comes back to like group selection and whether you know selection operates so a lot of a lot of species does it only operate at the level of vigils and of course there's I mean I'm of the view that there's definitely some group selection that it operates at different levels of like the fractal levels of you know organism and cells and down to yeah single yeah you know single nucleotide single I always tell people it's kind of a a mindfuck for them like you realize like we have this thing called the mitochondria right that has his own set of DNA what yeah yeah circular DNA huh yeah and we still really don't know too much history of like how did it come there that we evolved it it they would co-evolved did it like take us over like oh yeah this is a sexually a good good point because some some there's some like a fringe or non fringe opinion that maybe it's the mitochondria that are like really the hosts so yeah organism were just doing their bidding and because I mean they're much more successful than us if you view through the lens of how many DNA copies they have around like in the biosphere there's much more time mitochondria DNA and you then like good genes there's a good for that power sex suicide by power sex yeah this book is good you might know the author too uh here it is right here power sex suicide Nick Lane he tries he he's a like science journalist and he goes through like the history and he talks about that thing - it's like the mitochondria take us over mm-hmm cuz back down like we looked at like the atmosphere like through carbon dating there's more hydrogen you know the oxygen hydrogen levels is like could it be or just a big host or this yeah yeah it's definitely worth considering that that could have at least that's good of how it started right mitochondria were using like they were parasite because you can see it all the time like big animals being used by like small parrot their size oh yeah there's like whoever's if you're listening to this or watching this if you like just go to youtube and this isn't for like the squeamish yeah yeah yeah yeah yes there's a fun guy yeah yes the type of like fungi control ants yeah it's crazy so the it changes the biochemistry in the nerve of the end it's pretty much the fungi controls yet the ant climbs a little tree branch and the fungi pretty much pops out of the ant and the ant jumps in suicide and through wild yet jumps the fungi spreads because their spores and and the propagates I'm like [ __ ] yeah and there's like another example of some other I think ants that they once they're infected they get to like climb to some yeah like high branch and so that like a bird eats it and then it poops yeah yeah or something yeah so I mean examples of this kind of parasitism are abound so they could have been what mitochondria did to like the big cell cuz for me when I look at like longevity you know we gotta ask ourselves and we're just in the early days of this right yeah absolutely absolutely you know we look at things that play a factor in human health or proper healthy DNA copying we look at the mitochondrial health right you know but at the mitochondria we die creates ATP we needed to live then we look at our telomeres right certain enzyme like telomerase enzyme that can determine the length and that's that's another question why is it enzyme active only in certain cells yes mother's if telling you they're like so important and it they do seem to be you know when you need them our body knows how to elongate them using telomerase but for some reason and other cells it just doesn't know but there's also incorrect me if I'm wrong here but there's also cancer the hijacks yeah I know I know people say like use the argument why do you need telomeres at all why do they shorten at all yeah the Ackermann is so that prevents cancer but of course cancer can't like turns onto llamaron yes or there's like other alternative ways which Kim the reason I bring this up when I read about this I'm like well if cancer can turn it on to extend it look we figure out exactly I know and there's another like theory that maybe if cancer is trying to escape aging and for like in this very selfish way just those cells they're like I don't want to like play by your rules I want to die why should I die you've done and I'm just gonna propagate I have a sentient theory of cells hmm okay I think shells I think you're from a you're right from a fractal I think you can go from a geometric perspective like all the way from up to down down to up each cell and even like the organelles and everything inside are sentient and so you have let's say like this cell and it all say evolves into a cancer cell yeah it does yeah I mean it's all like and the reason why it's evolving it's like a mere you rest your body sucks because I'm an early detection system because I know what's going on oh my I don't want to die because I sense what's happening I'm gonna hijack this evolve so I can protect myself even like without being sent in yeah it could be like evolutionary driven to like do its thing so it survives for longer or it's more successful and they're like an evolutionary sense of making more copies of itself and yeah it's interesting maybe it's like you mentioned that you think like you know simulant we're in simulations yeah you from like that perspective it's kind of like has its own like sentient like outside of this kind of reality in another like in whatever is outside the simulation there's kind of well like my other think rogram doctor cells are the reason why I bring that up is I look at like cycles right and so let's say we go back even like before Homo sapiens like lineage ape lineage mm or even beyond that like we can go down to single cellular organisms since we've all from multicellular and here we are right the building blocks let's say we're looking at like you know one of our predecessors like Homo erectus or something that and it gets cancer and it dies now back in the day and I might be wrong we just don't know I'm pretty sure they didn't have caskets and all that stuff you know yeah well they might have buried their good yeah yeah but the actual flesh you know the carbon all that and touched the ground it was in the ground so the cell goes back into the ground maybe there's some process in there that we still don't know today you know because we just don't know that gets recycled somehow back into this ecosystem it's still alive somehow I don't know I have no idea it's just one of my thinking is ahead in the past and like it has to be a reason why does you know what I mean it's like it's preparing it knows the body might go away so it's figuring the body will collapse the decay the body was the K back to earth and it goes back in the soil somehow and somehow some part of the recycling system I don't know it's just like it's because always asked like why it's like yes it's a fact that we have cancer here and and you know it's [ __ ] horrible to have but there's a there's a fundamental evolutionary reason that exists mm-hmm yeah I mean cancers are very diverse but yeah and they're cold cancer but of course there are like many types yes cancers rural and yeah plays they have very differing mechanisms by which they get to this kind of like they discover or invent this kind of rebellion it has the body and just trying to propagate just too much as possible of course eventually does lead to their demise so they're not that's my thing I don't know if it does actually leave our lead them to their demise like through the decay I don't know how long it takes for a body to decay but you know it's back in the earth of the case so you think that would be like living free living like even though the body decays the cancerous cells already able to able to sustain themselves yes or or we talked about this before there's no free will so it's already pre-programmed in the simulation for this cell to do its thing because it needs to fulfill a role to go back to fit to fit into another piece of the clock right I mean from from from a perspective of like determinism for sure they're like if nothing else could have occurred like if it's predetermined yes that you know that cell was predestined to become the cancer cell but I mean yeah not in some kind of like grand design just you know that's how like this all kinds of events that yeah whatever you look at the past you know leads you to the future and this this or I mean to the present I mean this is the same as on a grand scheme of things in a block time universe is gonna occur yeah that cell is you know yeah like that's what's gonna happen so what we found today that in science both on the cutting edge and both smore more coming in to them what do we found that actually we might contribute to us living longer uh-huh at this point I mean there's a there's some things that are kind of on the on the cusp on the horizon that just might make it to the clinic in the next five years likes analytics I'm sure heard of those like they're trying to clear these senescence cells that we have and this theory was developed like I think in the past five to ten years of like senescent cells being one of the drivers of aging and so the idea is if we could get rid of them if we get rid of those senescent bat cells that are poisoning the organism maybe we can you know prolong life span and they have demonstrated this in mice that yeah like a few clear senescence cells those might seem to be living longer living healthier not by much but like maybe twenty to thirty percent which you know for mice that's not a huge but it's it's something so they're having some clinical trials right now these sena lytx and if those are successful then you know within you know five years how does that mechanism work so how they administer ating this therapy and what's doing well there are different kinds of sena lytx and some are you just take a pill like there's like anti-cancer pills or there's injections you can just inject it and they're like the one of the clinical trials is rightist trial opens right us in the knee and they inject it into there like what is it more they inject it's one of them all because its proprietary like this yeah I got you markula they're studying that as well preferentially targeting those senescent cells so it's not killing normal cells but it's only killing those bad cells that we want to kill so it's kind of cell or aggressively I'm gonna say aggressively buzz simulator now simulating um recreating Auto foggy pretty much yeah I mean the ideally those cells should have like committed suicide self-destruct but they don't and that's why like cancer cells and actually citizen cells there's a theory that those are kind of precancerous cells that were recognized that they have some kind of problem and they just stopped dividing but did they also instead of killing themselves for some reason to stick around yeah and so the idea is that just like we target cancer we can target those cells and hopefully you know if there's some kind of burden of those cells and organisms just causing it to age so oral injection it's a proprietary molecule the cell absorbs a molecule it stimulates autophagy yeah I think it's I'm not sure about like exactly mechanism by which they kill them but yeah I think they are they induce apoptosis oh yeah I think I'll just commit suicide essentially or maybe they use the immune system to like just yeah Kennedy they're just in housecleaning pretty much yeah and the idea is that you know in in place of those bad cells of the kills there's just gonna be some named my cells good cells that are like a stem cells will replenish that that kind of tissue within good cells and they'll prevent aging or some kind of like health declined for or extend health span for a long period and you know that's on the horizon and I mean they won't you know make us immortal or really produce huge rejuvenation benefits because we see in mice it's only like a minor minor in terms of like it's not doubling lifespan maybe it's increasing it by 20 percent but it's at least it's something because at this point we were like to answer your question and this is a very long-winded answer we don't really have anything that we cannot use right now extend our lifespan significantly or even like by like a measurable like say five years we don't we have anything so nothing yeah nothing's there I mean we have these kind of lifestyle things that we know that if we don't do them we can like kind of shorten our last share smoke or obesity food yeah I'll drink too much alcohol we know like the person who does all this bad stuff versus the person who does all the good stuff and say exercises and like goes to sauna whatever like difference in life span is like maybe 14 to 15 years and like a couple of studies that looked at lifestyle effects on the quality of life okay I'll trade that for years I won't smoke I said if if there was a consensus and somehow crazy studies came out the coffee will like kill me by five years and my god girl [ __ ] yeah although thankfully it's the opposite actually seems to have sunscreen all depends I think it depends on your liver enzymes like you can run a 23 me and look at your genetic data and you can see how kind of some people like fast metabolizers or slow metabolizers you know so it's for me is like I just coffee yeah I know same here so it's actually like always a good to find a study that supports whatever you're ready doing is that's a good thing to do and especially I can look there's very interesting Studies on like a tangent like coffee and prostate cancer for men yeah yeah but yeah that they said that there's like an association small one with people who drink coffee that they have a small increase in the lifespan and you know like mortality and it has a main theok Sandin chlorogenic acids inside of it but so we have that in let's talk about the Yamanaka factors all right yes my favorite ah first of all what are they well the American factors are like the transcription factors that this guy human academia Monica discovered back in like 2006 he was basically looking at things that can rewind a cell back into embryonic state hmm and he was looking at like a panel of 24 different genetic factors like a transcription factor is just like a genetic mechanism that goes inside like the nucleus and like changes gene expression what genes are turned on and off and can do like a massive kind of remodeling of all the cell and it turned out that those four if you use them together they do not just you know massive remodeling we can actually bring it back to the embryonic state where did that cell can now again become anything you want in the body because you know what what is the so special about like an embryonic stem cell yeah that it can turn into pretty much any cell in your body it's naive sell it they thought yeah before that before you Menaka they thought that this is like a one-way street that you cannot come back your skill kick skin cell cannot be back you turn back into an embryo right they thought it's like the waterfall yeah model weird yeah he just kind of rolls down and they can get back up and Yamanaka like turns it hold on his head and said no you actually can you can any cell that has a nucleus can turn back into like embryonic cell and again you can create an embryo like you can create your own clones from your skin cells or whatever in your other kind of cell which is Gary prospect but that's that's beyond them so this is kind of like so this would be kind of similar it's like stem cells were yeah it's even like more even more part and stem cell correct and embryonic stem cell way okay so theoretically out I can draw my blood theoretically apply through the therapy of stimulating the Yamanaka factors into my drawn blood let those cells then go back to a younger version of it and then re-inject it into me well that's one of the ways yeah you can create stem cells out of those or you can take your own stem cells it's kind of rejuvenated them using you know the American factors kind of roll it but how we stimulating the Yamanaka factors well you have to kind of get them into the cell you have to either get the genes for these factors into the cell and get the cell to start you know creating proteins from those genes the actual transcription factors or you can get the actual proteins your macro factors in the cell of course usually these your ways to do the gene thing because we have a lot of instruments that can insert needed genes so CRISPR tech will be used on I mean Christopher is yeah it's it's one of the ways but I mean they have have kind of a visa then associate viruses that do like a or are you specialized for this but gene delivery I mean CRISPR is more useful a cutting stuff and you still get the RNA cut it out for me yeah yeah pretty much yeah and so yeah once you get those those genes into the cell and if you activate them they can roll back the cell back to this kind of pluripotent state and not only do they do that they rejuvenate it in the process so it was like a hundred-year-old skin cell that he had with kind of all these kind of problems that in hundred-year-old Cell exhibits like fan are normally miss folded proteins or it reduced mitochondrial efficiency mitochondrial function if you induce your maca factors roll it back to the pluripotent state and then create another again you know make it induce it to become a skin cell again that new skin cell will be completely rejuvenated it has normal young levels of mitochondrial function all the where we are today with the research for this like this seems to be like it's it's happening yeah I mean the the of course on the cellular level that's creating in pluripotent stem cells they've been researching it as soon as the in 2006 um and I could publish this paper but what just recently scientists in the aging field realized that you can use this in vivo like in animal if you activate those factors just you know in a right dosage then you can rejuvenate the animal itself like systemically and make the animal live longer ah which is yeah which is I think that's the groundbreaking thing because it's one thing to just you know take cells so they've done this yeah that's what rats mice nice yeah it was a transgenic mouse line that was a really like kind of predisposed to living much shorter period okay I haven't been able to do this in normally aged mice which is kind of right that's where the field stands right now this is like the next milestone we need to accomplish we need to take these factors and make a normal aging mice that usually lives like two-and-a-half years rather than like three months and make it live longer as long as possible and this this milestone is still to be accomplished but the proof-of-concept that was shown in 2016 this paper at a Salk Institute by Ocampo it showed that you can use this kind of gene therapy in our bodies inducing Yamanaka factors to prolong life span and this dovetails very well with the idea that aging is an epigenetically control process yes because you know my cofactors that's what they're doing because rewinding the epigenetic clock backwards to the you know you know time zero where it's embryonic cell which has by definition age zero epigenetic age zero and luckily this rewinding process is gradual and you know we're just it didn't have to be it could be like a bind it could have been a binary thing where you know stealth cell is an old cell you know skin cell and somehow it's rolled back into embryonic cell but like not in a gradual way but luckily it is a gradual process where if we kind of cut off this kind of rewind a reprogramming process just in time so the cell still remains the skin cell we can gain the rejuvenation aspect without losing the kind of cell identity and this is important because that's the that's the kind of danger right now of this process that when cells are taking too far they lose their identity as a skin cell they become kind of this kind of lost in a no-man's land where they're not yet at embryonic so it's kind of in-between thing then you can get all kinds of problems and that's why I animal dies they they develop these teratomas it's pretty much like cancer cancerous tumors from this process and this is what we need to iron that we need to make this process safe so that you know there's no side effects and then of course efficacious so that it extends lifespan by you know significant amounts so that but it's very it's very exciting because all of the signs are pointing that if we learn to control these the epigenetic process of aging then we and periodically can rewind this epigenetic lock and this is another thing this is a revolutionized the field of aging research the discovery of the epigenetic lock that we have in our bodies it was like in 2013 and even before that there was the fame of most famous scientist is deep Horvath I'm pretty sure part of him of developing this epigenetic lock of Aging it was discovered that you know everybody a person of a certain age has a very similar level of specific genes like their epigenetic levels of these genes are the same which was kind of weird I mean why would our bodies develop in such a predictable way because initially we thought that aging is like a stochastic process and by that definition all this like epigenetic settings should diverge right you won't you shouldn't be able to like take two two random people of the same age and have the same levels of certain genes being expressed right and so it was discovered that there is actually a subset of genes that change in a very predictable way so that you could take a cell from anybody without knowing knowing their age and just using these analysis of like epigenetic patterns you're able to say I know how old the person is cellular age yeah yeah and so and you know not just one type of tissue that there's a universal epigenetic lock that you could take like your blood and then it's epigenetic clock will correlate with the you know your new rooms yes and this is very very odd because it's very different cells you know neuron is as old as your you are right because you had it from being an embryo but blood cells renew all the time but at the net epigenetic clock level you know the clock is showing the same time and this is very very strange because it's showing that there is some kind of coordinated program in an epigenetic program that hopefully will you know decipher one day and be able to hack it doesn't come as a surprise like you know the famous fly studies you look like [ __ ] clock and all the circadian clocks mhm we know our our body functions on clocks of course and yeah I'd like to people who are not like deep into biology it seems like common sense that of course there's some kind of program right because we we have life stages we know that at certain age you know puberty starts and everybody about you know the same age goes through it and then in another age like for women there's menopause and it's also pretty much predetermined at certain age so body does keep some kind of clause it does you know of course there's a circadian clock we you know we get you know want to go to sleep at a certain time and of course it seems like common sense that the same kind of clock could be used to like internally it needs to be synchronized could be used for aging as well and but for biologists I think it was if some reason was surprised that you know there could be some kind of coordinated process that is tied to aging and even after say like even after your reproductive age stops yeah even after that it's also synchronized yes which you know this kind of goes against the dogma that we only evolved up to the level of when reproduction stops and after that it's just you know mutations go wild and things should diverse diverge in our bodies because that won't be passed to our progeny because we won't have any more progeny but no even after you know reproduction stops for some reason there's a lot of coordinated processes that occur in very similar at very similar rates in in different people and this is odd and it kind of points to there being some kind of you know synchronization between you know what happens to people during aging and I think it's a manifestation of an aging program that hopefully we're just around the corner of being able to to decipher and do something about it so what are things people can do currently today even though it might increase a couple of years but what do we write what kind of therapies can we do well I think goes back to the lifestyle for here I mean therapies there there really isn't I mean there is this Amit Forman trial is starting because there's some circumstantial evidence that it could be prolonging a lifespan by just a little bit in healthy people it goes back two diabetics because metformin is a diabetic drug and they kind of noticed that people on it the diabetics pawn it for some reason lived longer than their healthy you know counterparts that's people with same age but who didn't have that yes they were dying sooner than these guys who were supposedly you know that's healthy they have diabetes but they weren't in this form in and they were out living their peers a you know over the same age and so it became like a biohacker drug people or of course you know by hacking is a very loosely defined term in russia it's used for people who just do self expand experimentation in the West it's used as people do like gene therapy in their garage or create I don't know some some beer that glows in the dark that's but basically people like were you know self experimenting for for decades weren't called by hackers but they were doing it they were taking metformin and there's been like online communities of people sharing their their stories of people first of all they would do like black panels and see if there is an effect lowers glucose or even like if they have some kind of does it make them feel better like you know subjective feelings that it helps and so out of that the the grew this metformin trial that is now you know FDA allowed to try it and it's going to start in November and they're gonna see doesn't it for man for long lifespan and decrease kind of the disease burden of old people and you know I think it's gonna run for like one or two years and after that we'll see but some people are taking right now and they're hoping that it will prolong their lifespan of course it's they don't expect to you know live 20 years longer what to remain healthy for 20 extra years but they are hoping that maybe you know it will crease lifespan maybe two or three years and your health spend by maybe five years and so this is something that you know I can't recommend but that's what people are thinking about and I think even David Sinclair it goes into mid form in his blog because a couple things like metformin nad yes and AG is another hot topic and it has been kind on I've been contemplating doing some IVs of it oh yeah yeah that's another thing people are doing IVs of supplements as opposed to like taking a couple matter delivery it is yeah of course once it becomes an IV it becomes really a drug and it should go through like the standard profession yeah and or go through clinical trials or being administered because you know orally are we have a very you know much more protection I guess I guess your liver yeah first of all and yeah it can get digested by various enzymes and but yeah it's it's another thing that people trying like IV delivery of the NID or some other stuff but an ID although it's popular I mean even in like model organisms like mice or flies or nematodes it's it doesn't seem to have like a huge effect it's even lower than metformin and it's lower than rapamycin those are like the the two drugs of choice in the gerontology community for decades were like permit form in the rapamycin and idea is being popularized or has been popularized I guess in the past like five years by Grant a who's the David Sinclair's he used to work with for him at MIT I guess but I mean it's it's all very small like effects on lifespan so it can be like a compound like proper die we know like now keto diets interesting data they have a ketogenic you can use it as a tool and I was taking external ketones sauna therapy so know for sure it's yeah it's like a win-win because it doesn't have a downside there's no doubt that I don't see yeah yeah but keto right now like people are being cost cautioned against it because like nobody's really been long-term on keto for like decades and I'm I view keto as a tool I supplement so let's say your healthy individual non-cancer like I I'll do cyclic keto with like in a minute fasting so it would be how long it can be it can be like I go keto for three days okay yeah yeah like I use it as a tool kind of like let's clean my cells a little bit no sugar I'll do sauna therapy so more or less very targeted yeah for sure it's always a good thing like to go alone sugar and yeah yeah so for me it's like yeah you're right I think unless you have in the very good studies on keto with cancer specifically if you have right like amazing yes yeah major like the problem there is people with cancer they don't normally live long anyways it's just a matter of some people are thinking like Kido I'm gonna go long-term for like five years yeah and there's some data now emerging the you know it could be damaging your I think it's all someone resistance although like you're not eating sugar but you're on keto I think it all case dependent you know yeah it's just yeah Dominic D'Agostino's been doing a good research on this I think it's all okay I think it can be used as a tool like any supplement you can use it as a tool sauna like no downside yes I got a Russian bunny I go back and forth between hot and cold all day long yeah I love it too yeah every time I go to the gym I I try to like jump into the sauna for at least like and the science is good both with the heat shock protein so regardless if it's hot or cold right that change in temperatures triggers which causes autophagy mmm-hmm yeah it could be one of the mechanism I can you say yeah yeah and I what I'm most convinced by is the this finished study that they were called-- even eats inland yes yes crazily lowered and like cardiovascular disease was much much lower but like almost 50% which to me was like very I think there's another I brought this up before somebody has there's an underlining thing okay so I'm making assumptions here mmm yeah we're just talking right not medically yeah yeah this is even medical so you go to the sauna Bunya whatever ideally you're not by yourself ninety-nine percent of time I'm not by myself yeah especially if I'm going to a bun yeah it's organized I'm going with a couple of peeps mmm so there's a social element there so you look at the finished study I'm guessing there's like three to four people together in this Baniyas was very social yeah right so you did you have that community cohesive bomb like the blue zone thing one of those well there's no one study would like the the religious group in California what are they the seventh-day adventists right so they're looking like oh they're living very long right so like okay what are they eating and you look as food it's like well it's not like some crazy special diet they look at although there might be some kind of antioxidant I know anyways they did they research everything like well what can it be and so they came to a conclude well to the best of their abilities they come to conclusion we they're very cohesively structured as a community you know the breakfast together lunch together dinner together socially together very tribal right right yeah I think Blue Zones thing that he was trying to find common themes between those blue zones like Sicily in Okinawa and yeah one of the things key he thought he narrow down was so the social element yes but people have like a strong social network and Canopus in their lives maybe vitamin D too but yeah they could be one of the things I don't know about you man the [ __ ] Canadian winters here yes definitely like if it's slower than and you know that's what a major thinks rapid genetic factors is vitamin D like we know for a fact Canada in Russia because we're bureaucratic we have highest document one of the highest documented rates of multiple sclerosis multiple sclerosis yeah I think it's multiple schools or MS why not vitamin D multiple sclerosis could be double check in real time data here all right well I mean yeah it's definitely like what vitamin D deficient multiple sclerosis yeah yeah yeah okay you should definitely yeah supplement and just get it back to normal it's more than just supplementation is a feeling you know I mean like well I mean it's always good like to be in a Sun so people who live in like sunny spots like you know it's also goes back to skating clocks that too so we know the studies are there where it's like you have exposure to light in the morning resets your circadian clocks and lack of light the evening which is good you don't want to be around blue light yeah no this is why I like your fullness you're in luck I got AB you feel trying this thing 24/7 all right that's like the worst one I have jet lag I stay away from it because yeah we have the 3m I like you got nothing to do and you wanna sleep like you're just gonna check my phone okay I can't sleep for another five oh my hope with science though is like we're just at the cusp of longevity science yes and more and more people are becoming aware of it and hopefully more money mm-hmm gets put into it right that's what we need yeah money is pretty much determines of how much research is money on because that's what scientists also I would love and this isn't just for longevity this is science in general of all fields I love more collaboration between different disciplines because if you look at health it's all disciplines apply physics applies biology applies chemistry applies hey yeah that's what like we're hoping yeah those guys are gonna come in solve eight an aggregation like here's a meta-analysis of all the studies done on human health within biology here's a meta-analysis on like physics many less on like chemistry and like is there patterns or connections that we can see mm-hmm hopefully yeah yeah I mean they're in a lot of people from other areas are coming into biology for some reason a lot of computer scientists a lot of physicists it seems that like maybe people at some point gets struck with like realization that what's limiting their potential output like in physics or math and computers is the fact that they have a very limited life span and they're like okay wait and this is a problem I should fix and then I have a hundred years to do whatever I want like in you know understanding physics of the universe or writing the like the the next cool I don't know computer thing and a lot of people are coming in and trying to understand why is it that we age and why it hasn't really been solved because it just seems like it's it's it's not that like crazy a problem to solve is just biology we've been looking and solving biological problems for I don't know already like 100 years at least I mean just like the same level of skill or tool sets that we have I'm not saying like even because you know they've been doing a lot of surgeries even in prehistoric times but it's just that we haven't really moved on aging on understanding the mechanism of aging for so long and people are outside of biology are wondering what what's what's wrong with us like what's wrong with the scientists why can't they figure it out it just seems that you know we have all the tools we can sequence a genome we can understand cells even sometimes like in real time we can look inside the cells and see what's going on but for some reason we just can't tie it back to this this kind of overall process of aging and why does it occur and yeah hopefully like this will get solved in a very short like in our lifetime like very short times but maybe even like within the next 20 years we'll have a much much better understanding that will result in you know meaningful life extension and therapies that can give us decades of life maybe even hundreds of years because that's like this is really what we're after we don't want to live just like five years long longer because that's not interesting and we don't want to live longer being you know old and decrepit we want to be as young as healthy as active as possible for as long as possible I mean this is the this is the goal it'd be interesting how people respond with the implication to society well it's definitely I think it would be just much better society in general much more fun less suffering because right now the suffering is he's invisible we don't really see people you know with cancer or people who are in retirement homes we kind of like put them away and just close our eyes we don't want to look at them having a very tough time because you know the last few years of their lives are not pleasant but if you know there's the there is no more suffering or there's much less suffering from those things you know right now I think the number one source of suffering in the world is aging like people they every day wake up and pain and you know or even people like with cancer they're much younger people but when they come to the realization that they only have like I don't know five years left to live or three years left to live and it's just the mental toll and the mental suffering that they just they have is undescribable and I think just like this when society realizes this that there's a lot of things that go on behind the scenes that we don't see but we should fix I think that much more support for doing you know everything we can to to get rid of aging yes as quickly as possible have you seen anything else besides that the model factor exactly I mean there's yeah there's a bunch of other approaches that are potentially very interesting does I briefly talked about these retro elements in our genome like the ancient viruses that sit dormant for a long time but for some reason those those retroviruses get activated after like age 45 and they start like little by little being expressed themselves and then jumping back into the into the DNA like that's what they do that's like the jumping genes they're called and for you know for like 45 to 50 years the dormant and after that they you know start being active and that's one cancer skyrocket so one of the ideas that maybe cancer is caused by the activation of these genes so one of the ideas is to try to prevent these genes from being activated so all kinds of approaches are now being considered to kind of prevent these jumping genes from being as interesting so it probably happens like it's there's a trigger with the epigenetic age yes and just the viral nose the aging yeah yeah yeah like it might not just like no but yeah at some point it's like little by little gets released from a little GL and it's once it is free it starts to be active and kind of wreaking havoc and creating mutations and so yeah one of the approaches is it's called like inhibiting reverse transcriptase or reverse transcriptase is one of the enzymes that is helping those jumping genes it's kind of jump back into DNA and it's now being studied in in mice and in dogs and we're gonna see if it's gonna prolong life span and in those animals and if you know that's effective we're gonna try to not we but like scientists are gonna try to see if that approach works in humans it's it's quite promising in my as well because the cancer is like it's number two killer in terms of aging any heart diseases no more like Cod diseases is a category including stroke and like cardiovascular stuff heart disease but cancer is like a close second and in terms of suffering I think it might even like worse than heart disease because you know well you don't want to have to pick which kind of suffering you have ideally you wouldn't want either of those but yeah I mean cancer is is a big component of age-related deaths and so if we can decrease that by inhibiting jumping genes that we already gonna have like small victories so most likely that realistically it's going to be a multifactorial approach sure whether it is this or Yamanaka or and stem cells either/or but it's going to be many different therapies as opposed like oh this is a Holy Grail yeah it could be or I mean I he'd be great if there's just one thing you can I turn on the like Yamanaka factors for a little bit and they completely rejuvenate you and you don't have to do this for another like two decades that's what David Sinclair preaches right now he's like okay we're gonna insert these genes in you and then you're gonna take these doxycycline the science abiotic that activates those genes you're gonna do it like every every out of the decade and I mean that's that's the that's the the goal that'd be great but yeah I mean right now we we shouldn't for sure rule out any other approaches because we don't know who's gonna you know or which parts of the puzzle who's gonna develop and not just those but there's a lot of therapies being created where they kind of repair they damaged already occurred yeah there's no cross links in in our colleges champion that to repair like a mechanic probably won't breathe great yes right yeah yeah Aubrey de Grey the sense approach this strategies for engineered negligible secure but the nation to them yeah yeah oh yeah yeah yeah he did he donated like two and a half billion a billion in Bitcoin to sands and also I think Michael Antonov of oculus cuz there correct me if I'm wrong their thesis is more kind of car mechanic thesis absolutely yeah they're not well programmed like of aging at all build a new piece and then yeah they're like saying yeah we're no different from cars we have metabolism that is creating damage so why don't we just without even knowing why this damage occurs we don't want to know which is gonna we're gonna fix the damage and we believe it's gonna take care of aging that's the Aubrey de Grey approach and yeah they have the seven categories of different kinds of damage and they have projects working on fixing each one and some of the projects are already advanced enough to turn into startups but others are still kind of in the lab but yeah and I mean although I have a differing view of how how aging works I fully support their approach just because you know we're gonna need to clear damage or fix damage anyways and if they find ways to clear our like better analyze or our cross-links you know you know her extracellular matrix that that'd be great I mean why not you can use it in conjunction with other therapies or maybe stem cell therapies and that's section another thing that we didn't touch upon it or something like what people can do today some people are doing stem cell therapies and like anecdotally a lot of people are swearing by them I have friends of my men they love it yeah and and and there's research like even in done properly it's just that mean the field of stem cell research is is a little bit weird because a lot of it is done in like in secret or offshore zones because people first of all they don't want to like get go to jail if you know they mess up illegally here and secondly I don't know just historically it happened that they they all kind of went offshore and they have no reason to publicize it if it works they have good clients or you know paying them a lot of money different types of stem cell therapy yeah and that's the thing they get very different it all it's like a craft it's not it's not even at this point there's so much of Sciences it really is a person if he knows what he's doing he found some kind of technology that you can maybe isolate the right stem cells or rejuvenate the the cells in a way and then he knows how to you know inject them back and the patient in a certain way or certain areas that you know produce benefits that the patient needs then you know that's what's gonna do and he might not even not even want to publicize it if it's like that's another theme that people are making money on on this and they have like a differing incentive from like the humanity approach where you human or like human rights approach where like you should be doing it not to make money we should eradicate aging you mean to get rich is a secondary funny so like one of our things that we're saying we're saying mission first and the profits second and to us it's much more important that we fix aging even if we you know don't get a sense from this someone else does it which is gonna be just as I agree I think there's also a problem with the public with a moral and ethic scope and I'll bring up this story with Nazis and and Russian scientists so people can we can all agree that doing experiments on humans are that don't want it yeah we don't we don't go for sure I know but it's the data that we got from the Russians and the Germans on human behavior and for example steroids it's very important data Russians I mean that's a Nazi both oh yeah the thing I would like to see though it's like let's say I have a disease called a disease X why can't i donate myself as a human being to this study like I think we need to have more kind of a scented like same thing in startups we have sandboxes like new type of regulations there were a lot to experiment we should have a and it's very political with the FDA and all this and this is why a lot of people go off shores right there's a lot of politics and money and this and that self-interest I get it I get it I know the system but if you are consenting adult and let's say you're like 50 60 and you have this disease actually you know your life expectancy is like not too good and I have seen disease X as you like I'll be Simon the [ __ ] up for this trial I don't care how unethical it is because right now I'm at zero right this was one AIDS patients back in the 80s yeah like like a point one chance of anything from zero I'll take it mmm yeah yeah and I mean they they I think they spearheaded this like people with AIDS and FDA actually relented and allowed like for like self experimentation or like I think these a therapy of last resort I forget what's a last resort yeah yeah like basically if you you are terminally ill abusive okay using whatever the hell you want yeah we're working with this but it's just I mean yeah I think you can like right now if you want to self experiment no not me self experimenting say you and I are scientists right and we want to get this research done that's what I'm saying so we get funding a million dollars can do this research for this one phase two but these participants we're volunteering to do it like right now there's certain like standards like you can't test this on humans I get it but if I'm like out my last straw over here like [ __ ] let's do it yeah I mean I think like right now you're allowed to like if you got volunteers willing to try your stuff even though you know it might kill them the regulations are they have to kind of prove the this it's worth it and prove the safety in animals first and of course it could take you know take you five years to prove it and this guy's people don't really understand how long studies take it so much money studies take yeah a lot of money in a long time absolutely that's why it's moving at such a slow pace although this is drug discoveries because an aging to because you know if you do a life spent studying mice it takes three years yeah finalized everything and yeah even other animals are even longer and they're outsourcing studies I always said there has to be some mechanism where we live because the thing is like if I'm a company if I can't profit from this and I go I am I gonna fund you yeah pretty much yeah so you got to look at sentient models right yeah and that's right and in in Russia we Oakland longevity that which is like the patients rights organization trying to model this crowdfunding clinical trial yes idea basically people signing up for trying different stuff or like already existing therapies or not even therapies but like taking supplements or doing diet we just want to validate it in big enough data said that it has longevity benefits and yeah and because there's no money in this big farm is not going to fund it but if there's a you know you can't really you know make money off of a diet Weight Watchers that's that's why for longevity benefits it's it has to be like all from a grassroots patients or organization drive that day okay we want to see if something works of course yeah for like radical therapies they have to be first created in the lab but by scientists on animals and because you can't just like say okay well let's try this completely you know random idea on people may be working you know I doubt that even the terminally ill you're gonna you're gonna be willing to put yourself out some people might men may be but yeah and there's I think now with this kind of advent of gene hacking in in your garage people are willing to try some crazy stuff on themselves and and maybe you know the government's are getting nervous even in Russia oh man if I have like some rare disease that like 500 people on the planet have and I know that the average age of death it's 35 for this disease mm-hmm I mean yeah I think every single person on group would be like I'm in it's a no-brainer yeah right Claire how crazy it is like what the [ __ ] like like I got like five years left yeah that's right you're definitely your risk tolerance goes like [ __ ] that's it yeah and I think that's one of the groups doing right now like teaching people genetic engineering so that they can like reverse engineer some drug that cost a lot of money like like a gene therapy that costs a million dollars you can really theoretically make it in your garage for like a thousand bucks or maybe seven thousand dollars but you know for for you to do this you kind of need some very basic biology skills but if you're like if you first of all if you're not living in the states where you have this drug available you you not gonna be able to get it so if you teach that's my only worry with any of these drugs in the future or therapies it comes like from the movie Elysium right yeah he comes are you hearing but for me I just like look at stem cells you know [ __ ] expensive stem cells are even like standard like IV and AD that was like warning shots like 350 yeah who's walking around just extra treat like right I'm talking about you money or this money go yeah good money buddy we get something like full stem cell injection we're talking about twenty five thousand [ __ ] dollars yeah yeah like a New Mexico whatever a lot of money yeah so imagining you get something like whether it's like you know new improved Yamanaka factors have to theory or whatever comes in the future like for me my kind of concern is and I'm glad I brought uh do you uh do it yourself or perverse engineering it's like well basically people of of great affluence can only afford these therapies and then you literally have to you have you have it a splintering of species yes and this is what like many people like just hear it for the first time that's their prime objection like will this be available only to the rich yes and me if it is maybe we shouldn't do this and of course the answer is no it won't like initially yeah it will be maybe just just to maybe like first couple of years but as soon as people figure out what it is that can you know greatly extend your life they're gonna reverse-engineer it and even like if we do this if we're gonna like put it out in the open you know you want to do it yourself a fine source yeah yeah I mean because I think it's a basic human right even like like stem cell stuff I don't understand why you know all those companies having such huge prices because it's really not it's like the cuz there's only limited places you can go maximize the profits like I mean from from the ethics well look at Canada my my wife's a doctor naturopath and we have a socialist health care system here as its pros and cons it's great cuz yeah pros for emergency rooms you guys [ __ ] hit the fan hit the ER wait time yeah but still you're doing it's free my taxes paid for it's not okay okay yeah our taxes paid for right your labor that you give here to take it off your income and you pay for it or whatever through taxes this is not free but still for emergency situations ers not bad but when it comes to proactive stuff then it's a [ __ ] show and it's heavily regulated like the stuff like stem cells not I can forget about it none in Canada proper like Prolotherapy like doing it right forget about it like the red blood cells spitting around going back in oh it's not here and this is why people leave Canada for any of this stuff you like even the United States like they have to go as you mention offshore so like because of the heavy regulations it's like okay there's only limited places that I can go and as you said like people hush-hush and obviously if there's limited like supply and demand it's only limited places that can go and maybe of the limited place I can go maybe only like ten percent are really good well of course they're gonna charge twenty five thousand yeah exactly it's well it is basic economic supply and demand this is just like I think we should maybe do better than just pure capitals but it comes to a life extension we should be maybe guided by something higher morals social health care system has I wouldn't change but it has to evolve and I love if the social help that the health care system had like a like I said a sandbox where it's like experiment do stuff right I mean I don't know about stem cells but I mean a lot of elective stuff in Canada that you could do for money I mean is available if you're willing to pay for it of course does it the question how much what should be considered elective yeah like procedure like would stem cells if you got like a problem with your shoulder or take a cut for something and a stem cells could petition to fix it should should this be free or like I want to be in the health care system can the [ __ ] dental mine they always boggles my mind why gentles not there I'm like how strong is a dental [ __ ] Union like lobby group you know I mean they don't put it in there it's all like historical political context well because you think about like I know I mean like everything your stomach teeth is not covered yeah and it's probably like one number one thing you need on a regular basis - yeah and it's not cheap you know yeah you are root canal there's 1500 bucks right oh you need veneers don't worry as a thousand dollars a piece yes I mean dental used to be free in Russia maybe it still is but it's getting actually disrupted dental yeah yeah I'm in Israel I have a missing tooth long time ago got hit with a baseball bat that had a root canal then it collapsed I actually have a I don't like that test for the most part I just had bad experiences but they passed I think stage two now we're using stem cells to regrow cuz for me and ever I never it never made sense to me I'm like wait a second I have baby teeth then it like they you've grown down twice mmm why the [ __ ] can I do this again makes no sense the cells are there it's what can I stay why can't I like send something stimulator I don't know like a message I need to send it a message like yo regrow like in everything like why am I putting stuff into my face I want to regrow my tooth back so they had that I mean let me actually pull it up like yeah stage two yeah it's one of the things about like could be another manifestation of programmed aging like an elephants they get six sets of teeth throughout lives it only grows up to like the numbers sixth time and that's it for some reason it doesn't go for the seventh time and you're like why not right Stage two successful stem cell based biological tooth repair regeneration nice yeah I'm super excited about that yeah absolutely because it's better to have your own like implants or something like plastic [ __ ] like and we're gonna put this polymer mmm get the [ __ ] out of here [ __ ] I want this in there yeah hopefully soon enough we'll have regenerative technologies yeah for other because there's animals who can't regenerate even like cut off limbs well Robert a Becker mmm he was a famous scientist long time ago ill actually pull it up over here he wrote the book Body Electric he got big in to physics mmm and he was see there's some studies back in the day but Robert Becker finger regrowth you gotta look at this shoe oh yeah that stuff I've heard that yeah if you cut like just above the like the knee yeah bad then it can regrow yeah below because like I have stem cells like Maya or whatever like the tissue stem cells like it's not complete stem cells some kind of new blasts that can regrow back to like different tissues but yeah he was doing research were like that was chopped off then it grew back but he did like some type of therapy towards it mm-hmm but yeah I mean that's one of the things that also David Sinclair is studying with the in Monaca factors they seem to be able to turn turn back the rejuvenation potential or a recovery potential of like nerves and they they saying they're gonna try it in paralyzed patients with like spine injury to regrow the nerves well I saw the first successful stem cell injection through the quadrille Pete he's a quad okay and he got the feeling back into his hands yeah that's huge feeling yeah like well how's it feeling now he's feeling yeah I mean from yeah like outsider's perspective this is like huge but like you know from a biological perspective you think about like its I mean the nerves are there it's just like the connection and they were able to grow yes when you were you know an embryo we have to be able to somehow figure out a way to to regrow them and it seems that yeah we're getting I always scream cuz I get angry when I see people have spinal injuries and I'm like it's [ __ ] 2020 pretty much like I'm like looking at my GUI out of everything we haven't we can't solve this yet [ __ ] irritates me I know really irritate me you're telling we're a [ __ ] spending billions of dollars on [ __ ] helicopters and war machines and all that we're not focusing on regrowing the goddamn spine yes that's definitely like one of my pet peeves that too just the society kind of took a turn for like consumerism whatever else entertainment as opposed to like the science and solving the problems like back in that night in 1990 as a kid I was thinking I by this time I would have all these kind of Neil said of the best like we wanted the Jetsons yeah but we got Twitter we got a new iPhone and then that rather than a calling you on the moon if you look at it like I I've been paying close attention last four or five years if you look at it both objectively and subjectively from a hardware that's what love what Elan is doing yeah people may hate on him it's not proper give a [ __ ] man this guy's building guard was like the greatest right yeah he's building hardware like actual infrastructure hardware that's much needed mm-hmm I look at everything like so the pretty I she lost like 20 years of just software I'm like actual like real hardware like we're talking about Jetson type of deal Mike where's Anna yeah it's my flying car you know I mean like oh I get it why don't we have like a Hyperloop why don't we have like more like magnetic rail especially Canada they're like second biggest landmass it cost me seven hours of flying got here like give me an give me a magnetic Monell you know 700 clicks boom you know like where's more infrastructure hardware development yeah I think it just comes down to like us going to like the the basic human urges or like the lower denominator of like we want to be entertained and comfortable as opposed to pushing ourselves to I don't know create again calling on Mars so call as Mars or go to space explore space more or yeah like figure out some kind of problems with aging or medical things and we're just being driven to or it's like profits and greed and that you know gives us much easier or gives entrepreneurs much easier like low-hanging fruit that they can can accomplish their goals but we're not like pushing ourselves to do better than just you know earn money or create something nothing's wrong a profit if it's done properly done feel like you look at the you look at the regulations like I give you example day with Apple mmm I'm like this isn't this isn't capitalism this is cronyism like Trump gives them no tariffs tax to import materials from China because they're opening up a factory to produce the new Macs in Texas me as a competitor how the [ __ ] do I compete with that that's not even fair that's like straight like you have to government and so for me it's like one idea I had before and you talked about a rush of the trend the open-source crowdfunding stuff for science I would love to have a system I actually know something block chain space work in this there in alpha now coming out of beta or coming in alpha going to beta fascinating so especially the psychedelic researcher is kind of taboo for people and so I would love to have an open source open patent where we have a research and it can be mapped out like okay phase 1 phase 2 phase 3 and so forth crowd-sourced we can crowd sources through crypto etc and everybody has some type of token it's not a monetary token it's a token that represents if something is discovered yeah we as the contributors to this if anything comes out of it we get pieces apart yes already free theory and when we're thinking about when we're trying to raise money through ICO back in like 2017 we were creating tokens that gave access to the therapies that if we're successful and I created the token holders would be able to bring much get them free yeah that I mean that's a great idea if for some reason it just didn't work out this kind of ICO boom yeah this is a nice oh this is just literally you're using smart contracts to track ownership yeah edition that's it and the token is just it's not a tangible monetary token is just like if Yuri and Amir discovers something in five years down the line and this something it's open is like is then utilized into some private companies are utilizing it for monetary gain we have a royalty right for it it's just crowdfunding through yeah smart contract right complete makes complete sense to me and do yeah for some reason is just yeah it didn't early cause early too early I think yeah eventually it will and maybe then we can yeah like yeah capsules is great there's nothing better it's like the worst of or the best of the worst alternatives right they big pull it but it's just for some reason I think there should be something be besides it you know not just not besides capitals but like within the capital system there should be another like entity setting goals for human or something like greater goals that you know it's not like either-or we should be doing both and for some reason it's just like this expels a space exploration kind of fell through the cracks like NASA said okay we're not even gonna have shuttle like I don't know what NASA does yeah for the past like 20 years like it's not much it's just wow that's why Ellen could like yeah like told American government like not doing like any big or it's a cancer I guess yeah I mean a lot of evolutionary process is like hierarchies that are going through it they like become like self-sustaining like people in the cushion like nice cushy positions earning a lot of money that really don't need to do much you want to preserve their status of course oh yeah okay you want to get to the monkey gives 20 years on like five billion dollars and then it comes in there is like I mentioned the model would be everybody okay it'll be difficult with like regulation but ideally no matter what system you're dealing with there's two things that need to be done there has to be a massive educational curve so for like everybody yeah we're nice right and then number two there has to be proper incentives right we talk about freewill before this rights incentives right among like also monkey-see monkey-do if someone else does that they want to do it right and so that's why the space race one was like the uses are on the United States like everybody was fueling each other yeah actually China should come out with like a SpaceX competitor so we can I know yeah why now Russia to like everyone let's go but it's crazy like you think about the level of technology that had like 1960's that allowed them to go to the level technology we have now and we can't even leave or not it's just we failing like the startups failing to land on the moon like the in India and Israeli like you know people did this in 1969 and you can't replicate this even with like small small craft I have a theory for what have you guys been doing for like I know 40 years I think things happen in exponential spurts yeah so you saw stuff from the six these into the 80s exponential so technology has exponential leaps and then there's a very long quiet period I I overlay this into evolution yeah absolutely so when I look at evolution yeah I believe in Darwinian evolution but I don't believe in the way like well it took five million years to get there I'm like really this study is actually now coming on hypothesis of like viral evolution right one generation definitely bursts over so it's not like well it took that species ten million years again oh no no no it contracted a virus somehow like those jumping yeah jumping joins create huge diversity also which died yeah well there's that crazy theory from Rupert Sheldrake is it like what's it called morphic residents of Norfolk residents theory mmm cross-species hmm of DNA jumping cross-pollination okay well there's definitely like within bacteria there's like horizontal a trance transfer yeah so for me I look at like okay here's a species it contracts something mm-hmm you know they bring you genes and they can create correct you could with in your genes combinations this species whether mammal or not copulates offspring that ball spring is different it's mutated right I mean it's it's not muted eyes are like chromosomes they have to match up but yeah physically muted as I so my god looks completely different yes they can yeah if they can like copulate and like if their chromosomes can line up you can have like cross species like a mule right it's yeah well I'll give you example of of a species changing its epigenetic behavior so there look they looked at wolves now in Chernobyl so there's a lot a lot of Wildlife there's also misconception that it's uh like people forget like ionized radiation like we've been exposed way more than Chernobyl way more way more mm-hmm the earth I'm saying yeah yeah like ridiculous amounts more but um scientist go in there they look in the wildlife it's popping like it's a it's good for them over there obviously first generation second generation it's you're the first of the brunt you know but what they found with the Wolves around Chernobyl was very interesting their antioxidant levels and so they found out I forget what markers of antioxidants they were actually pull it up by the Chernobyl wolves they found it they're producing at a level of four times higher the rates of antioxidant production okay because of the surrounding areas so I'm like there's real time evolution oh for sure I mean a time evolution you can see yeah like after some kinda accidents you can see species adapt in very quickly or there's this moth in in England I think like there used to be black because of the charcoal or something I think mutate it to be white or vice versa you can see examples of yeah like evolution taking place before our very eyes and yeah like and I guess radiation is a huge trigger of evolutionary diversity because it creates mutations and and I'm sure yeah there's a lot of truth to that that yeah evolution happens in bursts like and there's has to be usually some kind of external pressure to yes like create this kind of need for a version airy kind of the experimentation and then whoever you know survives is left so you can enjoy the prolonged period of relative calm is yeah until the next gonna and yeah viral like maybe an outburst of like a huge virus that you know what's responsible for diversity in millions of years it could be you know happening again and maybe it'll wipe us out like humans they'll create some some new diversity like new species and and we supposedly killed a what it's called Neanderthal yeah demo definitely well we bred with them too yeah what is it like five percent of humans or something or well yeah we have I think I checked my 23andme I have like a 3.5% the understood yeah yeah but we definitely have interbred and I guess we out-compete it I mean those those guys died out and and we didn't continue doing and I don't know who knows there's a lot of probably randomness involved and who gets to survive who doesn't I mean if an asteroid falls it's in its own environment like what happened during k2 you know the big event will happen you know the asteroids fall down what happens when you have or what do they call like Elife or earth level extinction events mm-hmm hopefully we won't have another one in the nearest future but yeah I mean those yet they have these kind of points separation points like between different you know strata of fossils that see that you know oh [ __ ] was like a huge dying out like a and then it was a explosion and new diversity like all cyclical meds yeah for sure that's what's that's beginning it's all simulation all right hey then you go back down you go to the next one and so forth and so forth and so forth there's one big cycle yeah we could be on the cusp of creating our own simulation we will I told you my see I'm telling you I'm telling it's true man I actually believe in yeah like there's a I think is a huge probability we are within a simulation and it's good to be living in this kind of interesting time I think Nick Nick Nick Bostrom Lutz that too that it's kind of weird like are we really this lucky to be living in just the time when things are gonna take off I mean look at you know previous history of humanity people throughout their lifespan nothing was happening yes they would be like born and by the time they died nothing really changed in the world but I will uh I will go along with Sam Harris take on this if we're able to survive from a geopolitical standpoint with human behavior in the next 100 years we'll be good yo yeah I think 100 years is more than yeah I mean technology well we're at that's and Eric Weinstein talks about this too we're at that tipping point right now mmm or like and so this might even apply to a I Sam talks about this it's like okay if we find out that Russia is gonna get some amazing AGI tomorrow now we know for a fact that AGI compounds in intelligence per day well what kind of a guy is this comrade a GI like I don't know what kind of a GI you're like in your the United States like oh my taking a risk with this comrade agent know exactly what happens when that happened well yeah so if you can't have it no one's gonna have or if I can't have it no one's gonna have it mhm and so I've you like I mean I think like AI researchers know about this and that's why they're so open all this research I mean they're sharing they're hoping that there's never gonna be this kind of huge like inflection point binary thing that you know today there's nothing in tomorrow's huge age you know it's gonna be very gradual and everybody's gonna know about it so people would be willing to able to replicate it like even though you know if it's happening in Russia it's gonna be happening at the same time in the US and yeah and I think the biggest risk is actually that like the whole humanities not just that one country gets it's just a Jake and of wakes up and yes so like well I think Harry's to it yeah my theory for Agia that like pretend I'm the psychic okay so the problem with people thinking what a GI will do is they're thinking in human terms exactly so I'm like how the [ __ ] can you relate to this AG I get out of here everything you're saying is redundant now I'm gonna use basic human logic here that might apply I'm not going to think like at the AG I I'm gonna assume things right hypothetically if I'm this super entity I'm still in software mode alright I'm living on hardware yeah you use humans to feed you this is exactly right so I need tangible physical material to live on mmm cool and I scan the world and I realize what's here I get the I get the for one one of Earth the history and all that stuff you recoil in horror yeah yeah these people like humans we are we're nomadic are we conquered the earth by Pete oh we got bored we hunted food we went everywhere look where we are where all the places right where to where yes we're travelers one of our biggest urges yeah there's a series like it's in our genes to travel there's some kind of speculation for that so if I'm this super Omega AGI and I've done the 401 of Earth I'm like you know this place is boring I'm out like I would leave I look out in the stars I'm like I'm on the next thing you know they made me I'll hijack what's happening in tests lying like you'll build me this like [ __ ] rocket or maybe it's already here that's what they're trying to push the [ __ ] Tesla they need to go to Mars like I'll get the [ __ ] off this boring planet I'm off I'm off to the the galaxy because realistically like what's at the end of day it's like okay it's like here's earth-like what's this well yeah I mean if it wants to calendar colonize the universe that's to kind of start somewhere but yeah I don't know if it would be willing to kind of self-destruct in horror that the existence that's here boring yeah I want to say self-destruct but it's gonna be it's gonna be curious and it's gonna I mean if it goes somewhere else if wouldn't be able to sustain itself until it unless it builds like a spaceship you know civilization of like machines on Mars that aren't like mine Mars for but we're assuming we're assuming an AI needs machines like so you know you look at like you know let you look at any of the kind of substrate to live in like we got computer or processor now even so we look at energy like electromagnetic frequency and there's different frequency or everything is electromagnetic frequency we're getting bombarded every day the Sun there's a radiation everywhere it's all energy and there's a different level the different frequencies etc cool and that's all information those are data packets in there so for me when I hope you I'm like okay if I'm just like super sentient AI eventually you like there's a like there's an evolutionary process right mm-hmm who's to say I still need something like this why do I need this containment unit mm-hm why can't I just go in the ether know since this electromagnetic and me I figured out a way to be jumping if it's super intelligent yeah can figure out is something some wait to exist without needing a containment yeah yeah that's my thinking mmm-hmm well I hope it doesn't cause it'll gonna mean that the end of us yeah well you assume you never know of course that's why you know you look at the illness we gotta merge with this thing it can be like we're just entertainment like if we're looking at it as like in a simulation step alright so Fox since 2000 yeah why not yeah could be yeah maybe that's like the game over like we create a GI like congratulations you've done it we turn you off now yeah that's another possibility that yeah I think there's some Harris or Nick Bostrom talking about but yeah I mean there's a unlimited number of potential scenario that could unravel before our eyes but if we just like consider like the kind of the bull's basic one that you know we're gonna create the super intelligence and we hopefully will be able to take control of it by merging limit and we become kind of the super intelligence with being able to preserve our kind of needs and wishes and use the super intelligence that we developed for our benefit I think that'd be a really really cool time to live in and to see what we can accomplish and like I know from colonizing the universe to that point when you come like oh ho mo cyborg yeah and of course the downside is that we kind of become too smart for our own good and kind of realized like maybe the futility of existence and like maybe that's the like so like rebirth like how do I escape this [ __ ] circus that's the worst kind of hell like yeah you can't escape and that's actually one of the things that people talk about we talk about like immortality that they're afraid that if you actually are able to do this in like non-biological way like and I think black mirror doesn't that mean yeah you now can preserve your your personality your consciousness even if you don't want to they can put you up and like some you know jail in like virtual reality jail that you can never escape and this is maybe even scarier than just not existing at all or being mortal and yeah that's definitely like if you consider the future far enough and the technology you know from a far enough angle there could be a lot of negative things that that could result from this but for now I think we're you know not they're far from there and we should still like focus on the bad stuff that is happening right now and hopefully the people who are creating a I will be able to preserve like the humanity of it and not kind of prevent like the bad stuff from happening and not being you know people wouldn't be able to get caught existence when they don't want I have my bag of popcorn and I'll just sit back yeah it is what it is yeah we can just you know ponder the possibility but in the end of the day they're out of our hands and with the idea that actually everything is predetermined too we all we can do is just gonna watch and enjoy all right you're a brother it's been a pleasure your people can get ahold of you if they want to kind of support what you're doing what's the best resource for them to heat you up well you know Facebook or they could go to the our website you theory am i oh and if you they want to look at the work we're doing with the Yemen a key factors and gene therapy of aging or any other topics they can just yet probably like social media i'm just google uri Dagon and you know they can see whatever my articles or whatever well I appreciate your brother and then I definitely will help you back for round two all right all right happy to yeah [Music] | Ameer Rosic | UCaPSoa3hoxgouMd8YdlUwXQ | 2019-10-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 17,335 | 91,734 |
GDkNj3UDARQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GDkNj3UDARQ | THE TRUE #TRAITORS TO THE NATION #ARREST THEM #ALL ! PRESIDENT TRUMP IF YOU #TRULY WANT TO #MAGA ? | you hello America James over here reporting live oh hi oh my goodness coffee and cigarettes feather knife guy here let's try to America for the knife got here searching searching searching for the truth searching for the truth that's what I'm looking for the truth how do I go about getting the truth well we just keep looking and God will guide you God will guide you to the truth the other thing I have from with is I got I got to get the hell out God's Way it's the own free will sometimes it stands in our way of success our connection with the creator and I make no judgments or no man because I judge not even myself or Lord is the judge of all that's what it's all about I'm reporting here live from Hiawatha Kansas and we are all basically been thrown into the swamp from the evil doers around the globe George Soros Archon George Soros who else we got the Hillary Clinton Foundation the Clinton initiative the global Clinton initiative yes we have all these evil networks don't forget about the Rothschilds that's right don't forget about the globalist that's right think about all the globalists that is destroying our planet and the people on it we are biological computers we have been hijacked ladies and gentlemen we've been hijacked by what by AI artificial intelligence what they want to do is hook us up to the cloud that's right the cloud and by hooking us up to the cloud they can control us better than they are right now right now we have this thing called an iPhone I want to have one never had one never will because it is a AI algorithm computer that actually physically immensely goes into your subconscious and basically turned you into a I bots we talk about Russian BOTS on the Internet three no Russian box there's a the New World Disorder box parading around like they're evil Russians Russia did it Russia did in Russia to him is still stuck on that and they're not going to go away seek when you lie ladies and gentlemen that life perpetual eights itself and you have to stick with it if you first don't succeed lie lie again and that's what they do and they love it but they can't stop you have to understand the reason they can't stop is because when you tell a lie you have to continuously tell more lies to cover the original line and the original line is they've been hiding the true Sun which I'll show you in just a little bit as we phase out but let's take a look at the players let me put my feather knife I put my feather knife down microphone believe me you'll hear me disappear get my coffee and my cigarettes going it's cold out here but I love it it's this makes you feel alive when you're freezing let's take a look at the demo rats okay who's been running our country for the last 50 years the other person hasn't been a demo rat because George Bush junior and senior of both demo rats parading in reblogged Atkin clothing the batter's American is Jeff Flake Barack Obama who else we got there John McClane loser Lindsey Graham these are all demo rats parading around and Republican clothing you can tell by what they believe in they believe in total tyranny they believe in total domination and they put the illegals over and above all we the people I get five hundred seventy seventy two bucks a month for disability after I was home invaded by illegals which almost murdered my ass Oh we'll just take a look at this just a list of the traitors to the nation we'll start out with John King he's all about common core Loretta Lynch Eric Holder traitors bankers go free tarmac meeting and Bill the traitor Austin Carter Sylvia Mathews races Robert a McDonald's sellout Julian Castro communist Jay Johnson converted to Muslim converted to Allah Allah up by John Johnson he was head can you believe that he was the head Department of Homeland Security yeah this guy's head of the Homeland Security and his goal was to allow as many legals in the country as possible along with her bummer these are above as cabinet members Anthony Foxx John Kerry familiar traitor to the nation John dick Blane he runs around his little wheelchair and his cane he had brain surgery I had brain surgery I didn't require a wheelchair for folks all right he's parading around like he's a victim feel sorry for him as he screws you that's what John John McCain does he is a traitor all the way back to Vietnam almost sunk a carrier that's right he is a traitor of the highest level and my pinkie doesn't feel sorry for his traitors ask Tom Perez Sally Jewell furnace modes' Chuck Hagel Chuck Hagel's had his ass in every administration Obama Bush and also he's in yeah he's in this administration again let's take a good look at him John Bryson here shriek greatly hoon Timothy gallery Ken Salazar Ellery Clinton traitor to the nation Samantha Power's traders of the nation overhead started the war over there in Ukraine and purged it and brought in a all-pro anti-american government that's right Benghazi the Arab Spring Egypt that's right Yemen they're killed mass burning millions of people in Yemen James clapper the crapper the poopy Pope John Court Bill Me Later Clinton the rapists they're all involved every stinking one of them and you go back to the bush of all the evil traitors administration of traitors to the nation you get the same names pop up Eric Holder Chuck Hagel Eric shrinker Kathleen siblings Sean Donovan John Kelly Ray LaHood kins Al's are Rex Tillerson was involved he's a he's a traitors in the nation you'll find out Steve Joe Austin Carter John Dyson Robert Gates Gary Locke James put Pete Mary Peters in repulsing Derek Kip Kip throw in John Harry Caray Susan Rice the total traitor to the nation Ellen showed I mean you just look at the names lazy look at the names little redder Lynch let all the bankers off they was right they had a a personal window for the terrorists and the drug dealers had their own personal window with Loretta Lynch when they brought the banks up on charges again after they bailed about in 2008-2009 with Oh bummer that's right there's a bailout for the evil bankers the New World Disorder that's what they did there's all the names of black and white ladies are doing it's really good for the day I just want to announce the traitors to the nation research check it out for yourself Palmer on I'm wrong I'm not I go with facts facts facts facts the feather knife guy reporting from Hiawatha Kansas that's right live drinking coffee yummy it's just amazing a totally amazing ladies and gent what they've done to us and we we personally allowed it and it's really screwed us up big-time you take my medicine it's a little chilly out with the sun's if you get right directly in the old Sun sunlight it's great but we the people need to stand up you want our nation back well I'm here to report we don't want our nation back I don't have to take the nation back that's right by force if necessary yeah they're demo rats the runt they parading around and think AVO will do anything because president trim panel houses they're all traitors to the nation's they hate our veterans they are all the Americans all right they hate everything they want to bring our country down and make us all slaves and bring it a third world population and not take care of our veterans not take care of the disabled people in America but give them you got a bunch of towel heads rolling up in here they're collecting how much 15 fifteen thousand nine hundred dollars a year they're giving the illegals in our in our veterans get 700 a month or a thousand that's it come on they're getting ripped robbed and rode like the rest of the American population and give it away our nation to a foreign entity it has to stop I'm calling on all Americans right now stand up be heard make your make yourselves heard make videos talk to people get the word out that we need to stand up with our veterans and all the American people that are illegal and flip the script backward belongs where we the people the bosses of them are in charge these sons of need to go every stinking one of them they're all traitors to the nation and that's what this video is about we the people have to take charge take command and stand up together as one nation under God under one flag that's right the American flag and that's right one guy Jesus Christ we do not bow to the Quran we do not bow to Allah and that's what they're trying to do they're doing it Europe right now Sweden a beautiful country turning to the rape capital of the world Thank You New World Disorder bankers thank you for creating on the wars killing people in Yemen doing the Arab Spring killing Qadhafi because he wanted to better his people with the gold dinar you people are some sick sons of if Jesus name I command you get the hell out I'm a closeout with the truth that way you can see the fact and a true son one more time because this is the only video recorder that picks it up so let's go have a take a good look at the Sun as we as we fade out but remember god bless america that's right here we go BAM there it is ladies and gentlemen the true Sun in its natural state so just so you know the video recorder I'm holding my hand is showing facts not fiction | Jack Dawson | UCWoaIGpdkjDJspuVKKwOvug | 2018-02-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,711 | 9,177 |
V1X71JVW41Q | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1X71JVW41Q | Gwent | Overwhelming Maiden [OH Monsters deck guide] - GwentEdge - Gwent Tips & Strategy | hey what's up everybody my name is trojan that's a babbling belgian and welcome back to gwentech the show where we talk about interesting decks to play around with and today i have a very special deck prepared for you all a um kind of an offshoot of the meta overwhelming hunger deck for monsters of course that has been created by one of my teammates so it's not been one of my creations i made a few slight bronze card adjustments but this deck was created by noel you can check him out on his twitch stream uh right in the co no not the comment section the description down below so you'll find his link over there so all credit goes to him and this is the deck that we're gonna be talking about today because it's called the well we kind of came up with the name as the overwhelming maiden deck and if this look down is going to continue any longer and my hair gets any longer i'm going to be known as an overwhelming maiden myself not but yeah the overwhelming meeting we're talking about is of course not such a gorgeous maiden it's not because she's overwhelming that she's beautiful but you'll see soon enough what i'm talking about let's head into the deck because of course the maiden that we're talking about is the plague maiden a very very strong card that has been a not too recent addition to the game it was added during the merchants of ofir expansion and basically has seven power and if it's destroyed it spawns seven rats in that row why do we actually use the blade maiden instead of something else in this deck because as i said it's a variation on the overwhelming hunger meta deck it's because the plague maiden is actually lower in power than something for like for example um gloucester would become which allows you to defend it more heavily and the combination that we're talking about here is playing plague maiden and then more food after that so more food has six power and boosts all allied beast units by one and rats are beasts so that means that you get seven extra points if you manage to destroy the plague maiden in the turn as well so seven extra points on top of the six is 13 points in one go on top of maybe any other rats or the wear cat that you might have spawned as well for consistency again we add on aeromancy haunt is the monster scenario that allows you to spawn like a huge buttload of consuming units which is also very important to note because the consuming units in this deck are pretty limited most of them come from halls we have three charges of overwhelming hunger which can can consume as well which you should be using for that and then of course uh there's one more all the way at the bottom we have two andrega warriors to consume as well but that's it for this deck consuming wise but the power of this deck lies in its big point slammy combos so we have holmes we have the plague maiden into morphed combo that we talked about we have the 13 points of eigen we have of course after you've well wyken eventually gets destroyed or you go into the next round you can consume it with azrael from the rain stroke giving you another 14 points and then the final big combo is that love high vampire consume him twice and you get 15 points from this one card so all very very poinslammy high power plays that should allow you to gain an advantage over your opponent but this deck is well requires a specific way of playing and i'm hoping that i'm going to be able to show that in the example match in a minute but basically you wanna either win round one and then push round two or if you lose round one um and your opponent tries to push you anyway you can push back and then uh you either can finish off in a short round three or if you've won the first two rounds all the better or but if you go into a short round three you can easily win with either the plague maiden into morvid um play or that love with two consumes so that should be enough to give you the win let's quickly go over the remaining cards so cave troll is good as a defending seven points on that as well um gives you a way to protect your scenario from karate heatwave and basically just takes the hit for you now we have maruna a very powerful death wish unit that allows you to seize a random enemy unit of 4 power or less when she is destroyed where cat is your well white punish so if your opponent goes into swarm mode you can easily punish that with the werecat some wild hood riders to actually get some thinning in there uh and then of course the thrive package from the andrega larva and we even got a here as well two bruxus and the uh foglets also can count as a bit of thinning so if you destroy the foglet actually pulls the copy from your deck if you haven't have it in your hand so far um the only two changes that i made the original version from noel actually had two bloomers in the deck instead of the two that i have here so i actually added squirrel to banish echo cards from your opponent's deck which can be really really powerful to take out a second on aeromancy or something like amphibious assault or any of the echo cards basically um and then the themed is uh great to just have some caddy of it when you do go into a round two that your opponent passes on immediately so that boosts all your dead wish units in your hand by one and that's quite a bit of those in the deck so that's the deck basically um let's show you how you should be using this because it's a bit peculiar and that sounds like skellige indeed i don't know a northern realm shield wall that's always a problem but it's gonna be good to actually show off what you can do with this deck so the main problem with the stack that you're gonna see here probably is that there is no um there are no control options so you don't have any direct damage helis which is sometimes problematic but we actually start off with a very good hand i'm gonna get rid of the fiend here and then maybe try and get that's also good um let's get rid of the noon rate and then the second and reggae warrior okay that is an interesting starting play so i don't have any drive units um but i do get basically all my good cards that is an interesting way to start off because i don't have on arrow man see that's the only card i'm really missing um but other than that looks pretty good so i think i'm gonna start off with um yeah very strongly with vigor um is that just a 13-point play if the armor gets destroyed of wyger and he gets destroyed himself but right now that's nine points to get rid of 13 points so it's not that much of a deal i'm actually going to get the magic lamp activated as well so we have some points on the field so that's it 80 points starts and now we got yeah i'm guessing that's going to be into amphibious assault which is great because then i can use the squirrel to get rid of that amphibious assault so that's why the squirrel was still in my hands i was expecting an amphibious assault and at least we can get rid of that because shield wall at the moment is very very powerful the one thing that you want to be careful with with shield wall is try to avoid making really really big units um so ygarn is basically as high as we're gonna go um and then i should probably start with yeah just get rid of that immediately with squirrel so squirrel the perfect guard for me of course because my uh my logo is a squirrel but squirrel banishes a card from your opponent's graveyard so i banish that amphibious assault so they can't use it again in the next round which is uh good for us and now we're gonna try them infantry unit good for boosting and then getting some extra damage ticks off of that um now the interesting thing thing about this deck is that there's actually a lot of cards that don't really work together so for example halt plays a lot of units which means that your board will is going to be filled up too much to actually efficiently use the plague maiden because the blade maiden again spawns seven rats on the road so she needs that space to actually fill up that row so what we're going to do is use holmes in this first round already we do risk getting hit by karate heatwave but it's a risk i'm willing to take if this doesn't work out then yeah we're probably gonna have to pass and then push in the next round but there we have the holds immediately pushing very very aggressively um but again it's probably the best use of the cards do we get karate we don't so that's actually really good there's also a row being filled at the front there um which is good for the wear cat but i'm gonna try and save the wear cat for the final round because that is gonna help me out then next up is the foglet uh so we play the foglet then we get a bargain automatically that bargest is gonna be able to destroy the foglet and we get our second one in the back immediately we don't really need to consume anything with the um the raid here just yet the desert banshee so let's keep it at that for now we're quite ahead at the moment but i'm guessing our i'm trying to actually bait one of the duelers out already we got a very strong loop with anastrange there the benefit that we have here is that we don't really need to use any of the overwhelming hunger charges just yet um i could of course i could of course do that but uh doesn't seem like i'm gonna need to let's get the deadlock going um and i think we're just gonna do that right away so let's play the nitrate so ghosts and everything all over the place and then we get banshee on do i use the bench at the bar guests now i'm going to use the banshee on that loft that also puts it to 12. you know what now that that love is on the field anyway i might as well use it immediately like this and then we kept most of our high powered units on the field already and we don't really need any other consumes so that's war elephant war elephant is going to be 16 points so that's 16 points um basically three on the loop in the back and then two more from so three two that's 13 points in one go that doesn't give him advantage so they're gonna need to play another card do i bleed it like that i could bleed it like that or huh i could use werecat now um and then just use one of the charges anyway i'm gonna use that so work at over here and then destroy all of those um infantry those volunteers in one go and that should hopefully be enough to win me the rounds because that gives them one soldier and then he's going to have to play another one right next to the war elephant which means that the the boat isn't actually going to get triggered so that saves us another two points and we do get the done banner and we get another shield wall out that's actually really good so that gives us that's an 11 point advantage and they only get three points automatically which means that they need to at least do nine points to get over that so let's just pause so usually you wanna push but i think i've wasted enough of my high value guards um because i want to keep at least the blade maiden and more food as our valley final card so that's seven points that's not enough oh of course because the seconds yeah okay never mind the second time he bought they pass they get another three points from anna okay smart very well played but they did waste only me as well uh even though we of course wasted our only good um control option there but let's get rid of the underrated warrior and get some drive going i could get rid of yeah the noon rate as well and we get the defender which is also very good so that's actually bad that we got the fiend now but we get a pause so it's not much but the fiend is gonna be able to uh give us a little bit of carry over as yeah we got one point from the carrier usually you get more but i've wasted a lot of uh dead wish units already but we got that one extra point on the noon rate which is good so now important to note keep one row completely empty before the noon rate um i think yeah so that's pretty good at the noon rate the plague maiden it's called overwhelming maiden for christ's sake okay so let's get rid of the wild hunter rider we still get maruna so we still have i think we do still have right two two charges yeah i think we still have two overwhelming uh hunger charges and we could get rid of that one yeah okay that's another yeah if you didn't have it already it's there now um let's start with the classic way to start the monster rounds with the andreyga larva that's going to give us a lot of drive over the course of this last round we get rid of its royal guards i could grab that that gives me six points guaranteed there are other juicy things that i could grab if i wanted to there's only one shield wall left there but i'm guessing he's going to use it on um physiogota hmm you know what let's just grab it let's just grab it so let's put maroona over here on the back consume it immediately with overwhelming hunger and get that card to our side of the field so that's basically um as they lose those six points so that's 16 points in one go if you count everything plus the two points on the andrega larva and we get squeena dahlia is that going to go into archers maybe no the marion drummer okay so there's a lot of an american drummer is there let's get the cave troll on the fields although you know what now let's get the broxah on here first let's put the broxah on the front row with some bleeding or nadalia and then i could defend something but i'm not going to with the two points and the two armor so you can have one unit on that field here there is visagota okay but he he was going to get the shield anyway so it's going to be too much too high to actually grab with mahuna as expected and then i would have preferred to actually get the um the right of its royal guard because that was guaranteed so let's put the cave troll on here right now so that gives us that so that means that the huh it's actually interesting so their duelers aren't going to have i should probably put that on the cave troll the duels aren't going to have shields because the shield wall ability has been drained completely so let's do this so the sad thing about this match is that i couldn't show you the pushing in the in round two um but it is something that you should most of the time do because usually you win that first round with the amount of points i put on the field but again shield wall it's very very strong at the moment and they kind of wasted their most powerful cards in one go there um let's play the noon rate first i'm going to play it over here because i'm going to grab the rad of its royal guards with the enrega wong in a minute so that should give us just enough space so then we get random dicks but that's mostly on armor uh we're armored up for half of our units so that's really good then we put the andrea white over here just trying to focus that on one row but still keeping enough space for the plague maiden in a minute so that's that we're gonna trigger drive two more times which is really good i'm guessing we're gonna get one more duelist before this is over um although the visagota charges are going to well to all the units which is in my mind a wrong move but now the most important thing about this deck the plague maiden play it on the row where you kept space obviously you can't have one on the unit there because even with overwhelming hunger you spawn another unit but you still have seven spaces left for the rats that will be appearing so let's play plague maiden right now i'm actually wondering i should probably play overwhelming hunger immediately just in case there's a karate because we haven't seen karate heatwave yet so if there's karate heat wave on the opponent's hand i don't want to lose those seven points so let's do the consume now there isn't really any white punish in yeah there we go and um northern realms we do get that right but even with that that's not that much of wow we did get we've lost three three rats that was really unfortunate um rng wasn't in my favor there but let's play more of it that still gives us a good amount of points i think there was still like 11 points we didn't get any of the drive triggers but that's too bad so we get southkirk so one duelic um but this it's without shields so even if the last card is um yeah the other duality kind of forgot this name we can still win this right so if i now put all sorel on the back row we got that 13 point boost and we end up at 90 points so that's 36 37 points our opponent needs to do he gets four from ending of his turn and then the duelist is gonna just destroy that and we got varaxis onto another duelic but that's not gonna be tradition it's not gonna be enough right with my wife oh crap it no it's not gonna be enough there we go there we go we beat shield wall with this deck and that is exactly what i wanted to show you um the only thing that we didn't really show was pushing in the second round um i'm gonna do one more match to see if i can show that off uh because i still have a bit of time um if that doesn't happen we'll straight we'll go straight to the uh the deck uh overview again and i'll see you guys there in a second so my second match as you might have noticed uh was a monster mirror so i couldn't show you the push uh tactic either there so i'm just gonna end it here with another look at the deck so again this deck was made by noel check him out on twitch and with the link in the description um because uh he's doing some really nice streams as well and he's really creative in his uh deck building as well so check him out um other than that again this is the deck list you can also check it out on playgwent leave a like there if you enjoyed it but just a small overview again so if you win round one push round two and try to take out as much well put down as much points as you can because you can either win round two that's definitely an option as well um or you're gonna lose and then keep something like that laugh or play maiden with more foot as your final play and you should win regardless um other than that there's another a lot of drive that you can start with as you saw with the envelope and then the ruxa and then every time go a little bit higher in your units um to just get those high tempo plays and just outplay your opponent the only problem with this deck again is the lack of removal but because of the amount of points you generate you usually overcome that as you saw with the shield wall match we just demonstrated so thank you guys namaste for watching hope you guys enjoyed this episode of gwentech if you really really liked it don't forget to leave a like there's a lot of all the deck guides on this channel so check them out if you're interested and uh well thank you enormously for watching and i'll see you in the next episode of gwenditch goodbye | TroVNut, The Babbling Belgian | UCc9fjGBdh-GYjpAIRd6-RxA | 2020-11-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,713 | 18,830 |
TRQlEprlbvw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRQlEprlbvw | Catharsis | Wikipedia audio article | katharsis from greek catharsis catharsis meaning purification or cleansing is the purification and predation of emotions particularly pity and fear through art or any extreme change in emotion that results in renewal and restoration it is a metaphor originally used by Aristotle in the poetics comparing the effects of tragedy on the mind of a spectator to the effect of a cathartic on the body topic dramatic uses catharsis is a term in Dramatic Art that describes the effect of tragedy or comedy and quite possibly other artistic forms principally on the audience although some have speculated on characters in the drama as well nowhere does Aristotle explain the meaning of catharsis as he is using that term in the definition of tragedy in the poetics 1449 B 21/28 GF else argues that traditional widely held interpretations of catharsis s purification or purgation have no basis in the text of the poetics but are derived from the use of catharsis and other Aristotelian and non Aristotelian contexts for this reason a number of diverse interpretations of the meaning of this term have arisen the term is often discussed along with Aristotle's concept of and ignore assess DW Lucas in an authoritative edition of the poetics comprehensively covers the various nuances inherent in the meaning of the term in an appendix devoted to pity fear and catharsis Lucas recognizes the possibility of catharsis barring some aspect of the meaning of purification predation and intellectual clarification although his discussion of these terms has not always or perhaps often in the precise form with which other influential scholars have treated them Lucas himself does not accept any one of these interpretations as his own but adopts a rather different one based on the Greek doctrine of humors which has not received wide subsequent acceptance predation and purification used in previous centuries as the common interpretations of catharsis are still in wide use today more recently in the 20th century the interpretation of catharsis as intellectual clarification has arisen as a rival to the older views in describing the effect of catharsis on members of the audience topic predation and purification in his works prior to the poetics Aristotle had used the term catharsis purely in its medical sense usually referring to the evacuation of the cat Amenia the menstrual fluid or other reproductive material here however he employs it as a medical metaphor FL Lucas maintains therefore that purification and cleansing are not proper translations for catharsis that it should rather be rendered as purgation it is the human soul that is purged of its excessive passions gerald f else made the following argument against uh purgation theory it presupposes that we come to the tragic drama unconsciously if you will as patients to be cured relieved restored to psychic health but there is not a word to support this in the poetics not a hint at the end of drama as to cure or alleviate pathological states on the contrary it is evident in every line of the work that Aristotle is presupposing normal auditors normal states of mind and feeling normal emotional and aesthetic experience Lessing sidesteps the medical attribution he translates catharsis as a purification and experience that brings pity and fear into their proper balance in real life he explained men are sometimes too much addicted to pity or fear sometimes too little tragedy brings them back to a virtuous and happy mean tragedy is then a corrective through watching tragedy the audience learns how to feel these emotions at proper levels topic intellectual clarification in the twentieth century a paradigm shift took place in the interpretation of catharsis with a number of scholars contributing to the argument in support of the intellectual clarification concept the clarification theory of catharsis would be fully consistent as other interpretations are not with Aristotle's argument in Chapter four of the poetics 1448 B 417 that the essential pleasure of mimesis is the intellectual pleasure of learning an inference it is generally understood that Aristotle's theory of mimesis and catharsis our responses to plato's negative view of artistic mimesis on an audience Plato argued that the most common forms of artistic mimesis were designed to evoke from an audience powerful emotions such as pity fear and ridicule which override the rational control that defines the highest level of our humanity and lead us to wallow unacceptably in the overindulgence of emotion and passion Aristotle's concept of catharsis in all of the major senses attributed to it contradicts Plato's view by providing a mechanism that generates the rational control of irrational emotions all of the commonly held interpretations of catharsis predation purification and clarification are considered by most scholars to represent a homeopathic process in which pity and fear accomplish the catharsis of emotions like themselves for an alternate view of catharsis as an allopathic process in which pity and fear produce a catharsis of emotions unlike pity and fear seee Belfiore tragic pleasures Aristotle on plot and emotion Princeton 1992 260 ffs pick literary analysis of catharsis the following analysis by er Dodds directed at the character of Oedipus in the paradigm attic Aristotelian tragedy Oedipus Rex incorporates all three of the aforementioned interpretations of catharsis predation purification intellectual clarification less than pre greater than slash pre greater than dot dot dot what fascinates us as the spectacle of a man freely choosing from the highest motives a series of actions which lead to his own ruin Oedipus might have left the plague to take its course but pity for the sufferings of his people compelled him to consult Delphi when Apollo's word came back he might still have left the murder of Laius uninvestigated but piety and justice required him to act he need not have forced the truth from the reluctant even herdsmen but because he cannot rest content with a lie he must tear away the last veil from the illusion in which he has lived so long tiresias Jocasta the herdsman each in turn tries to stop him but in vain he must read the last riddle the riddle of his own life the immediate cause of Oedipus ruin does not fade or the gods no oracle said that he must discover the truth and still less does it lie in his own weakness what causes his ruin as his own strength and courage his loyalty to Thebes and his loyalty to the truth attempts to subvert catharsis there have been for political or esthetic reasons deliberate attempts made to subvert the effect of catharsis in theater for example bertolt brecht viewed catharsis as a path pabulum for the bourgeois theatre audience and designed dramas which left significant emotions unresolved intending to for social action upon the audience Brecht then identified the concept of catharsis with the notion of identification of the spectator meaning a complete adhesion of the viewer to the dramatic actions and characters Brecht reasoned that the absence of a cathartic resolution would require the audience to take political action in the real world in order to fill the emotional gap they had experienced vicariously this technique can be seen as early as his agate prop play the measures taken and is mostly the source of his invention of an epic theatre based on a distancing effect for endings effect between the viewer and the representation or portrayal of characters topic catharsis before tragedy catharsis before the 6th century rise of tragedy is for the Western world essentially a historical footnote to the Aristotelian conception the practice of purification had not yet appeared in Homer as later Greek commentators noted the ethiop is an epic set in the Trojan War cycle narrates the purification of Achilles after his murder of their sites catharsis describes the result of measures taken to cleanse away blood guilt blood is purified through blood a process in the development of Hellenistic culture in which the Oracle of Delphi took a prominent role the classic example Orestes belongs to tragedy but the procedure given by Aeschylus as ancient the blood of a sacrificed piglet is allowed to wash over the blood polluted man and running water washes away the blood the identical ritual is represented Burkert informs us on a crater found at Kanaka Dini wherein it is shown being employed to cure the daughters of protists from their madness caused by some ritual transgression to the question of whether the ritual obtains atonement for the subject or just healing Burkert answers to raise the question as to see the irrelevance of this distinction you topic therapeutic uses in psychology the term was first employed by Sigmund Freud's colleague Josef Breuer 1842 to 1925 who developed a cathartic method of treatment using hypnosis for persons suffering from intensive hysteria while under hypnosis Brewers patients were able to recall traumatic experiences and through the process of expressing the original emotions that had been repressed and forgotten they were relieved of their hysteric symptoms catharsis was also central to Freud's concept of psychoanalysis but he replaced hypnosis with free association the term catharsis has also been adopted by modern psychotherapy particularly Freudian psychoanalysis to describe the act of expressing or more accurately experiencing the deep emotions often associated with events in the individuals past which had originally been repressed or ignored and had never been adequately addressed or experienced there has been much debate about the use of catharsis in the reduction of anger some scholars believe that blowing off steam may reduce physiological stress in the short term but this reduction may act as a reward mechanism reinforcing the behavior and promoting future outbursts however other studies have suggested that using violent media may decrease hostility under periods of stress legal scholars have linked catharsis to closure an individual's desire for a firm answer to a question and an aversion toward ambiguity and satisfaction which can be applied to effective strategies as diverse as retribution on one hand and forgiveness on the other there's no one-size-fits-all definition of catharsis therefore this does not allow a clear definition of its use in therapeutic terms pick social catharsis emotional situations can elicit physiological behavioral cognitive expressive and subjective changes in individuals affected individuals often use social sharing as a cathartic release of emotions Bernard REM a studies the patterns of social sharing after emotional experiences his work suggests that individuals seek social outlets in an attempt to modify the situation and restore personal homeostatic balance rim a found that 80 to 95 percent of emotional episodes are shared the affected individuals talk about the emotional experience recurrent lead to people around them throughout the following hours days or weeks these results indicate that this response is irrespective of emotional valence gender education and culture his studies also found that social sharing of emotion increases as the intensity of the emotion increases topic stages emile durkheim proposed emotional stages of social sharing directly after emotional effects the emotions are shared through sharing there is a reciprocal stimulation of emotions and emotional communion this leads to social effects like social integration and strengthening of beliefs finally individuals experience a renewed trust in life strength and self-confidence topic motives affect scientists have found differences in motives for social sharing of positive and negative emotions one positive emotion a study by Langston found that individuals share positive events to capitalize on the positive emotions they elicit reminiscing the positive experience augments positive effects like temporary mood and longer-term well-being a study by gable at all confirmed Langston's capitalization theory by demonstrating that relationship quality is enhanced when partners are responsive to positive recollections the responsiveness increased levels of intimacy and satisfaction within the relationship in general the motives behind social sharing of positive events are to recall the positive emotions inform others and gain attention from others all three motives are representatives of capitalization to negative emotion rim a studies suggests that the motives behind social sharing of negative emotions are to vent understand bond and gain social support negatively affected individuals often seek life meaning and emotional support to combat feelings of loneliness after a tragic event topic the grapevine effect if emotions are shared socially and elicits emotion in the listener then the listener will likely share what they heard with other people rim a calls this process secondary social sharing if this repeats it is then called tertiary social sharing you topic collective catharsis collective emotional events share similar responses when communities are affected by an emotional event members repetitively share emotional experiences after the 2001 New York in the 2004 Madrid terrorist attacks more than eighty percent of respondents shared their emotional experience with others according to REM a every sharing round elicits emotional reactivation in the sender and the receiver this then reactivates the need to share in both social sharing throughout the community leads to high amounts of emotional recollection and emotional overheating Pennebaker and harbour defined three stages of collective responses to emotional events in the first stage a Stata emergency takes place in the first month after the emotional event in this stage there is an abundance of thoughts tox media coverage and social integration based on the event in the second stage the plateau occurs in the second month abundant thoughts remain but the amount of talks media coverage and social integration decreases in the third stage the extinction occurs after the second month there is a return to normalcy topic effect on emotional recovery this cathartic release of emotions is often believed to be therapeutic for affected individuals many therapeutic mechanisms have been seen to aid in emotional recovery one example is interpersonal emotion regulation in which listeners help to modify the affected individuals effective state by using certain strategies expressive writing is another common mechanism for catharsis joann fred erroneous tam etta analysis suggesting that written disclosure of information thoughts and feelings enhances mental health however other studies questioned the benefits of social catharsis think an our and colleagues found that non shared memories were no more emotionally triggering than shared ones other studies have also failed to prove that social catharsis leads to any degree of emotional recovery second REM a asked participants to recall and share a negative experience with an experimenter when compared with the control group that only discussed unemotional topics there was no correlation between emotional sharing and emotional recovery some studies even found adverse effects of social catharsis contrary to the federally study sabaha and colleagues found expressive writing to greatly impede emotional recovery following a marital separation similar findings have been published regarding trauma recovery a group intervention technique is often used on disaster victims to prevent trauma related disorders however meta-analysis showed negative effects of this cathartic therapy you topic see also abreaction closure psychology kenosis Kairos is sublimation psychology topic notes topic references you Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 purification encyclopedia britannica 2211 Thad Cambridge University Press pp 662 661 dictionary of the history of ideas catharsis Catholic Encyclopedia mysticism and neoplatonism Blackwell reference cone Alfea 1992 no contest the cast against competition houghton mifflin ISBN oh three nine five six three one two five four catharsis in psychology and beyond a historic overview by estoppel topic external links the dictionary definition of catharsis at Wiktionary | wikipedia tts | UCqsTEykZZCMfAA5wK3mEjyQ | 2018-11-27 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,556 | 16,294 |
HkXDqGN2zQU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HkXDqGN2zQU | Master Diplomat | hey guys i believe all fighting could have been stopped at one point or another if there was a skilled diplomat [Applause] hey guys this fighting is pointless you just kill each other and no one wins i don't care he insulted me at the banquet yesterday insulted you i tried to get your attention after you ignored me i should be the one insulted you called me a wreck i have a name you know how should i know you were the only one wearing a red cape so i called you a red cape you could have asked everyone at the banquet knows me was it so hard to say hey who is this guy with the red cape a person of my position doesn't ask he assumes and i assume your name is red cape you will pay for your insolence no it is you who will pay [Applause] guys this issue is not that serious we can resolve it peacefully peacefully had enough peace living with this red cape only one of us leaves the battlefield exactly wait a minute did you call me red cape again [Applause] guys we can meet on neutral ground to find the optimal solution it will be of interest to both of you no my only interest is making him pay and my only interest is making him pay so go away hey i guess i'll have to use my ultimate weapon hey hey hey are you crazy man you know how dangerous this is walking around sick yo man i have to go quarantine don't want to get my family sick say man we'll catch up on this fight later and they said diplomacy won't work here let's see how many words can i end today [Music] you | AndasMus | UCjgKjj7O7v3FxjQj3-bdnfw | 2020-09-13 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 299 | 1,481 |
_JFiqzhVvHM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JFiqzhVvHM | Transport solutions... | i'm janet rice i'm the greens lead senate candidate for this election and i'm rod swift the candidate for gila brand transport is a huge issue in this electorate i know i've been campaigning for many years to improve public transport and to get trucks off our residential streets now the old parties don't have their priorities right they want to build a huge toll tunnel through our suburbs and our park lands while they squabble over who funds metro rail tunnel the greens care about finding solutions to our transport problems we want to see you to be able to get around our city quickly and efficiently so on september 14 vote for the greens because we're with you you | Rod Swift | UCsGxJYv-hrvKKa7b3PdUrUA | 2013-06-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 121 | 672 |
Kt-75Qr4J88 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kt-75Qr4J88 | Lateisha Davine Lovelace-Hanson - She Grrrowls Poetry Party | but it's called how i eat mango and yeah just sort of kind of honoring a relationship to mangoes that i feel really grateful to have it's my favorite fruit and it makes me think about my mum so how i eat mango mum always knew how to get the most succulent fruit home how to press her heart into each squeeze the top and the bottom teach will tell you if it's right press gently teesh but press firm feel how soft it can be knowing the mango was her way of knowing home a teaching that survived each press for independence each press for justice each press for liberation we press find the soft if it's there it's ours take back to be held protected in the remembered grip of 100 hands generations of ancestors cut in open out to the eaton to the hole to eat into the hole there it is the smell of sweet sweet mango remedy of remembering i remember mum offers me mango flesh like a mountain office sunrise and honouring reddies inside my young body anticipation of sweet nectar nature's sugar slides into my baby to smile i chase each chunk down to my stomach ignoring fibers trapped between each chip teeth i chew and i chew sweet summer stains drip down my mouth this is how i know it's right to remember home this is how i know it's remembering it's remembering it's remembering home only visited in dream visions bones that still crack under the weight of occupied lands last names that do not belong to us all when a fruit farm there carried her little girl laughter as she pressed up against family members leaving one by one there was no soft in this lie of a better life in england and a brother whose fall from the mango tree made him run made him run made him run to the roughness of poverty on jh streets oh she was alone left with a mango and memory that grew survivals and songs into her school uniform a blue pinafore white socks and plaques around her head she is young now too young to know what's to come but i remember i remember and i chew these stories down independence was yesterday tomorrow is not yet met zaimaka's taino tongue buried into the seed of her african skin and i stand there and i remember and our true ancestors made her flesh like mango to remember this land like mango to remember how country people grew like mango there's a brown girl in the ring there's a brown girl in the ring and she looks like a sugar in a plum plum plum to the wedge land between her nails whose skin like hers color of earth whose skin like her stolen his skin like hers burnt her skin like her scarred by the hands of false tomorrow and i remember as i too eat mango piece and i chew and i chew the healing lives in the soil beneath her feet calls her soul and i am called as she runs over unmarked graves through manco groves and gullies there is a purple ribbon in her hair now loosened by the chase of barefoot freedom oh she grows ripened fruit of many rooms and she grows she climbs to pick the fruit fresh before the fall bit straight in breaking skin to the seeds ancestral echo within and i smell the memory i remember i remember my mother's people knew the magic of mango it's strong enough do rightness me remember me return my memories so many to the roots of my body i speak the story after we for we taste it the mango we must we must protect the mango we must can i speak this the mango we must protect upon earth's lips [Applause] you | She Grrrowls | UCr9K0Nw1_t9T0pucAea5CIQ | 2022-04-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 649 | 3,364 |
mG47WPCeyiU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mG47WPCeyiU | NEW LAUNDRY ROUTINE 2020 | Laundry Schedule for a Family of 5 | I recently changed my laundry routine and it has been one of the best changes I've ever made if you want to know what I did to make doing laundry so much easier then keep on watching hi everyone I'm Vaishali and you are watching tiny and tidy which is where I love to share content about living a simple clean declutter and organized life when it comes to cleaning there's nothing I've hated more than doing laundry I don't mind putting it in the washer and dryer but it's putting it all the way that I dread the most before we had kids I'd let the laundry pile up I then spend hours over the weekend washing and drying everything I'd start to put it all away but then got tired of doing it often our clothes would just sit in the laundry basket and we just grabbed it from there instead of folding and hanging everything after I had my first child the laundry multiplied and it became even more overwhelming to deal with all of it on top of that we didn't know anything about minimalism back then so we had so many clothes to manage it really was getting out of control when we had our second child we decided to hire a housekeeper and she'd come every weekday evening for a couple hours and help with cleaning laundry and meal prep that was an absolute lifesaver and the first chore I delegated to her was laundry so every Thursday evening she'd start the laundry and when she left my husband and I would finish washing and drying everything then on Friday I'd make sure to sort all of the laundry at some point during the day each member of the family had their own basket and I'd sort the clothing accordingly and all of the linens were placed in its own basket in the evening when our housekeeper arrived she'd old hang and put away all of the laundry since it was already sorted and made it easier for her to put away and then she would do all of the ironing we continued with the system for years and it worked perfectly for us until the global pandemic once we had to stay in quarantine I no longer had a housekeeper and I had to start doing laundry again the washing and drying part was easy because the machines did all the work but the problem was putting all of it away now had to fold and hang all of my stuff along with the linens and clothing for three kids my husband would put away his own clothes the good thing is we now have a lot less clothing since we're working towards more of a minimalist lifestyle and most of our clothing is hung I really disliked folding clothes so whenever possible I tried to hang clothing as opposed to folding it but even though we were doing things to make doing laundry more manageable it was still a lot of stuff to put away and I found that I was starting to resort to old habits and I was leaving clean laundry in baskets for days that was when I knew that I had to change how I was doing things instead of trying to wait it out until my housekeeper could come back so I'm really big on routines and cleaning schedules over the years I've created various cleaning schedules and continue to tweak them but one thing I never changed was my laundry routine growing up my parents always did laundry once a week and they still do and as a result this was the same system I adapted and stuck to for years I knew that some people did laundry daily as opposed to weekly but this seemed like so much more work and I didn't want to bother trying it out but now that I was faced with this laundry dilemma I decided to pull my followers on Instagram and see what they thought about doing laundry daily and by the way if you're not already following me on Instagram or Facebook and there's my Instagram handle go and follow we have a great community there and we're always learning awesome tips and tricks from one another anyway it turned out that the majority of my followers did their laundry once a week and the minority did it daily so I then told them that I was considering switching from weekly to daily and asked them what they thought I got all sorts of responses a lot of people thought it was a good idea and highly recommended it while others raised some concerns which I have to admit were also things I was concerned about but I decided to give it a shot and see if it would be easier to make the switch I thought it was gonna be a very difficult habit for me to develop but it was worth trying if it didn't work out no big deal I just go back to doing it weekly well it turns out that it was one of the easiest transitions I have ever made as long as I'm doing the laundry I'm never going back to doing it weekly ever again doing laundry daily is so much easier and I highly recommend that you give it a shot now I know of those of you that currently do it once a week have a lot of questions and concerns but I'm gonna answer those questions now and hopefully convince you to make the switch first off it seems like a waste of water and energy to do laundry every single day well here's what I ended up doing to fix that problem normally I do four to five loads in one day now I just spread it out over the week so I don't do laundry seven days a week I usually do it for five days per week so I only do laundry once I have a full load if it's not a full load then I'll wait until the following day to do it you can also save money by doing your laundry during off-peak hours so here in Ontario Canada that's from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. fortunately during the quarantine the off-peak rates apply all day and when things go back to normal I will try to wash and dry my laundry from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. if possible another option would be to select a small load option on your machine if that's an option but like I said I just rather wait until I have a full load the second issue is having to mix lights and darks some of my followers were concerned that they'd have to mix their lights and their darks to avoid having to do this I just wait until I have a full load of lights or a full load of darks usually in one week I'll do one load of lights two to three loads of darks and one load of linens another concern that's both my followers and I had was that it seems like so much more work to do laundry every single day but I promise you it's not just like we don't wait an entire week to load our dishwasher we usually do it daily or if you don't have a dishwasher you'll hand wash your dishes daily doing laundry multiple times a week works the exact same way can you imagine doing dishes once a week that would be sane and we would need so many dishes which is exactly what we're doing when it comes to clothing since most of us only do our laundry once a week we're buying more and more clothing just so that we have enough to get us through into laundry day but ever since I started doing laundry multiple times a week I find that I never run out of clothing even though I have a capsule wardrobe which by the way if you want to know more about that check out this video so if you watch my Instagram stories you'll often see my family and I wearing the same clothes over and over again but I assure you it's a haul clean I just do our laundry regularly and when I put it away the items I washed most recently end up being at the front of the closet or drawer so I just end up grabbing the same ones over and over again which has made me realize that I can now buy even less clothing for my kids and I in the cloth diaper video I had mentioned that I follow a system where I only have to watch diapers once a week in order to do this I had to buy a lot more diapers and I have to hand rinse every single diaper had I just done laundry more often I wouldn't have had to buy more diapers nor would I have to rinse every single one I just thought it would be more work to do laundry so often so I never bothered trying it out so if I were to do it all over again I'd buy fewer cloth diapers and just do the laundry more often it's also easier because once the load is dry you don't even need to grab a laundry basket and start sorting everything I just grab items straight out of the dryer and just start putting them away right away believe it or not it takes less than five minutes to do and if you prefer to hang dry your clothes put them on the hanger let them dry and then just put them away on the hanger that you hung them on easy peasy honestly I can't stress how much easier it is to put away a single load than it is to spend hours dealing with a mountain of laundry another thing I could see people thinking is oh yeah obviously this works for you your home all day what about the people that have to go to work so I was on maternity leave when I started this new routine which I admit does make things easier now that I'm back at work we're in quarantine so I'm still working from home however I will eventually be going to work and like I said earlier when Hydra rates go back to normal I do plan to do my laundry during off-peak hours so how will I work around this here's my plan this was actually suggested by one of my followers and I tried it out and it totally works basically all you have to do is load the washing machine before you go to bed then hit the delay button I set it for three hours which means that the machine will start washing the clothes in three hours I didn't even know I had a delay button and I'm thankful that someone taught me this so around 2:00 or 3:00 a.m. my laundry will all be washed then when I wake up the first thing I do is put it in the dryer I wake up around 5:30 or 6:00 so this is enough time for it to dry before the hydro costs go up I'll then go to work and when I return home from work that's when I'll take five minutes to put away the load of laundry if you don't wake up super early then you could just start and finish the load when you come home from work like I said earlier since it's only one load it really isn't time consuming or overwhelming or you can just not bother trying to save money and just do your laundry whenever you have time to do it just do it multiple times a week instead of once a week I promise you you won't regret it and it's a very easy habit to develop even when my housekeeper returns I plan to continue with this system because that way she can help me with other tasks instead of doing laundry the entire time I actually don't mind doing the laundry now so I rather get her to do other things like meal prepping which by the way if you want to know all about my meal planning and prepping system or perhaps a detailed breakdown of my cleaning schedule if you need help decluttering and organizing your home step-by-step room by room then make sure to sign up for my clear the clutter membership the link is in the description box down below I am obsessed with organization and have years of experience I would love to share everything I know with you in an or nice and systematic way which is exactly what I do in my clear the clutter membership find out more on my website or by clicking on the link in the description box down below if you found this video helpful please hit that like button down below and share this video with someone that you want to help out I post new videos every single week so subscribe to my channel and hit the notification bell so that you'll be notified when they're posted lastly make sure to check out one of these two videos for more useful tips and tricks as always thanks for watching guys and happy tidying bye [Music] | TINY AND TIDY | UCt2ihNZ-C3XWDbPSjvE37lA | 2020-06-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,260 | 11,405 |
oyQbI5uWziE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oyQbI5uWziE | Class 7 | MATHS | Chapter 13 - New Numbers - Part 1 | SCERT | Online Chalkboard | | hi friends welcome back to online support new numbers [Music] foreign window [Music] minus degree temperatures degrees Celsius foreign uh foreign world is the coordinate of Antarctica minus 89 degrees Celsius minus 272.5 degrees Celsius America foreign minus 3 minus 4 minus 5 negative [Music] positive numbers numbers foreign [Music] foreign available [Music] minus 1 minus 2 minus 3 minus 4 minus 5 [Music] I know 100 foreign fourteen foreign la okay 25 minutes [Music] three by four one by two minus 3 by 4 okay this is minus 41 okay our questions [Music] foreign minus 4 minus 3 minus 2 minus 1 0 1 2 3 4 okay it is repeat rate for five oriented okay um [Music] number minus y minus 4 minus 3 minus 2 minus 1 0 1 2 okay [Applause] one two three four additions foreign [Music] all right foreign without foreign minus 3 plus uh 103 answering minus 3 plus 103 above minus some pluses plus Y is equal to y minus Express foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign foreign minus illa [Music] questions [Music] foreign thank you | Online Chalkboard | UCnp0ttUnKA0_2ebizFrcPSA | 2023-02-13 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 183 | 1,022 |
Kz5_4sakxAo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kz5_4sakxAo | Tomb Raider 3: Modding Showcase-Tomb Raider III Transformed | [Music] ah [Laughter] [Music] [Applause] welcome back to my humble abode feel free to take a look around [Applause] huh [Applause] let's see how quickly the assault course can be completed are you ready uh huh [Applause] huh bye that's gosh that was fast but i'm sure you can do better now it's time for our third adventure [Music] ah huh uh so oh huh [Music] huh [Applause] [Music] huh [Music] [Applause] [Music] huh [Music] yes [Music] [Applause] [Music] huh [Applause] ugh [Music] so huh [Music] [Applause] [Music] huh [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] oh uh [Music] [Applause] so [Music] huh [Music] huh [Music] huh [Music] huh [Music] who are you working for what you heard me i didn't honest what did you say i said who employs you listen who's she what does she do i don't know really i don't i just shoot people for her a commendable work ethic i guess yeah that puts me out into it as my father did and his father did it for how old is this italy i don't know late 20s early 30s right yeah for some people like yourself we get a special bonus i'm flattered i mean i could even be retiring from you then you might like to mind the bell happy retirement [Applause] huh [Music] huh uh [Music] ugh [Music] huh yep huh [Music] huh [Music] oh huh [Music] so [Music] [Applause] [Music] so [Music] foreign [Music] so [Music] foreign [Music] so uh ah [Music] ah huh [Applause] huh ugh huh so huh [Music] so uh hey uh [Music] huh [Music] huh [Music] oh [Applause] huh [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] you | CroftEd | UCoI_ngTqLuZOAEuYFCDF0Pg | 2022-07-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 278 | 1,550 |
Nk2bR93_Ul0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nk2bR93_Ul0 | 2024 Ford Escape Platinum AWD 601A w/ Panoramic Roof in Agate Black Metallic Walk-Around | 2024 Ford Escape Platinum all-wheel drive this one's a 601a package in the egg black metallic paint really nicely equipped Escape you do have front and rear parking sensors on here and you're rolling on 19-in machined aluminum alloy wheels with Bridgestone allseason tires this one's powered by the 2 L ecoboost engine paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission coming around back there's your reverse parking sensors your dual exhaust this one does have the class 2 trailer tow package it is a power liftgate you can't open and close it from the key poob as well and back here you do have your all weather floor liners for the first and second row as well as your carpet mats this also has an easy access cargo shade so you can cover your belongings when the tailgate is closed you have your mini spare tire there and then there's your nice panoramic sunroof there as well really bright interior here coming around to that interior you do have a space gray ActiveX seating material really comfortable seats front and back you have your own cup holders that fold down as well as a couple USB cat ports your own climate Vents and some storage behind the passenger seats coming around to the front you do have power windows and locks of course power glass adjustable mirrors driver seat memory automatic headlamps and really comfortable front power bucket seats and the driver seat does have lumbar stepping into the vehicle you do have a customizable digital display right behind the steering wheel the steering wheel itself is really comfortable it is a heated steering wheel you have adaptive cruise control and a lane keeping system and then over here on the 13.2 in Center display uh you do have connected navigation here and if I pop it in reverse there's your 360 camera and your reverse camera you do have your different climate controls including your heated seats and your heated steering wheel you do have a couple connectivity options down here two USB ports and a 12volt power you also have wireless charging for your phone you have remote start on the key fob some storage inside the center console here and some more over here in the glove box so really nicely equipped Escape all the way around | Boyer Ford Lincoln Bobcaygeon | UC0HUF_R6TckYuIZ9Ca0aPYQ | 2024-01-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 389 | 2,211 |
TZWKuZr68QM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZWKuZr68QM | The YES crew pays homage to Ken Singleton | JUST AFTER 3:00 AND IN THAT GAME, THAT WILL BE THE LAST GAME THAT KEN SINGLETON OUR COLLEAGUE WILL ANNOUNCE, DURING TODAY'S GAME HE ANNOUNCED HIS RETIREMENT, AS A BROADCASTER WE ALL KNEW IT WAS COMING, GUYS, FOR THE PAST SEVERAL YEARS, HE HAD HINTED AT IT, JOHN FILIPELLI ABLE TO LURE HIM WITH A REDUCED SCHEDULE TO STAY, BUT KENNY, TODAY SAYING GOODBYE AND YOU COULD SEE MICHAEL OBVIOUSLY EMOTIONAL ABOUT THE ANNOUNCE LITTLE, 37 YEARS IN THE BROADCAST BOOTH. A TREMENDOUS PLAYER A TREMENDOUS BROADCASTER AND I KNOW, FLASH, HOW MUCH HE MEANS TO YOU BECAUSE OF THE WORK YOU DID TOGETHER IN THE BOOTH. >> JOHN: IT WAS SPECIAL LISTENING TO KENNY TALK ABOUT THE RIDE HE'S BEEN ON. IT BROUGHT ME BACK TO MY FIRST YEAR IN THE BOOTH IN 2006, AND BEING THAT ROOKIE IN THIS NEW PROFESSION AND KENNY, LIKE ANY GREAT VETERAN TEAMMATE BEING, TOOK ME UNDER HIS WING AND SHOWED ME THE WAY, THERE WERE A LOT OF BUMP AS LONG THE WAY AND HE HELP NEED GET THROUGH IT. WE WORK AHEAD LOT OF WEST COAST GAMES TOGETHER. AND KENNY KIND OF FORCED ME TO START DOING SOME PLAY-BY-PLAY AND NOT JUST BE COMFORTABLE IN THE ROLE AS AN ANALYST, YOU KNOW, EXPAND, TRY ON GET BETTER, KEEP PUSHING, AND I CAN'T THANK KENNY ENOUGH FOR WHAT HE DID TO GET ME GO ALONG MY PATH. BUT TO HELP ME GET BET AIR LONG THE WAY AND MORE IMPORTANTLY, THE FRIENDSHIP AND THE VETERAN TEAMMATE AND THE GUY THAT I LOOKED UP TO IN THIS PROFESSION, HE REALLY TAUGHT ME A LOT. >> BOB: SEE THE WORD TEAMMATE WITH KENNY STANDS ON IT OUT ME. >> JOHN: PERFECT. >> BOB: WHEN I WAS DOING PLAY-BY-PLAY, I DIDN'T DO IT LIKE KENNY, KENNY DID IT FOR YEARS HE WOULD POINT STUFF OUT TO MAY SILENTLY, LOOK HERE, LOOK AT THE UMP, LOOK WHERE THE BALL IS IN THE OUTFIELD, THAT WAS INVALUABLE TO ME. >> JACK: A CLASSY GUY AND I THINK WHEN YOU LISTEN TO HIS SPEECH IN WHICH HE SAID GOOD BUY HE WANTED TO MAKE SURE HE MENTIONED EVERYONE THAT HE HAD WORKED SO CLOSELY WITH AND I JUST ALWAYS THOUGHT THAT KENNY WAS AS NICE AND AFFABLE AS ON AND AS PREPARED A ANY BROADCASTER I HAVE EVER COME ACROSS AND HE WAS THE TYPE OF PERSON THAT VERY RANDOMLY A TEXT WOULD POP IN IN TO MY PHONE, HEY, JACKIE REALLY ENJOYED THAT INTERVIEW YOU DID WITH SO AND SO ON THE PREGAME U JACK I THOUGHT YOU MADE A GOOD POINT ON THE POST GAME THE TEXT I LIKED THE MOST, JACK, HERE SAY NEW REGGAE SONG FROM THIS ARTIST. SOMETHING THAT I THINK YOU MIGHT LIKE. YOU SHOULD CHECK IT OUT. WE WILL ALL MILLS HAVING KENNY AS A TEAMMATE BUT WE WILL ALL CONTINUE TO BE HIS FRIEND. >> BOB: CAN WE LURE HIM | YESNetwork | UCJXltguGSVIZAcbIglaZ-mA | 2021-10-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | detection | en | 490 | 2,530 |
RXS_mU7gxDY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXS_mU7gxDY | God, the Invisible King | H. G. Wells | *Non-fiction, Religion | Soundbook | English | 2/3 | chapter forth parts 1 & 2 of God the invisible King this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recorded by william Tomko god the invisible king by hg wells chapter 4th parts 1 & 2 chapter the 4th the religion of atheists 1 the scientific atheist it is a curious thing that while most organized religions seem to drape about and conceal and smother the statement of the true God the honest atheist with his passionate impulse to strip the truth bare is constantly and unwittingly reproducing the divine likeness it will be interesting here to call a witness or so to the extreme instability of absolute negation here for example is a deliverance from Professor metchnikoff who was a very typical antagonist of all religion he died only the other day he was a very great physiologist indeed he was a man almost of the rank and quality of past year or Charles Darwin a decade or more ago he wrote a book called the nature of man in which he set out very plainly a number of illuminating facts about life they are fact so illuminating that presently in our discussion of sin they will be referred to again but it is not professor metchnikoff intention to provide material for religious discussion he sets out his facts in order to overthrow theology as he conceives it the remarkable thing about his book the thing upon which I would now lay stress is that he betrays no inkling of the fact that he has no longer the right to conceive theology as he conceives it the development of his science has destroyed that right he does not realize how profoundly modern biology has affected our ideas of individuality and species and how the import of theology is modern fight through these changes when he comes from his own world of modern biology to religion and philosophy he goes back in time he attacks religion as he understood it when first he fell out with it fifty years or more ago ludis state as compactly as possible the nature of these changes that biological science has wrought almost imperceptibly in the general scheme and method of our thinking the influence of biology upon thought in general consists essentially in diminishing the importance of the individual and developing the realization of the species as if it were a kind of super individual a modifying an immortal super individual maintaining itself against the outer universe by the birth and death of its constituent individuals natural history which began by putting individuals into species as if the latter were mere classificatory divisions has come to see that the species has its adventures its history and drama far exceeding in interest and importance the individual adventure the Origin of Species was for countless Minds the discovery of a new romance in life the contrast of the individual life and this specific life may be stated plainly and compactly as follows a little while ago recurred individuals we who are alive now where each of us distributed between two parents then between four grandparents and so on backward we are temporarily assembled as it were out of an ancestral diffusion we stand our trial and presently our individuality is dispersed and mixed again with other individuality in an uncertain multitude of descendants but the species is not like this it goes on steadily from newness to newness remaining still a unity the drama of the individual life as a mere episode beneficial or abandoned in this continuing adventure of the species and metchnikoff finds most of the trouble of life and the de-stresses of life in the fact that the species is still very painfully adjusting itself to the fluctuating conditions under which it lives the conflict of life is a continual pursuit of adjustment and the ills of life of the individual life that is are due to its dis harmonies man acutely aware of himself as an individual adventure and unawakened to himself as a species finds life jangling and distressful finds death frustration he fails and falls as a person in what may be the success and triumph of his kind he does not apprehend the struggle or the nature of victory but only his own gravitation to death and personal extinction now professor metchnikoff is anti-religious and he is anti-religious because to him as to so many Europeans religion is confused with priestcraft and dogmas is associated with disagreeable early impressions of irrational repression and misguidance how completely he misconceives the quality of religion how completely he sees it as an individuals affair his own words may witness religion is still occupied with a problem of death the solutions which as yet it has offered cannot be regarded as satisfactory a future life has no single argument to support it and the non-existence of life after death is in consonants with the whole range of human knowledge on the other hand resignation as preached by Buddha will fail to satisfy humanity which has a longing for life and has overcome by the thought of the inevitability of death now here it is clear that by death he means the individual death and by a future life the prolongation of individuality but Buddhism does not in truth appear ever to have been concerned with that and modern religious developments are certainly not under that preoccupation with a narrower self Buddhism indeed so far from preaching resignation to death seeks as its greater good a death so complete has to be absolute released from the individuals burden of karma Buddhism seeks an escape from individual immortality the everyone pursues religious thought the more nearly it approximates to a search for escaped from the self-centered life and over individuation and the more it diverges from professor metchnikoff assertion of its aims salvation is indeed to lose oneself but professor mentioned knock off having roundly denied that this is so is then left free to take the very essentials of the religious life as they are here conceived and present them as if they were the antithesis of the religious life his book when it is analyzed resolves itself into just that research for an escape from the painful accidents and chagrin of individuation which is the ultimate of religion at times indeed he seems almost willfully blind to the true solution around and about which his writing goes he suggests as his most hopeful satisfaction for the cravings of the human heart such a scientific prolongation of life that the instinct for self-preservation will be at last extinct if that is not the very resignation he impedes to the Buddhists I do not know what it is he believes that an individual which has lived fully and completely may at last welcomed death with the same instinctive readiness as in the days of its strength it shows for the embraces of its mate we are to be glutted by living to six score and ten we are to rise from the table at last as gladly as we sat down we shall go to death as unresistingly as tired children go to bed men are to have a life far beyond the range of what is now considered their prime and their last period one by scientific self-control will be a period of ripe wisdom from 70 to 80 to 120 or there abouts and public service but why one asks public service why not book collecting or the simple pleasure of reminiscence so dear to aged egotists metchnikoff never faces that question and again what is the man who is challenged to die for right at the age of thirty what does the prolongation of life do for him and where are the consolations for accidental miss Ford for the tormenting disease or the lost limb but in his preparation professor metchnikoff lapses into pure religiosity the prolongation of life gives place to sheer self-sacrifice as the fundamental remedy and indeed what other remedy has never been conceived for the general evil of life on the other hand he writes the knowledge that the goal of human life can be attained only by the development of a high degree of solidarity amongst men will restrain actual egotism the mere fact that the enjoyment of life according to the precepts of Solomon Ecclesiastes 9 7 to 10 is opposed to the goal of human life will lessen luxury and the evil that comes from luxury conviction that science alone is able to redress the harmonies of the human Constitution will lead directly to the improvement of Education and to the Solidarity of mankind go thy way eat thy bread with joy and drink thy wine with a merry heart for God now accepteth thy works let thy garments be always white and let thy had lacked no I'd meant live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest all the days of the life of thy vanity which he hath given thee under the Sun all the days of thy vanity for that is thy portion in this life and in thy labor which thou taketh under the Sun whatsoever thy hand findeth to do do it with thy might for there is no work nor device nor knowledge nor wisdom in the grave whither thou goest in progress towards the goal Nature will have to be consulted continuously already in the case of the ephemerides nature has produced a complete cycle of normal life ending in natural death in the problem of his own fate man must not be content with the gifts of nature he must direct them by his own efforts just as he has been able to modify the nature of animals and plants man must attempt to modify his own Constitution so as to readjust its disharmony to modify the human Constitution it will be necessary first to frame the ideal and thereafter to set to work with all the resources of science if there can be formed an ideal able to unite men in a kind of religion of the future this ideal must be founded on scientific principles and if it be true as has been asserted so often that man can live by faith alone the faith must be in the power of science now this after all the Flat repudiation --zz that have preceded it of religion and philosophy as remedies for human ills is nothing less than the fundamental proposition of the religious life translated into terms of materialistic science the proposition that damnation is really over individuation and that salvation is escaped from self into the larger being of life what can this religion of the future be but that devotion to the racial adventure under the captaincy of God which we have already found like gold in the bottom of the vessel when we have washed away the confusions and impurities of dogmatic religion by an inquiry setting out from a purely religious starting point we have already reached conclusions identical with this ultimate refuge of an extreme materialist this alter to the future of his we can claim as an altar to our God an altar rather indistinctly inscribed to sacrifice implies God almost all agnostic and atheist achill writings that show any fineness and generosity of spirit have this tendency to become as it were the statement of an anonymous God everything is said that a religious writer would say except that God is not named religious metaphors abound it is as if they accepted the living body of religion but denied the bones and held it together as they might deny the bones of a friend it is true they would admit the body moves in a way that implies bones and it's every movement but we have never seen those bones the disputes in theory I do not say the difference in Elleni between the modern believer and the atheist or agnostic becomes at times almost as impalpable as that subtle discussion dear to students of physics whether the scientific ether is real or a formula every material phenomenon is consonant with and helps to define this ether which permeates and sustains and is all things which nevertheless is perceptible - no sense which is reached only by an intellectual process most minds are disposed to treat this ether as a reality but the acutely critical mind insists that what is only so attainable by inference is not real it is no more than a formula that satisfies all phenomena but if it comes to that am i anything more than the formula that satisfies all my forms of consciousness intellectually there was hardly anything more than a certain will to believe to divide the religious man who knows God to be utterly real from the man who says that God is merely a formula to satisfy moral and spiritual phenomena the former has encountered him the other has yet felt only unassigned impulses one says God's will is so the other that right is so one says God moves me to do this or that the other the good will in me which I share with you and all well disposed men moves me to do this or that but the former makes an exterior reference and escapes a risk of self-righteousness I have recently been reading a book by mr. Joseph McCabe called the tyranny of shams in which he displays very typically this curious tendency to a sort of religion with God blacked-out he is an extremely interesting case he is a writer who was formerly a Roman Catholic priest and in his reaction from Catholicism he displays a resolution even sterner than professor metchnikoff s' to deny that anything religious or divine it can exist that there can be any aim in life except happiness or any guide but science but and here immediately he turns East again he is careful not to say individual happiness and he says pleasure is as Epicureans insisted only a part of a large ideal of happiness so he lets the happiness of devotion and sacrifice creep in so he opens indefinite possibilities of getting away from any merely materialistic rule of life and he writes and every civilized nation the mass of the people are inert and indifferent some even make a pretence of justifying their inertness why they ask should we stir at all is there such a thing as a duty to improve the earth what is the meaning or purpose of life or has it a purpose one generally finds that this kind of reasoning is merely a piece of controversial athletics or a thin excuse for idleness people tell you that the conflict of science and religion it would be better to say the conflict of modern culture and ancient traditions has robbed life of its plain significance the men who like Tolstoy seriously urged this point failed to appreciate the modern outlook on life certainly modern culture science history philosophy and art finds no purpose in life that is to say no purpose eternally fixed and to be discovered by man a great chemist said a few years ago that he could imagine a series of Lucky accidents the chance blowing by the wind of certain chemicals into pools on the primitive earth accounting for the first appearance of life and one might not unjustly sum up the influences which have lifted those early germs to the level of conscious beings as a similar series of Lucky accidents but it is sheer affectation to say that this demoralizes us if there is no purpose impressed on the universe or prefixed to the development of humanity it follows only that humanity may choose its own purpose and set up its own goal and the most elementary sense of order will teach us that this choice must be social not merely individual in whatever measure ilk controlled individuals may yield to personal impulses or attractions the aim of the race must be a collective I do not mean an austere demand of self-sacrifice from the individual but an adjustment as genial and generous as possible of individual variations for common good otherwise life becomes discordant and futile and the pain and waste react on each individual so we raise again in the 20th century the old question of the greatest good which men discussed in the stowaway Chile and the suburban groves of Athens in the cool atria of patrician mansions on the Palatine and the pension in the Museum at Alexandria and the schools which Omar Khayyam frequented in the straw strewn schools of the Middle Ages and the opulent chambers of Cosimo de Medici and again the old dream of a cooperative effort to improve life to bring happiness to as many minds of mortals as we can reach shines above all the myths of the day through the ruins of creeds and philosophies which have for ages disdained it we are retracing our steps toward that height just as the Athenians did 2,000 years ago it rests on no metaphysic no sacred legend no disputable tradition nothing that skepticism can corrode or advancing knowledge undermine its foundations are the fundamental and unchanging impulses of our nature and again the revolt which burns in so much of the abler literature of our time is an unselfish revolt or non selfish revolt it is an outcome of that larger spirit which conceives the self to be a part of the general social organism and it is therefore neither egoistic nor altruistic it finds a sanction in the new intelligence and an inspiration in the finer sentiments of our generation but the glow which chiefly illumines it is the glow of the great vision of a happier earth it speaks of the claims of truth and justice and assails untruth and injustice for these are elemental principles of social life but it appeals more confidently to the warmer sympathy which is leaking the scattered children of the race and it urges all to cooperate in the restriction of suffering and the creation of happiness the advance guard of the race the men and women in whom mental alertness is associated with fine feeling cry that they have reached Pisgah slope and in increasing numbers men and women are pressing on to see if it be really the promised land Pisgah the promised land mr. mchabe in that passage sounds as if he were halfway to Oh Beulah land and the tambourine that larger Spirit we maintain is God those impulses are the power of God and mr. McCabe serves a master he denies he has but to realize fully that God is not necessarily the triune God of the Catholic Church and banishes intense suspicion that he may yet be lured back to that altar he abandoned he has but to look up from that preoccupation and immediately he will begin to realize the presence of divinity end of chapter 4th parts 1 & 2 recording by William Tomko chapter four parts three to six of God the invisible King this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by william Tomko god the invisible king by hg wells chapter four parts three two six three god is an external reality it may be argued that if atheists and agnostics when they set themselves to express the goodwill that is in them do shape out God that if their conception of right living falls in so completely with the conception of God's service has to be broadly identical then indeed God like the ether of scientific speculation is no more than a theory nor more than an imaginative externalization of man's inherent goodwill why trouble about God then it's not the declaration of a good disposition a sufficient evidence of salvation what is the difference between such benevolent unbelievers as professor metchnikoff or mr. McCabe and those who have found God the difference is this that the benevolent atheist stands alone upon his own goodwill without a reference without a standard trusting to his own impulse to goodness relying upon his own moral strength a certain immodesty a certain self-righteousness hangs like a precipice above him incalculable temptations openly gulfs beneath his feet he has not really given himself or got away from himself he has no one to whom he can give himself he is still a masterless man his exaltation is self-centered is priggishness his fall is unrestrained by any exterior obligation his devotion is only the goodwill in himself a disposition it is a mood that may change at any moment it may change he may have pledged himself to his own pride and honor but who will hold him to his bargain he has no source of strength beyond his own amiable sentiments his conscience speaks with an unsupported voice and no one watches while he sleeps he cannot pray he can but ejaculate he has no real and living link with other men of goodwill and those whose acquiescence in the idea of God is merely intellectual are in no better case than those who deny God altogether they may have all the forms of truth and not divinity the religion of the atheist with a god-shaped blank at its heart and the persuasion of the unconverted theologian are both like lamps unlit the lit lamp has no difference in form from the lamp on lit but the lit lamp is alive and the lamp unlit is asleep or dead the difference between the unconverted and the unbeliever and the servant of the true God is this it is that the latter has experienced a complete turning away from self this only difference is all the difference in the world it is the realization that this goodness that I thought was within me and of myself and upon which I rather prided myself is without me and above myself and infinitely greater and stronger than I it is the immortal and I am mortal it is invincible and steadfast in its purpose and I am weak and insecure it is no longer that I out of my inherent and remarkable goodness out of the excellence of my quality and the benevolence of my heart give a considerable amount of time and attention to the happiness and welfare of others because I choose to do so on the contrary I have come under a divine imperative I am obeying an irresistible call I am a humble and willing servant of the righteousness of God that altruism which Professor metchnikoff and mr. McCabe would have us regard as the goal and refuge of a broad and free intelligence is really the first simple commandment in the religious life for another religious materialist now here's a passage from a book evolution and the war by Professor metchnikoff translator dr. Chalmers Mitchell which comes even closer to our conception of God as an immortal being arising out of man and external to the individual man he has been discussing that well-known passage of cants two things fill my mind with ever renewed wonder and all the more often and deeper I dwell on them the starry vault above me and the moral law within me from that discussion dr. Chalmers Mitchell presently comes to this most definite and interesting statement writing as a hardshell Darwinian evolutionist a lover of the scalpel and microscope and of patient empirical observation as one who dislikes all forms of supernaturalism and who does not shrink from the implications even of the phrase that thought is a secretion of the brain as bile is a secretion of the liver I assert as a biological fact that the moral law is as real and as external to man as a star revolt it has no secure seat in any single man or in any single nation it is the work of the blood and tears of long generations of men it is not in man inborn or innate but is enshrined in his traditions in his customs in his literature and his religion its creation and sustenance are the crowning glory of man and this consciousness of it puts him in a high place above the animal world men live and die nations rise and fall but the struggle of individual lives and of individual Nations must be measured not by their immediate needs but as they tend to the debasement or perfection of man's great achievement this is the same reality this is the same link and captain that this book asserts it seems to me a secondary matter whether we call him man's great achievement or the son of man or the god of mankind or God so far as the practical and moral ends of life are concerned it does not matter how we explain or refuse to explain his presence in our lives there is but one possible gap left between the position of dr. Chalmers Mitchell and the position of this book in this book it is asserted that God responds that he gives courage and the power of self suppression to our weakness five a note on a lecture by Professor Gilbert Murray let me now quote and discuss a very beautiful passage from a lecture upon stoicism by Professor Gilbert Murray which also displays the same characteristic of an involuntary shaping out of God in the forms of denial it is a passage remarkable for its conscientious and resolute agnosticism and it is remarkable to for its blindness to the possibility of separating quite completely the idea of the infinite being from the idea of God there's another striking instance of that obsession of modern Minds by merely Christian theology which I have already complained professor Murray has quoted mr. bivens phrase for God the friend behind phenomena and he does not seem to realize that that phrase carries with it no obligation whatever to believe that this friend is in control of the phenomena he assumes that he is supposed to be in control as if it were a matter of course we do seem to find professor Murray writes not only in all religions but in practically all philosophies some belief that man is not quite alone in the universe but as met in his endeavors toward the good by some external help or sympathy we find it everywhere in the unsophisticated man we find it in the unguarded self revelations of the most severe and conscientious atheists now the Stoics like many other schools of thought drew an argument from this consensus of all mankind it was not an absolute proof of the existence of the gods or Providence but it was a strong indication the existence of a common instinctive belief in the mind of man gives at least a presumption that there must be a good cause for that belief this is a reasonable position there must be some such cause but it does not follow that the only valid cause is the truth of the content of the belief I cannot help suspecting that this is precisely one of those points on which stoicism in company with almost all philosophy up to the present time has gone astray through not sufficiently realizing its dependence on the human mind as a natural biological product for it is very important in this matter to realize that the so-called belief is not really an intellectual judgment so much as a craving of the whole nature it is only of very late years that psychologists have begun to realize the enormous dominion of those forces and man of which he is normally unconscious we cannot escape as easily as these brave men dreamed from the grip of the blind powers beneath the threshold indeed as I see philosophy after philosophy falling into this unproven belief in the friend behind phenomena as I find that I myself cannot accept for a moment and by an effort refrained from making the same assumption it seems to me that perhaps here too we are under the spell of a very old in a redact about instinct we are gregarious animals our ancestors have been such for countless ages we cannot help looking out on the world as gregarious animals do we see it in terms of humanity and a fellowship students of animals under domestication have shown us how the habits of a gregarious creature taken away from his kind are shaped in a thousand details by reference to the lost pack which is no longer there the pack which a dog tries to smell his way back to all the time he is out walking the pack he calls to for help when danger threatens it is a strange and touching thing this external hunger of the gregarious animal for the herd of friends who are not there and it may be it may very possibly be that in the matter of this friend behind phenomena our own yearning and our own almost in a readable instinctive conviction since they are certainly not founded on either reason or observation are in origin the groping of a lonely sould gregarious animal to find its herd or its herd leader in the great spaces between the stars at any rate it is a belief very difficult to get rid of there the passage and the lecture and I would argue that here again is an inadvertent witness to the reality of God professor Murray writes of gregarious animals as though there existed solitary animals that are not gregarious pure individualist s' atheists so to speak and as though this appealed to a life beyond one's own was not the universal disposition of living things his classical training disposes him to a realistic exaggeration of individual difference but nearly every animal and certainly every mentally considerable animal begins under parental care in a nest or a litter mates to breed and is associated for much of its life even the great carnivores do not go alone except when they are old and have done with the most of life every pack every herd begins at some point in a couple it is the equivalent of the Tigers litter if that were to remain undestand amuri of men still living that in many districts the African lion has with a change of game and conditions lapsed from a solitary to a gregarious that is to say a prolonged family habit of life man to if in his ape-like phase he resembled the other higher Apes is an animal becoming more gregarious and not less he has passed within the historical period from a tribal gregariousness to a nearly cosmopolitan tolerance and he has his tribe about him he is not as professor Murray seems to suggest a solitary lost gregarious beast why should his desire for God be regarded as the overflow of an unsatisfied gregarious instinct when he has home town society companionship trade union state increasingly at hand to glut it why should we garius 'no strive a man to god rather than to the third-class carriage and the public house why should gregariousness drive men out of crowded egyptian cities into the cells of the Theia bayad shoppin how er in a memorable passage about the hedgehogs who assembled for warmth is flatly opposed to professor Murray and seems far more plausible when he declares that the nature of man is insufficiently gregarious the parallel with the dog is not a valid one does not the truth lie rather in the supposition that it is not the friend that is the instinctive delusion but the isolation is not the real deception our belief that we are completely individualized and is it not possible that this that professor Murray calls instinct is really not a vestige but a new thing arising out of our increasing understanding and intellectual penetration to that greater being of the species that vine of which we are the branches why should not the soul of the species many-faceted indeed be nevertheless a soul like our own here as in the case of professor metchnikoff and in many other cases of atheism it seems to me that nothing but an inadequate understanding of individuation bars the way to at least the intellectual recognition of the true God six religion as ethics and while I am dealing with rationalists let me note certain recent interesting utterances of Sir Harry Johnston's you will note that while in this book we use the word God to indicate the God of the heart Sir Harry uses God for that idea of God of the universe which we have spoken of as the infinite being this use of the word God is of late theological origin the original identity of the words good and God and all the stories of the gods are against him but Sir Harry takes up God only to define him away into incomprehensible necessity thus we know absolutely nothing concerning the force we call God and assuming such an intelligent ruling force to be in existence permeating this universe of millions of stars and no doubt tens of millions of planets we do not know under what conditions and limitations it works we are quite entitled to assume that the end of such an influence is intended to be order out of chaos happiness and perfection out of incompleteness and misery and we are entitled to identify the reactionary forces of brute nature with the anthropomorphic devil if primitive religions the power of darkness resisting the power of light but in these conjectures we must surely come to the conclusion that the theoretical potency we call God makes endless experiments and scrap heaps the failures think of the dinosaurs and the expenditure of creative energy that went to their differentiation and they're well nigh incredible physical development to such a divine force as we postulate the whole development and perfecting of life on this planet the whole production of man may seem a little more than to any one of us would be the chipping out the cutting the carving and the polishing of a gem and we should feel as little remorse or pity for the scattered dust and fragments as must the creative force of the immeasurably vast universe feel for the disk ejected membra a perfected life on this planet but thence he goes on to a curiously imperfect treatment of the god of man as if he consisted in nothing more than some vague sort of humanitarianism Sir Harry's ideas are much less thoroughly thought out than those of any other of these sceptical writers I have quoted on that account they are perhaps more typical he speaks as though Christ were simply an eminent but ill reported and abominably served teacher of ethics and yet of the only right ideal and ethics he speaks as though religions were nothing more than ethical movements and as though Christianity were merely someone remarking with a bright impulsiveness that everything was simply horrid and so let us install loving-kindness as a cardinal axiom he ignores altogether the fundamental essential of religion which is the development and synthesis of the divergent and conflicting motives of the unconverted life and the identification of the individual life with the immortal purpose of God he presents a conception of religion relieved of its nonsense as the cheerful self-determination of a number of bright little individuals much stirred but by no means overcome by cosmic pity to the service of man as he seems to present it it is as outward a thing it goes as little into the intimacy of their lives as though they had after proper consideration agreed to send a subscription to a Red Cross ambulance or take part in a public demonstration against the Armenian massacres or do any other rather nice spirited exterior thing this is what he says I hope that the religion of the future will devote itself wholly to the service of man it can do so without departing from the Christian ideal and Christian ethics it need only drop all that is silly and disputable and mattering not neither here nor there of Christian theology a theology virtually absent from the direct teaching of Christ and all of judaistic literature or prescriptions not made immortal in their application by unassailable truth and by the confirmation of science an excellent remedy for the nonsense which still clings about religion may be found in two books Connor Manson's service of man which was published as long ago as 1887 and has since been reissued by the rationalist Press Association and it's well known sixpenny series and J Allinson Pickton's man and the Bible similarly those who wish to acquire a sane view of the relations between man and God would do well to read Wynwood reads martyrdom of man Sir Harry in fact clears the ground for God very ably and then makes a well-meaning gesture in the vacant space there is no help nor strength in his gesture unless God is there without God the serve of man is no better than a hobby or a sentimentality or an hypocrisy in the undisciplined prison of the mortal life end of chapter four parts three to six recording by William Tomko chapter v parts one to three of God the invisible King this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by william Tomko god the invisible king by hg wells chapter v parts one two three chapter v the invisible king one modern religion a political religion the conception of a young and energetic God an invisible prince growing in strength and wisdom who calls men and women to his service and who gives salvation from self ad mortality only through self abandonment to his service necessarily involves a demand for a complete revision and fresh orientation of the life of the convert God faces the blackness of the unknown and the blind joys and confusions and cruel teas of life as one who leads mankind through a dark jungle to a great conquest he brings mankind not rest but a sword it is plain that he can admit no divided control of the world he claims he concedes nothing to Caesar in our philosophy there are no human things that are gods and others that are Caesars those of the new thought cannot render unto God the things that are gods and to Caesar the things that are Caesar's whatever claims Caesar a make to rule men's lives and direct their destinies outside the will of God is a usurpation no King nor Caesar has any right to tax or to service or to tolerance except he claimed as one who holds for and under God and he must make good his claim the steps of the altar of the God of youth are no safe place for the sacrilegious figure of a king who claims divine right plays with the lightning the new conceptions do not tolerate either kings or aristocracies or democracies its implicit command to all its adherents is to make plain the way to the world theocracy its rule of life is a discovery and service of the will of God which dwells in the hearts of men and the performance of that will not only in the private life of the believer but in the acts and order of the state and nation of which he is a part I give myself to God not only because I am so-and-so but because I am mankind I become in a measure responsible for every evil in the world of men I become a knight in God's service I become my brother's keeper I become a responsible minister of my King I take sides against injustice disorder and against all those temporal Kings emperors princes landlords and owners who set themselves up against God's rule and worship Kings owners and all who claim rule and decisions in the world's affairs must either show themselves clearly the fellow servants of the believer or become the objects of his steadfast antagonism to the will of God it is here that those who explain this modern religiosity will seem most arbitrary to the Inquirer for they relate of God as men will relate of a close friend his dispositions his apparent intentions the aims of his kingship and just as they advanced no proof whatever of the existence of God but their realization of him so with regard to these qualities and dispositions they have little argument but profound conviction what they say is this that if you do not feel God then there is no persuading you of him we cannot win over the incredulous and what they say of his qualities as this that if you feel God then you will know you will realize more and more clearly that thus and thus and no other is his method and intention it comes as no great shock to those who have grasped the full implications of the statement that God is finite to hear it asserted that the first purpose of God is the attainment of clear knowledge of knowledge as a means to more knowledge and of knowledge as a means to power for that he must use human eyes and hands and brains and as God gathers power he uses it to an end that he is only beginning to apprehend and that he will apprehend more fully as time goes on but it is possible to define the broad outlines of the attainment he seeks it is a conquest of death it is the conquest of death first the overcoming of death in the individual by the incorporation of the motives of his life into an undying purpose and then the defeat of that death that seems to threaten our species upon a cooling planet beneath a cooling Sun God fights against death in every form against the great death of the race against the petty death of indolence and sufficiency baseness misconception and perversion he it is and no other who can deliver us from the body of this death this is the battle that grows plainer this is the purpose to which he calls us out of the animals round of eating drinking lusting quarreling and laughing and weeping fearing and failing and presently of wearying and dying which is the whole life that living without God can give us and from these great propositions there follow many very definite Maxim's and rules of life for those who serve God these we will immediately consider three the crucifix but first let me write a few words here about those who hold a kind of intermediate faith between the worship of the god of youth and the vaguer sort of Christianity there are a number of people closely in touch with those who have found the new religion who biased probably by a dread of to complete a break with Christianity have adopted a Theogony which is very reminiscent of Gnosticism and of the pollution catherine and kindred sex - which illusion has already been made he who is called in this book God they would call God the Sun or Christ or the logos and what is here called the darkness or the veiled being they would call God the Father and what we speak of here as life they would call with a certain disregard of the poor brutes that perish man and they would assert what we of the new belief pleading our profound ignorance would neither assert nor deny that that darkness out of which came life and God since it produced them must be ultimately sympathetic and of like nature with them and that ultimately man being redeemed and led by Christ and saved from death by him would be reconciled with God the Father and this great adventurer out of the hearts of man that we here called God they would present as the same with that teacher from Galilee who was crucified at Jerusalem this probably was the conception of Spinoza Christ for him is the wisdom of God manifested in all things and chiefly in the mind of man through him we reached the blessedness of an intuitive knowledge of God salvation is an escape from the inadequate ideas of the mortal human personality to the adequate and timeless ideas of God now we of the modern way would offer the following criticisms upon this apparent compromise between our faith and the current religion firstly we do not presume to theorize about the nature of the veil being nor about that beings relations to God and to life we do not recognize any consistent sympathetic possibilities between these outer beings and our God our God is we feel like Prometheus a rebel he is unfilial and the accepted figure of Jesus instinct with meek submission is not in the our worship it is not by suffering that God conquers death but by fighting incidentally our God dies a million deaths but the thing that matters is not the deaths but the immortality and maybe he cannot escape in this person or that person being nailed to a cross or chained to be torn by vultures on Iraq these may be necessary sufferings like hunger and thirst in a campaign they do not in themselves bring victory they may be necessary but they are not glorious the symbol of the crucifixion the drooping pain drenched figure of Christ the sorrowful cry to his father my God my God why hast thou forsaken me these things jar with our spirit we little men may well fail and repent but it is our faith that our God does not fail us nor himself we cannot accept the Christians crucifix or pray to a pitiful God we cannot accept the resurrection as though it were an afterthought to have bitterly felt death our crucifix if you must have a crucifix which show God with a hand or a foot already torn away from its nail and with eyes not downcast but resolute against the sky a face without pain pain lost and forgotten in the surpassing glory of the struggle and the inflexible will to live and prevail but we do not care how long the thorns are drawn nor how terrible the wounds so long as he does not droop God is courage God is courage beyond any conceivable suffering but when all this has been said it is well to add that it concerns the figure of Christ only insofar as that professes to be the figure of God and the crucifix only so far as that stands for divine action the figure of Christ crucified so soon as we think of it as being no more than the tragic memorial of Jesus of the man who proclaimed the loving kindness of God and the supremacy of God's kingdom over the individual life and who in the extreme agony of his pain and exhaustion cried out that he was deserted becomes something altogether distinct from a theological symbol immediately that we cease to worship we can begin to love and pity here was a being of extreme gentleness and delicacy and of great courage of the utmost tolerance and the subtlest sympathy a saint of non-resistance we of the new faith repudiate the teaching of non-resistance we are the militant followers of and participators in a militant god we can appreciate and admire the greatness of christ this gentle being upon whose nobility the theologians trade but submission is the remotest quality of all from our God and a moribund figure is a completist inversion of his likeness as we know him a christianity which shows for its daily symbol Christ risen and trampling victoriously upon a broken cross would be far more in the spirit of our worship it is curious after writing the above to find in a letter written by force Westcott Bishop of Durham to that pertinacious correspondent the late lady Victoria will be almost exactly the same sentiments I have here expressed if I could fill the crucifix with life as you do he says I would gladly look on it but the fallen head and the closed eye exclude from my thoughts the idea of glorified humanity the Christ to whom we are led is one who hath been crucified who hath passed the trial victoriously had borne the fruits to heaven I dare not then rest on the side of the glory I find to a still more remarkable expression of the modern spirit and attract the call of the kingdom by that very able and subtle Anglican theologian the Reverend W temple who declares that under the vitalizing stresses of the war we are winning faith in Christ as an heroic leader we have thought of him so much as meek and gentle that there is no ground in our picture of him for the vision which his disciple had of him his head and his hair were white as white wool white as snow and his eyes were as a flame of fire and his feet like unto burnished brass as if it had been refined in a furnace and his voice was as a voice of many waters and he had in his right hand seven stars and out of his mouth proceeded a sharp two-edged sword and his countenance was as the Sun shineth in its strength these are both exceptional utterances interesting as showing how clearly parallel are the tendencies within and without Christianity end of chapter fifth parts one two three recording by William Tom Co chapter fifth parts four to six of God the invisible King this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by William Tom Co God the invisible king by HG Wells chapter v parts 4 to 6 for the primary duties now it follows very directly from the conception of God as a finite intelligence of boundless courage and limitless possibilities of growth and victory who has pitted himself against death who stands close to our inmost beings ready to receive us and use us to rescue us from the chagrin of egotism and take us into his immortal adventure that we who have realized him and given ourselves joyfully to him must needs be equally ready and willing to give our energies to the task we share with him to do our utmost to increase knowledge to increase order and clearness to fight against indolence waste disorder cruelty vice and every form of his and our enemy death first and chiefest in ourselves but also in all mankind and to bring about the establishment of Israel and visible Kingdom throughout the world and that idea of God as the invisible king of the whole world means not merely that God is to be made and declared the head of the world but that the kingdom of God is to be present throughout the whole fabric of the world that the kingdom of God is to be in the teaching at the village school in the planning of the railway siding of the market town in the mixing of the mortar at the building of the workman's house it means that ultimately no effigy of intrusive king or Emperor is to disfigure our coins and stamps anymore God himself and no delegate is to be represented wherever men buy or sell on our letters and our receipts a perpetual witness a perpetual reminder there is no act altogether without significance no power so humble that it may not be used for or against God no life but can orient itself to him to realize God in one's heart is to be filled with the desire to serve Him and the way of his service is neither to pull up one's life by the roots nor to continue it in all its essentials unchanged but to turn it about to turn everything that there is in it round into his way the outward Duty of those who serve God must vary greatly with the abilities they possess and the positions in which they find themselves but for all there are certain fundamental duties a constant attempt to be utterly truthful with oneself a constant sedulous Ness to keep oneself fit and bright for God's service and to increase one's knowledge and powers and a hidden persistent watchfulness of one's baser motives a watch against fear and indolence against vanity against greed and lust against Envy malice and uncharitable 'no staff on god truly does in itself make god's service once essential motive but these evils lurk in the shadows in the lassitude x' and unwary moments no one escapes them altogether there is no need for tragic moods on account of imperfections we can't no more serve God without blunders and setbacks then we can win battles without losing men but the less of such loss the better the servant of God must keep his mind as wide and sound and his motives as clean as he can just as an operating surgeon must keep his nerves and muscles as fit and his hands as clean as he can neither may righteously evade exercise and regular washing of mind as of hands and incessant watchfulness of oneself and one's thoughts and the soundness of one's thoughts cleanliness clearness awareness against indolence and Prejudice careful truth habitual frankness fitness and steadfast work these are the daily fundamental duties that everyone who truly comes to God will as a matter of course set before himself 5 the increasing kingdom now of the more intimate and personal life of the believer it will be more convenient to write a little later let us for the present pursue the idea of this world kingdom of God - whose establishment he calls us this kingdom is to be a peaceful and coordinated activity of all mankind upon certain divine ends these we conceived our first the maintenance of the racial life secondly the exploration of the external being of nature as it is and as it has been that is to say history and science thirdly that exploration of inherent human possibility which is art fourthly that clarification of thought and knowledge which is philosophy and finally the progressive enlargement and development of the racial life under these lights so that God may work through a continually better body of humanity and through better and better equipped minds that he and our race may increase forever working unendingly upon the development of the powers of life and the mastery of the blind forces of matter throughout the deeps of space he sets out with us we are persuaded to conquer ourselves and our world and the Stars and beyond the Stars our eyes can has yet seen nothing our imaginations reach and fail beyond the limits of our understanding is available being of fate whose face is hidden from us it may be that minds will presently appear among us of such equality that the face of that unknown will not be altogether hidden but the business of such ordinary lives as ours is the setting up of this earthly kingdom of God that is the form into which our lives must fall and our consciences adapt themselves belief in God as the invisible King brings with it almost necessarily a conception of this coming kingdom of God on earth each believer as he grasps this natural and immediate consequence of the faith that has come into his life will form at the same time a utopian conception of this world changed in the direction of God's purpose the vision will follow the realization of God's true nature and purpose as a necessary second step and he will begin to develop the latent citizen of this world state in himself he will fall in with the idea of the worldwide sanity's of this new order being drawn over the warring outlines of the present and of men falling out of relationship with the old order and into the relationship with the new many men and women are already working today at tasks that belong essentially to God's kingdom tasks that would be of the same essential nature if the world were now a theocracy for example they are doing or sustaining scientific research or education or creative art they are making roads to bring men together they are doctors working for the world's health they are building homes they are constructing machinery to save and increase the powers of men such men and women need only to change their orientation as men will change about at a work table when the light that was coming in a little while ago from the southern windows begins presently to come in chiefly from the West to become open and confessed servants of God this work that they were doing for ambition or the love of men or the love of knowledge or what seemed the inherent impulse to the work itself or for money or honor or country or King they will realize they are doing for God and by the power of God self transformation into a citizen of God's kingdom and a new realization of all earthly politics has no more than the struggle to define and achieve the kingdom of God in the earth follow-on without any need for a fresh spiritual impulse from the moment when God and the believer meet and clasp one another this Transfiguration of the world into a theocracy may seem a merely fantastic idea to anyone who comes to it freshly without such general theological preparation as the preceding pages have made but to anyone who has been at the pains to clear his mind even a little from the obsession of existing but transitory things it ceases to be a mere suggestion and becomes more and more manifestly the real future of mankind from the phase of so things should be the mind will pass very rapidly to the realization that so things will be towards this the directive wills among men have been drifting more and more steadily and perceptibly and with fewer eddying xandrie tarnation's for many centuries the purpose of mankind will not be always thus confused and fragmentary this dissemination of willpower is a phase the age of the warring tribes and kingdoms and empires that began a hundred centuries or so ago draws to its close the kingdom of God on earth is not a metaphor not a mere spiritual state not a dream not an uncertain project it is the thing before us it is the close and inevitable destiny of mankind in a few score years the faith of the true God will be spreading about the world the few halting confessions of god that one here's here and there today like that little twittering of birds which comes before the dawn will have swollen to a choral unanimity in but a few centuries the whole world will be openly consistently preparing for the kingdom in but a few centuries God will have led us out of the dark forests of these present wars and confusions into the open Brotherhood of his rule six what is my place in the kingdom this conception of the general life of mankind as a transformation at thousands of points of the confused egotistical proprietary partisan nationalist life wasting chaos of human life today into the coherent development of the world kingdom of God provides the form into which everyone who comes to the knowledge of God will naturally seek to fit his every thought and activity the material Greed's the avarice fear rivalries and ignoble ambitions of a disordered world will be challenged and examined under one general question what am i in the kingdom of God it has already been suggested that there is a great and growing number of occupations that belong already to God's kingdom research teaching creative art creative administration cultivation construction maintenance and the honest satisfaction of honest practical human needs for such people conversion to the intimacy of God means at most a change in the spirit of their work a refreshed energy a clearer understanding a new zeal a completer disregard of gains and praises and promotion pay honors and the like cease to be the inducement of effort service and service alone is a criterion that the quickened conscience will recognize most of such people will find themselves in positions in which service is mingled with activities of a baser sort in which service is a little warped and deflected by old traditions and usage by mercenary and commercial considerations by some inherent or special degradation of purpose the Spirit of God will not let the believer rest until his life is readjusted and as far as possible freed from the waste of these base diversions for example a scientific investigator Lit and inspired by great inquiries may be hampered by the conditions of his professorship or research fellowship which exact an appearance of practical results or he may be obliged to lecture or conduct classes he may be able to give but half his possible gift to the work of his real aptitude and that at a sacrifice of money and reputation among short-sighted but influential contemporaries well if he is by nature an investigator he will know that the research is what God needs of him he cannot continue it at all if he leaves his position and so he must needs waste something of his gift to save the rest but should a poorer or a humbler post offer him better opportunity there lies his work for God there one has a very common and simple type of the problems that will arise in the lives of men when they are lit by sudden realization of the immediacy of God akin to that case is the perplexity of any successful physician between the increase of knowledge and the public welfare on the one hand and the lucrative possibilities of his practice among wealthy people on the other he belongs to a profession that is crippled by a medieval code a profession which was blind to the common interest of the public health and regarded its members merely as skilled practitioners employed to cure individual ailments very slowly add tortuously do the methods of the profession adapt themselves to the modern conception of an army of devoted men working as a whole under God for the health of mankind as a whole broadening out from the frowsy den of the leech with its crocodile and bottles and hieroglyphic prescriptions to a skilled and illuminating co-operation with those who deal with the food and housing and economic life of the community and again quite parallel with these personal problems is the trouble of an artist between the market and vulgar Fame on the one hand and his divine impulse on the other the presence of God will be a continual light and help in every decision that must be made by men and women in these more or less officiated but still fundamentally useful and righteous positions the trouble becomes more mark and more difficult in the case of a man who is a manufacturer or a trader the financier of business enterprise or the proprietor of great estates the world is in need of manufacturers and that Goods should be distributed land must be administered and new economic possibilities developed the drift of things is in the direction of state ownership and control but in a greater number of cases the state is not right for such undertakings it commands neither sufficient integrity nor sufficient ability and the proprietor of factory store credit or land must continue in possession holding as a trustee for God and so far as lies in his power preparing for his super session by some more public administration modern religion admits of no facile flights from responsibility infirm it's no headlong resort to the wilderness and sterile virtue it counts the recluse who fasts among scorpions in a cave as no better than a deserter in hiding it unhesitatingly forbids any rich young man to sell all that he has and give to the poor himself and all that he has must be alike dedicated to God the plain duty that will be understood by the proprietor of land and of every sort of general need and service so soon as he becomes aware of God is so to administer his possessions as to achieve the maximum of possible efficiency the most generous output and the least private profit he may set aside a salary for his maintenance the rest he must deal with like a zealous public official and if he perceives that the affair could be better administered by other hands than his own then it is his business to get it into those hands with a smallest delay and the least profit to himself the rights and wrongs of human equity are very different from right and wrong in the sight of God in the sight of God no landlord has a right to his rent no user has a right to his interest a man is not justified in drawing the profits from an advantageous agreement nor free to spend the profits of a speculation as he will God takes no heed of savings nor of abstinence he recognizes no right to the rewards of abstinence no right to any rewards those profits and comforts and consolations are the inducements that dangle before the eyes of the spiritually blind wealth is an embarrassment to the religious for God calls them to account for it the servant of God has no business with wealth or power except to use them immediately in the service of God finding these things in his hands he is bound to administer them in the service of God the tendency of modern religion goes far beyond the alleged communism of the early Christians and far beyond the tithes of the scribes and Pharisees God takes all he takes you blood and bones and house and acres he takes skill and influence and expectations for all the rest of your life you are nothing but God's agent if you are not prepared for so complete a surrender then you are infinitely remote from God you must go your way here you are merely a curious interloper perhaps you have been desiring God as an experience or coveting him as a possession you have not begun to understand this that we are discussing in this book is as yet nothing for you end of chapter 5th parts 4 to 6 recording by William Tom Co chapter v parts 7 to 9 of God the invisible King this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by william Tomko god the invisible king by hg wells chapter v parts seven to nine seven adjusting life this picturing of a human world more to the mind of God than this present world and the discovery and realization of one's place and work in and for that kingdom of God is a natural next phase in the development of the believer he will set about revising and adjusting his scheme of life his ways of living his habits and his relationships in the light of his new convictions most men and women who come to God will have already a certain righteousness in their lives these things happen like a thunderclap only in strange exceptional cases and the same movements of the mind that have brought them to God will already have brought their lives into a certain rightness of direction and conduct yet occasionally there will be someone to whom the self-examination that follows conversion will reveal an entirely wrong and evil way of living it may be that the light has come to some rich idler doing nothing but follow a pleasurable routine or to someone following some highly profitable and amusing but socially useless or socially mischievous occupation one may be an advocate at the disposal of any man's purpose or an actor or actress ready to fall in with any theatrical enterprise or a woman may find herself a prostitute or a pet wife a mere kept instrument of indulgence these are lives of prey these are lives of futility the light of God will not tolerate such lives here religion can bring nothing but a severance from the old way of life altogether a break and a struggle towards use and service and dignity but even here it does not follow that because a life has been wrong the new life that begins must be far as the poles asunder from the old every sort of experience that has ever come to a human being is in the self that he brings to God and there is no reason why a knowledge of evil ways should not determine the path of duty no one can better devise protections against vices than those who have practiced them none no temptations better than those who have fallen if a man has followed an evil trade it becomes him to use his knowledge of the tricks of that trade to help end it he knows the charities that may claim and the remedies it needs a very interesting case to discuss in relation to this question of adjustment is that of the barrister a practising barrister under contemporary conditions does indeed give most typically the opportunity for examining the relation of an ordinary self-respecting worldly life to life under the dispensation of God discovered a barrister is usually a man of some energy and ambition his honour is molded by the traditions of an ancient and antiquated profession instinctively self-preserving and yet with a real desire for consistency and respect as a profession and has been greedy and defensively conservative but it has never been shameless nor has it ever broken faith with its own large and selfish but quite definite propositions it has never for instance have the shamelessness of such a traditionalist and undisciplined class as the early factory organisers it has never had the dull incoherent wickedness of the sort of men who exploit drunkenness and the turf it offends within limits barristers can be and are disbarred but it is now a profession extraordinarily out-of-date its code of honour derives from a time of cooter and lower conceptions of human relationships it a pre hen's the state as a mere ring kept about private dispute ations it has not begun to move towards the modern conception of the collective enterprise as the determining criterion of you conduct it sees its business as a mere play upon the rules of a game between man and man or between men and men they haggle they dispute they inflict and suffer wrongs they evade dues and are liable or entitled to penalties and compensations the primary business of the law is held to be decision in these wrangles and as wrangling a subject to artistic elaboration the business of the barrister is the business of a professional Wrangler he is a Bravo in wig and gown who fights the duels of ordinary men because they are incapable very largely on account of the complexities of legal procedure of fighting for themselves his business is never to explore any fundamental right in the matter his business is to say all that can be said for his client and to conceal or minimize whatever can be said against his client the successful promoted advocate who in Britain and the United States of America is the judge and whose habits and interests all incline him to disregard the reality of the case in favour of the points in the forensic game then adjudicates upon the contest now this condition of things is clearly incompatible with the modern conception of the world as becoming a divine kingdom when the world is openly and confessedly the kingdom of God the law Court will exist only to adjust the differing views of men as to the manner of their service to God the only right of action one man will have against another will be that he has been prevented or hampered or distressed by the other in serving God the idea of the law court will have changed entirely from a place of dispute exaction and vengeance to a place of adjustment the individual or some state organization will plead on behalf of the common good either against some state official or state regulation or against the actions or inactions of another individual this is the only sort of legal proceedings compatible with the broad beliefs of the new faith every religion that becomes ascendant and so far as it is not other world we must necessarily set its stamp upon the methods and administration of the law that this was not the case with Christianity is one of the many contributory aspects that lead one to the conviction that it was not Christianity that took possession of the Roman Empire but an imperial adventurer who took possession of an all too complacent Christianity reverting now from these generalizations to the problem of the religious from which they arose it will have become evident that the essential work of anyone who is conversant with the existing practice and literature of the law and his natural abilities are forensic will lie in the direction of reconstructing the theory and practice of the law in harmony with modern conceptions of making that theory and practice clear and plain to ordinary men of reforming the abuses of the profession by working for the separation of Bar and judiciary for the amalgamation of the solicitors and the barristers and the like needed reforms these are matters that will probably only be properly set right by a quickening of conscience among lawyers themselves of no class of men is the help and service so necessary to the practical establishment of God's kingdom as of men learned and experienced in the law and there is no reason why for the present an advocate should not continue to plead in the courts provided he does his utmost only to handle cases in which he believes he can serve the right few righteous cases are ill served by a frank disposition on the part of lawyer and client to put everything before the court thereby of course there arises a difficult case of conscience what if a lawyer believing his client to be in the right discovers him to be in the wrong he cannot throw up the case unless he has been scandalously deceived because so he would betray the confidence his client has put in him to see him through he has a right to give himself away but not to give away his client in this fashion if he has a chance of a private consultation I think he ought to do his best to make his client admit the truth of the case and give but failing this he has no right to be virtuous on behalf of another no man may play God to another he may remonstrate but that is the limit of his right he must respect a confidence even if it is purely implicit and involuntary I admit that here the barrister is in a cleft stick and that he must see the business through according to the confidences client has put in him and afterwards be as sorry as he may be if an injustice ensues and also I would suggest a lawyer may with a fairly good conscience defend a guilty man as if he were innocent to save him from unjustly heavy penalties this comparatively full discussion of the barristers problem has been embarked upon because it does bring in in a very typical fashion just those uncertainties and imperfections that abound in real-life religious conviction gives us a general direction but it stands aside for many of these entangled struggles in the jungle of conscience practice is often easier than a rule in practice a lawyer will know far more accurately than a hypothetical case can indicate how far he is bound to see his client through and how far he may play the keeper of his clients conscience and nearly every day there happens instances where the most subtle casuistry will fail and the finger of conscience point unhesitatingly one may have worried long in the preparations and preliminaries of the issue one may bring the case at last into the final court of conscience in an apparently hopeless tangle then suddenly comes decision the procedure of that silent lit an empty court in which a man states his case to God is very simple and perfect the excuses and the special pleading shrivel and vanish in a little while the case lies bare and plain eight the oath of allegiance the question of oaths of allegiance acts of acquiescence in existing government's and the like is one that arises at once with the acceptance of God as a supreme and real king of the earth at the worst Caesar is a usurper ass a trap claiming to be sovereign at the best he is provisional modern casuistry makes no great trouble for the believing public official the chief business of any believer is to do the work for which he is best fitted and since all state affairs are to become the affairs of God's kingdom it is of primary importance that they should come into the hands of God's servants it is scarcely less necessary to a believing man with administrative gifts that he should be in the public administration then that he should breathe and eat and whatever oath or the like to usurper church or usurper King has been set up to bar access to service is an oath imposed under duress if it cannot be avoided it must be taken rather than that a man should become unserviceable all such oats are unfair and foolish things they exclude no scoundrels they are appeals to superstition whenever an opportunity occurs for the abolition of an oath the servant of God will seize it and wear the oath is unavoidable he will take it the service of God is not to achieve a delicate consistency of statement it is to do as much as one can of God's work 9 the priest and the Creed it may be doubted if this line of reasoning regarding the official and his oath can be extended to excuse the priest or pledged minister of religion who finds that faith in the true God has out stat his formal beliefs this has been a frequent and subtle moral problem in the intellectual life of the last hundred years it has been increasingly difficult for any class of reading talking and discussing people such as are the bulk of the priesthoods of the Christian churches to escape hearing and reading the accumulated criticism of the Trinitarian theology and of the popularly accepted story of man's fall and salvation some have no doubt defeated this universal and insidious critical attack entirely and honestly established themselves in a writedown acceptance of the articles and disciplines to which they have subscribed and the Creed's they profess and repeat some have recanted and abandoned their positions in the priesthood but a great number have neither resisted the bacillus of criticism nor left the churches to which they are attached they have adopted compromises they have qualified their Creed's with modifying footnotes of essential repudiation they have decided that plain statements are metaphors and have undercut transposed and inverted the most vital points of the vulgar ly accepted beliefs one may find within the Anglican Communion Ariane's Unitarians atheists disbelievers in immortality attenuators of miracles there is scarcely a doubt or a cavil that has not found a lodgment within the ample charity of the English establishment I have been interested to hear one distinguished Canon deplore that they did not identify the logos with the third instead of the second person of the Trinity and another distinguished Catholic apologist declare his indifference to the historical Jesus within most of the Christian communions one may believe anything or nothing provided only that one does not call to public and attention to one's eccentricity the late Reverend Charles voic-- for example preached plainly in his church at he laughs against the divinity of Christ unhindered it was only when he published his sermons under the provocative title of the sling and the stone and caused an outcry beyond the limits of his congregation that he was indicted and deprived now the reasons why these men do not leave the ministry or priesthood in which they find themselves are often very plausible it is probable that in very few cases is the retention of stipend or incumbency a conscious dishonesty at the worst it is mitigated by thought for a wife or child and has only been during very exceptional phases of religious development and controversy that beliefs have been really sharp a Creed like a coin it may be argued loses a little in practical value because it is worn or bears the image of a vanished King the religious life is a reality that has closed itself in many garments and the concern of the priest or Minister is with the religious life and not with the poor symbols that may indeed pretend to express but do as a matter of fact no more than indicate its direction it is quite possible to maintain that the church and not the creed is the real and valuable instrument of religion that the religious life is sustained that by its propositions but by its routines anyone who seeks the intimate discussion of spiritual things with professional Divine's will find this is the substance of the case for the ecclesiastical skeptic his church he will admit mumbles it's a statement of truth but where else is truth what better formula are to be found for ineffable things and meanwhile he does good that may be a valid defense before a man finds God but we who profess the worship and fellowship of the Living God deny that religion is a matter of ineffable things the way of God is plain and simple and easy to understand there with the whole position of the conforming skeptic is changed if a professional religious has any justification at all for his professionalism it is surely that he proclaims the nearness and greatness of God and these Creed's and articles and orthodoxies are not proclamations but curtains they are a darkening and confusion of what should be crystal-clear what compensatory good can a priest pretend to do when his primary business is the truth and his method a lie the oaths and incidental conformities of men who wish to serve God in the state are on a different footing altogether from the falsehood and mischief of one who knows the true God and yet recites to a trustful congregation foists upon a trustful congregation a misleading and ill phrased Levantine creed such is the line of thought which will impose the renunciation of his temporalities and a complete cessation of services upon every ordained priest and minister as his first act of faith once that he has truly realized God it becomes possible for him ever to repeat his Creed again his course seems plain and clear it becomes him to stand up before the flock he has led in error and to proclaim the being and nature of the one true God he must be explicit to the utmost of his powers then he may await his expulsion and may be doubted whether it is sufficient for him to go away silently making false excuses or not at all for his retreat he has to atone for the implicit acquiescence 'as of his conforming years end of chapter v parts 7 to 9 recording by William Tom Co chapter v parts 10 to 11 of God the invisible King this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by William Tom Co God the invisible king by HG Wells chapter v parts 10 to 11 10 the universalism of God are any sorts of people shut off as if by inherent necessity from God this is so to speak one of the standing questions of theology it reappears with slight changes of form at every period of religious interest it is for example the chief issue between the Armenian and the Calvinists from its very opening proposition modern religion sweeps past and far ahead of the old Armenian teachings of Wesley ins and Methodists in its insistence upon the entirely finite nature of God Armenians seem merely to have insisted that God has conditioned himself and by his own free Act left men free to accept or reject salvation to the realist type of mind here as always I use realist in its proper sense as the opposite of nominalist to the old fashioned over exact and over accentuating type of mind such ways of thinking seem vague and unsatisfying just as it de-stresses the more downright kind of intelligence with a feeling of disloyalty to admit that God is not almighty so it troubles the same sort of intelligence to hear that there is no clear line to be drawn between the saved and the lost realists like an exclusive flavor in their faith moreover it is a natural weakness of humanity to be forced into extreme positions by argument it is probable as I have already suggested that the absolute attributes of God were forced upon Christianity under the stresses of propaganda and it is probable that the theory of a superhuman obstinacy beyond salvation arose out of the irritations natural to theological debate it is but a step from the realization that there are people absolutely unable or absolutely unwilling to see God as we see him to the conviction that they are therefore shut off from God by an invincible soul blindness it is very easy to believe that other people are essentially damned beyond the little world of our sympathies and comprehension there are those who seem inaccessible to God by any means within our experience they are people answering to the hard-hearted to the stiff-necked generation of the Hebrew prophets they betray and even confess to standards that seemed hopelessly based to us they show themselves incapable of any disinterested enthusiasm for beauty or truth or goodness they are altogether remote from intelligent sacrifice to every test they betray vileness of texture they are mean cold wicked there are people who seem to cheat with a private self approval who are ever ready to do harsh and cruel things whose use for social feeling is the malignant boycott and for prosperity monopolization and humiliating display who seize upon religion and turn it into persecution and upon beauty to torment it on the altars of some joyless vice we cannot do with such Souls we have no use for them and it is very easy indeed to step from that persuasion to the belief that God has no use for them and besides these bass people there are the stupid people and the people with mind so poor in texture that they cannot even grasp the few broad and simple ideas that seemed necessary to the salvation we experience who laps helplessly into fetishistic and fearful conceptions of God and are apparently quite incapable of distinguishing between what is practically and what is spiritually good it is an easy thing to conclude that the only way to God is our way to God that he is the privilege of a finer and better sort to which we of course belong that he is no more than God of the card sharper or the pickpocket or the smart woman or the loan monger or the village oath than he is of the swine in the sty but are we justified in thus limiting God to the measure of our moral and intellectual understanding because some people seem to me steadfastly and consistently base or hopelessly and incurably dull and confused does it follow that there are not phases albeit I have never a chance to see them of exaltation in the one case and illumination in the other and may not be a little restricting my perception of good while I have been ready enough to pronounce this or that person as being so far as I was concerned thoroughly damnable or utterly dull I find a curious reluctance to admit the general proposition which is necessary for these instances it is possible that the difference between Armenian and Calvinists is a difference of essential intellectual temperament rather than a theoretical conviction I am temperamentally Armenian as I am temperamentally nominalist I feel that it must be in the nature of God to attempt all souls there must be accessibility I can only suspect and accessibility zuv which I know nothing yet here is a consideration pointing rather the other way if you think as you must think that you yourself can be lost to God and Damned then I cannot see how you can avoid things that other people can be damned but that is not to believe that there are people damned at the outset by their moral and intellectual insufficiency that is not to make out that there is a class of essential and incurable spiritual defectives the religious life proceeded clear religious understanding and extends far beyond its range in my own case I perceive that in spite of the value I attach to true belief the reality of religion is not an intellectual thing the essential religious fact is in another than the mental sphere I am passionately anxious to have the idea of God clear in my own mind and to make my beliefs plain and clear to other people and particularly to other people who may seem to be feeling with me I do perceive that error is evil if only because of faith based on confused conceptions and partial understandings may suffer irreparable injury through the collapse of its substratum of ideas I doubt if faith can be complete and enduring if it is not secured by the definite knowledge of the true God yet I have also to admit that I find the form of my own religious emotion paralleled by people with whom I have no intellectual sympathy and no agreement and phrase or formula at all there is for example this practical identity of religious feeling and this discrepancy of interpretation between such an Enquirer as myself and a convert of the Salvation Army here clothing itself in phrases and images of barbaric sacrifice of slaughtered lambs and fountains of precious blood a most repulsive and incomprehensible idiom to me and expressing itself by shouts clangor trumpeting gesticulations and rhythmic pacings that stun and dismay my nerves I find the same object sought released from self and the same end the end of identification with the immortal successfully if perhaps rather in securely achieved I see God indubitably present in these excitements and I see personalities I could easily have misjudged to base or to dense for spiritual understandings lit by the manifest reflection of divinity one may be led into the absurdist under estimates of religious possibilities if one estimates people only coldly and in the light of everyday life there is a sub intellectual religious life which very conceivably when its utmost range can be examined excludes nothing human from religious cooperation which will use any words to its tune which takes its phrasing ready-made from the world about it as it takes the street for its temple and yet which may be at its inner point in the direct discontent may suffer from aphasia and still be religion it may under misleading or nonsensical words and yet intend and convey the truth the methods of the Salvation Army are older than doctrinal Christianity and may long survive it men and women may still chant of Beulah land and cry out in the ecstasy of salvation the tambourine that modern revival of the thrilling Alexandrine system may still stir dolls nerves - a first apprehension of powers and a call beyond the immediate material compulsion of life when the creeds of Christianity are as dead as the lore of the Druids the emancipation of mankind from obsolete theories and formularies may be accompanied by great tides of moral and emotional release among types and strata that by the standards of a trained and explicit intellectual may seem spiritually hopeless it is not necessary to imagine the whole world critical and lucid in order to imagine the whole world unified in religious sentiment comprehending the same phrases and coming together regardless of class and race and quality in the worship and service of the true God the coming kingship of God if it is to be more than a erratic tyranny must have this universality of Appeal as the head grows clearer the body will turn in the right direction to the mass of men modern religion says this is the God it has always been in your nature to apprehend 11 God and the love and status of women now that we are discussing the general question of individual conduct it will be convenient to take up again and restate in that relationship propositions already made very plainly in the second and third chapters here there are several excellent reasons for a certain amount of deliberate repetition all the mystical relations of chastity virginity and the like with religion those questions of physical status that play so large a part in most contemporary religions have disappeared from modern faith let us be as clear as possible upon this God is concerned by the health and fitness and vigor of his servants we owe him our best and utmost but he has no special concern and no special preferences or commandments regarding sexual things Christ it is manifest was of the modern faith in these matters he welcomed the Magdalene neither would he condemned the woman taken in adultery manifestly corruption and disease were not to stand between him and those who sought God in him but the Christianity of the Creed's in this as in so many respects does not rise to the level of its founder and it is as necessary to repeat today as though the name of Christ had not been ascended for 19 centuries that sex is a secondary thing to religion and sexual status of no account in the presence of God it follows quite logically that God does not discriminate between man and woman in any essential things we leave our individuality behind us when we come into the presence of God sex is not disavowed but forgotten just as one's last meal is forgotten which also is a difference between the religious moment of modern faith and certain Christian sacraments you are a believer and God is at hand to you heed not your state reach out to him and he is there in the moment of religion you are human it matters not what else you are male or female clean or unclean Hebrew or Tyl bond or free it is after the moment of religion that we become concerned about our state and the manner in which we use ourselves we have to follow our reason as our soul guide in our individual treatment of all such things as food and health and sex God is the king of the whole world he is the owner of our souls and bodies and all things he is not particularly concerned about any aspect because he is concerned about every aspect we have to make the best use of ourselves for his kingdom that is our rule of life that rule means neither painful nor frantic abstinence --is nor any forced way of living purity cleanliness health none of these things are for themselves they are for use none are magic all are means the sword must be sharp and clean that does not mean that we are perpetually to sharpen and clean it which would weaken and waste the blade the sword must neither be drawn constantly nor always rusting in its sheath those who have had the wits and soul to come to God will have the wits and soul to find out and know what is waste what is vanity what is the happiness that begets strength of body and spirit what is Error where vice begins and to avoid and repent and recoil from all those things that degrade these are matters none of the rule of life but of the application of life they must neither be neglected nor made disproportionately important to the believer relationship with God is the supreme relationship it is difficult to imagine how the association of lovers and friends can be very fine and close and good unless the two who love are each also linked to God so that through their moods and fluctuations and the changes of years they can be held steadfast by his undying steadfastness but it has been felt by many deep feeling people that there is so much kindred between the love and trust of husband and wife and the feeling we have for God that it is reasonable to consider the former also as a sacred thing they do so value that close love of mated man and woman they are so intent upon its permanence and completeness and to lift the dear relationship out of the ruck of casual and transitory things that they want to bring it as it were into the very presence and assent of God there are many who dream and desire that they are as deeply and completely made it as this many more who would fain be so and some who are and from this comes the earnest desire to make marriage sacramental and the attempt to impose upon all the world the outward appearance the restrictions the pretense at least of such a sacramental Union there may be such a quasi sacramental union in many cases but only after years can one be sure of it it is not to be brought about by vows and promises but by an essential kindred and cleaving of body and spirit and it concerns only the two can dare to say they have it and God and the divine thing in marriage the thing that is most like the love of God is even then not the relationship of the man and woman as man and woman but the comradeship and Trust and mutual help and pity that joins them no doubt that from the mutual necessities of bodily love and the common adventure the necessary honesty's and helps of a joint life there Springs the stoutest nearest most enduring and best of human companionship perhaps only upon that root can the best of mortal comradeship begot but it does not follow that the mere ordinary coming together and pairing off of men and women is in itself divine or sacramental or anything of the sort being in love is a condition that may have its moments of sublime exaltation but it is for the most part an experience far down the scale below divine experience it is often love only insofar as it shares the name with better things it is greed it is admiration it is desire it is the itch for excitement it is the instinct for competition it is lust it is curiosity it is adventure it is jealousy it is hate on hundred scores lovers meet and part there by some few fight true love and a spirit of God in themselves or others lovers may love God and one another I do not deny it that is no reason why the imitation an outward form of this great happiness should be made an obligation upon all men and women who are attracted by one another nor why it should be woven into the essentials of religion for women much more than for men is this confusion dangerous lest a personal love should shape and dominate their lives instead of God he for God only she for God in him phrases the idea of Milton and of ancient Islam it is the formula of sexual infatuation a formula quite easily inverted as the end of goethe's faust the woman soul leadeth us upward and on may witness the whole drift of modern religious feeling is against this exaggeration of sexual feeling these moods of sexual slave is nests in spiritual things between the healthy love of ordinary mortal lovers in love and the love of God there is an essential contrast and opposition in this that preference exclusiveness and jealousy seem to be in the very nature of the former and are absolutely incompatible with the latter the former is the intensest realization of which our individuality czar capable the latter is the way of escape from the limitations of individuality it may be true that a few men and more women do achieve the completest unselfishness and self abandonment in earthly love so the poets and romances tell us if so it is that by an imaginative perversion they have given to some attractive person a worship that should be reserved for God and a devotion that is normally evoked only by little children in their mother's heart it is not the way between most of the men and women one meets in this world but between God and the believer there was no other way there was nothing else but self surrender and the ending of self end of chapter parts 10 to 11 recording by William Tomko | Priceless Audiobooks | UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA | 2018-08-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 17,217 | 95,851 |
7N1nhrAXyRM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N1nhrAXyRM | Amy Pierre, RN, MSN, APN MMRF Podcast | the supportive therapy for our Myoma patients advancing is this working or one there is one off switch I think somebody turn it off maybe on the side yep there you go there you there we go thank you all right so we know that Myoma is a highly treatable disease but at this point in time is considered incurable hopefully that will change In Our Lifetime right and so the overall Cates have significantly improved due to the recent advancements and newly approved novel agents but with it survival improvements can lead to more comorbidities for our patients so the goal of treatment is to control the disease to prolong overall survival but we also need to preserve quality of life so understanding what these side effects could be and prompt management of these side effects can really improve quality of life for our patients so we know that the effects of Myoma itself can affect the bone marrow can cause Milo suppression those plasma cells are overcrowding the bone marrow it can cause renal dysfunction you know those fre light chains those monoca antibodies can be really toxic to the kidneys and also bone damage so for our bones we know that about 85% of our patients have bone disease and this is really because these my proteins can upregulate the activity of osteoclast and kind of suppress osteoblast maturation you know those two systems working together to maintain the bone health and we can see weakened bone holes in the Bones from this exact mechanism of action so the widespread bone destruction can lead to hypercalcemia it can cause fractures because the bones are really brittle we can see sometimes spinal cord compression we can see these kind of liic lesions and sometimes we can see really weak in Bones such as osteoporosis and osteopenia so the main state of treatment for bone disease is actually using basinet for Myoma and how they work is they inhibit the osteoclast activity and cause osteoclast opep Tois so it slows down bone destruction it doesn't really build bone it just kind of works on those Osteo classs and it can decrease pain and can also reduce skeletal related events meaning reduce risk of fractures that can happen with Myoma and there's also an an anti Myoma benefit to these drugs that we don't entirely understand CU there was a study that was published in 2013 that looked at the usage of basinet particularly zometa for patients who had Myoma and the patients who were on zometa versus not on zometa actually live longer so there is a survival advantage and an antimyeloma effect to these drugs so we typically get these the two drugs that are approved for Myoma zonic acid and pamidronate are given as IV infusions once a month for usually the first year and then we will spread it out thereafter to maybe every 3 months and there are pretty rare side effects but important to note they can affect kidney function so it's important to know what your patients creat and every time you dose these drugs there's a risk of fractures of the long bones of the femur and it can be usually bilaterally and it can be it can happen with little to no trauma to the area so it's really important if your patient's reporting groin pain or thigh pain to investigate to see if they have this fracture if they've been on bosence for a long period of time it can cause flu like symptoms maybe within the first 3 days of getting the drug typically with your first dose and not really with subsequent dosing happens in about 10 to 20% of patients manifesting as kind of a lowgrade fever or chills or body aches can be mitigated with taking something like Tylenol and then we do see this very rare side effect called osteon necrosis of the jar OJ and so the risk is increased with um more exposure to these drugs and also having a recent uh invasive dental procedures so we always tell our patients that if they have to have any sort of major dental work to make sure they get that done before they start bisphosphonate therapy and make sure their dentists know that they're on basinets because when they are dentists tend to be a little bit more conservative with the type of treatments that they do cuz the risk increase if there's exposed bone in the jaw so maybe tooth extractions or even implants can increase the risk there was a study that showed that patients who were on zometa for more than two years and had a dental procedure they had about a 2% risk of developing OJ so it's rare but it is something that's important to note how else we manage bone disease well you know treat the underlying problem the Myoma but we can also do surgical procedures like vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty and they're minimally invasive so vertial plasy they're basically kind of um reinforcing the collapse vertebrae and then kyphoplasties they're inserting a balloon inflating it in the collapse vertebrae and filling it with a bone like cement and this is minimally invasive patients can get pretty quick relief with this pain relief maybe within the first month of getting the procedure and it there really isn't a hospitalization involved with this so it's a nice option for our patients who have really painful compression fractures we can do radiotherapy it's really only for a select patient population because we know that radiotherapy can affect bone marrow function but if patients have Painful plasmacytomas that could benefit from this will sometimes offer this and also if we see Imaging that patients have maybe an impending fracture we'll send them to our Orthopedic colleagues to see if they need reinforcement so the kidneys we always Hammer to our patients that they really have to protect their kidneys not allow themselves to become dehydrated and that's because there's several factors at play so the Myoma can cause cast nephropathy the hypercalcemia we talked about can affect Ur renal function hyperviscosity and light chain deposition disease and amalo ois can all all cause renal dysfunction and so other causes too such as other comorbidities such as hypertension or diabetes can affect your kidney function dehydration and certain medications so the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs we always tell our patients to stay away from make sure they're not getting IV contrast and there are certain drugs that we give them that can affect their renal function too such as the bisphosphines and also some drugs we know we have to might we might have to dose reduce due to impaired renal function such as some of the imom modulatory agents like Len linomide so how do we treat this we make sure our patients are well hydrated I always tell my patients that they should be coming into Clinic with a bottle of water because they should not allow themselves to get dehydrated make sure you correct that hypercalcemia because that can really influence the renal function and teach your patients not to take non-al anti-inflammatory drugs and make sure they understand what the brand names are and the generic names are because they might not know what they're taking in is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug and if they ever seeing another Physicians who's ordering a CAT scan make sure they tell the physician that it should be without contrast sometimes plasma feses can help if they have really a lot of monoclonal antibody burden so you're just kind of SE getting rid of the excess monoclonal antibodies but doing plasmapheresis but really treating the underlying Myoma is the way to go and then also dialysis if kidney function is really impaired so here is a list of the approved agents for the treatment of Mom myom it's not an exhaustive list because I don't have the alkala drugs that we use such as bendamustine and cyclopamine and mlan and the good old steroids that patients can never get away from but we have our immunomodulatory agents we have our proteosome Inhibitors we have our monoclonal antibodies and we have our hdac inhibitor so you can see that these drugs they're break breakdown by class and Drug itself they can cause a slew of side effects for our patients so cytopenias increased risk for infection some GI distress we can even see issues with you know their blood sugars from the dexamethazone or Penzone we're giving our patients we can see even some cardiopulmonary effects so it's really important to understand all the risks of using these drugs and help prevent some of these side effects that can occur so peripheral neuropathy we know that this can happen either from the disease itself or some of the drugs that we give our patients and it can range from sensory defects to actual neuropathic pain you know patients can just notice some intermittent numbness to constant numbness that can manifest to kind of electric shooting pain or pin Pricks or a burning sensation that they have in their hands or feet and so it can happen like I said from disease or treatment itself ameloid deposition can do it hyperviscosity can do it and we know that the incidence of highgrade periphal neuropathy um can be mitigated with certain changes in some of the drugs that you use so bores we know the RIS is decreased if you give bores once a week versus twice a week and we know it's also decreased if you give it subcutaneously I can tell you here at hackin sack we pretty much never give bortezomib intravenously and we really only give it as a subq injection because the efficacy is the same but it's much more um better tolerated phenide we know that this is dose dependent meaning kind of the longer you're on it the more likely you're able to develop neuropathy and it's less it's a little bit harder to reverse neuropathy associated with pomide with bzma we know about onethird of patients can have irreversible peripheral neuropathy so we can help two-thirds of a patients if we recognize it early and give them a break so how do we manage it if we know it's related to the drug we might have to modify the dose or the schedule of the drug meaning if it's from basid we might want to change from going twice a week to once a week or we may need to give the patient a break to see if the neuropathy gets uh much better we can also try oral medications such as dolotin or prabin Gabapentin um some of the tricyclic anti-depressants can be really helpful like nortryptiline or amitryptiline and even opiates can sometimes be helpful but those neuropathic medications seem to be a little bit more beneficial there's compounded creams that you can use we don't use them very often some patients find them to be a little bit more painful than anything else it usually has a mixture of stuff in there like a muscle relaxing or a high do opiate ly ketamine and then just teach teaching your patients about really how to protect themselves so make sure they don't have clutter in the house if they have trouble walking so they're not tripping over anything make sure they're using safety features maybe installing stuff in their bathroom make sure they're using canes and Walkers as needed and if they're having a lot of trouble with their balance maybe Physical Therapy can be beneficial and even calling our neurology colleagues because we know they can do sometimes some e EEG testing to figure out the origin of the neur opathy and see if they have any other better ideas than we do so clots is a huge issue for cancer patients we know that cancer patients are inherently hypercoaguable Myoma is no different and we can see our patients can get either dvts or pees sometimes just from the drug that we're giving them or just inherently at risk so we know that these clots can result from kind of an unregulated activation of both the coagulation that occurs with endothelial damage or redu blood flow and just inherent hypercoaguability it's important to recognize the signs and symptoms of a clot it can be very Insidious sometimes patients can have very um minimal swelling in their legs not pain not heaviness not redness and you send them for you know a Doppler study and they can have bilateral dvts so how do we prevent clots we have to understand what our patient risk factors are so obesity a previous history of a clot can tell us that they're already inherently hypercoaguable having a central Venus catheter certain comorbidities and even certain medications like the erythropoesis stimulating agents that we give can increase your risk of developing clots we have certain my Myoma related risk factors too such as hyperviscosity or even certain drugs that we use and it's important to recognize the risk factor um where they lie on the scale because doing something like aspirin can be sufficient but if they have more risk factors doing therap therapeutic anti-coagulation is the best way to go so the best way to manage it is to recognize the risk and prevent it I can tell you we pretty much use a lowd dose aspirin for our patients who are low risk but if our patients are at high risk we'll use therapeutic anti-coagulation and we tend to add hackensac to lean a little bit more to the oral agents a little bit easier for our patients to avoid taking another shot every day and also watching how much corticosteroids we use because there was a trial that showed reducing the dose of dexamethasone there was a trial showing um high does Deck with rev or lowd dose Dex with rev and the patients who had a lower dose of dexim methone with revlimid had less clots and actually less infections we can do Doppler studies or a VQ scan and also if patients develop a clot while they're on therapy switch them over to therapeutic anti-coagulation so Milo supression we know is a problem for our patients because the plasma cells are overcrowding the bone marrow and causing these low blood counts and the drugs that we give them itself can be Milos supressive so it's important to recognize the risk and when patients nators are going to be and anticipate that and make sure they understand what the signs and symptoms of Milo supression can be so check those blood counts frequently particularly during that nater period if your patient has po poor bone marrow Reserve maybe you need to check it more frequently while they're on therapy make sure they're not on any other medications that can lower their blood counts besides their Myoma therapy if they're really symptomatic from their anemia maybe giving them a transfusion to improve their oxygen carrying capacity can be helpful trying those arthropo stimulating agents may be useful too you can try procrit or ainp and maybe look for other underlying issues that can cause anemia such as deficiency in iron or B12 or folate we've had a couple of patients develop this kind of um kums negative hemolytic anemia on of the treatments that we're giving them so make sure you look for that and correct it if you're seeing a lot of surrogate markers such as hyperbilirubinemia or the anemia is becoming more pronounced and long-term usage of some of the drugs like the immunomodulator drugs can cause hypothyroidism which can in turn cause anemia so make sure you're checking for that too so for our neutropenic patients we can offer them growth factor support more importantly teach them about infection precautions you know I had a patient yesterday who was very neutropenic and um was very sad that I told him he couldn't have a huge birthday party this weekend because he could develop a lifethreatening uh infection with all his grandchildren were planning to be at the party so it's really important to explain to your patients that it's they really need to avoid large crowds wash their hands really well it's so easy for someone to cough sneeze into their hand touch a surface your patient touches that surface rubs her eyes rubs her nose make sure they have a thermometer at home it's so easy to ask your Pat patients if they're experiencing fevers they'll tell you no but your second question should be do you have a thermometer at home cuz sometimes the answer will be no so how do you know you have a fever if you don't have a thermometer at home and so make sure patients know that if they do have a fever it's a medical emergency so for febal neutropenic we have to basically pan culture these people give them empiric IV antibiotics Tylenol to bring the fever down and also for thrombocytopenia make sure if our patients are really at high risk for spontaneous bleeds with a low platelet count give them a platelet transfusion and also make sure we're holding anti-coagulation if their platelet Count's really low so infection we know our patients are really at risk so the immune deficiency of Myoma patients is caused by many things so the Milo supression they have suppression of their normal imunoglobulin because of that excessive monoclonal antibody that they're producing they have deficiency in their normal antibody response because that monoclonal antibody that they're producing is kind of of non-functional and not helpful for their immune system there can be a shift in their microbial Flora so they're really at high risk for developing bacterial and viral infections Myoma patients have an inherent problem with their humoral immunity so they're at high risk for encapsulated bacteria infections such as homophilous infections and streptococus so they're also at risk for zoster and that's from the Myoma itself the treatment they get we give them such as proteome Inhibitors darab and even stem cell transplant so it's important to recognize this and prevent it make sure they're on antiviral prophylaxis if they develop zuster recognize it quickly and treat it so because the risk is always developing post herpetic neuralgia which is really terrible for our patients and we do not recommend the shingles vaccine for our patients it's a live vaccine and our patients should not be getting it but we can also make sure that we are finding a source of infection if we do suspect one so sometimes we'll do a respiratory pathogen panel to check for the most common viruses um a lot of my colleagues joke in the office that I order this way too much but you know when you have a patient Who develops the flu in the middle of the summer and has a develops a flu in April I had a patient who developed a flu twice this year um in the summertime and just in the non-f flu season so it's important to see that these people can be at risk for these kind of opportunistic infections when the general population is fine chess x-ray looking for pneumonia they're really at risk for that empiric antibiotics if you think they do have an infection vaccines are important so getting their seasonal flu vaccine and their pneumonia vaccine is very very important they may may not be able to mount um the response to these vaccines at a patient who doesn't have Myoma but there's still a protective benefit there and if you're patients have really they have chronic infections chronic sinus infections respiratory infections and really low levels of IGG you may want to offer them intervenous IGG to see if it can help them if your patients are having a lot of trouble with diarrhea may want to do a stool culture to see if they have Ci or an OM urinalysis and urine culture if they're having urinary symptoms blood cultures antifungals growth factors but I just want to remind you that sometimes patients may not really Mount the same kind of immune response to an infection because the Cod steroids can really mask the typical signs and symptoms of an infection so you really have to be careful and look for insidious things and make sure your patient is not infected so fatigue so this is one of the most serious complications of Myoma because it really really reduces quality of life and it usually starts with diagnosis and just gets worse over time and it's not the type of fatigue that you and I know after working a long day at work it's more the type of fatigue that's really not relieved with rest you know you and I may be able to take a nap and then get going and feel refreshed a lot of the times our patients don't feel that way and they're not really sure but they think it's due to increased inflammatory sidey kinds so it's important to kind of recognize what the risk factors are so you know anemia nutritional deficiencies if they're not sleeping well from the steroids we keep hammering into them even depression a lot of the time patients say they don't feel depressed but it's really manifesting as difficulty sleeping and having little interest and no energy and things that they love to do pain medication can do it just being sedentary can do it it's just like with babies right sleep to get sleep so the more you sit the more tired you're going to be and even some hormonal changes can do it too in the Myoma treatment so we have to tackle it from various standpoints correct anemia if we think that's the cause if it's drugs doing it maybe they just need a little bit of a break you know these patients are going to be on treatment probably indef so maybe they just need a little bit of break just to kind of refill their tank um sleep disruption disruption can be a big problem so educate your patients on proper sleep hygiene make sure they're not drinking a ton of caffeinated beverages before they go to bed and try and tell them you know if you are trouble having trouble sleeping please don't turn on the lights and start vacuuming your house cuz your body's going to get confused and think it's time to stay awake and and be productive for the day so just try and rest and close your eyes if it's because their mind's racing a lot at night maybe giving them a benzo dipene but maybe a sleep aid is really where they need to go such as ambient or even Lunesta sometimes our patients don't have energy because they're just not eating well so it's really important to lean on nutrition colleagues our nutritionist is fantastic she can really come up with an individualized treatment plan for our patients and sometimes patients are dehydrated and they just seen IV hydration to help them get going depression is a huge problem can cause fatigue we have a monthly support group here for our patients or Myoma patients it meets the third Thursday of every month we also have social workers that can help our patients sometimes they need more advanced helps such as seeing a psychiatrist or even having Psychotherapy and the demands of Cancer Care itself are very fatiguing you know a lot of our regimens that we give patients makes them come twice a week sometimes 2 days in a row 3 weeks on and one week break so we're coming to the clinic sometimes six times a month maybe more than that if you have to check them more frequently because you're worried about their counts so patients can be just really exhausted with the Cancer Care itself so I always tell my patients make sure you're leaning on your caregivers to help you with other things that you don't need to do run to the grocery store run to the laundry mat let them do those things so you can conserve your energy to do more important things such as that holiday dinner or that birthday that you really wanted to have and make sure they're exercising so basically exercise is the only thing that's been proven to help with cancer related fatigue and a lot of patients just say I you know I don't have enough energy to exercise but once you get those natural endorphins pumping they actually do feel better proper pain management as well and of course check for hormonal imbalances so GI distress we see a lot of this with our patients most of the time not related to the myom itself but more the treatment that we give them and there's tons of risk factors here so for nausea the hypercalcemia being constipated being anxious we know our female even our younger female patients are really at risk for nausea pain medicine can do it constipation there's lots of risk factors there too such as uncontrolled diabetes we forget about that sometimes just not eating well can cause constipation and diarrhea you know recent exposure to an biotics can do it and sometimes people have pre-existing issues like lactose intolerance or iridal bowel syndrome so how do we manage nausea so if it's due to drug we'll try and modify the dose but we really lean on our supportive medications for this so and sometimes it requires drugs from all of these classes so our 5 ht3 receptor antagonists our neuro one recept our neurokinin one receptor antagonists our dopamine receptor antagonists and sometimes even using the cannaboids can helpful for our patients using Marinol particular patient has trouble sleeping and they have a low appetite and trouble with nausea sometimes Marinol can be really helpful maybe the benzo diazines are a way to go too to add on top of this alternative therapies like acupuncture bands or acupressure can be really helpful and teaching your patient about small frequent meals a lot of the times patients say you know I had my large pasta dinner and I felt really nauseous well maybe you shouldn't have your large pasta dinner how about small frequent meals just to get that nutrition in and make sure you tolerate it well and a lot of our patients have trouble with reflux in fact one of my patients just stopped me in the hall and said Amy I just want you to know I've been having reflux all day today so I said well what are you eating she was drinking you know Coca-Cola and eating a chocolate cookie so we talked a little bit about sometimes food can exacerbate it such as caffeine and chocolate but you know a lot of the steroids we give our patients can really cause a lot of gastritis so making sure they might need to be on a PPI or even on an H2 and even T she said she's been chewing Tums all day so talked about how to best manage that constipation we forget that the almost all of our patients are on opiates and so they can cause a lot of constipation make sure their diet is appropriate um relistor can be helpful for opiate induced constipation make sure they're not taking their 5ht 3s very often and um diarrhea make sure your dose reducing are delaying if you think it's related to drug make sure patients are Slow Down slow down slow um slow down on laxatives make sure they're hydrating well they can use supportive medications like am modium or lodal even chosy damine can be helpful make sure um it's not related to gvhd CU sometimes that can really cause excessive diarrhea make sure they're eating appropriately and treat infections if you think that's the cause so now we have infusion related reactions as a problem for amoma patients um we're lucky to have this usually our lymphoma colleagues had to deal with this now we do too so we don't really understand what the mechanism is but we think it's some sort of cyto kind release and if usually occurs it's usually really quickly and usually with the first infusion and the symptoms can range so I always tell my patients if they feel strange in any way during the infusion let your nurse know so how do we manage it the best ways to prevent it so make sure your patient adequately premedicated start low and slow and there's some parameters for certain monocon antibod so there's a risk of having a delayed re um reaction with zat up to 48 hours after getting the drug so patients need to take prazone for 2 days after elotus they need to take it before they come and see you and how we manage it stop the infusion of course give them more supportive medications if you're worried about Airway obstruction make sure you have epinephrine and make sure they're getting fluids we do see some skin reactions from time to time make sure they're taking antihistamines topical cortical steroids we can see injection site reactions with pesm it's important to use the air sandwich technique to help reduce this make sure you're rotating the side of injection to help minimize this uh dmia can happen sometimes from drugs or underlying issues we have a ton of risk factors that can cause this make sure you're asking your patient if they're smoking and make sure they're not smoking they can sneak by us with that a lot of the time and so we manage this by basically correcting issues that can cause it so if it's heart failure doing it make sure we're getting a repeat echo cardiogram if we think it's a clot do a VQ scan and sometimes patients need supplemental medications to get them through so to in summary we basically have a lot of survival improvements with our new novel agents but it can also lead to comorbidity so it's and the adverse effects that can happen can happen related to pre-existing risk factors the disease State and the treatment regimen that we're giving them and a lot of this can really be potentiated by understanding what the risk factors are CU we know a lot of these adverse effects can be managed more properly if we prevent and harder to control once they happen and we know that if we can control this well and recognize it well we can improve our patients quality of life that's it thank you I tried to wrap it up thanks sweetie so she only has like three minutes because she has to go speak next door who's got pressing questions for Amy please I just have one you said with the hyper calcemia I was wondering you probably don't recommend vitamin D actually vitamin D is really important but um the hypercalcemia usually is from the underlying myom itself not not mostly because a patient has taken a lot of calcium or Tums although that does happen it's really from the underlying Myoma itself so treating the Myoma and also um supporting them with like calcitonin or Basin it's and fluids to correct the hypercalcemia but it's really important for patients to stay on vitamin D particularly living in the Northeast we're all very vitam D deficient here you would you know make matters worse by increasing the calcium no I I don't think it's going to make the matters worse but of course watch your patients's calcium levels so one of the issues with vitamin D and calcium supplementation because especially because you're dealing with an older population particularly the women they're on calcium and vitamin D because that's what their doctors tell them to take all the time we those those actually very important to make the bis phosphinates work better but we don't usually recommend them to their myom is under control so they need to take a holiday from their vitamin calcium do we get their disease under control and then they actually go back on it because it does make you know it makes the the this Fates work better okay so they need to take a holiday make sure they're not hypercalcemic because they're taking exogenous calcium control their disease put them back on it because it helps their bones other questions yes any prospects how soon XG is going to get improved because there are some patients with renal dysfunction you don't even want to use Ria with so there is a and sometimes your you and your colleagues recommend we use XA in these patients we can't get we can use XJ for only use XJ in refractory hypercalcemia it is a proof for that so if they're on abys phosphinate they become hypocalcemic you can give them EXA do you have any Ed do you have any idea when the denus no I know I've been waiting the trial's been done in Myoma they didn't approve it now if you look at the original XJ trial there was only there was a handful there was like 200 or something like that out of the 1,800 patients and they didn't feel the FDA didn't think that was a large enough subpopulation to approve it so a couple years later the company finally decided to do an EXA versus zonic acid study it's been done the results are not available so I can't answer that question | Hackensack Meridian Health | UCGNz3pc9coZmYxUuLFJSKtQ | 2017-01-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 5,652 | 31,654 |
dQ3RP29obfY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQ3RP29obfY | Moshi Monsters but its AWFUL Roblox games (Ft. RhiCuzWynaut) | welcome to moshi monster's role play welcome to my crib come on in the door's not really really there this is my this is my sofa room it's got a sofa these homes are very similar to the washi game i must say they really are oh this is my uh this is where i actually spend the money moving into the next that's the toilet thank you do you want to show me your house that you just purchased as you come in you can see i have a bowl of salad you know very healthy i like salad don't come in here i didn't see anything i totally don't hide people in there i apparently have children doing roblox the other ones are called legit i'm such a responsible mother i totally knew i had kids what the there's more i do have a question about your your children and the legitimacy of them if we go back in the room is one of them american and one of them english did you did you get them from one place i guess in the american one's the one that likes call of duty i find a photo of my family if you're interested oh let's see only got the two kids in there but there's my my dead husband i suppose oh no yeah he he went to get milk and he never came back you know it's very tragic so if that's your room then whose is this room how many children do you have ah how do we get out of your garden you can't you're trapped in here forever is that what happens to all the kids uh i'm running like i ran away from the police when they find out my children are missing what is that this is the treehouse of dreams oh my god my eyes are coming through my eyes this is where the the kids run off to i understand you don't kidnap them they just run away from your neglect just run away making a better civilization for themselves they're fans of them five nights at freddy's uh biology like quantum physics hold on it's a quantum crow crow crow and quantum chromodynamics for dummies as it should be damn this is a nice swing set oh i mean i don't know if having swings on top of a balcony is a good idea but then it looks like the final area is is a balcony but you might have noticed all the kids they did run away here but how many kids do you see here now oh no what happened to them they were kidnapped by a bad man or woman was it clunk it was clunk it was the criminal league of naughty wrongins no yeah no what do we do oh i know exactly what to do and how to get to them you must follow me so oh hey look it's the swings again oh wow it's a clue those swings they indicate that this is where they are in that chest up there because did you see the name of this of this obby i didn't what was it it's oh no this obby is called moshi's obby donate please oh you can donate so to get into this chest [Laughter] bear with me for just a second grab my foot my life together how do why can't i oh wait i think i got it i got it you went so hard she just went into orbit okay so to get the children back take a seat take a seat we can't sleep we can't to rescue the children we must pay however only one of us needs to how many robots do you have in your account i have a thousand we're gonna do another another moshi monster's obby and whoever wins gets to choose how much the other person must pay to rescue the children so i'm not sure what about this is moshi monsters but it's in the name so we go with it we'll go with it when do we start let's let's just let's just go i don't know how long this is but last one to the end just keep playing it bye sucks how many levels is it you know more than 69 but less than a thousand please please slow down please please i don't want to spend right now you've got so much more roblox experience but i have way more eyes i know what really wins roblox experience but i swear there's going to be like a plot twist in it there might be i've just not thought of it yet the only reason i've died right at the start so i'm right on your tail i'm right behind you we're not am i not oh what you're right are you no no yes yes run no no oh no you're gonna lose oh wait i'll wait until you get past that one no i do not need your sympathy [Music] i will beat you fair and square you will beat me fair and square like you sold those children fair and square hey they they were okay with it is that why they've been kidnapped again is that right actually oh there's a massive roblox man big massive roblox scary man is he clunk he must be clunk clunk clunk clunk clunk that is clunk's brother i'm on the big red balls oh you're you are you have you've done double the stages i have oh man these balls are hard nice bad sentence as long as i don't mess up once more i will succeed and you just also have to keep failing lots which i'm sure you will i just died yes perfect that will help me catch up 15 stages oh no oh i died as well but it was not my fault that was um purely because uh a bird flew into me him seems like a reasonable reason my windows open pigeons and here's a video idea one day we should just like get a bunch of people in a thing and play a bunch of barbies and whoever is like last has to tweet something awful or embarrassing oh like the n word i'm catching i'm catching no you're not no you're not no you're not i'm no longer 15 behind i am 11. i i'm at the guessing one i guess right because right is right was right right it was left oh no left and then left again yes and then right oh i am so good at psychology and then left first trial second try first try it's like when you take your exams and it's multiple choice you know it can't be b three times in a row oh oh okay that's that doesn't exist what doesn't exist there was a floor but it wasn't really a flaw i can't actually see what stage you're at if you look at the leaderboard in the top top right i do but my my recording software oh it's over the top oh it's all right i'm miles behind you don't worry about it what number you at i i don't worry about it i'm so sorry i have left you yeah you abandoned you like i abandoned my kids i i will never catch you in a million yeah there's just there's just no way i'm 50 stages behind you maybe i'm lying maybe i'm not 50 behind you maybe i'm maybe i'm free how do you how do you huh i'm too thick to get up there here oh oh no i made it and died houston i have a problem what is your problem houston i haven't changed stage is that why i'm catching up potentially wait no i'm still going but the stages aren't going up oh no i thought oh i'm catching i was getting so cocky yeah it might have stopped going up as well oh no what stage you are it says i'm on 29 but i think i'm on 33. uh well oh spiel pro yt is here to catch us oh exposed explosion did she see a slur i just gotta make sure you're you're a very good roblox player very good thank you thank you i do my i do my well i do my average you know honestly i did my best because if i did my best i'd be winning when you get into the purple twisty like line one have a have a great time it's really long but it's fine but i fell off right at the end because i tried to jump like oh i see it oh wow i see it and it's so far away why are you guys alone i can leave some more lonely this is a mugging you know the background looks very moshi monster so we'll give it that the background it's just clouds right yeah mushy monster also has clouds oh rough bean oh is that someone you know nope you've just got a funny name we're repopulating this you can have the most players in like a year you should play tower of health you would cry immensely i cry every night it's all right no take so long are these sofas made out of oh this spongebob surface and there's a special slope as you mentioned like 50 minutes ago yes oh no do not play this i'll be at 3am all the the lost moshlings from the closed game will come out oh no they are vengeful five nights at moshi monsters yo we should make that have a whole lore behind it we could finally do a fan-made thing about a kid's game that isn't run by pedophiles it'd be refreshing who would be the scariest muscling i'm gonna say furry because you could make him look super super creepy because he's like quite a big character like you know bonnie's like missing his face and that i'm pretty sure yeah you could do like something like that with furry would it be a robot or would it just be just blood oh my gosh bean is popping off at the end i see the end you see it okay we've been on the zombie for two hours at this point we're gonna miss the wedding oh no the wedding not the wedding i went bald because you died or because of the wedding or just oh i made it uh one on the oh one of the teleporters oh that one freaking killed me um i don't know if this teleporter works the whole thing's just broken we can't end it no that yeah it's definitely the first one i picked it doesn't work you can just stand on it uh one of these teleporters there's nothing hidden so it's still not working nope not working at all okay well i'm very happy to finish this level there i did being being rage quit he reached quit i don't know let's go to 100 let me just donate twice more than the kids will be saved and we can move on out from away from these obviously the kids that i abandoned you're paying for yeah this is how society works this is like this says a lot about society this is so much about society how should you do this jump i've never done it before in my life you'd be screwed if you if you won because you have to make that jump every time you want to donate mom we would be here for days weeks years the kids would be adults by then i've given this guy a hundred robux he should be happy very epic i'm gonna leave this now and never play that ever again i i don't know where i was going honestly i just i just think of words i'm sorry why are you sorry i think of woods | Peppoli | UCglI89Km41VgUh75w8XToAg | 2021-06-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,020 | 9,731 |
XPYc6wzXVio | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XPYc6wzXVio | RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT FACILITIES: A QUICK GUIDE (CTD17 article) | residential treatment facilities a quick guide have you been struggling with a drug or alcohol addiction for a long time and are looking for help have you attempted several drug treatment programs in the past but been unable to maintain your sobriety if you responded yes to any or both questions you could feel helpless to halt your negative thoughts and that your alternatives for receiving assistance are limited thankfully a residential drug treatment facility can provide you with the programs structure and support you need to conquer your addiction the highest level of care and treatment programs is provided by residential drug treatment institutions for all clients assisting them in recovering from the harmful consequences of substance usage here are some brief guides to help you fully comprehend this program and choose what steps you should do what is residential treatment residential treatment clinics sometimes known as rehabs address a variety of difficulties including mental illnesses behavioral concerns and drug misuse and addiction issues residential treatment centers are live-in clinically oriented institutions where patients are constantly monitored and supervised by qualified professionals types of residences individual therapy group therapy and support groups are examples of ambulatory services or treatment methods these services may be provided by a community mental health hospital or a private practice outpatient outpatient mental health services are the lowest level of care because they do not require an overnight stay or intensive planning outpatient services are scheduled at the patient's discretion which means they request as needed appointments intensive outpatient programs iop iops are similar to partial hospitalization programs in that the patient goes less often and for a shorter period typically three times per week for a few hours iops are largely focused on mental health and slash or drug misuse disorders and they may be helpful for someone who needs more assistance than is provided in outpatient settings partial hospitalization programs phps also known as day programs phps are outpatient programs in which patients participate in programming for at least six hours per day this level of care is frequently provided as part of a step-down approach to aftercare for patients who have completed a residential treatment program or have been admitted to a hospital hospitalization hospitalization is also known as inpatient acute care hospitalization is for those who need 24-hour care and access to a medical practitioner those who require psychiatric stabilization and slash or are at risk of harming themselves or others are frequently admitted to hospitals hospitalization is utilized in crisis circumstances to help the patient get back on their feet which usually occurs within a few days how long should you stay in residential addiction treatment when it comes to addiction treatment many individuals are concerned about how long it will take the solution is more intricate than you would think how long you remain in residential treatment for addiction is often determined by whom you ask however it should rely on your specific therapy demands since this technique will begin the greatest potential outcomes for your long-term rehabilitation rehab programs that last 90 days or more are advantageous for a variety of reasons addicts need time to properly cleanse their bodies of the addictive substance detoxification detox is the initial stage in the rehabilitation process and depending on the drug or substances used medicines may be available to alleviate withdrawal symptoms making the procedure as safe and painless as possible the detox procedure is merely the first stage and although it helps the person to safely eliminate alcohol or drugs from their bodies it does not address the underlying conditions that lead to addiction while the technique used to detox may differ from institution to facility the fact that time may be required to complete it effectively particularly when treating addiction to drugs that may cause life-threatening withdrawal symptoms such as alcohol or benzodiazepines does not alter longer treatment programs provide patients the time they need to quit taking substances and learn more about the recovery process throughout the detox process a patient must be monitored to ensure that he or she is physically and mentally well and is not in any danger furthermore the physiological desires for drugs and alcohol are not removed by rehabilitation clinics they also do not eliminate environmental elements that make the temptation even more difficult relapse for drug addiction occurs in 40 to 60 of all instances of addiction addiction is an illness that lasts a lifetime the longer you stay in addiction recovery the more equipped you will be to combat addiction for the rest of your life aftercare ensures that addicts are in a medical and social support system that reminds them that they were reminded of the coping techniques they used to fight their overwhelming need for dangerous substances the length of aftercare is dictated by the individual and the severity of the addiction some people may only need it for a year some people may need it for the rest of their lives it might manifest itself in social support organizations such as alcoholics anonymous or in housing developments where inhabitants pay rent and contribute to the community support may also be provided from a distance such as through the internet or phone systems even though the fact that treatment style and duration vary one of the most critical aspects of treatment effectiveness is the amount of time spent in therapy what are the benefits of residential treatment these facilities on the other hand differ from one another in terms of how they provide their services regardless of the changes several underlying characteristics contribute are several underlying characteristics that contribute to why residential is highly successful in general 24-hour support continuous monitoring and ready assistance 24 hours a day seven days a week in all residential treatment programs are a big benefit over other levels of care while it may seem like an invasion of privacy at times this continual assistance and monitoring help in tracking patient progress identifying areas of difficulty and preventing relapse distance the distance between the patients present and previous lives distance from one's present circumstances such as from toxic people triggering areas and so on being in the company of healthy individuals may help with discernment and perspective different forms of therapy instead of only talk therapy as many outpatient clinics do they employ a range of therapeutic techniques most residential treatment centers emphasize a holistic approach to treating your mind body and soul such as writing therapy art therapy and a range of experiential therapies are all prominent forms of trauma treatment frequent sessions patients in residential treatment programs have access to a wider range of therapy modalities as well as more regular sessions being able to visit a therapist daily might help patients get back on track and establish a trustworthy therapeutic connection the therapeutic connection is nourished not only by the frequency of sessions at a residential treatment center therapists may visit their patients in a variety of settings therapists and counselors often lead therapy groups accompany patients on trips or meals and engage in experiential activities with them in residential treatment clinical doctors monitored each patient to learn more about what they were going through moreover residents in residential treatment facilities usually follow a somewhat rigorous daily schedule patients will get up and go to bed at the same time engage in home tasks and responsibilities have mental health and medical appointments planned and time set aside for leisure and slash or exercise why should you seek therapy at a residential facility professionals can help you achieve the change you want recovery is not an overnight process and attempting it on your own is incredibly tough having them in the area ensures individuals get several of the advantages for a quick recovery the following are some advantages of a residential treatment program residential treatment centers provide a safe and secure environment one of the most important reasons you should seek treatment in an intensive residential treatment program for your addiction is that you will get therapy at the facility itself a residential treatment facilities setting is safe and secure and it removes you from the triggers and temptations present in your home environment and the outside world in general many residential treatment facilities are cutting edge with high-quality treatment programs and services that are evidence-based and personally customized to your specific requirements you will live in a nice apartment or dormitory-style environment with all of the advantages and conveniences of home while at a residential treatment program most importantly professional personnel will offer round-the-clock monitoring to ensure that all of your wants and concerns are fulfilled and that you are safe at all times detoxification through medical means medical detoxification is the first and most critical stage in the healing process when you stop using drugs or alcohol you may experience a range of physical and psychological withdrawal symptoms some of which can be quite unpleasant or painful the withdrawal symptoms you experience may be life-threatening depending on the intensity of your addiction the presence of other substances in your system and any underlying medical issues you may have medical detoxification enables you to progressively wean yourself off of drugs safely and effectively residential treatment institutions provide safe medical detox treatments on-site in clean pleasant and secure facilities experienced detox specialists will tailor a detox program to your specific needs drawing on services such as pharmaceutical treatment nutritional therapy physical activity programs and other interventions furthermore staff will carefully assess you for any co-occurring mental problems that may be impeding your recovery if a co-occurring condition is diagnosed treatment professionals may include appropriate mental health therapies into your recovery plan treatment programming in its complete form once you have achieved physical and psychological stability you may begin an intense drug treatment program that is highly organized and personalized to match your unique requirements this comprehensive treatment plan is comprised of a broad range of treatment services including individual and group therapy life and coping skills training holistic healing and therapeutic approaches and so on during this stage you will be given the skills as well as the encouragement and support that you need to conquer your drug addiction while many residential treatment programs have programs that run 28 to 30 days several institutions have programs that extend 90 days or beyond longer stays at a residential treatment facility result in improved results aftercare while finishing a treatment program at a residential drug treatment clinic is a significant achievement your recovery does not stop there when you return home and continue your normal routine the hard work of your rehabilitation starts the initial few months of your recovery are critical and aftercare programs given by a residential treatment facility will provide you with the extra support and incentive you need to confidently return to your regular everyday life with comprehensive outpatient therapy and sober living alternatives you may refine and practice your relapse prevention skills which are required to cope with cravings and desires to use constructively without relapsing into drug use health care is available around the clock the severity of withdrawal symptoms varies according to how much a client has used addiction nonetheless the majority of individuals experience some difficulty when they stop using certain medicines if not stopped soon might cause serious health concerns those who have completed the detoxification therapy at home on the other hand have access to medical specialists 24 hours a day seven days a week to address withdrawal symptoms nurses physicians technicians and other health care professionals must be present they may also alleviate any pain or provide security according to national institute on drug abuse medical detox allows medical practitioners to treat clients with immediate physiological adverse effects before addressing psychological side effects support the major portion of addiction treatment alternatives are centered on giving clients a large level of assistance however residential treatment is the only kind of therapy that provides the necessary support continually patients will be able to speak with knowledgeable healthcare professionals as well as others who have had similar experiences many detox center facilities allow visitors to come and go as they like throughout treatment this enables family members and friends to assist their loved ones while they are undergoing treatment residential therapy may be too costly for certain people however with appropriate financing choices families may still get the treatment they need because they will no longer be spending money on drugs the patient will finally be able to afford alcohol rehab therapy when you are sober there are social repercussions as well characteristics of a good residential treatment center before committing to a certain program social workers and clients seeking quality indicators are encouraged to ask several questions there are no standards or national ratings for residential programs and assessing programmes is complicated by the fact that different institutions compete for the same group of patients high-quality residential treatment facilities will in general have the following characteristics accreditation status high-quality residential institutions are often subjected to monitoring and supervision by state licensing bodies or other agencies that provide certification for health care such licensing and accrediting bodies typically impose stringent criteria for evidence-based treatment record-keeping medication storage and management and other critical components of residential care personnel with complete credentials practitioners working in residential facilities must be sensitive not only to the dynamics of each patient but also to group dynamics conflict dynamics between staff and patients and perhaps most importantly the often subtle indications that a patient is decompensating and in need of more intensive monitoring or even acute hospitalization prior experience working in an inpatient institution may be very beneficial for residential care staff members capability to rapidly boost workforce residential institutions with a variable personnel capacity can adapt to the treatment meal use shifting degrees of intensity treatment facilities may staff up to meet the needs of sicker or more agitated patients who may need more tight monitoring such as wellness checks every 30 minutes every 15 minutes or even continuous one-on-one surveillance this capability not only protects the particular patient but also ensures that the emotional environment of the treatment milieu may be modified as needed by the presence of extra staff members access to urgent and emergency care services is readily available accidents happen as do deliberate acts of self-harm residential institutions that collaborate with local hospitals and urgent care centers are well positioned to move patients in crisis to a higher level of care with little interruption to the environment there are outpatient therapists as well as a residential treatment team accessible the outpatient therapist of the patient recommended for residential treatment plays an important role in ensuring a favorable result the therapist is likely to be the most credible source of information on the patient's pre-admission functioning and symptoms and he or she is likely to have a prioritized list of the most urgent symptoms that need assessment and treatment for this reason therapists are often notified within 24 hours after admission to a residential treatment center many outpatient therapists want to keep up to date on their patients progress some will want to communicate with the patient by phone or in-person visits and a few may want to continue providing direct psychotherapy during the residential stay individual treatment institutions may not always allow the last of these responsibilities you | CTD Housing | UCypzCJFKZWBA22C_Y-Saodg | 2022-02-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,573 | 16,814 |
99jUMalf5Zo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99jUMalf5Zo | Weekly Live Market & Trade Analysis (22.09.22) | foreign ERS to this week's live market now this and shredding our succession with me and Patrick Manley we're going to get started here in just 30 seconds foreign PM British summertime before we get going there's always want to adhere to the risk disclaimer and most important to today's presentation the views and opinions expressed by me are solely mine they are not indicative or representative of those held by techno UK or tick Mill Europe Limited but just before we get going here if you can hear me and you can see my screen because just type A Y in the chat box so that I know we are good to go testing audio one two three testing audio one two three if you can type a y in the chat box if you can hear me and you can see the screen excellent thanks very much okay so for those of you who are here for the first time a brief introduction to myself like I said my name is Patrick manly and after I graduated from University I joined a city PLC consulting firm I left with some colleagues and went on to successfully co-found an exit a Consulting startup which was focused on c-suite's Executive search for technology businesses I essentially had a frontrow seat to the.com Bubble witnessing people make and lose a fortune in the market sometimes quite literally overnight so I decided to explore my curiosity for markets with some Capital to play with and some time on my hands I started day trading the S P 500 well probably more appropriately at that stage day gambling after some early beginner's luck can I write up some pretty solid gains however as it's often the case my beginners Luck run out and there's the market phase changed I began to average down into losing positions giving back all my gains and ultimately experiencing a significant six-figure hit to my Capital say this there's a gut wrenching and severing experience is an understatement I really had to stand back and figure out if it was reasonable for me to make a living from the market so I decided to get serious about trading and sort out as a mentor with an excellent trading track record working with my mentor for a period of 18 months to two years was the time during which I not just my technical game in terms of researching developing and extensively back and forward testing strategies that crucially suited my personality all of which were underpinned by a rigorous risk management approach but most importantly During the period of mentorship I significantly developed my mental game and probably most importantly of all I made the Watershed shift from being a highly goal-orientated individual focused on financial gains to becoming purely process orientated so what does that mean well it means I had to stop focusing on what I could make from the markets and start focusing solely on managing my mindset to allow me to consistently execute my trading strategy often times in the face of negative feedback from the markets in the form of losing trades but once you become process orientated and have a professional trading mindset and you understand the true nature of trading being a numbers gamer which You're simply playing the probabilities you lose the emotional investment and that hellish emotional rollercoaster of living and dying by the outcomes of individual trades so I'm no longer concerned with the outcomes of individual trades or even a small string of Trades my focus is on the next hundred trades because I know if I focus on excellence in execution my Edge will demonstrate itself over an extended series of outcomes a multi-strategy approach has delivered profit running a return since 2008. since 2013 I've also been managing investor Capital through a manager account service again delivering annual positive returns and I'm currently responsible for managing a multi-million dollar portfolio since 2010 I invented hundreds of private traders of all experienced levels from complete novices to former CME Floor Traders in developing the technical and mental skills to read consistent returns from the markets in addition to my fund management and mentoring I am a resident Market expert exclusively providing market and trade analysis to techno clients I provide an in-depth daily Market advert breaking down the fundamental and Technical drivers from the day ahead I also provide daily technical trade setup videos which are shared through the titmail trading view accounts and I'll put the link for that account into the chat for those of you who want to follow along with those those daily trade setups I also run ticknell's rapidly growing e-mini strategy group where I post a daily trade plan outlining my pre-market strategy for the cash trading session in New York for the S P 500 or the e-mini S P 500 futures I give my bias for the trading day ahead and specific action errors where I'm looking to engage the market these pre-market plans have delivered over 4 000 points of profit since we launched the group over a year ago second technical strategy group I run is for Traders who really want to take their trading to the next level the technical Futures Trading telegram group is a real-time environment on a daily basis I share in-depth insights analysis and real-time trades I also provide live commentary during the opening hour of the New York cash session where Traders can essentially see in real time how I dissect the markets and identify asymmetric training opportunities these sessions act as a platform helping you to develop a professional well consistent approach to navigating the markets and most importantly the mental mind gains that must be mastered to make it as a profitable Market operator okay so that gives you a flavor of where it is I'm coming from Let's uh let's jump into today's charts but before I do I'm just going to post the link for the uh Futures group there the Facebook group can just request access and you'll get access to my daily trade plan for the s p 500. okay so to the charts um before I get going here I've got a bunch of charts that I want to look through and get my view on if I don't cover a chart that you would like me to take a look at if you post that into the chat then at the end of the session I'll uh I'll pull that up and and give you a view on the charts uh and also if you have any other questions just drop those into the chat box and again at the end of the session I'll come back to them and cover them all off in a brief q a once I've once I've finished my presentation so let's start with the S P 500 using the e-mini Futures Contract uh we broke down through Trend uh Channel support after that horrific CPI print and we have uh We've basically traded into the resistance Zone I highlighted this level on uh on Monday uh through that through the tick mail trading view account looking at this 39 30 to 39 40 area so this prior basically trend line support to act as resistance which it did we saw a pretty decent uh sell-off yesterday from that similar level 3925 was the high yesterday and we are now down into the trend Channel support here uh obviously the sell-off yesterday prompted by a a pretty hawkish lead from the markets in terms of the fomc raised by another 75 basis points but I think the market was most spooked about the idea that a pal is really sticking to his guns now and uh and is prepared for um Main Street so to speak as opposed to Wall Street to take some pain in terms of a potential recession doesn't appear at this stage that he's going to back down and so the market took a pretty uh glum read on that and we saw a decent sell-off so what I'm watching today day is potential support Zone here interim support I'm not suggesting this is going to be a tradable sorry and you know the low of the move but I think we could see some support into this 3720 here we have this uh this low volume nodes and weekly projected range support So 37 10 3720 is going to be a key area I'll be watching today on the intraday charts but I think we can see a bounce and certainly think about a move back up into this 3830 area but ultimately whilst we hold below this trend line This is the weekly trendline support back from mid-march uh pandemic lows whilst we hold below there I think the June lows are certainly vulnerable but I would anticipate that we would at least see a tradable balance from that 3720 3710 area at this stage until we can reclaim uh 39.50 on the upside uh it's very difficult to get constructed for other upsides at the moment moving to the NASDAQ so similar setup here I've got an equality objective versus this swing structure here so from That Swing high at 12 970 we have a downside Target here of 12 uh sorry 11 200 and that would basically take us back into those June those from there I think we can see a bounce certainly we can think about this high volume low getting retested from low just below the 12 000 level and above there we have the trend Channel resistance but again similar to the the s p scenario at this stage unless we can reclaim uh 12 200 on a closing basis I think pressure remains to the downside and we could actually be looking at uh at a breach of the June lows and if we do the downside Target that I'm going to be paying very close attention to is the 10 540 to 10 340. uh one is the 131 extension of this swing hide from the 15285 we also have the 61.8 retracement of the post pandemic advance and that would uh that would be an interesting area to watch again not necessarily talking about the uh the low for this move but certainly I think we could see a pretty decent Bounce from that area somebody paying close attention to to any move into that support Zone Dow Jones so the Dow has actually taken out now the weekly trend line support on the closing basis so it's gonna be important to pay attention to the weekly close on the Dow because if we close below that trendline support I think we can be thinking about any bounces after that as uh as opportunities to fade looking then for the town side the quality objective versus the swing structure here 34 300. for those of you here for the first time let me just tell you what I mean by equality so when I'm talking about equality I'm talking about the length of this swing from the swing High projected forward to give us a potential swing low so that's what I mean anytime I'm referring to Quality objectives on any time frame that's what I'm talking about now interestingly this equality objective the 27 19. [Music] it's just below the 50 retracement 12 400 uh 27 498 so where we get these retracement and extension confluences they're often interesting areas to pay attention to for responses from Price actions so that's the the downside objective if we get a weekly close at or below current levels I think any bounces are there to be sold and we target a move down into this 27 000 area Russell [Music] Russell has uh is sitting just at its weekly quality objective uh sorry the weekly trend line support uh just above it at the moment I'm looking for a break here now to give us a Target down into 15 700 uh sorry 1579 which is the quality objective versus this swing structure here and if we pull up the fibro tracement tool let's see if we've got any Confluence there so just below we have the 61.8 retracement of our pandemic move so initially what I'm looking at for the Russell is I would anticipate we have an equality objective here on the daily time frame and then this channel gives us 1674. I'll be looking then for any bounces back into Trend Channel resistance as an opportunity to fade and then we're targeting a move down to that 1579 so any bounces from the 1674 back into Trend Channel resistance 1780s we watched with bearish reversal patterns to engage on the short side and we will be targeting them that move down into the 15 179 area below Dax Dax also sitting close or sitting on the ledge basically here um as I talked last week any clothes for me through this uh 12 380 area I'm going to be looking to get short adapts targeting a move down to 11 150 which is the equality objective versus this bigger swing structure here and we also have that 61.8 retracement and the year the S3 just below so paying close attention to any break of that support area let's just lower this line here any break of that support area and what I've been watching for is that first move and that first pullback into that prior support Zone to act as resistance so we get that extension to the downside in terms of the Dax all right let's take a look at the dollar this is a trade I've got on as of this morning uh sold the dollar Index at 11 1 11 50s and shared that with the the guys in the trading room this morning so that's running about 100 points of profit at the moment it's the only trade I've actually got on in the book right now so I'm looking for us to extend to the downside here initially targeting a move into the weekly projected range supports that comes in 109 and then from there I'd be anticipating the potential for a bounce and on the intraday time frame I'll be looking on the hourly the four hour chart for a three-way corrective move back into this uh 110 70s and from there I'm looking for a price to roll over and looking the main target for this move anyway to start with is going to be this 106 60s so this morning with 50 points on the upside of 50 picks and the potential trade I could see a 500 Point move to the downside so ten to one play here if it plays out as I anticipate and this this setup really a couple of things have driven this firstly we're going to talk about this in a minute the the boj obviously intervened in the markets today and uh and we'll talk about the effectiveness of that move but more importantly to me it's that idea of by the rumor sell the fat scenario plays out over and over again in the markets where the markets anticipate like we had there was a high level of anticipation regarding a 75 basis point move or even 100 basis point moved by the fomc and so the market ran ran the dollar up into that and then we traded into this resistance area that I talked about the 1150s 1180s and we've seen a nice reaction from their notes most importantly as I talk about this every week in terms of fading these Trend moves got to have this got to have momentum Divergence for me that's the critical component to fade in Trends because what's that telling you well it's telling you that the rate of change so the rate of increase in price is slowing meaningfully so that means it's taking more energy than the market to achieve higher prices than it was in Prior phases of the trends and that's the first sign or the first component or constituent of the opportunity to fade Trend moves otherwise you always want to be trading ideally with the trend but in terms of if you are thinking about fading the move and you have a Target area that's predefined for the for you guys that are here week in week you know you'll know been watching this level first it was the one 10 30 which I traded took some profits out of that and then we looked for that on 11 50 this week and that that trade is underway at the moment gold this is what I'm watching tonight certainly this is uh this is to my mind is uh potentially very interesting trade so what are we looking at well we have this uh major swing structure thinking in terms of the quality objective again so this swing here equal to that swing from this swing High gives us once uh 1663. now to my mind it's no coincidence that we have traded that level to the tick we traded it last week and we saw profit taking on the first move we've retested it now and we're seeing a nice reaction on The Daily time frame here we also had an internal uh swing structure so from this swing High into this swing low from That Swing high that also gave us 1670 as a dance as a Target area so I talked about this area last week and we're now starting to see some developing demand come into the market and importantly what we have is this momentum Divergence so again what is that that's the key component and now it's starting to be backed up by the price action so a decent reaction yesterday obviously a bit whippy because of the um the fomc but today if we get a closed bullish close back up towards the highs there so into that 1690 area coming into the session tomorrow morning the London session um you can be looking at on the hourly charts look for an overnight pullback and then look for that breakthrough as we head into London or the New York session tomorrow so I'm this is a trade I'm really uh mindful of and watching especially if we can keep that pressure on the dollar so dollar weakness should uh should see this gold trade potentially develop so I'm going to be looking to play a break of that pivot so through 1700 that sets up for tomorrow I'm going to be long goals and my first Target on the upside it's going to be back into this high volume node 1805 and range resistance just above at 18 20. oh copper is another one I'm watching here obviously it's been through a phase of a significant weakness driven by lack of demand obviously but we're starting to see the potential here for a corrective move so we're sitting at this trendline support so if we can close at or above current levels I'm going to be looking for a break of the pivot there through 3.5465 and what's my first objective going to be well it's going to be the equality objective so I've marked on here a b c equal legs which will take us back into the daily trend line from the high so we're looking then for a test of 3.9975 in terms of copper let's check in with Bitcoin here foreign still seeing weakness as most of you will know who are here on a weekly basis I'm not going to be doing anything until we test this 12. 12 185 which is this big equality objective that a b c plan it's complete and we are bouncing a little bit here but uh let's just see what we have so we have this trend Channel at the moment obviously we broke down through that prior support area remove that foreign channel to be maintained so look for resistance into 21 500 and again watching for shorting opportunities to the downside in terms of Bitcoin uh tenure notes so obviously interest rate sensitive products uh we are looking for a five wave sequence to complete into the 127 extension of this last corrective wave now obviously those uh who are Elliott wave enthusiasts you can see a three-way corrector move here this wave is impulsive so what we don't be anticipating here is that once we test that 127 extension if we can maintain some momentum Divergence here then we look for a three-way corrective move which ideally would take us back into this high volume area 119 and if we look at the 10-year yield so obviously yield moves inversely to price and uh what we're looking at here is the 127 extension let's draw this in it's not a large corrected phase and we are trading just below so let me just remove that and give you this so we're going to say that uh wave one two we're looking for a three I did even retest holidays prior highs and then get a fifth wave extension up into 3.76 and then from there we'll be looking for another corrected move to develop ideally in three ways back into the Apex here at just about three percent that's what I'm watching there uh let's take a look at the dollar Yen so we have a boj selling dollars this morning to support the Yen and this this weekly closed here let me just get rid of all these drawings for now watch this weekly candle because if we can get a close at or below current levels and I think this sets up for an opportunity next week to uh to sell the first corrected phase on an intraday time frame let's just pull up an hour of the chart here and I'll show you what I'm talking about when I can referencing that let's reset this [Music] so what we've been looking for ideally is a strong an Impulse move down and we then look for a three-way corrected move and then we'd be looking to sell that for at least an equality objective to the downsides so when I talk about those retracements having internet the next week if we can finish on the week side we're looking for that three-way corrected move uh against this this weekly close see we've got some nice Tails there three of them for 140 287 as long as we don't get a close above there then next week I think there's going to be a decent opportunity to sell this year and sell the dollar Yen sorry and what we'd be looking at will be a three wave move that takes us back down into uh the 135 13450 area uh before we once again try to rally but uh that's going to be a trade for me heading into next week in Euro moving inversely obviously to the dollar it was looking uh looking pretty bullish this morning but we decided to roll over a bit here the area I'm paying most attention to and I've talked about this relentlessly is this 9760 area if we can get a test in there and the bullish reversal pattern maintain momentum Divergence and I think there's an opportunity to uh to play a counter Trend rally in terms of the Euro today if we can get a close back above uh 99.70 so bullish outside reversal pattern then again tomorrow I'd be looking at an opportunity on the long side in terms of the Euro and that dollar Index player obviously would would work well with that Sterling we have tested that 112 50 Target we're finding some buyers at the moment I need to see it close back through 113.90 to look tomorrow morning on the interstate time frames for a uh a long trade to basically take out this wedge three-way curriculum thing we could trade back to the 117 30s around out here with the antibodyians so we have tested that the 6640 that's the long-awaited the quality objective trying to put in a reversal here on the The Daily time frame I'd want to see it close back up through uh 66.90 to uh to get interested tomorrow morning on the internet time frame looking for a long position and we think about the test into the high volume node and the trend line resistance at the 16th and 69 30s let's take a look at the key this is the other one that was of interest to me so we're testing this uh Trend Channel support we've got some nice momentum Divergence so any clothes back through the 59 level today would but to my mind be an opportunity on the long side to play a counter Trend uh rally and certainly think about a retest of this weekly trendline support then to act as resistance 61 20s something else I'm immediately looking at here let's look at the Euro again foreign tests here into the trendline support uh two ways of playing this so we have the test and reverse or we break and if we do then the first Target on the downside is going to be a move to 130 340s and then this is a pattern that I really like so if we get in here there's small bounce and then break we get down to here and then we get a three-way corrective move that puts us back into this 39 140 area I'd be looking at a fade there and I think we can trade down 125 on the downside in terms of the Euro again a big uh weekly trendline support coming in 1 30. so there's an opportunity developing in the Euro yeah and it can take out this trend line that's why I flagged that to uh to highlight that today okay so that's uh the Whistle Stop tour this week of the charts that I'm watching I think there's a bunch of opportunity uh developing here what a couple of things to be mindful of as we head into the back end of September now and thinking about October September has been it's notoriously a seasonally week period for risk assets so the equity indexes Etc but as we head into October that that seasonality starts to shift and importantly what you want to remember is that we are then heading into a period where focus is going to start to shift from from bank so to speak we've had nine central banks this week we've seen some big rate Rises of often can be a pivotal period but we are then starting to shift Focus to the US and most importantly uh the midterm elections and as I've stated before you can see some surprises in terms of um data and and focus in the markets as we head into those elections as the incumbent party seeks to retain control so just a sentiment factor to uh to bear in mind as we head uh head out of September and into October and then into those November midterm elections okay so are there any questions if you have a chart you want me to take a look at I haven't covered uh just post that into the chat or any other question you may have there aren't any questions I'm going to take that as I've done a reasonable job of explaining my uh my views of markets for this week and I'm going to wrap the session up I've posted the links in there for the trading view to follow along with those daily trade setups and you can just request access to the Futures group to get my daily trade plan for the S P 500 or the e-mini S P 500 futures contracts okay guys I'm going to wrap this session up here as always Traders plan the trade trade the plan and most importantly manage your risk until next week thanks very much | Tickmill | UCygXlFW43dWBKnNty1s-W_g | 2022-09-22 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,736 | 25,049 |
dmzV0hryOSc | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmzV0hryOSc | 100% Shiny ELECTRIC Pokemon Locations in Teal Mask DLC | welcome to the 100% shiny electric Pokémon locations in the teal mask DLC this is going to be our final video in the entire playlist which you should check out which has every other Pokémon type in the teal mask and you should also check out the playlist that has every single Pokémon location and typing from the POA region just wanted to say thank you for everyone who has watched this playlist and I hope that you all get your shinies in this video so for the electric sandwich I'm going to be doing something a little bit different here I'm going to be grabbing a yellow bell pepper I'm going to be grabbing myself some cheese and then you can pick literally uh salty hersa along with any other hersa that you may want so this is what I'm going to go for a salty and sweet put in my pick and please feel free to comment down below any other sandwich recipes that are going to be efficient for the electric encounter sandwich remember you can also use encounter power two sandwiches that also give a very similar effect if you did it correctly you should have sparkling Power electric and encounter Power electric also there are some Pokémon that do blend in with the grass so make sure you have your double home zoom in feature available so in order to turn that on make sure to go to the home menu go into your system settings go all the way down to system then go down to zoom enable that and when you do that you can double tap the home button in your game to see if the Pokemon Shiny or not all right let's get hunting if you want to hunt some Pichu a really good spot in order to do that is going to be at the Loyalty Plaza area right outside by this spot so you want to be on the border of the fence about this area here here and what you're going to be doing is just heading down this hill the when it says Apple Hills that's when the pich are going to start spawning now if you keep your angle like this and do a double home zoom in it's a little annoying so what you want to do is more angle your camera from top to down that's a lot better in order to see the shiny now the shiny for Pichu is going to look like this so it's basically just a little bit more darker and a saturated compared to all these Pichu running around so that's all you're looking for a much more deeper color apparently some spawn by these trees so you want to keep that in mind too like hey could show up here so you want to keep all your options open for Pichu but really just going back and forth to that location after you check out all the Pichu is going to be a quick way of just resetting them all over and over again so it' be a a great way to get your Pichu as fast as possible so good luck hunting your shiny Pichu now let's talk about more Pico there's going to be a really good spot all the way up from the kakami hall in Pokémon Violet because this is a violet exclusive to hunt down more Pico um it's going to be all the way up from Kami Hall so this is going to be like a town reset method now here's where the big problem comes in here's what more Pico shiny looks like on screen here but the problem is that there's also Pichu that start to spawn here when you eat an electric sandwich the big question about fixing this whole entire town reset method is how do we make it so it's just only more Picos the answer is very simple all you have to do is pop a dark sandwich if you're a violet player and when you do that you should be able to get completely solo spawns just for more PCO more Pico how do you say that let me know in the comments below because that would be the best way and then just zoom in and look for the difference within the shiny and the regular one and you should be able to get one but if you're trying to dual hunt more Pico and Pichu this would be the spot if you're playing Pokemon Scarlet this location becomes one of the best Pichu hunting spots even though I did mention one earlier where you have to zoom in this is kind of like different in both games though so I guess if you want to also hunt Pichu here this is actually actually I would say this is the better Pichu spot I just couldn't say this was for Violet players as well just make sure that you're going to zoom in and see if it is a shiny or not because with the sun and whatnot everything almost looks like shiny to me so yeah you just got to double check an auto battle to make sure that's not as shiny there you go g players you got a better spot than the Violet players for solo hunting Pichu so good luck getting your Pichu all right our next location is going to be for shins and it's second evolution now if you're playing Pokémon Violet you're going to bump into a bunch of more Picos within Paradise Baron so this is where you're going to be going for this hunt but if you're playing Pokemon Scarlet the only Pokemon you're going to have to deal with here is going to be luxos and some shins that spawn here so it's a dual hunt for Violet players here's what more Pico looks like shy just in case but this is not going to be our solo hunting spot for morico but for scarlet players yep we're going to be getting a shins and the second evolution here is me actually catching a shiny one over here as you can see there's nothing else interfering and it was just able to show up now a second location for the Shinx Evolution line is going to be in the kakami Wilds area which is going to be just right north of the felhorn gorge and right before the forest the cool part about this area is that you're going to actually get the final evolution Lux Ray to spawn in this area and you get a lot of them that do happen to show up now there is another electric Pokémon that does happen to show up here but it's nowhere going to be close to the amounts of Lux Ray and luxos and shins that you see so you'll once in a while run into a charger bug and you will find them here the shiny for this one is red but don't worry I'm going to give you a way better location in order to hunt this one down so we'll get to that but mostly here if you want to try to get a luxray this is the spot where you want to go so kittum Wilds for this Pokémon when you get a bunch of them in your sights you can go ahead and do some picnic resetting if you would like to quickly cycle through the respawns or just run around the area I mean it's it is big enough where you could just explore and despawn out a certain amount of Pokemon and respawn them in that's pretty much it you're really just looking for yellow shinies when it comes to these Pokemon so it shouldn't be too hard to get one so good luck hunting down your Shanks your Lux Rays your luxos you got this the next Pokemon that we're going to be hunting is going to be pisu and this Pokemon's actually really simple to hunt all we're simply going to be doing is doing a town spawn right over here on the map to the right of the masui Town Town spawn in and out and all you're really doing is looking for a much more pink shiny uh it's not going to be blue going to be pink and that's it so the moment you get on R's Road just make sure you're angling your camera because you don't you don't never know if something s to spawn over there just take a look at the left I get a lot more on the right side so you get a whole group of them right over here so like one 2 3 4 5 here we go there's 6 7 8 like so yeah you can see a whole bunch of them spawn in this area so really just make sure to just check all them real fast and then once you're done you're like okay it's definitely not as shiny over here you can just head right back into the town hop right back out back in rev's Road and you'll get the whole group of them spawning again so check around check by this and you should be able to get one very easy with no problem so good luck getting yourself a shiny pisu if you haven't got it in poo already if you want shiny luck like that make sure to subscribe to the channel seriously it works so a really cool hunting spot in Pokémon scarlet and violet was going to be this entire area right over here in the wistful field in Pokémon Scarlet you're going to be having a bunch of Pikachu spawning here so this is what shaie Pikachu looks like as well as another spot for charger bug but you most to be able to spot Pikachu charger bugs are only going to matter once you do happen to see red so in Pokémon Scarlet if you are running around this area you will just slowly see these things when you go back and forth in this entire area going up and down now the problem is for Pokémon Violet players you're going to be bumping into a lot of more Picos here as well they do spawn here they kind of ruin the hunts for a lot of people now I know a lot of people want to solo hunt charge a bug so what you're going to really want to do for this one is go to our bug video now now in the bug video when you come to this exact location the only Pokémon that spawn especially during night time is just going to be charge a bug and grubbins that's it you will not have any other Pokémon interfering with you and it should be very easy for you to be able to hunt down for a charger bug literally you're just looking for red Pokémon that's it for the shinies nothing else is going to bother you and it is a solo spawn so just keep that in mind bug sandwich would be the most ideal Violet players you're definitely going to use the bug sandwich cuz you will never be able to properly solo hunt one of these other players you might might be able to get away with it in the Pikachu area with the charger bugs but otherwise this would be the spot where you'd want to go for this so good luck now while we're also here in the woods let me take you over to this spot because there is a very difficult Pokémon to try to catch in the base game in Pala and it's going to be electric this Pokemon is so difficult to catch because it's just so tiny and Tynamo is very hard to catch but now we have an opportunity for you to catch an electric and you get a whole bunch of them that spawn over here the only problem is the shin is a little bit difficult to see but the amount available to you makes it a lot easier in order to catch so here's what the shiny looks like on screen and you pretty much want to just keep your eyes in on this little Pond area over here so the best strategy to hunt down this Pokemon is either use a Pokemon that can float in the water and take them out while you kind of hang back or you can go ahead and do the zoom in trick by despawning them out and respawning them with the picnic reset so you can face the water area at a good angle where you can you know spawn in as many ones as possible possible and then go ahead and do a picnic reset that quick picnic reset will allow all the other ones to start spawning in the water again and then you can do the double home zoom in trick to kind of check it out and identify if there is a shiny Pokémon in front of you otherwise just Auto Battle them all while hanging out down there and just keep respawning them in totally up to you what you want to do but this is the best way to hunt an electric entirely in the game so far so good luck hunting this now that you got all your shiny electric type Pokémon in the teal Mass DLC check out this video over here | PhillyBeatzU | UCHJgLYD96B0g1gtJO8BI3JA | 2023-10-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,275 | 11,248 |
YEOpt6elOMg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YEOpt6elOMg | Dove World Outreach Center Quran-burning controversy | Wikipedia audio article | in July 2010 Terry Jones the pastor of the Christian Dove World Outreach Center in Gainesville Florida us announced he would burn 200 qur'an's on the 2010 anniversary of the September 11th attacks he gained media coverage resulting in international outrage over his plans and pleas from world leaders to cancel the event Jones's threat sparked protests in the Middle East and Asia in which at least 20 people were killed in early September 2010 Jones cancelled and pledged never to burn a Koran nevertheless on March 20th 2011 Jones held a trial of the Quran in his Gainesville Church finding the Scriptures guilty of crimes against humanity the Quran was burned in the church sanctuary protestors in the northern Afghanistan city of mazar-e-sharif and elsewhere attacked the United Nations assistance mission killing at least 30 people including at least seven United Nations workers and injuring at least 150 people Jones disclaimed any responsibility Norwegian Swedish Nepalese and Romanian nationals were among the UN workers killed the killing of two US soldiers by an Afghan policeman on the 4th of April 2011 was attributed to anger over the burning of the Koran American news analysts criticized and blamed Hamid Karzai President of Afghanistan for drawing attention to the Koran burning topic Terry Jones Terry Jones was born in October 1951 in Cape Girardeau Missouri he attended college for two years worked at a hotel and joined the now-defunct Maranatha campus ministries he moved to Cologne Germany where in 1981 he founded a charismatic church the Christian community of Cologne cgk Jones received an honorary degree from an unaccredited theology School in 1983 and began using the title doctor he was fined for this misuse of a credential title by a German Administrative Court by the late 2000s the cgk grew to have a membership of approximately 800 1,000 according to the German magazine Der Spiegel the congregation kicked Jones out in 2008 due to the climate of fear and control that he employed which included elements of brainwashing and telling congregants to beat their children with rods he was accused of improper use of church funds and forcing congregants to labor for free a leader of the Cologne Church said Jones did not project the biblical values and Christianity but always made himself the center of everything others accused him of being violent and fanatical deutsche press agent or reported that church members said Jones ran the Cologne Church like a cult using psychological pressure between 2001 and 2008 Jones served as the part-time pastor of the Gainesville Florida Church Dove World Outreach frequently traveling back and forth between Germany and the United States Jones assumed full-time duties at Dove World Outreach in 2008 after leaving the German church by September 2010 dove world was said to have 50 members with about 30 members reportedly attending services in 2010 Jones published Islam as of the devil a polemic that claims Islam promotes violence and that Muslims want to pose Sharia law in the United States after Jones announced the Koran burning the German Evangelical Alliance denounced his theological statements and his craving for attention following an invitation from the English Defence League Jones considered attending a rally in Luton in the UK in February 2011 to share his views the anti-fascist group hope not hate petitioned the Home Secretary to ban Jones from entering the country in January 2011 Home Secretary Theresa May announced that Jones would be refused entry to the UK for the public good Jones actions have prompted a religious group to place a 1.2 million dollars bounty on his head Hezbollah a Lebanese political party and militant group has announced a two million dollars bounty on April 22nd 2011 Jones planned to visit the Islamic center of America in Dearborn Michigan to protest Sharia but was arrested tried and jailed local authorities had required him either to post a $45,000 peace bond to cover Dearborn's cost if Jones was attacked by extremists or to go to trial Jones contested that requirement and the jury voted to require the posting of a $1 peace bond but Jones and his co pastor Wayne Sapp continued to refuse to pay they were held briefly in jail while claiming violation of First Amendment rights that night Jones was released by the court on November 11 2011 Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Robert Ziolkowski vacated the breach of peace ruling against Terry Jones and Wayne Sapp on the grounds that they were denied due process both men's criminal records have since been expunged on the evening of April 22nd 2012 soon after he was interviewed at wjbk TV Jones gun fired accidentally as he got into his car the city allowed him to protest on April 29 a week after the trial in a designated free speech zone outside Dearborn City Hall Muslim protesters lined Michigan Avenue across the street from City Hall about an hour into the protest the crowds broke the barricades and a police line they rushed the street but were quickly contained by riot police crews the crowd was throwing water bottles and shoes at supporters of Jones police worked to push the crowd back across Michigan Avenue at least one arrest was made topic 2010 threat to burn Acheron in 2010 Jones announced plans to burn the Koran on the ninth anniversary of the September 11th 2001 attacks which he dubbed international burn a Quran day a wide range of politicians and religious groups strongly condemned the planned Quran desecration event Jones said he canceled the event and intended to go to New York to meet with the Imam of park51 Feisal Abdul Rauf after saying he would never burn the scriptures on March 20th 2011 Jones oversaw the burning of a Quran this prompted protests including an attack in Afghanistan that resulted in the deaths of at least 14 people in April 2011 Jones claimed he is considering a trial of the Prophet Muhammad for crimes against humanity topic background Dove World Outreach Center where the Koran burning was to occur is a small congregation in Gainesville with approximately 50 members the church led by pastor Terry Jones and his wife Sylvia first gained media attention in the late 2000s decade for its anti-islamic and anti-homosexual messages in 2009 dove world posted a sign on its lawn which stated in large red letters islam as of the devil several members of the church also sent their children to their first day of school in August 2009 wearing t-shirts with Islam as of the devil printed on the back the proposal to burn Korans began with a series of Twitter messages on July 12th and a related discussion on the now removed Facebook group Islam as of the devil named after Terry Jones's book Jones invited Christians to burn the Muslim holy book to remember all 9/11 victims it was to be held from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. the idea initially had little support and considerable opposition but religion news service ran a story describing Jones's claim that he had received qur'an's to burn care refused to respond but other religious organizations did on July 25th Jones posted a YouTube video in which he held up a Quran and said this is the book that is responsible for 9/11 no to me it looks like the religion of the devil which garnered substantial media attention on August 3rd Gainesville Mayor Craig lo asked the world's media to ignore Jones's church as a tiny fringe group and an embarrassment to our community but coverage continued to increase in early August Sunni scholars at al-azhar university in Cairo issued a statement warning of dangerous consequences if qur'an's were burned u.s. President Obama condemned the plan saying it would endanger the lives of US troops abroad American Muslims responded by saying they would celebrate September 11th 2010 as love Jesus day emphasizing the fact that Jesus is believed to be a Messenger of God in Islam other groups asked people to celebrate read the Quran day as a means to international understanding topic reactions you topic local Florida a Gainesville interfaith forum which was established in November 2009 in response to earlier anti Islam activities of the church requested for the declaration of September 11th as interfaith solidarity day a request that was honored by mayor Craig Lowe the forum scheduled a gathering for peace understanding and hope at Trinity United Methodist Church on the day before the planned burning mayor Lowe referred to dove world as a tiny fringe group and an embarrassment to our community twenty local religious leaders gathered Thursday September 2nd 2010 to call for citizens to rally around Muslims in a time when so much venom is directed toward them topic Nacional shortly after the event was announced the National Association of Evangelicals recommended that the event be canceled the Southern Baptist Convention also spoke out against it the world Evangelical Alliance asks Muslim neighbors to recognize that the plans announced by a Florida group to burn copies of the Quran on September 11th do not represent the vast majority of Christians it dishonours the memory of those who died in the 9/11 attacks and further perpetuates unacceptable violence the event is broadly condemned by American religious leaders John Rankin president of the theological education institute in Connecticut has started a yes to the Bible no to the burning of the Koran effort also Jennifer Bryson is advocating Christian interfaith dialogue and Christian rejection of burna Quran Day Feisal Abdul Rauf the cleric behind the move to build a Muslim community center near Ground Zero park51 said that should the burning of Qurans have gone ahead it would have created a disaster in the Muslim world strengthened the radicals and enhanced the possibility of terrorist acts against America and American interests he also added that retracting the decision to build the mosque would send a wrong message that moving it is that the headline in the Muslim world will be Islam as under attack in America a group of American veterans of the war in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan wrote an open letter to the huffington post calling on the American public to respect the values we risked our lives to protect when citizens here participate in hateful rhetoric and intolerance toward Muslims it leaves soldiers over there exposed the letter concludes by asking America you gotta have our back US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said it's regrettable that a pastor in Gainesville Florida with a Church of no more than 50 people can make this outrageous and distressful disgraceful plan and get you know the world's attention she also said it doesn't in any way represent America or Americans or American government or American religious or political leadership and she emphasized the hope of the US government that the church would not go through with their plans US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates called Pastor Jones asking him not to go through with his Koran burning the US Embassy in Kabul issued a statement condemning the plans Robert Gibbs White House press secretary criticized the plans stating any type of activity like that that puts our troops in harm's way would be a concern to this administration the commander of the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan General David Petraeus said it is precisely the kind of action the Taliban uses and could cause significant problems not just here but everywhere in the world we are engaged with the Islamic community on the same day hundreds of Afghans protested in Kabul against the planned Koran burning event chanting death to America and throwing rocks at a passing military convoy military officials also expressed fears that the protests would spread to other cities military officers at the Pentagon consequently said they hoped the rare incursion into politics by a military commander would convince pastor Jones to cancel his plans the pastor responded to portray a statement that we understand the generals concerns we are sure that his concerns are legitimate nonetheless w/e must send a clear message to the radical element of Islam we will no longer be controlled and dominated by their fears and threats Republicans in Congress also criticized Jones and his plans House Minority Leader John Boehner said just because you have a right to do something in America does not mean it is the right thing to do former Alaska governor Sarah Palin also criticized Jones calling his plans insensitive and an unnecessary provocation and Republican 2008 presidential nominee John McCain and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell both argued that the actions of Jones put American troops overseas at risk former US President Barack Obama made a statement on ABC News regarding the event stating that what he is purposing to do is completely contrary to our values as Americans he added that Terry Jones's plan to burn the Koran will put American soldiers at risk David would disagreed with pastor Terry Jones attempts in the Koran burning and compared it to the Earthmen Koran burning one book distribution website sacred book source.com offered to give away 1,001 free qur'an's and 1,000 free Bibles for every Koran Jones destroyed topic international the German Evangelical Alliance formally dissociated itself from the proposed Koran burning because of the widely circulated report that in his time in Cologne Jones had been associated with the Evangelical Alliance the all Fallujah web forum threatened a bloody war against America in response to the burning of the Koran various other Muslims such as the Ahmadi Muslim community have argued that the Dove World Outreach Center is not following the true teachings of Christianity of tolerance and love they quote Jesus but I say unto you love your enemies bless them that curse you do good to them that hate you and pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you Gospel of Matthew chapter 5 verses 44 - 45 the head of the community Mirza Masroor Ahmad has stated that religious extremism be a Christian extremism Muslim extremism or any other kind is never a true reflection of the religion on August 27th approximately 100 people protested in Indonesia outside the US Embassy Roni ruslan of hizmet Tahrir which advocates Islamic law said no one will be able to control this reaction we urge the US government and Christian leaders to stop the crazy plan from this small sect it's an insult to Islam and to 1.5 billion Muslims around the world on September 4th thousands of Indonesians mostly Muslims took part in events across the country organized by his victory ur-rahman Labib chairman of the group called the planned book burning a provocation and predicted that Muslims would fight back should it take place liheap said that Muslims must not stay silent when their faith is threatened the world Evangelical Alliance condemned the plans to burn the Koran the Church of Jesus Christ of latter-day saints issued a statement declaring that a key tenet of our faith as to Accord everyone the freedom to worship as they choose it is regrettable that anyone would regard the burning of any scriptural text as a legitimate form of protest or disagreement the International humanist and ethical union was also critical of the plans to burn the Koran on Friday September 10th in the northern Afghan city of Faizabad thousands took part in a protest against the planned Koran burning following Edel fit our prayers violent demonstrators threw stones at a German controlled NATO base initial reports said troops inside opened fire killing up to three people and injuring several others but a local police official said that only local police not the NATO troops were involved in the shooting according to the acting police chief of Badakhshan the protesters broke down the first perimeter gate surrounding the base and beat Afghan security guards and police on duty with sticks before opening fire police allegedly fired warning shots and were also fired upon from the direction of the demonstrators said the police official a local police chief talking to the BBC gave his estimates of the number of protesters to around 1,500 but said that the incident that led to the shooting was a separate one with 150 people participating this official also said that private security guards were the ones who fired at the people who tried to force their way inside the base NATO has launched an investigation into the incident general Zaheer Khan of the Kabul police described Koran burning a thinly disguised pretext for anti-government rallies with the Taliban in attendance protest rallies were held in several other Afghan provinces numerous Kuna Nangarhar Parwan Bhagwan Kunduz bulk and Farah the Afghan President Hamid Karzai also spoke out against the burning of Qurans saying by burning the Koran they cannot harm it the Koran is in the hearts and minds of one and a half billion people insulting the Koran as an insult to Nations protests continued throughout the next two days with three protesters wounded on September 11th and 4 on September 12th as Afghan security forces shot into groups of protesters some armed with sticks or throwing stones to disperse them two died in hospital due to severe gunshot wounds on September 11th protests continued in the country when Afghan security forces fought back thousands of demonstrators for demonstrators were wounded by security forces firing when they tried to storm several government buildings in PU le Olam in Logar province they also hurled stones at such buildings as the Department for Women's Affairs in Badakhshan province another thousand people protested three separate districts though the police chief said it was peaceful the prominent Qatar based scholar yusuf al-qaradawi despite condemning the desecration said responding to an assault as not by carrying out another assault as this is discouraged in Islam moreover we as Muslims are required to show respect to and believe in the divinely revealed books and all preceding prophets if a person insults Jesus peace be upon him I as a Muslim should feel annoyed by this and act in his defense this is what happened upon the release of a film which attacked Jesus Muslims living in the country where the film was shown reacted angrily in protest we believe in and highly respect all prophets and messengers including Moses and Jesus peace be upon them all the noble Qur'an even goes further and forbids us from cursing the pagans idols saying and do not abuse those whom they call upon besides Allah lest exceeding the limits they should abuse Allah out of ignorance al and backquote m62 108 small rallies were reported in Pakistan in Karachi and the central Pakistani city molten with around 200 protesters there were also protests in Indonesia Gaza and India a non Muslim majority country on September 15th regarding reports that at least 20 deaths worldwide were connected to Quran desecration protests Randall Terry responded that such logic is like saying that a woman who is abused by her boyfriend or husband as guilty of bringing violence on herself because she said or did something that irritated him protests in Kashmir escalated over several days as Quran demonstrations quickly turned into separatist protests against the Indian government in the Muslim majority province on September 13th protesters defy the military imposed curfew setting fire to a Christian missionary school and government buildings at least 13 people were shot dead by police and one policeman was killed by a thrown rock at least 113 policemen and 45 protesters were wounded on September 12 a church was burned in a curfew instituted in Punjab violence also spread into punch in the Jammu division with three protesters shot by police protesters burned several government offices and vehicles police prevented the burning of a Christian school in punch and another in Mandar the next day in clashes leaving for protesters killed 19 wounded but dozens of government offices a police station and eight vehicles were burned as of September 16th the Hindustan Times placed the death toll at 90 blaming much of the risen mint on the indefinite military curfew the first in ten years to affect the entire Kashmir Valley in Somalia the al-qaeda inspired group Al Shabaab organized a protest rally against the Koran burning attended by thousands the head of Iran's Islamic culture and relations organization labeled the Koran burning proposal ax Zionist insult a group of Iranian students also protested outside the Swiss Embassy in Tehran to protest the desecration of the Koran and chanted slogans condemned the desecration on the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks the Iranian House of cartoon invited international artists to an online exhibition to condemn the desecration of the qur'an's on the theme of devil against holy books devil against human nature and Terry Jones more than 30 cartoons had been submitted from Iran Turkey Brazil Ukraine and other countries since the event was announced on September 13th while there would be no prizes the entries would be published at a later date foreign minister manoj air mataki called the proposal heinous at a joint press conference with his Malawian counterpart at abanda he also added that the stance of the Muslim world including the Islamic Republic of Iran is transparent condemnation of this heinous insulting and sacrilegious act by whomever perpetuated it we clearly see the hands of the Zionists behind all threats and provocative moves aimed to strain relations between the believers of various faiths this is exactly the sort of extremist move that seeks to realize their objectives through creating religious discord iran's ambassador to the united nations muhammad kaze said he had filed a complaint with the body to attract the international community's attention to Iran's stance and to warn against the serious repercussions of insulting the holy book of Muslims and hurting the religious feelings of more than one-fourth of the world's population he also condemned the actions as abhorrent Iran's Parliament Speaker Ali Larry Johnnie censured the u.s. for its apparent silence on the outrageous act of desecrating the Holy Koran urging the Muslim world to take swift action against it he added that the silence of those who beat the drums for freedom and democracy on the blasphemous decision has drawn the ire of freedom seeking humans and stirred international hatred of the US he also said the desecration of the Koran would be a brutal act that shows barbarism in the modern era while he concluded that such measures would undoubtedly hurt spiritual and religious feelings of millions of Muslims across the world as well as followers of all divine faiths and warned American legislators they should expect a harsh fate if they do not act wisely the parliaments presiding board member Mohamed deccan said that whenever Zionists want to cover up their atrocities in Palestine they try to trigger anti Islamic sentiments across the United States and the West to deflect global public attention from their brutalities against Palestinians he also criticized the Zionists for trying to paint a violent picture of Islam to discourage others from converting to Islam he went on to urge Muslims around the world to remain united to stop the recurrence of similar profane moves the head of the national security and foreign policy commission of parliament a laden borage ad said the u.s. police reluctance to react to such sacrilegious action indicates Washington's greenlight to such a heinous crime the US government should take serious action against the perpetrators of this provocative move and declare its stance on that regard grand ayatollahs Jose Nuri Hamid Ani and Nasser Muharram shirazi favoured the killing of Koran burners but that the permission of a religious judge was required in Iraq Grand Ayatollah Ali al-sistani cautioned people to show restraint labeling the act expression of hatred of Islam topic counter protests a hacker with nickname Iraq resistance posted a voice altered video to YouTube published under the Be Named IQ ëadd claiming to have released the here you have worm to demand respect for Islam blaming Terry Jones and saying I can smash all of those infected but I wouldn't the worm first discovered August 20th attacked organizations including NASA Walt Disney and the Florida Department of Transportation and produced spam that rose to ten percent of all email traffic on September 9th in South Africa on September 10th Johannesburg businessman Mohammed vada had announced his own intention to burn the Bible on September 11th in the Johannesburg CBD in response to D WOC zone announcement however an Islamic Lawyers Association scholars of the truth quickly intervened by filing an injunction against vada in court on the basis of opposition against burning any religious texts and judge Sita Colby of the South Gauteng High Court granted the injunction thus prohibiting vadas announced burning lawyer and scholars of the truth spokesperson Yasmine Omar who spearheaded the injunction with her husband Zaheer stated that the judge's ruling established that freedom of expression is not unlimited if one exercises freedom of expression that is harmful to others topic governmental reactions Canada Prime Minister Stephen Harper condemned the planned Koran burning in unequivocal terms and said my god and my Christ as a tolerant God and that's what we want to see in this world Cuba former President Fidel Castro called the planned book burning a huge media show after Jones called off the event Castro said it would be nice to know what the FBI agents who visited him said to persuade him France defense minister of a Morin said that the threatened Koran burning and a French ban on full-length Islamic veils enacted shortly afterward did not put French or NATO troops at increased risk when you are at the maximum you cannot go higher Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel said of the planned Florida event it is plainly disrespectful even abhorrent it's simply wrong Indonesia President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono warned in a televised speech that the plans to burn the Koran threatened world peace Iran supreme leader of iran ayatollah sayyed ali khamenei said all muslims hold the US government and their politicians accountable if the US government is sincere in its claims of not having been involved in this incident it must meet out a befitting punishment to the main perpetrators of this serious crime President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called the pl'anna Zionist plot that is against the teachings of all divine prophets Lebanon President Michel Suleiman denounced the plans adding that burning the Koran as a clear contradiction of the teachings of the three Abrahamic religions Christianity Islam and Judaism and of dialogue among the three faiths Pakistan's government strongly condemned the plan Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdul Basset told reporters this is against the spirit of any religion the government and the people of Pakistan including Pakistani Christians are outraged at this planned shameful act by a self-proclaimed pastor Palestine in Gaza Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh called Terry Jones a crazy priest who reflects a crazy Western attitude toward Islam and the Muslim nation United States President Barack Obama said I just want Jones to understand that this stunt that he is talking about pulling could greatly endanger our young men and women in uniform who are in Iraq who are in Afghanistan quote he also said that the planned event was being used as an al-qaeda recruitment tool and urged that the Koran burning be cancelled because it violated US principles of religious tolerance the president also expressed frustration that under the law nothing could be done other than citing the church under a local ordinance for public burnings Vatican City the Pontifical Council for inter-religious dialog issued a statement saying that the book burning would be an outrageous and grave gesture supranational bodies NATO Anders fo Rasmussen nATO Secretary General said that the church's plans would violate NATO's values and might have a negative impact on the security of its soldiers organization of the Islamic Conference expressed deep concern and alarm at the burnings United Nations secretary-general ban ki-moon said he was deeply disturbed adding that such a gesture would be intolerable by any religion topic media reactions some in the media attributed the event to silly season and sensationalism James Poniewozik of time gave a few reasons for media coverage of the event tiny groups of Fringe idiots often get coverage presumably because the vast majority of readers find them strange and different the event also happens to coincide with a seeming American Islamophobia and concern over the Ground Zero mosque he also added that this is unfortunately one of those cases in which by having become news the story is now making legitimate news slates David Weigel said reporters should ignore this idiot the title of his blog post on the controversy Jones gets to hold the country or at least the part of the country that pays attention to such news hostage with reporters getting the Secretary of State and our general in Afghanistan on the record to condemn this nobody instead of dying in obscurity heal daya has been good work ABC News Chris Cuomo wrote that the media gave life to this Florida burning and that was reckless Roger Simon a columnist for Politico responded to David Petraeus remarks saying the issue is not the images it is the acts both The Associated Press and Fox News stated their intention to ignore it other media reactions the conservative power line blog stated it was against the Koran burning but also said that what gives rise to this dilemma of course is the fanaticism of radical Muslims who have indeed responded violently to real or perceived slights to their religion John hinder acre a lawyer and freelance writer argued that perversely the crazier radical Muslims behave the more it benefits them those burning the qur'an's today it is burning Quran but the broader objective as to outlaw de facto any criticism of Islam another conservative writer Michelle Malkin echoed an article by Christopher Hitchens when Sheba moaned the eternal flame of Muslim outrage when everything from sneakers to stuffed animals to comics to frescoes to beauty queens to fast food packaging to undies serves as dry tinder for all his Avengers it's a grand farce to feign concern about the recruitment effect of a few burnt currents in the hands of a two-bit attention seeker in Florida a Facebook page support the pastor's plan got more than 16 thousand fans by eve of the event while fans opposing the event numbered in the hundreds of thousands topic actions against Dove World Outreach Center the Gainesville Fire Department refused to grant the church a burning permit regardless the church planned to proceed with the event despite the potential fine following the July 2010 announcement of the Koran burning the bank holding a $140,000 mortgage loan on the church property demanded immediate repayment of the balance and the property insurance was cancelled a lighted sign and an acrylic cross on the property were damaged by rocks on September 8th 2010 Rackspace the provider of web hosting service to the Dove World Outreach website disconnected the site citing a violation of their terms of use policy a spokesman for Rackspace told news media that the shutdown was not a constitutional issue it was a contract issue the city of Gainesville has said it would charge the church two hundred thousand dollars representing the cost of a security presence by the police department the Alachua County Sheriff's Office and some City Public Works employees the Alachua County Sheriff's Office estimated that it spent $100,000 on providing security to Jones and specifically assigned 160 of the 242 deputies on duty September 11th to police activities related to the planned burning topic death threats Jones said that he hoped the event would not lead to violence he said that he had been receiving death threats regularly since the event was announced evan coleman of flashpoint global partners a firm that tracks radical militant websites said that a suicide bomber had threatened to drive a truck into the church and others had discussed setting the building on fire though it was not known if the discussions were serious The Wall Street Journal quoted an individual calling himself Abudu Jonna from a jihadist web site now I wish to bomb myself in this church as revenge for the sake of Allah stock and here I register my name here that I want to be an intended martyr when death threats directed against Jones were mailed to the Gainesville Sun in a letter postmarked from Johnstown pas the American Muslim Association of North America issued a statement signed by 15 Imams including Ahmed Almeida we of the Islamic Center of Gainesville condemning the death threats during Jones's September 11th visit to New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said that police plan to keep a close tab on him for his own safety in March 2013 the al Qaeda english-language magazine inspire published a poster stating wanted dead or alive for crimes against Islam with a prominent image of Terry Jones topic other Quran desecration incidents within hours of Jones's cancellation announcement on September 9th Westboro Baptist church member Megan Roper announced via Twitter that the church would proceed with its own Koran burning ceremony her mother said she was angry that the media had not covered WBC's 2008 Koran burning similarly to its approach in 2010 Phelps announced his intention to burn the Koran and the doomed American flag at noon on September 11th subsequently doing so without incident Duncan filth of the Wyoming tyranny response team obtained a permit to protest outside the Wyoming State Capitol from 11 o'clock to 1300 on September 11th he expressed the intent to set a Quran on fire at noon or if the public burning was not permitted to tear up the Quran and move the pieces in a garbage can to a private business to be burned members of the local Unitarian Universalist Church planned a counter protest later the group described the exercise as a test of free speech and said they would take no action on state property in Pueblo West a Koran was bolted to a stop sign during the weekend of September 11 to 12 in Nashville evangelical pastor Bob old and another preacher burned a Koran with lighter fluid in a private yard a group of protestors came to his house but there were no confrontations he decided not to post the burning to YouTube in lower Manhattan protestors against the Ground Zero mosque took some actions against the Koran the latter who refused to identify himself was reported to have been escorted away to safety a few blocks away by police after burning a few pages he was subsequently recognized as a New Jersey Transit worker and was fired by the agency for violating a code of conduct despite being off duty while at a protest in New York this in turn has drawn criticism from New Jersey State Senator Raye Lesniak and the American Civil Liberties Union which said a person employed in a non policy related role cannot be fired for off the job political expression also in Texas on the 9th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks a group of protesters made up of Christians Muslims Buddhists and atheists gathered at Sam Houston Park in order to challenge the plan of evangelist David Grisham director of a Christian activist group to burn the Koran an activist named Isum took away the Quran from Grisham and he left the park Alex Stewart a research lawyer in Brisbane Australia purportedly rolled joints using pages from the Quran and the Bible and smoked them in a YouTube video the video was quickly removed from YouTube but many copies have since been posted and related links according to Michael cope president of the Queensland Council for civil liberties I don't think on the face of it that what he's done as an offence dot nor do we think it should be referring to the Queensland anti-discrimination Act Stuart was placed on leave from Queensland University of Technology where he worked by its vice-chancellor Peter Cole Drake pending a review under the university's code of conduct Cole Drake said the university is obviously extremely extremely unhappy and disappointed that this sort of incident should occur it may have occurred in the individuals private time or on a weekend it doesn't matter there is always in the community collateral damage to these sorts of things Stewart was returned to his job on September 22nd after he had apologized unreservedly for the nature of the incident with mainstream media sources pledging to limit coverage of Koran burning individuals took to YouTube a YouTube spokesperson indicated that they do not pre screen videos and generally responded to complaints about the issue by placing warnings about offensive material The Huffington Post questioned why the Koran burning story was treated as major news while many news outlets did not cover the prosecution of 12 soldiers for crimes including the premeditated murder of Afghan civilians possibly for sport and the keeping of body parts as trophies Heath rich burg a journalist for The Washington Post in Beijing said that professional journalists act as a filter on what information should be released or left out so that it does not hurt society and warns that digital media allows the role of media as a gatekeeper to be undermined American counterintelligence experts said that with no images of Quran burnings televised during the September 11th anniversary that violent anti-american protests in Muslim countries would soon fizzle a Koran was found shot and burned in the driveway of the UH Noor mosque in Knoxville Tennessee Knoxville Police and the FBI began investigating the incident as a possible civil rights violation a threat and the hate crime a YouTube video posted by a user Muslim Knoxville org showing the burning of a Koran stuffed with bacon and doused with lighter fluid was also being investigated though it was not immediately connected to the mosque according to Knoxville FBI Special Agent Richard L Lambert the fact that the burnt and shot Quran was placed on mosque property can be construed as a threat of force the issue comes down to determining what was the perpetrators intent federal charges were considered based on a 1968 law making it an offense to use force to prevent anyone from carrying out their religious beliefs state charges were also considered under Tennessee civil rights law prohibiting intimidation and misdemeanor offenses such as disorderly conduct were also explored in Michigan a burned Koran was found in front of the Islamic center of East Lansing local police and the FBI were called in to investigate - what will lead director of Michigan's Islamic Council chapter said this is no different than someone painting a swastika on the synagogue or burning a cross on a black church on September 21st the county prosecutor said the man who turned himself in for the incident would not face charges because the act was not a crime under Michigan's Criminal Code on the north side of Chicago Illinois a burned Koran and a letter were found on the sidewalk outside the Muslim community center over the September 11 to 12 weekend and were turned over to be investigated by Chicago Police bomb and arson unit topic cancellation postponement and aftermath on September 9th Jones announced the cancellation of the event and a plan to fly to New York to meet with the Imam of park51 Feisal Abdul Rauf in an interview on the morning of September 11th the day of the intended protest he said we will definitely not burn the Koran not today not ever despite the cancellation visiting protesters from both sides attempted to reach the rally but a heavy police presence dominated the area a visitor from Atlanta who attempted to burn a Koran had his book and lighter seized by police the world Evangelical Alliance later contacted Jones asking him to apologize for the planned Koran burning in a public statement he refused saying we will not repent for standing up for the gospel adding that Christian churches have lost their guts to stand up for Christianity but instead they bowed down to the political powers and the false doctrines of the nations as of October 22nd 2010 Jones collected a new car which was offered as a reward to Jones in a quirky radio ad by a New Jersey Hyundai dealership owned by former New York Giants Brad Benson if Jones did not burn Korans Jones said he did not learn of the reward until several weeks after canceling the burning on January 19th 2011 it was announced that Jones had been banned from entering the United Kingdom by the British Home Secretary Theresa May Jones had been invited to give a speech for a right-wing group England as ours in Milton Keynes you topic 2011 burning of the Quran on March 20th 2011 Dove World Outreach Center held a trial which they called international judged the Kuran day Jones played the part of a judge wearing traditional robes the Quran was placed on trial for six hours charging it with responsibility for violence at the end of the trial the jury found the Quran guilty of all charges and sentenced to burning pastor Wayne Sapp then executed the Quran by burning it Jones saw the permit in April 2011 to hold a rally at the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn Michigan a jury sided with prosecutors ruling that Jones and Sapp would breach the peace judge Marc summers set the bond for each man at $1 which they refused to pay summers remanded them to jail Jones was barred from the area of the mosque for three years on November 11th 2011 Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Robert Ziolkowski vacated the breach of peace ruling against Terry Jones and Wayne Sapp on the grounds that they were denied due process both men's criminal records have since been expunged topic reactions on March 24th Hamid Karzai President of Afghanistan publicly condemned the act some diplomats believed that most Afghans learned of the incident through Karzai's announcement on April 2nd crowds chanted death to Karzai as well as death to America after a sermon on April 1st in the city's main mosque at least 12 people were killed by angry demonstrators in mazar-i-sharif Afghanistan including five Nepalese security guards and three other members of staff working for the United Nations assistance mission in Afghanistan UNAMA Jones denied responsibility Hajj walk Afghan news reported that the dead included Norwegian Romanian and Swedish nationals two of them decapitated BBC quoted police General Abdul Rafa Taaj as saying that according to the initial reports none were beheaded and that they were shot in the head up to 2,000 protesters took to the streets on April 2nd in Kandahar chanting anti us slogans the protesters burned several vehicles and hurled stones at police who were trying to control the mob they also torched a girl's high school and burned down a school bus in the center of the city security forces killed 9 protesters and injured 73 smaller protests occurred in other cities the Gambian government has called for the arrest of terry jones ed Brima oka mara the secretary-general and head of the civil service described the burning as heinous and asked for prosecution to proceed as soon as possible an affiliate website of Iran's revolution guard cyber defense command quoted a report by the newspaper vatan a.m. Rouge that claimed Iranian border patrols were burning copies of smuggled Bibles in Iran on March 25th 2011 the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations Mohamed kaze condemned the burning and called for jones's prosecution in southern Lebanon students protested peacefully with Shia Sheikh Hassan alzeid outside the Lebanese International University to construct the largest Quran on earth weighing 100 kilogram Lebanese Shia militant group Hezbollah has put a 2.4 million dollars bounty on the head of pastor Terry Jones according to the FBI on March 22nd 2011 Pakistanis protested in the Punjab Christian neighbourhoods and burned tires in front of a church on March 22nd 2011 amir hamza the leader of Pakistan's banned Islamic organization jamaat-ud-dawa issued a 2.2 million dollars fatwa for anyone who kills pastor Terry Jones on March 25th 2011 protests erupted in Pakistan where the Jamiat ulema Islam organized vents wide protests including a road blockage and burnings of effigies and American flags in the province of Sindh a man desecrated the Bible at the gates of st. Anthony's Catholic Church in Lahore to avenge Jones desecration of the Koran in Florida he was arrested by Pakistani police the president of the Pakistani Bishops Conference His Excellency Lawrence saldanha who currently serves as the metropolitan Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lahore called for the arrest of Jones saldanha said Jones burning of the Koran has caused scandal and fury in the Muslim world and the deaths of more than 20 people archbishop saldanha said the US government should detain Jones a South African Islamic organization called scholars for truth turned to the country's courts to prevent a fellow Muslim from burning Bibles in retaliation to threats by Jones to burn the Koran United States President Barack Obama strongly condemned both the Koran burning calling it an act of extreme intolerance and bigotry and the outrageous attacks by protesters referring to them as an affront to human decency and dignity no religion tolerates the slaughter and beheading of innocent people and there is no justification for such a dishonorable and deplorable act u.s. legislators including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid also condemned both the burning and the subsequent violence General David Petraeus said this was a surprise and that action was hateful it was intolerant on the 4th of April 2011 two US soldiers were shot and killed by an Afghan policeman in an attack that was attributed to his anger over the burning of the Koran the attacker was later killed in a shootout with NATO troops the attacker has been called a hero and a martyr by some of the local community with his grave becoming an unofficial shrine and local mosques being named after him however at least one local cleric has stated that the attack could not be justified on religious grounds topic see also 2008 Eucharist incident 2012 Afghanistan Koran burning protests book burning criticism of Islam freedom of speech in the United States Islamophobia Quran desecration controversy of 2005 | wikipedia tts | UCuKfABj2eGyjH3ntPxp4YeQ | 2019-06-16 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,807 | 46,767 |
ZcX6e_88tgU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcX6e_88tgU | Let's Play Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Duel Academy Part 55 - Exodia Obliterate! | all right let's do this [Music] yes [Music] let's play Yu-Gi-Oh GX duplicate [Music] sitting by the ocean fishing for fun I mean class making new friends new foes all together [Music] and Yu-Gi-Oh GX Academy all right and today I decided you know what we're gonna do so in between episodes I edited my deck but let's uh it's night time right oh no tomorrow's Sunday okay let's use the piggy [Music] is I wish I wasn't about doing the time duels tomorrow is Sunday okay there we go due time [Music] so yeah we've only made it to 47 of these Let's uh what time are we at we're at 2 16. Yep this episode I think we're gonna do majority time doors if I get stuck or whatever then uh okay offerings to the Doom okay red eyes darkness dragon this thing out pretty cool pretty cool we got Manju Manju solo Purity and light member ship the dark beam so obviously we need to take uh the original car from our deck [Music] okay and I'm assuming we just it seems this one seems pretty straightforward I'm assuming we have to Ritual some in here [Music] yes he has 6900 points so let's offer Manchu and Manju side [Music] being it's funny I actually uh just started my let's play a ship of or did you say it rashif or a rest Chef uh either way I just started my let's play this game which you can launch on this channel which is uh uh uh uh Yu-Gi-Oh oh yeah what's the name of it it's uh it's the one with a ship on the front too oh dude oh is it oh yeah is it just a sheriff of Destruction I think so anyway let's activate this effect I forgot what it does but uh discard all right gain control yeah that's pretty good okay yoink and then we just attack with everything right I mean I don't see any other way to do 6900 points of damage okay 25 nice and 24 red eyes Darkness Dragon so there we go pretty easy puzzle pretty easy one straightforward just gotta get your ritual out and use its effects okay [Music] oh yeah how's the volume by the way me let me turn up the volume but the volume's a little low Anna actually you know what I know what it is okay let's crank up the volume a little bit let's go times two [Music] yeah and I'll edit it from there on the TV there we go that always sound better for you guys sorry for the headphone users of the seven Spike but uh all right koala and zoa okay hot or generosity I would say it ain't so can we have metal more [Music] here what a terrible card but we actually need it so [Music] um just a little bit [Music] [Applause] okay I think [Music] that I'm assuming we just have metal mark down here yeah I didn't even bother a [ __ ] but we do more just attack whatever no we do have limited foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] the dark one this one might be more challenging Elite attack but the moon okay karibo blue eyes susky Samurai this automatically takes out a defense monster right details um even you use Sasuke to take out blue eyes element dragon FX when it destroyed a mushroom metal it can attack once again you are wind okay so we can get an extra 15 with that wait wait do we need it to be to be the fire effect too I'm guessing we just need it to be the fire effect too because with great Angus um believe it or not we'll have 500 extra damage this card will do [Music] blue eyes and try this out all right down you go Blue [Music] right take it out [Music] the Dragon [Music] and I'm guessing we use win win yep attack again nice [Music] 1900 perfect we nailed it we nailed it at 222 all right these are going pretty well let's go 51 giant rat horserader Casita Spirit okay I'm guessing there's something on the deck we need uh uh girl why those radiant's also in the deck [Music] School Union monsters tiger wait what's in the sand what's in the sand ah good thing I checked that okay so what we need to do [Applause] is Cheer upon a slight Point straight do I even need to use the Union because zombie tiger will let me think about my list radio let me let me [Music] do I need to connect you with the Union [Music] tiger takes out or [Music] she seems to be a direct attack right on this card attacks your opponent's life points directly ah okay so we do not need um yeah because he's only got 800 likes so giant rat Crush pretty unique puzzle from here is the Rebo I think so [Music] I just remember he has kushigo Spirit left me oh this isn't gonna work is it because she knows spirit [Applause] okay we've gotta start over whoa wait let me just try this this shouldn't work though I think we've got to start over [Music] okay okay so I need to get over 1900 [Music] . I forgot about sphere I forgot okay so let's go with another [Music] one I guess you do need to use the union effects so [Music] your attacks aren't equal strange [Applause] [Music] oh yeah it does Boost decade Commander I forgot about that okay by five minutes alrighty my bad zombie tiger I shouldn't have ignored you okay [Music] mindless Arabian [Music] Trader will be destroyed [Music] and we discarded kuribo because of this effect I think and a monster destroys one of your opponent's monsters one card's randomly discarded there you go all right let's read it for the for the not laughs all right 52 let's go right standby face uh what do we got here Ring Of Destruction do we have anything about 1900 first hmm okay and there's also swords what's he got based down here what you get face down buddy [Music] [Applause] [Music] break perfect so by removing removing spill counter I can destroy this lower trap destroy chaos first so we don't tie then we I think you can even attack here you don't need swords necessarily so uh Zera attacks this and it's a fish should uh place the counter on a breaker right [Music] pretty sure that's how this works nice yeah you don't even need swords okay [Music] easy easy puzzle all right Victory you just have to know I'll break for the Magical Warrior works okay 3200 for our opponent here lightning blade curse of Aging oh okay to Dragon zombie zombie and burst again [Applause] his effort this only works on uh but tells it gonna attack twice someone works on traps right okay and we have 1300 so obviously we can afford to uh take the damage well then again we have rings ring too um [Music] Plaza um with uh lightning blade to maximize the damage [Music] order to take five with chain burst so I'm assuming we use persevere Garden too [Music] I'm guessing Ring's a bluff yeah see now we're down to 300 but his zombies are down to 11 each so I'm not sure what the other solution would be [Music] goes down so how much life will you be at is that enough it is just okay we did it right cool yeah I was gonna already say I think Traders already here in there so and so is Ring Of Destruction you just don't have enough light points to do it okay 54. if they drop Nobles ooh that's awesome so with this weekend uh uh yeah especially some of anything from the deck can't hand deck or Fusion deck oh we have cyberstime too wow marshmallon okay no ancient beer go alone [Music] [Applause] interesting [Music] but these aren't properly summoning are they I think that's the issue I guess we'll cyberstein first see we'll see what we can do uh he has six thousand so okay okay Cyber End Dragon seems like they're calling here and [Music] then [Music] the ultimate ultimate [Applause] ultimately [Music] drove Nobles is a trick it's a trick don't do it two monsters I almost forgot aging your Golem has piercing yeah there we go two piercing monsters [Music] and then oh my cyber and dragon triple strident blast destroy that marshmallon easy piercing monsters are good all right 55. and I'm actually going to save State here just in case anything happens with the recording let's go for [Music] this was done on the 11th of 2022 let's do this slot one okay what do we got here Creator incarnate oh man the Creator is so cool I've always liked it as a monster uh [Music] okay we do have the Creator the zoo premature perio wow we've got some stuff uh [Music] wait what no no we don't offer two is tribute or Dooley I mean what what good is marshmallow gonna do here but no no we need our normal summon I'm assuming so [Music] on Twitter burial [Music] I guess we'll revive uh in Kearney [Music] all right so we'll send uh we'll oh this is to revive okay okay so we're driving carne Scar from our hand discard the zoo I guess so we can always bring it back on premature burial which are burial targeting [Music] [Applause] the extra three that's why bazoos here okay [Music] [Applause] [Music] maybe you need bazoo to destroy this yeah first I don't know yeah we might be missing out on 300 bet a Creator attack oh it looks so cool it looks so cool marshmallon [Music] from and curse short by 100 [Music] puzzles a little trick tricks glance so hmm okay short by a hundred okay there has to be a combo I'm not thinking of here hmm maybe you do trip to Tribute Maybe maybe you do [Music] because well I'm thinking if you too tribute you can get more for Bazoo 500. let me think about this okay so yeah let's let's try two tributing here just to get marshmallow in the grave so we too tribute we premature marry old something you're burial for incarnate [Music] equal 39. crap crap I messed up I messed that up let's uh [Music] I think we've got it though I think we've got it though so what we want to do is two tribute again don't use the effects of Incarnate it's funny that a car needs a trap in this uh puzzle but yeah we actually want to activate the effect sending the zoo so we target them Kearney [Applause] [Music] so what this card will do of course that will that was all to get work [Music] put your berries [Music] I'm out of attack [Applause] [Music] yeah game 600. [Applause] so all right but do having 22 yeah now we can get past [Music] basketball kind of a jerky [Music] everyone and the regular get them yeah [Music] slightly trick you know slightly tricky one all right and what time are we at okay well just in case my phone set s we get a really tough puzzle I can't figure out let's go state two all right 56 a lot of cards in hand uh but they're down to 1500 points what's this marshmallon they love marshmallon I'm guessing I need the used go tattoo here I mean I don't even know what equips in Our Deck but uh oh oh he black pinned it for the burn damage [Music] another black pendant okay oh we have gear 3D iron okay this is puzzles pretty [Music] I activate blackpink we'll talk at my gear free damn [Music] supx automatically destroys cars that equipped to them I could have some of the marauding captains and uh wait wait wait wait wait I think there's more than one way to do this puzzle puzzles this can benefit vanish right Beauty Warrior light machine this is the only way to do this puzzle you want to know why marshmallow is face down which means it's uh it's effect that when it's face down inflicts a thousand will stop you from using the Warrior by the uh Tricky Tricky Tricky but luckily I picked the right equip Target I just shotgunned it okay Escape tribute to the dunes okay oh we might need Escape Builder here for Amazon Archer twice wow actually Amazon Archer twice wins us the game okay this is the most BM way to win and attribute to the our own marauding captain [Applause] wow nope activate scapegoat [Music] it's crazy [Music] man what are these face Downs just so I know Millennium Shield okay yeah so this is literally the only way to do this stool Archer effect tribute and another pretty herself all right pretty easy puzzle all right [Music] uh what's this field spell oh luminous spark I'm guessing we need to take that out maybe not let's go else points are lower uh he's down to 21. okay [Music] so our Dream Soldier can take out mystical elf right now so we gotta get past that's really the only problem if a mouse with a dark monster gets five copycad interesting so I think all we have to do is hang on because he's down to 21 right wow this puzzle is [Music] actually a little a soldier no I won't change yeah it's got 2600 what the heck dude this is too easy thank you I think it's in life the first two puzzles [Music] was way too easy or dark elf uh you can't even afford for to play Dark Hill yeah MST and heavy storm here are red herrings double check the stats and you're good wow pretty easy all right so we gotta try to get to six so let me go to state three just in case [Music] 1400 oh well you're going give us that directly so that's sure wound what is in the graveyard mermaid my mermaid night could attack twice with Umi hmm big koala what is this face down earphones whoa so we get past [Music] oh we don't worry about mirror Force [Music] premature bear we figured it out [Music] um trivia turtle it has to be it because he has mirror Force when we don't [Music] [Applause] [Music] fire itself nice yep pretty easy puzzle pretty easy all right number 16 this is how to be tough oh my God three ultimate dragons okay wait we have Exodia wait um last piece in our deck is the last two pieces are in our deck [Applause] Soldier it's my good old buddy penguin soldier Okay I think I've got this solution so we set taiyu this is very key hard destruction draw the last two pieces and we went with Exodia so hey return the arm to my hand and now we [Music] filter effect we just have to [Music] let the ceiling all of them get to see the animation obliterate oh that was so cool dude dude that was so cool oh I'm so glad they put the animation in there for that puzzle too oh my God we got the show Exodia in this game dude that is vulgar bro definitely gonna say extinct to that okay guys Sonia is Anime not only in this game but this episode [Music] with that at all we're definitely gonna see that and I hope puzzles would say you all right man definitely gonna upload that Exodia obliterate clip too on the shorts so uh yeah that was awesome thanks guys for joining me you guys all I have the biggest grin on my face [Music] and have a good day oh I lost some Exodia [Music] nice all right you know what I might do that puzzle again just for a funny clip I can think of you know Exodia yeah yeah there are so many Clips I could think of to do like or even the my grandpa's deck has no prophetic cards kaibo but it does contain the Unstoppable Exodia yeah that'd be that'd be pretty cool to show in this game I'll like on a small flip got some ideas for videos all right thanks for watching guys I'll see you all they enjoyed the episode | floodinmon14 | UCOCsB-DUtOSO9oRTCD5i98w | 2023-05-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,783 | 14,394 |
JJmG83VTxYY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJmG83VTxYY | Lunch and Learn Workshop: Information Intermediation and Instruction MLIS Pathway | all right hi everyone i'm karen welcome to our information intermediation and instruction q a with our lovely advisors this is part of our pathway series introducing the different mlis career pathways where you will get an inside perspective from instructors and guests who have worked in specific fields today we'll be talking about skill sets that prepare students for work and reference instructional design and related information settings so let's get started with our agenda today's agenda consists of finding out what is information intermediation and instruction pathway which courses students should consider how do students use the skill set and information work and then we'll meet faculty and staff with expertise in this area who have made themselves available to answer your advising questions so what is information intermediation and instruction well it is about understanding how to help users define and articulate their information needs by using skills such as communication retrieval techniques evaluating sources and services effective leadership and management skills and instructor users you might want to focus on designing tools to enhance clients information literacy skills here is a list of core knowledge that students pursuing the pathway should be building for a career in this area such as research methodologies and evolution of information services and the core values held by information service providers these can be found on the ischool mlis career pathway for information intermediation and instruction additional information on standards for these skills is available on the association of college and research libraries and reference and user services association websites please take a look at what is in the yellow foundational and recommended courses such as info 282 with the topic on change management and info 220 with the topic on psychology of the information user data librarianship can be found on our mlis website under this pathway if you're interested in this pathway along with other pathways there is a great tool on our ischool advising toolkit website that allows you to see which courses different pathways have in common this tool is called mlis career pathways compare courses in common and here is sheila great so we're going to talk about information intermediation and instruction jobs that cross a variety of library and non-library environments and i really highly recommend that everyone download our mlis skills at work report which is actually available from the home page of our website it was just released not too long ago and there are many tips about the information intermediation and instruction job landscape which could be found inside this report and some of the career environments are listed on the slide here where you would find specific information about working with information and remediation and instruction in those different types of environments now many of the most in demand skills in library information science are part of the information intermediation and instruction skill set both the soft skills and the library and information science skills so inside the report on pages 11 and 12 you will see that many of the most in demand skills are are from this pathway including soft skills such as communication collaboration interpersonal organization skills but also lis skills such as technology training research customer service and here are just a few job titles that you will find that relate to this skill set including of course reference librarianship in many types of different libraries student success and outreach librarians in the academic library library instructors database trainers data services librarians and information brokers and then on the right hand side of the slide are some applied skills from job descriptions that i had pulled out for example this one was asking for someone to train law students and others in the use of legal materials and databases through extensive classroom teaching leading of tours and one-on-one instruction another job was asking for someone to do research analysis of user needs preferences objectives and working methods and how users consume content including data categorization and labeling another was seeking out to seek out and develop opportunities to offer instruction and scholarship support with digital fabrication and multimedia services so i highly recommend taking a look at our mlis skills at work report for very specific ideas about what you would be doing in these different positions on this next slide i retrieved an example of a corporate instructional design position description which had an annual salary of 89 000 and i wanted to point out that there are some highlighted skills that really dovetail well with some of the lis skill areas that you can be building in our program if you're following the information intermediation and instruction pathway so i highlighted some that i saw here advanced knowledge of instructional design and digital learning tools they were looking for someone comfortable in a fast-paced environment with multiple deadlines and shifting priorities sounds like ischool they were looking for specific skills i called out here they were looking for someone who who knew evolve articulate captivate powerpoint adobe ces and camtasia studio they were looking for somebody who could develop learning concepts through audio video role plays games so there are a lot of skills here that we can see come can come directly from the information intermediation and instruction courses at ischool um you can also create job alerts on resources such as indeed.com or other job search aggregators with keywords so that you can begin to see what types of positions even in non-library settings might be available in your area now these are just a few that came up in the san francisco bay area when i search for positions with the information intermediation and instruction skill set so you can see there was a senior trainer position for customer success there was a peoplesoft trainer curriculum developer for a consulting company peoplesoft is a database you know that we use at san jose state there was an instructional designer position that was a remote position an engagement project delivery manager in within higher education for work day there was a product trainer and evangelist support position and there was a curriculum design and training manager which was also a remote position and finally i wanted to point out that linkedin is can also be another great source of information when you're trying to analyze what could be available using these library information science skill set from information intermediation and instruction so if you want to see where other ischool alumni are working in this pathway you can do some searching through linkedin here's one example greta snyder who who wrote for the ischool career blog and was involved with ischool student research journal found a position as an e-learning specialist in the private sector after she completed her mlis here so instead of working in an academic library she's putting her skills to use working for a company that's an assistive technology provider for the visually impaired and you can take a look at her profile and some of the skills that she's called out in her linkedin profile for this position and they really do match up with the information skills that are learned following this pathway so it's a real treat now for us to open up the floor you're going to have an opportunity to hear from three speakers on our panel they're all experts in this pathway within library and information science we have two of our faculty advisors and our own director of online learning and first they are going to introduce themselves and let you know a bit more about their background and their background and their journey through this pathway and the skills that they feel are important as well as some a little bit about the courses that they teach and then at the end we'll be opening it up to q a for any of your questions so first off is dr aguinyaga hello there everyone jose aguniaga i joined the high school back in spring of 2020 and since that time as you might imagine it's been a interesting teaching and learning experience for everyone involved i'm teaching info 210 reference and information services but before i got to san jose state as a lecturer let me give you a little background as to how i got here i began my career hard to believe back in 1994 at the university of houston as a social sciences reference librarian during that time at houston wonderful place to work in and it's a great city i learned many things i also was prompted to assume the interim role of human resources coordinator for the library so talk about a learning opportunity and an experience to uh really pick up on many new skills the soft skills that were just mentioned that were needed at many times after houston i transitioned to my alma mater at university of san diego and i was once again back in the library but this time as a reference librarian but overseeing at that time the cd-rom collection for online databases as you might imagine and we transitioned from cd-rom format to the world wide web that also taught me many skills more specifically dealing with vendors and how to get the the best option for for the university and the students after that period i transitioned back to arizona and i was at arizona state university west campus once again in the world of social sciences reference librarian but also involved with web usability database oversight and other interesting projects within the asu community arizona state community and then guess what i've transitioned back to california this time to california state university long beach and i was there for about a four year period and what i did there was once again social sciences referenced librarians specifying in education criminal justice and social work um those experiences were quite valuable but the interesting part about being at cal state long beach but my last year there i participated in a program and i was chosen to be a faculty advisor but in the residence halls so i lived in the dormitories with my wife and as you might imagine that really opened my mind and my my knowledge base regarding students that live on campus and how to provide library services to students on campus that was a valuable experience i also became the union rep for the library that also taught me some interesting aspects about the shared governance process if you're going to pursue an academic career so having said all of that while i was at cal state long beach i decided to pursue a second masters and that was in public administration i completed my studies but i was so intrigued by the the content of public administration that i decided i'm going to apply for a doctoral program i applied for various universities and i was accepted at arizona state university so that meant my wife and i would be transitioning back to arizona and we did that i joined glendale community college in order to sustain the a lifestyle and pay the bills by joining glendale community college that opened a new avenue for me and for the past 16 years i've been with community colleges majority of that time has with has been with glendale as a reference librarian but also participating in many aspects within the shared governance process of glendale community college in arizona i became a faculty senator and after serving two three terms as senator i was prompted to run for faculty senate president i was the first librarian to be running for faculty senate president and to be elected that in itself opened a new avenue to understanding the administrative side and the faculty side of many issues that was a quite valuable experience besides being a reference librarian i also in my entire career i've provided instruction instruction is a key asset and a valuable skill to have to share that knowledge with students with faculty even with visitors that just come in and they want to use the library my current position with glendale i'm at the north campus i've been at the north campus which is about 10 miles away from the main campus and we have a separate library there i oversee that library and work with the information technology staff regarding that facility and also the services that we provide to students at the north campus and that's sort of the the quick summary of my career path but just to add a few other elements i've also been involved with the american library association on various committees i served on ala council for a three-year period i'm also heavily involved with acrl the association of college and research libraries i've been on various committees very various task forces and that keeps me engaged in giving back to my profession and to your profession in the near future if you choose the academic path so i would encourage your participation and getting involved whether it's at the local level state level or national level last but not least the skills once again the soft skills they make a big difference in developing those relationships with your new partners that you're going to have whether in the public library setting academic setting or even a special library setting and last but not least my wife who i met in library school yes she's also a librarian but here's talk about a pathway she began as a children's librarian she did that for about 15 years and the last 15 years she's been a medical librarian talk about a transition having those soft skills having the reference skills the technology skills can assist you in whichever path you want to pursue so we we live an interesting life in two different worlds academic and medical so that's just a little bit about me i look forward to your questions thank you oh wonderful before we move to our next speaker i just wanted to ask um did you have any little tidbits you wanted to share about your class your info 210 class maybe some of the projects or activities that students who would be interested in taking info 210 might be doing in your class dr aguinyaka yes sheila thank you for the reminder that is that is important info 210 just to give you the the read down it's an overview of the type of reference services that are available whether you're you want to you're interested in the academic path uh school librarian path public librarian path and even special library path there are various assignments um the big project the project assignment that's what we call it gives you the opportunity to choose a project not just the standard i'm going to submit a 10-page paper page paper no you have that option but you can also participate if you're interested in incarcerated librarianship we have a great relationship with san francisco public library and they have a program for eight weeks you could be part of that and that can become your project assignment and that you will be answering actual reference questions from the incarcerated population in san francisco they will guide you through the process but you will see interaction which is all through a communication written process but that's one one of the projects you can also do a video you can do a podcast you can do instructional videos on various tools that as a future librarian you would be teaching others so that's there are many pathways as to what your big project can be throughout the 16 weeks if you take it in the fall or spring currently i'm teaching it in the summer which is a condensed version in 10 weeks we will also have discussions weekly discussion there'll be a weekly discussion question there will be opportunities to do some search activities which consists of various examples of type of questions that you'll be asked to resolve and these questions mostly will be relying on online resources so it's it's a quick overview but it gives you a good feeling if reference will be the pathway you want to pursue and in which which road you want to follow on academic public school or special and if you have other questions regarding the course feel free to ask whether now or later on you will have my contact information i'd be more than happy to provide more insights thank you so much that was a wonderful overview and now we're going to pass over um the mic to dr loa so she's here to talk to you about her uh specialty area and and especially information about info 285 right thank you sheila hi everyone i hope you can all hear me and thank you for the opportunity to be here and to talk to you about my experience with information intermediation instruction as well as research methods i'm currently a full professor at the ischool and i joined high school in 2007 so it's been 14 years already and when i first started i primarily taught info 210 and referencing information services and research methods but in the past few years my focus has shifted exclusively to research methods still referencing information services remains a big part in my heart and professionally right now i serve as the chair of the program advisory committee at our school for the information intermediation and instruction career pathway and jose is a member of the committee and the committee consists of experts inside and outside of our school in areas related to information intermediation and instruction we need once every semester to look at the course offerings for the pathway to look at a potential job opportunities for the pathway and then the committee members would get together and share their observations regarding the trends in the pathway and make suggestions to refine the information on the career pathway page to make sure that everything is up to date and on the pathway to reflect what's going on currently in the professional practice so because of that even though i don't teach 210 anymore i still get to stay connected with all the experts and practitioners in an information intermediate and instruction related field um in the meantime i am an instructor for the institute for research design in librarianship which is a federally funded program that offers a professional development on research methods for academic and research librarians every year we have a group of academic and the research librarians participate in the program going through the training to improve their skills in conducting research and in disseminating their research findings and a lot of those librarians as you can imagine they come from information incommunication and instruction related areas such as reference librarians and subject librarians liaison librarians you know the job titles that sheila and showed you earlier and so it's wonderful just to um stay connected with the professionals to observe them to ch and chat with them to learn from them about their practice and their skill sets and that are important and for them to complete their job responsibilities and i i have to say the things that highlighted in schilla science and absolutely echo what i i have observed in the field when i interact with professionals in information and information communication and instruction related areas and i do notice that research skills research knowledge the capability to conduct research to understand user needs to understand um an instruction to understand the uh and how to better design education programs to to train and to deliver training to use research as a way to generate ideas for those and that's a key skill and highlighted in the um the skill sets for students in or for people pursuing this career pathway it's really not surprising to see that and it's also comforting to see that because i teach research methods i i am the course coordinator for our required research method course info 285 applied research methods currently i teach personally i teach three topics in this curriculum and as you probably have already noticed at our school info 285 the applied research methods curriculum is set up a little different from a lot of other um library programs because they tend to offer just one general introduction course on research methods but here at our school we offer a wide variety of research methods related topics in this curriculum some of the topics focus on a particular type of research for instance i myself teach and of course exclu exclusively focusing on just the survey research method and then another new course focusing on unobtrusive research i just started that this summer and some other topics focus on a particular type of library and information and practice um where research and research methods and can be applied for instance i teach one course focusing on academic librarianship how academic librarians use the research methods to conduct original research and to disseminate their research findings to improve practice and we have colleagues that teach courses focusing on youth librarianship to look at research methods youth librarians may apply in their particular professional settings so we do have a wide variety of offerings when it comes to the applied research and methods and info 285 course i'd like to share with you the top topics page for info 285 and to walk you through the offerings and focus on the the courses the info 285 sections that you might find useful and if you are interested in pursuing and the career pathway on information intermediation and instruction so let me share with you the uh this screen so this is the page on the course website um i mean on the school website that demonstrates the and the the different topics for info 285 and we do have a general overview course focusing on general introduction of the research methods and this is really good for people who are still a little vague in terms of what they want to pursue so they can just pick a general an overview section of the research methods and curriculum and then for those who are interested in becoming youth librarians we have one focusing on youth youth services so this one about evaluating programs and services i would definitely recommend this one and to students or that are interested in information intermediation and instruction because program evaluation service evaluation is can be a big part of the job responsibilities really in related domains and i did notice that program evaluation being able to evaluate programs and services is one of the skills in highlighted in ensuring slides so this can be a good choice and the the one that i teach myself researching academic collaboration and as you probably have already noticed information in intermediation and instruction a lot of the job opportunities do reside in academic library libraries no liaison librarians subject librarians information and literacy coordinators these are all job titles related to the career pathway that are in academic libraries so if you're interested you can also choose this particular section focusing on researching academic academic librarianship and then action research is a good choice as well because action research ultimately helps you produce this actual actions based on the research and this can be very um practical no matter which career pathway you're interested in you will be learning very valuable methods in conducting research and producing actions based on the research and doing research online and especially for those of you who are interested in engaging in primarily like e-learning or remote work then this could be a good option and historical research in writing and this one and this other one about records management and archival science these two topics could be good for those of you who might want to work in archives or special collections and then i teach one that focuses on survey research because survey is one of the most frequently used research methods adopted by um libraries librarians when they're conducting research um this is this can be applicable for for pretty much um all the potential pathways because survey is so frequently used uh we also have a couple of new sections um jason started teaching a 285 course focusing on technology management two years ago and looking at how research methods can be applied in looking at examining technology related topics and the one that i just started teaching and this summer is about unobtrusive research methods how we could use research methods to look at existing content and data without having to impose ourselves as researchers on human subjects for data collection for instance we can look at um like facebook postings tweets and and other types of existing content to engage in a rigorous analysis to look at the trends and patterns or conduct statistical analysis of existing data so we can just access and identify existing data and content for analysis we don't have to worry about gathering the data using focus group interviews or survey questionnaires and that's why it's called unobtrusive research methods so that's a very quick overview of the various types of uh um possibilities for you when it comes to choosing the 285 section that could help you whether you're interested in the information intermediation the instruction um pathway i'm going to stop sharing now and just so you know i'm the course coordinator for 285 so i and do know the curriculum very well if you have any questions regarding picking the 285 section and that's right for you please don't hesitate to reach out to me and ask any questions that's that's it from me i want to say thank you so much for taking um for walking us through that um explanation of info 285 that's very valuable so thank you very much and then i get to introduce bethany winslow who is our director of online learning for ischool and she has a fascinating um background and and areas that she's going to share with us now so thanks take it away bethany great thank you so much for that introduction hello everyone i am the director of online learning here and i am so excited to speak to you guys today because i really do love the field of instructional design and it's a great career in the information intermediation and instruction path and being an instructional designer is still the foundation of my work here and it's part of my professional identity before i came to the school of information i worked as an instructional designer at ecampus that's the department that serves all of san jose state university with managing the learning management system and working with different faculty across campus to design or redesign their courses and integrate technologies with their teaching and before that i worked as an instructional designer for a private company that helped schools across the country to launch their online programs and that served a range of students working with students from vocational schools uh to undergraduates up to graduate level programs at uh four-year institutions like san jose state and in the course of my work i've really seen a a really big overlap with lis professionals and instructional designers because very broadly speaking we're both working to achieve the very same ends and that is to make usable information accessible to everyone and in today's world with such large volumes of information that's subject to change very quickly the uh skills to be able to analyze organize and present that information in different ways to different end users is i think a really critical skill so i think this is a very compelling career path and there's multiple ways in which you could end up there i can't possibly cover all that i've met instructional designers who come from all sorts of backgrounds from teaching technical writing web design sales and marketing and there's all sorts of undergraduate or graduate degree programs too that lead to this path it's it's not there's not just one road the skill set is so broad and it's evolving constantly but what every instructional designer that i know what we share in common i think is first of all a love of learning and secondly i think we're really geeks about categories uh categorizing and organizing things organizing information and one of the things i really most love about the career is that it demands that you have a wide range in terms of being able to be very good at big picture thinking all the way down to being highly detail oriented so in my current position at the ischool i'm the course coordinator for a couple of classes that i help teach but these aren't traditional academic courses that you guys would take but they are the kinds of courses that you might develop or teach if you end up on this kind of career pathway and you work in the academic world as an instructional designer one of the courses i m i manage is teaching online that's the course that new ischool faculty take and among other topics it covers how to design a course based on learning outcomes and developing content i also briefly covered a backwards by design model but i'm also the coordinator now for info 203 which probably you remember taking i do teach a course and manage the peer mentors that are preparing to be the teaching assistants for that course so they get kind of a crash course in learning theory because those students do design and lead a meetup they create a short instructional tutorial video for a couple of their assignments and in my work i've also designed self-paced online courses i've created a lot of different workshops for both in-person and remote delivery i've made a lot of training videos i've certainly written a lot of tutorials and cheat sheets on various topics and technologies and you know when i skimmed the recent mlas skills at work snapshot and i think um sheila probably has it on this um presentation there were a couple things that really stood out for me that i wanted to impress upon you and first of all uh there's some excellent advice there on page 40 it says specifically and i'll quote do not underestimate the value of non-lis experience i can't emphasize that enough because it and and that goes on to recommend that you know you should inventory your skills and really cultivate being adaptable that's that's great advice because in my own life in my career i've actually had multiple careers that seem to be wildly divergent but i know from experience and from observation of my peers working alongside other instructional designers i know that what has set me apart and has made me more effective is some skills from for example uh you know i have a sales and marketing background among other things and i've observed literally working alongside other colleagues that don't have that same skill or background i've observed a tendency in them to be generally a bit more deferential to subject matter experts and not really um as confident in advocating for good design and i i really cried at my sales background with that point of effectiveness so um when i i think about looking at the foundational and recommended courses that um sheila and taran were showing earlier in this presentation there are so many that jump out at me that i would love to take but just a few of them info 287 seminar and information science the sections there's three of them gamifying information design thinking user experience oh that's those are three huge awesome topics uh info 246 the section on information visualization that would be great info 251 web usability and of course i did notice there's an info 283 marketing of information products and services so so many different ways to kind of forge a pathway into this into this field and forge a new pathway that maybe doesn't even exist yet but uh the people who teach those courses they would be great to speak to about the curriculum i don't teach any of those courses so um definitely check our website for more information but i have three big final takeaways if if at all you're interested in this career path uh specifically instructional design and my three takeaways are this first of all i'd say you need to focus on the pedagogy not the technology technology changes constantly the principles of instructional design and learning theory they evolve over time but they're more stable and i and what i mean to say here too is that knowing how to use a technology tool is not the same thing as being able to effectively design a lesson that uses it or to teach effectively with that tool that is a huge misconception so the technology is not the center of it all it's it's the it's the pedagogy or the under goji um secondly i would say seek out opportunities to create things for your portfolio you might not think that a one-page cheat sheet is a big deal but i tell you there's a well-written and concise guide is gold so create before and after examples if you see something in your own workplace that's a bit muddled i say go fix it and get permission to post the before and after on your website or your portfolio and the final point is i'd say you've got to love the partnership and the process a lot of instructional design work is actually reworking existing content you're not necessarily starting from scratch um you've gotta love working as a partner with other people specifically subject matter experts that you'll work with to help bring a vision to life so if you like being an editor a guide on the side kind of helping to refine and improve things i think you'd really enjoy this kind of work i think of it as you know sort of ordering chaos the difference in uh if for instructional design if i had to leave you with an image in your mind i'd say there's a um there's an old bookstore with books piled up piggly piggly all over the place and then there's the library where it's organized you know and if you if you like the organizational side of things i think you have the heart of an instructional designer so i welcome any questions i think that's about it for me oh that was awesome thank you for walking us through both your career trajectory and how it was not a straight line and then also all of your wonderful tips on um you know the hot sizzling classes that you would just not be able to pass up on if you were a student following this pathway those are great great suggestions from all of our panelists we have the floor open now everyone should be able to enter their questions for our three panelists into the chat i want to remind everyone to please select panelists and attendees from the chat menu at the top of the chat interface so that everyone can see your question and i have a little commercial on this slide to let everybody know that taran and i are available for live chat services during the day and we also are available for student services personalized advising appointments if you want to sign up to meet with us and zoom we're doing those on tuesdays and thursdays and if you have feedback on the workshop you can also send us an email so looking for questions in the chat window while we're waiting for those to come in i did have a question come in before the session and i'll go ahead and read the question and see if any of our panelists would like to have a stab at answering it a lot of these themes have already been touched on but the question is how would a school librarian make the transition into this pathway or any of the pathways to be fair when our work experience has been in education is it challenging even with the mlis so maybe some tips for mlis students who are classroom teachers or school librarians specifically that want to work in a different lis environment how they would position themselves what are the some of the things they could be doing to position themselves to be competitive to change to a different environment i was thinking myself info 203 peer mentoring opportunity might be such a good experience do any of our other panelists have other suggestions well i'll just chime in here this is bethany just because you mentioned the info 203 the peer mentors but if somebody was working as an academic librarian and maybe wanted to shift gears um like i said with my my one of my last points i would say look for the opportunities and they're there you don't even have to look for them if you are working in a library today i see this i talk to people who are little librarians and i see what they're doing and i'm thinking wow do you realize you're doing instructional design you're being asked to create tutorials create examples for people on how whether it's how to use the library or it's some exhibit that you're creating um so those are are you you are engaged in instructional design for example so documenting those experiences and being able to essentially it's it's kind of um it it's spinning it you know you're you're you're just you're just being able to describe what you're doing to somebody else that's the key skill we've talked a lot in this presentation about some of the soft skills and the people skills well i think this is also being able to present yourself in terms of you know using linkedin learning and i would absolutely recommend you guys use linkedin look at profiles but being able to take what it is you do for your work whether it's academic work or what work in your workplace and being able to say oh this actually matches over to there being able to market yourself effectively and say i've been doing instructional design work even though i've worked as a librarian and here's how so being able to put yourself out there into a different looking for positions that you wouldn't otherwise consider you know broadening your horizons so i think there's ways to do that but i think it's it's it's kind of a matter of um it's soft skills but it's also self-promotion skills in a way that's all i'll say to that yeah we actually have a class um that's all about marketing yourself in the lis um landscape and marketing up your repackaging what you know how to do and and and preparing that for the job search and how you can like bethany mentioned you can um repackage up what you know how to do for a different environment any other panelists have other suggestions or ideas we have so many opportunities for involvement here getting involved in our student organizations as a leader perhaps giving a training an online training that you can leverage in explaining in a job interview in a jobs story or vignette of how you you leverage those skills that you learned to a different type of environment that you've worked in we have a few oh it's bethany's comments in the chat i was looking to see if we had any other questions for our panelists all right here we go wondering how would the digital assets management certificate overlap with the information intermediation and instruction pathway do any of our panelists would like to comment on this one i'll say that the digital assets certificate is only nine units of your 27 units of electives and those courses are very technology skill focused um learning how to use digital assets to organize digital assets management skills to organize digital assets there's also one on information security and governance is one of the other pathways so instructional design and information instruction um is it's quite different than the aim of the of the digital assets certificate if not sure if any of the other panelists want to to mention anything in addition this is jose um i believe it's tina who's asking that question um just it came to my mind right now as i'm listening to sheila's giving her explanation the skills that you develop in info 210 can come in handy especially in today's world of digital information with the digital assets management certificate it was mentioned about security and privacy i would imagine that also would pertain to such as the um providing to the overlap as you're asking about great um we have another question that's come in um the question is what are some of the challenges and obstacles that professionals might encounter in the instructional design field and what are your recommendations for overcoming or mitigating them well i i guess i'll speak to that this is bethany again i think one of the challenges um would be a and it's kind of a mindset thing so it's it's not a skill set thing because skills are things that you can um you can all in fact you should be a lifelong learner you should always be learning new things and learning new skills so not being attached to one technology one field one one hard rigid pathway being willing to adapt to change is is a challenge for some people but it really comes down to the mindset so i would say the mindset is is probably one of the challenges and related to that would be confidence because um not everybody's comfortable with change or with ambiguity but the reality is is that in the instructional design field you're going to work with all different kinds of people if you go work in the private sector you're going to be suddenly working you know i have a friend who's an instructional designer at tesla right and she did academic you know instructional design and then you go work at tesla and now you got to learn how to you know explain how these engine parts work or whatever right you've got to be willing to learn and grow and the confidence to know that you can make those changes those are the biggest challenges or obstacles what are the recommendations for overcoming or mitigating them i would say cultivating the mindset to really see yourself as somebody who um is a lifelong learner that embraces change embraces ambiguity and can kind of roll with those changes that is a big part of um i think the the the mindset part of the job so i hope that helps it's probably not the answer you wanted but that's what i got for you amber i thought that was great bethany um growth mindset is really huge and then i'm also wondering um do you have specific recommendations for instructional um professional organizations or websites or places where you can continuously grow your knowledge in the field that um helps you to mitigate um the explosion of of uh things that you have to keep up with to stay up in the field do you have some suggestions for people in that area well i i definitely think uh leverage leverage community because one of the things one of my librarian colleagues that i work with in virtual virtual stuff that i do she constantly talks about the the need for us to um leverage each other's expertise we can't possibly know everything the infra the the volume of information and change that we're facing uh you know as a society or whatever in any industry is is exponential so um working with other colleagues um to help kind of leverage different skill sets i think is critical i mean i i have you know different um i subscribe to so many different um subscriptions and other people who consolidate different uh areas of information working with other instructional designers if i have a question about an instructional technology oh my god i can't even begin to tell you how many how many platforms there are just for for example social virtual worlds i can't i literally can't catalog them all i can't keep track of all of them i have to work with other people i explore these i learn and fool around with this technology over here and then i compare notes with my colleagues so cultivating a a circle of um colleagues professional colleagues communities of practice professional associations that's certainly a part of it there's great books if anybody's interested in instructional design you just want one good book that sort of explains it in a nutshell julie dirksen's design for how people learn it's one of the easiest best you know very highly rated it's a great book for a reason it's super easy to read to get a big picture glimpse at what instructional design is as a as a career um design for how people learn julie dirksen but there's a gazillion websites oh my gosh i couldn't just say oh here's the one there is no one there's no one ring to rule them all that's wonderful maybe if you have a chance you could type it into the chat so they have the authors spelling i wonder if any of our panelists um did they want to mention anything else other resources professional development resources or any other tips this is jose again i believe some tips would be especially as as as a current mlis student get involved with the national organizations get involved with the local organizations through through the ischool get involved and that will start opening up opportunities for you for what you're thinking about which career path you want to follow on um if i had not done that and i'm an introverted person i would not have succeeded as much as i have so far you have to push yourself and you may hear this all the time you know you got to do it you got to do it you're the only one that can do it but you also have faculty and colleagues here at the ischool that are here to support you and even give you a boost to introduce you to other people so um just keep that in mind and last but not least any of you that are interested in open educational resources the market is out there for individuals that are getting their mlis that have oer experience whether as a student but as a also someone that has created oer that is something that uh you may want to think about whichever path you're going to pursue wonderful and since we have a few minutes why don't you maybe detail some of our students might be new to oer what exactly is open educational what are open educational resources sure thank you sheila oer open educational resources the idea behind this concept is to provide textbooks electronic test textbooks to students at zero costs that's one of the definitions um within the california community college system what they've done and there are they are way ahead of the game they have i have started to create zero textbook cost degrees that your entire degree will have zero costs in purchasing textbooks the the textbook can be created by the faculty member and they created maybe it's a brand new one or they can adapt an open educational resource with a licensing called creative commons which is similar to copyright and by adapting other textbooks that have been created oers they can create one that will be a fruitful product for the student at that specific institution um it's a wonderful way to help student success but also to be aware of the financial struggles that happen when you're going through school you have family responsibilities you got work responsibilities sometimes you may not be able to afford the textbook this is one pathway to pursue that okay that was an excellent explanation and we do have the oer class here at ischool so if you want to future proof your course elections take those tips and make sure you're taking classes that are on the edge of all the trends in information intermediation and instruction we also have another tip that students in the pathway may also consider opportunities related to scholarly communication services at libraries and there's a link from dr lua so if she would like to if you would like to expound on that a little bit we have a couple more minutes before closing the session today yeah sure because i was just thinking about how academic libraries in recent years have increased their investment in services that are supporting scholarly communications at their institutions the link that i just sent out was this uh whole this graph detailing the different stages of the research life cycle and the in that comes from the university of central florida libraries and they've identified the stages of the research lifecycle where academic academic libraries can really play a role in supporting and if you really look at the services and the kind of scholarly communication support services libraries can provide involve lots of skills that we are trying to impart in this career pathway like you you have to design training and workshops and for faculty to assist them in the um in the scholarly communication process helping them understand the all the necessary elements related in the process to provide assistance so that's something that students in this career platform may also consider it if they wish to explore more about this wonderful thank you for that and i want to thank all of our panelists for your expertise in joining us for q a for this session um there is a oh there's one final question about marketing yourself um it is an info class it's taught by scott brown and if you want to email me kathleen i will send you the link to that class um it is a i believe it's a two unit class if i'm not mistaken but um yeah send me an email and i'll follow up with it with you and i wanted to thank all of our panelists dr lua dr aguinyanga and bethany winslow for sharing your time with us on your lunch time and we hope to see um students again for our next pathway workshop which we'll be doing in the fall so thank you again everyone for your time and your thoughtful questions and if you have follow-up questions please reach out to us at ischool sjsu.edu you | SJSU School of Information | UCtGthCqkWXZsbQbvfK_FHNQ | 2021-07-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 8,601 | 49,162 |
3UdipeXkHh8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UdipeXkHh8 | *NEW* Fortnite SEASON 4 Lv 100 Battle Pass Loot - How To Get OMEGA OUTFIT! All Changes In Season 4! | why is going on guys welcome back to the channel and I appreciate you being here today I am back with another for tonight season four video and today we will go through the entire battle past now I know many people that work many people are in college many people are in school so they can't get on the game to see what is battle past from season four offers and that's where I come in people I will show you everything you need to know before purchasing if you plan on doing that but forget the video class would you like to win some V books if so I give away 2800 on a weekly basis to be movie chance of winning make sure you subscribe to this channel and have that bow button ticked drop a like on this video and leave a comment down below wings I picked and not widely a direct message on YouTube at the end of each week so good luck everybody now season 4 is here people see some boys here and I went ahead and purchased the battle pass plus 25 level straight away and today will go through what you getting I'm gonna ignore the rubbish emotes that we don't need leave your Marcus what's this leave your marks play mark I can spray on things what is all that about I'm guessing that's what that is that's absolutely epic so that's definitely new but yes we have carbide at fists which is the one we saw in the first teaser image last week sometime we also have Bao Hawk we then have well a new spray x mark and leave your might that sounds pretty cool the books copy monks and a screensaver or a loading screen then we have this battle ax or harvesting tool gay or forced which looks incredible it really does let's not make sure which ones are these keeper marks I've got the rainbow mark the house there is new many people ain't imagined this I can't imagine being in the game at all so they are definitely new so you can spray on says you thought what these are I could be wrong but I'm guess that's what these are and then we get a standard issue battling for being a level 10 another screensaver banner icon we've got another GG smile leave your mark noise noise noise them have angel and then we have a glider yeah sugar crash don't crash part of the suite to set looking free snazzy I suppose we then have another banner icon hundred ten percent XP gain very much more more view box which we all love as you know that have retro sci-fi skydiving trails okay and if I'm an icon of them have spray has epic teamwork emote econ and then we have a new outfit called technique spray up a storm part of the air source us insects looking decent then we have a new mortgage on right looks I gonna be true all these you don't really need to know what these are these are just standard things we now never new emote injustice which looks absolutely nuts what is my character do new loading screen a chalk outline sick more XP hannover loading screen and we have sick popcorn emo ass epic that is epic okay so the things I don't have now we have a spray circle more V books in of a skydiving trailers they paint my XP looted I sick leave you marketability void Alou to that's a big let me have wings of villa all that matches the the axe we got back there was it yes it does indeed develop X I mean that's not a barracks gale-force X or pickaxe or harvesting tool or whatever you want to call it nice noise cool wings of that looks air pick comment to get that we then have another spray a little icon or just plaything or whatever you want to call them more V books another loading screen good cool XP plotting emoticon and a new outfit called zombie hey she looks a bit like a bit like Harley Quinn dare I say not quite well kind of same hairstyle you know Joker's green hair I mean we know what they're trying to get people we know what they're trying to get at Royal stroll and have a spray think I'll sick lightning that's amazing only for was in the game to let me say we think you I'm missing things at the top of up I'm sorry I apologize the rainbow thing and then what's that there what was that there a lollipop er that's pretty cool that's pretty cool chicken and we've got abstract that looks epic a new team art respect goodie bag babbling pirate sweet tooth set do it leave your mark we've got a banner icon and another arrow so assessing the loading screen but cool let me have food llamas as people have a new hype emo because you can't see me bougie sick is pretty sick and crabby we've got a new windows ridiculous heart skydiving trailer banner I can't lightning then we have fat warning which is leave your mark I mean this is Google but on that it could valise well that's her is it look in please snazzy that's Earth and the character we saw in the second fortnight teaser for season 4 which everyone thought was Wonder Woman getting isn't yeah we've got Navin nice we've got rabid dogs we've got a new loading screen kiss plate we've got intrepid that looks epic 79 never spray musk VBox we've got shooting star star diamond skydiver trailer damn do I got a technique spray we've got a squad leader new at their level 87 that isn't even that great to be honest 87 for that near man yeah man uh-uh never loaded really cool tunnel sick gun move Jeff [Music] as wicked then hits mine too and then we have a new space shuttle UPS and then for reaching a level 100 we get omega Oh which looks a bit like black pepper if you ask me and then we have Omega challenges and additional styles for Omega so we telling me we can have additional styles we can change color with him that'll be epic people and that's what that's all about pass that's all we have fun about a person now we do have challenges so I've got blockbuster challenges which complete any seven challenges and the reward item which what is that what do we get for that does it even tell you I don't even know okay so we get a and guess we get a new character there and then we have carbide which is for this amazing pickaxe what complete any three challenges to reward items so do we get Oh so come on a character reach a level of each season level ten we season level twenty who each season for each season two before each she's a little sixty five you get amazin I'm for this I'm guessing that don't know what we get we won challenges we've got deal damage with sniper rifles two opponents chest seeing on details use it port for search for tonight letters follow treasure map found in tomorrow time pieced of eliminations and limit points in flush factory ok pretty cool pretty cool ten weeks in total in your locker this is something new as well people you can now randomize your character outfits so if you want to randomize each like say if you're going to a match you're going to am actually different outfit every single time saying with the babblings as well I'm not sure about yes you can also do review I've seen tools and your gliders I'm guessing and I guess in for ya contrails that's pretty cool too can you do it with this yes you can as well after you close that one wine up can you view the emails no you can't do ve monitor yeah yeah guys that is it pop what's in the item shop actually I don't think is anything new here half shop that's new in it is that number tails in a half shell and that's it people they see it up up from the main screen which looks absolutely epic to know do is a limited time get more coming which is called hop luxe which isn't actually here at the moment but it could be it could be something each we get in-game which we will see people we will see but on that note guys we have come to the end of the video this is all of what you need to know about season oh and that battle path if you enjoyed the video leave a like really helps me out thanks as always for stopping by people and hopefully I'll see you and that next one [Music] knowing where we stand but you and I Carrie [Music] | DPJ | UCqheS9rd4_nojHk3H-FR2XQ | 2018-05-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,524 | 7,815 |
l6sS4fTrp7k | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6sS4fTrp7k | Ekiti Govt Suspends Minimum Wage, Slashes Salaries Of Appointees | NEWS | as part of measures of navigating through the emergent financial challenges the equity state government has cut down the salaries of governor kyo de fayemi and his political appointees as well as that of workers on grade level 7 and 12. the state government approved the new measures after reaching an agreement with the leadership of the organized labor following series of meeting on the latest state of finance occasioned by a shortfall in the locations from the federation account an agreement to that effect was sealed and signed by the representatives of the government and leaders of the nigeria labor congress nlc trade union congress tuc and joined negotiating council in arduikiti on friday consequent upon the agreement governor kai de fayemi political office holders and other top government functionaries are to make a sacrifice of 25 percent reduction in their monthly salaries for three months effective from may to july 20 21 hello hope you enjoyed the news please do subscribe to our youtube channel and don't forget to hit the notification button so you get notified about fresh news updates | Plus TV Africa | UCkY5L8JYwx7BT0cOXYZX_dw | 2021-06-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 183 | 1,109 |
4LevBgXBOu8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LevBgXBOu8 | Saving Bananas with Nuclear Science | [Music] these sweet bananas are all clones of each other they're genetically identical and they actually have uh susceptibility to different diseases and fungal diseases and so we're using nuclear techniques to improve the disease resistance of bananas what happens is we treat the plant material uh with iing radiation in the case of this project we're using gamma radiation and it's similar uh to like x-rays right and if when you go to the dentist and you go to uh get an x-ray uh you do not leave the dentist being Radioactive It's energy that's coming in and it's affecting the DNA and afterwards the material is completely safe and that's a big Advantage because the seed or material that we can irradiate in our Laboratories and cyers dorf can immediately be handled completely safely and immediately grown in the ground [Music] around | IAEAvideo | UCJjzF7cdxa0jZv_fDE_wm4A | 2016-11-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 144 | 842 |
Zds6DWAzSUY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zds6DWAzSUY | Fire Emblem Awakening - Paralogue 20 | [Music] good morning everybody its mañana beyond welcoming you back to the world of Fire Emblem awakening in the last episode we got the conqueror Walmart to join the battle and we also have the ability to buy a bunch of cool-looking Lance's it seems maybe one of them will make Fredrick actually useful something he's not useful as like everyone's been bully to him you guys are just mean were supposed to change to be every turn that sounds fun let's get one of those I guess brave Lance is always nice but we could finally buy those and I guess we'll be good for now so up next on our list well we've got some of Obama's to check out I assume five because it's been a day since I recorded and that's usually how it happens we got a heart so if you're on in I've always wondered how people like you feel their days I keep an eye on my brother he's always breaking something when he trains oh great I get to have more relationships as with those two I'm so excited [Music] up next is Tiki and God darn it what does Nick Gregor say how do you pass your time and come Gregor take all jobs of course so the Sun must earn living like anyone else and now we have Walmart's and Henry what a great duo hey I'm bored got any ideas about past the time when I'm not fighting I'm training for the next fight it's all I did oh poor Walmart he hasn't really fit in with this crowd of weirdos but I mean he's a pretty big weird of himself large' what we have here maybe I can use it for my hexes Roy's Blaine okay just lying around to your shore well since crime is Roy psycho fighters shouldn't that mean like it will do good let's see a vacant ice work out there you and teach should partner up next time if I actually use you guys that'd be something but now yes why is crumb Roy psycho fighter or not like I know his attacks are very similar to Roy's and like not like but in Smash war they make jokes about prom being too similar to Ike to be a playable character so no support we got Lucina and tiki rink be let's go greetings tiki yes ingredients - yoohoo cena i was hoping that today you might be able to tell me about Kane Marth you are certainly persisted in your curiosity no wait it's more than idle curiosity I should know more of the man whose name and once took as my own who was that real Marth and are all the stories of his deeds true what was he like one thing I could tell you is that he treasured his friends like no one else I've known he was kind considerate and call and despite his station quick a smile really you sound surprised yes I just didn't expect the money came mark to be so nice and how did you imagine him the Marth of history led the liberators and smashed the power of evil dragons he brought peace to the entire world at the edge of a sword he must have been a fierce unforgiving man who struck fear and friend and foe alike how could he not have been where he was forced to wait such a terrible war I suppose he was unforgiving at least when it came to sin he never stopped looking for a way to lead this world to peace and every victim and sacrifice on that path haunted him it sounds much like our own quest there must be so much to be learned from him his journey was draw was dogged by setbacks and troubles people did not understand his motives he was deserted and even betrayed how he suffered the struggles he faced would have crushed a lesser man but they made Marth stronger that is why he became the hero King he achieved the impossible just as we must no matter how steep or dangerous or path becomes we will prevail we must remember that math was an ordinary man long before you became legend that's why he knew he couldn't do it alone why he needed to help allies huh the hero of legend had help of course he did behind every great man sends a host of friends and comrades you want to win a war then you must learn to inspire warriors in win their trust that's why he was kind and considerate he needed the best to stand by him yes and the best loved him for it this Xena you could do it too you remind me of him you inspire trust and even love among your comrades as long as you never give up I have no doubt you will honor the name of mine you honor me Thank You Tiki it's so singing cool like it's kind of heartbreaking when you think about how she's lived for thousands of years like all the amazing things she's seen but all her friends are gone and she'll probably outlive all these guys as well but even still like she just I want to learn about all that stinking history and like the fact that she just lived through all those different worlds and periods of time I wonder if I would enjoy living for that long in the real world but I don't know like the stories you'll be able to tell them the things you'll be able to see if you could it's just incredible to think about and now it's time for maxing out long queue and Thyrza let's go lunk ooh I'm ready to perform the ritual hmm do you a vow this ritual will cleanse my soul and finally grant me peace pretty much it will erase everything and give you a fresh start all right good however the curse has been with you for years in its roots reach deep the only way to eradicate it is to uproot it along with all of your childhood memories what you mean I'll forget everything my life in the slums the times I spent with her every last bit but these memories torment you right you should be pleased to lose them no I cannot go through with this Hey I spent hours collecting bat wings you can't back out now even as I told you my story I realized how important the memories are to me my life on the streets her death these experiences make me strong if I lose the memories what happens to the lessons I learned from them I fear that they too will be lost seriously do you have any idea how many bat wings I had to collect I have confidence a woman of your ilk will have another use for them even so I'm very glad for your help like okay don't think that just feels weird then I shall think of some other way to pay you back perhaps with marriage now I can't but that is the end of their story so it seems long queue will never be completely rid of the memories of what happened but hopefully his interactions with a large' cherish and pain will allow him to heal from it so where are we going now let's go to wireless a bonus box better wear bonus maps and check out a hard miracle all the way over there I'm just gonna walk around the map to see if we got any special things in the and shops and then I'll restock our equipment and we'll be good to go uh this is something new and armed scroll racist the weapon level of all equippable weapons and staves sounds powerful let's go for it are sitting kind of low on money eh not used to that and in case you're wondering Walmart can only communicate with Robin just like gran Google can but now that that's seen Cairo you're going to head into this new pair log and this is the one that I am most excited about because it is quite spectacular let's go ahead and begin paralog 20 if you've come to our aid Oh God's be good thank you sir right we heard rumors of girls being stashed by the grim Lille for use of sacrifice all rights all are true I fear our own village has lost three already please you must see that no more are allowed to suffer this cruel fate the grimly live stole on their last victim I swear it do you know where the zealots gather one of the girls escaped and made her way here perhaps she could tell you more she's a gentle sort but a bit um well I'll just bring her a marine a marine sister is that you oh my gosh a marine sister it's me Alyssa what magic is this don't you recognize us I why please sir I feel you're upsetting the girl she doesn't comprehend as you or I explain I know a little about your situation so the girl doesn't hail from here she's been like this ever since the night she arrived in our village when she speaks it's with the words of a small child it pains my heart to imagine what horrors drove her to such a state he'll new sir the grit the grim will make for the village not a gun we can't allow any more innocent girls to be hurt nor can we shepherds prepare for battle oh boy I got a lot to say but I'll hold off for a bit until we get things started for this fight I guess let's make it a bit of a challenge mode shall we um guess that will work I have no idea how this is gonna go with these two out of action I kind of interested to see how quickly I will crash and burn but we'll find out so what pairs my still working towards by Sealand Flavia are the two big ones I guess so we're gonna have them in the front so they could get the most action surprised I still got to be ranked yet um have Tiki and Lucena wherever she is right here um I do have the seat of trust for Tiki I reckon I want to get do to them just because they're taking forever to max out their thingies uh Robin and Anna I guess I was working towards that not really important though savory only communicates with very few people the rest are all just whatever is I guess soo Miah with prom I think I'll just played a bit smarter this time around where I like I'll pair up guys are good with each other just so we could have stronger stats I don't know I guess we're good though let's get started what do you mean she's not here I'm sorry sir I looked away for but a moment and she disappeared perhaps she thought the zealots had come to take her back and wanted to spare us it certainly sounds like something she would do well she can't have gotten far come on first things first we got to protect her in order to have her join us in the end you need to make sure she doesn't get killed she has no way to defend herself you have to do all the protection on your end so let's see what we could do some wood Soumya and get over to her as soon as humanly possible that's for sure they're gonna be coming to us while you think we shouldn't even prioritize going after them at least these guys will have these cryptic Shepherd's the original Shepherd's actually it is think about it so three that closest to a marine and also soo Miah who adores her as well I would assume I don't have Lucena and you guys team up gonna have Robin Anna and then you guys who could fare best on their own probably sorry um we'll have Olivia with cherish just paint power I suppose the two beasts will team up and then series on home oh boy this is going to be a trip especially without Darja and long - I don't know what I was thinking but especially for out to fence mission I might regret this immensely we'll find out I guess and again I didn't save after beforehand so we're great I'll just have I'm gonna keep robbing from because I feel like there's gonna be an incredibly stressful mission I should create a barrier maybe this also be like a now that I think about it might be a better idea to keep everyone separated kind of like what I do with Tiki so let's get everyone over there as soon as possible and we'll create the barrier afterwards I guess pairing up is good just get people moving together but other than that let's see what they're gonna do they're going specifically for us okay so they're not actually going for a Marine though I doubt she's 100% safe so yeah evergreen is actually alive and you can recruit her but I didn't well I didn't know about the memory loss thing like it's not just that like she lost her ability to speak properly but does she know who we are is like um I researched about we already lost bus seal oh are you kidding that's horrible Oh God oh my god they're all taken from distance they're gonna make they're gonna make us go to them so yeah I didn't know about the memory loss thing I didn't know that like she lost her ability to speak like is it a matter of like the shock like she suffered a head trauma and like it's a physical injury or is it like I have no idea what to make of a or like is there any way to get her back to normal I have no idea but I honestly do have mixed feelings about this because the in looking to get a critical hit welcome to you though butts a 60% chance of even hitting us so also it's a ruin user so definitely get rid of them but what was I saying like I have mixed feelings about it because of course I'm over-the-top grateful that ever use a lot I'm sure that made a lot of other people happy but it's just kind of weird where when you have all these characters dying and then you just bring them back to life or like it makes the emotional story we went through seemed like it didn't even matter if everyone just lived throughout all of it and I kind of wished that they did have some characters died for good but it doesn't seem like any of them ever did all of them are coming back and I know like these paralogs are optional so like they could be considered non-canon if you just don't go for them but it's kind of weird in which like I don't know it seems like nothing that we went through seems to have mattered in the long run cuz everyone's okay anyway and everyone's gonna be joining us in the end I don't know just sort of my two cents on the matter I really like interval get rid of all these flyers if we can I guess well if lovey and say reteam up since my steals it's already stinkin gone oh it's good silver sword I guess okay and this is also a very great power duo these two right here that's gonna be releasing an intense I don't know if they go for everything so I might be causing myself more trouble if I'm like actively going to her right now but not all these guys right here I feel like I should be on my way to help her out I wish she could have reached her pits sooner Herbet oh geez this is gonna be bad oh let's hope she has mad dodging skills she does have skills magic plus two this is matter though could I give her tomes she's a see rank tone user soo Miah has tones on her hand a rally magic focus hmm I might be able to make her an ally I don't know she fights with you the hope she might like strictly be a defensive character even if we give her things let's find out I'll use the dragon stone oh boy this is going to be singing intense I probably not the best decision to not have ours had a long queue for this chapter but like I said I'm going to these completely blind so I really know what that's gonna entail I knew that like we had to keep her alive for this chapter otherwise we'd lose the chance to recruit her but I didn't know how what the situation would be like exactly I'm just gonna Fredrik over here because I want him getting killed by those guys oh of course they're going for her a hundred percent chance of hitting her well that's unfortunate I guess technically we never got the chance to see his semen battle on our side he's a horse rider it'd be helpful but I don't want to use him he's a jerk feel like we might have to though I'm gonna say no to Flavia and bossy Lou even though I'm turning rank out their sync and communication session they are wait you stinkin slow and I'll see low vertigo is what you think I'm fragile so I can't be using him right now God darn it let's just get it over with even though I really like the guy he's gonna help us out whether he likes it or not well we managed to make it over to her within the second turn so that's nice talk to her with kromm see what that does it's me kromm do you remember we're siblings we grew up together you me and Lissa you were always strongest the strongest of us even more than me I don't I can't God says I just I don't know what to do here alright listen I won't ask you to remember anything not even me just stay with us please we love you and we want to keep you safe we're stuck here let's switch could we trade over you no trade with the Quran we can't trade with her it's really unfortunate even though she could use tomes but supposedly she's not a fighter in this chapter so we're going to put kromm right here I guess and we'll get Frederik over here separate Lissa right here the problem though is that a lot of these guys can carry those wastes do that unless we go strict choice where was it is it Myer Myers the one that does long-range attacks so that's what we have to worry about and also bows or annoying as heck can't have chair shouting from because bow users switch to robbing I'll have them rally afterwards let's get Walmart over here right here I guess get these two over here hmm let's separate now just so he could run around later maybe switch to maybe say a easy is she quicker arja is only slightly quicker than Olivia then over here switch to Robin rally everyone see what this does of course they go for her first and 94% chance and it doesn't matter okay new strategy something that we've had for a long time but I never actually bothered to use Lissa is going to be the saving grace in this chapter because she literally has the ability of saving grace rescue let's just hope that it moves her somewhere actually safe oh boy oh thank god it brings her over here that changes everything so then just go ahead and I transfer but separate I wish Crocker just talked to her right now do we separate I guess but yeah that is like literally only way I could actually win this fight is if i teleported her over here and possibly somewhere else if I just wanna like mess around a little bit but there are enemies on this side as well so probably not entirely possible okay what do you got enemies you know you are really testing my patience not testing my patience like really making me angry should not be able to hit her that distance okay talk to her I guess [Music] don't know if that's entirely necessary but just to be safe I guess we could no I was like we could pair him up with her no we can't that would be incredibly helpful though I really wish I could still continue to move her somewhere let's go ahead and separate I guess just creating like a big stinking wall around her but it's not safe to have these flying units out in the open separate chairs over here and then wait lissa can also ELISA can also talk to her God darn I'm gonna regret this do you know do you really not remember me or crumb ah I don't I can't it's been super hard and I having you around but I've tried to be strong like you and if I've done this well without you think how well I do with you come on sis you kind of stay with us even if you don't remember anything does rescue always bring her to Lissa to an adjacent space so it's always gonna bring her to Lissa specifically I have rescue on Ana as well huh so separate put Frederic here I guess so there's no way anyone could reach her unless like just the dude who has is it ruin no it's the guy who has my er I want to get rid of him immediately he's the most dangerous um don't separate these two and get over here I'm getting actually keep Ana kinda distant in case me to get em out of here switch to I'm gonna paint a faster why [Music] Walmart hasn't moved yet oh okay that changes things uh separate Walmart and Thora are syncing guarding this place okay so you try and get past them I wish stars I had not fought to equip okay darn it sue me uh and I could take her place so he's gonna get murdered by those archers mmm we're Hanley I guess whatever that does and uh please don't die let's see what we got this has got to work okay they're going first one who is in stinkin a Marine which is nice but they still hit Frederick with a lot of singing damage darjah I beg of you never before have I needed you to go on a bigger killing spree than right stinking now let's go for it okay there's one I really wish you had not fought to equip though God darn it we're still going for her and those are high percentages god I need you to be healing oh my god this plan would be perfect if I just stinkin had the right tome equipped whoa oh I'm mad at myself I am really mad at myself stop going for her Thank You Walmart no I can't lose large a thank you for doing for someone else thank you oh but they're gaining a critical oh Jesus okay so Walmart has a character portrait grandpa didn't age never went for him I'd rather not lose you 70% chance okay good good get rid of him okay you know I don't like the guy he sure is a powerhouse these guys are coming over here I swear to God we have reinforcements popping in as well that'll be infuriating okay Darja stinking heal you and cried Rick and Walmart Lissa you have a fortify right source these we have all allies in range yes use that okay get the experience this is stinking intense they can't reach everything from this angle either right pretty sure they can't and separate others like kind of discombobulated I don't need to be completely this separated and all that jazz but just for safety purposes this is that and use that why don't you Walmart kind of us in Walmart into the thick of it just so he could clear him out quicker um these flying units are also kind of threatening because they could just fly around and get her on this side I'll have cherish here I guess just in case that happens um Fred sure could you talk to her you can't just want to make sure it's just once you were closest to her I suppose [Music] do I want to move Walmart over here I wonder I'm going to do that I think thar she could handle herself Blanco's right here so I can actually these are a lot of special attackers God everyone has special attacks so monk who's never really going to be 100% safe Robin it's just risky to ever put Robin out like either I don't like this but also she's guarding memory because some could just like go in here let's do this it's all about the counter-attacks that Meyer guy is still here though an Oscar Meyer Weiner okay thora do what you do best you and a thank you it's like such an intense play guy sorry like I have absolutely nothing to say for this one it's just like oh boy it's an incredible important cause and the fight is really sinking difficult in general so I'm just hoping this point that oh those flying units don't give you too much trouble in that we don't have any crazy any crazy stinkin reinforcements pop up and would be annoying it's like the Tiki hole is insane but like once you just got your wall set up and like I was never any risk of dying but now with all these guys if we have more than though we don't steel with lead around that's could be the worst stop hurting Walmart please I kind of need him boy he might actually go down Kahn does a lot of stinking damage though but oh no said you % Kaimuki dodge it you can't if I paired him up with someone he might have been able to survive hmm [Music] well he was incredibly useful though let's hope that sacrifice isn't in vain now my face let's go pull your face spen HP um unless it could attack from a distance of who we want to do cuz like I can't move Fredrik cousin like they could fly here and then attack her from this distance I like need to them to pain I need pink and move right I think so just trying to work out my little map in my head okay booty up and dragon up okay very nice uh and I can't move Tariq and there's no doubt in my mind that you'll take care of me no matter what thank you for vengeance and okay thank you for missing oh wow she actually didn't wanna Kailyn it's unfortunate when remember what Lanka was able to hit guys from afar huh when did that happen can I have it back please I I our guys still here mmm I can't move anyone it's too risky do I need does anyone need healing I could just use rally no I did uh-uh separate Siri put her back with nothing back working for some help me anyone else have a rally Robin does no boy they could heal themselves all I'd rather them do that than attack us oh boy they're going around just like I feared so we need to get rid of that guy come on Frederic you counter all you can't thank you for guarding though oh please oh no no no no no no no no no thank you thank you oh no no no no thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you oh my god Alyssa please keep saving us please keep saving us thank you no can they reach her now they can't worry big stinking trouble they can oh jeez kind of just you even get through this it sinks I can't go after them I mean I possibly could if I keep teleporting em away from them if I lose this one that's women I'm just like I'm gonna go after them but like constantly have Anna in the background like taking her away somewhere else I wish I could take her up into the mountains am I like a flying unit that could do this but you know we all these flying games are gonna go right to her let's have cherish we mean it's likely she'll die if she misses could she do eight damage to this guy I'm gonna assume cherish can do eight damage it isn't going to Shh that percentage though God maybe she will die Lars I can't reach any of them we may have to move a Marine [Music] uh God that percentage is horrible is it really just because of the hill oh boy oh god it's a bow no we have to move her it's too too risky she just to where these guys are still around here hmm I wish I could control where she escapes to as well I want her to be right here so what if I do this will she be behind me I doubt it rescue also while their faces are basically identical for the best thank you okay listen got her exactly where he wanted her to be now I need to just focus on murdering Arab buddy I can know that wouldn't work attack this guy like wish for on is for but valla flame okay we'll go for just cuz it's a guarantee just do that and hopefully she won't get killed next turn let's see what everyone do now just get rid of every single one of these guys in this term we're all separate so we should be able to do it or maybe that's what's not gonna do it because think it's all about pairing up again those bonuses and teaming up and whatnot pain pancake ever at that thank you and we'll do that oh my god this is the most stinking stressful chapter ever thank you regarding and we're good oh boy don't care about money right now we need to get rid of these flyers crumb crumb needs to be safe because if he dies and the chapters over same with Robin let's have him attack these further units Robins percentage with four on it's not great I've noticed I might want to change back to Ark Thunder just so I could have like better accuracy from go right here to them okay oh let's see up next is have long queue here did this guy oh my god I'm sorry like I'm complete like just in super serious mode right now I don't even know this is just super stress level like it the first thing record in the morning just like I was not expecting it to be a that's difficult in like under such like emotional and stress circumstances the one of their Tiki unique does anyone have better accuracy than that of no I'm in a 69 could make me feel better right now 59 9 I just know that's not gonna kill her let's go with cheeky get rid of this character I'm boy it's all about like whether or not we could even hit them which is unfortunate thank you I think if it's not 100% always stresses me the heck out noe I need you to hit this person up here should have been Tiki though cuz she had better percentage but wasn't thinking okay it doesn't matter good and up next sorry I want you I want you over here but I feel like I'm gonna get killed I send you out over here Xena I guess merit of this person okay unnecessary critical but I'm fine with that it's awesome isn't it on my side they can't reach her yet still it's getting close and yeah we have some archers still so we need to get rid of them cherish you can is he the only Archer here no he will kill cherish if I send them out over there I hate to send stinking savoury in here alone but it's like our only option [Music] oh boy come on you some critical cut darn it she's got a level up but gonna have to heal again I got rid of Lissa's I like okay so I do it they still have psychic okay I thought I got rid of it for some reason um I guess we'll we're gonna heal savory and then definitely do that and you too I guess stay over here in case something goes awry can't let me just use the word awry but whatever enemy phase let's go you know I don't like being alone Siri thank you for thank you think you think of me thank you thank you for the critical get rid of them immediately please thank you I'm so sorry you're alone right now I just hope you're mad dodging skills could come into play right now it's really important that they do okay 25 percent chance thank you then 15 percent chance thank you thank you oh my god this is a sinking long recording but it's to be expected thank you get rid of him now please no one else cover say hurry I don't want to lose her she could heal herself with her attacks of course one more 70% you have a chance Siri god you're attacking Darcy from all the way over there it's the boss 12% chance though Lord Grima does man's blood all things unto Lanka God Arnie it's not gonna hit her but still I can do that I want to go after that boss though if we could just end this fight early I would have no problem with that Sarge oh there's no doubt in my mind that you can take them down but do that and that oh god they're coming in 50% chance please don't harder please okay this was too much okay you're gonna go down thank you just hurry up and finish this series of attacks series of very very very unfortunate events oh boy oh jeez oh god oh no oh man oh god oh wow can't reach the boss yet they're human which makes me feel like if I beat the boss they'll stop don't know if that's true or not though oh boy just I also really need to get rid of all these guys way too many of them um let me think about this it's risky to put Robin out here but god I wish I said like Ark thunder [Music] um do I dare I'm gonna regret this so sing it hard [Music] okay and what do we have here experience it doesn't matter cuz you're maxed out I want to get Thor over there as soon as possible just kill him but also all these Flyers are getting insanely close so I should try to focus on them it's getting ossifer odd to just so start healing yourself please ko them that didn't next and nothing really know what's going on Arzo well if we get rid of the guys over here we could bring her over this way so let's try and get that done instead lissa you kill anyone who knows I don't like it but aim [Music] it's heal everyone okay that's better it's not have pain die they'll be terrible okay dodge it and we're good okay we're at least be let's got this side taking care of a little bit to where we could bring her back over here let's try cherish see if you get a critical or if you get to jump in at home thank you wow I was really good you too do you still have Frederick I know we don't let's I wish I could get rid of him right now see maybe we'll get a critical thank you just need to keep an eye alive and make her teleport a Marine over to the other way okay do that and we're good not quite I wish they were in his Brooklyn we have another one's for fine these two come on can't reach soo Miah can't reach [Music] maybe he long coupe will step in and help us that's all I could hope for they do have a little bit of interaction with one another so it's possible luck be a lady tonight it doesn't look like it no I appreciate that at least you are just dark user so that okay I just wish we got rid of this guy then we could just like go full hand with taking her away uh well it's not like we could even you can't reach her right he could walk around over here so don't move her just yet I wish we could though let's move just and so that we could like oh but then I might not work as rescue only has like so much distance on it I could double up and have Alyssa do it and then like and I will do like like hopscotch or around or leapfrog around or whatever I guess that's what I got to go for it's just you two I don't know what else I can be doing but if they want to fight I'll give them one just please don't kill kromm no boy detective Robin from 60% that's not fair okay thank you for missing oh I don't like all of them going after Robin don't like that I don't like this I don't like this I made a horrible mistake oh my god this entire fights gone I missed I messed this up this horrible everyone's gonna go for her everyone's gonna go for her oh no everyone's gonna go for her and hit her I'm wasted this entire stinking game I've ruined it God darn it no I messed this up God darn it doesn't even matter that it's just an optional chapter I'm so stinking angry should have done that so angry oh goody another rescue it's like they're giving you a hint on what you should be doing in this area okay after that monstrosity of a failed attempt i caught back up it doesn't take that long to catch back up if you just skip all the battle scenes it cuts out a lot of time so we only have six more dudes to go no boy this guy is just miring from afar he said my Reaper before No oh let's get rid of him was screw this guy with no EE maybe with Lucina do that all the guys the remaining guys are all coming from the right so the Marines right here and there's just all this big group over here walmart went down in the last turn unfortunately so Oh have Darja attack they want her to attack so like it's not always a guarantee that she'll get criticals and murder everyone you should keep that in mind we'll stand on this then I know it's just experience but whatever guaranteed kill get that experience Oh his weapon for proficiency this time okay a speaking of things getting changed throughout say if I was like remember when I picked up Roy sword in the Barack's well it turned out to be all sort and I did the reset so that's a thing I guess there's no other thing keys right there's another sparkly because we get that on our way around um we'll send Robin and savoury over there keep savoring in the front this time no we get down we go towards Emery long COO I will just go over here protect her we got this in the bag this time I think I really shouldn't say that but whatever it's magic I just had like randomly someone showed up it was like I could teleport array oh oh and it got a little 20 off camera slows cool I probably didn't you just skip that but whatever just I know this episode I'm right at a hour 47 minute recording so I'm not sure how long this episode is so I'm just sort of taking liberties in what I will and will show uh let's go with that for Robin get rid of that and so close to a level up see because that your last level up and not quite but we're good with that Darja get rid of this person and I'll stop skipping for now and we have like three enemies left and ours are likes it when we don't skipper a it doesn't like it enough to cable guy unfortunately is it just one two three okay cool just those guys are left so we can start heading up towards the boss all of us are gonna take a full charge and we're you stay here and hopefully we won't have any random reinforced with show glass could be like oh hey you left run guarded teehee that would be really lame go over here I guess we'll bring drama here he's not gonna get hurt by them right you're not gonna get killed at least you have bows either of you know so I could put soo Miah out the front okay enemy face what do we got and you still got that guy hitting from afar okay thank you for dodging then we got this guy detecting with wind very powerful wind my god you want to take assuming you don't sure be my singing guest oh hey wow that was a pleasant surprise hey dude we're good okay good for you soon ya get that level up though you deserve it oh my god this level was stinkin stressful and annoying I have my phase can't do anything play your phase Ile up you can do for I don't know if she can do 14 damage honestly uh let's just get everybody oh wait Richard can talk to her I tried before though wait your grace later lady emerging please wait really we heard rumors people said your body was never found but we had yet we had to flee your grace Crangle would have killed us all sometimes I don't allow myself a kind of fools hope that you survived maybe you were taken in by some kind please Ian or found by a traveling merchant or mostly I feared that if you had lived you'd fall into an even harsher fate I never forgot about you even after all this time I've been hoping and here you are confirming both the good and ill of my secret thoughts you I don't your brother has grown into a fine man but he would do well by your company stay with us your grace I beg of you I promise I will not fail you again another thing that kind of confuses me with all this is that how in the world did nobody tell them about this like not even the guys that found her seem to know who she even is like she's the ex all of a Sinkin country she's a ruler she's a princess and she'd be like world renowned and known by everyone like I know I understand like maybe they can't she can't say her name right now so maybe they don't know her for that reason but like they gotta know her face don't they I guess like this is in the world of photographs like people's faces wouldn't really be known I guess but I don't know it's sort of a stretch to me that like nobody knew who she was and nobody decided like tell us about it that's the weirdest thing for me oh go with I'm gonna hope that soon we could just could just do this the Blessed Lance heels HP when it hits so maybe we'll be lucky didn't heal HP but it gave me experience okay cool we're good so Frederic could talk to him I want to see if Robin can I don't think she could but we'll see I'll just end for a bit real quick he's still attacking Arthur from afar with a little no hope of success but this fight is one less one we just need to get back around just have a Robin go all the way bags gonna take a while I'll kind of wait - when I get Robin over there and Robin wasn't able to talk to her so there was no point in doing that and hey Frederick actually survived this entire round that's amazing okay let's see if we could give prom the final blow you cannot defeat them in one hit so for that reason I will green tiki and who's seen it up to weaken them a bit and then I'll have chrome finish him off do that and that or maybe Lucina will surprise us I'm fine with that okay oh that was an annoying chapter we got a talisman increase the resistance yeah we could use it from in sumia or rightfully the MVPs think listen I'm torn Robin if she somehow regains her memory it may mean greater pain for her it may yes My gods I want my sister back I want her to remember Lissa and me I want to just talk to her again is that selfish Robyn I know I'd be returning her to a world that nearly killed her once already she'd remember all the taunts all the guilt all the pressure she lived under it's a difficult situation crown I don't know what to say she's alive and free and for that I should be doubly grateful and yet it's not enough it's just enough for her to be alive like this did she just she did Oh every and it's you well you always used to say that to us when we were younger I knew you'd come back to us I knew it all right then no more crying for any of us you were strong from you once now it's my turn I'll keep you safe from now on sis I swear it [Music] I'm not really sure what would have been the best fate for her to regain her memories of all the torment and trauma that she went through as an excellent or to remain in this limbo where the consciousness is the only thing available to learn which one would she prefer which was the right thing to do is it even our option to even have the ability to choose one or the other I have no idea [Music] but regardless I suppose regardless of whether or not she ever regains her memories I think it goes without saying that all of us are overjoyed to have her back next time on Fire Emblem awakening we're still not done recruiting new allies we're gonna continue our search and see if we could find anyone else who's willing to help us this is midnight and beyond and I will see you all later unite [Music] you | MidniteAndBeyond | UCat0g_f3QCZtKHWEQGCfsKA | 2019-05-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 8,033 | 40,027 |
ltv2y6UQyMA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltv2y6UQyMA | UGLY LOCATION PHOTOSHOOT CHALLENGE! | hey everyone welcome back to my channel it is Kaitlyn here today I'm doing a video which was kind of a trend maybe two or three months ago but I finally got around to doing it because it looked a lot of fun I actually filmed this video dying when I was in London but because it's the collaboration it's taking a little bit of time to coordinate and get it up so I'm finally going round and able to show you guys this video which I'm super excited to do so this video as I've already mentioned is a collaboration it is with my good friend Parris here on YouTube her channel is or was galaxy fashioned I think she's changed it and gone with her name now she does a lot of fashion uni vegan related videos she is so sweet and so lovely and she came on board into this video with me and then also we have a third person for this collaboration who was the photographer his name is James Westlake he is an amazing photographer super talented does a whole range of stuff but he very very kindly came along to our filming date and took old photos for us which made them even cooler so yeah check them both out both her Instagram handles and Karis is YouTube channel will be linked down there because you should obviously watch her video as well to see her photos I haven't actually said what this video is oh my gosh so today I'm doing the ugly location photo shoot challenge so I think I went to around six locations in total I had 4 different outfits because I wanted them to kind of fit each location and be a little bit different for you guys and more interesting so I'm gonna go ahead and show you what happened and then what the locations looked like Hall went down because to be fair and you know I'm not gonna brag even though it wasn't really my effort with more Jameses the photographer but I think they turned out pretty cool I hope you enjoyed this video please leave a thumbs up if you did enjoy it subscribe to myself but also Karis and obviously check out James's Instagram and I'll get on to the video so the first location which we went to was this courtyard area it was pretty rundown there was a bunch of cones everywhere there was also kids playing like basketball nearby so that was location one I'm gonna get vlogging Katelyn to take it away from now location one we have chosen this is a courtyard with like a little mini gym some cones a square like the old goal and we're gonna take our interpretations try and make something cool I have this location number one so this was the final image which I like the best we went for this side leaning on the wall kind of style with the foot on the corn [Music] so whilst we were in that location there was also these like treadmill outdoor exercise machines so we took some photos on those as well but personally they're not my favorite but I'm still gonna show you of all of them the one that kind of made work sending you I thought you come oh okay we're number two I went for this one thought it was quite cool how I was staring into the distance and all like the pastel next location we went to another courtyard basically we were just walking around this like housing estate in London it was like a little bit rundown but there were some really cool energy areas which we found and one of them was this blue courtyard the walls were blue the tarmac was blue the railings were all blue so we thought we'd try and make it work even though it was quite overwhelming blue is this blue courtyard here we're trying to interpret it different ways and carries the anger focused on the woman so ever you don't mind I'll show you guys on top of that but yes location 2 is this blue courtyard area with all these people watching [Music] for this one I was not really keen on this location I thought the blue was way too much but this one was my favorite just kind of chillin on the blue concrete so location number four we went to little we were gonna go inside little because you know in all these other videos that you see youtubers do they go inside Department stories and try and take a KU photo in front of the fridges or the milk or you know whatever but we got to Lidl it was closed so instead we tried to make the car park work so this is at the car park okay right so location to actually I don't know what location we're on number actually we changed the number to location like three or something we're probably gonna do outside little and then we're gonna do inside little little is here [Music] oh I say holding on for dear life so I really really like this photo I think it's pretty sassy I like how my top is lined and it goes with the bars and also the yellow and black location number five was in this like housing estate area and it was on the stairway leading up to the top kind of balcony area of some flats so outfit number three location number whatever we're on five six I don't know is on this kind of like a staircase so James is there taking photos I've done one kind of on the stairs and then Karis is down here [Music] even know thought you come oh okay I really like this one I like how cute and fun it is compared to all the other ones which have been super serious and I just think it's really cool a different perspective of the camera going downwards and me looking up the way was when we were walking from one location to the other we came across this like building site sign you know like holding up us I you I don't know some construction stuff basically and we tried to make it work so we're gonna try get something cool with this as well they may or may not work but we're gonna try this interesting [Music] so this one was kind of fun we didn't really think that this location would work but I think it's pretty cool and I wanted to throw it in there because it was just very spontaneous the final location which we shot at I don't know I think were number six I don't know was this under passage so you know how when you go underneath roads if you want to like walk underneath them you know kind of like into tube stations and stuff there's those bad no you'll see in the video but basically in one time we thought it was gonna be super ugly and enough to be some funky lights down there like yellow green purple looks like a mini disco down there so we messed about took samples in there and I think they turned out pretty cool normally so still the same I'd say I fit number three we have come to this for location we walked down here that would be like you know pretty ugly we've come diner we find this really cool alleyway which is actually turning out really cool photos so it looks like this it's got some weird and neon lights but we're making it work nothing so this would be a really really cool one at this present [Music] it's final one I can decide between two images so I'm going to show you them both I really like this location how the tunnel is going backwards and I'm in the center of it with like the lights on each side okay guys those are all my photos which I took in the ugly locations let me know down below which location that you thought was the coolest like which one was the ugliest and I made work the best you know I mean like which one was the most surprising let me know down in the comments also look definitely check out Karis and James as well thank you so much to both of them from working on this video with me it was super fun to shoot with you guys so thank you so much for watching I hope you enjoyed please leave a thumbs up and subscribe down there and I will see you soon in minutes [Music] | Kaitlin Emma | UCCYuYoFvSfNZusr7N8wm0Hg | 2018-09-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,470 | 7,526 |
921W7ichixQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=921W7ichixQ | I NEED A GIRLFRIEND - PAWPAW - Latest 2024 Nigerian Comedy| Nigerian Comedy Videos_ Comedy central | and the other they can't do anything they can do a lot of things they will banish us from this Village impossible they try it I will launch a counter attack whever I am to teach them the lesson of their lives how much money is remaining from The Total Money collected how much Madame no change is is in a better position to answer that question why you so much worried about the money why can't you go to your brothera to borrow money from him please you'll be at peace with the ERS are you sure you are the son of your father you may answer that one better maybe you went for an a match so you want to tell me now that I'm a bastard it's okay he that's not what I mean come back here until I know who is my father I will never come back in this again I said come back [Music] here what will I do now will my brother agree to food this [Music] bill [Music] excuse me anything the house is on [Music] fire house is on fire and came to our house he met my mother over the morning realized so what are we going to do house we come first the authority of the ERS said we are two so we come F the whole village if you don't pay that money back we are going to face a big problem think about it let see way out yes which way wa let's find a way and create troubles or even confusions between the elders and the entire villagers confusion yes that will not give us the opportunity to s for the money and pay back confusion [Music] know my only brother you are the only one that can help me out of this predicament itaka has become a Tor in my flesh wipe your tears my sister I will not live to see you put to shame neither will I live to see a CH become useless in this Village thank I'll pay the debt he h the elders thank you and whether he likes it or not I'm going to the city with him brother if you do this for me if you can take aaka away from me I will become the happiest woman on earth why shouldn't I do itaka is my blood also if he is useless it is a shame on me I'll take him to the city I have friends who need help if not the setback I had in business he should have stayed with me sh we are discussing your dubious character in this Village why should you bring dishonor to our family no don't say that I'm here for Honor not for dishonor you know me I'm AER shut up where is the money you people collected the elders are on our neck I didn't collect any money from the ERS and I guess there's no rope around your neck so they not serious yet you're a fool listen make sure you wash all your clothes you are Living for the City enough is enough I believe so much in practicality by being used for start by your hospitality tool was me so I need 500 naira for what here you come again you said you want me to be useful so give me the morning let me go enjoy myself with some goodies you want to use my money to smoke cigarette and drink big Stout listen if you get to the city and you continue with your recklessness you will go to jail am I understood yes I've heard it with one ear you mean it enters in one and then move from the other no mama you don't understand me I reserve one ear to listen to the voice of my ancestors come on get out of here get out shut up brother thank you very much thank you I am I'll take him to to the city and take care of him thank you thank you goodbye [Music] goodbye going to take my I'm going to your house my house yes yeah better my uncle promise to take me to the city to start business to the city yes to start business you have suceeded so I'm going to be left alone in this stupid Village see is around to be with you everywhere don't tell me that look at look at look at is that because we do things together you you know does not belong to my class A Class of people that I associate with so you're going to become a mil please no no don't do this now see if I become a milli I'll pray for you to survive I W forget you you're friend I will pray for you to survive I will pray for you so are you I'm leaving tomorrow morning hey no no no no naked I not forget you for me I'm leing so I'm going to be left byebye so when is this suffering going to stop child look at this it's a go hey I going | Nigerian Comedy Videos | UCrsIdkarY7xP-hD3WTPYk8Q | 2024-03-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 865 | 4,147 |
4bwR_BtH6bk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4bwR_BtH6bk | Discussion with Vinca Wiedemann, script-consultant & story supervisor of L. von Trier, S. Bier [ITW] | Thank you very much, Vinca, for this interview. Can you present yourself ? Okay yeah, so my name is Vinca Wiedemann and I have been working with film since I was 20. I was educated as a filmmaker from the National Film School of Denmark and then I soon turned to script writing and teaching. I was a film school student in the 80s and a film school teacher in the 90s. Then I wrote my first script and after that it was made into a feature film and I thought I would write more scripts but then I got a position as a commissioning editor at the Danish Film Institute and after that I became the first artistic director of something called New Danish Screen which is kind of an experimenting scheme for young filmmakers. After that I went to continue with my job, more more and more turning into becoming a script consultant and what I call a story supervisor or story advisor. It's quite diverse what I've done but I try to make some kind of logic out of it. Basically I talk to directors and screenwriters and producers mainly about the development of the project. And I'm working mainly in feature films and mainly in fiction projects. But it could be both feature films and television series. And it's on a very individual basis I have a lot of young talent, I have a lot of very experienced talent I work with. And some of the people are people I've been working with for decades. And others, someone I may meet tomorrow. So it's pretty diverse and I try to adapt. I have kind of a set of special ways of working We also define it for each project. For example, I would also in some of my projects be a part of the process of making storylines, develop the storyline. So it's not just being an analyst it's also participating in the creation, the more "creational" parts. Do you think that your job is close to being a psychologist for screenwriters ? No. I see myself as a colleague. So I see my... Of course there are a lot of psychological things in it. And I would say that if there's something it would be kind of a... I don't think you can be under... have an overview and be down into the detail at the same time. So when you're really very much into detail, what happens is you become blind. So you need someone from the outside or maybe not from the outside but someone who is not part of all the details in order to regain a bigger perspective. So it can be kind of a game we play, where I go into detail and there... like that so I see myself as a colleague to them and not like someone... but someone who can initiate like do an intervention. It's like doing an intervention.You can agree to do an intervention. So I'm just a person performing that intervention. Okay. And so what... How did you create your tools ? I mean, how do learn to be what you do ? Yeah I think being educated as a film editor is really interesting, it was crucial to me. Because first of all I think film editing is fantastic. I just realized that if I should be a really good editor I would have to only do film editing and especially at that time you know when it was film you had to decide to sit in a very small dark room the rest of your life. And I had tried to be a teacher and so it was much broader. So I realized I probably wouldn't be really as good a filmmaker as I wanted to be. But the great thing about film editing is first of all you're in the core of what is specifically film cinematic. The other thing is you realize what happens with the script afterwards. afterwards You realize... I believe that when you only work with screenwriting, with the script it's kind of you you tend to forget what happens afterwards. So you tend to see it like a closed circuit. Whereas... I mean the reality is it's just a blueprint of something that goes on and basically you can just, you know... Most of it is things you can change afterwards. So I think I got... It's very valuable for me to know what happens with the film afterwards. And I brought that into my counselling. But in Denmark we have a big tradition of sharing So we're very... We have a tradition of being open in our creative process. So we very often have colleagues. We invite colleagues to read our early versions of the script and give comments. And we also invite colleagues in the early stages of editing. So we will have fellow directors, fellow editors, fellow screenwriters to look at the early stages of editing. it goes without saying that being an old film editor I'm also very often invited in to look at that, yeah. I love it. Maybe a more philosophical question. What is for you, the goal of stories ? Survival. Survival and of course, I mean it is to me, it is creating meaning in life. And it's not that I'm convinced that there's not meaning. I don't know if meaning exists in advance or if we create it out of nothing. That would be a little bit like asking about the chicken... the hen and the egg. What comes first ? But it's not that I think that it's... the universe is necessarily without meaning. But i believe that that stories, it's kind of how we breathe how humans breathe. So it's like we swim in stories we breathe stories, stories are all around us. And it's a way of, yeah, creating meaning. I think it is, but it is also maybe about creating hope or creating challenge or creating provocation, so it's not like... Yeah this is really... This may be really in concrete. It's just like I feel that we are stories. That's what constitutes us as human beings. I don't think that dogs or elephants create stories. We don't know but I don't think they do. I think it's something that happened in our brain. So we have to do it. And I think also it's yeah, it's a great thing. It's a great and mysterious thing. How do you make sure that you master the meaning of your story ? Oh but you don't. You don't, you don't. That's kind of the first advice : don't think that you... The meaning, if you know the meaning then you don't need to make the film. So for me an interesting film or an interesting story is about a question. So it's something that triggers you. Something... So for me art is about asking questions. It's not about answering them. The question is something that opens for your fantasy, for your imagination. And you can ask a question via your story. I think we have this tendency, we want to answer questions. It's also something you're working on throughout the process. It's like, now we gave too many answers. It's often in a good process, you're always kind of questioning yourself. Why does the scene end like this ? So it's kind of a recurrent revelation when you sit, that you kind of... Because you're looking for answers. But you don't want to give them. That's I guess, when you see Truffeau's début film "Les quatre cent coups", it's a nice thing when he stands there by the sea, it's like his one big question mark ? What should I do from here ? And the film doesn't answer it. Or Antonioni's "Blow Up" is kind of... You're in the middle of a mystery you don't know the answer to it. So it's like... That is maybe the goal you want to achieve. But it's difficult and it's a process where you have to challenge yourself all the time. In your process. So even if you have your own answer you shouldn't put it in the story. Even if you have one ? Your own answer as a screenwriter, you shouldn't put it in the story. Oh maybe. But no, no. But I think one of the things... You should hide it. Yeah, but that's when you take me in and I say I see it. You didn't "hide it". So that's when you have a character who's not really engaging, your main character, it will often be because you're too clever. So it's like you know the answer to the... You know this character has a problem and I know how to... what he should do to solve it. He needs the psychological development it just becomes boring. If someone in this room knows the answer to the mystery of life bring it on. I don't know what. So if you're young you want so much to understand the meaning of life but I mean... Come on. If someone came and said I know the meaning of life would you believe them ? I mean, would you be into : "Ah, sit down and I will tell you about the meaning of life." You would... At least when you get older you know it's like... Yeah. It's not where the fascinating stuff lies. But since we also want... I think it has to do with another thing. We like to have a distance as creators. We kind of look at the world in with what I call the warm eye and and the cold eye. So it's like you care for your characters, you're close to them, you know them by heart. You want to reveal their secrets, but you also want to show when they're cheating on themselves when they think they're doing one thing but they're lying to themselves. So that's a cold eye. Where you observe them from a distance. And the thing is to work with both things at the same time. And I think that the more you can do that then you kind of... It's kind of a continuum. It's like a universe you open, you create a space that's very wide because you both can feel them, be inside their skin and at the same time be at an enormous distance. But then you also have the story because this is about time. It's about time and space and specificity. So depending on what structure you make and what the ending is like, you can open it to many more questions about this character. If you don't allow for the characters to surprise you then you're not open to the fact that you created something which should be a mystery because all human beings are mysteries to us. We think we know someone. We know nothing about them. Your closest friend, your lover, your mother, your daughter, you know nothing of them. They're mysteries. They're mystery to you. And if you don't acknowledge that part that makes it : maybe he's not lying, maybe you're lying. If you don't have that then that's... This is where mystery and engagement and empathy and all that stuff comes. I like the idea that you try to explore possible answers. Because that is like feeding. You know, you feed like... It could be like this. It could be like this. But also it could be like this because then you show variety. That is one way of exploring your character. And also exploring an arena or a plot. If you know too much about the plot it's just predictable. So the big thing about all this dramaturgy thing : and then this happens on page 17 and blah blah blah. It kind of just calls for a predictable scenario which is boring so you want to, of course, to create anticipation and suspense but also surprise. Your plot should be... have... In a way it's the same as with character. It should be open for interpretation so it could go this way and this way. And of course at the same time you you work with a set of... I think we all work with a set of methods and tricks and tricks of the trade, tricks of the culture. A way we like a story to be that also directs the way we invent it. A good friend of mine went to Tibet at a point to try to be in solitude for a long time. Then he interviewed Tibetan monks Buddhist monks who were also living isolated for a very long time. What he told me was completely different. When he asked them about the story of their lives, he realized that when we ask, ask that question we will tell the story very much like when we do a film you know with climax and suspense and surprise and you know... In order to create engagement. But when the Buddhist monk told his story it was like blablablablablabla.... He felt it was really boring but he realized it was because he anticipated our climax structure. And they were not obsessed with climax. And that led to a completely different way of storytelling. I don't know what we can use it for but I think maybe we can use it to realize that this is also a cultural thing. So we are actually... We don't see it because we are so absorbed in our culture. But even this thing with the climax is something that we should maybe question. Or challenge at least. And we know that... One of my favorite quotes is of course Godard with his : beginning middle and end, but not necessarily in that order because... because we can always play with it and we can challenge it and maybe we can find new insights. What is the importance of ending for you ? The importance of ... ? The end. So then if we... Do you advise forgetting about the end to explore ? Well actually I'm... The thing is I would like to do some research on that because my feeling is that first of all everybody thinks that the real good, the real geniuses will kind of just have a full-fledged vision from the beginning. The film is here and we just need to get it on screen. And in my opinion that's kind of a... It's not like... It's an illusion, it's not like that. That's not how it works. So I worked with... The guy I worked with who came up with the greatest ideas and the most original films, who is closest to being a genius, is Lars Von Trier. And when he... When we started on Melancholia he said : "I know absolutely nothing about this film I only know..." So I say : "Come on, you know a little bit." "I only know that I want it to be in two parts, there should be two sisters, one should be the main character in the first part and the other should be in the second part. And then I know that it should begin with a wedding and it should end with the collision of earth and another planet. And you know, that was what he knew. Nothing more. But the thing is you can see he was a genius. Or close to a genius. Lars, you're not a genius just close to a genius. Because he had a beginning and an ending. So few people have an idea with the beginning and an ending. So few. It's so rare. You know I read hundreds of scripts. It's so rarely that you have the beginning and the end. Usually I say if you don't have a beginning and an end, the nice thing is if you have the ending. Because then you work your way to the ending. But most people only have a setup. And then they don't know what to do and they actually postpone finding the ending. It's just like pushing a mountain in front of you and... you know, like snow it just becomes bigger and bigger and bigger. Because it's like telling a story without ending knowing the ending is is kind of walking into a wilderness yourself . And of course exploring your story should be like that. It's a creative process but it would be really nice if that process... If you know the goal then you know the bow, then you know so much more about how to do the beginning. Sometimes it's like, should she live or should she die ? Actually it doesn't matter, but is he guilty or is he not guilty ? That's kind of a mystery. So of course it depends on the kind of ending. But it's fantastic to work on development of projects where you know the beginning and the ending. It's just... It's wonderful. But it's a gift and sometimes you don't have it. And you know it's like... Sometimes you only know the setup. And you will kind of... And it will it will be a horrible development process, horrible shooting process, horrible editing process but the film may be good. Because there may be other things that... And maybe all the striving is good anyway. It's like people say there can only be one main character. It's kind of a... I agree. But I have a lot of good colleagues who said I don't care, if you say so, I know you always say that in "Drinker" there should be one main character. But I like to have two. And it's like, yeah, and they can be really great films anyway. It just may mean that you need a damn good editor. Because it will take a lot of editing to find the rhythm and the focus where it doesn't really matter. And maybe it could have been even better if there was a clear main character but who gives a shit if you win an Oscar or go to Cannes or... This is Susanne Bier. Susanne Bier and I we had huge arguments on this. And I always use this example because I said, yeah so maybe "Open Hearts" which won enormous amount of awards, yeah, there was no clear main character but she had a good film editor. And she insisted on this and who am I to say that... It's so easy to people from the outside and for analysts to say : "Oh be prescriptive. You should do this, you should have this." It's just that you choose your own challenges. It's the same with endings. If you don't have an ending it'll be a lot of work and a lot of... And a lot of risk taking. but it's your choice. And so are you saying that if your goal is not to answer the question of the story at the end, I mean is the... Do you have to avoid answering the question at the end of your story ? Well I would say that if you want to avoid answering the question then you should know your ending. Because then you can make a clear, very clear open ending that is... It's like... It's like this that I really believe is true that if you want to kill a character it should not be to solve the plot. Because that's boring. I mean that's just an easy solution you know. Oh I don't really know how my story is ending so i'll just make it an open ending. That's like the cheap... It's cheap. So it should challenge you. The ending should be artistically challenging. Do you have other advice for screenwriters that... for helping them to think and write their stories ? Yeah. Two things come into my mind. One thing is read other scripts. And both read... Read... Read scripts not, you know, read... Not the scripts that are written on the basis of a finished film. Read "Blue velvet". Read the script for "Blue Velvet". Because it's so different from what you would think when you know the finished film. When you know the film and it's so mysterious it's so fun to see how David Lynch and his co-writer worked with the script because the script is actually pretty conventional in the way it builds up and information and stuff like that. That's fun to read. Also read other scripts where you haven't seen the film. Because then you don't... It's not so easy to know what they should do. Because you're always so wise after. Oh why didn't they do this, why didn't they... Also a part of that is sharing so share with other directors and scriptwriters. Share. Find some people who you share your challenges with. Because sharing is just a way of developing knowledge and experience and insights in a much quicker way and it's much more fun and you can help each other out. And it may be humiliating. You always want to do it "when I have the next version". But it's now that you should do it. So that's one thing. And another thing is remember that script writing is only to a very small extent, about writing. Don't call it script writing, call it, develop your projects. And I think that we are still very much into linear thinking where we say you write your project three times, when you write the script, when you shoot it and when you edit it. So that's kind of the basic three creative processes. But I used to say quoting Godard, rephrasing Godard, script, shoot and edit but not necessarily in that order. Because I think that... And also synopsis, treatment, script, but not necessarily in that order. I think we have to realize that we can work with it in many different ways. A synopsis is so great once you edited the film. But I rarely saw a synopsis as a good tool for developing a project. It's something that's nice for decision makers. They want a synopsis. But as a creative tool it's not so great but it could be to actually go... Go into a hospital if you want things to take place in a hospital. And we always, I think very often, have a tendency to look at other films to get inspiration. Ah, it's like that film. But don't look for characters in a movie, because you will just have stereotypes. Go look for real people. And talk to them. Doing a lot of other things than just writing on your computer. Writing on a computer is the smallest part of writing... Developing a project. I just think that... I read so many projects that were actually bullshit. No not bullshit but just shitty ,you know. Really bad Most projects are really really bad. Most scripts you read are really really... It's like, ah... Someone said to me it's so unfair because a good script you read it very quickly. But a bad script is like a fight. Just oh ! It's so boring and confusing and and you think what can I say about this script ? What can I say ? How, why did I say yes to it. So now I have to sit with them and pretend that I like it. Or what can I do ? And then you meet them. And they're really nice people and they have great ideas and it's just because they didn't get it and you know... It just wasn't there yet so be generous and understand that it takes a miracle to make a good film. And we're just you know... So sit next to them and ask them, be curious : what is it you want to do ? And then you can always have a great... You can always have a great a great conversation and and make an inspirational room together and maybe it will turn into a great movie. Because great people, inspired people can take really mediocre ideas and make them into great movies. That's the truth about 99% of what we see. It's mediocre ideas that is just developed with the help of a lot of people in a communal effort. And it turns, surprise, into something we love. So be generous and be curious. Sounds so easy. I'm the most judgmental person of all. So that's... but that's a nice ideal to have. Do you think screenwriters have responsibilities as they spread their stories widely ? Yes of course. Of course they have a huge responsibility as do we all as human beings. Whenever we appear in the world we have a big responsibility towards our next of kin. And when you work in media your next step can can be all over the world. And being... And that responsibility you have to find out how you want to deal with that. And sometimes it can be to be loving or affectionate. It can also be to provoke something or to challenge something. So I don't know what the answer is to it and I know we're all human beings so we all have our limitations. But I think that we all have a a responsibility that we cannot live up to, to be generous and create hope and meaning. in relation to other people. And how do you do to keep learning new tools or new ways of writing ? First of all I don't think I'm good enough at it. I think that I'm... That's part of why I'm here. I'm here because I'm fed up with experience. I think that I'm fed up with filmmakers, film people only talking about experience like, experiences, everything. I think that knowledge is really important and I think that we can challenge ourselves from other people's knowledge from other branches, from other you know... from academic fields. It's like they actually know things about creativity. They actually lean... Other people also know about stories. They know about perception. They know about a lot of things that we could learn from. So my big challenge is to be open to that and even try to read a book about it. I think it's really...I find I like to read novels. But I find it really difficult to read books about non-fiction. But I think I have to dive in. I'm trying to approach it because I find it so provoking that film people say : "Ah no, it's not for me I'm an artist, I'm just into the script experience I hate it. I'm like that myself so I'm trying to challenge that. And just working with new people. Yeah. And even if you've been here for one day have you learned some stuff that will help you in your work ? Yeah, I've learned a lot of new things. I don't know maybe it will make my life more complicated. So I don't know if it will make... but it has enriched me. But I want to... I think I would like to finish by saying that you... Very often if you read something, you read a script and you think it's mediocre, Or you see a cut... You know the first cut is always awful. And so the worst thing in my life was when I saw the most mediocre first cut and it was just like... The lights went up and it was like... you know, you just put down your... And then the director turns and says : "Oh Vinca, will you begin ?" It's just... and you didn't I was pretty young. And it was for me, it was horrible and it was like... And it was like... I happened to say I think this... I just came down with 10 problems. It was like giving a cold shower to the team. It was awful. And it was like I was so obsessed with it's so serious, this is so... This is a drama It's not good. And we were all sitting with our pens, papers and pencils, jotting down all the problems that they had to solve and it was like... It's like relax, it's just a movie. So if I could look at myself as a younger person I would say relax it's just a movie, let's have fun. It's more important to have fun and there's always.. Be generous. There's always something you can appreciate in a process. If nothing else you can appreciate the effort they did. So don't be so bloody serious. And don't be so bloody doomsday-like. It's just a film and we're here to have fun, to make... to get great challenges. Thank you very much, Vinca. Thank you, thanks for inviting me. | StoryTANK | UCuLqLVKE11vANNatunE2ZKQ | 2023-02-27 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | detection | en | 4,824 | 25,122 |
F-CqoFwf8Uw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-CqoFwf8Uw | Capture of Port Harcourt - Wikipedia article | [Music] the invasion of port harcourt was a military conflict between nigerian and biafran military forces chapter 1 background in the mid-1960s there was a military coup led by magen ziogwu that overthrew the democratic government which had lost credibility due to rigged elections and ensuing violence the coup was suppressed but the mostly igbo coup plotters were not brought to justice by the military junta that took power the coup seemed ethnically motivated as most of the people killed were hausa slash fulani and yoruba and the military junta was headed by an igbo man major general aighi i i there was a counter coup six months later and revenge killings of the igbo in houseland this led to an exodus of the igbo back to the southeast and an unfortunate series of events that culminated in secession and the biafra war chapter 2 battle following the defeat in the cross river region the biafrans regrouped the remnants of their troops and created the biafran 12th division under the command of lieutenant colonel festus akar the 12th division was divided into the 56th brigade stationed in orochikwu and the 58th brigade stationed in uyo on march 8 1968 the beaches at auron came under heavy nigerian aerial and naval bombardment the nigerian 33rd brigade under colonel ted hammond over and befriend defensive positions and continued towards zuyo due to the swiftness of the nigerian advance befriend officers began to lose control of their troops consequently hundreds of different troops were cut off and forced to surrender after nigerian troops stationed at oron linked up with the nigerian 16th and 17th brigade in uyo the 16th brigade under colonel e.a chuck and 17th brigade under lieutenant colonel philemon chand storm through ekit and occupied a pobo with the biafrans in retreat the nigerian 15th brigade under colonel e paula olaniakin renade station that bonnie launched an attack on port harcourt at the time port harcourt was defended by the biafran 52nd brigade under colonel obugo carlo after heavy fighting nigerian troops captured and dug in at on their success would be short-lived a division of biafran soldiers under an italian-born biafran mercenary unexpectedly counter-attacked inflicting heavy casualties before forcing the nigerians to retreat from on the biafran 14th battalion stationed in bori panicked and retreated from the town after spotting nigerian soldiers wearing the insignia of the nigerian 14th brigade as biafran lines around port harcourt crumbled a message was sent over radio biafra for the defence of the city on may 19 the biafran major joseph achusi arrived in port harcourt and was made commander of biafran troops defending the city port harcourt was subjected to heavy nigerian artillery bombardment while defending biafran troops fiercely resisted during five days of heavy fighting port harcourt's airport and army barracks changed hands on numerous occasions but by may 24 most biafran troops had been pushed out of the city into the surrounding areas major husie stubbornly continued to fight against the nigerians before narrowly escaping death after almost being run over by an armoured car it was then that major chewsy abandoned fighting and retreated to egreta chapter 3 aftermath the next day general adekunle said his famous announcement i will be able to capture owerri abba and omoahia in two weeks that quote then led up to operation how nigerian forces weren't able to capture the cities of owerri and abba until october 1 1968 and were unable to capture umuahia for another year on january 15 1970 biafra surrendered to nigeria and ended the war a large segment of the igbo population of the city fled in advance of its capture by federal forces into the biafran interior abandoning their homes and valuables some of those who remained were killed by troops or non-ibo residents many ijaw people welcomed the arrival of the federal troops and lay claim to some of vacated properties and filled local leadership positions following the end of the war igbos returned to the city many ebo professionals were needed to manage the oil industry and consequently the oil companies housed them in protected areas and pressured the nigerian government to guarantee their safety to promote reconciliation the nigerian government guaranteed all igbos that they could reclaim property they had abandoned during the war upon their return this proved difficult in port harcourt as the rivers state government defied federal authorities and refused to evict squatters on igbo properties state courts often sided with the squatters and the igbo owners perceived this as a state policy of retribution towards them chapter 4 works cited daily samuel fury childs the history of the republic of biafra law crime and the nigerian civil war cambridge university press isbn 9781 10895958 [Music] you | AI reader | UCUc2fvTZdVPNdrshpCTSNHw | 2022-01-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 795 | 4,854 |
Uabza2WHrJA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uabza2WHrJA | architecture | this video will introduce you to code organization because remember that we always want to write code which is easy to maintain that is it shall be easy to change its functionality and also easy to extend that is it shall be easy to add new functionality and in order to reach these goals the code must be flexible which means exactly this and when we change something or add something the lines we are writing we are dealing with should be exactly those that are changed or those that are added we should not have to change lines with code that is not supposed to be changed that has nothing to do with the functionality being added or changed and the code must also be easy to understand because if not our smart solutions will just be changed by other developers remember that you cannot assume that the same developer is working with the code all the lifetime of the code must be possible for other developers to understand your smart solutions to reach these goals the code must be divided into subsystems where each subsystem or layer is occupied with one specific toast we do not want code to do a bit of everything but we split it into subsystems that have clear responsibilities and this is called high cohesion so high cohesion means exactly this the code does not do a bit of everything but belongs to a subsystem that has a clear specific task and the code is dealing only with this specific task that is one of the properties that we want the code to have and the other property is low coupling which means that different subsystems different parts of the code should have no dependency on each other because that way if we change in one subsystem or one part of the code there is not much risk having to change in another subsystem another layer so this is the goal of the code structure to get high cohesion and low coupling and by reaching these goals we will make the code flexible and easy to understand and when the code is flexible and easy to understand it will be easy to maintain and extend so architecture is is a much bigger topic than this but that's all we are concerned with right now okay so now let's see how good architecture can help us reach these goals we will use an MVC Model View controller architecture model view controller identifies two specific tasks that programs have not all programs but a very big subset of the programs and especially programs in this course so this is a very commonly used architecture and the two subsystems that are identified by the Model View controller pattern our view which is the user interface the view is concerned with how to present the program state to the user and how to react to you suggestions in key presses swipes mouse gestures whatever so this is the task of the view to interact with the user only this user interaction nothing else and the other subsystem or layer and identified by the Model View controller pattern is the model so the model is the program state the program's view of the reality okay so these are two really different things to interact with the user and to model the reality and that is what the MVC pattern tells us to split the program into these two different layers fine but that's not enough there is another component here the controller and to realize the need of the controller I will try to show would happen if there was no controller oh I will try to explain this with the help of an analogy this image it is supposed to illustrate the process of building a schoolhouse the blue persons up here are supposed to be people working at this code light teachers the headmaster the janitor the school canteen and so on and the orange person's found at the bottom are supposed to be construction workers like carpenters plumbers electricians project managers and so on so in this not-so-good organization anyone appear working at the school is allowed to talk to any one of the construction workers so for example this person here might ask this person down here hey could you tear down this this wall I need a bigger classroom and this one might tell this one please add some extra walls here I want smaller group rooms and this one tells that one oh please add a pipe here I need a tap here okay so one can realized there will not be much of a school built with this organization so instead we need a better organization and that is to add this steering group here the green thing here in the middle so now the pool personnel is only allowed to talk to the steering group and only the steering group is allowed to talk to the construction workers so now the project is well organized and the person's up here have no knowledge about the person lap down there there are they are completely isolated it is only the green person in the middle who has detailed knowledge about the construction workers all requests something needs to be done those requests are passed to the this man in the middle the green and the green dispatches it to the red orange at the bottom and is this green one that has the detailed knowledge about who to talk with at the bottom who shall do what so the green as you might've guessed is the controller layer so the MVC pattern identifies these three layers the view which is where commands originate the controller whose task is to translate the commands originating from the view to detailed instructions to the model and the model is the program's view of the reality where the actual work is done okay so that's the Model View controller pattern a lot more can be said about Model View controller and there are lots of variants of it but that is enough for us now so we will also look at another architectural pattern and that is the layer button while the Model View controller patent specifically told us to have the layers view controller and model the layer pattern more generally tells us to split the program into layers subsystems called layers so in this image here there are three extra layers first there is the data layer which might be the database where the data is actually stored then there is the DB Handler layer whose task is to provide an interface between the model and the data layer just you could say that just like the controller provides an interface between the view and the model and separates those the DB handler layer provides an interface between the data base and the data base and the model and separates those so we don't need database calls all over the model okay but we will talk more about DB handler layer later in the course and then in this image there's also startup layer which contains the main method so the task of the startup layer is simply to start the program that does not belong in any other layer okay but these are typical layers but exactly which layers there shall be that is up to discussion and can be different in different programs the layer button just tells us to split the sub system in two layers so we must really be observant about the need of layers and a particular task should not be mixed with other code in other classes doing completely different things if the code we are about to write does not fit logically together with any of the existing classes then it it might be a sign that is the need for a new layer and I think it helps to think of the layers just like the layers in a cliff here in this image we can think of these layers as being organized top to bottom somehow this is the top of course and this is the bottom in this image and in the same way we can think that the view is at the top of the software layers and the data is at the bottom and calls shall proceed from the topmost layers to the lower layers this dashed arrow means dependency some kind of dependency so it's appropriate just as this diagram shows to have dependencies from higher layers to lower layers of course we need that right there is no way to reach a lower layer without a dependency from a higher layer but we do not want dependencies from lower layers to higher layers no we don't want those and we don't don't want that thing for example because that would create extra dependencies give us higher coupling and make the code a lot Messier also we would like to avoid calls directly from the view to the model like this because that would break the idea about the MVC pattern and we would be back to this thing here where we have the messy organization right so that was a few words about code organization of course there's very much to say about this topic but that's sufficient for our needs now | ID1212, Network Programming | UCv4AHtiZO09MgOwwMFXHOiQ | 2018-11-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,574 | 8,505 |
VMKqx8M60j0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMKqx8M60j0 | Wow! Giancarlo Stanton Opens Up The Season W/ 2 HR's 4 RBI's! Yankees Recap 3/29/2018 | yo Yankee says what is up it is Felix from my news.com why what a game the home opener for the Toronto Blue Jays their first game of the regular season Yankees versus the Blue Jays the Yankees got on the scoreboard early Granderson committed an error and beat first inning a line Gartner to reach judge goes down here comes John Carlos Stanton hitting a monster opposite field home run to right field fast forward to the top of the fifth John Cole with Stanton doubles and Aaron Judge giving him three RBIs in the game so far in these same any Gary Sanchez doubles in Stanton giving the Yankees a four nothing lead over the Blue Jays to the top of the seventh Brett Gardner comes to bat and launches a solo Jack to right-field putting the Yankees up 5 to 0 and we're off to the top of the 9th Giancarlo Stanton comes to bat formerly known as mr. 305 now mr. 7 1 8 launches another home run a solo home run his second of the game giving him or RBIs in total Giancarlo Stanton is just playing with people hey he's picking up where he left off he's leading the major leagues in home runs he had again and it's just opening day so there you have it folks the Yankees went 6 to 1 over the Toronto Blue Jays seve looked great if seve can't pitch like the ACE the Yankees know he is consistently he might be in the running yet again for the siyeong award striking out seven batters with over five innings pitched only aligned one hit and no earned runs so Yankee says this has been my recap for March 29th 2018 and like always this has been Felix from my news.com share like and subscribe I will check you out for the next video | NYYNEWS | UC-wI39tFM-omBDovxjjCe0g | 2018-03-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 315 | 1,621 |
dk_DF_Ls_Xs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dk_DF_Ls_Xs | Where is this IP from - geo ip lookup - Linux Shell | okay today's video is going to be a uh video on just it's going to be a quick little tip on uh different ways of finding out the location of an IP address so you have someone's IP address or a server IP address and you're wondering where is this located in the world um now before I begin I know a lot of people are going to be like oh there's plenty of websites you can go to and you can type in you know IP addresses like I'm just going to make one up here I can like 2222 see if that one works yeah that one's in France some of these web pages will give you uh uh the uh map as well of the location and of course there is who is.com which if we went there and typed in 2.222 or whatever IP address is and say search it'll probably give you the who is information or not maybe who is.org who is.net let's see 2.2.2 two go there we go it'll bring up the who is information and of course most of you will probably know that uh you can do who is from the command line which is probably how a lot of you use it so who is 2.222 and we get the who is information here and of course you can see what country France right there and um who owns it whether it's a company or person address uh they put in when they uh bought that uh that server and of course you can use uh server names other than just uh IP addresses uh and I'm like a lot of you probably already know all this but I ran across a little application today so I just thought I'd throw it out there show you guys this um it should be in your repositories if you aptitude search uh goip one of the options is uh g-b uh so you can see aptitud tells me right there I have an I so it's installed already once that's installed part of that package is go uh lookup and if you type that in with 2.222 or whatever IP address uh it just breaks it down for you a little bit cleaner and gives you the uh country that it's in so although who is is usually installed by default and this application is not and you could always grip through uh who is I just saw this and I thought it was neat the way that just gave a little simple output there um especially since uh who is in most cases at least from what I've seen just gives you like the abbreviation for the country and of course FR is France but uh maybe you don't know what some countries uh abbreviation is you'll get some weird abbreviation you'll have to try to figure it out but um GOI look up gives you the full country name and I just thought I'd give you that little quick tip there we can do another one if you'd like let's do 33.33 and hit enter that's the United States let's just type in something random like 63 243 13123 and that one's in the US as well and of course you can do the who is with any of these and get even more information on uh who owns it so that's a go lookup I just found it interesting probably won't use it myself too much probably would use who is in regards to like the difference between that and using a site like this is uh you know if you're writing a script the site's not going to help you much unless you're going to W get stuff and pass it information always easier just to use it from the uh tools you have so I thank you for watching uh this is just a simple little quick tip uh interesting I don't know if anyone's ever going to actually use this but thank you for watching uh visit my site films by chris.com that's Chris of the K there's a link in the description to my website thank you for watching be sure to subscribe because I put out videos all the time and if you like uh my videos be sure to like the ones you like so I know what you like thanks for watching and have a great day | Kris Occhipinti | UCf93fPKwotph47H3_KDcRyg | 2012-12-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 746 | 3,636 |
eyK5YPplceo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyK5YPplceo | Sensation from the Face: Neuroanatomy Video Lab - Brain Dissections | it's time to consider the sensation coming from the face so focusing on facial sensation i brought my friend along here and these green branches of the trigeminal nerve are going to give you an idea of the extent and the magnitude of and the importance of the trigeminal nerve so the trigeminal nerve has three branches from the vertex here we have branches all the way down to the um orbit and mid middle of the orbit and we call that the ophthalmic division then below that there is the maxillary division which includes innervation of the teeth and the gums and below that we have the mandibular division also includes the lower jaw teeth and gums now if i turn this around what you can see is there are green nerves on the posterior aspect of the skull but these are not trigeminal these are high cervical innervation of the back so it's only from the vertex and it only goes down and excludes the angle of the jaw the ear this is the external auditory meatus the ear is very complicated because embryologically it formed from different regions and so it's innervated partly by the trigeminal it also has some innervation from the high cervical nerves so the ear is not a good thing to test when you're testing sensation from the face so now let's look at some of the internal structures that are also innervated by the trigeminal nerve here's a hemisection of the head and i just want to remind you that the anterior two-thirds of the surface of the tongue and also the mucosa of your cheeks are innervated by the trigeminal so if you bite your cheek or burn your tongue that information is conveyed by the trigeminal nerve similarly the menasal mucosa is also supplied by the trigeminal nerve as are the linings of the sinuses and the most of the dura mater that covers the surface of the brain so now we're going to quickly start with the pathway from its origin in the trigeminal ganglion so these nerves from have come in from the surface and now sitting here in the middle cranial fossa this cavity here is the trigeminal ganglion it's green and big it's the biggest ganglion these are the cell bodies the primary cell bodies coming from all those three divisions and they are going to enter into the center of the ponds the middle of the ponds the ponds recall is lying right here over the basal artery so in the body carrying sensation up from the spinal cord we had two major pathways we had one called the spinal thalamic and we had the other called the dorsal column medial lemniscus we have that same two types of of tracks in coming from the trigeminal nerve and one is going to involve a synapse in a descending or spinal nucleus and that's going to be one route and the other one is going to involve another nucleus the principal or chief trigeminal nucleus and so we have these two pathways and the uh first one carries just like from the body pain and temperature hot and cold or warm and cold and the other one carries vibration two-point discrimination like knowing if my face is being touched in two places or one when uh two points are uh placed on my skin and also joint position joint with this must be jaw that's about the only joint we have on the face now light touch just like from the body is carried in both of these pathways so light touch will tell you that something's working in the trigeminal but it doesn't distinguish between these two pathways i'm going to show you this animation which covers the entire nervous system from the tip of the spinal cord to the top of the cortex and here we have the midbrain the pons the medulla and the spinal cord now pain and temperature which we're going to go through first comes in from the face and it does something very strange this first neuron the trigeminal ganglion neuron comes in and it descends it descends all the way down some people say c4 c5 to the cervical level then it synapses and the second neuron crosses and forms the trigeminal thalamic tract and goes up to the thalamus and then on to the cortex let's animate that you see this is the first order neuron you've been uh painfully stimulated on your your face information comes in and it descends from the middle of the pons to the top of the cord crosses to the left side and then goes to the left cortex via the thalamus now let's look at fine touch vibration joint position coming from the face it goes to a different nucleus it comes straight in and synapses in the chief or principal nucleus right there in the middle of the pons then the second neuron crosses it's always the second neuron that crosses and synapses on the third neuron in the thalamus in the same nucleus but different cells the ventral posterior and this time it's the medial part of the thalamus and then on through the internal capsule up to the cortex let's animate that information comes in synapses crosses goes to the thalamus through the internal capsule to the face region of the cortex recall this is only information from the face and it's out on the lateral cortex the lateral postcentral gyrus so now we are looking at the ventral surface of the brain and the pons extends from here to here and right in the middle of the pons is the large the largest of all the cranial nerves the large trigeminal nerve so it comes in on the side of the pons on either side we can see it better on a brain stem specimen we're looking at the brain stem here the surface here is the midbrain and as i tilt it up you can see the pons that extends from here to here and the medulla coming down here connecting with the spinal cord and right here is the large trigeminal nerve burrowing through the ponds here and here it is on the other side and so what we want to do is to follow this nerve as it comes in and makes its connections now we're going to trace the entrance of the trigeminal nerve that carries information for pain and temperature so here we have in the middle of the pons the trigeminal nerve so information coming in from the right trigeminal nerve enters and into an area approximately here and then those axons descend they're going back down through the medulla we're still on the right side back down through the medulla down near the level of the decussation even down to the high cervical spinal cord and there in these areas you will find the second neuron involved in crossing to the other side so the decussation of this trigeminal thalamic tract occurs all the way from the middle of the pawns all the way down to the high cervical spinal cord now we're going to consider vibration joint position and find discrete touch and how that enters similarly it comes in through the right trigeminal nerve and right here at the level where it enters there is a nucleus the chief or principal sensory nucleus of the trigeminal there the second neurons cross to the other side and are located close to the medial lemniscus that we saw coming from the spinal cord connections so we now have facial sensation located very close to the medial lemniscus that is carrying body sensation for fine touch joint position and vibration now the pathway that came up with pain and temperature is also in this area and so we have both of these pathways converging in the middle of the pons and from there on they are called the trigeminal thalamic pathway and they run close to the body sensation pathway and they are going to head up toward the midbrain this section is a transition between midbrain and pons and our fibers are traveling in this area here facial sensation for all modalities is very close to body sensation and everything has crossed so damage in this area is likely to result in the loss of pain temperature vibration joint position etc from both the body and the face one more level up is the midbrain when we get to the midbrain our fibers now are right here on the surface on their way going around the midbrain and onto the thalamus so finally we've arrived at the thalamus so we have to be going to the left hemisphere so we are now in the left thalamus and facial sensation goes more medial than body sensation so body sensation was in the ventral posterior lateral region and facial sensation is in the ventral posterior medial area of the thalamus this all of this is the thalamus so we generically call these nuclei vpm for the face and vpl for the body labeled lines still exist if you're a pain fiber you're still a pain if you're a vibration you're still carrying vibration and you enter into the internal capsule and you head up now for the face area remember the face is lateral on our homunculus so the face and larynx and pharynx and that area is all over in this most lateral part of the postcentral gyrus let's look at the cerebral cortex and a whole brain now we're back to our whole brain again and here is our central sulcus coming down here to the lateral fissure the post-central gyrus region here all of this area is mostly regarded as involving the face don't forget that we have lips and tongue and all of these other areas but we also have facial sensation so there's a very important take-home message about the pain and temperature pathway from the face if you have a low lesion of the brain stem or a high lesion of the spinal cord and you see loss of facial sensation for pain and temperature that doesn't mean that the lesion is in the pons it could be at any one of these levels and if all the sensation is lost from the face you know it's either the nerve or the middle of the pons farther forward or rostral anywhere from mid-pawns to cerebral cortex you | Moran CORE | UCldQrlI8TxtG0AJ4JLhh1fQ | 2018-02-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,762 | 9,528 |
GzP67oD3zAI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzP67oD3zAI | TOPIC 181024 A1 Summary of Strategic Plan | this is the summary of ideas from our strategic plan it doesn't matter that we will implement everything doesn't mean we will implement everything but to take very close look on all the ideas you've presented in allow maybe not do young eben wording sake I'd let me Joe off but that's okay because we want to capture the spirit of your ideas in later on when the exocomp comes back so meeting now may we can sift through those new ideas and we're so pleased and thankful for all the work that you have done when I was a llama for participating let's praise the Lord for that and really didn't one iota login' Ameen to come up with ideas and then just to give it to you we really wanted to get ideas from you and we are so pleased to get all these ideas so your mission statement mantle can you please read it with me one two three go the topic Commission exists to champion the well-being of Filipino pastoral leaders by mobilizing pastoral training institutions and individuals mentoring pastoral trainers and monitoring pastoral and church health indicators for future strategic decision so I tell young corbels nothing McGee not go on attend the mission that we do every day as exocomp and as topic community second a top own faith goes nothing say it with me together ready go the topic to mission and vicious to raise five thousand apparel trainers 5,000 pastoral help accountability groups with 10,000 new pastoral leaders in the next two years so let me just explain a little bit and maybe say you better go good and paren alright what we wanted to do is to raise 5,000 apparel trainers okay Mohamed's have been here optimum pastoral trainer how do we do that Kevin I mean you know Bennigan's a matrix remember so that you can identify where you are and somehow understand what you need to be a better password trainer now on here's here's the even if you cannot teach okay even if you don't have a material to teach you can still start as a an aspire and pastoral trainer pani on all you have to do is to gather a group of people four more people five five in all and then start a regular accountability group ok enough want ability group you want about why because you grow and learn and develop in community so from a mug and accountability group even if you're not a good teacher but if you're a good facilitator you are a good putter you connect with other pastors lolani mana password who are alone doing the ministry alone go in approach them and invite them in your group pray for them build them up encourage them then you're already part of the pastoral trainers because you're facilitating them that's the minimum requirement for a password trainer and then later on you can develop yourself little by little by taking more getting resources committee moon-jeep pro learning there are so many resources that you can share in your group ok you build up each other and that's how you become password trainer and then later on God willing you get more training as you get more training then you will influence more people you follow ok many monoghan so you momenta some of you won't be able to train a password trainer who can train other leaders but you can always start by creating a group and we know it's easier to measure pastoral health when a pastor is part of a group than just quantifying how many people attended your seminar that's a pretty common seminar so one hundred but after that nepali mouton illa after a week what they've learned but if you're part of a accountability group that meets for the next two years or one year ok regularly I assure you that pastor will be healthier than the one who attended one two or three seminars without really in-depth engaging himself in a deep way through seminar okay so what we want to do is to raise 5,000 personal trainers and you can encourage other pastors who are part of your network why don't you look for other pastors or emerging leaders Coyote now examine we call that pastoral trainers new pastoral leaders we didn't call them pastors because they could be a Bible study leader small group leader they're emerging as a pastor a leader you count them in network mo but when they decide to become a full-time pastor praise the Lord okay you know what you in the pastor that I brought here three of them are senior pastor at the battery manga illustrator Asia and that's about senior pastor the one who disciple that guy was my wife when they were in high school he was since I mean he was in college and through his professional life and now he's a pastor and then the two other groups that's jro and the other one jet is at the back Malala in town in Gaza because in a Ramesh LT pastor deben leadership at Ala Moana button to aina society school class Penang wife go and now we are mentoring them and we are we don't have any position in church the only ministry we do is to provide life coaching for them but they're the ones running the church already alright so that's the only thing you can do you can be a password trainer by just gathering a group of how many four people cause a young attrition rate not ten is fifty percent at least you get two more that you can count at the end of the two years all right it's not clear alright praise the Lord let's go quickly some mobilization I'll probably take maybe five to ten minutes or four times that okay okay so a mobilization and the Samaritan will be able to reach out to denominational leaders Madame upon denominational leaders are not here so the job of the exocomp is tried to work and reach out to them and if you know their nomination leaders that you can connect with us please connect them to us we want to tap ministerial fellowship we want to enlist qualified pastor trainers into the group okay Yamaha ideas in Yui somebody said to tap the Muslim background believers tap them for pastoral training events and leadership training tap tribal leaders to become password trainers by connecting specialized ministries in tribal communities when a wonderful idea okay so good idea steps for mobilizing identification recruitment vision casting supervision ideas another one is regionalised goals mechana Enid buddy you did that yesterday Amanda's on ABC maranatha I'm on original goals we need to create working committees we need to challenge you to think about stepping up as a point person for topic pray about it okay if the Lord is working in your heart to step up and say you know I want to be part of this what God is doing through topic we want you to pray seriously about it and when we come and visit you one day please share that burden to us and we want you to be part of that team all right we want to create develop program in timetables we did that create video materials a teaching medium we're already talking with our brother our Korean brother at the back thank you so much for doing this for us did you see the video okay that's only half of the video I think that could work in another video for the whole thing okay but you are grateful and we hope we can partner together soon to come up with materials resources that you can use that are being but that are taught by Filipino teachers okay hopefully we can tap again to you Herman and we have Phillip to do some sessions for you and then we will do I will make that available for free for all topic community okay so identifying develop basic muscle training curriculums that is transferable and relevant hopefully we can transfer it monitoring the use of social media as means to monitor met and Dominic sabaneta and so we will be coming up with the new Facebook page for the whole topic Commission soon Tomica identify tied we'll send you links so my email now so if you haven't given your email yet please go downstairs look at a look for a teacher give your email to them if you want to receive some of the materials that we present the dear don't put them in paddle assign us a email so it's important that you give your email to them I did check jnana Tom my email address cuz usually Miami bollocks IMing email Lee Tama periodic regional visit and report hopefully by God's grace with budget I'll to be able to visit these groups submission of reflection papers online and video teaching media create an accreditation system for all done formal partners of topic so talk about this seriously I say right now not non-formal theological education they have babbit's you know Connie longface national face for all of them and whatever problems they're encountering with decks or the government the puppets comes in to help them out all right so non formal trainings well appetite on we don't have an umbrella organization that takes care of us so right now we're seriously considering topic commission to become the face of all non formal theological institution the Philippines okay so hopefully you can come with us we can simply pack nectarine ki O'Neal again you may training toka main topic okay and TCC so at least me I don't perform credibility that when you do training and do panel and on topic and PCC we know that and it's easier to twenty five we say I know got a knock on I'm training at Auto copper a hope or even long salon topic then I can look for other trainings that I need instead of cleaning the follow so hopefully we can build that up sustainability whole periodic consultations evaluate and recommend curriculum that is needed source out funds and capacity-building so we'll be thinking through about that and most of what we'll do is acquire heal will try to connect with some of you to help us build capacity alright so step maximizing and utilizing social media for network of resources and building relationship the Samantha Nina prayer hubs hopefully we can build the prayer hubs for me I'm in the middle of trying to write another book for the church the title is teach the church to pray but what we wanted to do is to make this available online instead of having it published at least the first few ones okay so we're building that with G pro Commission we want to disseminate that to the G pro Commission hopefully once that's done we can cascade that down to you and we can build more prayer into the life of our pastors and churches periodic jeepers events retreats and topic conferences hopefully we can have to mark where he'll is thinking of doing one at the middle of next year and then another one at the start of 2020 before we call Ben 8 October 19 to 21 2020 all right so reserve journey on Marin a time G just don't know where we could do it and it might be a bigger event because that time is not gonna be a planning event it's gonna be an event to encourage build you up and strengthen the community of pastors okay so that's gonna be a big event 2020 and then we have a setup of structure for financial support pray for a cooler Hill is gonna meet with hopefully be able to meet with a potential supporter by October 30 been really pray that we can get some money Cassie honestly we don't have a single cent nothing don't you know one I'm in the Atacama Rito and we're trying to raise funds for this we lacked 85 thousand pesos when we came here the other day 46 a long letter may 46 permit on and we feel bad for those who said they're coming the best urban Ameen degrading moment Apogee Nikki Glaser dear I mean in a fair na pavakah Paulo Rio we have to say no to how many people 200 people sorry point do you predict a significant and I mean and 30 people didn't come my EDC la we served food for them in in place and that's a wasted opportunity for all the 200 who should have come here's the con mutation to gabay in Ipoh tyoma but we didn't reach the 5000 mark for the pastoral trainers coulomb Putin and about 700 people so we only have 4300 who committed to raise pasture trails but that's okay I say you exocomp I'm in Mexico he will happen omikami be bigger in a commitment then some how big a time commitment exocomp a said he'll have to find the 700 now tailor a mini challenge to fill that gap okay or at least me 5068 io alright so hopefully we can still push through bid five thousand yes yes yes yes praise the Lord thank you so I'm sure my mother is not into 5,000 even more yes pop yes okay it's the Lord support Ballack you put on you can challenge them in Rijeka this call I'm sure we'll be able to reach more than 5,000 right plus well a pupusa Chardon representative on formal education until entire II know not formal and we have a lot of people superb us who are part of that do you know that there's 300 300 formal theological education the Philippines 300 in Japan there's only 20 for the whole Japan so Pilipinas 300 what's the sad part the average graduates number of graduates from formal theological education every year is only 300 last one that means many of these form a theological education are not really producing pastoral leaders okay so can you imagine if 80s Moga graduates Allah if 80s has 20 P 30 people who graduated that year then that means about 30 seminaries didn't graduate anybody did many graduated here okay pastoral health accountability sempre we just multiplied that the same number because we're hoping that they in turn also build accountability so para on the number of pastoral trainers were hoping that you as a password trainer will build your own community for people each Tama 5k is a group band of brothers five okay and then if we translate that into pastoral leaders we have attrition rate of 50 percent then we have we still have 10,000 the reason why some of them are not this the sake I said up at some time so it should be times four because some groups already said this is the only the number of password leaders we can raise at the moment okay so that's fine it changes some of you won't be able to raise pastoral trainers you can just raise pass for a leader said that's fine we will just add the number later on two years from now all right okay finally the next G pro is going to be October 19 to 21 2020 so get excited we're hoping we can do it in a bigger event and but that time hope we hope we have more money that we can use so that we can accommodate more people but next time well on up on Libre well we will do we will bring the the registration as affordable as we can all right that's our promise now I mean happy so Mullis Apuzzo PSO on registration Paralympic guy I 1500 so technical will we're praying that we can bring it down we don't want anybody not to come only because of money it shouldn't be the case no one should be able to should be prevented from joining us only because of money - okay so we'll make sure of that plus we'll ask the good guys at the back - please distribute this small sheet of paper small longer and one for sheet because we don't want you to write so many things okay what we want you to do is to think of one what have you been blessed with in this conference just one Allan Poe Pomeranian then pick the best just one all right in the second what you want you share something you want to see improved in our next G prevent just one okay let's say but Moriah minami Yom Kippur ahoy so just share one of this ideas you don't have to give that right now will cause the pastor he'll for the next phase of our top but you can write it down and then later after the whole event you can give it back to us about or for a teacher all right thank you so much for listening [Music] | Gihwan Jeong | UC8_pnYEkdeW6WorTKM5S04w | 2018-11-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,876 | 15,361 |
imdNjy6L_3k | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imdNjy6L_3k | QUARANTINE THOUGHTS ON CRACK /\ Vlog /\ devontrieslife | haha hate all the time it's got your boy whatever you want to call me doesn't come at you with a random type of video today guys I just wanna chat I just have some things on my mind a couple of things first of all as you can tell I'm wearing a hat today my hair is not on fleek good back your ass but honestly I don't have time for a lot of things is the freaking is [ __ ] killing me and I can't do a thing more like I'm so sick and tired of it and I wanted to leave my house like I'm literally okay here's this thing I was working for good three weeks like three weeks straight like forty hours getting my coin so I can get the laptop so I can start editing and like my Sims 4 okay I want to play by since four and um girl I get I asked for a week off I'm going to start crazy already it's driving me insane like I my moms like hey and I'm like oh I was so nervous to go outside even if like I could just go for a walk which is so stupid because like I know I'll be fine but like girl literally going on the tik-tok because like girl I saw this one I was like man should be the one that makes the first move and I it was like to the tune of Liz's that's exactly how I feel copyright infringement there you go and I decided to do edit so here's that [Music] that's an odd truth like what if we're both but if we're both like men now I've literally been only watching tick-tock and editing and as of this moment when I'm filming this which is or 20 david dobrik you're canceled as of this moment Friday April 17th at 4:20 p.m. I have two videos that are scheduled to go up one is the comeback video that is going to be up on the 19th and then the other one is going to be the vlog that I did and like the transformation that I did with them Rachel if you haven't checked those out there will be a link to the playlist where they are in the description below and then I can also put it in my car breaking here if you guys want to go check that out I've been so bored I have not been doing anything like party and driving me crazy girl I don't know what to do someone please pray like I'm ready gonna bid your ideas like I have a couple like I'm playing a shoot another one after this video after I'm done recording it but like I'm literally trying to think of like what can I do run the house that's interesting I filmed a Q&A video that one is in the process of being edited and I hope it turns out well and I'm just like I'm losing my mind and the worst part is because you know a lot of the influx calls scans that I get typically come from India they India's on like a nation might shut down right now so like only unless if they're working from home which very few are I can't do scam bidding but I'm trying grow like I've been looking and I've been researching I've been do it and getting my tush so hopefully we'll be able to find some and hopefully we will be able to take care of that but I literally been losing my mind I'm so bored I'm literally picked up a shift tomorrow because I'm that bored and I need to like get outside the house right now or else I'm gonna go insane also you know what care if the classes also wait Stein no no I don't know if you did but that [ __ ] Wow that shit's laughs I like it's a lot like I live for it it's so fun definitely go get a croak note bored Roanoke croak and no broken all so I am a confucian hopefully I can think of some video ideas because I'm running out if you have any video ideas please let me know in the comments down below they can be whatever you want with bangs more q and A's gam baiting videos if you find any send them to me on Instagram and Emma tries life or on Twitter at Devon globe 52 and send me the numbers please I'm desperate for some numbers so I can get back to what I love doing which is a meeting don't be around I like doing these types of videos but skipping videos are so [ __ ] fun to make and they're so funny so I just wanted to film that I hope you all are surviving and let me know also down in the comments what are you doing during this quarantine fiasco fantasy tell me please I want to know and while you're done there you might as well go like the video please and also subscribe and become a member of the dollhouse and hopefully we can hit a hundred a hundred cuties a hundred dollars by the end of the year I think we can I think we can because we're iconic let's face it and then also let you down there whether you crack the notification valve I hope you guys enjoy this video and I will see you guys in the next one bye you can count yeah that's definitely damnit he's go | Devon Glover | UC6cRjpqH1x01rCg70lyQpwg | 2020-05-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 942 | 4,606 |
RUBjS-HPKEo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUBjS-HPKEo | 3D Printing Diary Part 13 - Elegoo Resin Review | so then I bought a 3D printer and I got two bottles of City's high Precision UV curable resin I really enjoyed this stuff it was quite thin and runny it was nice to work with so then I tried ELO's bottle and this was like really thick and really heavy to work with now this it stuck to the build plate like to a shovel you know what I mean it really stuck this was actually nice to get off kind of thing now the next one I'm going to try is the enic water wash res in and we're going to see how we go with this one this one from a shake test feels quite runny as well so I'm assuming it's going to be kind of like reality but basically I don't think I'll be going I don't want to use the igu anymore it's too thick the nozzle's rubbish it's too small it's get a nice wide one on this now we'll see how we go with this one yeah | Walejaw 3D | UCeF949mzhgSq7iAKVynWCig | 2024-03-27 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 175 | 826 |
Jp7Cf3gH5eA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jp7Cf3gH5eA | MINDFUL MASTURBATION (how to practice it & improve your sex life) | cvowellness | hey guys welcome back to chill vibes only today's video is on mindful masturbation so how to have mindful masturbation how to practice mindful masturbation and how mindful masturbation can actually help increase your sex life and help you enjoy sexual experiences more so i've talked about conscious masturbation on this channel before but in conscious masturbation i also wanted to bring awareness to conscious thoughts whereas mindful masturbation and practicing mindfulness during masturbation is really about connecting to the sensations in our body and focusing just on those sensations to practice mindful masturbation and mindfulness during masturbation you want to start to first cultivate a practice of mindfulness in your day-to-day life so mindful eating mindful walking you know if you're having a shower focusing on the water on your body and being super mindful of you know maybe when you apply lotion afterwards or when you're brushing your teeth practicing as much as possible becoming aware of the sensations that you experience in your body when you do those simple tasks and then we can begin to practice being mindful when we masturbate so when it comes to mindful masturbation you obviously want to set aside a specific amount of time that you're going to practice this so may it be 10 15 20 minutes all the way up to an hour it's really just however long you have time for uh and i would start off by trying to eliminate any stressors or noise or anything that's going to distract you so picking a time and place where you are fully comfortable um where you're not going to be disturbed and where you are going to be most at ease so you set yourself up to be as mindful as possible um so trying to eliminate any external factors that may pop up in your mind so once you kind of create that time and space for yourself what you'll start to do and what i recommend is first starting to touch your secondary erogenous zones so you want to maybe start to touch your arms and explore what it feels like to have your palm touching your arm or maybe you can start to touch your legs um so just focusing on like chest arms legs parts of our bodies that aren't necessarily connected to our sexual selves but allow us to start to increase our awareness of the sensation so you know running your hands really lightly up and down your arms or on your thighs um can feel really nice and start to be aware and pay attention to how that feels on your body um you know not necessarily labeling a judgment with it like oh i like that or i don't like that um or i'm neutral to that instead just being present for the experience and noticing that the sensation like even if i move my hand up my arm right here i'm feeling sensation and now that maybe i put my finger nails and i move the opposite way down my arm it's a little bit of a different sensation and every single sensation comes and goes but we're just being aware for each one in that present moment so you're going to start off by you know exploring around your body touching your arms your legs your chest and then you can start to move on to touching more of our um sexual zones of our bodies what i'll call them so maybe you start to play with your breasts or your nipples um and maybe you start to move your hands towards your hips and you can kind of play around and see the sensations of running your hands over your hips or maybe your lower back or starting to touch your butt um so you just kind of playing again more with the sensations of your hands bringing your intention back to your hands on your body and that feeling when your mind starts to wander so if you're touching yourself and you realize you're thinking about your grocery list or the fight you had last week or something at work um just bringing your attention back to the sensation in your body as you touch yourself and that's the mindfulness practice so just like if you're mindfully eating or mindfully taking a shower and you're bringing your attention back to the sensations of the food in your mouth or the water on your body you're bringing your attention back to the sensation of your hands on your body then you can start to explore touching your genitals so if you've masturbated before maybe you kind of go in a similar type of style and you touch yourself in that way if you really know your body if you're not super comfortable with masturbating yet i would start super super slow be very conscious and aware here very mindful um and you can start to maybe massage your [ __ ] or touch around your vulva exploring your own body and what feels good to you um i would avoid using any toys at this point especially this is the first time you're doing mindful masturbation just use your hands and the goal here is not to have an orgasm the goal here is actually just to feel the sensation and feel maybe pleasure so exploring our bodies touching ourselves being mindful of the way that we touch ourselves and how that feels in our body and when our minds start to wander bringing ourselves back to that sensation so do that for the time that you allotted if it starts to feel pleasurable in a specific spot and you like to feel that sensation then obviously continue to explore that spot but if you reach a spot that isn't feeling pleasurable or it's really neutral to you or you feel like you should be feeling something you're not acknowledging that thought and then you know bringing yourself back to the sensation on your body and not getting wrapped up in the thought just saying okay that's a thought and now i'm going to bring myself back to the sensation and focusing on the sensations instead of the stories that we're telling ourselves in our head by practicing this it's going to make you more mindful and aware during sexual experiences so if your mind starts to wander with a partner you can bring yourself back to the sensations and move towards the ones that feel more pleasurable to you and it's going to enhance those sensations oftentimes during sex we can be so and even during masturbation we can be so far out in our minds we miss picking up on the subtle cues of our body and the pleasurable sensations that occur because we're so distracted by our minds so practicing being mindful and being tapping into our body and focusing on the sensations instead of focusing on what's going on up here can help enhance and make your sexual experience so much better and mindfulness and mindful masturbation can help you practice that tool in everyday life so you can bring it into your sex life and your sexual experiences i do want to say that masturbation can be a huge source of frustration for many people oftentimes some people don't know how to give themselves orgasms or their partners don't know how to give them orgasms and we get so wrapped up in that and that's why i don't want you to focus on orgasm as the goal during mindful masturbation the goal is simply just to connect with your body connect with sensations and potentially just move towards more pleasurable ones but if uncomfortable or unpleasant ones pop up acknowledging that those are just temporary and they're going to pass and try not to get so wrapped up in those and instead focusing back on your breath on your body on the sensation and moving towards pleasure so um definitely try out mindful masturbation i recommend honestly trying to do it once a day if possible even if it's just for 10 minutes i think it's a great way to connect with your body to feel more at one with yourself um but if not at least once a week set aside time to explore your body get in touch with yourself because it is such a wonderful form of self-care um and yeah try to explore and see how that changes the way your sex evolves over the next weeks months years if you become more aware of sensations if you're more present in the moment mindfulness can have so many positive effects on our sex lives just like in our everyday life and mindful masturbation is a wonderful tool that you can use to kind of unlocking those pleasurable points and also wonderful sensations and potentially orgasms in your sex life so i hope you guys enjoyed today's video please give it a big thumbs up if you liked it and subscribe um let me know if you try out mindful masturbation in the comments below or dm me give us a follow at cvo wellness on instagram we post a bunch of different sex education and sex tips and relationship advice and yoga classes on there so definitely check that out at cvo wellness on instagram thank you guys so much for watching and hope you have a great day | ChillVibezOnly | UCaxNO6YQwDk121DeyBVf3JQ | 2021-08-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,579 | 8,603 |
OpzEJhMb4QU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OpzEJhMb4QU | Example: Mohr Circle for a Pressure Cylinder Subjected to Torsion | in this problem we have a closed and cylindrical tube with diameter of 250 mm and wall thickness of 5 mm which is subjected to an internal pressure p equal to 3 map pascals and a torque t equal to 15 kons about its axis and using more cycle we need to determine the principle stresses and the maximum shared force and estimate the orientation of the plane at which they occur then first we need to calculate what are the stresses created by the pressure and the torque so if we consider this small element here we will Define this to be dist stress in the X Direction so this is the X Direction This is the y direction Sigma Y and this is the sheer stress to XY so let's determine what are these stresses we have first distress due to pressure and we know from our previous exercise that if we have a cylinder with an internal pressure p the stress in the longitudinal Direction Sigma X is equal to p r / 2 T where T is the thickness of the wall so this is equal to and the stress in the y direction for this cylinder we have also the solution from our previous exercise this is equal to p r ided by the wall thickness then this is equal to and now we can determine the stress due to torsion of course due to torsion we have only sheer stress then we can use the torsional formula we know that the stress / R is equal to the torque ided by the polar moment of inertia then from here the shear is equal to t r / by the polar moment of inertia and since we can use the th wall approximation we know that in this case the polar moment of inertia is equal to 2 pi r Cub * T then from here we have this is it equ Al to T * R and this is finally equal to then these are the stresses in the X and Y Direction and The sheer stress then now we can start drawing our more Circle this is our small element they can then we can first Define then we can first Define the center point which is equal to the aage stress so this is equal to Sigma X Plus class first we can to start calculating what is the center of the circle we know that is equal to Sigma average and this is equal to Sigma X Plus Sigma y divide by two so this is equal to and we know that the radius isal to Sigma x minus the average squar plus this here stress squared and the square root of this so this is equal to now I can start drawing my more Circle this is my reference I know that the center is located more or less at 56 so this is Sigma average and I can I can start defining the plane a point a I know that this here here is creating a cont clockwise rotation so according to the criteria that we are using this is a negative sh stress so negative 36 3.56 and the corresponding Sigma X is 37.5 so the point is small as here is 0.1 and point 2 of course the rotation is clockwise so positive 30 56 and the corresponding normal stress is equal to 75 megapascals so more or less around here then this is these are my planes A and B this is Sigma X and sigma y and now I can finish drawing my [Music] circle more or less like this so these are the planes of the principal stresses this is Sigma one and this is the second principal stress so now we need to calculate them we know that the principal stress one is equal to and sigma 2 is equal to right remember that I didn't say this but Sigma 1 is the average Plus radius and sigma 2 is the average minus the radius so from here now we know because the problem is asking for this what is the maximum here stress which is equal to the radius then the maximum Shar stress is equal to 38 35. 85 megap pascals we have our principal stresses and we need to finally determine what is the orientation of the principal planes with respect to the reference that we have right now so for example with respect to the plane a we know that the angle of rotation in the more circle is two times the angle of rotation in the real problem so so this is the angle 251 that the principal axis forms with a and of course this is the angle 252 that this second principal axis is forming with the plane a so from the geometry of the problem we can measure that 251 is more as 135° so from here we know that 51 is equal to 7 7 67.5 degrees counterclockwise from a they have the same direction of rotation and 252 which is equal to 251 plus 180 so this is equal to 315 so from here we know that 52 is equal to 157 .5 de again counterclockwise from a | Calvin Rans | UCMhEVijVXzQSgktJ9zAYilQ | 2016-03-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 885 | 4,339 |
1gJvrYrjr3k | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1gJvrYrjr3k | FOSDEM 2009 - 05 | you see me talking with on your anime men oh yeah I'll try to be I'm here better when we hear but they're not at the level of a voice in the window oh my face right so hopefully now you can see a very gambling of what I'm going to talk about to start just by giving you a quick introduction to be making some of the grooves on the new coal plant interesting and then which is so I can have the next slide this multiple family thanks back to around night 60 certainly gets driving this to the first original thoughts in subject line of the running of the Stanford was really one found in my veins with language that that's all finished that way seven with a brushless motors very light and self has long very popular percentage on JavaScript parents must avenge himself but it has something make successful nation make you scratch my head the one that was fun if I can move on to the last cycle some it's full talk that are grammatically to make this assignment which uses this come on in okay so you know they're able all of that didn't they suffer anymore right legis we're all different areas and the other things message center and mr. vacuum I objective c which is so yummy differences in their love square brackets with us square brackets don't get to see that to distinguish between see so you have three types of message you've read messages adjust my message messages with long promise that I made messages with alternate realities which is this vector which we compartmentalize and I guess that one's refusal surprised by this attack so we can move on to the next slide the program hole so anything someone speak yeah just that we were on the frog on Fox I so this is for a peaceful clock stops to right-wing Texas magnificus the objective c you have no 12 segment is the prince while all that comes down and it's multiple there are out of control statements on that message center all you can do to have additional executions or this implemented internal medicine so if you want to have something to look like a statement that you just have a boolean objects improves them through message that is not into that one closure so invest example here on the slide which instantly removing an object in proven false message and the little square brackets there are blocking sprains so these are just another night little number literal string tentacles that you get accuracy they're just turned into an object when Lionel runs and this object and some blockage of ours that it responds to a value message possible design you can see my kunis so implementing rectifier so this would be a method that would be implemented on the Block closure object itself which is bad while true method which takes the new body is not met and it just returns the results of the standing about your message itself and then setting if through message to the result of that the loop body so this looks kind of complicated it's basically a denomination while doing it the balance of thing just and just that this confusion area just drop without needing to have anything an adult movie and that's how you want any one dimension is no special I'm nervous to anything I don't know is a very nice messages objects so all you need is two subclasses is true plastic bottle ass that proved us implement this if through messing you by setting a value message argument and the false one implements in line doing nothing so then if you want to do any planet in digital you get a mess the method that returns Kingston's climbing through more balls all of this video works and as I don't if you use this specific exact opposite of it this defines all of this kind of message sending into that the functions and small talk is exactly as expressive that it works from the other end in mind what I don't think that you can bring this exact to the kind of things that you would do mind yourself events so next one please so objective-c I guess as a language the paper industry really nice and is there in one game who's not used objective-c loves the work subjective see is basically the last notes pregnancies mentor that's one to try again if you squishy and sports all together into a single you really see programmers to learn it was basically love the dusties tactic internet cheers and it's really easy small talk but was to learn basically just a smart decision time after the national record but it's not as the object language one of dozens we will talk is the other object oriented languages and has nothing objective-c has been supremacy plug 12 structures would you calmly replacement mechanism and smoking doesn't adjust as massive sample and objective-c is an avid bastards small talk the reason objective-c was created was this mortal with to slug that use on the ring achieve machines they're available in the early eighties I guess now that is a problem popper calculations and lasting machine that with a client workstations lens or daughters created but it's still been granted you've got something as processor intensive objective-c is precisely master is positive I'm democracy and possible that's faster than personal it's also possible to write really something stupid our objective c losing a certain value again writing school so one of the headphones arms and abdomen is hardly an archer circles and a half implementations motor which uses a sensible loop native conformation a diversion Objective C which uses IE Roger recursively templating engine some free version and by the time you get to around the 20th and margin of them via small talk started so that's like is so small talk why do we want this talk is about pragmatic mortal so my destination and bundling the widest Holden attention and it sort of has many advantages over objective statements a really simple thing which you have the venue that's dr. theocracy it has the same advantage than objective statements when using your object oriented mode is very thing degree is very easy to understand creeper message expressions as long as being the I design for sensible then you can kind of get a good feeling learn what the actual and these messages likely doesn't job of which little insert object and run around that you have to try the documentation to work on which all other parameters going for wanted design detection and curious focus that programs we nightspore thought because it matches very well with objective season is really to bridge the two because they won't happen this selector would you fix parameters hannah mcdonald next slide now stop talking class 12 / generally now that talk a bit about the subject of so we first included this as part of a twilight of my core rates at the end of our skin and she started working on compiling small-timers and target the objectives envi years ago they and the current version has absolutely product that started working using very simple get my cream cones I don't have them put it in then there's this a third generation is used but they have quite a few limitations it didn't do a lot of the things like so that kind of language like producing the basic plastic impressive not much beyond that the new versions will build 12 LLP but this hasn't you advantages he'll be impossible massive optimization of Roger Roger that it can produce that info add it as a just employment life so the same magnetics won't talk the use in the process as the just-in-time compiler if used to produce object code which you can link the extra length of scene programs and so the pragmatic small-clawed compiler is actually built a set for the biggest thickest language of it which is a new framework in is running which is designed and reducing dynamic language with one of those original artist objective-c rightly so this contains a set of venue I level abstract syntax to be classes and then a few local libraries and seven Renwick's and several moment southern rappers are abstracted basically of generators this party only one in existence which is based on lbl this takes this implement code generator and laced into center series of messages which will again students will sentence when I combine probably sometime in the next few months notarized interpretive at the end so that we too much more like great value apparently it has its own small runtime library miss I'll talk about a little bit more next few slides this handles this of the bits that amended the leg did lights were on but that are provided by the new objective c right and it all serves of Lords loadable grant earnings bundles the various different languages the only one that we have this really stable at the moment is mortal which is why miss tortoise for pragmatic normal but transfectants be working on another one since Christmas these frames which is a JavaScript Island we have to be statement next couple months there's also a command-line tool etl see which one they dynamic language of the richest soil neither driveway for complying running rampant in different and this doesn't view the context of syntactic sugar select and string down the hatch destination bar like a top of the line so you can use this to run shell scripts expose or using the canoe stand frameworks and it supports logic bubbles so we've put as Adams a bundle there does a little bit of vacuums in a bundle method in a sparkle which star bubble depart and so we have about inverter to write applications purely in sport or with no need to compile in the tour just distributing the dock and marvel at the spa new language plays organ DLC resort on typing machine you can just double-click on the workspace just one so next time so one of the aims for this was trying a small because this morning's interview by the user to test isn't available to understand and this slides assuming the what you see what I see detected sync the slide should be showing you exactly how big this is so if I start at the bottom the total amount of code produced that as part of this openness or language it's really all the runtime is jumps under an alkaline through them perspective think the audience is rather like read about to both analyzing the cover so this compiler all the new start is less than we have in America today we do on time see open so small talk specifics around after a house a nice time that is that because Jesus Mary well that's not the reason by the way this is that language I'll be answering and although there are sea by wyndham lb every horrible stuff of those since Objective C has this nice ability to go over languages we just use C++ natively there and this is another really nice play around Atlantic's models of little use Jeanette asleep as if it were a boring function to make sure you can just write some never die fast it'll jective secrecy your sleep possible functions in any language for that event I think than any method directly review so the next rank is all right sleeve just talk to that's not acceptable you see programs as our objective c method and that'll way you go I smile at the language pointer arithmetic code into liquid myself early but when you do needed that it's really 2002 you send a message to an object I'm small talk when the octave whether the receiver is a small voltage at the projective sea of object it doesn't matter look at all the temples do have exactly the same command line structure when you can play the glass from gospel yes sleep module structures that the random at night we understand and expects together and focus generated Objective C so there's no but has no bridging that there's no overhead for sending messages from objective c is equal to or from small talk two objectives does just a breeze when I got all this and the reason for this is the multiple way it works is by using the climb select the information that we do wrong time as in why they run that guys and the apple runtime doesn't them so we can do Ramstein every selector has a name like the substitute them and you can get this information really easily a wrong time you claim usual the massive expansion starting line out exactly what types and that they expect so it's all talk everything's languages are sometimes are eligible members that's right but often when you're flying objects with you code then one or more of the parameters you want to pass will be an integer so all integer types are box is this specialist mordant remedy in language and this is a sort of pseudo object which is it's basically an integer the store pointer so the loosing the data center one and when you want to perform any arithmetic with it you just write it in one do miracle take a pen shifted during maintenance very short I mean that compiled 12 E&M code and then when you came to perform any of those operations the compiler just generates close to those functions via in lets them for more complex types like structures they're all box Methodists Brenda managing what we value central air filters together ask for example a string to something that antigen looking for an enemy but it's not human I know this is object except I've got a fastening very message meant to ask Monica often walks as onto the object implements for value method different lands means then in lower so you use strings and integers into that wall interchangeably automatically next time so there are kind of makes the world about implementing sports with an excellent plan usefully and the first one of these is blocks swarms of users blocks everywhere their first loss objects in glass slippers if you can do small talk involved blocks and the other one is not local protect the meter agree mr. majors go to where if you have a return statement of law then when it encountered the methods whether what was declared returned so you need to producers that one day just thinking about in terms of next ladder so this little coach offenses are you for the matter of Iranian pragmatic small talk disarray by the last NS array wrong person categories of a ceramic gentle these members and that's what the dogs for everything listed on the line fence lines over so this takes a block which owns one on this argument and then sent it to message it sends a message entering the direct in turn that then it creates a new array which takes the result of this problem as a translation so that's long so that's the problem is when your turn is going to haunt you need to be able to create or what was that if we have to do a heap allocation and every single time admin that so every time you create a blog better it's compiled to a monkey and the hundredth expands the blog as its first argument and that's just like any other medical terms of C the block object itself we had mexican stand and that's fine and we also put on share the context object which those born of the locals and i think next time from reason epic not a problem is that now you have not checked with someone might want to retain allocated understand so what happens if impulsive love as an argument amended and receive a sesame anthem small engine it is very good at making two stores bring something but then your method returns and then frame is hot on his dad and next thing i use it you just read from a random sack relations tenure so that's kind of a problem solution to that is now whenever you send our a tech message to block object block is coming but if you remember the last night the block itself business nomas object all it does is that why to the content context is where one of the variances so we do some Isis whistling there so that bomb contacts which is the last stand is Jamie and appointed to the reform of transit stored somewhere else then when this does the block context is providing actually people i think so but mamas variables being accessed on the staff their local very nicely when you move off the staff then they still watching and slightly so the other thing so give nothing seems like this you have some additional message that you return so this would be just like objectives if some condition return true then that's final objectives even control the first a mature content but it's all talk this return true statement that mountains and when you deliver this return true statement should return from methods not just wrong so when you do that is to have a new exciting panel touchdown which is part of language in the ground so with the new zero cost exception and we may realize that they're in love student existent they let you associate personality every time frame is just or debugging metadata this and this is cool but you're my freakin sense this is some exception pointer on what is that for this rain and this if this extended you have but this right then and that's all this to function still objective-c SME now music sports long style session on except it's not exceptionally average one exclusive on which the receiver then most impoverished exception so the downside of this model is done proaches things really slow but the upside is that its focus like when Reggie uses emoticons text Angeles clendening for the same thing making exceptions for using the God causes other things that are so that's businessweek interpretations the melody application which America working on is a music 2.1 eclair so it uses my music time so that my friend Missy agree on with this their objective c and then content news reporter small talk code one objective c plus so we've got the huge selection of a new school users will use it in strength somebody that's an application with recognizes gestures does hot water move the mouse in football and i sent a message as that the object which is very to justice suit using small talk me to adjust bastards object of my existence so I guess most people when you retire fast paced object who sings just buy a new set of mantle's on existing bars and those new bindings replace existing balance and that's great that's just a 40 grams but because this so if I'm category is equal to one objective c objects so instead of publicizing content injectors the objects but really there are objects which have some madness in most of these America NASA Jet some others are technically but and so any one of these objects as a mixture of small talk objective-c methods and we do that now for the coast and applications we've got a user active man that in Twilight thank you which effective firing it and it shows market rally and the new version two presentations rentals expecting and they also have a language so if you have any troubles with an LP extension application the other narrative then assume a fishing boat different level and science and even bigger to existing applications they replace the next level so I guess we're all in the books in some way we believe the priests on recruiting and free software foundation defines free software x 3 x 4 3 and they qualify this by selling access resources Preakness but now for us access the sort of decent presentation with language in plugins there you have the access to get expects to modify to replace existing application runtime you can still distribute your money patients just not the language in my any user nations to anything use that navigate without me so this is which lets you look far is the categories on the glasses as you do that you use different environments weeks of silence so this does give us in fact I like the last browser you saw in the screening arms is driven by an intervention so this will be writable fastest of the fast break so you can go to you got any last event in your running and that the source of all sorts of available players the distance you can still write the category the were placed a method and it does sound nice tweets1 of the next five in two weeks ago with abstracts eclipse free transfer friends and class using this now so if you can find it if you if you're an instance variables to an existing parts then we're still want to be able to do that does is as is it kids references so you variables to existing language evaluating ran rampant in the application menu developed button and you press that pops up and nice so that you expect the application so that's kind of pretty much all I need say the vegetable so feel free to contribute water your back christmas project like this which is travis foundation so if you keep following me twice Walter this setup long as the method on project just use an extra in last hands for that and there's actually expect Celine my eye so I'll campus optimizations already generating bands and that person is known here as fast as in winter there's lots of predominance honest it's by just writing of the medallion plasters something's we are linked by doing that for example three platforms whether method one last week which will power through messages to just the various treatments so if you guarantee and improve message you will never be sent doesn't respond to that message then just boring ask questions that you imagine mention the bottom obviously I into experimental / generated the object attached to me and really bad 2012 sister encompasses works which is this room that's sweet but Nikolas to Application Manager application which is any visions Oh yeah what I was thinking is maybe we we prepared a replacement for tomorrow and maybe merge this one or some fashion of this one with the i-20 steady-state a story i just got a question what happens really dynamically t of small talk if you compile it is still there will it get frozen somehow I want to know if them small talk gets if you compile it if it's good if it gets believe if it's used to dynamically on yeah so if you if you compile sport out what is the impact of the dynamic aspects of the language both the dynamics that will began comes from from private inspection so you still have test exciting dynamic you still have commanded reference for you still what else do okay there's nothing Boston in the budget someone think the planning on adding very soon is the ability to the great general change file from the small tour bundle when is loaded language last time as longs it hasn't changed coding class so nice so I don't know if you have some other questions I cannot tell them locally but that's a problem and then I di will yeah we found a version of this toad ball tomorrow and try to be able to answer more questions about this one okay with that okay so thank you | Damian Zaremba | UCqy4GH6pi5CbkcftJcwdN7Q | 2014-09-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,048 | 22,303 |
_vTaCrbm4Rk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_vTaCrbm4Rk | William Blake - A Song of Liberty (1793) | a song of liberty the eternal female groaned and it was heard over all the earth Albee ins coast is slick silent the American Meadows faint shadows of prophecy shiver along by the lakes and the rivers and mutter across the ocean France Rennes down thy dungeon golden Spain bursts the barriers of old Rome cast thy keys o Rome into the deep down falling even to eternity down falling and weep in her trembling hands she took the newborn terror howling on those infinite mountains of light now barred out by the Atlantic see the newborn fire stood before the starry King flagged with grey browz nose and thunderous visages the jealous wings waved over the deep the spiri hand burned aloft unbuckled was the shield forth went the hand of jealousy among the flaming hair and hurled the newborn wonder through the starry night the fire the fires falling look up o citizens of London enlarged thy countenance Oh Julie of counting gold returned to the oil and wine o African black African go winged thought widen in his forehead the fiery limbs the flaming hair shot like the sinking Sun into the western sea waked from his eternal sleep the hoary element roaring fled away down rushed beating his wings in vain the jealous King his grey brow counselors thunderous warriors curled veterans among Helms and shields and chariots horses elephants banners castles slings and rocks falling rushing ruining buried in the ruins on earth or nose dens all night beneath the ruins then there sellin flames faded emerge round the gloomy King with thunder and fire leading his starry host through the waste wilderness he promulgates his ten commands glancing his beamy eyelids over the deep in dark may where the son of fire in his Eastern Cloud while the morning plumes were golden breasts spurning the clouds ridden with curses stamps the stony law to dust loosing the eternal horses from the dens of night crying Empire is no more and now the lion and wolf shall cease Coris let the priests of the raven of dawn no longer and deadly black with horse note curse the sons of joy nor his accepted brethren whom tyrant he calls free lay the bound or build the roof nor pale religious lechery called that virginity that wishes but acts not for everything that lives is holy | Anarchivist | UC_ZMbhFTVal3rybt__vYk0g | 2019-03-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 399 | 2,252 |
fIaxE1Fxzbs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fIaxE1Fxzbs | a Critique of MODERN WARFARE (RADEON RX 5700 XT ULTRA REALISM) | [Music] hey what is up guys it's sauce and less and welcome back to another video I hope you all enjoy this realism gameplay that I captured a few hours ago yeah I thought that was kind of cool I need something to throw into a video as promised from my last video here we are we got some modern warfare realism boat off the Radeon rx 5700 XT that I managed to order from whenever I was gone ultra settings at 120 frames a second you can't go wrong also guys let me know down in the comments section below well place modern warfare and what do you play it on you played on PC ps4 and Tendo switch Game Boy Advance let me know so I've been playing this game for about want to say four or five days now I remember whenever I was at training for MP school I managed to get passed and I went to the bowling alley I ordered a little gaming booth and I was able to actually download and play the beta on Xbox and I'm not gonna lie it looks pretty bad but now that I have it on PC with this new graphics card I'm very glad that I had ordered it and know it's all my Xbox and ps4 Oh miss out there they would be playing together they got my back sometimes you know so anyway aside from the visually stunning graphics that this game has to offer I've been having a lot a lot a lot of fun with it alright overall I really think that this game was a polished masterpiece alright like overall the gameplay works great I love the time-to-kill and it's realistic as heck and going back to the time to kill it makes for some really nice clips alright it's really nice clips I don't know if you guys managed to see via the previous video I had posted a couple days ago kind of recommend you do it was kind of cool I'll just kind of push I just kind of put it all together on my phone I hid the clip exported it and Paula strip-mall nage pretty may look a little cool Rubio everyman and now that I finally figured out how to work OBS I could start doing more stuff like that [ __ ] I might might end up posting like a nice little quickscope montage get like 10k views and that would be awesome that would be so awesome so let's talk about the weapons that modern warfare has to offer to me I feel like every weapon amongst the ARS the SMGs sniper rifles even the secondary's RPGs pistols all of them have their own unique play style amongst each and every type of weapon from the mp5 to the p90 it's got its own unique kind of playstyle if you know what I mean for example you could take the stock off with most of the ARS basically turn them into a run-and-gun SMG which is crazy that's another thing I think that modern warfare absolutely killed the gunsmith in this game all right absolutely killed it in a good way I like how the game gives the player the ability to personalize their own weapons in a way that suits their play style even if it's a weapon that they wouldn't enjoy using I mean eventually you get you get the players that want to max out all their camos and get the gold the platinum or whatever and whenever it comes to use those weapons that they don't really like you somehow manage to have fun with it and that's all thanks to everything that the gunsmith has to offer and if you are a casual modern warfare player Call of Duty player that's cool man you know hey it's always good to just sit back relax that's that's all I used to ever do I'd never really go for the camos I just sit there and play the game cuz it was just fun you know but if you haven't gotten into unlocking camos skins yet how they recommend you do it's a nice challenge it'll keep it busy you know and when you do complete those missions slash challenges and you unlock those camels you can show them off to all your friends you know so would this game be good for a first-time Call of Duty player and my first time card player I mean like never ever touching a Call of Duty ever before maybe they played a little bit of Halo at their uncle's house or whatever but never ever played a card I think that the answer is yes and let me tell you what if you guys don't already know the last few years for Call of Duty have been an absolute mess all right absolute mess I'm talking like the double jumps the wall slides I mean and I'm sure that that appealed to a younger audience for a very long time I mean I remember whenever black ops 3 came out her no no no actually it was advanced warfare all right was advanced warfare that was the very first Cod that I had ever personally owned all right and I remember Treyarch got so much backlash from that so much backlash from advanced warfare but no matter all that backlash no matter what I still loved the game all right I used to play it all the time I'd get my homies over we'd run up split screen and it made for some good times now do I think it's a good game no was the story good yes what was it fun to the extent yeah I could say it was pretty fun but I would have rather much I've had a modern warfare game be the first Call of Duty that I've ever owned simply for the realism and the nostalgia that brought along with it you know I used to go to my buddy's house on the weekends or even on the weekend weekdays you get off the bus go after school I'd go right next door and we'd be running up modern warfare 2 and this is why I think this game would be great for a first-time Call of Duty player a young old no matter what the case simply because of the way the game looks the way the guns feel how pleasing it is with every headshot that you've managed to hit with a sniper rifle and the extent of realism that modern warfare has to offer now I will say that map design could have been a little bit better you know but that's what deals Caesar for and apparently modern warfare is going to be releasing every single DLC for free the only thing you'll ever have to pay money for is cosmetic items in the game which is also a very great way to market out the game now the community on the other hand still a little toxic you know they think they'll be getting a little salty for a corner that they didn't manage to check or a guy sitting there mounted over it thing is saying bags just waiting to wait and get that for K you know but honestly you can't really blame them because this game is kind of hard to get the hang of and that's another reason why I do recommend it to first-time Call of Duty players the game promotes camping but I'd rather prefer the term tactical positioning now do I agree with campers no but are they doing it because they're not good yes and this is assuming that the camper is a new player all right if there's a prestige for in the lobby and he's just sitting in the corner that's kind of sketchy you know and he's probably just doing it to mess around with your gameplay and in a way that's modern warfare promoting the reality of war for you and what it's like to be in a battlefield where a guy sitting at dark corner with a sniper rifle just picking you out you know it happens it's a real life because the game is meant to be more realistic than a running gun which I can so long but then again if you have those new players that are camping they got to start somewhere you know just give them a little bit of slack you'll get them that just makes you want to check your quarters a little more it makes you a better player and it makes the camp for a better player by making him want to move around a little more we all just need to trust the process I have a lot of faith in this game and it's gonna be one for the books for sure alright I think it's fair enough to say that Call of Duty has redeemed itself alright and that's that's a that's a big statement all right but I honestly do think so with the story the way the story's going right now awesome amazing the realism it really shows the dark side of war that not many people see not but not much of the public sees which i think is just so cool I think that Infinity Ward is marketing out this game really well all right really well already no loot boxes none of that none of that [ __ ] you know I think we all we can all set a wheel we all kind of hated those little things stealing your money God points God points cowboy where they released the game like it was super early from it being like completely done I'm sure they have so many more maps and content coming out within the next few months I'm really excited so overall I really think that Call of Duty outdid itself with this game it appeals to all audience and away from old to young I had drill sergeants up at AIT that were gaming on it they couldn't stop talking about it they were there rubbing it in our face they're like a pride guess what I played yesterday what Jill saw oh just a new bottom warfare [ __ ] and yeah so this has been my honest critique of the new call of duty modern warfare again they really outdid himself I cannot wait for this content to drop I can't wait to be making more videos featuring this game bring it to you guys with this quality ass content let me tell you now there's one other thing that I did leave out I tend to get a little mad on this game but I learned from it so it's okay you know I mean everyone gets mad it's a Call of Duty game that's that's what you should expect but I really want to know is what you guys think do you guys agree with me do you think do you think that this is the Call of Duty game that we've all been waiting for it let me know down in the comment section below anyway guys I really hope you all enjoyed this video I'm always trying to start a new stuff with the channel trying different things see if we can get that get that publicity you know got a dick ride and modern warfare but hey that's just how it goes so smash like subscribe for more check out my other videos check out that modern warfare clip I got more to come and so I want you to go out and have a good day today or stay inside and play Modern Warfare cuz I need more friends no seriously I need more friends and so I will see you guys in the next one make sure you hit those post notifications let you know whenever your saucy boys upload a more I'll see you guys the next one peace [Music] | SaucNwes | UCV2r6k1oZwyN7wKmRE0CFTQ | 2019-10-31 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,019 | 10,148 |
CnSwAtRKKZY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnSwAtRKKZY | Mark Kelly, Scripps Networks | AWS re:Invent 2017 | live from Las Vegas it's the Cubans covering AWS reinvent 2017 presented by AWS Intel and our ecosystem of partners welcome back to the cubes continuing coverage of AWS reinvent 2017 we're live from Las Vegas day three there's still a ton of people here we have a great guest nook so we're excited to talk about mark kelly the director of Cloudant infrastructure services architecture talking with myself Lisa Martin and my co-hosts to minimun mark welcome to the cube thank you glad to be here the Scripps Networks tell us a little bit about that I know a few things HGTV Food Network I watched those a lot but tell us a little bit more about Scripps Networks Crips when I say that name most people do not know it but we are the leading provider of home food and travel content for broadcast the web and for emerging technologies at this point in time so we've got a lot of brands in our umbrella you said HGTV we've got Food Network in their Cooking Channel DIY Network great American country and Travel Channel yeah so mark I know my family binges a lot of these shows so takes a little bit you know what what's happening in that industry today say you know binging versus you know watching online cloud digital is that the joke of course is they at least things are you know pretty stable and not changing in your world right oh no absolutely it is changing on a very rapid pace so as more and more people you know the big buzzword is that cord cutting thing we've got big concern in our in our industry around that but as more and more people talk about it we are adapting our technologies to be there just to provide for them so we're on those emerging technologies we're on all of the you know set-top boxes Apple TV Roku we're actually developing networks specifically for those technologies so we're trying to adapt Bret the broadcast world is still our bread and butter so until we figure out the the revenue models for these new technologies we're going to be in the broadcast world for some time so market talking to us a little bit of what's your role there you've been there six years I believe you said how is kind of cloud change though the way Scripps works so cloud has definitely changed the way we work you know when I first came on board we were looking or scripts is looking for a way to move the business faster you know scripts because it's changing so rapidly they're in the business that they have to compete with startups and when they're competing with startups startups don't have the same processes and controls around everything that they bigger enterprises do so it was an extreme challenge to them and you know when they don't understand they don't have budget concerns like big enterprises either when I'm going to do a project to launch a new network they don't understand it I've got to buy hundreds of thousand dollars worth of hardware or whatever associated with it so when we were looking at the cloud we needed a ways to accelerate that we wanted to make the business process much quicker we were up we weren't going to have those lead times for purchasing hardware purchasing software getting license you know racking it stacking it doing all that we were looking to ways to move that out of the way so everybody could focus on providing more value for the business and that was the primary reason we actually started looking at the cloud from an end-user gold perspective obviously mentioned speed and having to compete with with other networks and other native original content companies how does the end users demand for 24 by 7 content how does that drive really the pace of innovation that Scripps has to has to meet yeah that is a very good question I think we're still trying to figure that out because the the whole consumption method for all of our all of our engine end users is changing you know if they're going from their traditional TV to where they're watching it on their phone to switch into their iPad to everything else in between so we're developing technologies and methods so that we're providing it for them as they as they need it and want it so Marc Marc can you give us a snapshot of what does your infrastructure look like today well what are kind of the major things that have changed and what else what's kind of on the table today we are running about 3,000 instances in AWS so AWS is our primary cloud provider we run a lot of auto scaling to take into account our seasonal loads that's probably one thing that we one of the challenges we had going into the cloud is that we we were up against you know certain times of the year where the load was extremely high but it was only extremely high for a couple of weeks I mean literally would be running at two to three hundred percent of what normal was and it would do it for two or three weeks so we were having to purchase hardware in advance for that and it would just set their idle for the rest of the year so we were looking for ways to avoid that excess purchase and still scale to support our our consumers and needs so when you you know when you started this journey and we were talking to them earlier about cloud as a destination you get there great you're done but when do you start this journey you mention AWS and we're here at reinvent where did you start what were some of the stakeholders that you have on the business side that you had to say all right guys let's come to the table we have a great opportunity here to this this industry is transforming as you know the jokes to made earlier once you start with those business discussions so I think it was more around know trying to figure out that solution it's like when I said earlier we're trying to get to market quicker so it was easier to go to the stakeholder and said hey I think I can go this route and I think I can get you to market twice as fast and cup o absolutely here's the perk up eyes would light up you're like really and they're like how much more is it gonna cost me and I like I don't think we're gonna do one D would present the you know the on-demand cost models like I think we don't have to do all these big upfront costs and that got a little bit more excitement out of the the stakeholders and we went went forward from there so we would it took a while no don't get me wrong everybody gets it set in their ways they're going to do things normally change sometimes is hard difficult to push through absolute cultural change there is a complete cultural change to go from your traditional on-premise to the cloud model where you're you're not managing the hardware as much you're focusing on the engineering around it yeah so mark you bring up managing you know monitoring something that that's gonna change very differently talk a little bit about your people you know that the skill sets they had to change you know what's the difference is kind of before during and after that migration beforehand we were on in our own premise environment we were focused on tool sets for monitoring and managing our infrastructure that were very vast I mean we had a large number of them one of our goals moving to the cloud was to consolidate that tool set we wanted to get down to a minimal set that actually would accomplish our goals to get everything that we needed so we didn't have to go through training people to learn 50 different tool sets for monitoring whatever it was network equipment storage equipment or the computer equipment we were actually focusing on monitoring our applications and still getting some of that underlying infrastructure reporting on our monitoring but we didn't have to have the same level where we were monitoring the hypervisors we were monitoring the networks which is that that kind of went away so our focus became more on the operating system up and engineers developed you know they didn't help no longer had to focus on that hardware yeah so what are you using for that you know how many people does it take to do that do you know if it kind of so every compare to what you had before yeah our standard our standard monitoring suite is actually composed of New Relic New Relic has been a great partner for us they had the same mindset as us you know we were looking to compete with the startups at the time New Relic was a start-up because we've been using them for between five and six years now we've brought them in because they had that same hunger and mentality that we were looking for their culture matched really well and we got in and and deployed all of their Suites to every environment we actually leveraged it in from development up through production so we try not to separate our monitoring we try to keep it all uniform so our troubleshooting gets a lot more lot simpler we actually have the same people monitoring our dev stacks that are monitoring our production stacks so they can troubleshoot and help get through that it became a lot easier for them to do that yeah did you talk about kind of how many people you had kind of managing infrastructure before versus the monitoring and you know some of the training that they had to go through or so before it was all specialized people I don't even have that I couldn't even give you the headcount because I mean most of that was before my time yeah yeah every individual was actually specialized on each application for monitoring so it was actually teams that would focus on each part of the business so as we migrated into cloud we became more standardized made it simpler we actually have our my cloud team is really between about 15 and 20 people so and we're monitor managing 3,000 3,000 instances in AWS and about 6 petabytes of storage so we've got quite a bit of content up there already and you're on the customer advisory board for New Relic see you mentioned cultural alignment between scripts and and vendor and that's really key but talk to us about this collaboration and it sounds may be bi-directional that you're able to maybe influence some of the things and help them make their technologies better absolutely we've got a really good relationship with them so anytime we have a challenge you know one of our current challenges is service you know as we move we have a lot of development teams that want to move into service we've been working with the New Relic teams and and giving feedback to them on what our challenges are with that and how we're monitoring it because we've got certain things where I want to be able to monitor those functions and server lists and I need to give a cost back to my stakeholder to say this is what you'd cost it's challenging to do that now we're working with the New Relic team to help them deliver some of that knowledge to us marquita hot button for me so you bring bring us inside you know why serverless you know what do you hoping to gain from that you know I've seen New Relic actually has been tracking for the last couple of years adoption of containers and server lists so it was in service it's kind of the new hotness you know we've been moving into server lists primarily because it again it's that next iteration of speed for us so it makes it even simpler for the developers to get started gives them that we can give them a standard framework they can start developing their code and just push deploy and it's running and they don't have to worry about any infrastructure or managing anything that again the challenge has been the monitoring part of it but we're working through that and actually getting pretty good results out of it so far you've got about 70% of your consumer facing side is is on AWS but you've got some latency sensitive workloads that are still on Prem a hundred percent of my consumer facing properties are on yes fantastic so we do have some workloads that are really not designed for cloud you know it's our end use and financial systems are our critical business system so it needs to be close to those departments those actually still live on on-premise for us and you know when we started this journey the on-premise was it was a it was a slow horrible process but as we've evolved the cloud they've evolved I don't firmus tough to keep up with them as well we're actually looking at single some of the other monitoring solutions out there New Relic has been an option for us tact actually look at on-premise well monitoring as well so all the advancements that you guys have achieved and your 60 or so translation transition to cloud that you've talked about what's next for scripts what are some of these may be new business opportunities that this optimization cost reduction is enabling so next for us is actually a machine learning and AI we have large initiatives going on that right now where we are trying to analyze our video analyze our content you know lots of its forward to help remove some of the manual processes that we have now because a lot of those stuff when you're delivering to our different partners there's certain requirements around the video and the only way to do it right now is with eyeballs watching the video so it's just somebody sitting there watching it for hours and hours a day we're leveraging some machine learning stuff to actually auto classify this video pull out thumbnails for the author so they can put it in there the metadata awareness for them and we're doing lots of things with AI so we're looking for that to be a really hot feature for us in the next couple of years excited with what you've heard this week from AWS the first day keynotes were completely blown away that mean there were all things we were looking for so anything specific that you've been waiting for or just not waiting for but got excited by yeah there was lots of the Kinesis video streams was actually really good the video API I'm drawing a blank on the axon exact name of it but that one actually has some really good features for us because we are looking to do exact things that that one does where we're looking to pull timestamps out for when stuff shows up in videos and provide that back to our end-users where they can search and find things in the videos much more quickly excellent well mark thanks so much for stopping by the cube and sharing what you guys have been doing at Scripps network with us it sounds like you've seen a massive transition and you really have a great foundation to continue going forward and and we look forward to continuing to watch great shows on the network awesome thank you guys and for my co-hosts to minimun I'm Lisa Martin we would thank Mark for stopping by you're watching the cubes continuing coverage from Las Vegas of AWS reinvent 2017 stick around guys we'll be right back [Music] | SiliconANGLE theCUBE | UCu3Ri8DI1RQLdVtU12uIp1Q | 2017-11-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,709 | 14,677 |
AuBCqxvRpxg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuBCqxvRpxg | Prince William invited Prince Andrew under his wing after overthrowing Prince Charles | prince william to punish andrew and fergie for growing doings back in the early days as the marrying wives of one sword the princess of whales and the dirtiest of joke were thick as thieves but in the year before dana's dead all that changed fergie got too big for boots and seemed to make it her missing to humiliate thee an insider sensationally claims to new york id royals she would say snot things in public but even put her biography that donna gave her food words dee was modified and fuji found herself very much caught from the social stance until dinah passed now despite being divorced from prince andrew virgil 16 is sitting pretty in the royal lodge at windsor alongside x though thanks to treatment of dinah she shouldn't get too much comfortable fuji's best of bullying day is largely forgotten now but not by prince william alleges outsource he never lied fergie in a passive aggressive way he's heard all about how fractured thins got between her and his mom of course he's determined that dinah shall get the last word in even from beyond the grave william 38 who is second in line to the throne has been given unprecedented amount of power within monarchy by his grandmother the queen who is insist that he is prepared for taking the crown at any moment she's 94 and charles is 71 so she has very wisely began letting william taking the rest already says the source and one of this first order of business examining just what exactly is the point of prince andrew who obviously has stepped down thanks to his smoky dealings with pedophiles and alleged cis traffickers and is his wife who's clinching into the royal code toils and purge williams beliefs highly have no right to be colder and cozy within one of the family's most regarded residences and made noises about moving them to a less envious postcode to reflect their status the source adds fergie has suspected this is william's way of getting revenge on behalf of he so liked her in so many ways of course william wouldn't admit outwardly that his motivations are ready but getting one back on 30 has to make him feel very closer to the mom he lost in such a young age for more pick up the latest issue of new idea royals out now | Insider Media | UClveTrb_GETcx1wbpHmPHAQ | 2020-10-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 403 | 2,208 |
cA7HB3xHmXY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cA7HB3xHmXY | Zoospensefull | hello everybody this is peter cooper afghan it's well planned training to be successful the foundation is very important in this case body positions duration desensitization and of course counter conditioning are all important approximations to be successful in cooperative care but the question is how do we get strong body positions and which techniques should we apply to give us and the veterinarians the success we need we need to condition them to proper duration and to make seconds into minutes there is a variety of techniques we can use which we will tackle in this webinar [Music] we can change the way our animals look at the environment now with systematic desensitization and counter conditioning we can make the environment fun for our learners we make sure our animals want to cooperate with us in their own care do you want to know more about this topic join us on the 12th of november for another suspenseful webinar | Zoospensefull | UC1lHeKx16FBmMnIS0vScZ0Q | 2020-10-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 160 | 934 |
DOvxNv4Fy6c | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOvxNv4Fy6c | I think I'm being Haunted | Disappearing Object Phenomenon - Story time | i think i have a poetry guys following me yo what is going on guys breezy today brings a brand new video in today's video i want to talk to you guys about ghosts aka a poultry guys and why i think one may be following me slash attached to one of my items i have been experiencing disappearing object phenomenon and if you don't know what that means it means basically when the common objects you use every day just seem to go missing into thin air like they're here one second and gone the next now clearly with disappearing object phenomenon it's not just oh ghost took my items it could easily be you misplaced your items you picked it up moved it somewhere and then you just forgot about it because it's not the common spot you put it you know having a simple blonde moment so nothing pretty you know interesting with that or another one that could be happening is somebody in your family slash household has simply borrowed your items and another one that they say is something that's temporarily invisible so you know when your mom tells you hey can you go get my purse it's on the couch and you go to the couch and her purse isn't there so you go back to her and you're like mom your purse ain't on the couch and then she's like if i go to the couch and my purse is right there i'm gonna beat you up and then you look again and her purse ain't there but as soon as she goes to the couch her purse is there yeah so temporarily invisible is another thing that people have said is common where you don't actually see it out there when it's there there's another one called dimensional ships where basically we're moving into the space-time continuum and you're looking everywhere for say your chapstick and all of a sudden you hear it fall in the kitchen and you go to the kitchen and there boom it's on the ground that's kind of like a dimensional shift i don't really know how to explain that one so please just google that one i'm sorry and the final one the poltergeist one where a ghost is attached to your object and moving it around the house or your person and that's why i think i have it unless unless my bag has a dimensional shift in it i have no other explanations on anything i'm going to tell you guys everything that i know that has happened to me and i want your guys's opinions down below so june 2020 i have been carrying this bag around with me not everywhere i go but a couple of places whenever i carry this bag for some reason i have not came home with everything that i had in this bag so a couple of things i have gone missing were some masks which are simple easy to replace i'm not mad about those my air pods the thing that i'm most maddest about because i don't have a job right now i'm not on unemployment i'm just not i don't have any income coming in basically my airpods are gone vanish proof disappeared nowhere to be found and some other things that i can't really mention on youtube because you know the whole youtube terms and stuff i don't want to get my video shadow banned so just know things that don't belong on youtube in the back so my story is kind of special i only have items disappear when i take my bag into somebody else's car and i know you're thinking well you probably just had to fall out in their car you probably left it at the place i'm gonna tell you guys a story about the time i lost my airpods and the time i lost my mask the airpod story is what started it the math story is what's funny about it i was packing up my bag because i needed my portable charger and i always keep my portable charger in my bag and so that was simple i put the charger in the bag simple as that and then i saw my airpods last second and i was like i'm gonna take my air pods because whenever i go to my friend's apartment they always leave me in the living room by myself and i'm always just sitting there like bored like nothing to do so i grab my air pots and i throw them in my bag quickly and then i run out the door you know i go my friend's apartment this was the first day that they did not leave me alone in the living room which i didn't find funny i just thought that was like hey they're being nice because i was always complaining like you guys always leave me in here by myself like ba ba so they didn't leave me in there so i didn't have to go into my bag to get my airpods so i just ended up putting my phone on the charger and leaving it like that and then as my friend is finishing getting ready i'm in the living room talking to my other friends and we're just talking you know nothing too important he gets done getting ready so we all head out downstairs and we don't take my car usually we go in my car or usually i'm the one who drives because i don't like how other people are driving but yeah this was the first time i never been in the car with her so i didn't know what to expect so i wasn't really pushed away from it yet i didn't want to say oh no i'm not going to go with you i would because i never seen her she drove i brought my bag with me because my phone was still charging i didn't want to just take my portable charger and then have my uh iphone cable with me either so i have my bag still and we pull up to this luau kickback so we're sitting outside waiting for the host of the party to get there because um he's throwing it at his friend's house because he lives in an apartment or something i don't remember so once he pulls up i put my back underneath her seat because i was sitting in the back so i just put it underneath the front passenger and we go inside we literally sit there for about 10 minutes because the vibe was kind of dead and off so we left we went back to his apartment my friend's apartment and we just kind of chilled we didn't do anything we tried to play some games we did 21 questions and things like that and the night was over and i was going back home a couple days later i was talking to my cousin and i was like whoa i mentioned my air pods and i was like boy i haven't seen my air pods in a couple of days and i was like oh i know where they're at they're in my bag but as soon as i got to my bag and i looked through my bag my air pods were not in there nowhere to be found so i was just like oh they must have fell out of my car i'll go check my car so i want to go check my car and they weren't in there either so then i went to go check the pants that i was wearing and my air pods weren't in there either and then i was like panicking so i started like looking through literally everything like i tore the whole house up looking for my airpods i literally could not find them nowhere so that is a story with my airpods have i found them yet no now let me talk to you guys about the second thing that happened which was a mask going missing and it was actually a mess that i actually started liking more because i liked how it fit my face because it was just better so basically um my friend hit me up for my birthday and we were going to go to dinner she was like let's go to dinner for your birthday she invited me and we ended up going to red lobster i had my back again i had my camera because i wanted to take my camera because we always usually do something afterwards so i thought oh maybe i could film it for a video which didn't happen so she came to pick me up i had all my camera stuff in my back i was about to forget my mask so i had to run back in and grab my mask so i ran back in grabbed my mask and then i got in her car and we went to go eat i would get to a red lobster i have my mask on you know because you have to have your mask on to go into the restaurant and then to leave the restaurant so i had my mask all the way until we left the restaurant i had it in the car and she brings me back home so i get home and i'm planning on going out again i'm finally just leaving the house again right away i'm getting in the house and then i'm checking my bag for my mask i'm like okay my mouth isn't in here i check my pockets for my mask i was like oh my mask isn't in here either so then i text the girl and i was like hey is my mask in your car that i leave my mask in your car and she says no your mask isn't in here and granted i'm gonna be honest i feel like she didn't look i'm being 100 honest with you guys i feel like she did not look at all like i don't know why i feel like she didn't look but i just feel like her personally she's kind of lazy like i feel like she was already at her place and got in the house and saw my message and then didn't look but it's been a couple of weeks since then and she always drives people around so i feel like somebody by now would have seen you know would have seen the mask so that one to me was really funny now let me go back so i told you guys i was going to leave the house again to go hang out with another friend because i wouldn't want to stay in the house that day so as i'm backing out leaving the house where i actually get out of the car to see if i drop the mask you know outside in the rocks or in the driveway or anything so i'm looking around checking all the bushes there's no mask and i specifically remember getting in the car and taking my mask off i remember getting in the car and putting my mask in my bag or at least like on top of it or something and now the mask is just gone vanished and those two simple stories are the reasons why i think like i might have a poultry guys following me i've had a total of three items go missing i've been in the car i've been in my friend's car for a total of three times and the third thing was something that i grabbed last second too so the things that have gone missing from my bag were things that i have grabbed last second every single time every single time something i thought about before i left right before i left it has went vanished so i was reading some stories on google well i don't know which website it could have been read it it could have been i don't know just i googled disappearing objects and this woman said that her computer charger went missing and her daughter's favorite shoes went missing and she ended up saying she demands for her objects back so i kind of want to try that but i also want to know what you guys think down in the comments below do you think my bag has a dimensional shift in it and somebody from a different dimension like say me in a different dimension has my back or do you guys think my bag is possessed because i think my bag is possessed i'm sorry i know the bag is sitting right here but i really feel like i need to go grab another bag like i need to buy another bag because this bag seems to be a bad luck hey guys sorry i'm busted and sorry for the interruption of the video but the video is over now i told myself i'm gonna try to keep my video shorter for the youtube watch time for the algorithm so more people are watching my videos so it can start getting recommended and then i'm gonna start making longer videos so this video is already at 10 minutes i'm just going to end it off here if you guys want to see the part two where i actually demand for all my stuff back subscribe to the channel leave a like on the video and i will see you guys in the next video this has been breezy peace out everybody [Music] you | Ninja Breezy | UCaSyF3E1EpYyKxdUGcILRpQ | 2020-08-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,294 | 11,224 |
YWX540ZEbkk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YWX540ZEbkk | 18-19 Upper Deck Synergy Hockey 10 Box Case Break - C&C GB #9386 | Stata have seen a group rate 83 96 we've got the check box teeth break of 1819 upper decks energy everybody we've got a red review prints for the Dallas Stars exceptional talent number two 749 for the Senators maxime beaugeois and a significant selections of Ryan an auto for the Boston Bruins we've got a red rookie of Dillon gambrel for the San Jose Sharks green number two 299 Matthew Joseph for the Tampa Bay Lightning rookie and a postseason perfection of rain bork for the ah Blanche right of Drew Doughty for the LA Kings blue rookie number two 799 of keepers Sherwood for the Anaheim Ducks and a significant selections of TC middle sad for the Buffalo Sabres red rookie of Cruz Ching back lining for the Winnipeg Jets number two 749 Roarke charge a exceptional talent for the Sharks Eddie Matthew bars Ville a little bit of damage on the bottom again for the there's blue rat Oh serious damage on this one my goodness Robert Thomas red rookie for the Blues bullet red Rookie of Robert Thomas for the Blues number two $7.99 work sorry $5.99 and more III shard postseason perfection for the Montreal Canadiens red a PK Subban for the national creditors number 218 be scored for the Islanders Matthew barzil 18 of 18 with even better and a blue Jamie been for the Dallas Stars we've got a right of Mark Messier for the Edmonton Oilers a blue number two $7.99 Anthony Cirelli for the Tampa Bay Lightning and a last in line of Freddy Anderson I'm sorry laughs line of defense ready for the trolleys which random Matt Duchene for the Ottawa Senators rookie auto for the thanks Louis Blues Robert Thomas I should be golden that'd be funny Robert Thomas Henry clump is green for the Raiders it was a Robert Thomas box I made up for that damaged red one by getting like all the other ones we've got a Patrick line a red for the Winnipeg Jets blue rookie number two 799 Dillon gambrel for the San Jose Sharks and a Patrick Kane postseason perfection ba-ba-ba-ba red Rookie of Christopher Ian for the Detroit Red Wings exceptional talent number two 749 for the Senators max team lunch law and last line of defense Corey Crawford for the Blackhawks we've got Matt Duchene red for the Ottawa Senators we've got an autograph for the Montreal Canadiens max domi max domi and a green of Jack Eichel for the Buffalo Sabres we've got a red of Parlin home for the Toronto Maple Leafs Green number to one ninety nine postseason perfection of Mike Bossy for the Islanders and a last line of defense for the Blue Jackets of Sergey above Adamski we got a red rookies Phillip Roenick for the Detroit Red Wings blue number two 799 Roark Chartier for the San Jose Sharks and a Mike Bossy postseason for the Islanders red rookie of Adam got it for the Vancouver Canucks exceptional talent number two 749 for the Sharks work Chartier so it's stuck and a blue of crosby for the Pittsburgh Penguins Dennis show us a red rookie for the Red Wings mu number to $5.99 Elia Simpson off for the Washington Capitals blue rookie and brought Besser significant selections for the Vancouver Canucks we've got a red of pique Subban for the Nashville Predators number 299 Green rookie for the Ottawa Senators great bath earthen and Carey Price blue for the Montreal Canadiens we've got a red rookie upendra you you are you for the Chicago Blackhawks blue number 2 599 Jenner Dennis chill out ski for the Detroit Red Wings and a last line of defense of Matt Murray for the Penguins right at Patrick line a for the Winnipeg Jets number 2 749 exceptional talent of Niro Heights get in for the stars and a blue of Taylor Hall from the New Jersey Devils rydym Maxine lush long for the Ottawa Senators Balu number two $7.99 max the he loves all for the Ottawa Senators and Bobby or postseason for the Bruins we've got a red rookie of Jacob's or boom oh my Jacobs Borel for the Boston Bruins exceptional talent number two 749 for the Flyers McHale biroba and drink bath arson significant selections for the Ottawa Senators read of Clayton Keller for the Arizona coyotes we've got a rookie card number 219 for the Winnipeg Jets semi niku and agree to Drew Doughty for the Kings we've got a red rookie for the stars of Rubens green rookie number two $2.99 Sammy niku for the Winnipeg Jets and Elias Peterson taking different selections for the Vancouver Canucks we've got a write of Jamie Benn for the Dallas Stars Green last line of defense over to 199 Devan Dubnyk for the minnesota wild blue rookie number two 799 for the Lightning Matthew Joseph and an Alex Ovechkin postseason perfection for the Washington Capitals we've got a red rookie of Matthew Joel set for the Tampa Bay Lightning exceptional talent number two 749 for the Blues Robert Thomas and a Patrick team Chicago Blackhawks blue all right keep on going how are those other brakes coming along ladies and gentlemen let's keep it rocking we've got a red rookie abusive out lucky for the Calgary Flames blue number two 599 law is Anderson for the Rangers and our a Smith all insignificant selections for the Braves well that's not that many for 20 bucks buster Steve Yzerman red for the Red Wings exceptional number two 749 Brady could shuck for the Ottawa Senators green rookie number 2 299 Dillon gambrel for the Sharks and a Drew Doughty blue slight damage on the bottom I'm starting to notice a pattern with this like damage on the bottom he for sure my dad rookie for the Ducks Dylan Dube number 2 799 for the Calgary Flames blue rookie and Steve Yzerman postseason perfection for the Red Wings red of Spencer food from the flames rookie number 2 749 Garrett Anderson Dolan LA Kings exceptional talent and last line at the last line of defense Connor hello buck for the Jets Sidney Crosby Pittsburgh Penguins red purple number 295 rocky for the Chicago Blackhawks Dylan Sakura and a green or the Abreu prints for the Dallas Stars we got a rider worthy of Joe Hickock's for the Detroit Red Wings Green number to 199 post season Joe Sakic for the Avalanche and last line and defends Andrei vacillate back Levski for the Lightning last line of defense that's a tongue twister when you say it quickly Anthony Sorelli red rookie for the lightning blue rookie number 2 799 of author lindblom for the Philadelphia Flyers and of Jenny Malkin postseason perfection for the pay ways we're gonna read rookie of Dillon secure up for the Chicago Blackhawks exceptional talent number two 749 Andre Johnson for the Toronto Maple Leafs and a blue of Sebastian at home for the Carolina Hurricanes they're doing dancing to Eminem now what is this dance studio doing cites Aranda Dominic Cahoon Chicago Blackhawks bread rookie exceptional talent number two 749 Dylan Sakura for the Chicago Blackhawks and a blue of Alex Ovechkin for the Capitals they went from John Lennon to Eminem red rookie of Jordan green way tiny damage on the bottom blue number two 599 how are you he hire you for the Chicago Blackhawks and last line of check Oh Renee for the Nashville Predators we guide mark audrey flurry bred for the Vegas Golden Knights yes it was me golden and double ballots number two 399 or ass methylene blue rookie for the Buffalo Sabres and blue of Chris Chelios for the Chicago Blackhawks we got a red of Matt Duchene for the Ottawa Senators number two 799 Adam Gaudet for the Vancouver Canucks blue rookie and Joe Sakic postseason for the Colorado Avalanche we got a red rookie in the caliber opiod for the Philadelphia Flyers number two 749 Maxine come Twala exceptional talent for the Anaheim Ducks and significant selection Eli told an aide for the Nashville Predators random Johnny Gaudreau for the Calgary Flames we've got a rookie Auto for the Chicago Blackhawks Henry yogi har you and green of Alex Ovechkin for the Capitals we've got a red rookie of maxime beaugeois for the Ottawa Senators green number two 299 Parlin problem for the Toronto Maple Leafs and postseason appalled coffee for the toilers red and Matthew bar valve for the New York Islanders blue number two $7.99 for the Leafs par Lindholm and Mitch smart are significant selections for the Leafs all right I'm gonna take a quick water break this is a lot a lot a lot of talking and I'm gonna give you guys some links to the other breaks with still neat villain so we got 12 live in spoon and nine left and splendor let's keep those going if we had all breaks bill tonight I'll give a wake up 10 folks all right continuing on we got halfway through we've got a red rookie of Sam Steele for the Anaheim Ducks blue number two 399 or a key for the Canadian yes very cup can yummy and last line breeding hope beat for the Washington Capitals McHale girl BIA red rookie for the Flyers green number two 299 for the Red Wings Stila cronic and yes very cocking any significant selections for the Montreal Canadiens we've got a red rookie of Max being come tois for the Anaheim Ducks of blue rocky number two 799 for the Panthers Maxime Mammon and postseason perfection Mark Messier for the Rangers we've got a red rookie of Sammy niku for the Winnipeg Jets exceptional talent number two 749 a light opening for the Nashville Predators and a blue of Matt Duchene for the Ottawa Senators rad of Chris Chelios for the Chicago Blackhawks green significant selections number 2 199 for the Toronto Maple Leafs Austin Mathews and Steven Stamkos blue for the Lightning red rookie for the Sharks Roark charts yay blue number 2 $7.99 ante my life or the San Jose Sharks and Martin Brodeur postseason for the New Jersey Devils red rookie Noah Wilson from the Montreal Canadiens exceptional talent number 2 749 Michael Rasmussen for the Red Wings green rookie number 2 299 for the sharks Roark charts yay and Connor McDavid significant selections for the Oilers we've got a read of Steven Stamkos for the Tampa Bay Lightning oh cool we've got a glow shift for the Montreal Canadiens Terry price chest Nieto and a green there were 299 of Maxine women for the Florida Panthers I think my goal in the dark we got a red of Dominik Hasek for the Buffalo Sabres Green number to 199 significant selections Elias Peters name for the Canucks and John Tavares blue for the Leafs right a Dylan Dube for the Calgary Flames blue number two 799 for the Anaheim dogs Josh Mahara my hero my hero Wayne Gretzky post season for the Oilers radda Philip Roenick for the Detroit Red Wings exceptional talent number two 749 KC middle staff for the Buffalo Sabres and blue Lanny McDonald for the plains red rookie Evan Bouchard for the Edmonton Oilers boo number two 399 Andres metchnikoff for the Carolina Hurricanes and Patrick line a significant selection for the Jets red of Dylan Larkin for the Red Wings blue number 270 99 Zach Aston Reese for the Penguins and cam Ward's post season for the Hurricanes ratted Zach Parise a for the Minnesota Wild exceptional talent number two 749 for the Ducks Troy Terry and last line for the Sharks Martin Jones we got a mail card read of John Tavares for the Leafs green of Sidney Crosby for the Penguins and we've got a cast for greatness for the Buffalo Sabres Jack Eichel read of Austin Wagner for the LA Kings green significant selection streak Patterson number to 199 for the Senators and last line Jonathan quick for the case we got it red for the st. Louis Blues Vladimir Tarasenko we've got an autograph rookie for the New Jersey Devils Michael McCloud and a green X Harrison go for the Blues red rookie of Ethan bear for the Oilers green number two 299 Dillon secure out for the Chicago Blackhawks and Jonathan Quick postseason for the Kings red rookie of Oscar Lindblom for the Philadelphia Flyers blue monkey number two $7.99 more in Fogel for the Carolina Hurricanes Jack Eichel significant selections for the Sabres we got a ride of Joe Higgins for the Detroit Red Wings exceptional talent of Drake passer thing for the Ottawa Senators and blue of Subban for the Nashville Predators read of Brett housing for the New York Rangers Andre Johnson number two 7.99 for the Toronto Maple Leafs blue and last blind Devan Dubnyk the Minnesota Wild right up Erik Carlsson for the San Jose Sharks exceptional talent number two 749 Elias Peterson for the Vancouver Canucks and Matthew barzil blue for the New York Islanders we've got a red rookie and Adams got X for the Vancouver Canucks number two 799 bully rookie Ethan bear for the Oilers and Pat's Lacroix postseason perfection for the yeah we got a red rookie of Cal Petersen for the LA Kings exceptional talent of Evan Bouchard for the Edmonton Oilers number 749 and Austin Matthews significant selections for the Leafs all right to my left what teams need hits guys I need some requests we've got a red rookie event isla mela for these San Jose Sharks exceptional challenge of entry OPR you for the Chicago Blackhawks and last line and Freddie Anderson for the Leafs rad ups tammini Cooper the Winnipeg Jack's green number to 199 postseason for the Rangers Mark Messier and last line at pool garage for the Boston Bruins [Applause] radda tribe is direct for the Toronto Maple Leafs Rookie Blue rocky number to 799 Jared Anderson doling for the Kings and post season of reborg for the Colorado Avalanche read of Oscar Lindblom for the Philadelphia Flyers rookie number to 749 Henrik Borgstrom for the Florida Panthers exceptional talent and blue of Jack Eichel for the Sabres I don't think we've gotten any Carter heart so far she told him red rook give Elia Simpson off for the Washington Capitals is he in this blue key of Sam Steele for the Anaheim Ducks and Casey middle sad significant selections for the Sabres sabasha navajo red for the Hurricanes green number two 199 Elia Simpson off for the Washington Capitals and Marc Andre flurry bu for the Vegas goal tonight alright I gotta pick up the part of her photo then red rookie a Christian gospel eating for the Winnipeg Jets blue looking over to $7.99 Sam unique uber the Winnipeg Jets and Maurice 3 shards postseason perfection for the Canadiens red of Jamie been for the Dallas Stars we've got a rocky hard number 219 for the Detroit Red Wings Michael Rasmus name Hannah green of Zachary's day for the Minnesota wilds all right time for a little laugh box mojo oh why did you do that these cards like to lean to the right we've got a rather henrik Borg strutting for the Florida Panthers Troy Terry number two 599 bully for the Anaheim Ducks and last line mark Andre flurry for Vegas rattle more info goal for the Carolina Hurricanes I asked you nice number to 299 for the Pittsburgh Penguins green rookie and Ryan Donato significant selections for the Boston Bruins red Amerinet flag for the Florida Panthers blue rocky number 270 99 Christian rattling in for the Winnipeg Jets and Sidney Crosby postseason perfection for the Penguins red a Mac demon rookie for the Florida Panthers exceptional talent of Adam got X for the Vancouver Canucks and a blue Erik Carlsson for the Sharks red of Peter Forsberg for the Colorado Avalanche number 291 purple for the Toronto Maple Leafs join tolerance and a blue of Lonnie for the Jets read of bread hole for the blues root page number two $7.99 blue rookie for the Dallas Stars and Mario Lemieux postseason perfection for the Penguins red rookie of Isaac lundström for the Anaheim Ducks exceptional talent number two 749 Josh mobile rap mr. Gura for the Anaheim Ducks and andriy special cup significant selections for the Hurricanes and lapack mojo is a rata Ryan Getzlaf for the Anaheim Ducks red rookie for the Canucks elias peterson and blue of gretzky for the Los Angeles Kings there we go | CloutsnChara Sports Cards | UCM1CnVA0viwqwoK3lAJ7clA | 2019-02-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,782 | 15,539 |
w-qoI1W04VQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w-qoI1W04VQ | United States Marine Corps Reserve | Wikipedia audio article | the Marine Forces Reserve M AR fo r re S or M fr also known as the United States Marine Corps Reserve USMC AR and the US Marine Corps Forces Reserve is the reserve force of the United States Marine Corps it is the largest command in the US Marine Corps Marines in the reserve go through the same training and work in the same military occupational specialties MOS as their active duty counterparts Marine Forces Reserve is the headquarters command for approximately 40,000 Reserve Marines and 184 reserve training centers located throughout the United States the mission of Marine Forces Reserve is to augment and reinforce active marine forces in time of war national emergency or contingency operations to provide personnel and operational tempo relief for the active forces in peacetime and to provide service to the community for example through Toys for Tots the United States Marine Corps Reserve was established when Congress passed the naval appropriations act of the 29th of August 1916 and is responsible for providing trained units and qualified individuals to be mobilized for active duty in time of war national emergency or contingency operations Marine Forces Reserve also provides personnel and operational tempo relief for active component forces in peacetime M AR forr es comprises two groups of Marines and sailors the first known as the selected Marine Corps Reserve smcr are Marines who belong to reserve units and drill one weekend a month in two weeks a year the second group is known as the individual Ready Reserve IRR the IRR is composed of Marines who have finished their active duty or USMC are obligations however their names remain on record to be called up in case of a war or other emergency the individual Ready Reserve is administered by the Marine Corps individual reserve Support Activity IRR Marines participate in annual musters to check in with the Corps topic structure topic units ground combat element fourth Marine Division aviation combat element fourth Marine Aircraft wing logistics combat element fourth Marine Logistics Group Force Headquarters Group command element deployment processing command West mental Services Division Marine Corps band New Orleans reserve support unit Environmental Services detachment reserve units utilize infrastructure when mobilized through reserve support units RSU located at various bases throughout the u.s. such as Lejeune Pendleton Miramar Quantico and 29 palms topic enlistment enlistment in the Marine Forces Reserve occurs through a process similar to that for enlistment in the regular active Marine Corps recruits must take the ASVAB pass a comprehensive physical exam and be sworn in they may enter through a billet in the delayed Entry Program DEP Reserve recruits currently attend recruit training along with active duty recruits earning the title United States Marine upon successful completion of the training they then have a mandatory leave of ten days up to 24 if they volunteer for an are assigned to recruiters assistance although reservists are not usually given rar before further training at the school of infantry SOI and their designated military occupational specialty MOS only after completing the training programs does a reserve Marines enlistment begin to differ from that of an active-duty marine there is a program called the select reserve incentive program SR IP which provides enlistment bonuses for reservists enlisting for needed moss half is payable upon completion of training and the other half is spread out over the term of enlistment topic Commission for those who have earned a college degree the Reserve Officer commissioning program our OCP provides a path into the Marine Corps Reserve leading to a commission as an officer of Marines upon selection from a regional officer selection office Oso applicants attend Officer Candidate School OCS upon successful completion of OCS 10 weeks OCC our candidates a commissioned second lieutenant and subsequently attend the basic school TBS following graduation of TBS and follow-on MOS training officers report to their reserve unit where they will serve their reserve drills and annual training requirements topic service Reserve Marines enlist for eight year terms there are three options on how these terms may be served one of which is designated upon enlistment 6x2 under this option the reservists spend six years in active drill and fulfills the remaining two in individual Ready Reserve IRR this is the only option which makes reservists eligible for the benefits of the Montgomery GI Bill and is also the most common five by 300 this option the reservists spends five years in active drill and fulfills the remaining three in individual Ready Reserve IRR four by four under this option the reservists spends four years in active drill and fulfills the remaining four in individual Ready Reserve IRR after serving several years in the reserves and attaining leadership rank it is possible for an enlisted reservists to receive a commission through the reserve enlisted commissioning program our ECP Marines who have previously served on active duty weather officer or enlisted can join the select Marine Corps Reserve directly veteran Marines wishing to do this go through a Marine Corps prior service recruiter the mission of the prior service recruiter is to join members from the individual Ready Reserve to SMC our units close to their home Marine reservists are allowed to serve simultaneously in the United States Marine Corps Reserve and in the naval militia of their state of residence however when called into Federal service reservists are relieved from service and duty in the naval militia until released from active duty topic see also comparable organizations Army National Guard US Army United States Army Reserve United States Navy Reserve United States Coast Guard Reserve Air National Guard US Air Force Air Force Reserve Command US Air Force | wikipedia tts | UCqKZqRCjBaE6TBfi_JQc8ag | 2019-06-27 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 953 | 5,937 |
GeI0rMAMv8A | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GeI0rMAMv8A | VLOG 22 2021 Project Micro Skiff 14 Part 7 LeeCraft almost back on the water The Real Life | [Music] my low profile navigation lights i mean it is low just a tiny little thing on the bow wires pretty much run got some inside lights on the inside i mean real simple setup i don't have the main battery in for the engine fuel tank in and running anchor light switch system bilge switch the light in the hatch so i can see what's in there right now i'm running off of a drill battery but yeah a little bit to do still got some some tidying up here but looking pretty slick for the most part i gotta finish wiring up the key switch to um kill the engine and turn it on or off and i'll still have the kill switch there it's just a pain to kill it with this all the time all right i think it's looking pretty awesome getting there all right guys so here we are let's give you a quick walk down what she looks like a quick visual some of it's still in mock-up mode but all right so i've talked you through i've talked you through um all the stuff that i've done from front to back so let me just walk through it so first off really low profile um give you an idea how low that is my finger beside it so super low profile um navigation lights again like i've said before i'm gonna replace the seats but it's what i got for now um so i use this i don't know what you call it's where you hide cables for for putting up a tv i think it's going to be a temporary thing i don't know if it's going to work it doesn't seem to be holding up very well but it doesn't make me feel like it's going to hold up very well so yeah kind of is what it is let me use it for now um seat mounts i'm using these i forgot what the brand is i try to look it up a bass pro shop but they are non-corrosive uh plastic heavy duty plastic and pull this lever right here and the seat pops right off so pretty nice i'll remove the seats when i want to um typical jug this is my old jug put some fresh couple gallons of gas just to test things out got it kind of up here but it's mostly likely [Music] looks like we're gonna end up living right there um i hate that because when i'm by myself i back up a little when i'm by myself in this thing i already know that the bow rises up really easy so either way let me move this so you can see so i've got this rulemate bilge pump it's mounted in solid i don't have the hose clamps on just yet but it just snaps out um snaps back in real simple the entire idea of this boat build was just a simple design um i got the he said just let's just look at the bilge i got the bilge routed over here um i'm gonna mount that to the side of the uh to the to the transom area coming off the side there she is hard to see which i think is what i wanted it's just above the logo there as you can see all right anyway ah lost i'm trying to fault there so bilge oh yeah what i'm saying i'm not done with the transom by any means um but it's solid i've got one of those drain plugs that if you leave it out it's got like a scupper in it i added these stainless steel tie downs see all this from the side put your tar down it's really sunny out here you can't hardly see the plug down there it's kind of hidden which is fine there uh electrical well we'll get to electric one minute so i had a new plate made for this um wish that had a new plate made for the other but i didn't underneath here but it looks okay um made a little mistake on the transom i got a mock piece of wood here at the moment not intended to be permanent just getting something in place i can mock everything up um let's see what else to talk about back here all right so let's talk about electrical and we'll come back to it seats um so i got a switch panel that came with it i just cleaned it up and reused it i added a key switch added some lights and let me walk around the other side yeah better view it's so bright out here so you see the bilge build switch and then i've got the other switch on this i mean the other light on this side that's pretty simple all right what i'm about to show you the battery it's in this box here there's uh one one strand of wire running to the front to the bow light one set of wires coming to the back running the bilge and the anchor light [Music] right there see the anchor light i think i might need to just fold down if needed or up however little simple um like i said i added a key switch this is a mess now i'm just it's mocked up at the moment but you know small battery got the key switch trying to figure out the key switch and how i want to use it i've actually got um let me show you so key switch on i was just running this so it's got water in it but what do i do so just to show you a demonstration i got the kill switch wire temporarily just to try out how i want to work the key switch so key switch on all right take three i got some starter issues um it works you just gotta tap one and then but anyway all right key switch on let's zoom this way out so you can see everything you switch off kills it so from the seat you know without turning around and forcing myself to pull the kill switch um to kill it every time um i think i can press the button the red button to kill it but i don't know just i can reach down turn the key off a lot easier um that's about it i still got some work to do on the trailer i gotta button up um button up the hose here you know this stuff put some little tie tie down type things connected to the back wall to the uh transom i've still got i got to find a cable to make me a um what am i trying to say like a trolling motor type connection i haven't found one i like yet still trying to figure that out um i need three wires i need uh or else i'm gonna run that red wire through my other channel i didn't really want to do that i wanted to run it with the with the power cable trailer next on the agenda it's uh this trailer has been racked um i got to get a new strap on the winch up here got to get some lights put on it um probably not going to do a whole lot to the trailer i can see i don't know if this was all worth it i'm just going to replace the trailer because it's a it's just a mess it's in a it's been wrecked which i think i figured out is what has happened to the boat why it had so much fiberglass repair on it originally i think they wrecked and i think it crunched part of the hole so i have repaired all of it um i don't know what else to say honestly i'm going to put a um probably going to get like a cooler the cooler corner mounts whatever amount of cooler right here behind the seat something small nothing not a huge cooler uh just something to put some drinks in and to keep it forward of the boat and um seems like a good place to put it and then that leaves me standing room to fish here standing room to fish there i don't know if i'm gonna put a trolling motor back on this thing i'll see let me just play with it i still got to get my fish finder mounts and everything done not quite there yet but we're getting there but i don't know that's update for today thanks guys [Music] [Applause] you | The Real Life | UCxwzl5OGn0uOau0XtToDV1w | 2021-07-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,467 | 6,991 |
hOkj9VXzvG8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOkj9VXzvG8 | Camping at Cape Palmerston: Exploring Queensland's Hidden Gem #landcrusierv8 #mackayregion | I am fully stuck onto the chassis [Music] holy welcome back to a new year for days off Adventures guys welcome back I'm super stoked to have you here with me we have got some uh We've Got a Brand New Year oh have I got the biggest tastiest secret I've been keeping from you guys for a very very long time this is a massive project it's a massive way that this channel is going to take uh a turn this channel is going to take and I'm glad to share it with you guys so here it is the big secret that I've been keeping from everyone so if you head to Makai Council website on their website there will be 101 things to do in Makai guess what your boy's going to do every single one of them I'm going to do every single one of them on that website and more and I'm going to bring it to you so I'm going to give you information about the places to go things to do in Makai this is the biggest project I've ever done and I'm super super stoked to bring it to you guys so today we're kicking it off we're kicking it off this year wow mate look at this blue skies white sand blue Beach no wind just the tiniest little breeze of wind I am super stoked big girl on the background oh guys I'm at Cape Palmerston Cape Palmerston is probably the speckiest spot in Mackay great for camping a little bit of full driving um now campsites I will give you this information campsites for me tonight it's seven bucks for me in the car that's it I think for a family uh it's about 28 bucks for a full family of four and one car I think it's a little bit extra for camper trailers but I'll leave a link to Queensland parks in the description below as well as Mackay Council um Makai tourism all the websites so you can get all this information properly in the link below So today we're going to explore Kate Palmerston I always come here and I haven't come here in a fair while because I've been busy doing other stuff but I'm actually glad to come back it's so beautiful this place this place is uh definitely one of those places that is underrated and I actually have to kind of beat the tide I'm having a bit of drama with my drone at the moment which I'm pretty annoyed about DJI fixture gear mate I'm over it so we're going to punch up the beach um head up to Windmill Bay and try and get to the lookout and hopefully do some fishing on high tide so let's jump in the car let's go so if you haven't headed up to Cape Palmerston before guys uh very very tidal so if you think you can get up here in high tide ah you can't you can't I'm actually racing the clock right now to uh get to a certain point hopefully I can get to it or else I'll have to wait out the tide it was just that's just the time and day I like to get here but definitely check the tides before you come here um I should be able to get full pretty close up the beach there is an inland track but unless you want to scratch up your new car it's covered in Lantana and there's a lot of a lot of big bog holes there and um I've actually been stuck with air once before so definitely the best Drive is up the beach um definitely drop your tire pressures if you're unexperienced always drop your tire pressures on the beach it just helps you give you a bigger footprint in the sand to give you more control give you better traction in the in the sand so we're driving along the beach right now and yeah she's still a bit of a bit compacted the sand which is pretty good but yeah we definitely have to race this tide and I'm hoping to get around this point and then once we get up this point we can head up Inland there's a tracking land that you can hit but I didn't want to hit the first Inland track here because it's just it's not a good sight so there's camping all along the beach um there's heaps of campsites as you drive in uh along the beach you'll see them all along the beach windmill Bay is probably my first destination of campsites that I'm going to try and look at today I do want to try and do a bit of fishing I've got a bit of squid there and a few lures uh Bluey country around here as I've been told by the locals so if you do like to fish and you've got a boat definitely uh drop it in on the beach here I wouldn't suggest a massive boat uh maybe a tinny but um yeah it's definitely a beautiful place and definitely have to watch the tides when you're coming in here guys um they can get we're actually at a very high tour today actually so I'm hopefully just gonna go as far as I can and hopefully I can get to this other Inland track and um yeah and then then I should be right it won't matter the tides won't matter to where I'm going you can hit Inland tracks from there I just don't want to hit that first Inland track because it's yeah it's boggy as hell and covered in Lantana I've seen it on the way in and yeah I would have just scratched up my car in the first five meters so it's not something I want to do and I'm sure you guys don't want to do it either so as you can see the tide is actually racing right now I'm on the sand now and it seems to be pretty dry which informs me that where I'm driving it the high tide Mark hasn't gone any higher than where I'm driving so should be right and as as and the reason why we do this guys is uh salt water is no good for the car definitely no good for the car so I was hoping to get my drone up which I'm pretty dabble about but I don't think I'm gonna have a chance to mainly because I'm racing the tide as I've said and DJI uh but I just don't want to improve their app for the mavic 2 which I'm absolutely annoyed about all right guys I'm gonna punch it so we definitely made it now uh if you want to head to Windmill Bay I will say this as you get onto the beach from the main road of I think it's called Uh Cape Palmerston Road uh if you want to head down to where I am so you get on the beach and you turn left and you just keep following that beach you'll go around a big corner and you'll come into a little Bay and then right at the end there'll be a bunch of mangroves there and you know you'll see the track come straight in now I'm in a bit of a fork in the road here so from memory that way heads out to a point which you can go to I think we used to hit that a lot in the forbies but we're going to go straight we're heading to Windmill Bay that I'm pretty sure that way takes you out to the beach and so if you're coming in through the track here right we'll take you to another Beach and you go straight ahead to go with windmill Bay and that's where we're headed now so again guys what I'm doing this year is 101 things to do in Makai I'm going to hit every track every campsite uh try and do a lot of family fun events that I can show you guys give you as much information as possible so hence why I'm talking a lot but um I just want to do this mainly because a lot of people ask me a lot of questions about what there is to do in Makai and they want to know more information about where I'm going so this is what I'm doing guys I'm going to try and do as many as I can and give you as much information as I can so you can get out there on the track so if you're going to find this this content valuable please hit that subscribe button and hit that like button and leave a lovely comment to me guys and because that's going to make my that's going to make my channel grow and that's pretty much what I want to do I just want to help you guys get out there and have a bit of fun with your family all by yourself or with your mates or with your Missus and just get out there and hit the tracks guys and just get lost in this beautiful country we have Australia and this beautiful town in Mackay so again that's what I'm doing look at the big girl in the back loves it loves it cruised along the beach very very nicely I was in low range there oh actually let me give you a bit of a tip for driving on the beach especially here stay at 60. 60 is probably the highest speed you want to do on the beach any more than that man you hit you hit a soft patch you could easily roll your cards happen so many times you see it on the news people drive stupid on the beach I'm going to promote safe driving for everyone on the beach and for yourself and your family so 60 is the highest if you're not confident on driving on the beach go slower but a good tip is keep the momentum up if you need to stop uh if you're in the higher part of the beach to try and stay as close as you can to the water but not in the water let's just say that halfway in between the soft sand and the water that's where you want to go because the the overnight Tire would have compacted that sand enough for you to drive on so that's that's the safe way to drive stay at 60 if you don't feel as confident maybe drop yourself down to 50 but just keep that momentum and don't stop because soon as you stop you could end up in a world of hurt oh actually if you do stop and get stuck my car's still running sorry get yourself some Max tracks I've got some on the top of the roof rack there I usually carry four um I just haven't figured out a mounting system yet but I'll get there I'll get there but I just carry two just in case also carry some recovery gear because if you do get stuck and someone drives past they'll be able to help you out so let's keep punching on because I want to get to the campsite and I want to do some fishing let's go [Music] thank you foreign [Music] it's a hard life it's definitely a hard life windmill Bay and that's why you have that's why you pay the money for you know these sort of campsites because they give you facilities like a long drop but oh my gosh that beach is just there look at this [Applause] oh I've stayed in terrible places this is not one of them Campground here is very flat too so definitely if you've got a rooftop tent which I do um great place to park up but even if you've got a swag or whatever a beautiful place to roll your swag what else do you guys need to know if I've missed anything or you want to know more information just drop a comment and I'll answer it as quick as I can with the right information for you guys but um windmill Bay what an absolute gem what an absolute gem all right guys we're gonna head to this uh Lookout top I'm hoping that I've got enough reception now so I can fly my drone and um get you some awesome picks so I've actually twisted my own arm and I think I might uh pull up for lunch here I was gonna go gonna go uh check out this Lookout but it's too goddamn gorgeous I just need to just take it in and uh I don't know yet this does look like a good spot but there's so much more to explore in Cape Palmerston and we're going to do that but there's views like this wow [Music] thank you [Music] so I uh got lost but I won't end up going into uh the creek there uh Cape Creek I think it's called anyway it was completely packed there was heaps of people I think I've got a little drone shot there finally got the Drone working but where I'm at right now is at the lookout holy this place is absolutely Specky I'm right on the point here oh you couldn't ask about the weather I'm actually blessed to have this weather I went there obviously I came from the creek so I come back in then but there's this beautiful beautiful drive that kind of goes through the little range here on the edge of the ocean oh I'll show you I'll show you his butt I've got here now um I think I might head back to Windmill Bay I'm hoping that it hasn't been packed out now if not I might find somewhere closer to Windmill Bay but all along this rock wall here I'm definitely going to throw a lure this afternoon even though it'll be low tide I'll be able to get right out and maybe maybe I'll land something because in the high tide you'll definitely got a big chance unless you've got a popper or something to get caught up on the rocks and yeah I don't want to lose lures again today so we're gonna head through back on the coast bit of this dirt road and I'll show you these drone shots guys because it is a Specky Specky place tick this one off the list if you can get here [Music] foreign [Music] so as I said Kate Palmerston is a good a good place to bring your four-wheel drive now I'm hoping I'm not eating my words here but there has been a couple of as you would have seen before that little gnarly Rock step there there's another one right here that I just couldn't go past it and not have a go to be honest so it is pretty rotted out I'm probably gonna get a few wheel lifts but all it takes is good wheel placement I don't have any lockers yet hopefully that comes soon um let's have a go I'm going to set up the camera so definitely go on low range for this one um see how we go hopefully not too hard foreign holy oh there we go [Music] foreign [Music] a few moments later you asked for it I'm now bugged oh now you're gonna watch a bit of a montage of me taking my car out Good Times hi I'm fully Stark onto the chassis I have uh a witch which I should have pulled out sooner but um I wanted to get it out through digging so I'm hopefully just going to try and pop myself up that's all I need to pop out of the sand because I am bogged to the diff and the chassis rails oh this is a joy it's a full driving eh [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] do not try that at home oh my God zoomed in oh rhino can anyone spot where we went wrong huh it 100 pace to have your recovery gear oh [Music] East Coast always [Music] still alive [Music] so as you see I had a bit of a shower oh that feels so much better it was covered in sand I'm gonna have to clean the car out before I go do anything but um this is probably the best campsite windmill Bay if you are looking for a campsite at Cape Palmerston oh just because if you've got kids and even in your misses there's a tall block right there I know some people don't like to go pooping in the woods it's a conversation at um we'll put it so I know no one really likes to talk about it but it needs to be talked about so one more bye pretty stoked I don't really have to do much to set up camp I was going to throw the awning out but I don't really want to I don't need to really don't need to I do think I might go grab some firewood I might make myself a fire but before that I'm going to enjoy this drink and uh see you in the afternoon [Music] right guys that's the first episode of the Year done and dusted I hope you like the whole idea of this concept of what I'm trying to do for Makai first this local tourism so guys what I need to do is definitely subscribe to the channel and not only that guys I need you to get on Get Behind These local tourism businesses and spend your money local also guys I've got a lot more car content coming up this year a few more trips and secret spots to come around Makai I'm going to show you guys everything make sure you get a lot more information for a lot more things to do around Mackay so you don't sit there and say there's nothing to do in Mackay guys because that's what I'm going to be doing this year to make sure you guys have got something to do every weekend with yourself your friends your family all of it guys and that can't happen unless you just help me out by subscribing to the channel watching my content guys and that would be greatly greatly appreciated guys so that's it I'm going to leave a link in the description for all the camping stuff for Kate Palmerston guys so please get around it share it get out there and explore this great town peace [Music] just no ween running out the way that we stocking if I got it you got it if I call it she slide and tell her to mop it yeah I got that | DAYZ OFF ADVNCHURZ | UCF13rK9e4GjR-2D6-ZwoleA | 2023-03-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,191 | 15,595 |
AMxqXfn-thw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMxqXfn-thw | Day 1 Etsy Shop Refresh - Looking At Stats | tara jacobson marketing art flea so this is a this is the story of an etsy shop owner me who wants to refresh your shop and i'm going to take you guys along for the ride but i'm also going to be doing my work at the same time so if you're even slightly thinking about doing digital products i will be showing you how i come up with my worksheets and things like that so first off this worksheet is um one that i did for another project but i like that i have blocks in it so this is gonna be our very first thing that we're gonna do is we're gonna check our stats and eventually i'll have this worksheet for sale but you don't need a worksheet you can just write this down on a piece of paper right okay so we're going to check our stats and let's see what stats we need to check oh that's my youtube okay shop manager you're gonna go to shop manager you can go to stats okay so let's let's start with last 30 days visits orders conversion revenue okay so we want last oops that won't work last 30 days visits orders conversion rate now let's make all our lines the same amount that makes nicer forms and revenue okay and i will tell you that the highest i've gotten my revenue for this shop is probably um in the 500s um it may have been higher at certain times like um because i sell worksheets and planners at you know the end of the year beginning of the first year it would go higher but i would say that honestly this is a pretty um that 500 is probably pretty close to what my best times are just trying to get a i like things to line up because i make worksheets right oh there we go okay last 30 days visits orders conversion rate revenue so my last 30 days are i'm gonna here this is what i'm saying you don't need to uh have a worksheet i like making a worksheet because that's just me okay 30 visits three two three six orders 31 conversion rates 1 and revenue is 2 35 253 253 53. okay all right so now i want to know um i'm going to go so this last 30 days june 21st july 20th so right now is a weird time right um we're under lockdown here in well we're not really under lockdown but we're kind of stuck at home here in tampa florida um so i want to find out last year too right so i'm just gonna find out last year same one same time so we're going to say custom i'm going to say 19 19. okay so last year i did a lot better right visits 4093 orders 53 which is why i need to refresh 1.3 and then 4 43 69. okay so later on in this challenge i'm gonna try to figure out some of these things but for right now i just need to get my um numbers right like we just need to start getting our numbers maybe we need a date on our last 30 days okay and then we're gonna say last year oh i messed this up this has to be two and then another date don't worry we'll get it oh perfect so that does that's perfect let's do this copy paste there we go okay so last year we have i did better okay now i'm gonna go to all time so this is 16 17 18 19 20. so let's go um all year last year because i seem to do better last year i just want to see okay so let's do um last year 55.8 okay 639 orders conversion my conversion rate is about 1.1 right or 1 or 1.1 and then revenue 488.49 okay so now i went on my worksheet and then we're gonna say last year average because the next thing i'm going to do is i'm going to take an average of that meaning there's 12 months in the year so i'm going to divide these by 12. so let's do five five eight hundred divided by twelve so my average my average month was four four thousand that doesn't seem right let's go back and look no my revenue is four eight eight four nine there we go oh gosh okay so my average were four five four thousand six hundred fifty four thousand six hundred 650. so i got way more my visits are going down right so i got to get my visits up that's one of the things i need to do because if my conversion rate seems to be consistent at one percent one of the things that i can think about doing is to increase the number of views which will increase my sales whether or not my conversion rate changes right we can work on things to change our conversion rate which is something i might try to do in this refresh but the one thing i know i can do is to um increase my views right and i'm a marketing person so that's that's okay for me okay so 639 divided by 12. let's do that 639 divided by oops clear third quarter clear 639 divided by 12. so my average orders was 53 and what do i have right now 31 so that's not you know we're trending down i don't like it um conversion rate is 1.1 they just give me the average like i said we may be able to take a look at that and then the revenue was forty eight eight forty eight four eight eight eight point four nine divided by twelve which is four 407.37 407.37 okay so i'm below that right now too so if i added an extra hundred dollars a month which is about 150 a month extra 150 a month times 12 months i could add eighteen hundred dollars to my annual revenue and this is my digital products um shop so there's no fulfillment there's no cost there's no nothing all i have to do is kind of get a little bit better at doing my work so this is gonna wrap up this is all i want you to do for today is to write those down and start to get an idea of your numbers right we have to know that my goal a really realistic goal would be 500 a month right and so that is what oh let's make a goal do we want to make a goal let's make a goal okay so this can be a working goal right you don't know exactly what's going on let's see working goal working goal all right so i am going to set a working goal of okay let's get that out of there okay okay and this is what i'm gonna kind of be working on for the rest of this year um so we have visits orders conversion rate revenue okay visits orders conversion rate revenue okay so my revenue goal is easy for me to think of my revenue goal is going to be 500 a month my conversion rate i want to get that up so um like increasing my conversion rate by 10 would be 1.2 um but so let's let's say my goal is going to be 2 so i'm going to say working goal visits well i think i could get 5 000 a month easy and because i'm going to increase my conversion rate i don't need to get like i don't need to double the amount of vision visits to double the amount of revenue or even increase my revenue okay orders let's see orders let's do 75 conversion rate i want to get to two percent and my revenue i want to get to 500 a month every month month in a month out um because last year was 500 oh we better make that a bigger goal let's make that 750. okay so that is it for today we're just checking our stats you need to start write them down somewhere like i did here eventually we'll have a worksheet if you want to do a worksheet keep this for your records but you can do this on your um just in a note so terry jacobson marketing artfully | Marketing Artfully | UC2B3qKCa0VKExKnhwjzXjRg | 2020-07-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,425 | 6,878 |
KHYdgCb0duI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHYdgCb0duI | Antioch Santa Barbara: Commencement Speaker, Carol Forhan | hi everyone chitin Daryl Horgan I am the secretary treasurer for the board of trustees for a neon university-san Marcos so if a local board is opposed to the five campus board and on behalf of the board of trustees up for NES university I'd like to welcome volume family friends students faculty staff in particular I want to welcome students and congratulate you on achieving your goals this is look really proud moment I know how it feels I was sitting on the other side in 1987 doing the same thing so as Mandy I grad I really feel in my heart for your accomplishments I know what you did to get here I know that you spend weekend tonight's games I know that you'd your presentation papers it's a lot of work so congratulations on achieving your goals it's really a huge just really I want to say this past year has been one of great excitement and change in Antioch University we have a new leader nancy leopards we have a brand new campus on the court if you haven't seen it you will shortly on the corner of Anacapa co the streets our programs are expanding enrollment is growing I'm pleased to report the board of trustees expects both the excitement and change in the growth to continue in the future we couldn't be more proud of this campus and more pleased to support it um and I University Santa Barbara is a relatively young campus that is part of a very old and venerated institution Antioch University it's sort of like the best of both worlds of my talk today will be very short I was told to keep it short but it's a short graduation speech means a good quotation so here's mine it's from one of my personal heroes Robert Kennedy he once said it is not enough to understand or to see clearly the future will be shaped in the arena of human activity by those willing to commit their minds and their bodies to the task for graduating students this means you have the opportunity to take the wording that you have from Antioch University and bring change and growth to all of your daily activities your community your work and your family we hope it will move into this new exciting phase of your life that you continue to sit close to a me on campus be the best is yet to come | antiochausb | UC6HZQc21IHia4KLXd-LPtdQ | 2011-07-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 413 | 2,190 |
IbbAiL_KZpI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbbAiL_KZpI | Ryan Morris accused of robbing 8 convenience stores | the man police nicknamed the sorry Bandit after he apologized to clerks he robbed faced a judge today 10 News was there last week when officers arrested Ryan Morris after police say he held up an eighth convenience store 10 news reporter Candace cron is live at the courthouse with what one of Morris's friends believes led up to this crime spree Candace well Morris stood silently in court today a prosecutors say that the suspect got away with about $1600 from the robberies well tonight one of Morris's friends says that she was shocked after learning the man in the surveillance video with someone she knew Ryan Morris limped into court Wednesday afternoon where he was charged with eight counts of armed robbery a judge asked we not show his face but his picture has recently been on 10 News police say Morris was caught in surveillance video at this convenience store pretending to buy something but when he got to the register officer say he showed a gun and demanded money I just really wish that he would have asked me and you know that if he needed the money that desperately it's hard to hear but in the video the Rober told the clerk he needed the cash and then apologized he went in with a loaded 380 semi-automatic handgun told the clerks he was sorry he was having tough times but he still robbed them and terrorized them attend new's crew was there when police arrested mois 2 days after they say he robbed eight convenience stores near the 15 and one 63 freeways a friend of Morris says she saw the surveillance video but didn't think the man captured on camera was someone she knew well that was a real shock to me and I just didn't expect it he didn't seem like the type of person to ever do anything like that now if convicted Morris faces up to 45 years in prison because he used a real gun to commit the robberies he'll be back in court next week we're live downtown tonight Candace Crone 10 News | Johnathan Masters | UC2593N-5QjJVuBdiMxhor0w | 2014-05-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 354 | 1,918 |
209xi7EB1Rs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=209xi7EB1Rs | Living Objectivism w/ Yaron Brook: Live from NYC, Pursuit of Wealth Book Discussion | okay happy Saturday everybody hopefully you're all doing well this is uh this is the Iran book show and we just as though living living objectivism episode and we're talking today about well we're gonna talk about a bunch of different things and I'd really like to take your questions today with with blog talk radio actually working you can call in today on on the BlogTalkRadio line it's three four seven three two four three zero seven five so three four seven three two four three zero seven five I see people are joining us from from on Facebook that's good so we've got Facebook going hopefully we'll get YouTube going here in a second and people will be able to join over there as well and so I encourage you to today to ask questions now don't just start filling the streams with questions you know the the streams of the chat sections because I can't keep trapped but that's a wait until I ask you to ask questions and then ask them on those on those chat facilities but oh my god Jonathan Hoenig just reminded me it's Yom Kippur today and I'm doing the show wow that is about a sacrilegious as it can be Jonathan so he asked me am i fasting today and of course being the good the good Jew that I am I completely forgot it was Yom Kippur today and no I'm not fasting I haven't fasted on Yom Kippur since I don't know since my teenage years at some point in my teenage years I decided that appeasing my parents was not a good enough reason to suffer through fasting you know the juice fast when the juice fast they fast they take this seriously they not only do not eat for 24 hours they don't drink no water you're not allowed to brush your teeth you go to synagogue everybody sting and and it's it's of course the best part of Yom Kippur is the meal at the end of Yom Kippur where everybody just just just you know you just eat and eat and eat and there's tons of food but you know now and now the left has it's or not the left but a lot of people a lot of the kind of a healthy crowd have the equivalents of Yom Kippur where were you fast what does it call cleansing it's called cleansing is supposed to fast and not drink or not eat anything and it's supposed to be good for you no it's not eating is good for you drinking is good for you so anyway no no no fasting for me no fasting for cleansing no fasting for certainly not for religious or tribal reasons we'll talk a little bit more about tribalism later but no I'm off the fasting the fasting thing so but thank you Jonathan for reminding me that the today is is Yom Kippur and you know I remember I mean this tells you everything you need though about religion so on Yom Kippur you know you you spend you spend a lot of time in synagogue at least I did when I was a teenager I would go with my grandfather who was quite religious I didn't believe anything but but I went again to it to appease and for a big chunk of the ceremony of the of the praying there's there's a number of times during the day well what you do is is you basically admit to all your sins and you admit to the extent to which you are fundamentally inherently a basically a sinner and and you kind of you kind of hid your heart and it's a you know I send I did this I did this I'm a you know I'm a bad person and please forgive me God the whole point of Yom Kippur the whole point of of this holiest of Jewish days is to admit all your sins and to ask for forgiveness from God and to purify yourself through fasting to purify yourself to expose all the sins right be reborn as a as a good person it's it's it's there's an element of original sin not quite because in Judaism you can actually ask forgiveness and and in to some extent you know you're not you know an inherently evil but Yom Kippur is in that sense I think quite a Christian holiday for Jews it's it's a it really is there's this assumption of a sinful human being of the inherited inherent sinfulness of mankind the imperfection of man and in in in many regards I consider Yom Kippur maybe the most Christian of all holidays and Manoah truly it's really interesting I I hated it I hated that fasting I hated the synagogue I hated the whole the whole idea of you know man or me more accurately as as inherently as inherently a sinner and I rejected the whole thing so you know so I've invested in a long long long time so and we'll never do it again don't worry you know maybe if you can convince me as a kind of what is it as is the cleansing cleansing thing you know maybe maybe then it makes sense I don't know all right so thank you all for being with me on on this Saturday I'm in New York City as there's a title this doing doing everything from my laptop I think I figured out some of the problems we've had in the past I think it's basically a lack of memory on my laptop and lack of processing power I really do think that we you know I'm gonna have to upgrade my laptop in order to really effectively do this from the road to a Power Mac which has 16 gigabytes of memory and and a little bit more oomph in its processing power we are you know doing a lot I'm asking the software to do a lot managed a chats you know a stream both and blog talking on Facebook YouTube in Paris scope and I just think that my computer right now is it's just not up to it so so unfortunately that's where we are and but I do expect I do expect that that we will upgrade up with these capabilities and and make it possible for us to do this in the future more effectively with less problems as we move around the world anyway that's that is that is in our future so I mean New York at the end of this long European trip this is my 8th country on this trip I started out in London almost a month ago I think some of you saw my talk it's hard to believe it's it's the same trip that I met Sarah gone of akkad I think that's right we're talk about socialism in in London I haven't been home since then and you know right now I since then I've been to seven countries that was London tably see Baku Paris Geneva Copenhagen Kiev and now New York so you know fabulous trip a lot of interesting people a lot of talks a lot of presentations a lot of exposure a lot of again you know more more interaction kind of with Europeans with Eastern Europe in particular Tbilisi Kiev fascinating in particular but you know we've talked about a lot of that New York it on Wednesday this week I did a debate at Yale the video of the debate is up online I had a good opponent I have to say I mean I thought I thought he was a smart he made a good as good of a case as you can for his position I think he was challenging because he does what the best of the opponents do they bring out a lot of data they tell hit they make up history and they tell so you have to you have to challenge them on so many dimensions that it becomes very very very difficult so you know so I think I covered you to watch it watch what he does I think you've learned a lot about the state of kind of leftist academia from what he does the kind of the quality of their thinking or lack of it but he was good I mean he I don't I think it was it was hard for me it was not it was not easy some some of these debates are easy because the opponent stands for nothing says nothing means nothing represents nothing this guy actually had a point of view he actually had data he had a narrative about history that was wrong but in a bit of about history I had to spend a lot of time kind of cool you know debating him on his history which which is time-consuming for me and and he a that's good for him right cuz then it's my facts versus his facts go figure out who's right yeah he wins that I think he is at an advantage in that kind of situation because most of these kids know nothing about history know nothing about the facts of the world and he's an accomplished that could damage ease a law professor he's got a PhD in philosophy from Oxford University you know and they're more likely to believe him than me so I you know again I think you should watch it keep an open mind I know that the tendency is to say oh you're on just crushed him because you agree with me so it seems like a question but you've gotta approach this objectively if you were a student who has mostly hood the other guy's story what would you think not knowing everything that you know but what would a neutral student think that that's the perspective you had taken it's hard you know it's hard so I think I think it was as good as they come right as good of an opponent as I've had I thought he was I still think that I I still thought I crushed him I still thought I beat him I still thought any objective observer would see that the truth and justice and was on my side but again he was about as good as it gets alright so I encourage you to go watch that video I think it's I think it's up there'll be a snazzy really well edited video of the same thing of the debate put up over time the Federalist Society put on the debate at Yale it was a beautifully run events the the well attended there was a large audience it was beautifully filmed they had three cameras they I think the lifestream went off well but they've got footage from three cameras they're gonna edited we edit it now and be able to present what I think is a really powerful debate so look for the kind of edited version of the debate coming in the weeks to come so you know thank you to the Federalist Society they did a great job this was one of the highlight events for the year they've spent a lot of money on this by the way the next event that the Federalist societies are really highlighting and putting a lot of efforts and money and resources into highlighting is an event by Tara Smith at the University of Chicago Law School it's gonna be a discussion a talk that she gives on free speech so well look for that coming up it'll be it'll be live streamed and then again it'll be edited professionally presented as a professional video so I think you know I encourage you all to to watch it when it becomes available so it's a kind of focus on that and and be attentive to that coming down the roads and down the road alright let's see I've got a question here let me take the question and then I'll I'll get back to some of the topics I wanted to discuss this is from Ronald Williams on on Facebook he asked I would like to know why you disliked it lon musk so much is he wrong for taking government subsidies versus letting his competitors take them playing the game he was born into he is on record asking the government to remove the subsidies well I don't know about this he's on record asking the government to remove the subsidies I haven't seen that I'd like to see it but the fact is that since PayPal Allen mask is only started businesses that rely excuse rusev Lee on government subsidies on government projects and government involvement there's a lot he could do in the fields in in in the in technology that does not rely on government subsidies but he is chosen explicitly to focus on those realms that rely on those subsidies whether it's solar panels with I think it's solar city whether it's electric cause with Tesla where he gets massive subsidies you I mean it because he gets massive massive subsidies primarily from the state of California because of the co2 mitigation that supposedly he provides so the utilities pay him kind of as a as a to be as a mitigation for their the cost of they comment and of course SpaceX which relies on NASA now SpaceX I find the least objectionable of what he does because SpaceX is somewhat admirable because in Spacek she's got a 30 year plan to colonize Mars he realizes the only way to get there are the is by in the short run working for NASA but not just for NASA or so putting private satellites into space and so on but he's working for whatever customers he have Tesla and SolarCity are not the same they're it's not that the government is the customer the government is this subsidizes Tesla is an illegitimate project there is no legitimacy to electric cars they are completely uh neck they make absolutely no sense they are an inferior technology to everything we have around us it is still an inferior technology Tesla is still an inferior car and the only thing that makes it viable then makes Tesla viable is the heavy heavy subsidies that it gets and the same thing with solar panels I'm a huge fan of solar energy I wish solar energy would take off I remember doing my in high school and kind of my senior project I can't remem forward course it was on solar energy and solar panels and I went to interview scientists and I thought it was really cool and it wouldn't be amazing if you could harness the Sun and get the energy from the Sun and in those days that this is 1978-79 the scientists told me oh it was just years for a breakthrough any day now we're gonna have this massive breakthrough and it's gonna become this massive source of energy and of course here we are 40 years later and there has been no breakthrough and it's still unbelievably expensive its inefficient it's unproductive it requires battery storage which is inefficient unproductive incredibly expensive and the only reason it is even on the table the only is because of mandates by the government to switch to alternative energy but not nuclear or or what do you call it from dams whatever right and it has to be Sola it has to be wind these are unbelievably inefficient unproductive sources of energy and yet we have them and Elon Musk goes into that knowing that he makes it marginally more efficient but marginally more efficient is still unbelievably unproductive and inefficient as compared to any other is compared to fossil fuel so I encourage you to to read you know the mall defense of fossil fuels by by my good friend Alex Epstein so I encourage you to to do that so ya Ceylon mosque has chosen chosen to pursue industries and projects that are explicitly can only exist because of government subsidies now I would have forgiven him a SpaceX because I think SpaceX is unique and I and I do look and I and my ID Maya Ellen mosque at the same time so I have a very much a love-hate relationship not that I have a relationship with the lawn mosque I don't you know I've never met him I doubt he knows who I am he might know who I am but um but it's it's because he is a man of vision and he has this long-term perspective particularly is reflected in SpaceX he has this goal of colonizing Mars which i think is amazing in incredible and and he thinks long-term which is amazing and incredible and yet and and look Tesla's a gorgeous car and what he's done with it is pretty amazing again it would not be viable in the marketplace if not for the subsidies so I admire him much of what he does and at the same time despise the fact that he is the epitome of cronyism the epitome of what it means to be a crony now it would be great if we could if if he could become a champion a real champion not just in some comments some way but it will champion for eliminating subsidies that would be terrific so so I would have a lot more respect for him I would a lot more innovation for him you know so anyway let's see all right so if you want to ask questions we've got kind of three platforms we've got Facebook we've got the chat feature on blog talk and we have the chat on periscope and YouTube I'm kind of monitoring all three but it's gonna be hard so I don't know if if fun the platform you on you can put your question in bold or make it go all caps or some way that I can see it that it pops into my into my vision as a question rather than you know rather than just as you know just a comment that that would be helpful so I'd be happy to answer questions happy to answer questions all right let me know sis let me let me just make this note well you guys think of questions you want to ask you can also and maybe even better you can call in questions and you can call and talk to me three four seven three two four three zero seven five and when you do that make sure to press one so one after you've dialed in after you can hear the show press one and that'll notify me that you're calling it not just to listen to the show but to actually ask a question so that would be terrific if you actually did that all right you know Gail asks how much do I think alone Musk's ideas are distorted by subsidies I mean I don't know I don't know Elon Musk it's hard for me to say you know he obviously has these ideas about artificial intelligence and about robots that I think that I think are wrong that I think make no sense that I that I think you know don't have respect for human intelligence and human reason but it's hard to tell I think a lot of people in Silicon Valley have the views I think there's a certain hubris that people in Silicon Valley have they think with some justification that the smartest people in the room are the smartest people in the world that they know everything that they can predict the future I think that's why they tend to be status it's because that they think they could be great central planners and and I so I'm not sure that his bad ideas are a consequence of the subsidies versus just a consequence of bad ideas you know that you get with a lot of people in Silicon Valley a mixture of genius and brilliance when it comes to a technology the ability to run a business the ability to to be great you know in terms of the marketplace and in terms of the but in you know an inability or and in the - I don't know - to get to have a real understanding of a philosophy of the state of humanity of the state of mankind what it entails a real lack of understanding of capitalism and of the marketplace and how it works in spite of the fact that they are brilliant at participating in capitalism participating in the marketplace and deploying their products into the marketplace they seem to have an inability to comprehend the beauty of how it all works to accept that individuals - marketplaces individual is is if you will individual values and you know in some ways they want to they want to impose their own values on the marketplace you know in a kind of bizarre way so I've talked about Silicon Valley before I don't want to get into too much of it it's it's not what but you know feel free to ask me questions Jeremy question previous post I'm not sure what that means so if you have a question type it in I I don't really I don't really see it all right is there an objective message to a work of art okay here it is is an objective message to work Avadh as opposed to subjective or intrinsic interpretation of the art work regardless of the author's intended message this came in Korea's Atlas project yes I think there is an objective message to work of art a good work about a pie quality work of art projects an objective message and that objective message might not be what the author intends its to be so it might be that the author thinks the his message is X but the actual message of the artwork is y and the reason is that an artwork reflects an artist's metaphysical value judgments Munroe flex the deepest value judgments he has so you know often these value judgments are held not explicitly but but implicitly they're sometimes held by subconscious rather than then is conscious and he might be trying to paint consciously a particular message but his the arches is much more reflective of the subconscious state and his subconscious values and that's what gets reflected in an artwork so and a lot of times for example style reflects a certain psychopathology that is the the the the quality of consciousness and his view with regard to observing reality so that for example the the a lot of impressionistic painting might have a very positive sense of life in the sense that it portrays things with a lot of color and positive and and and joyful and and in in people is basically enjoying life and having a good time you can see that in Renoir often I mean very positive but the the fragmentation of the visual the fragmentation of reality represents a certain fragment to epistemological fragmentation a certain view of how we view reality which is distorted and perverted and I don't think I don't think the roon wall would have necessarily thought that necessarily that being explicit in his mind artists are not necessarily philosophical it comes across to it's his is his subconscious you know subconscious you know epistemology epistemological view so that's what's reflected in the artwork so yes and now again it has to be good out you know I don't think Impressionism is related to romantic to the Romantic movement in many respects Impressionists is a rejection of the romantic most impressionistic art is naturalistic it shows the world as it is in terms of theme but broken up and fragmented in terms of the means of perception so through dots through through brushstrokes it breaks up the world if you want to see romantic art and painting one has to go to the academic paints as I think of a France of England maybe some of the romantic academic painters of Germany Kasper is one of them where reality is in shall focus there is drama in the painting there are choices there's clear you know romanticism is all too corny tiny man is is is an is an art that reflects man's free will romanticism is art as an expression as competitive romanticism in philosophy which is something very different romanticism and art is a reflection of the fact that man has free will so it is aught that reflect choices reflect that it has a certain drama to it that is reflective of a choice of I could go this way I could go that way you know there's a is one of my favorite sculptures is in Paris it's called Spartacus it's at the Louvre Museum and it is it is Spartacus having broken his changed standing in defiance of slavery and defiance of the of the perception of himself as a slave and he is for liberty he is for freedom and he's broken his chains and it is a magnificent romantic sculpture I mean clearly free well clearly drama clearly he has chosen a particular path and you can see it that he has chosen that this is not arbitrary this is not random this is a choice that he has made so no right so so so Impressionism even in it it's best even when the scene is the most positive is typically just a scene it's just typically just a capture of a particular thing that's happening in the world out there and it almost never has drama in it say you know a lot of it is kind of even even romantic landscape painting can be can be dramatic right there's drama there's no human choice there but there's that there's a certain decisiveness in in in what is drawn it's reflective of of the choice the artist has made about picking a particular point of drama and but but the Impressionists purposefully you know Monet as pretty as it might be chooses to do you know green lily lilies a lily pond and it's just a lily pond and it there's no drama to it it's it's kind of pretty but there's nothing reflective of something going on of action of choices of drama as reflected in it so anyway Jeremy says many subjective us would say that there's no one interpretation of a work of art so it is subjective but but it is one interpretation of a work of art now it's not easy to get to but one has to be objective and how once interpret saw it so you have to look at what is in the art piece objectively what what are the components of it what is the style what are the images what is the story being told and you know and it's harder the more abstract a work of art is so it's easiest I'd say in literature it's hardest in music and I don't know how to do it in music and maybe none of us know how to do it in music but that's because on knowledge on understanding of what music is actually portraying is still very primitive and I knew and talks about that in the Romantic manifesto but it's it's it's it's harder and painting in sculpture than it is in in literature because literature is the most conceptual and the most it tells you in in in in in very detail what it's trying to say so there isn't an objective interpretation and what does it mean to be objective it means to go by the fact what is the fact of what is in the painting what is the fact of what this paragraph is saying what does it actually mean you know what is the facts fact regarding the style that that is being that is being conveyed here so that's what it means to be objective it means to go by the facts it means to go by reasoning means to go by the evidence it means to go by what is actually being portrayed by the art form and not by your emotional response to it so so not by you know your most serious response obviously is incredibly important so for example I can imagine having a piece of art that I that I interpret and objectively see oh you you know this is real something meaningful to hear and it's it's really good but that I don't have a positive emotional response to it for a variety of other reasons right so your emotions and your objective interpretation might not be the same you have to be able to back off and interpret it objectively and if you want to see how that's done you can look for some lectures by for example Mary answers I think they're they might be some in the East or online I think on the Iran Institute website you can find an essay she wrote called metaphysics in marble where she analyzes objectively interpret subjectively marbles the marvelous sculpture in other words and and you can see an example of that but it's hard and and the some of the obviously in nomadic manifesto an ran does it it's hard be skeptical of a lot of objectives to try to do this cuz cuz it's hard and very few people know how to do it Oh a nother brilliant example of this another billion example of this is Leonard Peikoff eight eighth grade plays which you can now get in book form not just online on a li campus I encourage you to go to a bi campus one of my favorite courses all time of Lenape cough could have taught me to analyze and you can apply his methodology not only to plays but also to movies to literature it's it's really it's it's taking on man's ideas and applying them to aesthetic analysis to objective objective aesthetic analysis in a powerful way and so I very very much encourage you to to do that oh I see we've got a bunch of questions I'm a bunch of phone calls now I'm gonna take a quick commercial break after the commercial I want to talk about my new book and and after that we will take some of these call this the Iran archives has more than 1,500 photographs of Iran her life and her work become an AR I monthly sustainer today and you're eligible to receive the Iran photo series every month these high quality reproduction each with historical anecdotes provided by the 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as well so I try to repeat the questions but let me let me do a few more questions related to the art that I think is interesting so somebody asks but what if they're not intentionally creates a piece of art that has no meaning well a again the intention of the artist is not what matters it's what is reflected in the artwork and so a lot of times what today is regarded as odd does not even odd so he gives an example of mouths its own smoking a doobie that might not be on it might just be garbage a lot of times white on white people just scribbling on pages paper is not art and has no meaning no matter what the the artist intended the meaning to me it has no objective meaning and yet an artist can say I don't think this has any meaning and yet it does if you objectively analyze so again what does is reflect not the artists explicit thoughts but logic then it expresses the largest the artists subconscious the artists implicit values the oddest implicit slew of viewing reality which you can capture from the artwork in a way that the artist can never explain so the artists actually point of view is irrelevant what's relevant is what is in the art what's relevant is what you can see in the piece of art so it doesn't matter what Michelangelo says about the David you can't see in the David a certain set of values you can see in the day David a certain objective perspective and no matter what Michelangelo thought about it that the David stands on its own and indeed this is why great odds you should be able to objectively if you I mean you have to be good at this but you should be able to objectively analyze and integrate it even if you don't know the story behind it you know art you you've never heard of the artist he hasn't told you what he thought or anything like that a really good art should you should be able to see it so I I often don't want to read the descriptions and people's analysis of it until after I've actually examined out and looked at it and thought about it and analyze it cuz because I want to be able to see if I can you know if I can get it so the odd has to have it okay so yeah I mean so I don't think one person's interpretation of a piece is odd is as good as anybody else's interpretation of good know some interpretations are true and some interpretations are just wrong some it's eight citations are you know you might have multiple interpretations that are all flawed that is but but they is a true right interpretation this is true in this is definitely true or not now in art it's hard that's why you could have multiple interpretations that all seem reasonable and it's hard to figure out which one's right and which ones wrong and it's hard for the person to accept that his interpretations might not be right because he's got so much emotion tied up that's what all does it evokes emotion so so you know but the fact that it's hard does not make it any less objective okay before we get to other callers or the questions I haven't looked at Facebook to see if they've other questions they don't forget to that oh no oh I didn't scroll down lots of new questions on Facebook all right let me let me just mention my new book and for those of you on video I'll pick it up and and and show it it's it's called the pursuit of wealth the mall case for finance it's co-authored with with Don Watkins it also has an extensive an excellent X s a by Ray Niles is an economist PhD in economics from George Mason University and teaches at the University here in New York City and so so the book is out it's on Amazon you can get it on Kindle and it's softcover it's not gonna be in your local book store cuz we self-published us on Amazon so basically Amazon is our vendor and you can only really get it on Amazon so sorry those I don't think it's on an iBook I think it's only on the Kindle but I do encourage you to buy it I also I would also say you know this a great book to buy if you're in the financial industry and give to your employees give to your bosses give to your clients it is the it is the first book I think ever to articulate a model case for finance to explain what Finance does to explain why what it does is mall explain the standard by which morality should be evaluated and that is the standard of human flourishing somebody's asking about audible I like to get back to you an audible as far as I know right now it's not an audible I'm hoping it will be but but you know I think we're still working on that one so this is a book that explains the standard by which one evaluates the morality of a human endeavor the extent to which it enhances human flourishing that it creates values for human life it's the only presentation I know of the real model case for finance as I said it was co-authored with Don Watkins it's got a short essay by doug alt nough and a pretty extensive essay which I'll talk about in a minute by economists really Niles the book is based on a a lot of work I did you know for many many years on Finance of course I taught in the 90s at Santa Clara University when I was a professor called ethics and Finance and you know I developed a unfortunately a lot of material I did back then is dated and a lot of the gritty I had a great examples back then about Mike Milken and hostile takeovers and junk bonds and things like that so a lot of that material that material is not in here unfortunately but but you know the core of what is here is from those days it's also based on of course that I did at at a predecessor at the oak on I think in 1990 I don't know 9 maybe which was the mall case for finance that course by the way will be released as a podcast starting in a couple of weeks the mall case for finance the course I did in the 90s as a supplement to this book we released in I think five or seven I can't remember how many episodes on you know on on BlogTalkRadio as a podcast so you will all have access to that for free and and be able to listen to it as you read the book I think it's a great supplement to the book and there I discuss Mike Milken and and in hostile takeovers and junk bonds and all that stuff that was very relevant in the 80s and 90s not so relevant in people's minds today most people don't remember it today you know the the the the book was also inspired by an essay I wrote a while I don't even remember when I wrote it exactly it's in it's in the objective standard so it would be whenever the projective standard started so in the in the mid-2000s actually wrote it before that I think and it on the morality of money lending a short history so that essay is in there is in the book and and for a long time I wanted I wanted to get this book written and I and it took me a while to convince Don that he could do it that he could help me write this book that he could really dig into it and really get it because it's a complex issue finance is not easy and and Don was worried about being able to properly represent it and properly understand it and kind of dig into it and get it but he did and and he's done a phenomenal job of the number of essays here that exclusively his the number of co-authored essays and he's done a fantastic job and really taking a lot of this material and putting it in writing and and we formatting it and and bring it up to date and bringing it up to up to today's context and and that is excellent he's so so the book is divided into three parts the first part is how finance help helps us flourish the lead essay you know the most important essays in USA here's the mall case finance where we kind of do the overview of the whole of the whole case that we're gonna making and setting up human flourishing as the standard the second essay in the book is the morality of money lending which which I did a long time ago which presents a history of finance and how a fine has been demonized forever for 2,000 years and and everything about that then there are a couple of important historical essays to deal with history the history of finance particularly I you know the first essay is focused on kind of the Great Depression and then the financial crisis and and everything that happened in between so a lot of the mythology that says finance caused all the crisis cry dance create all the problems it's always bankers fault and Don wrote that finance isn't free and never really was it's it's this myth that finance is free and finance caused all these problems so then it really sets that the history straight which is excellent because it's an a really really important and really really quiet you have to you have to do that you know it's established that finance has always been regulated and to the extent that or almost always yeah it's always been regulated and to the extent that it to be successful it's been in spite of those regulations and it's been an incredible achievement of the finance here's to overcome those regulations and still be this incredible benefit to mankind and I did a podcast that I think last week on the blaze about all the benefits of finance and and I covered you code you to listen to it in addition to reading the book and in addition to listening to the podcasts that are going to come about it so Don does a good history generally about regulations that caused a crisis the crisis that is blamed on financial markets which causes more regulations which then caused annex crisis which is blamed on finance which causes more regulations and this is a perpetual perpetual kind of machine kind of thing until we get to the point today where banks are basically kind of utilities run by the government almost entirely and very little freedom all right the fourth essay in this section is the dubious origins and purpose of central banking this was written by rein Isles and and it's really important because again history we have to set history straight and and and a big part of history is the fact that the the product of banking the the most important product the bang were responsible for until they took kind of the 20th century in the US and until the maybe the 18th century nurse to the world was money and yet money is the nationalized and fiat money through central banking has because dominates and and central banking not only does it distort money by bike by just printing it but it distorts interest rates which distort the economy it distorts it distorts through regulation of financial industry it distorts the world of finance in many many ways so it's really crucial essay describing the way in which central banking has you know so this is a in a sense a continuation of kind of the important addition to what Don wrote about the history of finance this now you know complements that but with with an essayist saying it's not just the banks are regulated and finance is regulated but then at the core of it is the central bank that distorts everything that happens in the economy in particular what happens in finance again think about how great the achievements of Finance is though when they have to go up against all these barriers so those two essays are crucial and then there's another essay by Don Steve Jobs Bernie Madoff and Wall Street greed which is an important essay he wrote a while ago which kind of differentiates between great what does it mean to be greedy is Bernie Madoff greedy and Steve Jobs greedy you know and this goes to the question of selfishness is is Bernie Madoff selfish and Steve Jobs selfish that's the that's the shallow perspective of selfishness but there's something fundamentally different between the greed and the selfishness of Steve Jobs and Bernie Madoff maybe Bernie Madoff is not selfish maybe Bernie Madoff is self-destructive so maybe we need a different category for Bernie Madoff maybe if selfish is Steve Jobs it's a good thing maybe the the the the the self-interest the greed of Wall Street and of Steve Jobs is a good thing and it's it's a misapplication of the term to use it for Bernie Madoff the crook because the fundamental thing about Bernie Madoff is the fact that he is self-destructive not that he is he is creating anything not as he's building anything now that is fundamentally bettering his own life so so that's an important essay that so that's part one a lot of history kind of framing the debate framing in a toast of self-interest framing it in terms of morality but also emphasizing the history and the function of Finance because you either three things you have to do when defending an industry in my view is understand its function and how it enhances human flourishing understand its history understand you know why if bad if thing bad things happen why they happen and in what sense they happen and and third you have to be able to understand the morality that the profit motive the selfish aspect of it so this section covers all of those part two connects in a sense our previous book done in my previous book on inequality with this book and it talks about the inequality attack on finance and this is series of mainly short essays although the first two a medium length essays the first one is turning tables and inequality alarmists which is an essay don and i co-authored on inequality and in the difference between why equality should mean and only really means politically is equality of liberty equality of rights equality of freedom equality of before the law and and why economic and and income and all of those equalities that you a wrong it's a wrong way of looking at the world the whole conceptualization of things in those terms is wrong and fall so that's i think it important essay if you want to get a short version of our book this essay is a good feature of that the next day that i think is a really excellent essay that Don wrote it's called luck is overrated we analyzes this perspective which I got at Yale really hammered it this other guy hammered at Yale in a subtle kind of way that everything's luck you know Steve Jobs or Bill Gates got lucky one Buffett got lucky the whole luck debate an important crucial philosophical issue I'll do I'm gonna do this issue one of these podcasts I'm just gonna dedicate to the luck question it might get Don watt Don on to talk about it it's it's so that's a really ese and then you've got other essays that deals with these kind of related issues the issue of rent seeking and why rent seeking is is the wrong term the whole issue of CEO pay and how to look at CEO pay properly so those this you and then a final one is about certain controversies so an essay on index fund and essay and insider trading an essay on subsidizing bank bonuses and then a short essay by Doug oakna on on John Allison and how dodd-frank and dodd-frank and the regulation so and this financial controversies section could have been a hundred times longer you could do essays on a million different things around this we could have done junk bonds here and and and milk in and and hostile takeovers and a bunch of stuff here but just in terms of room and time and and we said we had a few have a few samples here and then finally at the end of the book is an epilogue there is an interview with me Don interviews me and we have a lot of content and I think I think a lot of you will particularly if you in finance I think you really enjoy this we cover a lot we cover a lot of stuff that is not covered in the previous sections we get into what's you know the issue of CDSs and see do you know derivatives and and a lot of kind of issues that relate to finance so you know it's a really good interview I'm pretty proud of you know what I say there and the analysis that goes on there and everything so yeah you know by the book but but really by a bunch of them and give them to your friends you can get them on Amazon it's the best way to get large quantities of them just buy them at Amazon give them to friends give them to colleagues if you're in the financial industry I think this is a must book this is a book to get the clients this is a book to give to your co-workers this is book to give to your bosses if you run a financial company I you know I would love to come and speak about this at your company so you know invite me over invite me to come and give a talk and you know this is an important issue you will not find a better defender of a finance an activity of Finance as a model activity as a wolf creating activity than I am so you know invite me over my project over the next few years is really to work on defending the financial industry and really get in front of finances and get into position where we can we can really communicate and really give finances the backbone the more backbone the mall you know confidence that they deserve and I've I've done this I've spoken actually in where was it in Tbilisi of all places and Tbilisi Georgia I spoke at the Bank of Georgia to a group of executives basically on this theme of how productive and Malo what it is that they do and they loved it right because it basically vindicates it says yeah we're good guys and they are good guys and you if you're in the world of finance a good guys in in your in your profession so give me an opportunity to do that for you so if you run a group if you have a company if you want me to come in and speak to that company or if you want me if you're in a business school you want me to come to speak at a class or to MBA students so it's a bit of students just let me know drop me an email and and I would love love to do that so okay great so I am going to we're gonna take another a quick break here and then when we come back I see I've got a couple of callers and I know I can see kind of just scanning that we've got some questions on Facebook we're gonna take those and let's see which commercial do I want to use we're gonna use this one we'll be right back after this 2017 marks the 60th anniversary of Iran's Atlas Shrugged 12 years in the writing it is Iran's masterwork despite being published six decades ago the novel continues to gain recognition and profoundly influence business leaders thought leaders and a growing number of political leaders its presence in today's culture cannot be denied the fascination with Atlas Shrugged persist because it grapples with the fundamental questions of human existence and presents radically new answers whether you're an adoring fan who wants to add this new addition to your personal library or someone who wants to read the book for the first time to see what all the fuss is about pick up your copy of Atlas Shrugged today an updated cover for the mass market edition of the novel recently hit stores check it out you can order your copy today on Amazon all right we're back you're listening to your on Brook show we're in BlogTalkRadio Facebook live youtube and periscope everything is actually working and so that's that's unusual and that's that's that's cool so everything's actually working and and we're doing we're doing we're doing okay nothing break please um I was just talking about my new book with Don Watkins in pursuit of wealth I'm all case for finance I encourage you all to get a copy let me just note somebody asked us on Facebook live that it's not just for people in the field it's a book explicitly written for people who don't know that about about finance I think I think the professional benefit enormously from it but I think if you are if you know nothing about financial benefit a law firm it partially you'll understand the world around you a lot better and and you'll understand what happens what is happening in the world around you much better you'll understand things like the financial crisis and the Great Depression and just what happens on a day to day basis in the world of finance much better you'll get much more confidence about your defense of capitalism and defense of free markets by reading the book is it the the financial world is a whole other perspective it's also an area where Kannamma stip eclis write about its its finances it is seemingly a distinct field and a lot of economists don't really understand how get financed that much I find including Austrian economists don't usually think in terms of financial markets so I don't know of any other book like this so I don't know of any other book that's tried to do anything like this even the extent to which we just explain markets in the history of markets financial markets so I need this is a book for everybody so go for it I hope you all you all buy copies buy copies for friends buy multiple copies to giveaway it this is a great Christmas present you know christmas is coming up soon it's just around the corner stock up on Christmas presents by kindle version by a soft back version you know in in and really if you like the book the other thing that's really I would urge you to do is write a review please please write a review and Amazon one of the ways in which books get become successful on Amazon is because people write reviews so you know there probably be about I don't know something like 10,000 people are gonna listen to the show overall if I could get you know 20% of you to write reviews on Amazon if I could get if I could get 20% of you to buy the book and read it a and then write reviews on Amazon this book could easily become a best-seller so if I could get a hundred percent of you to buy the book look the book is cheap particularly on the Kindle it's like three ninety-nine a $4.99 or something ridiculous like that so no excuses and you're gonna you know it's a good read it reads well and and if you look at the back cover it's been endorsed by by you know some of the leading minds in finance today from John Allison to Peter Schiff to Dmitry Bauhaus near very successful hedge fund manager to Jeffie ass who runs the largest option trading firm in the world to AV more an incredibly successful venture capitalist so you know by the book recommitted to your friends by multiple copies as I said but write reviews and encourage your friends to write reviews give it a star rating one would review something just just get on Amazon so that so that there's something something that Amazon records it helps the book a lot alright we're gonna take a quick we're gonna take a caller here hi you in the about book so who's this hey you're on this is Mark from Michigan hey Mark from Michigan what's up hey so this actually follows up nicely with your book you just mentioned John Allison gave you a blurb for the book and he's great and I was reading a Wall Street Journal article yesterday about Trump and minuchin interviewing candidates to replace Jenna yell at the Fed and the focus of the article was on these two former Fed governors Jerome Powell and Kevin Walsh what they also just threw in there that John Ellison was in the running and so I wonder know what you think about that and also it's said that John Ellison was offered a position on the central bank's board of governors earlier in Trump's tenure but he turned it down so I was wondering if you knew that that happened and the motivation behind that and if that would scale to also being offered the top job sure so let me so let me I'm gonna take you offline just because there's just because the audio set up while I'm on the road is is complicated and if I have you online it's it's kind of a mess all right so the question is about John Allison and the fact that John Allison has been mentioned as in the running for the head job at the Federal Reserve and in the article not he's not one of the two leading candidates but it did mention that he has been interviewed for that job it also mentioned that in the past John had been offered a position on the board of governors of the Federal Reserve and and had turned it down and so I guess I guess he's asking what I think of that and what do I know about it and and so I you know I need to really think about what I can say because the real person who should answer this is John Allison of course not me let me just say about John Ellison did that John has just agreed to join the board of directors of the annuit Institute so you'll be joining our board in the next so I don't know about the board of governors of the Federal Reserve but a thousand times more important the board of the INA Institute that's a it's a much more important board and he is joining that board starting later this year john john was interviewed for a number of different positions with the trump administration he was interviewed for the position of treasury secretary early on and then he was interviewed for the position of i think vice chairman of the of the of the central bank and is now I don't know if he's been interviewed but is definitely under consideration and the number of senators and others who would like to see him suddenly I could imagine somebody like Rand Paul would certainly want John Allison to be the you know chairman of the Federal Reserve I think there are a number is so let me just say that that no trying to think what John said publicly the other day about this but but I think John is uncomfortable being in a trump administration and he's uncomfortable being on the on the on the Federal Reserve Board when is little you can do and I think he also I think there's a question of whether he could be he could actually be even if he was nominated would the Senate to prove him it to be chairman of the Federal Reserve John is on record unequivocally and under oath I think would state that he believes that the Fed Reserve should be abolished so if he was in front of the Senate and they asked him and this is Encounter to greenspan who was a great liar and and and and and lied constantly and and deceived and and while he was chairman of the Fed I don't I don't actually believe John Allison could do that so if he was asked in his confirmation hearing are you heading an organization that you want to dissolve he would say yes and then would Republicans vote for him and my guess is the answer's no you know the answer's no so you know so IIIi don't think it's realistic to think that he will be offered the job and even if he accepted that he would actually be appointed chairman of the Federal Reserve and I think any other position I just think is just you you don't have enough influence to make a difference and you're sanctioning the existence of the organization and the existence of the mixed economy and the existence of all the bad stuff that this administration and other administrations would do by joining them you know without you having the real without having I think they're enough real influence to make a real fundamental significant difference so yeah I mean at the end of the day gonna have to ask John these questions cuz I don't want to speak for him and and we've obviously had private conversations about it but I don't know how much of that is sorry what I'm saying is only stuff that he said publicly so I'm trying to be careful but but so that's where it is he is under consideration I I think it's very unlikely he gets off at the position all right we've got another another caller hi you're on a book show who's this Aloha it's Stuart alos do it how's it going haven't heard from you in a while let's swing yeah it's going great good long so may I ask you about a particular um psychological profile that's often given of these Islamic terrorists in Europe especially France sure you can yeah go ahead because I find strange how both the left and right cite this but we come to seemingly opposite conclusions but what they often say is that they find that these Islamic terrorists who on the task people in France they seldom grew up in households where they were raised to be very devout Muslims since childhood usually they come from families that were you know nominally Muslim but they're not practicing they're not devout and usually what happens is that they go through a lessons feeling alienated and lonely often they go through a bad breakup and then you know feeling dejected they go to these radical mosques and get radicalized and why think it strange is how I see these secular center-left people saying all this absolves Islam of blame because if it was true that Islam was to blame shouldn't it be the ones who were always devout since childhood who always do these terrorist attacks and on the other hand I hear these right-wing people like Tommy Larenz say well doesn't this prove that even you know supposed to be nonviolent Muslims or actually violent there's I think she said they're just one bad breakup away from going on killings for so yeah so let me take you offline again because the audio issues and and talk about this Stewart is asking about the psychological profile of many of Islam is particularly in France and and also also to some extent in I think the UK you find the same kind of profile and the profile the psychological profile of the terrorists tends to be people people who grew up in Muslim households but but not particularly radical or you know very religious Orthodox Muslims you know nominally Muslim practiced some aspects of Islam but the parents tend to be you know such additional lists and and and not not real dedicated to a slum ISM and what happens is these kids grow up for whatever reason they alienated they're frustrated they're they're not happy that some of them actually get involved in violent gangs separate for this and then in this search just like some in the war some teenagers in this search go to drugs or go to house krishna or whatever these young people tend to find the local radical mosque and the islam the moderate form of Islam if you will is unappealing because it's not it doesn't provide them with enough of a a vision enough of a mission enough of a drive to overcome the alienation it doesn't fill them with purpose the way these Islamist jihadist mosques do the way the way this ideology that is you know seemingly consistent you know driving purposeful has a mission for them it has a clear clear line of sacrifice and purpose and something that they that they want to do and and you know that the left says interpret sisters look this is a sign that it's not Islam that it is it is just these these wacky cult-like figures on that that pervert Islam from their perspective and these kids are troubled kids to begin with and it's their fault and of course the right uses the same thing to say but you know the this is all about Islam this is everything all Muslims are just just on the brink a being of being sucked into to this radicalized view you know radical is being consistent view of Islam and ethical is not the best word for this because I I think of myself as a radical but an extremist is not the right view of this but but you know the jihadi the Islamist view of what Islam is and so you know so what is it and and of course both both have elements of truth to them right you know it's it is true that most people particularly the terrorists the Muslim terrorists in the West the ones who are in France or in England or in Germany not who maybe second generation born in those countries or third generation born in those countries who then become jihadis they it's this is this is a this is true that they understood people that they are people who have not accepted any of the the world around them have not integrated in any respect into the world the Western world around them this is not true of in my view of most Muslim youths in these countries most of them to some extent at least have absorbed some elements of the West so that they're not inclined to put on a suicide vest and go blow themselves up they value their life too much and they've learned from the people around them first of all because they're just human beings they valued their life too much plus to some extent they have observed elements of the West that is around them now it's hard in France in England for this to happen particularly in France because phen society is so isolated them French society has not tried to integrate has not tried to assimilate them but has put them in ghettos basically usually on the fringes of Paris where they live among themselves and they're less and less exposed to Western values and what life in the West is but I think most of them still absorb a little bit of it and and and and many of them are quite secular and but there's an element within that are alienated the alienated from society the alienated from their parents because the teenagers after all they alienated from for much what's going on in the world around them and they are looking for purpose in life we all need purpose in life purpose is really really really important and when they look at Western society what they see is materialism and lack of purpose and this is particularly reflected in in Europe is kind of a drift through life a drift through the world no purposeful activity this is why Europeans don't have babies they don't have children because they really see no purpose in life the pessimistic about the future they you know I'm gonna and I'm reading right now a fascinating book written by a Frenchman called submission and and I'm gonna do a podcast about it I'm just I'm just in the middle of it and I want to finish it before I talk about it too much but you very much get the sense of the of the westernized French purposeful the lack of purpose in their life so if you're a a teen looking for purpose growing up in a religious cultural environment you you know you're looking at the world out there and you see nothing but but shallow materialism you look at your parents and they have an uncommitted view of Islam which again seems purposeless they haven't absorbed into West they haven't they're not fully committed to slum then neither here nor there and it's very appealing to be attracted to a charismatic consistent somebody who can give you real purpose and take the slum that you already have absorbed in your childhood and really push it all the way consistently and and I think that's exactly that's exactly what happened now Muslims are particularly susceptible to this because the Islam as a religion is is has this I mean the Islamists and the jihadist aw appealing to Islam appealing to the Quran the appealing to actual sentiments in these books they're not making anything up right it's their interpretation of these that is just as legitimate as anybody else's interpretation right so they they have they have legitimacy within the Islamic world the parents can't counter it with very much because their form of Islam is weak purposeless unprincipled not focused on anything and ultimately its religion so anything goes right so it's both it's Islam but it's also particular its Islam as it appeals to particular type of person and luckily fall of us this type of Islam appeals to us very very small minority of people I mean think about it there are millions and millions and millions of Muslims in Europe imagine if all of them were truly committed to putting suicide vests and going up and blowing themselves up to malls on trains or and all over the place I mean that would be the end right it would be total war and it will be unbelievably destructive and it's not happening and it's not happening because ninety percent 95 percent maybe even 99 percent of them I'm not committed to it nice now about larger percent that we would like it's still committed to the idea of the religion dominating life and dominating Europe but very very very few of them are actually willing to take up arms and to take up suicide vests and actually go kill themselves for it and you know of the 1.4 billion Muslims in the world in spite of the fact that many of them support al Qaeda and an Isis very very very very very very few of them are actually willing to join Isis or to act on behalf of Isis and al Qaeda thank Allah I guess for that right or thank God I think something right thank human human love of life even even a little bit of it you know even among Muslims for that fact that very very very few of them are willing to fight for it because what you don't want is 1.4 mil suicide bombers I mean that would be something so it's aslam but it's not only Islam there has to be another component in this component is the psychological states of these youths who are willing to accept you know killing and murdering and and dying for this cause and and that's a tiniest minority so the psychology is important in psychology is suicide oh now I think in the Middle East it's it's it's easier to get them but even in the Middle East you know they're not that many of them just not that many of them right there were 15 19 suicide 19 by suicide bombers on 9/11 I don't know how many you know you could run up the numbers of all the people who have committed suicide bombings over the last 20 years and then I was not that big again luckily right and and not every Palestinian is ready to go out and just shoot Israelis and die as a consequence and the fact that they are Muslims doesn't make them violent the fact that they are Muslims even committed to some extent to jihad to the ideology of jihad doesn't make them jihadist doesn't make them willing to take up and actually do it luckily right so the first step is to destroy and kill their capacity to arm themselves and the capacity and the idea of victory and the idea of purpose you see this this this is the core of the psychological element the reason these young people do it is because it gives them purpose in life purpose is only you only gain purpose because you believe that there that there's something that's going to be achieved by what you do because you believe you will be victorious because you believe the cause is a cause that can win my whole points and this is a psychological point about you have to crush the enemy and you have to crush the Saudis you have to crush the Iranians and now we'll stop suicide bombings in Paris is because they lose purpose because once they realize that the I don't know the black rocking Kaaba in Mecca is meaningless is disintegrated that they that the West is is much more purposeful than there is willing to defend itself and they have no chance whatsoever of ever winning then the purpose is out the window then then the number of people you can recruit shrinks by 90% so as it is it's very hard to recruit anybody there not that many people that are being recruited now you add to the equation that complete destruction of their ideological base base of support in Saudi Arabia and Iran and now your equipment is gonna go down to very very close to zero so if the West fought the purposeful Ness the psychological appeal of suicide bombing that psychological appeal of killing would go away because there would be no doubt that it's not working today it looks like it's working you know every time every time they kill people in Paris some some aspect of French culture appeases them a little bit more and a little bit more and a little bit we don't publish cartoons we take statues or paintings of muhammad's out of museums we don't play certain operas they are winning and they know they're winning and when you're winning you get more recruits losing teams don't get recruits you got to make them the losing team and so if you stand up to them they will completely fold because it is so much driven but by this this the psychological aspect it's not it's not as so many people portray it Islam equals jihad and Islam is always gonna lead to jihad that that's not the case the Islam leads to jihad when they think jihad it can be successful and if Islam is crustose if Islam is brought to its knees if Islam is humiliated if Islam is made to be to be perceived itself as a complete and utter unequivocal failure that it is as a philosophy as a religion as an ideology as a culture then Islam will change he will not change until then then it might have an Enlightenment then it might ban the Muslims might abandon the religion completely and and and secularism will rise but only when it is crushed when is destroyed when it is brought to their knees they the closest wave it came to that was was in in in the 19th century when when it was clear that the Ottoman Empire was in decline that Islam was was way way behind the achievements of the West with the Muslim world questioned everything and they when there was seeking secularization and the great tragedy as I as I talked about in my course on the short brief history of the Middle East which all of you should listen to it's now on BlogTalkRadio it's on iTunes it's it's it's on all the podcasting apps and it's really really good if I can say so myself you'll actually understand the Middle East versus what I find is 90% of the people particularly Objectivist who talk about the Middle East have no understanding of it they don't know the history they don't know the first thing about the history about the context about what happened about how it happens by the way right now on blog talk radio and on so in all these podcasting apps you're getting you can get my course on the rise of totalitarian Islam so it goes back to the founding of the Muslim Brotherhood and and you know how that came about and how that led ultimately to Qaeda now it doesn't cover modern times it doesn't go all the way up to Isis but it covers and in a sense predicts Isis it covers all the way through past 9/11 and into into rock and it's it's it's the it's it's evolution of this ideology this this this form of militant Islam of jihadism and again listen to it before you start talking about the topic because most of you I don't want to be insulting but most of you don't know what you're talking about when you talk about these issues anyway when when the Islamic world was in the 19th century was convinced of its own deficit of its own failure of its own incompetence and to a large extent of the superiority of the West they actually looked to the West for answers and I said I was in Azerbaijan in Baku that's about the time when in Baku they decided they wanted to establish the palace of the Caspian Sea they will completely secularized and they wanted a secular society they were not interested in religion and they they built an opera house in the 19th century in Baku and they brought over opera singers and opera companies because they wanted Western civilization and the great betrayal I call it the great betrayal is that the West when these rich Muslims send their kids to study in Western universities what these kids studied instead of the Enlightenment values of reason and individualism which would have liberated the Middle East instead of that what they studied with socialism and fascism and what they brought back were the secular values of socialism fascism and Syria and Iraq which was secular countries under the boss party the Baath Party was a was a fascist party modeled after Mussolini's fascism and today and for generations now in the psyche of Muslims when they think about secular when they think about secular what they think about is fascism what they think about is about party and they know they don't want that and what is the West offer them an alternative some kind of mixed economy unfocused no purpose no meaning life is nothing life is of course they're not gonna accept that so the other alternative is religion so the Middle East has become more religious much more religious over the last hundred years much more religious over the last hundred years than it was a hundred years ago a hundred years ago it was moving towards secularism fifty years ago it was still a chance now the secular lists have gone right Saddam Hussein is gone Assad now is is becoming a even though he's completely secular he's becoming an Abbott Shiite any in East gonna he's gonna be a complete satellite of the Iranians and Hezbollah and flees by lefkosa Adi Shia so religion is everywhere then was the Brotherhood dominates on on the Sunni side and and the Iranian view of religion on the Shia side so this is the default of Western intellectuals this is the fact that we have not stood up for the right values we do not give young people purpose purpose in reason and individualism purpose in the in the in the you know not even in the Objectivist sense but but in in you know in a secular phoning father this sense we've abandoned that so what are they can emulate there's nothing to emulate alright so I think I answered Stewart's question alright we've got one other caller hi you in the one book so who is this scholar hey Scylla all my regulars are calling today go ahead I think I figured out should we call liberal collectivist leftist and should we call conservators collectivist Rytas well well okay so I'm gonna take you offline again in answer the question offline so the question is should we call a left collectivist leftists leftist collectivist leftist and Reuters collectivist right is I mean yeah I mean I think it's two different forms of collectivism so there's two different emphasis in a collectivism there's a collectivism of the left and this collectivism of the right and and I think we should contrast it with individualism individualism which is neither ultimately need the left no right which i think is what Objectivists are and what some but you find elements of individualism in some people on the right and some people on the left is actually good a good article that I was gonna talk about today but I won't I'll talk about it you know in a future blog post by Andrew Sullivan who's kind of I guess left-of-center but but I mean III think of him in some regards as one of the good guys in spite of the fact that he's left of center it's called America wasn't built for humans and and articles really answer he's wrong in many ways but his is his his thesis is that look this this country was built for individualist and would become tribalists and humans inherently tribal and you know with deteriorating back into tribalism and and he's right in the sense that individualism is a massive achievement and that the I don't want to say instinct but when we don't use reason when we don't think so at the pre conceptual level human beings gravitate towards tribalism because it's safer it's easier it's more emotionally appealing so so this is it's it's a really good article particularly if you can tease out what's true and what's false in it so I'm going to talk about it because it's it's an important article and I've talked quite a bit about tribalism and there's a lot more to say about tribalism because I think it's the evil of our day right now very much evil of our day and it's it's it's it's even infecting the Objectivist movements in in in yeah in ugly ugly ways so I intend to I intend to talk quite a bit about this in in future episodes but was I anyway so Scott let's see yeah so so I I think basically today unfortunately most people are collectivists and collectivism is gaining tribalism is gaining and and it's on the Left it's on the right it's in the middle I think it's even among people who call themselves Objectivists we're seeing collectivism and tribalism so I think the the spectrum on which one should differentia what differentiate oneself it's not left or right anymore or maybe and maybe never was I don't know but it because I think left or right comes from fans and it comes from the post French Revolution kind of way in which Paul II the French parliament was structured and and I don't think it's a very maybe it was never useful to him but suddenly today I think we have to the spectrums collectivism to individualism and I know there are objectives out there say yes collectivism is the left individualism - right fine I don't think it's very useful because everybody everybody everybody thinks that Nazis are the right everybody thinks racist so the right everybody thinks Republicans on the right everybody thinks that so and it's not and the wood right doesn't mean anything it just means right or left it doesn't mean right in a sense of right versus wrong so it's not a it's not a term that I think is worth fighting for right and I think that there is a distinction between Nazis and antiva right they're focused on different things someone is when is more Marxist and one is not Marxist in in in the collectivism comes from from racial identification and the other the collectivism comes from Manorama kind of a post modernist kind of perspective so there's usefulness in identifying in in differentiating between collectivist of a little left and collectivist so the way they come it today collectivism from slightly different perspectives and there's usefulness if you're gonna fight against them to realize that and acknowledge that and and and and deal with that right so I'm an individualist am I on the right in my my left I don't know what that means right and and in in a I'd rather stay away from with left and right you know I I I find myself agreeing often with writers on the left I found myself agreeing often with writers on the right you were viewed traditionally on the left on the right you know what is what is Dave Rubin what is Sam Halas what is I don't know what is Jordan Peterson right now Jordan Peterson he would say he's on the right dave rubin is in the middle sam Harris is on the left but it's that really a useful way to differentiate between them it doesn't mean anything I don't know III know I I dunno I I don't think so so so I I've abandoned I use those labels because I think it's still helpful to say those left us because some people left as though those right is because some people you know they're so see what the right but I don't view it as left as good and right as it left as bad and right as good or the other way around I have you just left and right as bad and individualism is the good and you know you're gonna have to get used to it because that's how I talk that's on many of us at the Institute you talk so and I know not everybody in objectivism is on board with that but then telling convinced otherwise that's the way it's going to be right okay let me see if we have any questions here okay yeah I mean one of the yeah okay let's let's just look here Facebook please talk about Sam Harris and the New Atheism who believe in the religion of States ISM and collectivism please well I mean I don't think it's statism and collectivism as a pile as a primary I don't think that's the that's and I think it's altruism which is the primary so I find what's sad about the New Atheists is that they are willing to challenge metaphysics and epistemology that will need to challenge the the Christianity and the conventional wisdom but but they're not willing to challenge Christianity in the conventional wisdom when it comes to ethics so their conventional in ethics even though they're kind of radical when it comes to metaphysics in response he's not as radical design man but pretty good right so we have it we have common ground on metaphysics and epistemology and we have no common ground when it comes to ethics and therefore therefore politics now notice that in that sense there the flip side of libertarians libertarians you know challenge conventional wisdom when it comes to politics and economics and and and then they stop and just like the New Atheists their conventional in morality and opposite of the New Atheists their conventional in pistil Maliki and metaphysics so many of them are religious and many of them have a what metaphysics right so and it's certainly many of them including even von Mises right is a Content in in in in much of his epistemology so it's fascinating to me that libertarians and I've told this to libertarians I've told this that I remember talking to John Tomasi very well professor at at Brown University who's like a libertarian conservative Catholic kind of thinker and I said you know what you're doing is you're challenging political philosophy you you really pushing the boundary and political philosophy you're challenging economics but you refuse to go deeper you refuse to challenge ethics you just accept Christian ethics and you refuse to challenge religion you refuse to challenge epistemology and metaphysics and he said yeah yeah and I said objective as we go all the way we're willing to challenge every single one of those and you should assume that if you've got something new radical and different to say about politics that it probably is going to require rethinking ethics epistemology and metaphysics that you're not gonna be able to come up with a solid foundation for something new and radical in philosophy in politics if your grounding and on the same old conventional foundations that have led us to all the statist regimes that we have today and and so and I think that's that's the it's the huge problem among conservatives and libertarians and then if you look at if you look at at the new atheist they go the other way they challenge these fundamentals but then they stop and and you know Sam Harris even goes far as far as to say that he that you can get an art from an is but then his arts or conventional altruist conventional Christian morality kind of things so he kind of he kind of has to distort his perception of what the is is that drives those odds and it's sad because Sam is incredibly smart and incredibly competent and I admire a lot of the work he does and and on religion and other things and so you know but he can't go there he can't go there and and I think Jordan Peterson in many ways is is isn't its conventional throughout right so he's really not challenging the metaphysics although he's got an interesting take on the metaphysics is the same with epistemology he's accepting conventional epistemology though those got an interesting take on it and and he's he's conventional in morality although again the thing with with John Peterson is he's conventional across the board from politics all the way to metaphysics but he has an interesting twist on all of it he has his own way of looking at it which is which is interesting and makes him interesting to read and and and to think about and observe all right let's see any other questions let's look at let me just flip to where is YouTube there's YouTube and see if there's anybody Yeah right so so not not not that much not that many questions online have you ever thought about writing a book aimed at the working class and lower people to convince him to become capitalist for they won't sake as anyone then that I mean I thought that free market revolution to some extent was that it was written for kind of a tea party audience which is if you will the lower class or working class or whatever non not necessarily intellectuals it was written I think in you know maybe it's still a hard book to read but look it but I also believe that at the end of the day civilization is shaped by intellectuals and civilization is shaped by by by those who capture the intellectual high ground and and my very much my focus is on trying to create the next generation of intellectuals and my appeal to most of you is is the most important people listening to the show for me are young people who have the potential in ability and ambition to become intellectuals in the future and and that is that is the most important audience because at the end of the day I don't think the world is changed by numbers not numbers of people numbers of intellectuals yes I you know we need a thousand means we need a we need a hundred on cause we need a hundred Greek salami Ares we need a thousand Alex Epstein's right so you need a you need purposefully the philosophers got lower numbers and the popular rises like me and Alex got larger numbers but you need a lot of us and and to change the world that's what needs that's what is needed to change the world and when we need all of you who are not intellectuals to support the cause to argue for the cause to help fund the cause to contribute to the cause and a variety of different ways that you all do but at the end of the day the people who change the world people who write books give lectures teach classes teach courses and do all that so if you are young if you're ambitious if you're smart if you're interested in ideas you're my primary target and if Mike convince you to come and join us at the Institute to take there always see the objectives academic Santa to get engaged with us to come an intellectual in the future to be the next Alex Epstein or Don Watkins or you Ron Brooke on call got a or Greeks on Mary or Tara Smith or any of the you know any other lectures we have that's the lunch you know it you know did all of those guys you know whatever field you do that's at the end of the day what we need and and and and and and that's who I'm hoping you guys some of you guys become and you know I view my success the success of these podcast partially is how many new people we get in the OSC how many new smart people we get to become new fellows at dynein Institute become writers become speakers and that's what I really want I want to generate hundreds of these and and I'm you know I'm counting on you to be those people so join us join us in this battle go to the Iran website under Institute website engage in the battle oh wait we're gonna wrap up now by my book in pursuit of wealth the mall case for finance it's it's on Amazon it's in Kindle form and a soft back form I get if your friends get a few relatives get it for you know people in your world get it for it particularly if you're in the finance industry you know use it use it it is a tool is it a tool so use it apply it and so on what's this how long a career is worth a are i investing in a potential intellectual i I'm not sure what that means you're asking how long a career they still gonna have well I mean it depends on how much investment is required but but you know the focuses and young people because I expect a long career it's a lot of work to train a new intellectual it's a lot of work to train a new intellectual Alex was at the Institute seven years Don I think ten years I was trained for a long long time all of us got lengthy training some of it on the job some of it in advance and it takes a lot of work and you want to get the maximum out so I don't know exactly how to answer that but but a decade two three four as much as possible if you're asking because you're older and you just don't have a runway it would depend on how much training we thought it would require how much investment of fun all right by the book again in pursuit of wealth Amal case finance and thanks think so you know - thank you to those who've already bought the book think of you those who are going to going to buy the book soon thank you to my co-author Don Watkins to Ray Niles for his essay to Doug all Tina but yeah I mean go by the book I think whether you're interested in finance or not you will enjoy it and in to enhance the other thing I want to encourage you to do is to listen to my history of the Middle East brief history of the Middle East on iTunes on any of the podcasting apps on blog talk radio and now the course I think four of the five episodes already out on the the rise of totalitarian Islam the fifth episode will be thou tomorrow the day after go listen to that I think the more educated you get about this topic the more intelligent the conversation we within this movement will have about the threat of jihadism of Islamism will be and I don't know other than Elon Juno I don't know of anybody who knows this topic better than I do and I think I think you'll benefit from listening to those courses also you know he'll enjoy those courses that you're on the at the Easter but now these are all available for free as as podcasts available to you anytime you want to listen to them alright thank you all I will see you tomorrow we've got the blaze tomorrow between 2:00 to 4:00 Eastern Time right after that show I'm flying home to California so I'll be doing that from the toe so you can listen to that on the blaze radio I'll try to do it also on on Facebook and in all of that we'll see we'll see if that work it won't be high quality because it'll have to be through Wi-Fi but we'll see if I can make that work one note from next weekend the blaze is going to move to Saturday's so they're moving my show to Saturday's which means that they're gonna we're gonna do it in the morning yeah Pacific time it's gonna be from 9:00 to 11:00 and then they're gonna replay the show in the evening so it's get double the exposure which is great it's a good sign it's a good move for more exposure for the show so I encourage you to to listen on the blaze and and get engaged oh wait you are you've been listening to you on booked show and talk to you tomorrow and then again next week bye oops | Yaron Brook | UCabMx-URCjr2toe9wOE3Y-Q | 2017-10-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 16,860 | 88,644 |
5ykiUz8pHMw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ykiUz8pHMw | How to Bend Poles │ DIY Greenhouse | what's up everyone my name is nate and with tiny hilltop food forest today I want to show you the method I use to ban poles form a hoop house I'm currently in the middle of building 60 feet worth of hoop house saw bent quite a few hoops now at this point and ice wanted to share the method that works best for me the first thing I did was I tried to find the correct hoop bender for what I was doing they have 6 foot 10 foot 12 foot 24 foot I think they have a couple more in bits in there somewhere but I'm using a 12-footer because I'm making 12 foot wide hoop houses so I took that by that hoop bender and I mounted it to my deck and I built a guide system using one by fours some scrap one by four you do want to give yourself some space you want about an 8 foot a 4 foot by 8 foot area about the size of a plywood or OSB sheathing to maneuver the 10 foot poles the first thing I do is measure 9 inches on the male end of the pole I've seen some people say 6 inches 12 inches really all that does is it determines how wide and how tall your hoop house is gonna be 9 inches I found works pretty well with 12 foot once you have your 9 inch mark you want to insert the pole into the pole bender you want to make sure that your 9 inch mark is at the end of your pole bender once you have that lined up you're ready to make your first bend the first Bend is the easiest because you have the most leverage but it's also very easy to over bend and cause a kink you want to just make sure that you're binding it just along the curvature of the pole bender and when I do a little bit differently that I found most people do is when I get to this stage most people have an extender that they put on the end and then they keep bending but what I do is I not inches from the female end and I flip it around and repeat the same process I do it this way because I feel it allows me a more uniform bend than adding an extender I feel like I lose control with that so that's how I bend them I like to have 9 inches on both sides because it allows a little almost like a straight top on my hoops that allows me to use a 1 by 4 treated as a ridge beam I'll show you a couple runs through at normal speed just so you get an idea of how I do it and the time it takes [Music] I want to show you real quickly what I mean on the first Bend the first few I did I really hulked them and I bent it way too much I think it's 17 gauge steel so it's a lot easier to bend than you would imagine but I think just going into it I worked up my mind I had to bend fence poles so I got all holed up and I just I went way too far on the first couple and I had a little bent off the pole bender so I had a little kink guy to work out so this is what I mean you want to get to about right here and you'll see you're pretty flush with the end of the pole bender and it's very easy to keep going but that'll cause a kink so you want to bend it there and move on that's how I bend poles from hoop houses I'm by no means an expert but I want to share what works for me because I think it's a little more intimidating when you start to look into it than it is once you actually do it as long as your uniform and do the same thing each time you'll end up with with rounded hoops thanks for watching I appreciate it I'm creating a little food forest micro farm kind of a thing so if you want to hang out while I do that I'd be cool thanks again take it easy grossed off you | Tiny Hilltop | UCzs6XnwVC3S84AgK-BRnjgw | 2018-03-23 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 740 | 3,432 |
WsQ-3O0JLEs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsQ-3O0JLEs | Nuclear Wepons - Michael Pascu | foreign the summary shows what we'll talk about atomic power atomic weapons 101 psycho psychological problems paranoia people have in general when it comes to atomic power and atomic weapons the false propaganda used and the future of weapons of nuclear weapons and my conclusion the aim of this paper is not to give a exhaustive or comprehensive introduction but to give a mere introduction to the layman to the intriguing exciting and possibly very dangerous world of atomic power this is atomic can used by the american army in the 1950s they had the idea of shooting a projectile at over two miles distance and doing this to some poor city they quit the idea because they developed rockets with the engineers from germany this is how a nuclear was gonna turn uh this is how a nuclear atomic explosion takes place explosion uh happens where it happens the air very fastly dilates it creates a vacuum that vacuum is very uh very quickly filled with air the ground has fine particles on it earth those particles are scooped up towards the vacuum and due to inertia continue to go up and then fall back down the nuclear mushrooms you see the initial explosion afterwards the ground the ground parted grills are scooped up and so the nuclear mushroom is formed these are atomic shadows that's a bridge which didn't have reinforced concrete it was partially destroyed but this bridge did have a strong enough structure to resist and what happened where the nuclear blast couldn't reach there were this atomic shadows there's another kind of becoming shadow the reverse kind this is where a human being in hiroshima used to be on the stairs he was sitting on the stairs the nuclear explosion happened and wiped him out a nuclear explosion has twice the temperature which would melt steel well our human body doesn't have such resistant elements so we evaporate instantly at the with the contact of the nuclear blast now the dot in the center represents all the firepower of the second world war that represents roughly three megatons of explosive three megatons of tnt that's three million tons of tnt well all the other dots represent our current firepower now the little circle on the left represents one sub which i believe can destroy a lot of cities actually it can create three world wars that right and sub can create eight world wars and uh just two squares and this chart would uh erase all the cities in the northern hemisphere and just i must i did a mistake squares would erase all the large medium cities in the world richard dawkins made the book you would believe this doesn't have the least bit of doesn't have any connection a connection doesn't have a connection with nuclear weapons well it does because we want to survive we want our current affairs to be in the best possible order uh we do anything possible we do anything for our state to be as good it's as good as it can be so we're predisposed to do others harm now this goes so uh so far including testing on our own soldiers this is the case of an american soldier they tested on their own soldiers the effects of nuclear mediation i'm sorry you can't hear the sound they're saying that there was a film uh with the one you would get when you go to a dentist or when you want to get an x-ray there was a film coated in metal so the acid of the stomach doesn't destroy it was introduced into the subject and afterwards he was exposed to radiation deliberately now this is a film about the effects on uh soldiers of a nuclear weapon terror it's a propaganda film this film was shown to soldiers to tell them to lie to them that everything's okay you can hear the music and the dialogue but they were told everything's okay this is shown they're having a cigarette this lucky fellow has a book on how to all the soldiers survive about 1 200 soldiers died in two or four weeks including that guy they're inhaling a little clean dust it helps grow the lungs and i believe tumors and this is shown this was shown in 1950s and 60s to soldiers to release them of the tension of facing a nuclear weapon afterwards this segment shows that everything's okay they're fine and they're going to have a little talk after what happened he's going to ask for a cigarette now this paranoia due to propaganda reverse propaganda in this case the propaganda which tells us that it's extremely dangerous we have to do everything possible to control this threat so much so that on interstate 5 in the united states they installed the radioactive detector they stopped the car it was detecting a radioactive pistol the problem is in that card it would the car had as a passenger a little kitten which had chemotherapy due to its cancer they are stopping random cars because they have watches which uh system i'm sorry i don't know it in english they have some materials which do emit radioactivity but in uh small enough those not to be dangerous but in a large enough tools to be detected the problem is this with even a concrete um container can be stopped uh that's a movie australosa a fish the black one they are talking now about how uranium is a rich uranium as you can see is just 0.7 usable uranium for nuclear weapons or nuclear facilities and they by introducing it in a centrifuge are distilling it so they can use it it is very hard to make uranium weapon grade uranium you have to have at least 90 percent might be five percent purity now the problem with this propaganda that nuclear weapons are so dangerous we have to go out of our way stop our lives and be very careful is this from the 1960s the american state has done a statistic of how many u.s citizens citizens in their country and out of their country have died due to terrorist attacks the number is now roughly at 5 000. that's the same number of people in those 40 years which have died by lightning strike so the chance of dying from a thirst attack is the same with dying from a lightning strike more people die annually due to car accidents and even more people die in a month due to car accidents then they uh died on a liver elegance september the 11th now the problem with this is that there are very many gullible people this is a kid sold for just 250 bucks that's 10 million late on the internet against radioactivity due to the research i have done i know that just one single thing from this kit is useful they you'll die capsules which stop you'll die in entering the turret gland the problem is this we have lungs we have intestinal tract we have so much which can be harm dry radiation and to pay 250 bucks for just one thing is foolish but this is even worse i took that off field blog even itunes has a statement which says you cannot use this program for production of missiles or nuclear weapons that's not good at all something which would be indeed more dangerous is this after chernobyl they did the study of every place they can find radioactive particles well i would believe that the pink area and the light red area are that misinformation they wanted to have something against the soviet union to point against them but the red and dark red areas are indeed dangerous now if that's one reactor and let's say there will be nuclear attacks or terrorist attacks against these reactors well that would be a problem the thing that i have considered only recently as is that no none of these countries have been attacked recently in a war these countries over here or the arab era countries have not been in a war since they have nuclear reactors the problem is what would happen if let's say france would decide to attack north korea and they would launch just one bomb one simple bombing tnt not nuclear non-biological over that reactor this whole area here would be infested or what if they would attack japan or any country there that is where the real problem lies with their defense in nuclear reactors now there's even a bigger problem than this shared paranoia disorder what what does that mean when a group of people stay together a very long time if one of them has a paranoia about anything the dominant one especially can communicate this paranoia to all the others when you're on a nuclear sub and the captain thinks the russians will attack there's a pretty big chance that something bad will happen now the even worse thing is that if a guy who was known to smoke pot could uh be the government of california well i don't believe there's a pretty high standard in the army this was a study done in the 1970s by dr alan greenspan uh greenspan and he said that seven percent of the soldiers which should defend us this is in america are where maybe the statistics are different seven percent of them are alcohol dependent and this is the most important thing they have been high on at least 40 days of the year 10 not all of them but they have weapons they have done they have bombs now this is a film done by japanese researcher where every dot with every color represents a nuclear explosion done by different countries a green one would be a french one a red one would be an americana it's a point this is the first years as you can see 46 uh it will be till 50. the first years are pretty boring a second has to pass for every uh for every month but the second film which uh razvan will show you is a little more interesting the computer cannot show cannot give all the explosions at the same time okay this is on not fast forward this is the real time frame but you'll consider this a symphony it takes four billion years for uranium to reach half-life that means half of its radioactivity this happened in the 60s we're breathing all of this now this is uh nowadays most of us were born in 1990 and again we're breathing all this radiation now i took the liberty of considering weapons which might be developed in the future this is a antimatter weapon one of this would be sufficient to destroy the whole female race due to the dust formation the problem is that when you use a nuclear fission you will release only 0.1 of the nuclear energy of the nucleus that's what they use in weapons and then what that's what they're using reactors now they are trying to develop nuclear fusion and they did that in a weapon but now they're trying to develop that for a reactor to produce 10 times more energy well antimatter releases a hundred times more energy than nuclear fusion and one thousand times more energy than nuclear fission so any weapon they have now they could increase the power of that weapon by 1 000 times now james morrow said that there are no atheists in foxholes and this isn't an argument against atheists well i can take notice from that and say that it's a paradox that most scientists are atheists because they are playing god and this is not the argument against scientists this is not a god argument against atheists this is an argument against nuclear weapons we should ban all nuclear weapons in general now these ladies did a very good job of saying something and i believe that rating weapons for peace is foolish because the inventory of the machine gun the gatling gun said that then no one would be foolish enough to fight against uh automated machine gun which can shoot about four thousand four thousand dollars per minute well no in the first world war when the gatling gun was introduced sometimes twenty thousand forty thousand people died from one gun in one day on one hill over right when when he invented the plane he saw that the plane would revolutionize warfare and he said no one no one will fight war from this day on because no one would be foolish enough to fight against the airplane well we can see how well this has gone and i want to remind you again no one no one would be foolish enough to fight a guy against uh atomic weapon well history has proved us wrong if we believe that the chance of nuclear war is 70 per decade we can't spin that number and say it's one percent per year it sounds less threatening well it's the same thing exactly the same thing but numbers can lie this way well we're playing russian roulette because every year that percent increases and increases by the big hit it's 80 percent and the problem is it doesn't have to reach 100 that can happen at any moment because people are involved the system is designed by people the weapons are designed by people and people make mistakes well when we reach the 90th year it's almost certain happen but again it can happen earlier and when we reach the 99th year there's only one outcome it can happen even earlier but the 100th year it's almost certain | Razvan Daba | UCkQRJ2E6UQa5vJgLHisFkOg | 2012-05-16 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,312 | 12,540 |
5gFl_Ok_eCI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gFl_Ok_eCI | Always ALWAYS Pay Yourself First! (This is why and how.) | hey guys how's it going my name is Matt and this is how success is made and today I'm going to share with you a super important premise that you need to implement in your life and if you implement it in your life today your life will drastically be different in the future and that is paying yourself first you may have heard a lot of entrepreneurs self-made millionaires talk about this premise and all of them do it I originally learned the idea from Reading Rich Dad Poor Dad into 2009 this is when I started all this stuff and he talked about paying yourself first but what I'm realizing is I didn't necessarily know what it meant at the time uh no one really explained it to me and I just kind of came up with my own thoughts of what it was but when I started doing it I started learning what exactly it meant and how to do it and that so that's what I'm going to share with you guys today why it's important to pay yourself first what it actually means to pay yourself first and then how exactly to do it so first off paying yourself first what it really means is putting money aside for yourself before anybody else which includes your bills your mortgage company your credit card company your car insurance your car anybody else you set money aside and you don't touch it for anything uh except for yourself even if you have bills due even if you have credit creditors calling you asking you for money even if you have people threatening to sue you or take away your stuff you don't touch that money it's for you and this is important especially when you don't have anything if you can build the discipline to put money aside and never touch it even in the hardest times the times you're struggling the most that builds Financial discipline and financial discipline is super important if you ever want to be a millionaire uh it's super important because you know if you can't not touch 10% of your money no matter what when all you have is you know a little car a house you know you're just getting started out in this millionaire mindset what makes you think that you can discipline yourself with money when you own huge businesses and private jets and Lamborghinis and Ferraris and mansions you know if you want to be a millionaire what makes you think you could discipline yourself enough to hold that money if you can't even do it when you're in a situation like you are in now so another point to make is all the bills and stuff that you're paying your mortgage your car your phone those are all things if you think about it all all of those things are for you everything you're paying for is for you it's to improve your lifestyle somehow whether it's paying for a car paying for a house using credit cards to buy yourself things paying for a phone to help you guys out electricity all of it is for you so if all those bills are for you in some sort of way why wouldn't you make the most important bills of all the one that's directly contributed to you not the phone company that helps you out or not the car that helps you out not the house that helps you out why wouldn't you make the most important bill the one you pay yourself and so it's really important to get that it's it's so important to pay yourself first and like I said uh if you can do it in the toughest times where you're struggling and you can avoid like the creditors and the people threatening to sue you and take your stuff away and stuff uh like if you can discipline yourself to still have money set aside and not give in and not pull from that and give it to someone else if you can discipline yourself to do that over time your financial situation will be fantastic like it has changed my life drastically um so I I want to share with you a little little bit about exactly how to do that and what I'd recommend to do I learned this from T harveer I've kind of modified it um through the years of modifying it for myself um but always always always pay yourself first no matter what situation you're in I cannot stress that enough if you do this what I'm about to share with you if you do this I promise you if you do this for just give yourself 3 months or something I promise you at the end of the 3 months you will have more money set aside than you have in a long time of you not doing this it's insane also I'd measure it by the way so this is how I would suggest paying yourself first this is T harveer method uh first off you need to manage your money you need to know how much you have how much is coming in and how much is going out and what you're paying for you need to manage it you need to balance your checkbook as they say and you'd be surprised a lot of people don't do this and don't know how to do it it may sound simple to some of you guys but I guarantee you not everybody knows how to do this or what to do so it's really easy all you need to do make like a Excel spreadsheet or something that's what I have I use Google Sheets and I have a little spreadsheet that just basically show shows how much money is coming in and how much is going out so all you need to do you could even start with something simple like uh you know every time I I would actually start with once a week manage your finances so what you're going to do is make an Excel spreadsheet put or you can write it down on a piece of paper if you don't know how to use Excel or whatever just write down how much you made that week and sometimes it's nothing sometimes it's some and then write down everything you've paid for go go through your bank statements and just write down everything you pay for add it all up uh and it will tell you a total of the expenses you made and the income you've earned now the goal is for your income to exceed your monthly expenses right uh that's how you start making money so first off you need to measure any of this stuff to do that so measure it you can learn how to do that um use Excel or whatever but uh so paying yourself first how much do you set aside what exactly is it used for that's what I'm going to share with you right now so the most important thing that there there's two accounts that the most important things you need to set aside first and uh is your Financial Freedom account and your Play account so Financial freedom and play now what I would suggest is putting 10% of all your earnings into Financial Freedom and 10% into play I would go to your bank and open up two accounts or two more sub accounts or something and uh open up call one your Financial Freedom account and call one your Play account that's how I have it I have a bunch of sub accounts on my bank account and I can see their name is play Financial Freedom tithing all this stuff uh I'll go over those later but this is what you want to start out with so uh what it is is this is how I would suggest to start 80% of everything you make goes to your Essentials which is what you're paying for now all your bills your food your insurance everything you're paying for goes to Essentials that comes out of the essentials account these you don't touch for anything else except for the purposes that they're allocated for so 80% of everything you make use 20% of everything that you make divide into these two accounts this is how I would start I'm not going to in fact um I don't even know if I'll give you the rest but just do this and so let me explain to you what these are so you may not know now what you're going to invest in but Financial Freedom this account is specifically allocated for money you spend to make more money it's Investments it's basically money you set aside to spend on things that can create a passive income for you and I've explained what a passive income is it's basically uh you're not working for money you're just earning money from something you've created something you've done like a business something you've created or something you've invested in you're just earning money passively residually um anyway yeah so that's what passive income is and your Financial Freedom account all this money that is accumulated in the Financial Freedom account it's only used to create passive income don't use it for anything else if you're paying for things that don't contribute to you making more money uh directly this don't use this account for anything else your Play account this is really important is for you to go and have fun it's for you to go out and eat it's for you to go to the movies it's for you to buy things that you want for yourself uh that's what the Play account is and let me stress this is super important some of you may think oh man you know I'd rather just roll my money into you know everything to make more money or you know I'd rather not do that I don't have time to play Let Me Tell You Why this account is important and why you need both of these uh the Play account offsets the Financial Freedom account the reason is if you don't allocate money for yourself to have fun with yourself and have a good time uh sooner or later if you're just spending all your money putting it into Financial Freedom and on bills and stuff sooner or later you're going to crack and you're going to get sick of not enjoying life which by the way enjoying your life is what you should do always always like you don't don't wait until a certain time because that time may never come enjoy your life now enjoy everything you're doing enjoy the process enjoy the things you're doing enjoy everything and work towards things that you can enjoy in the future so the Play account is to offset the Financial Freedom okay sooner or later you're going to crack if you just do this stuff and all the work that you put into saving let's say you go two or 3 months without playing and you're like well I am so sick of not doing anything and just working all the time uh you're going to crack and you're going to be like you know what maybe I'll just buy myself a little something and do this little thing and then you're going to start pulling from your Financial Freedom account or your Essentials for things that you play on and then all this work maybe you spent 3 months you've gathered you know $3,000 or something in this account and you've worked 3 months and all of it is just gone because you weren't enjoying yourself so all the hard work all the money you put aside it's gone because you got sick of not enjoying your life so that's why the Play account is super important it's to offset the Financial Freedom also you should be you should be enjoying your life all the time and so with the Play account there's some requirements for it with the Play account you have to spend all the money in the account every month uh there shouldn't be anything left over at the end of the month in this account you are required to enjoy your life you're required to spend money on yourself you're working hard think of it as a reward for putting 10% aside in Financial Freedom you're like I'm awesome I deserve a little bit go out to eat with your friends you know go to the movies you know do fun things for yourself go rock climbing it's one thing we did recently it was pretty cool but anyway so this is the breakdown I would do so when you receive a check or any money that you get uh before you do anything before you pay any bills anything as soon as that money reaches your hands divide it into these accounts this is how I do it the money comes into my bank account and as soon as it comes in I go into my bank account and I hit uh transfer transfer and I transfer 10% into my financial freedom and 10% in my financial play 10% being like you know I get $750 I just take off the zero that's 10% so it's really easy to calculate you don't have to do any fancy math or anything you get $100 take off a zero it's $10 you get $1,000 take off a zero it's $100 anyway um but yeah take 10% of the money you make and divide it into Financial Freedom and then another 10% into your play your play you have to spend all of it during the month enjoy yourself enjoy everything you're doing you got to enjoy your life and 10% into Financial Freedom these will be Investments things that you'll need to invest in in the future if you just do this super simple just do this your life will change drastically and I know some of you I could hear some of you through the video right now saying but I don't have 20% my paycheck can't 20% of my paycheck do you realize I need that money for things like you can't expect me to put 20% aside let me go back to this you have to if you Cann not discipline yourself to pay yourself first that's always going to be your excuse that's always going to be your situation and you're never going to get out of it this money it's put aside for you to get out of that situation you cannot afford to not put money aside for yourself for Financial Freedom because if if that is your excuse if you're saying but I need all the money I can get because I'm super broke and you know I can't put 20% of my money set aside uh right now like I need every scent I have if you can't do that you need to do this more than ever if if you can't you must Tony Robbins says that if you can't you must it's so true though discipline yourself to put money aside and no matter what you do don't touch it it you'll figure it out I'm telling you I've been through this believe me it's stressful at first especially if you're using 100% of your paycheck to do everything there are things believe me you can cut back on and when you start doing this stuff and start not touching this money and pretending like it doesn't exist pretending like you don't have it you will either find ways to make more money work more hours or do something to start a project do little services on the side uh you'll find a way to either make more money or you'll find a way to to save the money that you're making spend less money so that it's down to 80% I'm telling you you can do it please please please if you feel like you can't do this you must do it you must do it this is exactly what it takes for you to get out of that situation of feeling like you can't do it so super important to pay yourself first as soon as the money hits your account transfer it into those two accounts pretend like it doesn't exist don't touch it except for what they're used for uh oh and by the way let me tell you something about the Play account it's such a good feeling to have money when I started this this was the most amazing thing it's such a good feeling to have money set aside for you to just enjoy yourself because before before I had money set aside before I had a Play account I would spend my essentials and stuff and I'd go out to eat I didn't necessarily allocate any amount of money certain amount of money to play let let me tell you this uh I'd go out to eat and because I didn't have any money and because I didn't have any money set aside you kind of feel bad for at least this is my situation you feel bad for spending money especially when you're in a financial stressful situation uh like I was um and you go out with your friends and even just going to like Taco Bell or something and you're sliding that card it's like I know I shouldn't be buying this oh I know this is bad for me oh I know I shouldn't be doing this oh I need this money for rent for utilities for anything I just don't have enough this month but you're still going out to eat you're still enjoying yourself because you have to you have to your enjoyment is life you have to enjoy your life uh but that feeling like I would go out and enjoy myself and it didn't even feel good like I'd go out and I'd just worry and stress about the money go out to eat I'd go out to the movies and I'd be like oh man I shouldn't be spending this money oh it's a God and you get this feeling or same with like going to the grocery store or something like you walk out of there with like a hundred bucks full of groceries and you're like oh and it pains you you should feel good about spending money all the money you spend is for you you got to think about it in a reverse sort of way like oh my god when you pay your phone bill like oh man I can't believe for $100 I have access to any information in the world at any moment in time just from my pocket I could communicate with anyone at any moment in time think about what it's getting you for a hundred bucks a month and some of you are paying less some of you are paying more I understand that but just look at what the value it's bringing to you it's amazing the value you get you you wouldn't be buying the stuff if you didn't feel like it gave you some sort of value so focus on the value don't focus on the cost okay um um you should feel good about going to the grocery store oh my God for a hundred bucks I don't have to go and like just I I just exchang 100 bucks for like a week's worth of food and like I don't have to go and hunt and spend all my time hunting and Gathering and getting nuts for the tribe it's amazing the life we live in you could just exchange it's so incredible but my point is before I did this Play account I felt pretty bad spin money I'd spend it and be like oh god oh I shouldn't be spending this I need this for something else I need this for bills or something and it didn't even feel good to have fun with this as soon as you start doing this it feels amazing cuz then you look in this account and you have like 40 bucks or something it doesn't have to be a lot you have like 40 bucks and you're like holy crap I could go go eat I could go have dinner somewhere and like you slide that card that Play account card that you've created for yourself and you slide that card and it feels so good cuz you're like you know what this is what this money is meant for so feels great uh so I ask you guys always pay yourself first super important 80% of your money should go into Essentials 10% into Financial Freedom and 10% into play this is Investments things and you know what if you don't just just accumulate money humor me that's what I did I didn't know what I was going to do with with this money for like a year uh and but I still put 10% aside into it and then when the time came where I found something that I wanted to some business opportunity that I wanted to try actually it was the Kindle books uh to get books written for me and like do this stuff um when I found that business opportunity it was incredible because I had like thousands of dollars set aside just for that and I knew what I wanted to do so it's it's amazing do it this is just do it for like three or four months tell me if if your life does not change I'm sorry I don't know what you're doing wrong because it will change this is from some of the most financially successful business people millionaires billionaires in the world this small tactic is what they do so if it doesn't work for you you're doing something wrong or maybe I taught it wrong but yeah anyway guys thank you so much for joining me and uh always pay yourself first do the split for 3 or 4 months tell me if it doesn't change your life uh if you have any questions below please comment and I will answer them and uh give the video a thumbs up for me thanks guys look forward to seeing you in the next video | Matthew Cory | UCeizRbTUXTcYlDfSNqZkEnA | 2017-01-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,782 | 19,217 |
IUJXqfswrzo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUJXqfswrzo | Cleveland Pd Sgt Rutherford's Lies and the Truths to Her Lies | hey what's up Korea [Music] you hey guys listen this is what's going on guys one's a film film we're filming I don't care anyway he was he's on federal property over there barely he's been there a lot today well he's pushing this issue with this gun because he's open carry instead of how you carry so you can walk around with it but if something says no guns you can't go in right he's tried to get in there from what the girl said they wouldn't let him in because he okay then he leaves there he goes to the back of the gate where all your trucks are at yes go on [ __ ] puppy and it's sitting there filming then he's talking to all the male carries making them all nervous she told me leave you're making us nervous I don't know if he's pushing the issue with the god they each carrier he talked to three of them it made every one of them nervous and he said to one of the officers I didn't hear this today I got in to find out what's going on he told them I'll be better tomorrow to you he'll be back with the weapon also they're doing this - oh he's youtubing an item I said I need your ID I'm not giving you idea I go yeah you are yes you're gonna give me your ID and you're not taking my weapon so the other sergeant I'm with he's much bigger than me of course he says we're taking you what for our safety yes so I mean we're whatever but he's trying to challenge it you got federal property trying to get in there and he's on your brother probably trying to go past he's already by the green gate but Green gates back there that's their property they told him to leave more than one so you can what I'm getting from her actually inside the compound oh I don't know what's inside I mean I didn't go to the front I had to go to the back side yeah door over there okay so he was oh he was over there oh yeah he was over there did he actually he tried to open the door and they would not let him cuz he at the weapon she said that we refused to let him in because of the weapon okay so I don't know what kind of locks you got or if they had it locked because he was out there is there are locks on the doors that's and that's what they did they denied the access because he said you kid that's what she told me in the back with the blonde hair light-skinned black female she said we he tried to get in from whatever the clerk said and he had a gun and she said we let you win because it's my understanding what she said is it because your honor you can't come any because you have a weapon what should I get it you know right and what I'm getting from the officers is I guess it was already told to leave he told me he said earlier today I held the door open for an elderly female a female to go in he goes and there was another woman over there on the sidewalk I go to see him well he goes they better charge her or do something her I go she have a weapon that's where we're at right now you know I don't I he's trying to push the issue he sees he was thrown he didn't throw laws out of me he was throwing him out at the officers is my understanding he's throwing all these laws out there I'm fine whatever do you know what property with a weapon you're not police can't even go into the Federal Building with the weapon and negativity able to put it up you know come on and he is he's filming he's I'm gonna turn this back on what we we have everything because we haven't had company contain in the car right now the officers so he's in the back if I throw some laws at you maybe he's new at filming so he's not sure where to go from here okay so charge advise him everything I just advised you yes all right brother I'll tell you what he what he was doing apparently he was here from what he's what I'm gathering quite a bit of the afternoon yeah and talking about different post office people would say only two people second yeah right why didn't you I am he was tried to get in from what females out there anyone on their property and he's thrown all these laws at the office okay because you're coming out yeah we asked for his ID he wasn't gonna give it I said Jesse are and then sergeant I be of course we got his ID and stuff at this point that could top the court it's a contempt of court now the ones that you've been seeing on YouTube are they walking into [Music] yeah because that's what she said because he had a weapon they wouldn't let a man and he said well that females on the sidewalks it should charge her - I go she have a weapon no you have a weapon there's a difference excuse me have to read the entire who charged for what we had them discharged committed a felony but 29 is 29 23:01 alpha things that we charge them with because it he was over caring you guys didn't find any CCW or anything like it no wow did he are to carry water was did you find anything in his wallet so he was just open carries what he was doing he said it you know and he know they know they're cousins in the state why you know Gary but wherever it says you can't have weapons on federal property can I mean I understand they're pushing the issues and throwing laws at you I don't care if there are laws if if they're on federal property and they don't believe that did that female tell you she told me to leave - oh you doctor came back but he came back after you don't believe yeah I thought it's gonna pour and start a training I didn't know what I didn't know was three postal employees he was making nervous I thought was just one the mail guy he said somebody said there was three postal people he was making nervous I guess so they just charge somebody I know they're doing this all around the country so I'm here at the West Park post office started closed right now I got a little sidetracked at earlier today get a little quick toward the outside of the building I can't go inside because I am carrying a firearm so simple logic states that I can record on the public sidewalk as long as I don't go onto their property somebody's recording really quick flag is at half-mast and wonder why that is [Music] yeah here goes the location United States Postal Service probably most boring job on the planet [Music] let's go ahead just fine [Music] closed Sundays and holidays what does the sign say I'm wary of a postal employee of course the facility carries a prison sentence of up to 25 years upon conviction huh interesting very interesting and the address Oh zip code that they were in yeah okay well record a little bit more how go on the inside and record and everything this ain't gonna be a long video I might add it with the other work with the inter counter with the cops and everything cross over so I'm not going into the behind the gate [Music] this is the back of the building we got one two three four five six no trucks they're probably about to get ready to go home soon whoa stay close a few minutes ago hello yes record in just wanted to record whatever I see from the public whatever I see from the public this is tuck Lee a public easement right here because it goes all the way around well tell them it's public photography is not illegal yes I'm not allowed in the building I'm allowed right here though just recording I'm actually heading home hopefully in about maybe a couple of seconds I was gonna get ready to go because you guys I cost you when you're closing I was gonna go in and do a tour but I can't go in with the gun I know I can't so I was gonna stop in to my I'm gonna leave it at home I'm gonna stop it tomorrow record anyways yeah it's just whatever I see from the public view yeah you too ma'am you can I get your name in bed tomorrow sergeant soon as I'm done on the phone okay sorry can I get your what's your name can you spell that please are you th er authority okay thank you me yes but I'm not giving my ID and we leave you of that weapon uh you're not taking my weapon I do not consent to that I don't have people Sam yes I do don't have to consider what you're going to give it up sir it's my fourth video or you can do it willfully or we can take it from your butcher it does sir that is a violation my fourth remember just go ahead unsnap the hobby no don't put don't get up don't don't take my camera and don't put you in handcuffs no no no no you and your resisting now could I take the my bag on those is gonna be my weight that's gonna be in my way no you're violating my rights no we're not buddy you are I did never go in that building they said you were trying to get into no I didn't know oh they're trying to say enter the building because you have that weapon on you you want it in I did not want in the building what are you talking about I get my video camera I need my kids in the car I will I was can you take this bag off Sonic is off this is gonna be in the way but is it rich like the bad guys you [Music] hello just record in just wanted to record whatever I see from the public whatever I see from the public this is tele a public easement right here because it goes all the way around well tell them it's public Photography is not illegal yes I'm not allowed in the building I'm allowed right here though just recording I'm actually heading home hopefully in about maybe a couple of seconds I was gonna get ready to go because you guys I caught you when you're closing I was gonna go in and do a tour but I can't go in with the gun I know I can so I was gonna stop in to mom and leave it at home I'm gonna stop it tomorrow record anyways yeah it's just whatever I see from the public view yeah you too ma'am you okay yeah but they'll say that no still have so he's on their property with the weapons Angie you even said she came out to me and he'd refused to leak in he just said when we are really so you on their property all day [Music] what is this is I be looking for a sorry [Music] when I was back there she's already talking yeah I know they they have to move what would just found your card and this guy's wallet [Music] I thought I sell them walking away but don't look what's up for me you guys gotta tease me I'm asking questions I'm not sure what loss he's playing at you guys up on the stone you didn't really I didn't truck it smokey I said I'm gonna go find out don't let him go until I find out information did I be tell you guys to wait till you guys are - okay that's what these people said I'm still underfunding info he's on government that's why I said look alive ot be junk that's a property with a gun he can't [Music] you | Munkay 83 | UCyxcptbMjlyiDsKVxESazmg | 2018-07-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,109 | 10,439 |
0uI7yc6LMKY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uI7yc6LMKY | 8 MILE BRIDGE | My Trucking Life | Vlog #2872 | foreign good morning good morning good folks look at this trailer look at it empty it's 9 30 a.m here in Prince Edward Island it means it's 7 30 a.m back at home there's my load so I'm gonna wait for direction before I leave the island I have to pay a toll to leave Prince Edward Island and I don't want to have to pay I don't want to pay that toll and then be told that I have a load here on the island and have to turn around and come back to pick it up I don't think it's not very likely at all that I'm gonna have a reload on Prince Edward Island here but just in case I don't want to pay that toll and have to come back I'm going to wait for them to give me a direction I'll probably be going into Quebec or something for a Reload we'll see I had a Reload scheduled on me yesterday uh but it got canceled that reload was in Northern New Brunswick and it was going down to Wisconsin I was excited about that kind of sad that I lost it but for whatever reason it got canceled maybe it wasn't ready yet or I don't know whatever the reason is that's okay we'll wait for something else some of you have asked how I get my loads I don't schedule my own loads I don't find my own loads that's my truck I own the truck they find the loads for me they take care of all the headaches they find the loads for me they uh book them they arrange everything for me uh what else they do well they handle all payroll obviously all the oh the paperwork back at the office all I do is I have a computer inside my truck and it goes ding when there's a load offer for me and then I I look at the load offer and I have a choice whether or not I accept it I can say yes or I can say no I don't ever I very very very very rarely ever say no and once I have a load booked on me I get the information I go pick it up and then I take it to where it needs to be still here and unfortunately we're not getting reloaded today but I got some Direction so we can get moving I'm heading to Moncton New Brunswick which is pretty much just on the other side of the bridge a little ways on zwick there uh there's obviously not going to be anything on the island and there's nothing around the maritimes right now to line me up with today I might be taking my reset here then so I'm gonna call them on the way there and just and so hey would it work for you just because I'm running low on hours I might be able to make it make it home if I keep recapping hours like looking at my clock here depends where they want me to go right if they want me to go into the U.S I'm definitely going to have to do a reset uh but if they want me to go back across Canada well then I got some hours to play with we're not going to be driving through downtown Charlottetown I was looking forward to showing you all the big buildings and stuff that they got here it's not like it's a massive City or anything it's like a small City but I want to show you because we drove through it last night to get here right and it was a truck route however I didn't realize that there is a bypass that goes around the city oops good thing we did that at night so we're gonna go on the bypass around Charlottetown I went right through downtown this is just better it's better if we go around it's better if we go around this is Charlottetown coming up to it here I've got to go around it last night we went right through it which would mean we would turn to the left Karen's trying to get me to go that way again my GPS I'm gonna go around the bypass this time once we get over the water here is like a little channel here or river get to this I'm gonna turn right instead I'm hoping I can find a Timmy somewhere that I can pull into I kind of doubt it though I don't think I'm gonna find one on the island I mean there is Tim Hortons here but there's none with truck parking this is not a very truck friendly Island I've noticed there's no truck stops no big ones anyway nowhere to park a truck overnight like maybe I'm wrong I don't know this island very well but I looked there's not a whole lot of places where you can I was lucky I was able to sleep right at the customer last night from where I would have stayed the park here's a Tim Hortons up on the other side I don't think I'm going to be able to find anywhere to park this thing for five minutes all right Kate GPS slight left on Grafton Street you want me to go through downtown I'm sorry Karen I'm going around last night was okay because there was no traffic but I don't want to deal with all that traffic today yeah I know I know I'm not listening to you I don't have to oh is this a truck stop Irving is it a big stop no it's just a regular one no no truck parking at around about take the third exit in 600 meters no one cares now she wants me to turn around and go back really wants me to go through downtown really that was the whole light not the whole thing Prince Edward Island has fallen for this whole roundabout shenanigan too the roundabouts everywhere you know you keep putting them in everywhere I'm gonna start liking them then what and then as soon as trucker Josh says oh look these roundabouts are good they're a good thing then they start taking them out another one coming up you kidding me I've gone through like 15 already [Music] thank you foreign [Music] thank you we're coming up to Confederation Bridge I believe we're going to pay the toll on this side let's see how how much it costs to cross here I'm not sure I'm gonna go to one of these Lanes where there's an actual person in here that's because I don't cross here very often looks like on the left there they call it a straight pass that would be the equivalent of like an Easy Pass just to drive right through type thing I guess I don't have one of those 75. I got a Cheesa uh it's got no tap all afternoon 75 dollars yes please [Music] thank you [Music] 75.75 [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] thank you [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] I'm in Salisbury came here and I thought that we were going to stay here till tomorrow nope turns out just as I was settling down for the evening no no no no no we got a load for you in Quebec go to Quebec okay I better get going to Quebec just as I get rolling to Quebec and they say oh no worries pickup isn't until the day after tomorrow that's the earliest week again I don't mind I don't mind it's just ah we're going to Quebec but we're not in that big of a rush so that's good that's okay my hour I'm running low on hours anyway so I was trying to tell them like if we're rushing this like I'm gonna run out of hours I'm gonna start recapping hours I don't know if I can make it and then they came back and said no no we're gonna get you to load the next day I was like oh okay good good that works perfect for me then so I came back here I got my timmies I was bad I've been good this whole trip okay I've been keeping my diet under 1500 calories every single day this whole trip okay I haven't even told anyone about it but I did it today is Blizzard day and I'm very excited about it I don't care if you judge me go ahead Give Me Your Best Shot [Music] oh that's good how's it going let's go out here so we're gonna go close to Quebec we're gonna run up to uh what is it Edmonston not Edmonton but Ed in Edmondson close to the Quebec border with New Brunswick but still in New Brunswick there's a nice little truck stop there and it's a casino right next door I think it's called the gray wolf stop or something like that I'm drinking something now we're gonna go there and park there for the night and then we just got a few hours to do tomorrow so that'll work perfect let's get ourselves back out on the highway I like it when I have something to do that I know what I'm doing I don't like not knowing what I'm doing that's what I mean this whole day's kind of been up in the air in my head because I didn't have anything to do and I was sort of like like a lost puppy I need something to do I mean I don't mind sitting in New Brunswick but I didn't even know if I was going to be sitting in New Brunswick and then when I finally decided yeah I'm going to be sitting in New Brunswick nope then everything changes no I'm not sitting now I got something to do ah story of my life that's okay that's okay I've got to get across this traffic here it's my turn it's my turn do you know who I am excuse me trucker Josh's ego coming through here sometimes I get told in my comment sections that I got too much of an ego I don't think I do I don't think I'm very good I don't think my videos are very good I'm just glad you're here watching them with me but I keep making them because you keep watching them so as long as you guys keep coming back and watching my videos I'll just keep making more so I've got about seven hours available to me to drive yet today but we'll hit midnight before then and then I get hours from tomorrow so I still have very close to a full day to drive if I wanted I could probably make it all the way down to my pickup my pickup's in Valcourt Quebec but since I don't need to be there till the day after tomorrow the hallway today we'll go we'll go a little bit tomorrow we're not going to get a reset either way so at least this way you know it works out better I'll have three drops on that load heading West back home all three in Northern Ontario last ones in Kenora and I'm pretty sure I'll be going home after that unless if I grab a little Lumber while I'm in Kenora as well while I'm there right we'll see we'll see what happens we made it so we didn't quite make it to the gray Rock Casino truck parking lot almost a half hour before that and a shell truck stop in Saint Leonard New Brunswick here me and my empty trailer I've got about five and a half hours of driving to do tomorrow sometime my loading appointment is 7 30 a.m I think I told you already the following day so I have to be there at least 10 hours before that so I can stop and get my logs all straightened out for the next day and get ready to go and get ready to load in the morning so that means I have to be there by 9 30 pm tomorrow it's only five and a half hours from here rush I'm probably gonna leave around noon I'm going to stop in Lancaster oh shoot we're not going to be going as far as Lancaster I was going to say we're going to stop in Lancaster Ontario for a shower the Flying J I'd be in Ontario yeah we're just going into Quebec I don't think there's any Flying J's in Quebec is there used to be but I heard that they had a falling out with Flying J and the province of Quebec because Flying J refused to change their signs to French something like that remember I was telling you the other day that Quebec actually has language police like it's a real thing like it's language place you can get in trouble for not using French properly or you can get in trouble for using English instead of French like on your business signs your business signs have to be in French and the French language you can have English on the signs but it has to be a certain font size smaller than the French you quebecers can correct me if I'm wrong on this I don't live there but maybe you can tell us more about your language please in the comments section this should probably come from one of you and not from me right but I do know there are language police in Quebec which is wild crazy right anyway something about I think Flying J refused to uh frenchify your business convert everything over to French that's what I heard anyways so they got kicked out of the province is that true well maybe one of you knows anyway I guess we'll find somewhere to stop for a shower tomorrow I want to think of showers in here I'm gonna wander in here maybe take a showers here let's figure it out thanks for hanging out with me today we went over Confederation Bridge did nothing today nothing we sat on Prince Edward Island all day waiting for a load then we got sent to Moncton to wait there for a load and then no load came in and then I was just getting ready to settle in for the evening and enjoy some YouTube and maybe you know watch a Netflix movie or something just settling down and then I got a message head to Quebec we have a load for you in Quebec like okay so I buttoned up and got everything ready to go I rushed out out the gate noted the truck stop and onto the highway and then right after that I got a phone call saying okay but you don't have to rush it's only for the following day like the day after tomorrow you'll be loading yeah I mean I'm totally fine with that it doesn't matter it worked out now I get to sort of take my time I could sleep in tomorrow here take my time getting there tomorrow and uh that'll be that but hey if you guys want to hang out with me some more don't forget to subscribe to my channel I make videos every day of my life on The Road Trucking across Canada and the United States hit that like button if you did like the video don't lie to me okay I want an honest opinion if you like my videos hit that like button down below don't forget share it with your friends so that more people can come and join her join our big internet family here there's about 126 200 subscribers right now and that'd be awesome if we could get more of them to watch every day let's take care everyone be safe drive safe [Music] thank you foreign [Music] | Trucker Josh VLOGS | UCrkahiSmFd6w0fmdZ95K_wA | 2023-08-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,696 | 13,331 |
DtdBS1QaLx8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DtdBS1QaLx8 | When hypo. `(Na_(2)S_(2)O_(3))` is standardised using `K_(2)Cr_(2)O_(7)` by iodometry, what ? | hello friends our next question is when hypo na2s2o3 is standardized using k2cr2o7 by idometry what would be the equivalent equivalent weight of k2 cr207 then our answer will be in idometry ki reacts with k2 so4 in aesthetic medium to give i2 and this is titrated adjacent na2s2o3 then our reaction will become k2 cr207 dot h2so4 plus 6 ki reacts to give 4 moles of k2 so4 plus cr2 so4 3 so4 3 plus 7 h2o plus 3 i2 when this is standardized with na2 s2o3 then we will get the reaction for will this will be h2o3 plus i2 gives 2 mai to nai plus na2 s2 os s4 o 6 s 4 o 6 then the equivalent weight this is the process for standardization and the equivalent weight valent weight will be 49 gram for potassium chromate from it that is k2 cr2 o7 thank foreign | Doubtnut | UCcv7pspGHmM7AOywuLM1ufA | 2020-04-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 150 | 754 |
bv7vHrDRUs0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bv7vHrDRUs0 | 1.6 Surface Area and Volume of Spheres | hello everyone welcome back to another lecture lesson 6 do believe that this is the second last lecture of the unit so measurement is almost over let's hop right in this one's about surface area and volume of spheres like baseballs as you can see the surface area formula sphere is given to you there but I'll add one as well the surface area when you're it might be known to you as pi d squared or d is the radius so 4 PI R squared or PI d squared whatever works for you so their first example given here the diameter of a baseball is approximately 3 inches determine the surface area of the baseball to the nearest square inch so because we're given diameter let's do that I have a formula why not surface area is equal to PI times the diameter of 3 squared 3 squared is 9 and then pi is right around 3 it's just over 3 so 9 times 3 is 27 I'd expect it to be just over 27 maybe like 29 or something like that turns out we punch that into our calculator surface area is equal to 28 inches squared easy if you know the radius of the diameter of a sphere you know the service area is doesn't get much easier than that one the surface area of a soccer ball is 250 square inches what is the diameter of the soccer ball to the nearest tenth of an inch so this time we're given the surface area being 250 inches squared and we want to know what the radius is so let's use the other formula let's use surface area is equal to 4 PI R squared to find out what the radius would be we're gonna isolate 4r we're gonna get it all by itself so we're gonna divide both sides by 4 hi and then we're gonna square root so surface area divided by 4pi we bring it to the bottom across the equal sign square root it to get rid of the square sign on the R is equal to the radius we can then punch that in 250 divided by 4pi it's actually just a number divided all Square rooted so the radius is equal to well it's actually asking us for the diameter well we'll find the radius and then and then we'll double it to find the diameter it would be four point four five inches and if we multiply that by 2 to get the diameter it's eight point nine inches my apologies finding their own thing but we found them both anyway no problem at all the next one is a try it on your own so I'd recommend pausing the video and giving it a try it's on your screen it's also in your booklet and then when you're done unpause and we'll be able to go over it together all right everyone we're back this is a question about the service area of a medicine ball it is approximately sixteen point nine square feet at surface area what is the radius okay so this time we're finding the radius service area is equal to 4 PI R squared you know that from the formula we're given the surface area for n PI R in just numbers so we can find out what R is you can rearrange the same way as last time surface area divided by 4 pi all Square rooted gets us our so go back to the last question you're unsure how to rearrange that essentially dividing by 4 pi on each side and then square rooting to plug in those numbers 19.6 for a surface area and 4 pi on the bottom i'll square root it give us a value of 1 point 2 5 feet for a radius now 1.25 feet is not what we want we want it in feet and inches so we are going to take the fraction or the decimal part of the foot and turn that into inches so we know it's going to be one foot but how many inches 0.25 beat gonna convert that into inches feet on the bottom inches on the top 12 inches in one foot as we know 0.25 times 12 so that's essentially like dividing it by 4 and giving us 3 inches so therefore the three dots mean it is one foot three inches that is the radius of the medicine ball let's move on than to volume problems to have questions definitely email me yeah well move on to volume problems as spheres now the volume of the sphere formula is given and it is only one formula there is not two formulas for this one it is four over three PI R cubed we have to imagine if you can a whole bunch of tiny tiny pyramids pointed in towards the center of a ball so each of those added up together would give you the volume now it's a really complicated way to think about it but we'll just use the formula for now so the first example tells us that the Sun a huge sphere has a diameter of 870,000 miles what is the approximate volume of the Sun so we have the diameter but we need the radius first thing to do is divide that by 2 so 870,000 miles divided by 2 gets us 435 thousand miles sounds good now we are going to use that radius and that is actually the only thing that we need to know to find the volume of a sphere is just the radius so we have that volume is equal to 4 over 3 times pi multiplied by this number for 35,000 cubed so you're going to multiply that by itself 3 times x pi x 4 and divide by 3 now we'll get us a volume of 3.4 times 10 to the 17 now that scientific notation that means that there are 17 decimal places this way and I just don't want to write it because otherwise here I'll write it and I'll show you what it would look like you would look insane so this is the same as writing let's throw it over here I need to have the 4 and then 16 zeros so 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 zeros is that many miles so instead of writing all of that out I can just represent it like this so that means that there are 17 decimal places this way so 16 zeros because we take the 4 into account as well so you can see why I'd be easier to write that but there is the volume you know the volume it's for being huge mouse cubed the volume of the Sun let's move on to the next problem a half a grapefruit I mean though this is known as a hemisphere has a 5 centimeter radius what is the surface area of the grapefruit to the nearest tenth of a square centimeter so we are going to need to work out what the equation needs to be a little bit so we know that the surface area of a whole sphere is 4 PI R squared now if we got a hemisphere that's just half so we just divide that by 2 4 divided by 2 is 2 so that means that the volume of a hemisphere sorry the surface area of a hemisphere let's write that nicer the surface area of a hemisphere is equal to 2 PI R squared we then need also take into account the circle that is on top when you cut that grapefruit in half and that circle so the surface area of a circle is equal to PI R squared so this whole thing the surface area of the entire thing is going to be 2 PI R squared that is the bottom portion of the grape for the outside of it the Hemisphere plus PI R squared which is the top portion and you can actually add these together 2 PI R squared plus 1 PI R squared is 3 PI R squared so the surface area of a hemisphere is total 3 PI R squared so I can use that formula now to find out what the surface area would be all I need to know is the radius which I have so the surface area total is equal to 3 times pi the radius and the question has 5 centimeters and it's going to be squared 25 times 3 is 75 times approximately 3 is about 225 we'll go a little bit more than that because it's 3.14 4 pi so it's gonna be approximately 250 let's see 235 it is 235 point six centimeters cubed the surface area of our grapefruit the next thing it wants to know if we go down just a little bit here what is the volume of the grapefruit to the nearest tenth of a cubic centimeter so now we are going to find out the volume volume is equal to 4 over 3 PI R cubed and then the volume of half of a sphere is just gonna be divide the whole thing by 2 when you're dividing this whole thing by 2 again you're getting rid of the 4 so the actual volume of that hemisphere the volume of a hemisphere this is 2 PI R cubed divided by 3 again all you need to know is the radius which we do it's 5 so we can do that the hemisphere is 2 times pi 5 cubed all divided by 3 just 260 one point eight centimeters cubed boom we did it feel free to pause and go back throughout these videos to listen again to ask any questions that you may have you can send me an email or we can you know talk about it in some other way but definitely do the practice problems and I'll see you for the final lesson in the next one | Travis Dekezel | UCKJqB3rplBA8aYjYogD6d5A | 2020-07-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,698 | 8,171 |
VsPxfuH3U-M | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsPxfuH3U-M | NFO-53 (AV10460): US Farm Report: Dairy Market | NFO number two Staley and rust recorded October 5th welcome to another program of us farm report brought to you by members of the national farmers organization in this listening area in the interest of agriculture rural business and the well-being of our nation we have as our special guests Oren Lee Staley president of the national farmers organization and Albin Rust dairy commodity director of the N F old ladies and gentlemen we appreciate the opportunity to come into your home and visit with you particularly about during this afternoon but nevertheless we want to visit about the other commodities at the same time it is now being generally recognized that the NFO's collective bargaining program has been one of the big and most people or at least many of them consider the biggest factor and the unexpected price rise on hogs that have been maintained the price rise on cattle that has been maintained through the heavy slaughtering of cattle this year and so this means that certainly as we have built the collective bargaining program the NFO over a vast area we have added to the meat marketing arrangements the grain program which has in its principle at least theory and the principle practice of on for the imposition sales this makes it possible for members of the NFO that raise brain to decide what time of the year they want to sell that grain and then put it in position for sale either either in the local elevators that has been arranged for by county in fo Grain bargaining committees that these people of course have been elected from the NFO members within the county or is in position from farm storage now this is all important because the NFO recognizes that you cannot just work on one commodity and maintain any success that you make on that commodity without also working on all the other major commodities therefore we're working very hard in an overall bargaining program and dairy is of course one of the major commodities and one of the very important commodities and I have with me mr. Albin rust who is director of our dairy commodity department he's a dairy farmer from Hillsdale Wisconsin and of course it would be only appropriate to have a head of our dairy commodity department coming from the great milk producing state of Wisconsin which produces so much of the milk that comes into the nation's households now Albin I know that you've had a lot of experience in various fields and you as well as the other directors of our commodity departments are very green and meet our people that we're very proud of and these are coordinated with the assistance of other administrative people that have had various backgrounds all of them farmers and I know that Albin that the one thing that all of us recognize and that is that the dairy farmers put in longer hours of work throughout 12 months of the year than any other working group of farmers in America and of course it means that many of the families do the work many of the whys many of the children do the milking while the husbands are out either planting a crop tending it or harvesting it and then of course this means that it's a really truly a family operation but the dairy farmers are really the most underpaid group of any segment of our population I know that the consuming public Albin a lot of times thinks well 25 cents a quart for milk really how much does a dairy farmer in most areas get for that milk on the fine well basically mr. Staley the dairy farmer himself and his family for all the efforts they put in producing the individual quart a hundredweight of milk received very little in respect to what the consumer pays around 7 cents is the average per quart that the farmer himself receives for the milk he produces he has to out of that pay the trucking in to town these points seem to me to be quite ridiculous as you stated these people work for around 37 cents an hour they put in more hours year in and year out than any other farm group that is producing farm goods in America today they have a long history of producing a basic commodity that is needed on a day to day basis from farmer to handler to consumer of where it seems to me that if the dairy farmer through an organizational effort much as NMOS program is would put forth the necessary organization that he could change this almost overnight because dairy products being considerably different than other farm products they are produced on a day to day basis and they are consumed in this same manner in other words it's a small amount each day going into the market there is no one period of the year when you have months production coming in at one time or anything of the sort it's from day to day and in order for the farmer to price a commodity such as milk he needs organization and he needs sales groups that can work closer together than what they have in the past and I think but by and large we're getting ever closer to this as we keep moving along well but this is an interesting point when you say dairy farmers need organization we know that there are many many dairy groups organized out here in almost every milk producing area what what happens are these existing groups and do they compete against each other or just what happens that farmers are organized but what what really happens to do they have divided sales that compete against each other at this level or what what really happens this Albin well the farmer selling his dairy products naturally has to sell it to some local processor or handler in doing this we find in making the different studies throughout the 12 state area that there are approximately 800 individual selling groups representing the different groups of farmers today these 800 selling groups definitely compete with one another trying to make a sale someplace in the market now while you have 800 individual buying groups buying from the individual farmers you have about eight major dairy groups that buy dairy products butter cheese and powder nationwide so you can see the terrific competition existing between the individual selling groups and what a time they must have trying to maintain the pricing structures that they have today by and large if it were not for the government support programs federal order programs and the what should I call them the crutches that government has set up for the dairy industry to operate on I don't believe we would see prices even as high as we have them today well Albin I know that I've been in many dairy areas instead of the summer of nineteen hundred and sixty-five dairy sales have continued and through some of the heaviest dairy producing areas and it's simply because that the dairy farmers have become so discouraged because of the lack of return on their investment a lack of wages you might say for their work and so consequently this is a serious situation now you get into the situation what can be done and what is the NFO doing I know that I have been in several discussions with existing groups where we have tried to explain many years ago in fact that the organizational power in the dairy industry set up proper under a legal structure that would allow them to do just what we're saying has to be done this could have been done but it seems as though there was reluctance on many of the existing groups to go together and unite the the selling power that could have been united in a legal manner so consequently although we started organizing in a corn-hog diversified area we knew that it was necessary for us to go into the milk area the areas where milk is produced and bring together the dairy farmers so that we could start establishing the organized power from the producer level this is where it has to be organized now if we're going to analyze the dairy industry I think the first thing we have to think about is just how much the nation's total production goes into manufactured milk and how much goes into the bottle the grade a class one milk well we have roughly today a 50/50 split hips that the figure is not just exact but it is about 48 percent bottled milk and 52 percent manufactured milk in this sense dairy products are split about half-and-half manufactured and half the other half being grade a milk now when it comes to pricing the two different commodities manufactured milk and a grade-a milk we do find that the manufactured milk by and large is priced through most generally a federal order in some area set up around such as Chicago Cleveland Indianapolis and so on well you find your manufactured milk prices being established namely on the support price that the government establishes from year to year it wouldn't take too much of a price increase on manufactured milk in most areas to make a terrific difference to the dairy farmers even in federal order areas we have a rough breakdown of how this takes place on legal fine and the pricing structure on butter powder ratio for example a one cent increase on the butter powder ratio would return to the American dairy farmer a five cent increase on raw milk you have on cheese a one cent increase on the pound of cheese to the consumer would levy a raise of prices on milk from the farm level going into cheese of ten cents if there were ten pounds of yield in a hundred pounds of milk so a very small increase in the price of dairy products could levy a very great return back on the farm level so far as individual producers are concerned I find it quite shocking that most consumers have no idea of what percent the farmer is receiving from dairy products any place along the line that's the reason I think the seven cents a quart and after all how long does it take a after the cows are milked on the farm under the sanitary conditions that are required and the farmer gets the seven cents a quart and he has to pay the trucking out of it how long does that take that milk to get to the household and how much processing is in it it certainly didn't take as long to get it from the farm to the consumer as it did for the old cow to get it from there into the processor this is about the point you get to on delivery of milk from farm level into processing groups and certainly it is a commodity as you stated it is a number one commodity it receives more inspection and red tape than any other farm product being delivered to consumers who you have in many many areas inspectors from any number of states inspecting these individual farms making sure that they are producing a grade a quality of milk that is befitting almost of any price you don't have these rigid inspections on your meat and grain that we find the dairy farmer competing with well this is right still the father because of no processing the fact that there's no processing or very little involved means that the cost of processing these other products meat for example should pretty well offset each other shouldn't they Albin and this means that what is taken for the processing and the others there's just something that's very wrong as far as the farmer receiving seven cents a quart for that milk and the next 24 hours it'll be a consumers table at twenty five cents a quart now what what first I think that we have to recognize that in order to be successful in bargaining in the dairy industry that you cannot just bargain in one area because if you tried to bargain in one area oh you can possibly bargain out of it is just a little improved efficiency and marketing and this is fine but this has generally been done but if you tried to do something about price in another area what happens in this case well what what happens there have been dairy areas maybe even as large as a state or more that have made an effort what happened to their efforts well the same old story happens with the dairy farmer that happens with any other farm commodity and they used to tell us by the way mr. Staley that well if you fellas take the milk out of the state of Wisconsin we'll ship it in from Minnesota yes and when we finally organized Wisconsin and Minnesota then they turned around and told us well if you hold milk back here in these areas we'll ship it in from New York and Pennsylvania yes when we started organizing in those then they said they would ship it in from Canada now I don't know where they'll get it from next but it's the same whole story of one group just setting just in back of the other one that always is subject to shipping these products into an area trying to price it if an individual area tries to price the commodity it's true with grain and meat in this same manner but dairy products being what they are certainly seem to me to be one of the easier commodities to price in this respect if the farmers in the different states such as Minnesota and Wisconsin Iowa in fact throughout the whole in NFO territory or area would sit down and work out this problem together an NFO has suggested a legal formula for this it's a matter of the individual marketing groups today enlarging their scope and vision so far as marketing problems are concerned and instead of working from just a county level or a district level or going from there up to an individual state level for them to start looking at their problem as a national problem and working together on those basis certainly we know most any group can solve their problems yes FL program well Albin I think what you brought out is so important because the people that they're selling to those 8 major companies you're talking about by all over the dairy producing area and so you cannot be successful in bargaining unless you do the bargaining over this entire and I think another important point is that marketing orders the federal support programs are only minimums there's nothing to keep the bargaining efforts bringing price above these if the if there's sufficient bargaining power to get the price and I think there's one thing important and you pointed it out I live in Northwest Missouri and we're in a diversified farming area and I remember when we first started organizing in NFO they used to say well if you just try to do anything for the dairyman we'll ship Wisconsin and Minnesota milk and and then of course we said well we'll go out and organize the dairy farmers in Wisconsin and Minnesota which we have and then what do you think you're going to get it as you said they said well New York New Jersey of course then they get to Canada Canadian milk production isn't very big you know as far as our population is concerned and of course the thing about it is our program is set up so that we can have a surplus disposal program developed through our master contracts with processors and many of the people have always said well processors won't even talk to NFO they won't even sit down to talk to you well processors and all the commodities are even the largest many of the largest processors are sitting down investing with NFO now the important point is that they have problems that we can help meet that haven't been met by getting the production there to them in the area that needs to come from in order to be most practical as far as their plant operations but I think that it might be interesting I'm sure it would because you've told me were these master contracts have been signed with processors lately tell me a few of the places you have been to show the scope of this Albin and the fact that processors are not only investing their signing master contracts and then we'll discuss briefly the master contracts which are of course the heart of our program well in the last 10 days two weeks we have had cooperation in signing contracts all the way from Idaho over to the southwestern corner of southeastern corners of Wisconsin I took in some discussions last week with processing groups out in the Colorado area these groups by and large seem to be taking a different view of the dairy situation and what they have in the past I do find many of them telling me quite frankly at this stage of the game that in years gone by individual groups such as our marketing milk in the southwestern areas that these groups did at one time try to sit down and formulate a program much as we have suggested at this time however these efforts failed namely because of lack of participation by farmers to urge the different processing groups to carry out this type of a marketing procedure and I think it's very important for the processing groups as well as the individual farmers at this point to understand that through the NFO program specifically we have an opportunity not just to talk to the individual farmer about becoming a member of NFO and it's dairy marketing program but we also have a chance to bring his knowledge to the processing level and talk the problem over there also by having both groups out selling a program of this type certainly it can be accomplished well but I think you brought out some points that are so important and when you were talking about the contracts being signed from Idaho on over into Wisconsin in the 10-day period I remember you coming in with a group of contracts from northern Minnesota and I believe over in South Dakota shortly before that and then I remember a short time before that you are some of the people in the dairy commodity Department told me about being east to the Pennsylvania line and and I believe on down into Tennessee Kentucky into that area and this shows the great effort that is being made over the entire area now in these master contracts when a processor signs a master contracts basically what what does a master contract incorporate in it or what is incorporated in the master contract basically and the dairy contracts for dairy production these to me are a very practical contract for any dairy farmer to work under the dairy farmer in the past and we have never touched on this too much and has signed many many contracts with many many processing groups however the contracts he's had signed with the different marketing oops have all of them been a simple contract for a supply one of the big factors in the NFO program and its contracts is that these contracts establish a delivery to local processors they also establish a grade and quality to be delivered on a stipulated pricing structure they established still further a year to year supply feature for processing groups to work with this certainly gives them the benefit of the doubt by saying the production will be there from year to year on such-and-such a standard and with such and such a volume so that they can do an efficient marketing job throughout the industry these are basic then the whole important core of the NFO program is first for the producers to organize so they can bargain together right right and this is what the NFO has been building a structure whereby the producers can make their desires felt and an information structure where the producers can and analyze the entire marketing structure and decide on their own how they're going to market and whereas they're developing their bargaining power and this is their this is their individual initiative that they must take in this face and then of course after these have been organized then you're talking about the master contracts at the processor level which stipulates the price that the producer is going to be paid which is 605 base price for class 1 grade-a mail the manufactured milk the prices 5 hours from $4 to find safety yes so varying on the area and then all these points are incorporated in the contract and the one thing that really amazed me was when I heard existing dairy groups one time say well Mary farmers can't get a price for their milk or they'll price themselves out of the market and I've heard so many people say well if hogs ever go to 20 to 75 and what people don't realize is that these are average prices over the year we're talking about those allowance for seasonal variations and all but they said if hogs ever go to 2275 way you'll lose your market well this always amazed me and then it amazes me more because I haven't heard anybody talking about that and the people are still eating pork and I'm sure that they're going to continue to drink milk just like I bought this suit of clothes although the price was up it means simply that the American public has to realize that the American farmer is a very important segment of our economy he purchased so much steel so much gas so much rubber so many of the things that are manufactured and that this great purchasing power could not use and less farmers have a fair price for their products and so Albin Rust we'll just simply means that the rest of the nation cannot continue to have the profits that they've been enjoying or the working people cannot continue to have the wages that they have at the present time unless the farmer also gets a price for his product to help buy some of these things now then back to the dairy program and back to the effect of it we're organized over this large area we've organized and of course signed many many contracts with processors and this means that the bargaining power of very farmers have continued to be increased now as we build this bargaining power do you think farmers really realize how much strength NFO has and that they really understand that this organization is built on the principle of bargaining effectively on all major commodities and that all of them have to be brought up in relative balance that the minor commodities also will fit into the pattern as this bargaining powers increase do you think the people really understand when they talk about bargaining for farmers do they understand what they're talking about I'd I sometimes wonder whether the individual farmer there seems to be no doubt in his mind that he understands that selling together can get him a better price because he understands the business formulas and large business groups throughout the nation and their ability to establish prices on the farmers goods that he has to buy these are simple mathematics to him in in that sense there seems to be a little bit of doubt in his mind possibly that he can get enough of his fellow man to go along with this type of a program but again I get down to the point of in the different discussions with a lot of non-members and so on at the different bargaining sessions talking contract on milk these people seem to believe that at today that this type of a program is coming they feel possibly that n Apple is maybe pushing it a little bit too fast but at the same time with the large number of sale bills we have hanging in the local banks the local stores your local county papers each month in each week at time is of essence if we are to save the dairy production in the areas where it's at well then I think this is very important the one thing that I think is so important is that the processes they understand farmers bargaining power they know that their processing plant is only worth junk price unless there's milk going through it if it's a milk processing plant and so they understand that right and so consequently when they see farmers organizing all they're doing is guessing where the farmers are going to successfully organized enough production or whether they're not and those processors say yes we want to sign the master contract they're saying really we want that production before it gets away this is really what they're saying to you now the whole thing seems to boil down to this that the farmers have to realize that by bargaining together by selling together they have the ability they have the power and I know from my discussions with you that now that we have the producers organizing great numbers over such a large area that as we're driving to get more of them organized as they join with the NFO that as we build our bargaining power that the steps that you're taking I'm sure that you're confident and I am too that they are going to start a price rise for milk at the farm level in the not-too-distant future we have the power the strength and now all we have to do is build on that in order to get the games that are necessary for farmers dairy farmers as well as others to get the cost of production plus a reasonable product the historic records of the united states government prove conclusively that farm prices must be in balance with wages and interest costs in order to have a fully operating economy and relative full employment for our nation's people government records also prove that each dollar of growths farm income generates seven dollars of national income how much longer can we afford to under pay our nation's farmers when it is costing our nation seven dollars for each dollar of underpayment to our American farmers the members of the national farmers organization are calling on the rest of the American farmers to join with them in an all-out effort to solve this farm problem join now | ISU Library. SCUA. AV Collection. | UC0NllHpQOW8Uc3IPfe03oow | 2018-07-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | detection | en | 4,530 | 24,882 |
aelSvhV57Xw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aelSvhV57Xw | Plenary Session 1 (Creativity and Diversities): Thomas Patrick Hoy | our next speaker professor uh thomas uh patrick thomas hoy from i'm sorry okay okay thank you thank you sir um from department of english college of liberal arts here at thomas university okay oh is this one okay not too many slides actually i was originally planning to do this as a full speech but i think i've become dependent on powerpoint at the end i i chickened out i couldn't do it and i needed a few pictures of um to help me along um okay so we're talking um the theme of this panel society and transition creativities and diversities that's what i've sort of tried to address here can you just go back to the first one um well societies are always in transition i mean people are always in transition if you're not you're dead i suppose even then you're decomposing so you're changing so we're always in transition and but i'm i'm thinking at the context of thailand and also of talisad at this 80th uh anniversary and i think uh transition is perhaps not the right word society and repetition might be closer to it and i think particularly of thomas hat when we uh think of tamasat's founder died in exile we think of another uh important rector of taversat the other library is named after him the one that ranks it died in exile now it worries me to think that on the hundredth anniversary of tennis hat somebody else may mention other important or perhaps even insignificant by then figures from tamasa who also died in exile so i think we should talk about these things so society in transition or society in repetition creativities and diverse diversities or conformity and uniformity this is what i'm going to talk about can we go to the next slide please tolerance and diversity in my first theme order harmony and unity my second theme creativity knowledge and censorship will be my third theme and then i'm just going to give a few examples of what i find you know where i find some creative thinking at the moment uh next slide please let a thousand flowers bloom you may know this quote it's from chairman mao i think the next part was that a hundred thousand flowers bloom let 100 schools of thought contend unfortunately everyone took him seriously and as soon as they popped their heads up blooming away he chopped them all off so it's a little bit ironic this uh this title here okay i'm just going to read my initial abstract which was written some time ago as as we know that the um there was a transition which delayed my presentation um okay and this is a rather personal reflection the whole the whole speech you know so no no um no claim to academic knowledge or anything of that sort here a personal reflection on what i think is going on in time okay i came to thailand in 2001 and about a year later the world cup was on and i wrote about this in a paper around the same time there was a a series of ads sponsored by the kung tai bank and i thought they were very very interesting for me it only been around about six months or a year and they struck me as very exclusive and um perhaps even racist and what we saw in these ads were various falang and the the farang was seen teaching a succession of awkward and graceless ties how to speak time how to perform a thai dance how to make hawaii how to cook tom yum and finally how to give one of the famous thai spires so we had um the forums as the possessors of tinus and the thais as awkward graceless you know the the image of everything that ties are not supposed to be and um the punchline as translated to me was something like aren't you ashamed that you have to be taught to be thai well that stuck with me for a long time and and then as now the ads struck me as an indicator of a cultural fear that kindness and the national unity that embodies were fragile and there was a perception of a need to defend them from the ravages of internationalization and modernity and i think this is uh still the case just uh last week a child psychologist of some sort came out and said that uh nannies should be thai um well there's a bit of a reaction to it but i believe that the ministry of labor whoever is responsible has said yes they should because a burmese nanny or a lao nani or a cambodian nanny or heaven forbid an australian nanny i am after all the father of a thai child i wonder if i'm teaching him the wrong way to be tight we're not good enough would not teach pure tightness um so i think there's a still this sense this same sense are we thai enough um for those who uphold tinus today's political culture and cultural situation shows that the fear has sort of been justified the three pillars are under threat in various ways a banner on a beach in northern thailand during the uh i think in may or february during the protests um sparked a hysterical reaction i thought about the nation being ripped apart by lana separatists the spike in les magiste cases since the coup of 2006 means that even the most fervent supporters of the monarchy cannot claim that it is universally revealed revered or they wouldn't be charging people and the buddhist discourse that says that the nation should be led by people who possess karmic goodness is also being challenged what should be done well people could be taught to be thai through more edicts on proper behavior from the ministry of culture through glorious versions of thai history and unity continued continuing to be promoted in the classroom more billboards cinema ads and tv features demonstrating the monarchy's wisdom and virtue can be made paying attention to the national anthem at 8 00 a.m and 6 p.m could be more strictly enforced more thorough censorship and punishment for untie attitudes behavior and speech could be instituted and dr rientong nana's rubbish collection organization could be licensed to take out the trash or is there another way at the recent thai studies conference in april and may april was again held in sydney professor andrew walker suggested that for a long time now thailand's political discourses and practices have been all about managing unity this has been done with some success the political social and economic conditions have changed such that what now needs to be put in a place is a system which manages diversity and conflict such a system would have to recognize a much much broader idea of tightness than that which currently exists okay that is obviously all completely redundant what i've just said i wrote that in may for a conference for this seminar which was scheduled to be held in june well that didn't happen it seems to be redundant what i'm talking about there diversity for the next few years at least the talking points now the orders are unity not diversity harmony not disagreement and discord and debate happiness not sorrow happiness not thought magenta has sorry the mcpo has issued its 12 core values of tightness without any debate as far as i could see among ties the education department has picked up on it very enthusiastically everyone seems to be rushing to to get on the bandwagon and is promoting patriotic songs and marches and records of good deeds i think this was failed but the idea was that students would have to go to their teacher and get a good deed signed so you and this will somehow get you into university at some point um interesting thought to report it to the teacher and filed away as part of the university entrance requirement oh sorry i meant say could we go to the next um next slide please now back a bit that one yeah um a thousand flowers blooming play time happiness time um where was i sorry uh okay so we follow away these ideas of good deeds as part of interest grants the happiness fair at salaam lawang had yet more free screenings of king nourish one five the ministry of culture or mini cult as i call it has banned a computer game that threatens to destabilize the country and tropico that lets people role play as a coup leader or a resistance resistance leader i don't know why everybody else should have all the fun the orwellian language of attitude readjustment and invitation to meditation is freely used while i debate with myself whether i should risk showing 1984 in my politics classes which is something i have done for years so diversity we're talking about the national legislative assembly a diverse organization comprising about 200 people 10 of whom are diversely women 100 of whom are diversely soldiers not even a corporal or a sergeant or a private i think generals ab admirals etc one finest for all ties absolute unity and agreement polls showing 80 and 90 support for the national council for peace and order but most tellingly a junta spokesman said that people should forget anything that happened before the 22nd of may this year i sock spokesman pompeo not my tie is still very bad after many years he said i quote it's time for tyres to stop dwelling on the past addressing primarily redshirt voters in the north and northeast he said quote they should forget everything that happened before the 22nd of may we are a department of liberal arts memory is the business of the humanities and in the context of memory as all this has been going i've been returning to a writer that um i studied in my phd thesis and who i've tried to keep in touch with since the great czech dissident writer milan kundra kundera was exiled from czechoslovakia in the stalinist period he wrote a book called the joke where somebody told a joke and it led on to all sorts of disasters for the joke teller um but he was exiled for for his um his dissidents his writings his jokes and um what he uh said in his book of last laughter and forgetting is this the struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting in thailand lately forgetting is mandatory memory is banned on the theme of harmony and happiness promoted by the totality state kundera wrote this he wanted the right to be unhappy he was unhappy he was initially a communist a very idealistic young communist we're going to change the world sort of thing and he realized it didn't quite work like that and he has an image of falling out of the circle everyone's holding hands everyone's laughing everyone's happy he felt himself falling out and he said about about this idea he was excluded from the the happy land let's say all human beings have always aspired to an idol a paradise a garden of eden happiness to that garden where nightingales sing to that realm of harmony where the world does not raise up as a stranger against man and man against other men but rather where the world and all men are shaped from one and the same matter innocence happiness no diversity everyone is happy because everyone is the same everyone is a reflection of yourself that was what he was talking about that was how kundera imagined the totalitarian state as a garden of eden and he thought it was a beautiful thing he compared it to music harmony a great lover of bach he thought of it as a bad feud there everyone is a note in a sublime bark feud and anyone who refuses to be one is a mere useless and meaningless black dot that needs only to be caught and crushed between thumb and finger like a three if the future of thailand is the military utopian vision utopian and i was just watching something on the original utopia james thomas moore's utopia everything was great in this utopia there was only one rule you had to believe in god if you didn't you might do wrong things otherwise everything was fine execution was the punishment for those who didn't believe it as i said if this is the future there is no space for well i'm not going to say no space of course people will always create spaces let's say there is less space for diversity and difference and they will inevitably be dissident black dots that need to be crushed so um what i'm arguing is that as a faculty as a university the cultivation of memory is the key to understanding and rejecting or contesting power and as humanists we have the duty to foster memory not forgetting and to preserve maintain extend free discussion and speech rather than just submitting to public relations i'm going to what you said earlier on um next slide please so i'm just going to say a few things here about how this has affected me censorship in any form is the energy of creativity since it cuts off the life of creativity ideas and i want to talk about just a couple of examples of censorship and how they affect my life as a scholar does anyone know this uh man he died a couple of years ago he was widely recognized as a brilliant polemicist a wit um a very a great writer a great talker a great debater not everyone agreed with him i certainly don't i didn't agree with his stance on iraq he thinks the americans shouldn't go in uh he but he took on all comers atheism iraq um the british royal family and he wrote and spoke brilliantly even his most fervent what's the word detractors would agree with that okay i came across a reference as i was doodling around on google to his book called the monarchy which is about the british royal family and it's a dire tribe against diana and charles and all the rest of them the sort of thing we can usually read um and i saw that this was where the reference was to it being located on i don't know if you didn't know this website it's a sort of file sharing site called scriptd s-c-r-w-w-w dot s-c-r by bg.com and it's a pretty handy place you can go there and pick up all sorts of stuff so i thought all right okay good i haven't read that book and what i wanted to read it for as much for his ideas was his wit and style okay i went to the scripty having looked at that book and this is what i got i thought my god christopher hitchens is a threat chris i can't read christopher egens well of course i can i mean it's ridiculous i can i can i can go to many other places and get his work but i thought this is absurd this is completely absurd i mean i've got some some public servant somewhere has got it into his head that whenever i see the name christopher hitchens somewhere he's bad for some reason and i must do that to it i can't think i can't think that uh this is a search and destroy campaign but i was sufficiently paranoid to think what about thomas paine who's this guy well he's even better than christopher hitchen christopher mitchum died three years ago he died 200 years ago thomas paine happens to be one of christopher hitchens great heroes he's written a a short book about him um but and i thought you know they they share a lot of thoughts in common thomas paine also i i googled had an article on scribda called the age of reason now let's just put thomas painting context if you are a historian who wants to study the american war of independence or the french war of uh french revolution you have to read this guy he was a brilliant pamphleteer when george washington's armies were deserting and starving and in the ice or snow in the delaware somewhere he wrote a pamphlet called common sense written in ordinary language that picked them all up and sent them charging after they won the war eventually he went to france where first of all he was elected as a member of the um the the national uh parliament the revolutionary parliament and next of all he was chapped in prison and about to be guillotined by rose there but where he wrote another major work the age of reason about his atheist or no i shouldn't say atheist deist ideas um so there he was and uh roger bear got beheaded before him so he was able to get out of prison okay so this is a major major historical figure dead 200 years old i wanted to read his pamphlet called the age of reason which was available on scribdy hill countries and that's what i got now that was a couple of months ago i i've looked back at scripty to see if i can still get them i can i don't have this stuff now but you have to pay at scribd now they've they've finally worked out they can make some money out of it so i can get them if i pay but i can't get them for free that's what i was trying to do so you will be able to go to script and find these but you can go to anywhere all of thomas payne's work is on gutenberg you know it's important stuff okay let's go to the next one i mentioned before that for uh for several years i've taught a a a social science course and to a very big class 150 students very difficult um and on the social side i do a politics unit module where basically you look at two forms two films one is frank capra's mr smith goes to washington which is a nice optimistic view of our democratic potential the ability to transcend corruption the the ordinary man can have power and for the opposite view i i look at the book of the film 1984 i don't expect them to read the book none of them will they might never but what now i just thinking what happens if i do this course next year i don't have an intimate association with these students there's 150 of them what are they thinking well i think they'll be thinking that i have some sort of political acts to grind that i'm trying to propagandize them and i think that one of the things that really is a bit scary and disappointing in thailand is that a culture of snitching is developing i think you get 500 baht if you put someone in well i can imagine that of 150 students some of them might think that i'm on the wrong political side and they might snitch on me to i don't know to the government to professor somkid uh whoever so we are talking here the theme of the conference is creativities and diversities and my creativity has just been be diversified a little bit you know i have or maybe it's been inspired i have to think of another book um and the next one please okay the the the sort of brief mentions of this in the news el tropico 5 i've never heard of it before have anyone you haven't played it you might know that well the the rhetoric around this uh well by the officials who who had banned it was it might cause problems it could provoke conflict it may bring diversity um not sorry not diversity it may bring problems may could might not is not does it's a potential now that person there may cause problems one day he does he might you might may you could it could happen you could go crazy and go on a psychopathic webpage i don't think we're going to yet ban you from your existence or lock you up because you could cause problems you might create inequality diversity can't creativity can't really work with that level of fearfulness strange power and fear going together very okay the next slide please i just wanted to quote uh great columnist congratu in the bangkok post they're only the only world they're fighting isn't against tropico 5 or hormones another uh show that was you know talked about or a sensitive talk show show what they're fighting against is youth technology and a concept of the future and a loser future but a future towards which the whole world is moving the past isn't perfect and sad that there are still a lot of good people who don't realize that the world moves only in one direction forward now this is not something you know these problems with l tropico and hormones and all the rest of it are not something that arose because of the ncpo i mean i could at least a million of these over the last 13 years i've been thailand this move to oh we're scared of this it might do something bad let's get rid of it um antithetical to creativity and diversity okay next uh next please um okay now i'm just going to have a look at a few things that i've been interested in lately which are critical and celebratory of thai society at the same time i'm doing a little bit of literary work on some novels from from the realm of thai expat detective fiction and i'm looking also the art of this guy chris coles i just want to finish off with something that i think is good interesting creative okay and something that you know this is not a pretty picture of bangkok it might cause problems to thailand's image instead of the next one well that is a pretty picture of bangkok the sexy bar but also might cause problems to thailand's image a solid dog and the next one uh this is a book about really about the politics of the last 10 years and about tightness how tightness is manipulated how it becomes a cover for things uh how uh people are brainwashed um and it's all about the the last 10 12 years of politics it hits all sides it goes against everyone um and the cover is another of those paintings okay so i think there's there's you know obviously i said before um critical creative diverse expression can still flourish it's more difficult you know when there's an atmosphere of fear but i think universities have the responsibility to remember not to forget and i think far too often at this university and others forgetfulness is the hallmark okay thank you very much i'll just finish up thanks for listening thanks for agreeing thanks for disagreeing it's all okay i hope thank you thank you thank you so much professor thomas patrick hi and maybe before that i feel so close to prison then listen to your i mean talk today thank you so much you | TU soc-anth | UCSI556tHnJZYcTcQQYOTMqQ | 2014-09-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,961 | 21,112 |
TWnm8bmpdMw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWnm8bmpdMw | Checking Out the Massive AIR Music Bundle! | hey what's up everybody today we have so much stuff to cover we've got the premiere performance bundle from air music technologies these guys started out making all of the the plugins and effects for Pro Tools when they were with zoo sound design so if you've ever used Pro Tools you probably are familiar with a lot of these now we have since we got samplers we got drums and we've got presets and we've got a crapload of effects so there's so much to cover I'm just going to kind of lightly touch on the sounds included in each one I'll start with expand 2 which is basically a ROM pleure type instrument and you have four different layers here so if we look at the these types of sounds we get we get you know synth sounds and pads as well as pianos and organs and stuff like that let's check out some of the since here and then we also even have you know percussive loops and stuff like that something like this [Music] so expand kind of covers a little bit of everything you're not gonna get like those really realistic samples it's a it's a big romp ler sort of like you know Nexus 2 or something like that but it is a really good basis for a lot of different sounds and it covers it all in this one package let's go on to velvet this is an electric piano so let's check out that a little bit [Music] you now on to vacuum bro which is an analogue sounding synth this one along with hybrid 3 are probably the most intensive for people doing electronic music and loom - so let's check out vacuum a bit it's got a really nice analogue sound [Music] so I really like this one vacuum pro in the loom and hybrid are the ones I'm most familiar with I've owned those for quite a few years so let's move on to transfuser now this is a really cool rhythmic loop processor you see right here in my sequencer I've just got this one note held down so that'll trigger a loop and then we can go into the actual plug in here and if you notice right here I've you've got the kick snare at the hi-hats and stuff like that you can kind of paint out your own rhythm inside the sequencer here in the plugin let's check it out a little bit and there's so many sounds there's it's going to be impossible to even cover probably one percent of everything here but let's check it out [Music] so you can see not only do we have there's percussive loops and everything we have melodic loops as well there is so much to really do with this one and we're going to have a live stream about this one as well so have no fear we're gonna talk about it a bit more and there's some better videos as well so let's move on to the riser this one is obviously made at made for making electronic risers and stuff like that [Music] [Applause] [Music] so that's some really cool stuff there let's go on to structure which is another it's a sampler type instrument and we can get you know like right now I'd remember marimba loaded up so let's move on to structure this is a sampler type instrument and we have right now I just got a marimba loaded up let's go through a little bit of the sounds here [Music] you [Music] so you can hear with that guitar we have different key switches down here so this is gonna be you know more realistic samples as well like the marimba and this guitar that I'm using and stuff like that so that was structure now let's move on to mini grand which is obviously going to be a piano type instrument [Music] you [Music] so that was just the main preset the initial loading sound and so you can hear when I go right here in this knob right there from Ballad to soft atmospheric and the room sound I had it the ambient at the end there it's got that nice reverb to it so it's a really nice sounding piano library now let's move on to loom another one for the electronic producers [Music] let's move on to hybrid three another synth with a ton of presets saying this one's gonna be best for you know modern trance and trap and stuff like that [Music] all right let's move on to DB 33 [Music] let's go on to boom which is a drum machine it also has loops a sort of like the loops and transfuser but this is a drum machine only you can operate it just like a normal drum machine but you also have some loops if you hold down the keys higher up and then finally we have effects so you can see them all right here all of these are included in the bundle so you got filters maximizers chorus delay flanger pumper reverb distortion compression anything you could possibly want we'll cover these more in the live stream as well so there's just so much here instruments since samples percussion effects distortion whatever you could possibly want there is something here for everyone for EDM producers for cinematic composers for someone who wants to get into sound design and learn synthesis with loom or with hybrid 3 or vacuum someone who needs organs pianos risers anything that you can possibly imagine it's all here it's a huge bundle so much to cover but that is a very brief rundown of all of this stuff that you can get with it and remember to tune in to the live stream or you can watch the replay anytime available on our YouTube channel so thanks so much for checking this one out of me go check it out it's the deal of a lifetime and I'll see you guys next time thank you [Music] | Audio Plugin Deals | UCGn9KdqacVzcc7-N7Oznc3w | 2020-06-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,021 | 5,275 |
BtczgeYI4JY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtczgeYI4JY | Learning Svenska #2 - Letters | Welcome back, now that you know some basics about the alphabet it's time to look more closely on every individual letter, because I was very brief in my previous video when it came to pronunciations. So today I will start off with the first letter, A, and end with the last one, Ö. On every letter, I will start by stating its name, then its pronunciation. If it's a vowel, I'll start with the long vowel first, and then the short vowel. Then I'll say how common the letter is in the Swedish language, using the grades very common , common, not common, uncommon and rare. After that I will take two word example, just so you can hear the letter "in action", if it's a vowel, try to figure out if it's a long or short vowel. Lastly I'll give you some fun fact if I can come up with any. Let's start. A is a very common letter Ask, Jag If a word starts with A it almost always has the short vowel pronunciation. B is not a common letter Bar, Tub C is not a common letter Cykel, Acne, Café C can be pronounced as S or K, and a couple of other ways that I will talk about in a later episode. D is a common letter Dyr, Ide D is in some instances a silent letter which I also will talk about in later episodes. E is a very common letter Ek, Grepp The pronunciation for the short vowel for [E] and [Ä] is the same. F is not a common letter Fisk, Alf G is a common letter Groda, Öga, G is sometimes pronounced as J, and sometimes it's silent H is a common letter Hall, Joho H is sometimes silent I is a common letter Is, fisk I on its own is a Swedish word which means in or within J is an uncommon letter Jul, Paj J causes preceding D's, H's and G's to become silent. K is a common letter Kaj, Jak L is a common letter Lat, Tal M is a common letter Mat, Tam N is a very common letter Not, Ton O is a common letter Orre, Mot O is sometimes pronounced as long Å, as in "kol". P is not a common letter Par, Rap Q is a rare letter Quagga, Blomqvist Q was sometimes used instead of K in ye olden days, and lives on in last names. R is a very common letter Ratt, Är, Art R is the trickiest letter to pronounce. It's hard to describe how you do, but place your tongue just behind your incisors and try to make your tongue vibrate by exhale slowly. RRRR Sometimes, as in "Art", R is more similar to English and you don't articulate it that well. S is a common letter Sak, Bas T is a very common letter Tak, Stå U is not a common letter Ulv, Hus V is a common letter Vad, Liv W is a rare letter Wok, Bowling W is only used in names or loanwords from English X is an uncommon letter Xylonfon, Yxa Y is an uncommon letter Yxa, Rysk Z is a rare letter Zebra, Ozon Z is pronounced as an S. Å is not a common letter Åsna, Måste Å on its own is a Swedish word which means "river" Ä is a common letter Äta, Päls Ö is not a common letter Öga, Söla Ö on its own is a Swedish word which means "island". After this, we can conclude that "Ö i å" means "island in river". Before I end this episode, let's take the vowels once more: A, E, I, O U, Y, Å Ä, Ö. Next time, I will talk about when you should use the short or long vowel. Thank you for watching. | Dave37 | UCS1Mdx7UWlVH8HNKoasbNog | 2013-09-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 642 | 3,125 |
2w5num7MM28 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2w5num7MM28 | Rain.cally And The Star 3: Fire and Ice (sorta) Animated| Chapter 5 Part 3/5: Ice n' Flow | another day watch another night doing absolutely nothing but I repeat you send me a video than masses I mention not [Music] my visas just children masters dimension oh yeah what's up Oh some Bonnie how are you pretty good oh hey good question yeah what's up have you heard this guy's a lefty black there buddy sorry oh no I haven't heard it before never sure yeah oh never mind let's gave you the one just ask you to hell that's my man yo dude what're what's funny what they used to be yeah I guess I'm gonna passed oh man no cool he told me that he needs me for like important stuff Oh what again about lofty why are you asking me that question uh he was just wonder if he knew him cuz he said he is actually a villain in it you're at the same time you mean antihero yeah that's what I miss oh well if you see him you let me know when no stigma going okay was I supposed to be post be a video reference yeah why no man later man bye we're gonna watch funny videos [Music] we can't have a moment taken aback this is John Smith misses once right [Music] oh you just stiffen the star huh ow my head hurts don't do that again like well I'll just taking a little nap like yes I am really what the tails no no no no I haven't any talking to him stop stop stop a TV okay [Music] whatever if you know why just care to start with you okay oh this is good girl cutting tip taka tails make sure don't look at me okay no Phil gonna bored lately yes I am so our dragon how are you alright no what's wrong nothing I'm just my CV no no just cute okay don't dude I'm just gonna leave you be so you can just remain yourself no way go away sorry man gotta go man I hate the our driver leaving me behind I just hate it it was actually that's that's all that's pretty cool I guess you have it that's yours see won't be tagged all right now you're at it's okay look I tell you you tagged me but you had come Chase me come back well I do with this maybe it is Prentiss I guess hi everywhere for this can't find it anywhere where is it where is it there it is yeah do you know how long I've been looking for you oh man so start like well might as well take you on Dakini oh my you sure I'm up aunt Bonnie don't stop sleeping up me label you keep sneaking up on me like that sorry pale but you're going mate what are we do wrong you're just have to kill me girlfriend wants you fine whatever come on man let's go what is that gold beer one for me two hours later okay let me get the straight you're saying that this store is the only store Nick defeat King eighty yes precisely look lofty I know it's been a long time since we last minutes yeah has really man I I just went insane due to my friends being gone a rock stars you know them yeah no long time bill well I'm a bear what secrets you know yeah it's just a part of me died when my friends died you know without the whole rock stars and feels I feel like I'm alone so that's why you decided when community yeah whoa hey take it from here hmm how about you join our team me yeah I mean there's a lots of cool friends you wanted me down there I know you as a rock stars and I miss them too but you showed me true you look all tired why don't you rest up buddy oh I guess Goldie I promise I won't be an anti here anymore gonna be a good guy for no one that's why that's here eager us doubly thanks man our own love thee with you meanwhile okay how is player to go again simple we spy Iran please team then we come back with the knowledge and evidence that we have and then what's a wrinkly to a toad I will stop you right there I must still be right there yep hear me loud and clear Bowser turning the princess into a toad oh good question which kind of told a frog or an actual toe for no sure kingdom nope oh dude I'm talking about the toe for the Mushroom Kingdom that's wrong are you an idiot oh no dr. hunt [Music] whatever at least we have all 10 stars whoa correction only not what water what minions accidentally threw it away are you kidding me can't believe you I'm sorry man but think of it this way we find a store we get it at Target to toe how about that do it makes you happy bacon don't call me bacon I'm sorry that's true just at least find the tenth star so we can turn wrinkly to a toad oh my meals we're gonna lay on it a Susan Wayne ice crack oh you have a hard whatever whatever but my plan is almost complete she'll have no other choice but to be with the other toes and a mushroom que no [Music] you | Super Smash Masta | UCX9CCOcxY-Zd1M_7wI9_bqA | 2020-06-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 921 | 4,454 |
1iNM9u1WBf8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1iNM9u1WBf8 | clove hitch | hey hey guys it's Derek with survivalist um I'd actually like to welcome a very important guest who is also my daughter nope it's Kenny this is my daughter she's gonna be very helpful here hold a stick yes she actually just turned two and she's gonna try and help with some videos so say hi all right so right now I'm actually going to be working on uh a clove hitch knot [Music] and peanut say hi hi are you having Daddy can you can you smile hmm I know she's cute all right so this is gonna be the clove hitch as you can see I got my stick so what I'm gonna do is take the end go over oh foreign yeah she's trying to help go over Bring It Around kind of make an X go back down take the working end and feed it up through the ax so it's gonna look kind of like that and pull tight that is actually the clove hitch as you can see the more you pull it the tighter it gets but it's not really tie tied so that is a clove hitch and to undo it just pull and done so that is a cool pitch um I will be doing some more on Knots and a few other things for you guys so hope you guys like subscribe and uh I'll see you out there | DJ's Outdoor Survival | UCOaUgpCh3XeQw62hNoG9ctg | 2023-04-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 239 | 1,118 |
hyHeaFaxj84 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyHeaFaxj84 | LIVE Lobsters Venting boomers/with Robin and maybe you | hello you happy [ __ ] out there grampy lobster here huh summoning michelle best and von helton now nope no no no no folks you guys have uh known me for a while you know my uh ah first of all i'd like to say hi to bozo robin's in the back she's going to be here and kennedy how you doing twisted uh who else there's what says three people are watching bozo's here okay and uh uh folks i hope everybody had a good boxing day had a good boxing match had a good fight or some [ __ ] like that uh folks hamburgers how you doing uh you know anyway uh without any jelly beans hi all how you doing anyway we're gonna i'm just gonna bring in robin because we've been talking about this uh jello shots is here hey how you doing jealous how you doing robin hey [ __ ] how are you uh well you know we've been talking for like the last i just want to get some people up to speed folks this has been the last hour or so has has really really uh i got it you know this trust me folks we'll we'll get into vaughn hilton and and all that [ __ ] later maybe but this is kind of a grampy rant and robin's been uh well i even took an ad event tonight folks but um yeah i over the years that i've been on the internet uh or people that are familiar with uh who i am and stuff you know they pretty much know that when it comes to uh religion that i'm not religious at all or you know things like that i call it what you will and politically uh i lean more liberal than conservative on a lot of things um not as liberal as some people might think i might be and whatever you know but over the years i've i've learned that um because you think something is funny this is why i stay away from people in real life yeah because just because and and i found this out myself you know on many occasions just because you think something is funny doesn't mean everybody in the room is gonna find it funny yeah read the room you guys it's very easy take the pulse of who's around you uh get the feel for the atmosphere know your audience even if you're around people that you're very very familiar with in a lot of ways and you talk about a lot of things you find out these little i don't want you you know things you just don't talk about we'll call it politics religion right i don't mind talking about politics and religion okay as long as i get my you know fair sharing i've had arguments i've had you know people i don't believe in god and they go oh don't you want to go to heaven and whatever same with same with uh politics right oh you don't like trump you must like hillary you know you don't like this you must like that everybody it's it's it's either there's a split in the middle you either are this or you're this you're either one way or the other and most people aren't like that in real life so when people walk up to you and tell you something that they think is funny and then when you come back and say uh hey i don't get it i don't find it funny uh and then they get upset because you know the whole world thinks it's funny and what i'm talking about folks is that let's go brandon thing okay i didn't even honestly know what the let's go brandon thing even really was until just a couple of few days ago i finally you know and i'm like okay it was funny when it was done maybe it got some sportscasters to maybe deflect some people that decided to throw politics into a [ __ ] nascar race you know i'm sorry i didn't see it i don't watch nascar anymore i used to who's brandon oh god don't get him started jello so this guy he also i'm sitting outside having a smoke all right okay we're maybe smoking a little bit of the devil's lettuce you know having a good time you know people out there having you know and there's somebody always that's got to come in always has to come in and make some stupid [ __ ] joke or attempt to make humor that's something that a lot of people don't [ __ ] get or even find interesting or funny and then when you don't find it funny and you go oh you know uh yeah they come in like joe cool because they know the uh latest buzzword yeah i said i said i see i i go do you know where the nest that brandon thing came and he goes he started on a nascar race and they're gonna tell the digger i said yeah exactly that tells you how [ __ ] funny it really probably was you know um oh god and then you know and then i'm like okay let's open the [ __ ] gates i said at least we don't have a criminal name like am i called trump a criminal a [ __ ] con artist which are my honest personally deeply held police and this guy you must have got some wrong information and [ __ ] next thing also i'm the [ __ ] bad guy you know there must be something wrong with you that you don't think like that yeah this guy and i'm like oh my eagles well you started it i'm like i don't to being eat [ __ ] and like look i know there's probably somebody in the side chat that doesn't hate trump right there's people in the side chat that don't hate biden right there's people inside chat that hate trump there's people in the side chat that probably maybe like biden don't mind by i don't really give a [ __ ] i and there might be some people over there that don't give a [ __ ] about any of it and don't talk about it yeah i don't talk see i got away from that [ __ ] because that used to make me lose my [ __ ] [ __ ] because people will sit there and talk about things they find like like you know it's like to me it's almost like in sports you can [ __ ] on the other guy's team right like i [ __ ] on the new york yankees right i hate the [ __ ] yankees i know people that hate me for that not literally hate me because i'm a red sox fan but then when you get with politics and like i said people know pretty much that i'm i i wouldn't have ever voted for trump people know you know uh people think that um you know like i'm i'm an atheist so somehow i must be either denying god or just prefer to sin you know um you know yeah yeah boy i when i first heard let's go brandon you know i was in the dark and i thought okay so brandon is the male karen then yeah that's what i kind of thought it was you know like like you know and then then as it went on okay that's not it at all i'm missing the point but your explanation today i had no idea that it started at nascar no idea well that's even stupider and i'm like i'm like dude it's a [ __ ] meme you know i said it was funny quasi you better knock it off or you will be blocked you better watch yourself quasi yeah i know but you know and like look i've gotten into these conversations with people people know that you know like i'm telling you meet charlie i love charlie to death you know and everything we talk and stuff he sent me cannolis sent me a bert you know everything like that but we can't be friends on facebook because he'll say something or i'll say something we've tried it before um but but but at the same time me and shirley have had these discussions where there's a lot of things that we do agree about you know when it came when it comes to certain things as long as you get away as soon as you get away if you start talking about actual things instead of who's a bigger dick you know or this guy did this or this guy did that it's like that epstein's [ __ ] right all i keep hearing now is uh all the [ __ ] democrats that epstein was you know associated with on on one side and on the other side i hear all these republicans will talk about democrats that were with epstein and the other way around and i'm like dude you all were in the [ __ ] picture you know what i mean and it's just ah oh i know i know how it started no they didn't lie about what the fans were chasing they weren't gonna yell [ __ ] you biden on the on on the air they were trying to they were trying to dodge a very unnecessary situation when people try to bring politics into uh a sporting event you know it's like when i go to a sporting event to be honestly honest with you i uh well i'm not going to get into that argument with you snyder i'm really oh yeah i mean i mean because you know uh whether he went to the island whether he didn't go to the island clinton went to the island so many times this guy they they all yeah but yeah yeah it's uh boy i just i just can't i'm too [ __ ] old yeah people think that like i said uh oh i must get my news from cnn i'm like wow that's uh news to me you know i mean uh glossy monkey i got laid out no no no if you would have seen the situation it was no one guy was in a wheelchair um but um yeah never mind that grandpa tipped him out onto the concrete no you didn't i know you didn't do that i i know you didn't yeah but um no i just it just it amazes me like if if i would have like i i don't know i this is why i hate uh grampy is wearing mrs lobster's makeup to cover up the black eye oh really [Music] i haven't been in your makeup oh no damn quasi is really starting to everywhere you know how you doing folks say hello to uh america's favorite uh side side chat host uh adam e i get my news from the fun brigadies too as well you know speaking of which speaking of which i found it's on my facebook page i'm gonna try to go into another window robin because okay i found a facebook a a story on facebook you want news i'm i'm i'm i'm gonna let me see i'm not let me see i'm still here i'm i'm i'm definitely okay grampy's really good at this you guys he's really good at this uh he's not gonna have to go out and come in again he's really good at this you guys okay we're hoping we're hoping we're hoping shut up i'm just blathering you oh you're lathering me up i'm greasing you up robin that even sounded worse the worst i know i gotta shut up oh god geez my wife is sitting right here and you're going oh butter i'm greasing yes it stays soft even in the fridge yeah hey come on man that wasn't nice hi eileen ebony hi everybody that i haven't said yeah hey there's just something uh when you realize 2022 is also pronounced 2022. i know you got to be careful how you say that uh obviously if you think you're smarter than the previous generation 50 years ago the owner's manual of a car showed you how to adjust valve today i warned you not to drink the contents of the battery i know i saw that i saw that i know we are so [ __ ] stupid you know let darwin uh what'd she say oh i don't know i got these headphones on so i can't hear a goddamn thing which you know she got him for me so she can't say oh no you don't have to listen to me but oh yeah they are good they're bose speakers or headphones oh yeah whoa jeez bougie bougie oh god i just you know what i got did i did i did i tell you the story about my uh i was on uh i was talking to my son uh doing a video call and i was bragging about my new uh wireless headphones right and i had never had wireless i've never dealt with wireless you know because i you know i'm old and stuff uh apparently there's a video of von hilton caught trying to censor you it's an old video i did god damn that's old mudbrucker posted it but um i'll look at that again and then we've got the uh the video of the uh and we can show this later other people have seen it but a guy actually saved a lobster from well his final demise when he bought a lobster at a grocery store his name is leon i think you've seen this movie this uh video haven't you yeah this guy is a hero to all these lobsters out there he saved the lobster had it has a saltwater tank beads at all sorts of stuff i know uh let me see bloodbrucker uh anyway we had talked about that my question was does it have to be a salt water tank or can it be a fresh water tank well if it's a salt if it's if it's a if it's a um depends on where it was caught originally i guess because there are fresh water yeah yeah but this was a uh uh anyway i'm trying to find this article because let me see uh mother tried to flush mother flat tried to flesh flush pet monkey down lavatory after offering it cocaine oh i saw that i saw that a little wet monkey the news only you need to hear the amazing roast of grampy lobster that was kind of a dumpster fire uh let me see i'm trying to find this go ahead i'm trying to find this because this is like really it it there there's a lawsuit out there folks um i think it's it's somewhere in russia or somewhere in uh you know that part i don't want to mispronunciate you know or misidentify a certain uh demographic out there or thing because uh milk trucks collide with cow and grant canty oh my god but anyway apparently there's a lady i think in russia or china one of the two one of those countries you know that literally is suing mcdonald's right and she's got a lot of they've accepted the lawsuit apparently she's suing mcdonald's for her for her like breaking her diet or going off her diet because mcdonald's cheeseburgers are so good basically that's her lawsuit oh first yeah yeah i i wish i wanted to find this goddamn heart because there's they're so good boy there's somebody with that lacks impulse control eh yeah and she's blaming it on mcdonald's yeah she should try it in a nut burger now there you're getting into trouble yeah but you know what rhode island pastor facing child pornography oh yeah a local there's that one yeah there's that one yeah um let me see how the patriots lost okay fine uh florida social media star arrested tells troopers he's young makes lots of money and he can do what he wants you know what robin that right there the entitlement so yes exactly people think today that they have to have that in entitlement they have that instant entitlement because mommy and daddy told them they were special right they were in trouble and then another yeah mommy and daddy helped him out mommy and daddy got him police arrest riverside fortune teller who allegedly received more than fifty thousand dollars to rid customers of parasites oh boy the woods are full of those kind of people well that was out in your neck of the woods no i know just up the road from up the highway yeah yeah man arrested and stolen ricky bobby race suit after wild crime spree in oregon [Laughter] if you ain't first you're last okay um okay on that day that's the day i finally moved into this place but yeah they th this this sense of entitlement that that people i can't find this article um oh god there's the dancing math that says remember them that that you're rocking matthews at skinny crazy or uh oh god uh that was just nasty that rocking matthews somebody in a sideshow i can't find folks out that's pretty much for the news part of this um okay so on to the next segment then yeah so um anyway so yeah grampy has his first like person that hates him you know so i hate being out in public how you doing prairie queen hard truth cut both ways you know uh gen x forever god you guys complain about every [ __ ] thing oh my god i don't know uh i don't know what to name when we were children we had a stick and we had a ball and we were happy yeah and if you didn't have the ball at least you had your stick yeah yeah yeah get over yourself go on play catch joey you don't have any friends throw the ball against the [ __ ] garage door but if you break the garage door i'm going to break your neck pulley and we'll use the guy next door who has no arms and no legs we can also use him for home plate during the off season that is true that is true that's why it's always good to have handicapped friends folks you know they're handy they're handy yeah they're handy you can always use them on for the base paths you know i mean yeah hey yeah they're not going anywhere and they want to be part yeah and they want to participate folks well they get the t-shirt you know that's important to everybody a participation t-shirt hi oh hamburgers hi cutie dre who else is over in there people don't know a participation trophy you know god you know the political correctness has taken all of people's like competitive spirit you know yeah [ __ ] the competitiveness folks we're just here to really have a good time get some stretching in some socializing if there's actually a game we'll play it but we're just really here to like be here because you know uh and here's your trophy yeah there's your trophy thanks for playing you guys were swell you guys were awesome you guys were just so awesome every one of you special even the little kids that picked his nose out in right field all season long you're a special boy too you know what i'm saying you know we're going to get into so much trouble let them come after me yeah real boomer hours that's right beach god damn it you need to be in here then but um but no i you know and that's another thing too like like with with humor you know and like i know i got pissed off at a joke that i didn't understand didn't think it was funny and the guy when everybody when when somebody thinks that everybody gets the joke and then literally nobody only one other person there actually understood the joke you know um your gen x well then get the [ __ ] out of here okay so what we're gonna start we're gonna start dropping everybody we're gonna start dropping everybody that's not a boomer because you guys have been picking on us far [ __ ] too long and we're not going to take it anymore oh for heaven's sake grampy would you toughen the hell up [Laughter] you can take it wait what time is it uh it's officially 8 30 on december 28th uh year 2021 here in the metropolitan uh uh oh 38 degrees mostly cloudy okay we're 52 degrees and cloudy yeah x's are stoners the millennials will fight with you god you know see that's the thing sure there's more technology you know with with ways people can get high now and stuff like that i get that you know like devices you can use but people think that they invented getting [ __ ] up you know and getting really hot you know it's like oh ladies i bet you've never been this [ __ ] up it might have taken a little bit more sometimes but unless you've got maui wowie or ty stick we had to fight for our buzz man no kidding i'm not kidding keep passing it around keep passing around yeah more people's look look this is how this is how much we we had to go through back in the day back then you could get smoking a joint two people smoking a joint and after one joint right you look at your friend and go hey man did you get a buzz i think i got a buzz i don't know that was what it was and you go okay well let's smoke another one and after the second joint right you'd be like okay now i got a buzz right now you know thanks to technology and the growing things from your pie your pot smoking pioneers folks that's what we were for you you're welcome okay yeah that we we we dealt with the bags with more seeds and stems and actually with more si oh geez you could collect a jar full of seeds from a a four finger uh baggie yeah yeah remember when they said sell it one finger two finger three finger four fingers that and you know four fingers was like rich class yeah yeah but it got i've i've been a a stoner since before all these most of these people were born yeah how you doing eileen uh eileen ebony still buy hash but yeah i mean i like to get like bomb stone right like when i do edibles sometimes i just wait for it to kick in because i started 50 milligrams you know and then um uh you know if i get whatever but uh i i just i don't know people think that they you know it didn't start with you guys it did not start with you guys it didn't but but um yeah okay i got one for you beach i got i got you how many joints are in a lid it's an ounce yeah it looks an ounce i know but that was the old cheese and song thing oh two one yeah we roll big joints too you know oh adam everywhere started young a over 20 years okay 30 40 50 60 75. i've been doing it for uh 45 years well i did it on and off um for years i didn't because uh i drove a truck you know and oh yeah things like that but um but i drank a lot but um ludes my okay mommy's little helper when i was in high school uh the girls i went to this girls school and the uh the girls would steal their mom's mill towns i don't know anybody knows what a mill town is these days but but yeah they you know bring just gonna pass them around uh yeah mill town stealing those from your mom was a big deal your mom's diet pills yeah robin's like yeah my kids never did uh you know uh but remember oh i i remember uh contact cold tablets were the first that was i think remember packing yeah that's the old time release yeah those were the original um what's uh what's that means well yeah but what's the stuff that they took off the market because people were using math um oh oh oh oh not bad um that's close yeah but anyway um but yeah they used to go you know what if you get all the little red ones man crush them up man yeah and then there was darvon compound 65 or something like that and a darvon uh capsule if you open it up it had a little tiny red pill inside and if you take the gather up all those little red pills inside the darvon capsules that was the mind blaster part we've got we've got to also emphasize right now folks that we are in no way shape or form advocating for or uh proselytizing for the use of any types of dangerous narcotics and if you do if if you do want to use dangerous and narcotic please be careful and and read the manual okay yeah you know so uh yeah i think that's our disclaimer i think legally we're not bound to somebody goes i was watching grampy lobster and robin i went to the store and i bought these old pills i didn't even know they still sold contacts and you know the next thing i knew i was in the hospital i'm gonna sue grampy lobster yeah yeah yeah draven's [ __ ] says don't condone drugs that don't exist anymore i know darvo darvon compound six there were plain darvons and then there was the compound and the compound part was the little pill inside that you took out and uh yeah but yeah drugs are bad unless unless they're not yeah if you wanted them to be bad they're bad okay any bets on when vaughn goes dark yeah uh yeah mute that bozo you you are correct you are correct because a lot of people discovered just what i did about dark because i was in a car accident and they that was prescribed to me and that i was dumping out half of it because uh pharmaceuticals really have an effect on me uh i i'm a real easy easy uh you're a cheap drunk i'm a cheap drunk so i would like a dump out half of the contents of and then i discovered this little red ball pill inside and i took that all by itself one time and holy [ __ ] that was the best high oh yeah ever yeah but people were hurting themselves yeah they were hurting themselves remember when just getting high was enough you know it was always enough for me hey it's enough for me now except every once in a while i have to have a dirty martini oh yeah yeah lots of olive juice make it real dirty with those great big olive stuffed with blue cheese or the ones with garlic yeah yeah don't ever get the ones with jalapeno those will kill you apparently eileen ebony is a cheap date too robin yeah see what uh cheap dates unite yeah eileen ebony i think that was the compound 65 part i think it was an opiate but i i sure liked him what how old was i i was 30 something yeah yeah now i either get high on grass or i drink chardonnay and that's certainly enough for me well that's you know i mean um i was another one i i had two two of these uh specialty drinks that were on sale at applebee's on christmas eve and there wasn't enough alcohol in them i didn't even you know um but yeah but i can't drink and smoke so i don't drink oh man oh i do both i do both in fact i i'm having a little chardonnay right now because it's after five and i'm about ready to pack my pipe and uh mute myself so that i can cough along out so as soon as you see me mute that means i'm coughing yeah so anyway um if anybody like to come in um and uh okay stuff like that and things and stuff raise your hand y'all raise your hand if you'd like to come in i'm gonna put the link right here in the uh side chat and let's see if we can't get some well let's see if we can't have a little fun get going here folks there's the [ __ ] uh we're paneling up we're paneling up here comes the power oh yeah we're paneling fentanyl is a dark storm coming i don't understand why people want i i don't boy did i love fentanyl when i was in the hospital getting my angiogram but you were getting an angiogram you know and it was administered by nurses yeah big difference big difference but boy was it lovely yeah i mean i didn't care if if somebody was uh a lion was eating my leg off it would have been okay that good you don't give a [ __ ] about yeah when i had my hand operated on a few years back uh they gave me this um uh sedative whatever i don't know what it was but i felt great for like two days you know yeah happy and then they had me and then uh they gave me like five days worth of something and i had to go back and um but yeah i just remember i was like man i've never been to this i've never felt this good yeah they say here they say heroin is like that you know it makes you feel really good and you never get a cold from what i understand if you're a heroin addict but but yeah but you do a lot of this yeah you're scratching the bugs not that i know under your skin yeah okay it was a small point in time that you know i had to try everything once or twice or three times yeah i tried everything but but heroin and yeah i did i would never touch that and you know well morphine you couldn't get can't get well i've been on don't use any of those i was on more when i had back surgery back done back in 1994 i i have a very low threshold of pain okay uh i'm first of all um i'm out of surgery and laying into bed and at me on one of those uh pumps those morphine pumps oh so you can self-regulate yeah well it but it'll only you could pump it as many times as you want and it counts how many times you pump it but it's only going to give you so much they're not going to let you like you know and they apparently i had the record i had smashed the previous record that they thought unsmashable um about how many times i pushed that button and as much as i got i i was sick i was throwing up every i would see food somebody would say i don't know the word food would make me throw up um i was just like puking all over the place and these nurses were getting so pissed off right i tried to drink water the water made it just everything they're like we just changed guess what you know yeah lightweight but then i've had i've had it again where it wasn't like like that and i had better you know you know i mean it did what it was supposed to do and i had a good time time so it was a win-win situation you know i hate that that's all you can ask for yeah at the end of the day that's it that's it yeah draven script asked how was your christmas grampy you've never done math and i'm so happy the crazy meth heads are ridiculous i i tried meth i tried coke um yeah i tried shrooms well mess i mean honestly watching tank girl while trump ruined that movie for me oh bozo i am really oh man oh too bad boy that sticks with you too and that's a that's a class movie uh bozo i really i really hope one day bozo that you get over that you know that that you're able to enjoy tank watching tank girl uh like you did before you know i mean our thoughts and prayers are worth your vote i just got a benediction from from the grampy yeah that's uh and uh david epic honestly had never done drugs was never your thing well apparently you hung out with a different class of people than i hung out with because i had friends who did all kinds of [ __ ] as grown-ups middle-aged people uh would yeah course uh they're dead now you know that's what happened well that happens it's good uh it'll make you dead for sure so yeah i know yeah i i know a lot of people that have never never done drugs they've never drank you know uh you know and i poke at people i'm going well g was you know more weed for me he was good when he was on the pump one of my best friends of back in the 80s she was she was on cocaine and she was skinny as a real skinny skinny skinny and she always had this richness about her face you know this grimace this kind of smile thing she showed her teeth a lot and i that wasn't for me because just smelling it it reminded me of the dental office you know the smell of okay so so i always turned it down she'd come over we'd you know hide in my bedroom and she'd do it and she offered it to me for i said now pass reminds me of the dentist and she says that's why i like you so much i don't have to share with you absolutely uh he was around drugs mom mom and dad both smoked weed and did coke was just not your thing i didn't see the appeal well you know what david good on you well i disagree i think basically your parents didn't try enough david i'm kind of disappointed in you they couldn't leave it out after hours like they should have they should have encouraged you more i'm sorry that you didn't have that role model in your life uh david um i it man oh i know what it's like dude so uh yeah i mean yeah yeah you know that puzzle never did a needle yeah the only needle i ever did was my boss taught me how to give myself a b12 injection that's that's as close as i got to anything using needles yeah oh both your sisters picked it up okay okay well but okay well you know there you're i know and then people go and then they then they go yeah i had trouble with it for years and now i'm not doing it and then i feel bad because i know some people like i was never like like addicted to like you know drugs and stuff like that you know and yeah i never had that so i i don't understand what you know i mean cigarettes sure you know that's as close as i can come with um with that so i don't know what it's like to i know what it's like to detox after uh taking a whole bunch of um psych meds and end up in icu for eight hours uh i know what it's like to detox from that a few times but detoxing from other drugs i've never been into them enough to ever have to i oh when i did it when i did it was re it was recreational with people you know it wasn't like you know um yeah and so somebody said that oxy was as bad as heroin oxycodone that's um no that's hydrocodone that i'm thinking of uh vicodin uh i was given that for a bad tooth and the damn dentist prescribed 300 vicodin three it was in this fat a jar from the pharmacy 300 and so i i took them a couple of times and boy i felt really great but then i would start getting tremors and shake and then i'd puke well who in the hell wants to do that again uh so i flushed him down the toilet don't ever flush pharmaceuticals down the toilet you guys because that'll just get our fish all seven kinds of high um yeah no like like david no look i've been around people that were sick okay when i say i don't understand it it's because you know and you can unders understanding the addiction through somebody who's helping someone is different from my opinion than actually uh understanding what it's actually like to go through that physical withdrawal that that's all i meant you know i you know um that was uh uh you were doing 30 30 a day before quitting 30 plus 30 is a day what's oh well that's quite a lot damn uh draven strip had fentanyl patches you know maggie of england mike like pal her husband is on fentanyl patches and it's been a blessing because um he can get up out of bed you know he's still dying but it's not active dying now that he's not in pain and so it's it's a blessing for him well it it it helps with their someone's quality of life it sure does you know what so does morphine morphine helps people check out uh gently uh my mom was on morphine when she was in hospice in our living room and and she didn't give a [ __ ] you know she was on three oxygen uh condensers uh for her breathing because she had copd really severely i mean really really plus a couple of other things and she didn't give a [ __ ] if she couldn't breathe on the morphine and that was a blessing there too you know and she just you know she went she checked out all happy yeah yeah i mean 81. well yeah and it's it's you know it's like and and somebody that's like dying you know like that you know i mean not that you want to just bump them and pump them and pump them but quality of life you know it's not like they go well we don't want them to get addicted to it before they die it's like oh [ __ ] that it's about quality of life it's about quality of death the quality of death counts for a whole damn block uh i'm so grateful for that time because she yeah she checked out and she was in a good place mentally yeah oh yeah some dude wanted to buy some from me so he could open the pack and sniff it good thing i said no because he got it from someone else yeah you know um hey but you know it wasn't your fault then draven what yeah so does anybody want to come in draven i thought you wanted the [ __ ] link grampy put the link up in there you guys did you know yeah you know what draven uh hurt nobody should hurt nobody should have to hurt we have we have the technology we have everything available so people don't have to [ __ ] hurt uh you know damn yeah give people well you know i've told this story before um my wife's grandmother right her grandma mary when i first met my wife um uh she had she had a grandma mary it was her dad's mother and really friendly lady but she was really old she's the grandma that talked really loud had all the stories but she loved to take you to lunch and she liked to talk and she was the grampy or she was the the grandmother that and i've had them myself um that everybody's heard the story holy [ __ ] there goes grandma again well along comes me i've never heard the stories right so i would sit with her we talk and yak and stuff like that sweet lady and everything well mary had um her health was getting towards you know she uh when she was in the nursing home um she used to um oh let me tell you the first time i met her she she took me and my wife to this place called the crow's nest it's a seafood place and she literally ordered like almost everything on the [ __ ] menu so i could try it and then she gave the waitress like a 300 tip at the end which made the waitress cry and [ __ ] you know and so i've got like like five days worth of [ __ ] food all i wanted was a [ __ ] veal farm or a chicken farm you know that that's what i was gonna get you know but we tasted every delicacy seafood delicacy and and rhode island thing and but anyway but she lovely lady but she could be a little bit feisty too like we were at the uh this place called uh i think homestyle creamery new england premiere getting some ice cream well she had to have sugar free well she wanted a certain flavor of sugar-free and there was this i don't know 16 year old girl looks like probably her first job she's ever had they all looked standing it yeah yeah they they're you know can i help you and everything well sh mary wanted a certain kind of sugar-free ice cream which they didn't have and mary very italian she's like just lit up like are you serious do you know who i and am like well i've heard about this side but anyway took a while to calm her down everything but this girl went in the back and we finally got waited on by one of the managers and stuff but anyway when she was in the nursing home assisted living or whatever you know be yeah um she was diabetic and everything and mary loved chocolate okay both of my wife's grandmothers just like they had they love their chocolate especially around the holidays or whatever they just like to have some chocolate not a lot you know but when i want some chocolate you know that's where my wife gets it from yeah they were she was in the uh nursing home and this is right before we moved out here i was in the va uh the rehab place or whatever it wasn't out in oregon before i moved out here and i get this phone call right and uh they took mary's um well they wouldn't give mary or any chocolate so mary went out to the store and bought a whole [ __ ] wagon a little chocolate and they took it from her and they were worried about um they're like we don't want her getting diabetes or something okay and i'm like the woman is not ever going to leave this hospital alive right she wants some [ __ ] chocolate if you give her a piece of chocolate she's happy but they're like well we don't want to cause you know any health complications and [ __ ] like that and i mean if i i'm like holy [ __ ] so uh my wife's father uh would sneak her chocolate good but it's like and i even talked to him about it one day i was like you know i said when i was in the thing when when your mom was in the hospital i said and they wouldn't give her chocolate and his he the man didn't he was an anna he had kind of an animated personality but he just started he goes hey guys it's like my mother wanted some chocolate he goes don't tell her no sneak some chickens give the woman some [ __ ] chocolate you know it's like jesus yeah it's not like she's going to be running a marathon you know or getting out tomorrow with diet yeah the diabetes uh yeah [ __ ] and david epic says you believe in assisted suicide so do i i i mean i uh and of course people need to be checked to see that they're not losing their mind and you know because yeah it's a lot of assignments dying with dignity and it's there's a long process i i i met some people when i when i lived in oregon um my uh when my mother was in hospice i met a bunch of people and i met some people uh with a dying with dignity thing i think some of the laws may have changed but a lot of it was um very secretive it's it's you know because things happen leave yourself open to yeah attacks uh uh and so um and there's people in there that actually risk uh going to prison for for helping people um and and or they'll set something up but as long as you i mean i don't know enough about it i i'm for i'm for dying with dignity i mean um and why can't we have that choice damn it uh i want to if i want to decide to check out i i want to do it and yeah okay i have a i have a woo boo theory i have a theory about an assisted suicide i have thought since the beginning that david bowie went that route because he made that last music video about you know where he goes into the closet and stuff and you know like he's talking about the end of his life and it illustrates you know his you know the people reaching for him from the anyway and then right after that he died but you did not hear anything about it except he i know i know for sure because he saw his life was over he still had his marbles but his body was failing and i think he made that decision i think he did it that's just me that's just me but yay him if he did yeah yeah i mean i don't know what i would do in that situation honestly you really don't know until it's happening yeah you're right um and and for for for i don't know multiple reasons but um what yeah but go ahead no but i want to segue out of this um uh yeah you guys somebody come in here and we'll get off the talk of debt okay oh speaking of which um okay let's talk about somebody else um 41 dollars you know he'd rather pay his cable bill than make an attempt to go up to ohio because from hamilton from clay county kentucky all the way up to hamilton ohio is thousands of miles probably the worst roads in the country folks it's uh you know 41 dollars too much yeah i agree draven is in the room folks you know what before i draven before you say anything i'm glad you're here buddy um we're going to get into some stinky conversations and stuff like that great uh but uh just like when uh robin was on with me the other day as soon as somebody else pops in it's time for grampy lobster to go take a quick [ __ ] break and i don't have any commercials set up so you guys uh so draven and i will nesta until you get back and and sure yeah what's up if you show us your penis one more time you will be blocked okay i'm just letting you know okay i'll try to keep it in the pants okay yeah yes i know it's hard how long you want to be on the show by keeping it tucked in or not i'll i'll be back in a few minutes folks okay we'll get the [ __ ] out of here then go pee yeah you might be peeing in your pants go slug it out with one of those old people downstairs that are going to challenge you god with trumpisms and brandon [ __ ] go get them grampy we want trumpisms brandon [ __ ] oh yeah yeah that he got that earlier when he went down for a cigarette um yeah okay i'm gonna i have to respond to a uh comment on the chat dream uh david epic says robin williams discussed assisted suicide with professionals and they all turned him away or talked i did not know that i was not i never heard that i wasn't aware of that i know he was had just been diagnosed with lewy body dementia before his suicide but i didn't know that he had actually discussed it with people okay moving on i didn't know i didn't know that either yeah well you know what uh the stuff you guys were talking about was so interesting i have a darva set story and uh it's from like a long time ago it's from like 2002. i was like in uh i was with some idiot and they were driving a car i it actually was an ex-girlfriend we were going to school she picked me up and she was staring at me in a brand new honda civic and i'm like don't look at me idiot look at look at the road and we she plowed right into a car right when we're in front of the school they brought me to the hospital because i i guess i went out and when i woke up they they gave me darva set they gave me like 80 darva sets and i didn't know what the hell they were but then and to find out in 2010 yeah darvon darvis said they basically robin after heath ledger died they kind of stopped it i mean when was the dark knight like around 2009 2010 around that time but apparently that's what he that was one of his cocktails until he was taking xanax he was taking darvis set and some yeah darvaset replaced darvon darvaset was a tablet a long tablet uh darvon was a capsule and you could oh okay yeah yeah that's how i found the little orange uh ball of opiate it was in the darva set or the dark encapsulation or in the darvon capsule yeah so then they started replacing it with dharma said so i think darvon is history now oh yeah anything with the uh perpoxaline is gone which is the active ingredient in all those medications after 2010 and i know it's like i'm not sure i can look up like when the dark knight came out but i know around right after he died that's when it kind of went away but yeah so many people i know i've made some dumb mistakes you know i had a friend in 2007 he was irish to the core he worked at an irish bar and he he would take xanax and the bartender would give him beers and stuff after the after the after the uh you know at the end of the night and i would say hey man don't don't be mixing that because xanax and beer do not mix and he passed away jesus yeah well yeah i think it sends your liver into seizure and it does something to your brain at the same time uh boy that's bad um okay so i'm i'm looking oh sorry not to cut you off no go ahead uh yeah i just noticed that okay uh dark knight came out in 2008 and i know like right around that was that was not re that was kind of a long time ago by today's standards oh yeah yeah definitely so i know he like so around 2010 they they kind of stopped that so it probably took like a couple years to figure out what he died of because i know you know if you remember when that went down the whole autopsy of heath ledger and uh the old one of the olsen twins was involved because the the uh uh he was supposed to get a massage that day and the massage just or the masseuse or whatever they called it massager yeah she called uh mary kate olsen instead of calling the police or a doctor first and apparently mary says i told her to [ __ ] call the police what are you calling me for but i think she was calling her because that's where he got a majority of the meds oh that's how those girls stay so skinny oh i would know you know uh my wife and i we've done a couple of uh movies uh do you know trauma have you ever heard trauma like toxic avenger lloyd kaufman i'm old honey no i haven't drive oh lloyd uncle lloyd he's old he's like 80. uh he's done a lot of stuff with a lot of uh of people including like uh oh god what's her name uh you know that that christmas stuff with uh um chevy chase and chevy chase's uh wife but her name was she did a trauma movie and um well samuel jackson also did one so they were all all discovered by uh lloyd or troma and like in 1980 he did toxic avenger the first toxic superhero from new jersey uh now they're working from new jersey that's hysterical oh you gotta watch it if you've never seen the first one is it is a classic okay i'm i've i'm gonna write that down toxic adventures i've never heard of this yeah lloyd is he's an interesting guy because at first when i saw this stuff i'm like oh this is absolutely disgusting but then as i'd watch the movie i would see there's a message in here like he has one called uh poultry geist now you're the chicken dead and all that's all that's the whole thing is about uh working at a chicken place like like like a chick-fil-a and but having like being uh working near a toxic sludge factory and having the chickens come to life and kill the attendees yeah and it's all about the consumerism of eating fast food so he sprinkles all that stuff oh okay yeah a little wisdom a little fable a little horror a little entertaining yeah exactly he's brilliant he and he is fascinating i didn't know if i'd like him when i first met him but he was so nice to me like because i would go there and like do the conventions he does conventions all over the united states oh yeah they do comic-con and then they do horror horror con and they do all conventions all over the place if you see troma lloyd kaufman he signs everyone's thing he'll sit there and he'll talk to everybody and i used to dress up here i'll show you okay okay you see that mask yo a fan sent me this a fan he made me that talks this is this is toxie amazing look at that thing he made me this for nothing and i'm like this like the horror community is so cool like give him a shout give him a shout so that he knows you're appreciative what's his name or doesn't know is that only known him i only know him by his name on like his not i don't know his real name oh okay um well he doesn't wanna a one-off he wouldn't want to do it again maybe so shh but uh they were just nice people like i never seen just such nice people that kind of welcome me into a community and you know even though it's horror themed horrors like happy drama it's all the same [ __ ] to me but they're just such good people and i would go in there and i'd be like hey lloyd i need to take a break like i'm type 1 diabetic and you know he'd be like no problem like he really gave me a lot of leeway and i i appreciate it i i love being part of the troma family you know that they're the coolest people but anyway you should really check out um some of their movies i will you know what i'm going to ask my granddaughter about it i'll bet you know she has a pet snake and a pet scorpion now and so she she was if she's 20 she'll be 12 [ __ ] she'll be 29. i'll bet she could tell me all about it i'll bet we'd have a topic of conversation if i check it out yo i met somebody one time who had a pet snake in 1999 i was with my friends in new york at the uh national marijuana fest where you walk from battery park to washington square park or washington square to battery park and like you march and everyone's smoking weed and stuff and it was it was really crazy and back then i didn't know anything about politics and i remember they were giving out placards and they were like you just like you you could smoke but can you just carry this placard and it was all placards of rudy giuliani's face but with like hitler's mustache whatever i'm just here for the pot i don't know anything about that but you know to giuliani's credit i remember new york before he was involved and it was dirty nick new york city it was dirty like the sex shops were up and down the block but i know he was really against the marijuana so people were like carry these placards to get him out of get him out of uh new york and [ __ ] but when we got to battery park there would be there was this mother-daughter group and they were smoking weed together and both the mother and the daughter had this humongous i guess what were you that big ass anaconda like snake lime green around their necks so she's the mom has it with the head here and so like and then the daughter has the other thing and they're passing the joint to each other and i i go up because i'm high i go up and i'm like are you sure that thing's not going to like get all crazy and start tapping or wanting and they're like no and take the mom takes the joint and just blows in the snake's face she's like he larry loves it i'm like larry larry larry she's like larry loves it look at that that was like you know he forgets to pull it back in yeah yeah he's just kinda like that but it was what an experience god how yeah my granddaughter's snake is a python okay a little one you know and she took she headed us her main picture you know her avatar on facebook and yeah and she just got her fiance a white scorpion as a pr she surprised him she said it was on sale of course it was on sale who wants a [ __ ] scorpion but anyway she bought this albino scorpion for her fiance day before yesterday she she put the uh mock the olson twins i think the olsen twins are adorable scully i think they're just cute little bugs yeah and they're they're hella successful you know they're smart or they've hired smart people you know hey they're set for life yeah but you know what when you're my age you can mock any [ __ ] person you want you know yeah well you know like i'm not trying to mock anybody i mean you know this is grampy's stream but uh i was just telling my experiences of a long long 20-plus years ago and you know i miss my friends dearly i loved and i respected them and they respected me and and i wish i wish some of these people would have made better choices my one friend i'm talking about that was uh that died that was working at the irish bar he was a marine so yeah and i thought man if anyone could make it it would be a marine so uh yeah you know but it's a very it's a very solitary journey and unless uh they want to make the decision themselves there is no amount of tough love of help of resources provided nothing will work until the person says okay i'm ready my daughter never said she was ready um and and it was we provided every every everything everything uh and uh like i said nothing works until somebody wants the person wants to make it work and uh you know it said i lost her 11 years ago and i'll tell you thank you uh you guys well every time i talk about it it gets a little easier um but uh okay meth my daughter injected meth okay oh little tiny diabetic needles those kinds of and uh she uh yeah she and her sisters and her dad and her boyfriend well her boyfriend was actually her drug dealer uh so you know there was no stopping that because she was in in love but anyway okay it went on for about 10 15 years because i know she was doing it before i realized that she was doing it and then she was very blatant about it because she'd lost all caring yeah when you do meth what meth does will cause major organ failure y'all and there is nothing more horrifying than listen to life support machines clicking off one at a time boy this has really gotten oh i know we were going to stop talking about being dead uh well we we ran out of [ __ ] to talk about grampy oh wow they lose their soul what was this maybe five minutes before what i typed i don't know what uh oh you know we were just talking but robin was just filling me in but uh okay we can move on but yeah rob i'm definitely sorry about that and last thing i'll say about the whole thing when you're kids you do stupid things you know what i did 25 years ago you know i was a kid i was stupid you're naive to life you don't know how fast you think you you really feel like you're invincible for granted you were like 21. did you feel like you were invincible oh you think you're gonna live forever yeah yeah i uh when you're young yeah like i used to tell people i'm going i got a strong back you know don't worry about bending pro lifting properly load on me yeah yeah oh [ __ ] yeah or uh you know drinking you know i was talking earlier today with somebody i go you know when i used to drink uh when i was young a lot um i would i was able to uh get hammered all night go in the barracks lay down for an hour or two feel like crap for a couple hours get through pt and by the time nine o'clock rolled around it's like you know by the time noon came around i was like i can't wait to do that again you know uh physical training in the army um but it's it's like there's that one time that first time that you do the exact same thing you get really [ __ ] up you go oh god let me go lay down for a couple hours i'll be fine there's that first time that you can never repeat that it just goes that you go ah can't do that anymore you know what i mean um yeah yeah so never forget how are you doing hey what's up hey first of all i want to i want to ask you um silly kitty are you kind of an [ __ ] okay kidding sure and there's that man who stays so skinny after claiming they were health on drugs and no you don't get to mock people because of your age that's how you don't live much longer what the [ __ ] is this a friend of yours grandpa i don't know what that's about i i have no clue um i you know can make fun of whatever i want you know i mean it's uh boomer yes i do get cute i did yeah i mean to me robin was just talking about her personal experiences and i wasn't talking about mom we weren't making fun of anybody no no i didn't want to ask you about fond though speaking of making fun of people yeah let's let's get to vaughn so never forget how are you doing i mean oh yeah it's right hey hello i'm doing my best to never forget well you know i i'm glad you're here because uh i i've heard a rumor i've heard a rumor uh i've heard i've i've heard that you're not really black well i don't know what to tell you i don't know how to answer that i i don't i'm a colorblind i don't see color well i'm just saying i mean i know who you are we've seen your picture you know you're uh trying to sneak back in your pictures why is there hair the explosion i'm almost half offended by that you know americans they can't see that [ __ ] man you can't see what i don't know where you were i was right there when that [ __ ] happened i saw that [ __ ] go down i would i was i was actually in a clock uh i was in the military when that happened so uh oh vayne uh-oh uh-oh all the people are going to jail all of you trolls are going to jail i'm going to take care of the local yogas then i'm taking grampy lobsters opa benefits and then you're all going to do them well hey amazingly enough i'm not really going to the va anymore so uh that's because of me that's because of me that's because i took away your va benefits i just got a letter from him today you know but uh you know but thanks for coming in you know and uh hopefully you get to make it to uh kentucky tomorrow with 41 in your bank account to watch your mother uh be buried no no no they're going to try to bury my mother here listen they're having fun they're having i'm going to shoot that funeral in lake alice on lake house wait no like hold on a minute hold on a minute hold on a minute hold on scully kitty i know we all have shitty backstories none of ours are worth mocking another's who nobody did that mocking you're worried about my christmas you're you're like who got mocked i i don't know i just shared oh i should i made fun of uh one of the olsen twins being skinny oh well they deserve to be mocked anyway and you know what she gave [ __ ] heath leather uh ledger drugs man she should be in jail for yeah think uh [ __ ] you so uh vayne um uh gatsby rotten wants to know if he's being extra guided to kentucky eventually yes after i deal with the local focus all of your trolls will be thrown in jail why is vaughn charged grampy he should be i ain't saying a goddamn thing [Laughter] no i'm just i don't know bro i just know his mom went you know he she passed on the floor he didn't do [ __ ] to help her and then like next thing you know she's dead i've mocked the olsen twins on multiple people he administered pbr yeah absolutely absolutely you saw her mom um hey um wait wait wait wait a second wait a second wait a second i i'd like to stop this this this stream right now just for a second i'd like to i'm gonna go on i'm gonna i'm gonna for everybody out there we here at lobster studios i'd like to formally apologize if any comments were made about the olsen twins that may have offended someone uh in the chat our goal is not to offend as well sometimes but our goal is to spread the love you know and uh those olsons did make good coffee though that's uh and and and i'm sure robin right now in her heart is so sorry that she mocked uh jesus christ picking the olsen twin has something to die on anyway um but uh yeah it's uh we we definitely we are sincerely sincerely uh and we hope we we're striving folks we're taking courses as we speak strides i tell you sensitivity sensitivity that uh we will we're going to take olson sensitivity training uh we're already scheduling up carl's in the back he's already he's already opened the rolodex and we found a good uh i have some breaking news what's that go breaking news mary kate or ashley one is signed on to play skeletor in the live-action he-man movie in their bid to become more sex-positive and have a female villain they wanted an actress that could really portray a skeletal presence and she probably achieves that presence through ice cream and drugs i like that uh gigi allen's we're in an apologetic mood tonight he wants to apologize he doesn't want to offend anyone that he's an idiot you know and and like i've told people before you know i have never claimed to be the brightest bulb on the tree the sharpest knife in the drawer far be it folks i'm more like a dull butter knife okay uh when it comes to smart sometimes kiss my duck wants to be [ __ ] over there kiss my duck just my duck i kind of like that kiss my turn look look kiss my duck this isn't um tinder okay oh you took a wrong turn back there uh it's in the snowstorm yeah i have more breaking news what's that the other olson has just signed a contract with the uh national lampoons to to star in a couple of cameos as the uh laboratory skeleton in a biology lab uh david epic wants to apologize if if he's offended anyway he goes i want to apologize to your parents that your child turned out to be such a brittle [ __ ] if i've offended you you're welcome there we go in keeping with the spirit keep in mind you guys speaking has doxxed what you know something most i've never boxed anyone in my life scully kitty i don't know what you're talking about i don't i don't i i have you've been in a street you've been in a stream of mine before okay really i don't know if skully kitty is or is you're not real not your real name i've never i don't know your name i don't know your address uh pretty sure i can't speak for anybody else i think she's talking about i don't i think oh the trolls haters and naysayers anyone anyone ever in my life ever i i know okay i think this might be uh somebody that we do know by another name i'm uh bye reminds uh i think their name rhymes with celeste pretty i think i could be wrong i could be wrong but i think that's who that is oh is that is that celeste too yeah i don't know this to be fact oh no i just assumed huh but i've never talked to anyone that's completely made up she has just if that is her she has completely just made that up i've never doxed anyone ever huh why is every time i come on here things go this way well because you mean trouble you know that's right i guess it just means the other guy has so the other guy must be draven i apologize for my outrage either draven or um there's only three guys not you and and the and the other other guy we're just trying to figure out who the other other me or the draven guy scully kitty you've been in my stream so i i don't think you're talking about me you have been in my in my streams i know that for a fact this person always looking for trouble in other streams they're just here no never before i've never had i'm sure triggered geez this show does not represent like look i'm in the trolls haters and naysayers i'm in the discord i sell them today was the first time i think probably in months that i've actually gone in into the discord there for a minute um same with uh other discords i seldom go into my own discord or the fun brigade it's it's adam and eve um but um we all know granby lobster is not smart enough to do that [ __ ] yeah hey you know grampy didn't do it it had to be somebody else this is getting weird yes i know david epic trouble is fun it is i mean unless you're real unless your screen name is your real name and that doesn't count as doxing right like like if you come out here with your name as jimmy billy and you say oh he doc [ __ ] you that's not toxic well i i don't know if you were around because i don't know exactly who the [ __ ] you really i mean i know how long you've been around but um when google plus when i first got on google plus uh i didn't understand a lot of it i put my real name out there and then um like uh charlie and yeah paulie for the longest time refused to call me anything but patrick right right right yeah but i didn't understand for the longest time and then you know they're like well look at the youtube side yeah yeah i mean i'm gonna call you on your screen name you know like yeah but but yeah so and i'm sitting there going how does everybody know my name because it was me and oftentimes it is the person that um does their own doxing even if they've ever i've never docked anyone in in ever yeah ever ever and that's nice yeah i mean even with michelle best i've had people give me her address and stuff like that i'm not giving it out if there's other people that have it they you know but because i i'm the type of person that if if i do it once and somebody's gonna expect me to do it twice and the next time i you know i just you know it's um i don't have to be the middle man you know even with some [ __ ] bag like that you know but uh i don't i don't you know i can have other other experiences where where roads lead to yeah you know yeah and then people want to come to your house and you know shoot you and or swat you uh yeah you know swatting is scary well i've got to stop through my front door what you guys aren't realizing is uh the doomsday clock today is the 28th i'm supposed to be hit but i'm supposed to be shot by i guess friday folks so are you serious oh michelle said that michelle best said last year she says before january 31st of next year which is this following year yeah yeah that she was going to at least shoot and wound me wow she's mm-hmm drive that semi right up to your door um well she said she'll take her vacation time you know what i'm thinking that [ __ ] she talks about the greedy gold diggers you know how much money is everything should be free but she's got these [ __ ] pictures of stupid clouds and [ __ ] off the side of a freeway that she claims that she'll get five million dollars a piece for or she's selling it for 14 million dollars a piece and uh look at the faces in the clouds yeah oh god i can look at the same one and see a bunny rabbit you know what i'm saying i mean you know it's just like those [ __ ] remember those books those magic books you had to put your eye next to and [ __ ] coming out i can't see anybody but you grampy are you still uh doing a solo show yeah i just i forgot i'm i'm a little there um there everybody is so am i yeah but um well we can move on grampy uh you were staying about vaughn yeah uh 40 41 dollars and i mean he doesn't is there a way to donate a nickel to his paypal just one nickel i'm sure yeah you could donate any increment everybody donate a nickel like where is just under a dollar yeah it would be like two dollars for it i thought it was 500 bucks my bad you're paying more in interest than you are in the money right it cost them money to get it yeah oh that's great i don't know i i think glitter bombs are more apropos especially when uh and fart spray glitter bombs i want you know what i if they evict stinky which i hope they do what whether they're doing you're missing the most important thing alice has requested a viking funeral in lake alice and when her spirit ascends to valhalla she's going to come back for vengeance and i think you're number one on the list there mr lobster no um you're high you may not be number one but you you're number six you know something yeah luckily for me he doesn't know who i am so i thought you said yeah but when but when when when when well i am but um when when alice dies she will know all so she will actually know who you are so i haven't hadn't thought about that i forgot about that little pickup in my giddy up there yeah so i just think uh um maybe we're all [ __ ] you know i mean it uh you know what i you know what we are what what i what i'm gonna really enjoy watching is when alice ascends to valhalla and comes and for her vengeance she heads straight to stinky she was she was his vengeance in real life like you think about every time you ever heard her voice she was screaming about gnats this is why you got your kids took y'all so nasty in here like that no mother she was never nice you know she was right though [ __ ] manchester oh yeah i mean i'm of course i'm just making the point that she was his arch nemesis in life yeah well she did hate her god he said i've he's not even he's pissed off that there was an obituary made he's pissed off that there's been arrangements that people actually took arrangements because alice died which is something that needs to take place when it happens you know it's something that it's it's thrown on people uh and um it a lot of these things they're taken care of within a few days you know um i've been doing computers yeah well i mean i've been to a few funerals in the last couple of years and uh within a few days time allotted you know it it can be done and stuff it can be pri whatever the [ __ ] but you do something you know you'll sit in your [ __ ] kitchen with a card table cutting up air falling yeah cutting up and going well i haven't given any uh i haven't given any go-aheads for anything you know if they're doing anything you know they're going to jail it's like they're doing something he talks about the frost yeah he says he says he's the medical power of attorney right he probably couldn't tell you what kind of medication his mother was on he would just throw him to her probably okay he never talked to um when you have medical power of attorney you have conversations with doctors always you know the medication doctors and stuff you know what's going on you've got that [ __ ] like little book you know why did you give bond that the medical power i know she i don't have the legal the regular for like the house he was a trailer um yeah she fights back and then way back i mean i bet if she knew then given medical power and he leaves her on the [ __ ] floor thinking that she's having a little nap three times three times hey great i just i just want to say last time when i talked to you and you were like you really hated vaughn i do i am sorry bro i didn't know i have wat since watch some videos i did a video about vaughn uh with villa vendetta and uh wow the [ __ ] i've learned about this [ __ ] guy is wow he's at work yeah it is a piece of work he's he's taken credit for some people's passing on the internet dude he's bragged about it yeah yeah he bragged about it he's bragged he's bragged that his gods are the reason that you know you know i'm i'm you know so many stories so many wild ass stories he is just absolutely his first wife didn't have a miscarriage trolls sacrificed his first child he said [ __ ] like that and i'm like trolls yeah the state of his house the the crap in the beds it looks like when you're at the beach you know when you're like at the beach and you like rent a hotel room you might have some sand come in from the the beach that's what his house looked like like there was dirt or sand all over the side did you see that yeah i'm looking firmly i'm belief i'm of the firm belief that when um he saw his mother lying on the floor he didn't give a [ __ ] wow and he left him he may have he may have checked out because he goes oh she was groggy yeah because she's having a [ __ ] stroke you [ __ ] he goes oh wait and come back until like she's like literally not moving anymore because some 92 year old lady that probably has a very comfortable bed would much rather just throw her blankets on the floor like his five-year-old yeah he said well there were pillows around her i figured she was taking a nap down there pillows around and nick everyone don't get me wrong i'm not laughing because i'm making fun of the situation like this is how i deal with grief i laugh when it's sad yeah i wish that camera i wish you know of course you want you wanted alice to have privacy okay uh and you don't want to put it so you don't want yeah so you don't want to have a camera necessarily in the bedroom for you know reasons you know um he said i can see her kitchen in case she sets something on fire because she looks and i can see her living room and that shows me the hallway so if she falls down coming out of the bathroom or trying to go to bed he'll see her other than that he can't see anything he's made that and he he got the cameras judges or judges and attorneys told him to do this right it wasn't his idea it was you know it was whoever what whatever authority figure was involved so it's all irrelevant bond just so crazy [ __ ] you know yeah yeah yeah and then he he did leave her a third time and then by i think he finally called somebody after you know well i think he just wanted to make sure she would die there it doesn't look i know i know people don't people are not very forgiving and giving vaughn the benefit of the doubt because vaughn's an idiot he did absolutely say that he let her stay on the floor absolutely he said that yes yeah but at the same time i'm not sure how much i believe you know just because von's a liar you know i mean yeah i can't pick and choose when i want to when i want to say he's telling the truth right but if every if what people are saying is true and people are looking into it then they'll get to the bottom of it and if he uh if he broke the law they'll get him i mean if he's not in prison it's because well i mean look people break the law every day and get away with it everyone knows that's how our justice system works but at the same time people are looking so everything that can be done and again you're you're talking about knowing someone's heart right well i know he did he wanted her to well you can't know someone's intentions right like you can't know you can you can make a judgment based on what you see right but all i'm all i'm saying is that if he doesn't get you know he'll sell for 30 years that is you know what i mean like i don't think he's going to go to jail i really don't but you know we'll see well at least he'll be homeless yeah i think that would be all to um look forward to is maybe maybe he'll be homeless although i think maybe uh his mom's family might have soft heart so they might i don't know if they would provide him kind of a break they may yeah i'm gonna break let them live in the trailer move the you know of course they should sell the property and you move his trailer to a park somewhere pay six months of his rent um hey this uh didn't cut him well i think uh if he wasn't do any jail time there has to be someone to press charges whether that's the state of kentucky or the frost because you know ain't going to do it already looking into it oh yeah he's he's been on the the watch list for both cps and probably uh the elder abuse uh uh yeah they're a long time to gather intel uh on uh something that they're trying to build a case for anything neglect and his videos have been sent yeah provided to agencies uh as evidence yeah and there's plenty of on there yeah i think anything he could he would just have you know uh elder neglect as uh a charge right if anything elder abuse yeah i mean the state that that trailer was said but i know his mom had her own little or bigger i know they're thinking like yeah they're person possibly pursuing charges about uh when he when he was in moss house he had on shoes and as you know if you've seen his toenails that's concealment of a deadly weapon [Laughter] they are looking into that too oh that's funny boy he did show his foot one time and he had these sores on his ankle oh oh yeah we had a little athletic that's like that's syphilis isn't it well i don't think she was dead on the floor she died in the hospital yeah she did she did but i'm sure he gave her plenty of chances yeah sure well that that definitely raises a question i have a question if the frosts were watching these the cameras right then the cameras were set up for a while why didn't they call the police when they saw her on the floor on the floor out of here and they were in there right and see and that's that's where i understand like i said before that out nobody wants to see alice undressing and stuff like that and there's ways you can cover or stand you know there's ways you can get around that but the woman was 92 years old probably should have been in an assisted living place okay or that's you know yeah my grandmother had a nurse you know right exactly so the fact that there was a camera in the room like because maybe not tonight but there's a good chance something happens or and yeah and if she [ __ ] falls or something like that and doesn't have one of those life alerts or something like that i don't know if she had one but if she doesn't if if if nobody has any way of knowing if she fell you know sometimes look um i've been around people in hospice and and in nursing homes and and a lot of times it sucks your your privacy can be taken away a little bit because of certain situations right nobody's watching you like do a show and whatever nobody wanted to watch alice take her clothes off nobody was probably watching would have wanted to watch that nobody probably would have watched it yeah you know it was just for her safety because of her age i get what you're saying grampy it's like yeah you want to give people their their constitutional rights but then at the same time she was you're right she's 92 man yeah the whole palette story is suspect yeah like buy pillows all around it was probably a blanket she probably grabbed a blanket a pillow you know like falling off yeah just maybe he just threw a blanket over her and then you know krypto so all that was caught on camera was vaughn coming in going into her room looking like he was checking on her and then him leaving there was no way to know she was on the floor by those cameras position yeah because oh did we oh hi blue hey blue hello to all thank you robin excuse me um good to see you i don't think kelton's gonna be arrested he's just not you would have been all right uh no no that's not necessarily true trust me there i've there's some stuff coming there yeah i i honestly i i i can't say uh i but um no this is not going away for stinky uh yeah probably i hope you're right i really hope you're right too far and if anybody back there because i'm uh i'm a mandatory mandated reporter for uh elder abuse here in california yeah i docked my docs myself i do it all the time anyway but uh so but i i have no you know words uh that would be respect in his state where is is he tennessee kentucky where is he uh he's in kentucky kentucky right kentucky i i can't daniel boone national forest i can't do it outside of my you know where i signed on for it but man if i knew anybody and i said before that i was gonna maybe get a hold of somebody but but i never did because i'm a lazy ass um um i've heard of a similar case blue before um on the uh youtube channel that chapter they hadn't talked about someone who yeah exactly um she died in a similar way and out of the respect for the family they took their time before they arrested him just like maybe the other out of respect for the frost like maybe the frost said hey just gather all your ducks in one row before you get them because i'm sure they feel sorry yeah yeah get anywhere exactly so it could be it could be several months ago yeah that was definite neglect and uh inflicted uh you know what anyway he talked awful to her you know he hated her um his mother never gave any anything never gave him anything but a hard time you know i know i i heard that somebody's blurbed today what what he was saying about his mom maybe it was secular opinion i can't remember um but he there were clips of all the bad things he'd said about his mom over the years of his career on youtube career what am i saying uh but he said awful awful things about her so you know it just kind of follows that he would be neglectful right what i always thought was just hey he believes that his mother should have let him and his children or him move into the double wide and her living that i heard about that when it when it's like her trailers her properties she or you know yeah uh what's up paulie glad to see you silverman blue beer i like that hi polly hi paulie that's a great beer is that splatter or is that uh grandpa i have a question about the uh smaller trailer i don't know i i think paulie got stuck in a cotton candy machine well i'm really disappointed right so you know the routine bro i've been silver for a long time and i thought [ __ ] i went bald i never got the kenny rogers look i'm going to try to make my beard green and i bought something called shamrock green brightest green you can get and i found out that well there's a problem my hair doesn't hold any red pigment so when you take red out of green you get blue this has had green in it for an hour and a half today and it still won't turn green thoughts and prayers man thoughts and prayers seriously i think yeah you were going for the billy eyelash look so i get it you know she's got that brilliant it was more like i sell cricket phones and things okay taking one for the team that's polly draven what were you so the mom has the double y a double y trailer i saw pictures i mean even for a trailer it does look pretty yeah it's not a movable it's an immovable one right yeah like metal switches on a big flatbed it's still movable you take the side shirts off you drop the axles under and you go like out okay and uh and vaughn lived in this in a smaller a single so i heard when his father was alive they had a similar setup where the mom lived in one trailer the father lived in another they were never married so they could both get some sort of benefits or something they they had gotten divorced oh they got divorced but they both because from what i understand and paulie correct me if i'm wrong they got divorced for insurance purposes like health health insurance reasons i know it wasn't good i didn't want to leave her he didn't leave her with with nothing right right so when he got to where he knew he was going to be terminally ill for financial reasons they got a divorce he got his own place to live in she actually bought it she's the only one with money in the family for him to live there that way the government can't say oh you're just cheating he really didn't [ __ ] live there yeah okay that's okay but he lived on the property right no no no his property was down the road it wasn't even a joining oh okay okay and then so what happened to that trailer just because the father is deceased right it wasn't a trailer it was a house and that property's been sold oh okay i'll be damned but his father died like what a few years ago um here's some more of it i forgot about this he withheld medication that's right he did yeah because he didn't believe in it right well he says she doesn't need that just yeah they do it yes it makes her forget things so she won't be able to testify yeah you're just supposed to help her not forget things yeah right there refusing medications um that's bad for withholding medications medical and there doesn't even need to be physical evidence because he has it all on the internet and the internet is for [ __ ] ever so there's always they they're getting it is it's not hard to be um charged with uh elderly neglect uh it's really not very little has to happen to be charged with uh elder uh elder abuse yeah and they also have involuntary and voluntary uh because i'll tell you well okay and i'm only saying this is because when my mother and i oh god there goes grandpa you know but when my mother was uh at home uh before we had to put her in hospice okay we had two nurses that came they were overqualified and i was lucky to get them but my father would try to like change my mother or put her in another gap or something like that fix your laundry and he was rough not intentionally okay he was a man yeah yeah well no he didn't have i got a soft touch and everything and he was leaving bruises on it wow intentionally and my mother was also saying don't let your father touch me it hurts not that he you know so the nurse that we had uh she called me outside one day and i've i was informed that uh as a mandatory um reporter reporter that she had no choice to report my father if oh wow if we couldn't get her into hospice care hospice care which i did it was on a friday and i i did more on a friday than most people could do in two weeks because nobody told me i couldn't so by the time bundy came around they're going how the [ __ ] did you get your mother in here and she was over here yeah she's already in he goes if she's in they're not going to take her out but the people were very willing and they were great people and stuff but um but uh yeah and it wouldn't have been so we were trying to save my father some space because he he didn't he wasn't doing it on purpose i mean he was a real prick during the whole time but he wasn't like hitting her like that but when he would grab her and and he just didn't know how yeah and he was like deleting through and it was making my mom upset and everything and my mother was like don't let him touch me and uh so that that so but he was going to get charged with involuntary spouses oh okay that's like like a misdemeanory kind of a thing i i don't know but all i know is is because she explained to me the laws of oregon or or something that was out there i mean we sat out there for like 30 minutes it wasn't just a you know five-minute conversation but um we were informed that yeah this really needs to happen or uh it could be very embarrassing for my father oh and a drawn out process yeah and a drawn out process so we got her like into hospice um fast people ask me how i did it and i go i don't know they told me to find some place i found a place they said send an ambulance over come get we'll come get her they did and then monday all these people are going how the [ __ ] did you get your mother in there and the guy the guy it was a private home that did hospice they were they were really good it was a family and uh the guy told me he goes don't worry he goes she's here they're not gonna take her out but and i think he knew what was gonna happen on monday because he called me really early but um i would like to just just a little bit more evidence here okay um okay and here's why this particular case is so interesting right uh i don't think he's gonna be held responsible and the reason being he has already been found to be psychologically kids if anybody is culpable here it's the judge for assigning him medical power of attorney that's true smart what about involuntarily does this mean he skates again that means he uh is not responsible for even involuntary he will not be held responsible because he's mentally ill and deficient and uh hmm there might be some forced uh medical i don't even know about that in this will happen i'm just saying it's but i think you're right on that from a realistic standpoint right everybody's like [ __ ] yeah he's finally going to get his cup come up in this but the guy's a [ __ ] [ __ ] i mean at the end of the day he's lucky to be in iq 70. but there's also uh the thing about being criminally insane uh they have uh mental wards in the prison system i don't know if anybody knows about lord stephen christ uh rest his soul no don't uh but he was in the mental part of the prison you know because he threatened the president is that guy really dead lord stephen he's really dead he d-e-d yeah dead he died uh was heart failure or uh i can't remember his ex girlfriend veronica is uh one of my acquaintances on the internet and she she knows about it she told me but i'm not sure uh but it's yeah something related to somebody that would be much older he was only in his 50s and he died from some old people it either was his lungs or his heart well you know they're roommates in there so when one goes the other one goes but yeah something up there in his chest that took him out when you say only in 50s it sounds so sweet thank you honey anybody under the age of 60 as a kid to me um yeah my youngest my youngest daughter is going to be 50. so you know you guys use y'all young folks it was about four or five years ago and von did not have custody of the kids but he was saying he was going to get uh custody back and everybody all the trolls and hate sayers swore up and down no way there's no way he gets these kids back absolutely no way and of course he did get the kids back and i came into a hangout and i was really angry and um i'm i'm not trying to cause rob but uh father jay was there and i was really angry at him because he had been the one that one who had been the most steadfast in saying he'll never get the kids back but as soon as i heard his voice as soon as i heard how upset and how sad fj was that he got those kids back you know my anger disappeared and i understand and he was as hard as anyone else so that's i mean i only bring that up to do like paulie says that von could skate out of this easily simply because he's mentally incompetent but i do think that he could be charged as a criminal and will be sent to you know the mental facility in a way you don't think so absolutely not you don't think you don't you know that well no he didn't you know he didn't you know run her through with a bayonet or anything uh anything active like that but the neglect [Music] of human resources and and you know uh children protective services and and department of children health and well-being and my wife runs a nursing home and i'm telling you the chances of him getting actually charged and convicted of anything is like buy a [ __ ] lottery ticket a better chance that's too damn bad well then we move on to do you have do the frosts have the power to evict him yeah that's an interesting question right i mean like we none of us know for sure what the paperwork is the last time i talked to jim was this was when the kids got taken it's the pictures right that's all the pictures that that era was the last time i talked to jim and at that point my understanding was that he was the executor of the estate at that point um so i i don't know if there's any clause or anything i mean there might be something there's there's things that not squatters rights but very similar laws to that you know family living on family property kind of deal and there's an expectation imminent donation you go through a divorce and somebody gets ordered to pay alimony because the person that you lived with felt a particular way about the income that they had and typically that lasts for the same period of time that someone was a freeloader if you will so he's been living there rent free for 27 years so there's there's some possibility that he made the rest of his days there just because the smaller one now whatever they sell the property exactly great if they could uh make a sale on that property and leave it up to the new owners what to do with them yes and no because the the squatter has rights i know this sounds ridiculous but it doesn't i know what you mean yeah yeah if you stay for a place more than 30 days uh they have to they have formidable evictions let me before you go any further let me i'll tell you a quick story on on when i lived in oregon when me and mrs lobster went camping um we uh went to these areas and there was a law out there that you can't stay at a campground for what was it five days in a row two weeks in a row because people will start building things [Laughter] you know yeah and then yeah and the center block the yeah yeah and we that actually happened to us um we went camping we had all this we were gonna have a nice time nice quiet you know and there was this crazy person next to us uh i think everything she owned was there and then oh god she had this dog that just pissed on the outside of my [ __ ] tent on my shoes she got mad at me when i got mad and then at night we're in we're in our tent right and we heard this yelling and screaming her boyfriend showed up in her truck you know and there was it was [ __ ] crazy as [ __ ] we got our stuff up the next morning what the [ __ ] you know but uh yeah because because you know the campgrounds will say no more than a week or two because people will start uh taking up residence you know yeah yeah yeah squatters rights differ state to state you're correct scully uh so yeah oh what were you showing paulie and by the way we lost blue blue it says lou does that shamrock shamrock freaking green this is not this isn't this is so disappointing god we'll go get some spray paint okay uh paulie as an old cosmetologist from another life ago you need to put a stripper on that beard do you know what a stripper is no you guys get out of the gutter uh it's uh no i do my no robin you were the only one going in the gutter with that you were actually paying attention well you're my ex-wife was a beauty school dropout i do oh yeah well hell you know so do that to your beard and open the uh what what do they call that open the pores uh so that it absorbs color you know beards that's like trying to dye pubic hair yeah yeah my beard stays colored for about a week ten minutes yeah and then the great then this starts coming yeah but you're you're you don't try for an exotic color see you have to oh oh what do they call it open the shingles of your hair what did they call that god i used to know yeah i know you're doing well i wouldn't call it shingles you know you raise the cuticle layer you raise the cuticle layer by putting a stripper on it and that lets uh your beard take the color there he goes talking about strippers again ask the wife ask the wife about it and you know go to the beauty supply i think you can get it for like a buck 99 yeah i know all this stuff is cheap you know it's just it's just the point some things food isn't so cheap anymore nope in kentucky it takes 15 years of continuous occupation for a squatter to make oh oh no kidding okay so that's on their side well it's on stinky's side he's been in that trailer i mean there's there's some states that you can actually claim the property you can own it oh he's been there for longer than 15 years [ __ ] he's been there for like 20 26 hours and he says his mom hated him and i wonder i'm i'm wondering if he takes his electric from her meter from he doesn't have an electric bill no they're separate meters larry told the only thing he has really they do really oh oh too bad to too bad because if somebody bought the property you know they wouldn't have to allow him access but if he has his own meter then that's a whole separate thing dang boy i i'm gonna be really sticking to this story this is gonna really get interesting uh it's been interesting for over a decade yeah well yeah i never caught up with it until just maybe a couple of years ago and only because you know my friends had clips and made fun of them and you know i always love to make fun of people but anyway so that's that was my only information but now [ __ ] i might subscribe to the [ __ ] just i'm blocked no don't do that don't do that don't subscribe just let somebody else post the link okay so i'll just still keep up with all you all yeah i don't subscribe to shanny either but you know xxx archives is my go-to little champion girl uh reporting on shannon that's in the pizza man he's uh doing the large work as well don't forget you know i mean i just i just looked up the uh the uh foreclosure in kentucky and yeah if the frosts get ownership of the home then uh they would have to ask vaughn for payment even if they want him to stay they have to ask him for a payment and he has 36 days to pay them after 36 days or 45 days then they give him a letter after that nothing to do with this it has nothing to do with foreclosure it has closure an occupant of the property yeah yeah well if uh if the frost owned it wouldn't they say to von you have to start paying us now for not necessarily i don't think it doesn't work david hey david how's it going first of all this is in the state okay oh it's in a state that that's a whole set of rules oh the whole thing so both trailers are a package deal type of thing it's all on the same property owns rental properties trailers in her backyard in essence uh yeah in her front yard it's even worse it isn't really it's so you can see it from the street yeah his his trailer is closer to the road than hers is oh [ __ ] that that doesn't uh allow for this really they just put it there one day like here vaughn here's a trailer to live in basically wow i didn't know you could do that so you can literally if you have the property you could be like i just i want a trailer single it depends on what the zoning laws are and the property because uh when i first put a travel trailer in my uh on my parents property uh after about two years i realized that technically what i did was create my own private trailer park uh which was against sony code so they had to move my trailer like subject feedback yeah and like it was oh god twelve thousand dollars later um you know it all got moved and stuff but um uh because plumbing everything's got to be redirected and because it was set up like you know but um uh i can't wait for this uh viking funeral to happen though on lake dallas i really i really hope it's televised um yeah didn't alice look after the kids well yes she did well that's why that's why the kids were there as long as they were you know if it hadn't been for her they wouldn't have been returned 13 times right thirteen i can't believe that what now she is now that she deceased who owns the property well that's what we're her family figure out yeah and even if it is the frost uh you know there's it's inheritance laws property yeah you're right the estate owns the prop yeah nobody in particular the name is on ownership it's it's part of the estate and whoever is in charge of that i hope it's a good attorney executor uh will um number one go by the letter of the law and that not even not the spirit of the law but the letter of the law and also uh whatever wishes she may have set forth prior to her death but if there was were no wishes set forth prior to her death the attorney will go according to the law uh and that's how it'll go boy i'm going to be glued to this y'all yeah i didn't know there was this whole estate of vaughan but that does make sense if the mom owned all those nursing homes and everything um and yeah if uh if you if there's an estate and someone passes away in the state goes on until what until the last person's left right type of thing yeah and if there was not an official arrangement put forth you know notarized and signed and all that [ __ ] if it is a state issue a state not a state but a state a kentucky they're gonna take a whole bunch of the proceeds from any sale oh yeah they will claim you know so whoever winds up owning that will not have much left you know yeah that kentucky takes a big inheritance what they call it or estate tax inheritance uh i'm just reading about it right now the ones yeah probate court sucks that nobody is bringing up right now is that seven million dollars what what's seven million dollars yo she has that million dollar trailer the seven million dollars that was in the closet that james arnold frost and larry frost oh you're [ __ ] with god that's why they're living that's why they're living you know the luxury life now and everything and i mean you saw when when secular had his stream and he was talking to larry and marcia and you can tell man they're they're big time i mean you know they're they're just living you know i mean they're they're living the hot you know and that other guy who bought the uh tractor how in the [ __ ] did that guy come up with the money to buy a tractor i don't know maybe he had a credit card maybe he had you know uh credit maybe he yeah whatever the [ __ ] you know maybe he saved his money but according to vaughn that was money that you know people you know i want to know how vaughn got that expensive gamer chair i wanted to know how he got his other toys you know jerry's money yeah stealing 70 000 people used to give stinky money on the uh they did yeah there were times even even um okay there's paulie's okay there's the property okay so wow this is this is james's trailer okay this is ma helton's trailer back here this is lake atlas this is the big wood shed this is the small witch which one is the gravy dome yeah it's that's uh that's this one over here okay so she just had a long single wide with the pop-outs this double wallet no it's a porch there's a portion of that it's really long that's so nice it's it's a long single wide that's a damn good-sized holy [ __ ] but what a pretty all that property do they own all that property yeah well there's i i've done a video on this i'll post the link for it i did it on both halves of the property and common values of them um because he was claiming that it's worth so much money really i'm ready i i seriously would consider buying it right now and look lake alice is in a heart shape look at that could you imagine being stinky's landlord paulie oh well what i considered was this what i considered was letting him stay there and putting up about a hundred [ __ ] cameras and renting ma's place as a bed and breakfast like an airbnb so you can come and throw beer cans on his porch and [ __ ] [Laughter] it could be a destination that's so evil wonderful no look no it's you're creating jobs it's good for the economy and where i'm looking at vaughn hounds no it's not his property there were two gaming chairs i can't afford one alice's properties oh he's happy where's the property is her property line it's right here behind that you see where the corn field is that's someone else yes property it kind of goes across here and it also cuts up into the woods so she's got a total of if i recall it's i don't know if it's 60 acres maybe maybe 40 acres i think it's 40 total 40 acres that is pretty damn substantial yeah it's okay sure so where where's the helton cemetery oh that's down the road further oh i thought it was like a cemetery it's just a plot you know a family plot yeah oh somebody was saying it was actually a big cemetery oh well i mean big me means different to everybody i guess it's relative yeah but wow look at so he lives in that larger looking place well it's wider no he lives in the here you go he lives in this single wide here oh that okay i thought that was hers no that's his closest the road like you see but it is but if okay so that skinny one and then she has the the wider one with the nice porsche right here yeah double y see but if if if alice would have died first his daddy would have definitely just lived moved into single wide and let him and the kids and andrea live in the double-wide really because that's how his daddy was you know but not every obama a couple years ago we were looking at this property right here and buying this church it was for sale about five years ago and we're gonna buy it right next door to him and set up like a again some sort of observation tower to be able to throw beer cans and a drone launch and stuff yeah wouldn't that be funny you know you can start a pumpkin chunkin uh uh every year contest from there to see how you know close you can hit stinky's house with a pull or a driving range yeah if you're a golfer yeah try to put out the windows so what is that what is driving practice field what practical commercial or what what what's what's around there yeah what what what can they use that property with i mean it doesn't look like it's there's no sure let me show you how close uh oneida is you are you guys familiar with that somewhat the oneida factory are you talking about the glassware no oh no no this is the the town of uh oneida kentucky but that's that's how close the nearest town is and that's where larry and them live i think boys and then there's a jerry frost jerry jerry's his kid vaughn's kids jerry's his kid gary jerry's the one with the broom with the bro what does that mean uh that's old uh yeah very smart and unclean and stuff yeah got a broom he's a witch he was getting social security and bob was taking it right yeah what his only source of income was my children's disabilities of course my only source of income gary's money is my money i can't believe he taught the 19 year old into moving in with him like i know she was mentally ill and that's what he was looking for 19 yeah mouse injuries 19. that's what i heard he definitely don't you know what and he was like 45 or something she you know what really what i was watching that's part of that stream when uh andrea was on with with vaughn the other day yeah yeah and when she apologized for being a bad wife and i was like oh my god you know after all the things that he has said about her that she's morbidly obese she's you know all infected and you know she's crazy and drools at the mouth and everything what yeah and then he gets he gets on the uh she gets on there and she's like i'm sorry i was a bad wife it's like god oh that poor poor child that poor child i wonder who was in charge of her when she left before she met vaughn i wonder who was in charge of her and where she lived alabama we have the logs yeah and the whole thing about uh stinky's blaming larry for making his mother alice kick andrea off the property now he's claiming that larry might have used black magic you know well first uh brainwasher you know oh wait wait wait wait back up back up hold oh hold on sorry robin oh larry convinced his mom alice to kick andrea off the property so yeah andrea just didn't get sick of vaughn no andrea punched alex i saw that he thought it was funny and yeah vaughn and andrea thought it was funny he says and it wasn't a big bruise yeah she had a black eye but it wasn't a big bruise she also told andrea that she was gonna go to [ __ ] hell cell and get locked up because beating up old ladies is bad and when she was in [ __ ] jail she was gonna get beat up by the prisoners she did you know her because i can't believe you know even if you're mentally ill you'll put your hands on an old woman because even then she was what in her 80s if she's 92 about 80 81 at the time how can you hit an 80 year old i know how indeed i know they're in your face this whole thing you just go make them a cup of tea and calm their ass down you don't like them and uh you know and alice was only trying to help she was just showing that that they're just they're disgusting like this is why you got your kids taken away she was doing the [ __ ] brain 13 times i ca and i think about this now who's who's watching vaughn now she was also saying it to a child brad child bride that had the iq of about 68 if she's lost i remember i still have a copy of the audio when you got when you were talking to him and uh you were talking about like people were making fun of he was saying because people call her [ __ ] and say she's stupid and everything and he kept going on and you went she has the mind of a child and he goes well that can be anything you know or so what you know basically like and just it's like no she's i mean not everybody has to be as equally uh smart i guess you know or you know iqs i mean whatever the [ __ ] you know the idea is that those of us know better don't take advantage of those that don't yeah oh definitely no kidding wow this is a well that just keeps getting deeper and deeper the more and more i swim in it because it's like at first when i thought i knew something it's like well no uh he told her to get her off the property because when he punched when she punched her in the face so larry told mom or uh is that's odds mom that's his what his aunt or his mom you know alice is alice's grandpa and and larry's grandpa are brothers i don't care if an 80 year old woman at the time is screaming in my face if you would have swung at her too then i'm really [ __ ] sorry you know i've had older people than that scream at me in my face it's called self-control have something yeah yeah exactly a little collab and you have to also figure like the inconvenience that alice went through alice didn't want her there that's her [ __ ] property she was the one that was feeding stinky and ellen she was the one for paying neglect yeah yeah probably andrea didn't do anything right she had to take care of her as well so yeah it was a little minor and this time the smaller trailer and alice was in the bigger one remind everybody of the time that andrea came on camera and thought she broke her [ __ ] wrist because she swung at lila and missed and hit the [ __ ] crib just look at the baby yeah yeah maybe are you [ __ ] kidding that was that was right about the time the twins were born yeah so yeah so alice was probably she knew what was going on behind the scenes she was probably real pissed off like no you're a piece of [ __ ] get some mental help and then come back here no she knows she no she she's very um stern no she let him she would yell at him but at the same time you know she also knew he was he was he was kind of like that dumb animal she probably knew that if he got to go on his own he'd probably get hit by a car you know what i mean um so i felt she she felt probably obligated in a lot of ways you know yeah and he brings up a good point in the chat that was a shitty situation all around and i don't really think any of those people were in the right state of mind to really be in the situation they were in oh yeah i agree what a [ __ ] show kitty we are thinking of and we are thinking of andrea's state of mind she has the mind of a child which does it just but i understand this went down i started a [ __ ] fundraiser for andrea so she would have a leg up when she got thrown the [ __ ] out i'm the one that made 600 [ __ ] bucks for her so wow i've always had these people in my heart so he swung at her she swung at her alice tells larry larry tells alice you need to get her out because i'm worried about your safety probably more like it if she's doing this she comes back to vaughn and her andrea has to go and then after that vaughn goes to the state and says she's incompetent i want full custody right think of all the way they were all thinking no because i'm not an idiot you know there's nobody very bright in that whole yeah like that there's nothing that happened a lot of this had a hundred times maybe i could get to where they were i think the part of this that fascinates me the most and i think it kind of grabs a lot of other people too is the fact that there is some weird [ __ ] that you don't see right it's like sure it hap but we're watching it it's like interactive television people are like remember the old days uh paul remember that tv show uh kind of it was in the 60s when they uh the original uh they followed a family around for like a year remember that show um i think the name the loud family i forgot what it was but the whole year was just when you were syndicated you mean like you're you're going to be syndicated yeah and they went through their whole life and it was like family yeah and it didn't turn out well it didn't one kid committed suicide i think yeah oh wow yeah it was uh yeah that was the first uh television venture into following somebody's life it was the first uh reality and it was awful yeah yeah it was called an american family in it uh january 11th to march 29th 1973. and it was a loud family yes and two members of the family killed themselves yeah yeah what i was thinking is the nielsen when you were a nurse and family oh wow two okay yeah some people definitely can't handle that and i i could definitely under understand andrea and everyone's aunt point of view on andrea but vaughn shouldn't have had a woman that young and mentally ill like the whole thing was von's fault definitely i put a lot of the blame on him because you know if someone was fighting with my mother you know i'm going to get in the way and i'm going to take the hit then i'm going to be like hey guys shut up go have like you said robin have some tea but uh i'm going to get going guys granby uh good seeing thank you for coming in good to meet you draven i love those headphones you got there david they're green i bet you that's i bet you that's the color that uh paulie was going for pretty much yeah it was heartbreaking the whole [ __ ] time terrible heartbreak i know that's the billy eilish green it's crooked green but yeah cricket dream oh okay well you gotta try to get some get some food dye food but because it just won't take color if it won't take [ __ ] hair dye it ain't gonna take color i'm just gonna have to color each hair with a sharpie hey dude be like cobs you know get a bunch of sharpies i think he uses vomit as hair color doesn't he god or worse yeah uh scully i had some pretty unfortunate parents myself oh geez yeah no i i did i mean i've i've always told people that in my opinion my parents were probably at least two qualified people to raise kids yeah they should have had to issue tests uh or to uh raise a child yeah my parents weren't good at it either yeah uh we were more of an inconvenience oh oh i you know what i was the kid that came eight years later after my mom had her tubes tied and caught her eyes i was this big surprise when my mom was done having kids after two she hated being a mom and then here i came that that wasn't you know just to piss her off yeah yeah it she was pissed the whole time she lifted well my my parents and this was my parents always told the story they go we wanted to have a boy and a girl right so the first two came out was my two older brothers they were gonna quit because well they were only gonna have two kids it was boy and a girl but they only got two boys so then like a year later they're like let's try again for a girl and then i came out okay and then my parents were a couple of years later my sister was born my sister i was told because my sister is very mechanical she knows how to build things she goes into a into a home depot and knows her way around one of my favorites yeah she power tools or her friend and stuff and she builds things and stuff very smart got a college education a whole bit master's degree and [ __ ] business yay her anyway yeah but i was always i always tell people because i'm not mechanically inclined i don't build things i'm the person that goes there's a reason people do that for a living because i'll [ __ ] it up you know and then i have to pay somebody to fix it you know but um the uh yeah where were you going with that grandpa oh yeah the whole thing about my parents you know like they they had me on act you know they tried for a girl but got me so then they figured we're going to try one more time and i got my sister and we have our girl now you know it's like well at least they wanted another baby and they got a baby i wasn't even i was the surprise and my mother told me that my entire life well we didn't plan on her oh yeah yeah she was a surprise yeah yes who took care of her her last four years of life hey not the sister that she pampered yep my biological parents were the first people in the state of illinois to be married in prison and the story gets better from there [Laughter] yeah oh i just remember like look what came from that i think you're great paulie and i don't even have to know you no i appreciate that baby i really do it's uh it's definitely tragedy becomes comedy because it's easier to laugh at things and it becomes something to build on let you know what you don't want to be and you know that you have the power of choice well yeah i listened to e40. everybody got choices everybody that's our only power you know that that's the only one we're born with is the power of choice really even if the choices are limited we still have choice that's true yeah so so what do you think do you think vaughn's going to actually so where the the the funeral is going to be tomorrow up in hamilton and then they're going to bring her back to uh the homestead to bury her huh i i don't i don't know where the burial is taking place man i mean you gotta think she still has family up in hamilton there may be a body dispute going on that we don't know about uh oh oh gosh there's that layer of it too holy [ __ ] i'm god i get you know you're more interested in this the more you'll learn you learn so much about people uh when there's a death in a family no [ __ ] the [ __ ] show up right away don't they oh yeah always um yeah there's there's i've been to been to a few funerals where i literally have not talked to certain people at the [ __ ] uh in my life sense and uh just because the way they i don't know their actions the way you know i hate fake sympathy you know uh and that plastered on smile yeah the blaster on smiles eyebrows yeah yeah i just you know but uh anyway wilson i thought wilson was going to come in yeah he was over there whining come on in we need some more estrogen we're getting a little testosterone heavy over in here six drops yeah well wilson was gonna pop in and we're not really sure about it okay so that's an extra overload of testosterone so six drops somebody finally write an obituary yeah i got uh cop uh gertrude perkins actually uh posted it on my facebook page i think gertrude is probably the coolest person on the internet i love gertrude yeah she uh yeah he's all right yeah he yeah he's a different kind of guy um but i like different kind of people you know um i didn't notice he was so different what are you saying grampy is are you a misogynist no he fancies himself now you're judging me man and that's really of course i am you know i always hate that when people go you know what the only person that can you can't judge me you can't judge me for what i think the only person that can judge me is god it's like [ __ ] off yeah because god's not a person that's a dumb thing to say oh okay i have to address scully you don't need to apologize you don't need to apologize uh celeste kitty okay so yeah i knew we knew you by another name i know she was just you know no and see that's the thing and i have all kinds of friends that are [ __ ] in certain ways you know you you're probably an [ __ ] but i like you she's been around a while she's our [ __ ] you know a resident [ __ ] and you know you're pretty bossy if you were i have a daughter that uh you know everybody knows i call her miss bossypants because she lost well i heard it yeah i heard scully actually does have some good cleavage though and that's always a plus um did that come across misogynist or um no okay i just you know and david i gotta tell you right now you're like you know if i was i don't know i was uh maybe a little drunk right now i'm not even oh geez hopping in with uh he's a hot looking guy ladies look at that he's got that beard that hair are you single that that happens oh yeah okay david is single take note ladies or whatever you you know hey dude what are you wearing i know are you wearing pants david uh it's shorts actually oh i'm wet how you doing wilson how's it going well we're doing okay how are you doing sir one time huh jesus wilson must be drunk again he can't figure out no you caught me right in the middle of me taking my sleeping pills no god don't do it are you gonna nod off here with us he got he got two fists of scotch in him you know and then he's gonna take some pills what kind of so did you bring enough to share what kind of sleeping pills you got i mean they're just cheap generic like powder they put me to sleep so what else would i call i i know you know benadryl puts me asleep anything yeah i get you so i've been trying to get caught up lately because i missed a lot of what happened uh the meltdown that bond had about the obituary and that his grandmother's being or his mother's being buried in kentucky instead of ohio oh would you like to watch the uh that's in the pizza version sure sure hold on hopefully uh my computer won't [ __ ] on me for this okay i'm gonna mute and take a token cough then we're all watching hopefully my computer uh doesn't [ __ ] on me oh there's that issue okay grandpa he's really good at this you guys crappy's really good at this you guys are okay grabby might go blank in a minute okay let me see uh speaking of scotch my father-in-law is a big fan of scotch and i found something by glenn fittick called old fashioned reserve what happened was a guy bought like a whole [ __ ] truckload of this [ __ ] in the 70s and through the 90s like 20 years he just kept buying this [ __ ] and stockpiling it and it went on the market recently so i got him a bottle of 18-year glen footage old-fashioned reserve that was bottled in 1990 for christmas i have to say whoa i do enjoy a good single hold on robbie we'll let you in a minute uh i'm i'm in another thing so i can't uh john's actual scroll and i may have mispronounced it glenfiddich glenfiddich i don't know if it's a ca it's maybe this is it come on and after uploading yesterday the classic little rage fest that he had i thought why why not bookended with a more recent one how about one that happened with in the last 24 hours but before that can i say thank you thank you to all the subscribers out there to anyone who's ever watched the video put the thumbs up thank you very much it is appreciated it's fun to do these videos and to educate some and entertain others i have even offered my hand out to von an olive branch if you will i thought what better way to show that i am sincere about being friends with him than to align myself with him politically so i've brought a gift now we can be friends right anyway on with the rage fest von recently discovered that the frosts have sorted out the funeral arrangements and than the obituary he wasn't very happy but the question is why couldn't he sort it out or at the very least help to sort it out what was he doing george magnificent man india flying machines anyway here's the lightest ride fest from on enjoy sorry i don't know i don't know yet maybe if you send me the money you know where the funerals at you know the funeral is thousands of miles away in ohio did you know that yeah the funeral is thousands literally not thousands of miles and i got exactly 41 bucks to my name 41 that's it that's all i got okay that's all i got i don't even know if i'm gonna be able to pay my damn cable bill i think i need to pay my cable bill before i think about driving thousands of miles away don't you reckon wow did you hear that for yourself he should worry about his cable bill before worrying about driving thousands thousands of miles folks thousands of miles from uh how many uh look look i've flown across the country a few times in my life and ohio chair of the border i've driven i've driven across the country it's what i think uh 3 600 miles something like that that's a few thousand thousands of miles man could you run that back 30 seconds and let it start again i think that's worth it favored he wasn't very happy but the question is why couldn't he sort it out or at the very least help to sort it out what was he doing anyway here's the lightest ride fest from vaughn enjoy i don't know maybe if you send me the money you know where the funerals at do you know the funeral is thousands of miles away in ohio did you know that yeah the funeral is thousands of miles away dude and i got exactly 41 bucks to my name 41. that's it that's that's all i got he could get that i straight stall that's all i got i don't even know if i'm going to be able to pay my damn cable bill i think i need to pay my cable bill before i i think about driving thousands of miles away don't you reckon thank you uh okay but i don't even have the money i can't thank you uh carthage two dollars uh i like turtles as well folks and and and we we always have to remember that turtles turtles spiders and snakes and turtles do okay this just thousands of miles away okay i have two friends one lives in ohio one lives in kentucky my friend in ohio says oh yeah i can go visit him it takes five minutes ohio and kentucky well i mean it depends on how close you are to the state lines right but you know ohio isn't that big he has a ford ranger a ford ranger that gets about 23 miles to the gallon and he has 40 bucks 200 30 miles worth of gas in his [ __ ] pocket so a while ago i i looked it up from because i live in ohio i was hoping you would uh will yay so i i looked it up from my house to bomb's front door is about three and a half hours oh [ __ ] and keep in mind that i live about 45 minutes north huh like i said four hours worth of driving yeah yeah with traffic yeah probably about four hours thousands of miles that's and and if he wasn't a dick about it and everything he could have probably got a ride yeah yeah oh all he'd have to do is get there with the you know spend 30 dollars spend the rest of it on a a hamburger on the way and just get there yeah or they could get him in the car and then just beat the [ __ ] out of him in minecraft oh yeah oh yeah that would be and when he gets out of the car when he gets out of the car and they get oh yeah what happened to him i don't know he kept on falling down in the car kept falling and then out of the car and yeah getting into it see him like this really the really puzzling thing about this is just his sheer lack of he can't be he can't be bothered to give a [ __ ] yeah okay so i i had to attend a viewing today for an uncle uh me and my uncle were not especially close but it's still family had to do i was there for about 40 minutes before i had to leave because yeah it just showed up yeah i showed up because i have to you know show support my aunt because i love her to death right but this dude is just like he has gone beyond apathy i have to keep a strong face for my kids your kids you know yeah they gotta be strong for the kids it's like oh now you're thinking of the kids wow oh i don't i don't know you know i think you need to let but i'm talking as a mother who's not warped uh but i you know my kids learned how to show emotion from me and that we talk about it now you know god they're past middle age but you know you let people see what the human process is and that you're human and you know this guy is just he's should never have been allowed to when he really said the really sad thing i mean when you talk about like feelings and stuff and showing them i i was raised in a family where we did not show uh yeah me too yeah you got you got punished if you showed emotions yeah uh so that's that's you know kind of like me started me off because emote i talk with a couple family members and we call ourselves emotionally [ __ ] up because there's certain times where uh i don't know if you're at that feeling like when something's really tragic happens and everybody's like oh my god oh my god and you know it's a sad event but there's you don't have that like outpouring of um sympathy for the i mean sympathetic yes but um i don't know some emotions or yeah when i was little um if i uh cried cried uh my mom my dad shut up or i'll give you something to cry about you're crying i'll give you something to cry for and then if you laughed too much oh yeah i was told uh yeah you keep laughing pretty soon you're gonna be crying and sure enough they made sure i did try you see and what i find hilarious is that vaughn's concern that he's not going to be able to pay his cable bill what he should really start you know being wary of is the [ __ ] sack you know the waste of egg and sperm to his left uh vom probably does have a a fairly good chance of getting partnered with which what's to wear with twitch because i don't think you need to have a thousands you know vaughn doesn't have subs on twitch he has followers i don't know what that is which w-h-i-c twitch t-t-t has a nervous twitch okay twit okay twit oh that's the platform yeah that's the platform he has the watch hours i believe i don't know well yeah i mean that makes sense because he's probably a freaking lol cow and people probably love him yeah i mean his last couple you know streams they've gotten like 800 900 views yeah because everybody's everybody's been recording them yep the but let's say he does get you know he gets partnered with which and he might be able to start making a little bit of money that's going to be from ads and it'll be like it'll be pennies yeah the the big thing about twitch is that if you get partnered they start looking at you and if [ __ ] jadab starts rattling off the dumb [ __ ] that he likes to rattle off they will they'll they'll ban his account and vaughn is too [ __ ] stupid to realize that if you get suspended or you know kicked off twitch you can't just start another account oh oh that's a that's a good uh which doesn't yeah twitch doesn't ban accounts they ban people that's what happened ip internet protocol baby well if not if not deeper they'll go mac address sometimes too and they'll ban your system periodically straight from the platform they don't mess around well it's what happened to emo because emo got suspended for saying some racist [ __ ] and he thought i'll just make a stack account just go right back to it well that's why when you report someone on twitch the first button you can click on is ban invasion yep if you try to evade a ban you're blocked indefinitely that's why emo can't have a twitch well let's let's uh let's watch a little bit more of stinky von poopy pants uh his uh i guess we call this his memory his uh i don't what do they uh eulogy for his mom he'd pay my bills but when i tell you they cut off literally every [ __ ] dime of money that's what i mean that piece of [ __ ] down the r road there james r frost crane creek road manchester kentucky four zero nine six two stole my my [ __ ] inheritance money to the tune of seven and a half million dollars the number just keeps on getting bigger i love it i'd be able to do things it was six million then it was six months six and a half million then it was seven million seven and a half million i'd be able to do all kind of be able to bury my mom be able to do all kinds of cool [ __ ] but you can't do it without no [ __ ] money now can you maybe you [ __ ] youtube trolls instead of cutting off every goddamn diamond money i had maybe you ought to [ __ ] helped me instead how about that maybe that's why the gods are killing your [ __ ] asses because instead of helping me you decided to hurt me even more you know the old term kicking them when they're down and that that sort of thing his gods are failing him miserably when they're down adam everywhere says twitch was made for kids and gaming they have you have a good terms of service yeah i think it's brilliant adam uh but isn't it interesting that he goes over to a place where a lot where kids are imagine that the bubble-headed bleach blonde goes on at five folks well you know i know everything is interesting and everything like that folks but the one person that we haven't heard tonight from yet is the one and only mr robbie battle robbie what are you thinking about all this [ __ ] oh that nothing good i can't say nothing good about vaughn hilton hi ronnie hey guys how are you to god every time i every time i think bad about him he does worse he does worse yeah i mean somebody that won't even go to their mother's funeral like that's just sitting over there going here hold my mountain dew i got to pay my cable bill before i see my mother you know that's dead you know yeah he can't be he can't be bothered to go but he'll [ __ ] he'll use her to drift money out of people but he can't be bothered to go to the funeral mm-hmm she's provided him everything everything for years and years and years whole this [ __ ] yeah he could never repay her for what what she's done for him even if he wants to get a job and turn his life around and that's the thing you know i don't think alice was looking to be paid back per se no i think alice wanted him to pull himself up by the bootstraps do something in society try to uh fit in somewhere um instead of becoming a i don't think so buddy i think she would have settled for just being [ __ ] respected yeah but she didn't demand you know i don't you know she she didn't ask for she just kept giving and taking care of him taking care of him they had this very like symbiotic uh this very closed relationship and damn it worked he talked his daddy that this is the same [ __ ] that changed his namesake while his father was so alive well because there were never because he did that because you know there were so many hiltons that were criminals and he didn't want to be you know yeah their male kept on getting switched up and carlos i have no [ __ ] idea who camo dave is so i don't know i seriously uh you hang out with everybody neighborhoods you know we all hang out in different neighborhoods around it's probably somebody from a different avenue or some different uh wow yeah carlos is everywhere you know i mean not everywhere like adam but well almost because that's not part of his name let's see if we can figure it out i haven't watched the rv community since i stopped following uh oh elvis guy is the only one i know of uh lordy i don't need to go down any more rabbit holes yeah that was some crazy weird lust your heart you know we all have our own neighborhoods we hang out in hey cheers uh yeah dave the fisherman oh okay okay no okay i know dave one okay but you know i mean the only rv living i've watched was that that academy award-winning movie that was based on the the truth uh start that oh never mind i can't think of it never mind but that i don't know about rv life i have no interest yeah please don't ever let me have an interest that means i would need to do it so six drops you've been really talkative tonight and uh who i think could happen you guys haven't taken it up for us i have tried over and over to get six drops to stop talking but six drops if you'd really like to talk and say something you know just let us know i mean should we all meet you that means you have to mute grampy no you don't have to mute it's my second show hey robin do you remember when you was a kid hearing the saying um sing at the table cry later oh yes oh my god oh i never heard that was a new one oh thank god i didn't hear that one too oh let me tell you something if we were laughing if we were having too much fun at the dinner table my parents used to make us sit there this little card table and my parents used to make us sit at this card table uh like and laugh for like 30 minutes right and we we had all the versions of therapy yeah we had the fart noises we had funny little silly records we could play that's good for maybe about five minutes right and then it's kind of funny and then when you're like trying to fake laugh you know it's like it doesn't look like that's real laughing you want me to you know laugh or i'll beat you our kitchen area like where the table was was so small that it had to be up against the wall and it was it was one of those melon mean with the metal legs you know i'm talking about though it only had three chairs and there was five of us kids in the house and any other time we had a couple of foster kids anyway we had to eat in shifts we weren't allowed to eat at the same time because you had to sit at the table to eat so we ate three kids at a time and you'd have to take your turn to eat okay well yeah well you know what i'm gonna do a big salad for everybody right now uh and uh dip out for just a couple of minutes and uh that way hopefully six drops and robbie and and and everybody can because apparently i'm taking up a lot of them before you do buddy i'm gonna duck out completely because it's i've had my time i yeah i want to say real quick i hope that hilton gets his comeuppance as much as i hope to find a bigfoot one day an alien and all that [ __ ] i want it all to be real unicorns all of it yes uh bye good to meet you paulie take it easy paulie he will yeah nice meeting okay do i stink or something no go ahead and well did you check your pits i took a shower i promise i mean some of my hair is even wet in the back they're leaving over here i don't ever think you have to prove anything six drops show us the pitch come on we want it oh oh here you go hey yvonne this is just coming out of my nightstand i won't tell you why look what i got buddy that's more money than bond scenes all year [Music] can you float me alone six drops what did you do for that six drops or do we want to know you don't want to know you don't want to know uh i get it i get it i've got to pay the right that information is behind a pay wall no i know i know i yes he did i did and i do apologize for that but you know what i'm gonna do right now i'm gonna leave you fine folks oh [ __ ] you haven't left yet he's gotta go get his smoky smoke i thought you just got back damn probably allowed the smoke around the fancy fancy equipment because it gums it all up so he's got to go outside to do that the more we talk the more he's going to hang around would you get the [ __ ] out of here grampy i just want my favon is live right now okay well you know what um if somebody if something if somebody's over there if i can't because i'm blocked but what we can do is when i get back if somebody wants to uh uh do a narrative we can if somebody wants to share the page because i know robbie wilson robin everybody's got a uh i don't know about six drops because i don't know if we can trust her yet uh do you have a uh a wrench six drops i don't know if i do let me check real quick see what i don't think i do let me put it up like in the live chat it should come on no okay well what we're gonna do is yeah we are definitely uh okay uh let me go on the youtube side hopefully i don't hear myself that'll twice me out and stuff but i gotta make 50 doesn't feel like yeah that you uh i don't need no wrench well you do no um no only myself i am the you know sole proprietor of this nobody wanted to uh go in dibs and have these with me and share the wealth of that is lobster studios you know because we are okay twenty one oh oh so we have to oh i did not oh okay never mind well there is a hierarchy you know that by now robin come on i gotta work for that wrench i gotta what is it it's just fond hilton uh just put in von helton to go to twitch and type in von hilton he'll come up okay see i was looking for it on youtube okay uh omarose moon thank you for always being the town crier of course i'm high well okay now now it doesn't want to load god god damn it so yeah go get your smoke get a load when you get back i i think he went to go get his smoke listen how quiet it is when he leaves i can't mute myself oh well uh you know i never um faced of vacuum i didn't like to fill with words um mute that bozo did have horrible things for that wrench and they still have nightmares oh i know you know what it's all it's like being in the foxhole together during the the war with cannons booming and rockets overhead and yeah horrible things for branches it's like they got ptsd i guess would be w it's a fraternity there's a secret handshake there's a signet ring uh yeah shh i said too much didn't i oh mute that sounds kind of fun really oh no wait well we no we don't it's not fun okay what happened we scared another one away what happens in the wrench room stays in the rent room okay something just happened with the screen is granted that yes maybe let's well let's just name life maybe once their face finally knocked grampy out they they was threatened he was gone what's his face what's his face is like everywhere was going to kill grampy isn't that the way it worked someone was threatening to kill grumpy oh bobby go check on the grumpy yeah press the button on the elevator for him maybe he has an elevator he's got the life alert watch i don't have the life alert watch this i've fallen and i can't yeah the yeah yeah he's got grampy's other end of that life alert omarosa moon says he's starting off with a little rant okay vaughn is ranting right now thank you for it that yeah he's he's ranting about the trolls who have ruined his life they destroyed his channel they destroyed his income they destroyed everything yep i took it it's right here i took his income it was fun i'll do it again in a heartbeat double my money i'm sharing my stream of like my screen of watching him i just don't know how to pull it up into the stream yard so that you can all see it do you have a share a button share stream button oh oh yeah i do share nope okay try that can you do a url or you know see look at the little look at the little boomer showing all those younger kids how to work the screen yard i see the little button that says share kids wink wink i just want to tell you i do have the button but all it says is stop screen so i guess my screen is already being shared it's down in the bottom i just don't know how to pull it into the screen yard okay so maybe crampy is in control of that oh okay that would have been a learning stream yard you know i just know the basic just enough to get me on enough to you know not do great but anyway oh lordy lordy lordy nice that three point says mute the bozo i will clasp you to my large bosom to make that the bad dreams go away oh be still my heart that was very poetic nicer nissa i'm kind of jealous okay geez oh kiss my duck says grampy needs to approve it yeah okay so he has to do the shirt i okay this is beyond my pay grade i know nothing beyond what i just told you oh well hey we'll learn together can i motorboat just like a little you guys are hysterical you know i don't understand i don't understand vaughn helton like how is he upset that somebody organized the funeral for him did the obituary why is he upset instead of grateful i would be grateful why is he upset because there's something wrong with him yeah clearly i know uh you know he and then well i mean that's how he's showing grief maybe because i mean how does he find time beside your grief to actually be upset at anybody if it's your mother the one who gave you life how do you find anything besides grief where in the world do you because he's not feeling one speck of it he's glad she's dead it's sad i said but that's how he is wow she's dead can you imagine oh [ __ ] that [ __ ] sorry excuse my language but i am not following him and staying followed for three months just so i can comment on his screen yeah don't do that you sit to yourself if it's too short boss please don't listen well unless you like the pain if you like the pain that much you can always we can always talk lately you know everybody has their kink yeah you know you should always remain private however yeah don't do that to yourself you'll hate yourself later you really will i i don't know much about him but i hate you all right i'm kidding i would rather sit here with this lighter and burn the end of my nose than to follow this guy no don't do that don't oh yeah i i could never follow him i can't stand him just listening to him right now i'm like what are you really making me nervous thank you i know look at that glorious hair get that lighter don't jump the lighter is for this guy the lighters on my candle okay if you use aquanet uh that your shirt will go up in a flash but it will not be funny no but you know he's too wait it smells like coffee neat there's a coffee candle not bad could be worse at least it isn't what gwyneth paltrow's whatever [Laughter] yeah i don't need a coochie candle i'm all good isn't she gross i think she's you know she has a big fan base but now now you just said out of one side of your mouth that everybody's got their kink that's that's but i i also have my opinions yeah that's true i think it's gross as hell too but you know yeah neener needer there has to be just a little bit of mental illness when it comes to gwyneth paltrow just a little i guess i'd have to walk in her skin a little bit to figure out what the hell yeah i don't know i don't i just look at it with my eyes you know there are a zillion viewpoints but from my eyes ew [Music] smells like a wizard sleeve in here someone just won the internet oh everybody do trophy emojis [Laughter] that's cute yeah i want a party working that's a three-point if i ever bump into him in the real world no kidding no i mean jesus lord that's a good time oh god of course it's business but with that special hollywood weird twist to it you know i'm gonna be laughing about that six days later nope kidding be be loud and proud sweetheart you broke the internet with that yeah that was good i know some moments are priceless [Music] so robbie battle a robbie battle i have seen you around here and there but i guess yeah i mean like every so often i try to catch one of his dreams yeah yeah well good good to meet you okay uh since grampy's gone can i ask you a question yeah how did you get started being on youtube uh see 2014 i started i was just talking about wrestling but then and and uh i ran at one time i was i the reason why i know lobster is free von hilton because i used to watch well i started at one time i i thought von helm was kind of a funny person and i didn't really know how screwed up he really was so it all starts from devon hilton that's how i knew lobster and we've went back and forth uh through the years and yeah we're on you know we're on good terms but we weren't always on good terms but uh but yeah that's that's how i know lobster and but i started in the wrestling community but i don't really talk about wrestling anymore i kind of don't like it anymore so well we all evolve and go through stages and um i've had eras that have lasted for years and years uh but then you know then you change up and oh yeah other stuff so well good to meet you nice to meet you robin yeah it's yeah excuse me a voice sounds horrible but i i just uh i've grown out of that crap i can't i've tried to watch it every so often just because like it used to be a fanatic and as far as wrestling goes but it's i can't even tolerate it anymore so i i have had internet friends who uh you know that we all met someplace and then some of the the fellows started talking about wrestling and then they formed offshoot groups you know so i know there's you know yeah i was even invited to one of them because my my grammy and i used to sit and watch wrestling i remember i was five oh years old and i used to sit in this big chair with my grammy and we'd watch wrestling and yell at the television oh yeah yeah so so you know that's how i got but but yeah okay grampy hey hey is this is this uh stinky's uh latest video going on yeah yep yep oh you got any sound yep okay let's get some sound in there get that sound in there my goodness i wonder if you have to enable audio well could you imagine the poor person who had to give him them beads for seeing his tits supposing that he actually went there that is a man-shaped tank top that's one of his mothers i'll bet you [Laughter] look at the cut look at the cut of the sleeves and the neckline that is not a man's top ice so yeah so if you want to catch up i can catch you up a little bit on what was going on the rant he was going into he was talking about why he's upset about them handling the funeral and them doing the obituary it's because the person who did it frost approached whatever their name is they're not actually family they're like like a married brother-in-law or something like that so that side of the family isn't actually related to him so he's upset that they did it and then he went further into a rant saying that the funeral they're having for her is they're going to dig a hole next to a dog in a backyard and throw her in the hole that's not oh that's literally not what's going to happen my duck [ __ ] you okay carry on gentlemen again oh all right and kennedy wants me to get on this snotty pant oh my god so much pressure folks yeah i can't hear him what he's talking it's just this is just oh there's got to be a way to get do you um do you have to enable it on your own grumpy or should he be able to if i do it i've got to take my headphones off and uh we used the speaker that way which i oh right you probably can't hear it because i have the feed going into my headset yeah ah heck hold on i can probably i can change the feed probably hold on okay see if you can do that oh this is so fun let me meet myself did that help any um not yet okay i'll see that's my television that's my tv playing it now yeah i hear something coming in god you guys are quick on the draw over there in the chat oh i wasn't even paying attention sorry i'm a bad mod good idea yeah well am i going to go to the funeral no i'm not going to the funeral i had nothing to do with this why would i go to something i had nothing to do with it because it's your [ __ ] mother right i'm restraining myself sense i'm not going to attend something that i have nothing to do with you are one petty small little man no way jose like i said i've got my popcorn i'm just going to sit back and watch this [ __ ] all go down his loss i've not possibly orchestrated this any better than i could have that's for damn true the family is so lucky he's not gonna show up they are so [ __ ] lucky i'm muting cut your nose spite your face and put it all together and make it into one big jigsaw puzzle that makes sense you and i can't do that we don't have that belt and so this is going to get real interesting yeah i'm just going to you know i'm just going to sit back with my folded and watch this whole [ __ ] uh pan out because as soon as the gentries find out you've been buried in a hole in the ground in a backyard next to a dog instead of being buried in ohio with full owners next to her military husband this is going to get real [ __ ] interesting isn't it [ __ ] yeah it is it's going to get real interesting why is it going to get interesting i don't have to do nothing all i got to do well he's pretty good at doing absolutely nothing already so yeah okay wait a minute grampy aren't you a veteran don't they take care uh care of the veterans spouses as well it's part of their package depends on like my my parents are both my father was a retired navy he was he was uh buried at the uh at a va cemetery with my mother my mother passed first my mother was in the va cemetery and then my dad was put next to her um jack [ __ ] you know what gets me is he has done literally nothing he wouldn't talk to any doctors he would because he admittedly wouldn't answer any phones he said he wouldn't answer his phone when they called yeah um so family police officers is probably not a good thing to do can you turn up the volume oh yeah he's got a family of police officers obviously they're not going to believe that the gentries are a bunch of police officers well sorry trolls but they are that doesn't mean anything okay and unlike the frost they are direct blood to my mother through cecil gentry so this should be very very interesting remember folks james arnold frost and mary frost are in best at best distant distant relatives okay at best the gentries by contrast are direct blood to my mother that should be i don't think he understands the first thing about oh and by the way folks i want to make it abundantly clear that if the frosts claim to have any type of legal documents whatsoever those legal documents are fraudulent now you say well how can you say that with such confidence because every legal document was stolen out of my mother's house and if they're stolen they become fake we look for all of them no they're all gone do not steal legal documents okay that's not what common criminals do okay so whoever stole the documents obviously had an agenda did they not yeah okay it's like he's trying to convince him all this [ __ ] himself [ __ ] the money we want documents alrighty i assure you it is a fraudulent document all right now in regards to the will that everyone is talking the will that is currently out there is incomplete uh james arnold frost told my mother to put hilton on my name and on the kids names well our names aren't help her names are upon help okay no your legal name is elton yeah exactly there's legal names on there especially down here because there's like seven james helms down here they're not gonna get it mixed up god damn you know it'd be like somebody somebody with the you know like i i remember growing up can you pause that for a second yes okay i remember like what about in some areas you'll have like smith's is a real popular name it used to be right there'd be hundreds of smiths in a phone book right in a town sometimes right very popular name so with stinky's thinking that maybe it seems that there's some smiths that might be a little bit shady we'll just change our name to von smith because you know that way whatever the [ __ ] i'm sorry yeah i just go ahead i mean you're just an idiot i mean you do they're full of [ __ ] hey what are you doing how am i doing i'm doing man well here comes another pizza shop we're ready and i'm ready to watch the fireworks buddy well we kind of left off in a little bit of a rough spot this morning yes so did you take care of the scumbags no i'm gonna let i'm gonna let the gods handle it because god's the god's in there oh yeah because you'll literally do nothing he doesn't have the capacity to give a [ __ ] about it but his mother [Music] well i don't know dude um i actually i got rid of all my gateway pundits so let me see if there's anything oh can you pause that a second yeah that okay when he leaned over once again i am stating that he is wearing his mother's tank top because number one you know that high cut neckline number two men's tank tops have really big armholes y'all see there unless they cut the sleeves out uh nevertheless if he cut along seams that is still a lady chop okay you guys okay i'm gonna cut the sleeves off of the shirt neckline sorry is that what's going on you think she did that on purpose uh why else would you bury someone next to a dog if not first first of all please enjoy that piece of [ __ ] down the road so he knows that you're supposed to you had the arrangement for uh uh in cincinnati right whatever i handled that [ __ ] yeah the day she died i told him my funeral home i told him what cemetery no you didn't so he has went behind my back and undid all that [ __ ] what a slimy little slug why hasn't he reached out to the va if he was that pissed off yeah yeah yeah right he's done literally nothing from the time his mother from the time he found his mother on the ground the first time the first three hours later when he called the [ __ ] ambulance to right now he has literally done nothing nothing to for his mother's care or any type of uh uh arrangements that need to be made you know i mean god damn it if they're gonna wait for him to do it even if it was paid for you still have to tell him you still have to communicate with with people you know because they're not yeah but you said something significant grampy so we have never really been able to pin down this timeline this window of where he found it the first time and then after he found her the third time well he's changed it a few times three hours but you said three hours yeah you know even if it's just three hours that's any chance does anybody change it to i went outside to feed the jesus dogs yeah it that is just and it came right back in that's nauseating i mean if you're if you're if you're 92 year old mother your mother's on the [ __ ] floor to begin with come on mom get up man let's get back to bed if my daughter walked and either of my daughters walked in on me on the floor man they would have had [ __ ] going into action in a heartbeat yeah for me i'd yeah for whatever reason she just decided to make a palette on the floor and just lay there you know and he went out and then he came back neither a pillow fort did he make her a pillow fort i hope oh maybe uh get with some art and flair to it perhaps i i'm sure you would have won a contest for making a pillow for it for his mom to make her comfortable okay very damn well done at least that [ __ ] yeah because it kind of irritates me you better watch it step in ohio yeah i think the main reason he's not going besides i don't think vaughn would feel very comfortable in a car with a bunch of frost and i have a strange feeling if he was to go up to hamilton ohio he wouldn't prop i'm just guessing he's not gonna get the best he's not gonna get the warmest welcome no and then two there's this uh component of him being very very socially awkward he does not know how to be around other people no yeah uh you know so you avoid that [ __ ] if you aren't good at it or even and then why why i ever liked him at one time i can't figure out why i was attracted to his content i'm like i think robbie you're because you're a nice guy and you try to and a lot of times you like when people are talking even if it's goofy [ __ ] you know you'll you're like okay it's kind of entertaining to watch you know i i get that you know and two and two okay i've been fooled uh by youtube so many times he does speak with conviction and you know if you're uh just encountering this he speaks with a crazy amount of conviction and you know that's very engaging i've been sucked into it dear do not be hard on yourself like i'll watch it it's like i can't believe it one time i felt bad for this idiot like hello hey look when i first came across von helton um like 10 years ago when secular opinion in them you know it was like really going it was like at the end of uh vlog tv beginning of pretty much google plus and stuff i used to there were times where i'd be like oh man leave the old man alone he's just a crazy old man lives in the trailer somewhere you know whatever if that were only it yeah because i i at first honestly i'd be like that's kind of pathetic man jumping on this old guy but then i found out that he wasn't near as old as i thought he was i thought he was like 70 [ __ ] years old you know i did you know and uh it's like no he's five four four years younger than you you know and for me you know and and uh then just the [ __ ] that would start spewing out of his mouth and then when he started off with we started with the whole cold war hero [ __ ] that's pretty much oh and we talked before about this grampy if if everything he says he's done in his life was true he'd have to be really 179 years old yeah and robbie license robbie you know uh i i see robbie did a video on it uh stinky actually claims to uh played uh football in uh uh what universal they haven't they haven't fielded a team since what nineteen seventy seven before he has a last season yeah and the the jersey style that he had was like i went to high school in the 70s i know what the way the football jerseys were they still had the big pads and everything but that was a jersey that was probably cut like from like the 50s or 60s because just the way it was made you know and then he put big erv on the back like wait wait wait that's what guys that's one of those shirts you can buy at this uh concession stand on the board or or you could you can buy them they have uh uh nostalgia like nostalgic football jerseys you can buy just all these styles yeah because when he was a because when he was 14 or what nbc i was 1974 i was 14. so he was what 11 um and then he said he played football in both ohio and florida but he couldn't remember if he was playing as a floridian or if he was playing in florida representing the state of the great state of ohio you know and i'm like dude if i was on a football team that trav or something like that i would i i played little league baseball until i was 12. okay you know what i remember every [ __ ] team i was ever on yeah not all the names because i was a kid but he can't remember if he played for a team out of ohio or florida oh god because little boys when they're in sports that leaves an imprint on their brains it's like a slideshow and they can describe well it stinky's probably played less football than me and i haven't played a lot of football he's lying about it yeah i was in a few flag football leagues when i was a kid uh as soon as that tackle football thing got up i was like no i don't want to be hit like that so i didn't play you know um but i've probably played more football than stinky you know i mean yeah yeah even okay [ __ ] little you is more of a man than stinky anybody's more than i mean i'm more of a man who's more of a man than von elton i mean it don't take much to be better than vaughn you know like the like the spokes model you know oh she's very good at that she's our vanna white yeah okay that was very yeah exactly there's a career a second job for you when when uh i'm glad nisa put that up there or nice uh i never can remember uh when when he started doing that all i kept thinking was al bundy you know when he would talk about his and polka no that grandiosity [ __ ] well you know what folks we've been going on for three and a half hours not quite are you [ __ ] me yeah okay in less than a minute we'll be at uh okay 50 seconds we'll be at three and a half hours and i'm gonna end this we have to go on to till then yeah well we're gonna and we're gonna end this and everything but uh i just wanted to thank everybody for being in here tonight and robin thanks for like calming me down before he actually went on the air uh it's not the first time i've had to talk somebody down you remember that my friend is maggie yeah i i've had a talker down because robin yeah and he came on uh just like that you guys he used that voice oh but uh anyway i'd like to thank everybody for being here david it was nice meeting you thanks for uh nice meeting you nice great sharing and everything great hair a man with long hair that takes care of his hair you know um it's the whole package it's the entire package right there plus he has the envy color uh headset oh eye candy but uh you got anything to plug you gotta you got a page you got anybody uh nothing you got it got nothing that's all right i'm just a guy with a headset that's all you need that's all you need robbie how about you doing buddy how's your uh lobster or your uh wrestling uh i watched some of your wrestling stuff and um yeah it kind of i could test on them earlier i can't i can't even tolerate it that's trying to i try to watch it occasionally but it's most of them's garbage now wow secular is live somebody dropped you've grown past it maybe there's some news i don't know you gotta love secular yeah uh so six drops do you have any uh modeling jobs coming up lately or final thoughts here six trucks oh doc catch me uh tick tock six drops in rey that's about all i can say as a participant in uh jiggy's what is it paranormal yeah she's a regular on the panel there uh otherwise part-time regular can't find her robin uh you want to like think about your show or um the granny show is tomorrow morning at noon nine noon nine oh well noon eastern standard nine nine pacific that's right it's tomorrow see it's it's you know what's the thing it's it's noon it's noon right but it's not noon where maggie or robin is i know isn't isn't that it's like a troika of the uh conjugation conglomeration of uh entities coming together for the granny show on the world wide web on the world wide web yeah it's called robin eagle song my name because i'm an egotist an egotist well i believe that yeah thanks but anyway folks this is uh thank you everybody for being in here this is grampy lobster uh you know what folks if you're not watching this on the official 2018 grampy lobster channel folks you're getting played and remember folks we live in some weird [ __ ] times right everybody's sensitive everybody's just losing their [ __ ] collective minds over all this [ __ ] you know that's a crying [ __ ] shame and uh with that you know i uh i'm losing faith in all humanity well not completely but uh it's gonna be fun folks anyway this is grampy lobster thanks for being here folks three hours 33 minutes and 30 oh i could have clocked it off at 3 30. wait a minute can you still hear me yeah okay i thought i was out of there i thought yeah okay so i got to tell you something stop it stop it stop what it's not yeah it's serious but uh my my words of wisdom to all you folks that i dearly love laugh and you know what grampy that's why we we were here that's why we like the fun brigade song you know what i mean and this this show was absolutely on wings it was so quick three [ __ ] hours jesus i got three hours older during this but but dear uh i love coming here with you uh you know i love you know this is our little villages you know a little corner of youtube i know we're oakland yeah no oh no would you quit talking doom and gloom about being [ __ ] [ __ ] yeah you were but anyway thank thanks thanks this has been a hoot an absolute hoot haven't we all needed a laugh van is on his channel personally i were mexican okay well uh i'm gonna dip then and go get some cheese and crackers and i'm gonna go watch vaughn maybe i'm gonna go watch uh secular stream and uh oh no that's more that's right secular i you will i'm really happy anyway folks you know um uh china everybody's going through their own problems in the world folks and let's just try not to be a [ __ ] you know what i mean uh try not to be a [ __ ] and be a good be a great [ __ ] that's the empirical yeah be your best [ __ ] ever be the best [ __ ] you can be folks and if you can't be a good [ __ ] be well he could be something else you know grampy there's something for your teeth spring shop figure out how to [ __ ] get out of this stream man i think we just have to say goodbye and just hit in stream bye bye and | Grampy McLobster | UCNRO6WmAakmG9JvQ86hndRA | 2021-12-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 33,093 | 166,403 |
med0LiRIAF8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=med0LiRIAF8 | Chemical reactors | Wikipedia audio article | a chemical reactor as an enclosed volume in which a chemical reaction takes place in chemical engineering it is generally understood to be a process vessel used to carry out a chemical reaction which is one of the classic unit operations in chemical process analysis the design of the chemical reactor deals with multiple aspects of chemical engineering chemical engineers design reactors to maximize net present value for the given reaction designers ensure that the reaction proceeds with the highest efficiency towards the desired output product producing the highest yield of product while requiring the least amount of money to purchase and operate normal operating expenses include energy input energy removal raw material costs labor etc energy changes can come in the form of heating or cooling pumping to increase pressure frictional pressure loss or agitation chemical reaction engineering as the branch of chemical engineering which deals with chemical reactors and their design especially by application of chemical kinetics to industrial systems topic overview the most common basic types of chemical reactors are tanks where the reactants mix in the whole volume and pipes are tubes for laminar flow reactors and plug flow reactors both types can be used as continuous reactors or batch reactors and either may accommodate one or more solids reagents catalysts or inert materials but the reagents and products are typically fluids liquids or gases reactors in continuous processes are typically run at steady state whereas reactors in batch processes are necessarily operated in a transient state when a reactor is brought into operation either for the first time or after a shutdown it is in a transient state and keep process variables change with time there are three idealized models used to estimate the most important process variables of different chemical reactors batch reactor model continuous stirred-tank reactor model CSTR and plug flow reactor model PFR many real-world reactors can be modeled as a combination of these basic types keep process variables include residence time tau lowercase Greek tau volume V preacher tea pressure pee concentrations of chemical species C 1 C 2 C 3 C n heat transfer coefficients H u a tubular reactor can often be a packed bed in this case the tube our channel contains particles or pellets usually a solid catalyst the reactants in liquid or gas phase are pumped through the catalyst bed a chemical reactor may also be a fluidized bed see fluidized bed reactor chemical reactions occurring in a reactor may be exothermic meaning giving off heat or endothermic meaning absorbing heat a tank reactor may have a cooling or heating jacket or cooling or heating coils tubes wrapped around the outside of its vessel wall to cool down or heat up the contents while tubular reactors can be designed like heat exchangers if the reaction is strongly exothermic or like furnaces if the reaction is strongly endothermic topic types topic batch reactor the simplest type of reactor as a batch reactor materials are loaded into a batch reactor and the reaction proceeds with time a batch reactor does not reach a steady state and control of temperature pressure and volume is often necessary many batch reactors therefore have ports for sensors and material input and output batch reactors are typically used in small-scale production and reactions with biological materials such as in brewing pulping and production of enzymes one example of a batch reactor as a pressure reactor topic CSTR continuous stirred-tank reactor in a CSTR one or more fluid reagents are introduced into a tank reactor which is typically stirred with an impeller to ensure proper mixing of the reagents while the reactor effluent is removed dividing the volume of the tank by the average volumetric flow rate through the tank gives the space time or the time required to process one reactor volume of fluid using chemical kinetics the reactions expected percent completion can be calculated some important aspects of the CSTR at steady-state the mass flow rate in must equal the mass flow rate out otherwise the tank will overflow or go empty transient state while the reactor as in a transient state the model equation must be derived from the differential mass and energy balances the reaction proceeds at the reaction rate associated with the final output concentration since the concentration is assumed to be homogeneous throughout the reactor often it is economically beneficial to operate several cstrs in series this allows for example the first CSTR to operate at a higher reagent concentration and therefore a higher reaction rate in these cases the sizes of the reactors may be varied in order to minimize the total capital investment required to implement the process it can be demonstrated that an infinite number of infinitely small cstr's operating in series would be equivalent to a PFR the behavior of a CSTR is often approximated or modeled by that of a continuous ideally stirred tank reactor C is tr all calculations performed with C is t RS assume perfect mixing if the residence time as five to ten times the mixing time this approximation is considered valid for engineering purposes the CI STR model is often used to simplify engineering calculations and can be used to describe research reactors in practice it can only be approached particularly in industrial sized reactors in which the mixing time may be very large a loop reactor as a hybrid type of catalytic reactor that physically resembles a tubular reactor but operates like the CSTR the reaction mixture is circulated in a loop of tube surrounded by a jacket for cooling or heating and there is a continuous flow of starting material in and product out topic pfr plug-flow reactor in a PFR sometimes called continuous tubular reactor Center one or more fluid reagents are pumped through a pipe or tube the chemical reaction proceeds as the reagents travel through the PFR in this type of reactor the changing reaction rate creates a gradient with respect to distance traversed at the inlet to the PFR the rate is very high but as the concentrations of the reagents decrease and the concentration of the products increases the reaction rate slows some important aspects of the PFR the idealized pfr model assumes no axial mixing any element of fluid traveling through the reactor doesn't mix with fluid upstream or downstream from it as implied by the term plug flow Regents may be introduced into the PFR at locations in the reactor other than the inlet in this way a higher efficiency may be obtained or the size and cost of the PFR may be reduced a PFR has a higher theoretical efficiency than a CSTR of the same volume that has given the same space time or residence time a reaction will proceed to a higher percentage completion in a PFR than in a CSTR this is not always true for reversible reactions for most chemical reactions of industrial interest it is impossible for the reaction to proceed to 100% completion the rate of reaction decreases as the reactants are consumed until the point where the system reaches dynamic equilibrium no net reaction or change in chemical species occurs the equilibrium point for most systems as less than 100 percent complete for this reason a separation process such as distillation often follows a chemical reactor in order to separate any remaining reagents or byproducts from the desired product these reagents may sometimes be reused at the beginning of the process such as in the Haber process in some cases very large reactors would be necessary to approach equilibrium and chemical engineers may choose to separate the partially reacted mixture and recycle the leftover reactants under laminar flow conditions the assumption of plug flow is highly inaccurate as the fluid traveling through the center of the tube moves much faster than the fluid at the wall the continuous oscillatory baffled reactor Co BR achieves thorough mixing by the combination of fluid oscillation and orifice baffles allowing plug flow to be approximated under laminar flow conditions topic semibatch reactor a semibatch reactor is operated with both continuous and batch inputs and outputs a fermenter for example is loaded with a batch of medium and microbes which constantly produces carbon dioxide that must be removed continuously similarly reacting a gas with a liquid is usually difficult because a large volume of gas is required to react with an equal mass of liquid to overcome this problem a continuous feed of gas can be bubbled through a batch of a liquid in general in semi batch operation one chemical reactant is loaded into the reactor and a second chemical as added slowly for instance to prevent side reactions or a product which results from a phase change as continuously removed for example a gas formed by the reaction a solid that precipitates out or a hydrophobic product that forms in an aqueous solution topic catalytic reactor although catalytic reactors are often implemented as plug flow reactors their analysis requires more complicated treatment the rate of a catalytic reaction is proportional to the amount of catalyst the reagents contact as well as the concentration of the reactants with a solid phase catalyst and fluid phase reagents this is proportional to the exposed area efficiency of diffusion of reagents in and products out an efficacy of mixing perfect mixing usually cannot be assumed furthermore a catalytic reaction pathway often occurs in multiple steps with intermediates that are chemically bound to the catalyst and as the chemical binding to the catalyst is also a chemical reaction it may affect the kinetics catalytic reactions often display so-called falsified kinetics when the apparent kinetics differ from the actual chemical kinetics due to physical transport effects the behavior of the catalyst is also a consideration particularly in high-temperature petrochemical processes catalysts are deactivated by processes such as sintering coking and poisoning a common example of a catalytic reactor as the catalytic converter that processes toxic components of automobile exhausts however most petrochemical reactors are catalytic and are responsible for most industrial chemical production with extremely high volume examples including sulfuric acid ammonia reformate BTE X benzene toluene ethylbenzene and xylene and fluid catalytic cracking various configurations are possible see heterogeneous catalytic reactor you topic external links simple CSTR models in MATLAB energy-efficient processes for polymers written by roland kunkel | wikipedia tts | UCGoNozP_2TZV5hVciGW1y6Q | 2019-05-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,729 | 10,632 |
nYDbj29qxVg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYDbj29qxVg | Dr Andrew Robinson's Presentation | thank you very much Ellen um firstly apologies it's me laptop blew up and so this is a borrowed laptop so it might be a bit funny anyway computers so first question anybody know who that is and we gon call out I know you teachers but Steve Ferber yes as Steve Ferber and created the arm or going back created the BBC Mike Rome was responsible for that so I did my PhD on the sea Ferber and one of the things that he did was we got and got me into public outreach so there's two I've got to thank you for two things one is for doing getting me into public outreach and two for letting me play with the BBC micro when I was about five or so so um first of all who is a teacher put your hands up we've got teachers sort of we got so I'm dressed I suppose you just got an interesting hobbyist sort of type thing Raspberry Pi if you're a hobbyist put you hand up would you say yeah right so it's the split right so basically in terms of just a bit about Manchester for five years we've run the National UK schools animation competition and that is I open nationally to schools for them to produce a one-minute animation and one of the packages they use is scratch so for five years we've been trying to get more people interesting beauty science and we've been doing it with scratch so we've got a bit of background that way as Alan mentioned wherever he's gone we've also done other outreach activities like try not to blow children up but let them blow things up and get computer controlling and what's basically come out of that is we've realized that we want to make you need a hook because what we've discovered is that children are experts in time management in that what they'll do they'll look at something think nope next thing so what we've got to do we've got 10 seconds best is to get them to go wow that looks interesting I can get some sort of result I'll spend the next three hours doing something with that and as I was also saying another lesson we've learned is this comes in with that with my media jobs of hard we're design it's very important that things are observable and things are testable so that when you're doing something it's just a black box and you think what's going on in there you need to make it see it and so that sort of given as a bit of background so just a bit of history a sort of a year ago in May um we've been obviously been doing public engagement stuff and I'd heard that the Raspberry Pi was getting on so I sent an email and got a reply saying oh it might be ready by Christmas or so and then sort of nothing we've kept it at the back of the mind and then it basically we heard about it on the BBC News and we heard about it mainstreaming we felt ah this is quite a big project so what we then said Alan said what you want to do with the Raspberry Pi and a lot of you know what you want to do with the Raspberry Pi but children don't necessarily you know we've got this ten-second interest if you show them a Raspberry Pi ago no it's they've got to really see what the potential is so what we thought sort of would be a good thing to do with the Raspberry Pi and to be honest we've got a bit of an interest in embedded things because that's that's our area is get them to inter first thing so we came up with if i press buttons something we've called this pie face and it's just an add on board for the Raspberry Pi and one of the things that we're very keen to do is to get children to be able to do something in 10 seconds so so our challenge was can they get some sort of result instant gratification whatever you want to call it in 10 seconds so basically what we put on the board is there's a couple of realize everything is with screw terminals and we've got some software so then if I just go for a video sound so we came up with a quick demo looks all right to just go it so just a bit of background that was from the I can't bring the chicken because that's from the animation festival so it was actually our prize winning died for the school children for the competition yesterday and so we had the the Raspberry Pi and the chicken that so what that was the demo of is they've got this animatronic chicken we just cook couple of wires then we just screwed youth into two terminals we've got a nice python api which talks to Twitter there's a text-to-speech engine running on the pie as well and we can give that to children and we can say right edit six lines of code and you can either make it follow a person you can make it follow a particular tag or they can obviously then the children children can take it as far as they like so that's just one an example of what you can do with it the interface we go so I'm another example we've got is a few games if I just see to take it into schools and so what that's showing that's just one example we've got about five buttons or so I'll with LEDs and so you can drive the LEDs from the outputs sends the inputs with the switches and that's running whack-a-mole so basically the light light so they have to press the button so we can get the children to write that depending on where we're going but they can they can put that together in just a few minutes and they can get a fun game I don't the teacher in the background that I said I don't think I've ever seen you concentrate as much so Bradley so that basically it just shows how and we just discovered it really engages them it's the they see the game they want to play the game and then that leads them to want to learn more you can't say we're going to teach you computer science what we can say is that's something from if you want to do more then you'll have to learn and where you have to say that but they sort of fig after that so then if it there's another game just as another example so we got we got a scalextric set here and we sort of basically just got so just set of resources sort of right we round and basically it shows you how to there's a jack connector on the game so you can just simple thing to just it doesn't quite cut the wire but effectively you cut the wire at the game and then the raspberry pi can control the scalextric and so then on screen it could well on screen is you can't see if I point to that and laser pointer so you can just about see that in that window you get questions popping up multiple choice if you press the right button then you get the real light turns on Paris your car a bit look further and the children can race it round and again it just our experiences I it really just captures their interest once you've got their interest you can get them to do do more so what am I why am I here I'm trying to make the powerpoint work right so oh yes so just going back still best we've got Manchus the stem net involved presumably you've got stem met in cambridge and other places around the country but it's a group which gets engineers and stem net ambassadors I've seen a few actually with the triangular veggies on and so we're providing this is an activity for them and then they can come in talk to us we'll help them develop activities and then I their contact into schools so we're also running teachers workshops it's all manchester-based but we might have another one in cambridge or talk to someone in here to get it organized but basically what we've got we've got a set of outline I'll just sort of activity sheets which take you through lesson plans and that and we'd like to develop more and we'd like to do that with teachers so how do you get in touch well we've got to show you the website sorry yep we're on so website is pied at CES commander ocuk another thing which might be with washi they're having a quick look at we're in a competition which we're calling the Great British raspberry pie bake-off and that's the chance for we're running two strands one for hobbyists to get together have a come up with a brief project presentations and Ethan and also one for school people although we might actually speak to foundation because we don't want to show them down sales and because I know they've just launched a competition and but basically any questions I'm Andrew at CS manda act up ukr there's contact details on here if you can't remember all that if you just a raspberry pi and interface then you'll get to one of our pages that's it thank you | L4LTV | UCB28er9-XQQTi1PfmsMLckw | 2012-07-22 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,626 | 8,279 |
Yu_uOa895rs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yu_uOa895rs | Lecture 40: Passive Microwave Remote Sensing – Part 1 | [Music] hello everyone welcome to the next lecture in the course remote sensing principles and applications in this lecture we are going to start a new topic known as passive microwave remote sensing or also known as passive microwave radiometry so what passive microwave radiometry is we know earth emits radiation because of its internal energy or its own temperature and that was the major physical reason behind us doing thermal infrared remote sensing say here we have this wavelength in x-axis with the spectral radiant emittance or what is known as the radiant flux density in the y axis and the curve is plotted for a black body at 300 kelvin so this basically approximates earth's surface ok so this we have already seen before if you look at this curve the radiation will be starting like here it is plotted something around like one micrometer so typically the radiation will start emanating around like say three to five micrometer range ah radiation will begin to will begin to radiate it will increase and then there will be like a long tail in thermal infrared remote sensing we use the wavelength range of 8 to 14 micrometers this particular range so we used or we send satellite sensors into to observe in this particular range observe this radiance and calculate the temperature of earth surface features but this curve will not stop abruptly earth surface will be keep on emitting radiation and it will have like a long tail which is extending all the way up to the microwave portion of the electromagnetic spectrum so here even if you observe in millimeter range or centimeter range there is small amount of radiation that is constantly being emitted by earth surface so this radiation is what we are going to make use of in passive microwave radiometry that is earth starting from ah short wave infrared or ah mwa or mid wave infrared portion but three to five microwave range earth will be keep on radiating energy this radiation will slowly increase and it will reach a peak in the long wave infrared portion around this nine point five nine to nine ten micrometer range there if we since we call it as thermal infrared remote sensing but this radiation will not abruptly stop from earth surface and the radiation will be keep on emitting an earth surface will be emitting energy even in microwave wavelengths that is with wavelengths in the order of centimeters maybe from one centimeter to hundred centimeters if we observe this radiation from earth surface in these wavelengths in centimeter wavelength and use it for different applications we call that as passive microwave remote sensing or passive microwave radiometry so naturally this is an extension of thermal infrared remote sensing extension means we are not producing any new form of energy whatever the earth itself is emitting we are observing it but in a different wavelength okay so we are not observing anymore in 8 to 14 micrometer wavelength but we are observing earth emitted energy in microwave wavelength in order of the wavelengths in order of centimeters in those wavelengths also solar radiation is not going to play any role okay because we have already seen once we cross this five micrometer wavelength solar radiation reaching the earth surface almost goes to zero so we can safely neglect any incoming solar radiation so whether during day time or night time whatever radiation we observe in microwave wavelengths essentially that energy will be due to emission from earth's surface just ah study this in parallel with thermal remote sensing whatever even in the 8 to 14 micrometer wavelength uh whatever we observe is basically due to emission from earth surface same concept is applied here we are applying we are observing at a different wavelength but still whatever we are observing is due to earth surface own emission so our wavelength only changed but the emission the sources earth surface and the various features present on the earth surface so what exactly is the microwave portion of electromagnetic spectrum this also we have discussed in the earlier classes in the introductory classes so in general the microwave portion of electromagnetic spectrum that we use for remote sensing of earth surface spans between the wavelength range of around 1 centimeter to 100 centimeters so 1 centimeter to 1 meter so we can classify it from say ka band k band k u band x c s l and p in the range of increasing wavelength okay starts may be something around one centimeter wavelength to one meter wavelength we have lot of divisions in between for our own understanding these this nomenclature this p e l s c x these nomenclature have been developed in uh olden days as a secret code during military applications like one of the earliest applications of microwave is in military like for different surveillance needs so this sort of frequency the random names were given for frequencies in order to keep it secretly and that name prevailed even now so these are all the common names we give it to the different portion of ah microwave portions see like invisible band we call point four two point five as blue ah point five two point six s ah green and all right same thing here microwave portion is a pretty long portion of electromagnetic spectrum we have divided into certain classes and we use this for remote sensing whatever the portion we have seen from one centimeter to one meter from k band to p band it is not essentially the full microwave portion of spectrum microwave is still really a very huge part of electromagnetic spectrum and it is it has its applications in various domains like in communications like our cell phones everything depends on microwave based communications microwave oven transmits microwaves for cooking of food so microwave is there everywhere around us and we use it for several applications remote sensing is just one of the applications in which microwave wavelength of emr is being used just imagine we have one ah some some transmitter kind of thing emitting energy in one particular microwave frequency there is a satellite a passive microwave sensor which observes the surface in the same frequency just think what will happen whatever this transmitter is radiating is going to reach the satellite sensor and the satellite sensor is going to think something is coming from the earth's surface and as an end user when we take that image we will see what is there on the surface we will not know that there is some transmitter which is radiating energy maybe a cell phone tower what not you know to avoid such confusions the microwave spectrum has been divided and for each application each portion of the spectrum has been allotted so similarly for remote sensing a certain frequencies has been allotted okay only this frequencies has to be used for ah microwave remote sensing and only this frequency has to be used for communication purposes if these frequencies clash say if a communication agency if some agencies using a particular frequency allotted for remote sensing if they have a radio if they have a microwave transmitter then that is going to interfere with what the satellite is going to observe there is some artificial source that is emitting energy that is going to cause interference in satellite observations we call this as rfi radio frequency interference these sort of things tend to happen but in order to minimize this or avoid this the microwave portion has been split up and several small portions has been created and each application has been allotted certain bands say for remote sensing purposes these are all some of the frequencies which we can use for earth observation or observation of atmosphere you can see here there are two titles active and passive what exactly active and passive means passive is the passive microwave remote sensing that we have just got introduced to or what we are discussing right now that is whatever we are observing from space the energy is primarily due to earth's own emission there is also an active mode of remote sensing what exactly active mode of remote sensing or active microwave remote sensing is we will have a sensor what is known as radar this will transmit some electromagnetic degradation with a given frequency this will interact with earth surface features and this will be reflected back this will again reach the sensor and the sensor will observe it and use it for imaging purposes so this process where the sensor itself will transmit certain energy and receives it back we call it as active mode of remote sensing active remote sensing so in microwave it is possible to do possible to do active remote sensing we can send a radar to space that will transmit emr in microwave wavelength get the reflector signals back so active remote sensing that is a topic we are going to see next after we finish passive microwave so that is possible in microwave so even in microwave spectrum for active and passive also the frequencies has been divided for example let us take l band okay l band frequencies see typically these frequencies correspond to l band 1.2 to 1.3 and 1.4 range frequency gigahertz frequency if you want to do active remote sensing you are supposed to use this 1.2 to 1.3 gigahertz if you want to do passive remote sensing in l band you have to choose this 1.4 gigahertz frequency there should not be any mix why an active remote sensing sensor and a passive remote sensing sensor if they work in same frequency then the active radar itself will become like an interference to the passive sensor let us imagine there is a satellite called smap soil moisture active passive which is like launched by nasa so it had both or it has both a radiometer passive microwave radiometer and also a radar both is there both this both will work in l band but the frequency in which the sensor will send in signals is different from the frequency in which the radiometer will observe so the radar will send the frequency at different frequency will observe a different frequency like say it will it will transmit in around 1.3 gigahertz receive the signal back in 1.3 gigahertz whereas the spasm microwave radiometer will not transmit anything but will observe frequency one in 1.4 gigahertz so that even within a same satellite even if you have active and passive mode of remote sensing mixer together the frequencies will be different because the active radar should not act as an interference to the passive imagine the active is also transmitting energy at 1.4 gigahertz what will happen 1.4 gigahertz will go gate reflector surface will come back and passive micro radiometer will observe it thinking that it is coming only because of earth's emission that itself is an interference so in order to avoid this interference there have been specific channels created to make sure or to minimize this radio frequency interference so for passive microwave remote sensing there are like specified channels or specified bands in which observations will be made before moving on to seeing the concepts of passing microwave radiometry we will look at the planck's law one more time planck's law we have seen several times in the introductory classes as well as in thermal infrared remote sensing here also in passive microwave radiometry plank slope plays a major role because essentially the radiation coming out of earth surfaces thermal in nature the original form of planck's law that is for the radiant flux density is given by two pi hc square lambda power phi exponential of hc by lambda kt minus one so this is the original form of planck's law that we have seen ah earlier so this will be like the radiant flux density with units of watt per meter square per micrometer so for isotropic radiators of elaboration surfaces we have seen that ah radiance is equal to radian flux density divided by pi so by using this particular relationship we have derived this equation for radians so this is the plant's law for radiance the only difference is this term pi will not be there this also we have seen earlier this particular equation will give us the radians coming out of a black body so essentially these equations are defined for black bodies whose emissivity is equal to 1 always in all the wavelengths so this particular equation the radiance equation will give us the radiance of a black body at a given temperature t that will be emitted at a particular wavelength lambda so if you look here there are like two independent variables t can vary independently and lambda can vary independently if we assume the black body is at one particular temperature that is l of lambda at a given temperature t then this also will become a constant and this will be like the variable and hence this equation l lambda will tell us how radiance varies with wavelength radiance variation with wavelength what i mean is ah this will be like the curve this will be lambda this will be the radiance so some sort of curve like this we will draw right say for t is equal to 300 kelvin like this we will draw so if we fix the temperature of an object the equation given here will tell us at which wavelength what will be the radius so essentially the equation given here will tell us what will be the variation in radians for an object with respect to wavelength for a black body at a given temperature t so mathematically this can be written as a partial derivative that is this l lambda is nothing but the variation of radiance with respect to wavelength dou l by dou lambda at a temperature t so here we are holding temperature as a constant that is why this partial derivative is coming with respect to lambda in microwave power lens like ah whenever we enter the microwave domain of remote sensing most of the people like the engineers who develops the systems and everything the microwave antenna the sensor system and everything they prefer dealing in terms of frequencies but as remote sensing people we prefer talking in terms of wavelength so essentially that there is always need to convert between ah expressing something in terms of wavelength and expressing some things in terms of frequency so it will be easy for us if we can convert this planck's equation expressed in terms of frequency that is the variation of radians for an object at a given temperature t with different frequencies that's it rather than having lambda and x axis now we are going to put frequency in the x axis that is what we need is we have to convert this dou l by dou lambda into dou l by dou f where f is the frequency we need to convert this into this it may seem to be like a very straight forward operation just by replacing ah lambda with nu no we know the relationship right c is equal to new lambda using it we can replace but it is not as straight forward it is not a mere substitution of ah lambda with frequency it there needs a small mathematical operation in between so we will see how to do it so once we do it we will be in a position to calculate the radiance with a given frequency so what exactly we have to do just examine the equation once more so the radiance equation is a function of lambda and using this relationship lambda is a function of mu right ah we can like take like c is equal to nu lambda that implies lambda is equal to c by nu so lambda varies with frequency where c is a constant like this we can imagine so essentially we need dou l by dou f or new whatever so i write it as like f here so dual by dou f what we have in our hand is dou l by dou lambda so essentially if we use the partial on the chain rule of partial differentiation we can write it as dual by dou f is equal to dou l by dou lambda into dou lambda by dou f so if we do this we will be in a position to calculate what will be the change in radians with respect to frequency okay so that is the thing we are going to do now so dou l by dou lambda we already have in our hand ah that is the planck's equation given in the previous slide so this equation is nothing but the dual by dou lambda so now we have to calculate dou lambda by dou f that is this one the variation of ah lambda with respect to frequency so c is equal to nu lambda or lambda is equal to c by nu just differentiate it once dou lambda is equal to minus c by nu square dou nu so i'm interchangeably using new and f to represent ah frequency so dou lambda by dou nu is equal to minus c by nu square ok so this is done this is actually a negative equation where the negative sign represents the direction in which lambda will change with change in frequency that is as frequency increases lambda will decrease and vice versa so this negative is an indication of direction so derivative is nothing but mathematically it's a slope right so normally we attach the concept of derivative with slope so in which direction this variable will change so as we increase frequency lambda will decrease and vice versa for us for our particular application the direction is not important but what we need is the magnitude so magnitude means i am just going to take the modulus of this particular function which means c by nu square the minus sign will go off so here we are going to calculate the variation of wavelength with respect to frequency so when we differentiate lambda like lambda with respect to frequency we get minus c by nu square where um minus sign indicates the direction in which lambda will change so we take we are taking modulus in order to y direction we are not interested in seeing in which direction the slope is going to go so we are taking modulus of it and we are getting a c by nu square so substitute everything there ah that is uh l lambda that particular equation you substituted 2 hc square divided by lambda power phi exponential of hc by lambda kt minus 1 into this term will come in c by nu square now you replace now we have to replace all the lambda with respect to nu because this relationship is newly we found out between lambda and u now we start substituting it now if you start substituting it l rather writing l lambda this is l f l f is equal to 2 h c square into exponential of hc by c nu kt minus 1 into c by nu square this will come something like this so you cancel everything out and finally we will get this particular equation 2h like c cube this will become c square and then this nu square will cancel this will become new cube so numerator will become 2h frequency cube divided by c square exponential of this c will cancel out h nu by kt minus 1 so this is the way in which we have to derive the planck's equation to be expressed in terms of frequency so it is not a straightforward substitution for lambda and convert it into frequency we have we need we have a chain kind of relationship lambda like the radiance equation the planck's equation is related to lambda and lambda is related to frequency so we have to combine them use the partial chain rule the partial rule chain rule of partial derivative using that we will derive this particular equation so this is nothing but the simple planck's rule expressed in terms of frequency so now rather than telling you okay what is the uh radiance coming out of an object at a temperature of say 300 kelvin at 1.4 gigahertz we can directly find it we need not convert frequency to wavelength and then substitute substituted so directly we can use and ah get the variation of radians ah at a given frequency for an object at a temperature t ok so this is like a very simple conversion of one equation in ah given with respect to one variable into another variable that's all now what we have seen till now is a generic form of planck's equation and original form without doing any modification but in microwave wavelengths ah if you look at the planck's curve ah it will be like the end portion like especially in the longer wavelengths we will have like a linear line so here everything is expressed in log scale even if you put everything in like a normal scale we will see it the tail portion can be approximated to be linear it need not be treated perfectly as the exponential curve the tail portion where the microwave emission comes essentially it is it can be approximated as a linear line rather than treating it as a exponential curve so we can do one approximation and this approximation is known as rayleigh gene approximation for black bodies our allergen approximation of planck's law to be more specific what this approximation says the rayleigh approximation says that if this condition holds good that is hf by kt is less than much less than one or hc by lambda kt is much less than one then in this particular equation ok we can drop this exponential function and simply write it as lf is equal to 2h f cube divided by c square hf by kt that's all so we are dropping this exponential term this minus 1 this is applicable only when this term is much less than one so if we do this then the frequency the planck's law variation with respect to frequency will become something like this similarly the planck's law ah with respect to wavelength also will become something like this so these two simplifications of the planck's law ah is what is known as rayleigh gene approximation so what is the advantage of doing rally in approximation from lavaliers in approximation ah what we can observe is the relationship between temperature of an object under radians coming out becomes linear that is like l lambda becomes 2 k t c by lambda power 4. so the t is there in a linear relationship with respect to radians and also all the computations becomes highly simplified highly simplified in the sense ah we need not take the exponential we know and divide one by other like the main number of like computation steps you need to calculate uh to perform the certain operations is much simplified the equation is very simple so in order to so ralogy and approximation first tells us the equation like the planck's curve or the radiation that is emitted by a black body ah this kind of like becomes linear towards the end that is one thing and second thing is ah all the computations that we are going to do becomes much simpler till now we have seen the planck's equation for black bodies like even when we converted into frequency or even when we did the rally gene approximation everything was for a black body but we know most of the earth surface features are non-black bodies they will have emissivity less than one and the emissivity will also vary with wavelength so for such non-black bodies how it will be so normally what we will do for non-black bodies the radiance will be given by emissivity times the planck's law of the object at a given temperature t so this is the usual way we do right even when we did it in thermal infrared remote sensing ah we calculated this as ah something like this right something like this we would have calculated we would have just multiplied the planck's equation with respect to ah spectral emissivity same thing we will do here even in this particular wavelength we will multiply the planck's equation with spectral emissivity however here we will use the rally gene approximation because in microwave wavelengths ah especially for features of earth's surface when the object is at uh 300 kelvin with the average temperature of 300 kelvin ah rally gene approximation will hold good roughly when the wavelength once crosses 50 micrometers even for this sort of micrometer wavelength rayleigh gene approximation will hold good but in microwave terms we are talking in terms of wavelength in the order of centimeters say one centimeter to 100 centimeters so normally at this very long wavelength rally in approximation holds good and hence we can write radiation or sorry the radians using the rayleigh gene approximation so 2 k c by lambda power 4 i am just taking the t and spectral emissivity out together let us say a sensor is being sent to space it is going to operate in l band around like 1.4 gigahertz okay so hence as soon as the sensor is designed and sent to space wavelength is also fixed it is going to observe only in this 1.4 gigahertz frequency or roughly 24 centimeters wavelength so this thing is fixed now this entire term within the bracket becomes a constant for that particular sensor so the radians observed or the radians coming out of any non-black bodies is now a direct is now directly proportional to the product of temperature of the object multiplied by ah surface spectral emissivity so this signifies for a non black bodies the radiance emitted is directly proportional to the product of temperature and spectral emissivity so here both temperature and emissivity has an equal say in defining what will be the radiance that is coming out of an object so you just look at the equation and tir band so this is the equation for radians and tr band this is kind of like highly non-linear emissivity is here and the temperature is here in the denominator within the exponential all these things but if you look at after the rally gene approximation equation becomes much simpler and the radiance is a is directly proportion to the product of t and emissivity so here the weightage of t and emissivity is equal in defining the radians both have equal say if temperature increases radiance increases with to the same extent if emissivity increases radiance increases to the same extent and vice versa so here the influence of emissivity and temperature both are equal in defining the radiance coming out virus and t are wavelength in the original form of planck's law ah the change in temperature will have a more influence or a larger say in defining what will be the radians coming out of an object rather than changing emissivity maybe like when we do some like numerical problems later we will try to understand how these things work here also one thing we have to remember ah the product of temperature and emissivity for any given object is commonly referred as brightness temperature in microwave parlance ah when we defined brightness temperature in tier remote sensing we defined it in a different way we defined it as the temperature a black body will have in order to produce the same radiance as observed by the sensor here sometimes in most of the literature you can sense like brightness temperatures defined as the product of temperature and emissivity because people assume in microwave wavelength atmospheric effects is negligible we will see it later and hence whatever is observed by the sensor is almost effectively ah free of atmospheric effects and if you remove this ah sensor response function and all so whatever the radiance received by the sensor is just due to the mere effect of temperature and emissivity okay so this thing you please be clear in microwave parlance brightness temperature ah the word brightness temperature and several literature will refer to the product of temperature of an object and emissivity of the object so as a summary in this particular lecture we have discussed or we have got introduced to the concept of passive microwave radiometry we have seen what all the spectral bands used in passive microwave radiometry and also we have seen ah in detail about the conversion of planck's law from with respect to wavelength with respect to frequency also we have seen the rayleigh gene approximation the rally gene approximation will help us to simplify our calculations and also to understand the relationship between temperature and radiance and also emissivity and radiance with this we end this particular lecture thank you very much [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] you | IIT Bombay July 2018 | UCLI5I1QwKqQn0Cf4nzdGKeQ | 2021-03-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,921 | 27,582 |
2FNexda1b3A | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2FNexda1b3A | FIRST FORTY DAYS, THE | this story is hard to tell painful because our outfit was in training a few weeks ago some of the boys who are with us aren't around anymore they were good men good soldiers they had learned to fight and they had the guts for fighting when it came it was like a sock on the back of the head Korea started rough the first 40 days were a battle for time with a handful of man against an army yes they were good men good soldiers and no story of the Korean War can be told without saying first how well they fought against great odds in the beginning there were only a couple of companies from the 24th division no brass bands at the airport two days before some of us had been in cities spending leave time at Fuji something like that they weren't scared we didn't know we got stuff out of the planes we moved out nobody said this is it nobody said you have arrived in Korea to beat back 5 North Korean communist division somebody did say we're here to delay the Reds okay let's go about ten percent of us were veterans few roads look like friends somewhere between Paris and Mets mostly the soldiers were young no battle experience they smiled a lot they made the whole lot of us look like good-natured Yanks glad to see a new town some of these boys enlisted to travel but whoever sees travel posters about Korea relax come to the land of the Morning Calm at first the town's look like any town in this part of the world the South Korean troops like any soldiers you know they're worried about the same thing get tired I mean tired we all wanted to ask what was it like up there what kind of fighting terrain tactics guns as far as we were concerned those Koreans couldn't talk we were in a completely foreign country no time to get acquainted the empty to town hardly a thing left couldn't buy anything even if you had the time which we didn't have there are two ways of getting to know the terrain walking over it if feeling how it was underneath underneath it was caked and sticky the tools of a soldier's trade a shovel and a gun we had small stuff with us machine-gun howitzers it was hard to believe one two three we were smack in the middle of a war comes ready aim North against an enemy that would look exactly like our friends the South Koreans these troops had seen action they didn't have to speak a closed book their shoes poke their eyes we got set like I said when it came it was fast and it was all around us they threw everything at it we answered we went ahead was like d-day with no warning those kids they became veterans overnight tough hard nerve they moved as if they'd been with us all through Germany there were too many North Koreans with too much heavy equipment especially tanks but can men with guts do against tanks a bazooka was some defense but there were too many tanks into few bazookas day after day it was pulled back and fight again there were too many of them he wouldn't know where they come from rice paddies would like quiet we'd hide in the shadows trying to look like a hut to a cornfield or a rice paddy concealment was one of our weapons with too many of them boys pulled back tired as dogs because whenever they meet the reds head on the Reds had enough men to fight us on the front and on our flanks too we knew it was hard to face we were hurting kids would drag back so beat up they couldn't be expected to fight for at least several days instead of a week at a rest area we grabbed an hour anywhere took a shower sat down lay down seemed like the greatest pleasure in life was to give the feed a chance to breathe we fell back to new position she looked around at some of the foxholes you can see a deep respect for those red mortars very deep we were short on men South Koreans carried our ammo but we didn't know what some of the others were carrying turned out that many of the silent refugees piling along the South Korean roads were North Korean communists in disguise it sneaked through our lines and fighters from behind we caught some but infiltration caused plenty of casualties we were going to watch the refugees more carefully from now on this was a big police job in Korea the biggest the attack was full-sized had to be stopped the United States Army a small part of it was here to help there'd be men and other uniforms fighting with assume the whole world has seen this knew what the score was up near the guns the score was against the enemy they were losing points losing time there were tough decisions but we had leaders of the maker general Walker and general Dean as our outfits were winning they were holding back the enemy until help could arrive we didn't feel it yet but reinforcements were on the way it takes time to pour a defense program into a small country with almost nothing not all the stuff can get there overnight even in an age when we're used to things traveling four or five hundred miles an hour oh we made it tanks and jeeps soon if some of the boys at the front could have heard the winches grind at the port had would have been sweet and if something television maybe could have shown us the soldiers we're going to fight with us soon maybe it would have been easier as it was the outfits and the foxholes needed every half track and howitzer and tank they could get and more and the men to go with them yes our mission and the Lions was delay delay the red drive in Korea delay it so we could get jeeps delay it so we could get weapons carriers and weapons more ammo get it to us man and equipment wet or dry because it was still rough going for it would stay that way for months maybe longer until enough men would be in Korea to strike back yes it was Operation delay mo was precious one field artillery battalion against 40 tanks we hold them off for a few hours in a blasting frontal attack Reds would envelop us on both flanks always trouble up ahead trouble on the side we drill back South of the comb River burned our bridges behind people in big cities like Pittsburgh are bothered by smoke this smoke was black but it didn't bother us a bit yeah both can look good when it's where you want it there were plenty of times when the smoke was too close garden your eyes so you couldn't see anything you can take a lot when your buddies get hit it hits you inside nobody says much just so and so got it or so and so has been evacuated he'll be okay or so and so's been evacuated back of us units from the 25th infantry division and the 1st Cavalry Division we're unloading now with baggage all of its first class urgent the tanks were light jobs they sped north where they were most needed smaller than the Russian monsters but still a wonderful sight nothing was too good for a tank in this territory boys treated them like baby they went over the top to bottom call them pet names they cleaned him up better than for inspection that's cleaning their tanks had heavier armor the jewel that was their advantage but our advantage was some iron sharpshooter they had Giants we had giant hey Jean was the worst ask anyone where he felt at the worst and maybe you'll hear a few other names that was bad all over but most guys will say tasia some places we were just outnumbered but in Asian we were outnumbered outgunned out tanked and outflank we pushed out trying to poke a hole in their line no go we tried another direction but at the end of every road leading out of tayshon there were thousands of north korean troops plenty of t-34 tank got kind of confusing there was one hot day 100 degrees we just SAT there was no place to go was war not the way it is we were all tired including general Dean flank attacks had cut every escape route he gassed up ready for a move we were supposed to hold this hot town for two days we held it for three it was get out or be trapped in phase on we gotta we fought our way out general Dean stayed behind they still be there it was a bad road out of cash on some guys didn't make it hey Jean was burning dead town the man who got out we're heroes the man who didn't get output they were heroes there's no better woman by this time the new outfits were in the Lions fresh ready to shoot everything said just right nice to hear the steady Trump of your own mornings even nicer to hear the howitzers slanting a lot together a terrific our morale went up five thousand percent we had some pressure now we turned it on and forced a victory at a time like this frontline child tasted better than pheasant under glass the rally was short One outfit might do okay for a day but on that same day five other sections of the front line would be feeling the enemy's hard blows in developments the infiltration some of our strongest attacks were by patrols small groups battered by the enemy beaten by the mountain falling down time after climbing over half a dozen mountains it made you more tired just to look at them felt like the bear who went over the mountain and saw another month getting anywhere in Korea was back-breaking work you did it the Korean way slowly you were the bulldozer no push pull click click up here to throw a bridge across a stream in four or five hours every rock at it up even the little one you were to three days to put an outfit on the other side of a stream the rainy season and the Korean superhighways didn't help us get around wherever we went we built our way it was no good having any drag of the engineers they had their own trouble you were the engineers in this battle you did everything still fight Oh pull back and destroy whenever we were about to leave a place we planted it carefully TNT planted it not deep just deep enough so it would come up the way we wanted it better you plant it better it comes up the second storage on this kind of gardening went on quite frequently very relaxing work we were going to stall them up and down the whole front and someday there'd be a turn about that would pay those North Koreans off for what we'd been taking and then we might have to put back all these bridges we slow them but we couldn't stop fighting fighting always rough but it's rougher when you're forced to pull back we gave them ground they gave us time we used every barrier every River to make a stand it was the best way of saving men they beat us back to the neck tongue we got there early enough to make it across the neck tongue was a pretty useful River no King ever had a moat around his castle so wide and protected it felt like a new division within the life plenty of outgoing mail went across the next town river if you've seen combat you know what it is to have a line place to fight fun well for the first time in this Korean business we had something we could call alive all during the fighting we had air power they had had it we met have improved air power did plenty of damage that everything the enemy had and wanted to bring up those guys flew so low they should have had bayonets on their propellers in a corner of Korea a little bigger than a beachhead we dug in build a village of foxholes only here you couldn't dig too deep on account of the rock on this beach head a lot of the boys who flew in at the beginning we're still around still smiling there's waiting in every war time to find out where you were are you were doing we faced the enemy we face ourselves our enemies were fanatics we were believers in one thing that men can live together peacefully thinking feeling worshiping each in his own way you couldn't think about anything for very long when you were planning new moves new delaying tactics we pulled down the bridges we wrecked the roads steep hills around us were rugged we need them more rugged the enemy beyond our foxholes we unwound some vines of our own with thorn and beyond the tight ring of our perimeter the enemy closed in pushing us hard threatening the death blow that would throw us back into the sea how long to behold how long the battle hung in the balance and then swung to us a great force reached Korea and a new strategy that gave the North Korean army a battle from three sides at once replaces new units lively ready for business they stole along the hills slipped up the ridges looking for a soft spot in the enemies hardship you we gave it to them steady all up and down the line all at once here dusty smokey this was what we used to get when we first hit Korea victory never comes easily you have to be in a fight to see how tough it is see how in an attack guys stumbled back needing others to look after them always plenty of trouble it takes men and machines to knock out a strong enemy and as you go forward you can expect to lose some of those who start out with you there some went back their feet heavy their step slow kids who became men man who's hollow face looks show that they've been in the line too long you can't count on a straight road to victory sometimes it wind goes down goes up sometimes you're forced to detour you can pick out the new troops they walk different another outfit but if you gave them the once-over they were like the fellows in our outfit when we landed the same smiling Yanks making the best of everything and a little better than that we battled for time in korea and one we had the right man good man good soldier you | PublicResourceOrg | UCO9Q5_D6tItyoilmDogexng | 2010-07-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,555 | 13,201 |
ZbPvrOvUdHk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbPvrOvUdHk | Tales Of Lonely Trails | Zane Grey | Nature, Travel & Geography | Audiobook | English | 8/8 | chapter 4 tails of lonely trails by zane grey this LibriVox recording is in the public domain chapter four tonto basin part 11 the last day of everything always comes time like the tide waits for no man anticipation is beautiful but it is best and happiest to enjoy the present live while we may on this last day of my hunt we were up almost before it was light enough to see the morning star shone radiant and the dark gray sky all the other stars seemed dimmed by its glory silent as a grave was the forest I started a fire chopped wood so vigorously that I awakened nielsen who came forth like a burly caveman and I washed hands and face in the icy cold brook by the time breakfast was over the gold of the Rising Sun was tipping the highest pines on the ridges we started on foot leaving the horses hobbled near camp all the hounds appeared fit even old Dan trotted along fiscally pile a neighbor of house had come to take a hunt with us bringing two dogs with him for this last day I had formulated a plan ed and one of the boys were to take the hounds down on the east side of the great ridge that made the eastern wall of dude Canyon RC was to climb out on this Ridge and take his position at the most advantageous point we had already chased half a dozen bears over this saddle one of which was the big frosty coated grizzly that ed Nielsen had shot at the rest of us hurried to the head of dudes Canyon coppell and i were to go down to the first prom on tori's under the rim the others were to await developments and go where how thought best to send them coppell and i started down over and around the crags going carefully until we reach the open slope under the rim rock it seemed this morning that I was fresh eager agile like a goat on my feet in my consciousness of this I boasted to coppell that I would dislodge fewer stones and so make less noise than e the canyon sloped at an angle of about 45 degrees and we slid stepped jumped and ran down without starting an avalanche when we descended to the first bear cape of projecting Rock the hour was the earliest in which I had been down under the rim all the canyon and the great green Gulf below were unusually fresh and beautiful I heard the lonely call of strange birds and the low murmur of running water an eagle sword in the sunlight high above us to the east Rose the Magnificent slope of dude Canyon I gazed up to the black and green and silver as sent up to the gold tipped craggy crest where r c had his stand I knew he could see me but I could not see him afterward he told me that my red cap shown clearly out of green and gray so he had no difficulty in keeping track of my whereabouts the thickets of Aspen's and oats seemed now to stand on end how dark in the shade and steely and cold they looked that giant Ridge still obstructed the Sun and all on this side of it under its frowning crest and slope was dark and fresh and cool in shadow the ravines were choked black with spruce trees here along this grey shady slant of wall in niches and cracks and under ledges and on benches were the beds of the bears even as I gazed momentarily I expected to see a bear it looked 200 yards across the canyon from where we stood but Koppel declared it was a thousand on our other side capes and benches and groves were bright and sunshine clear across the rough breaks to the west of dude Canyon I saw a flock of wild pigeons below way out and Beyond rolled the floor of the basin green and vast like a ridged sea of pines to the bold black of muscles so hauntingly beckoning from the distance coppell spoke now and then but I wanted to be silent how wild and wonderful this place in the early morning but I had not long to meditate and revel in beauty and wildness far down across the mouth of the canyon at the extreme southern end of that vast oak thicket the hounds gave tongue old Dan first in the still cool air how his Great Wolf Bay rang out the wildness of the time and place already ed and pile had rounded the end of the east ridge and were coming up along the slope of dude Canyon hounds working round declared Koppel now I'll tell you what last night a bear was feeding along that into the thicket the hounds are a mill and round trying to straighten out his trail to dead since they'll jump a bear and we'll see him look everywhere I cautioned Koppel and my eyes roved and strained over all that vast slope suddenly I spied the flash of something black far down the thicket and tried to show it to my comrade let's go round and down to that lower point of rock it's a better stand than this closer to the thicket and commands those by golly I see what you see there's a bear slipping down stay with me now staying with Coppell was a matter of utter disregard of clothes limbs life he plunged off that bear ledge slid flat on his back and warmed feet first under manzanita and gaining open slope got up to run and jump into another thicket by staying with him I saw that I would have a way opened through the brush and something to fall upon if I fell hear em dat the edge of a deep gorge that made me dizzy he leaped cracks he let himself down over a ledge by holding two bushes he found steps to descend little Bluffs and he flew across the open slides of weathered rock I was afraid this shortcut to the lower projecting cape of rock would end suddenly on some impassable break or cliff but though the travel grew rough we still kept on I wore only boots trousers and shirt and out with cartridge belt strapped tight around me it was a wonder I was not stripped some of my rags went to decorate the wake we left down that succession of ledges but we made it with me at least bruised and ragged dusty and choked and absolutely breathless my body burned as with fire hot sweat ran in streams down my chest at last we reached the bear flat projecting cape of rock and indeed it afforded an exceedingly favorable outlook I had to sink down on the rock I could not talk until I got my breath but I used my eyes to every advantage neither Koppel nor i could locate the black moving object we had seen from above we were much closer to the hounds though they still were baying a tangled crosstrail fortunate it was for me that I was given these few moments to rest from my tremendous exertions my eyes searched the leaf covered slope so brown and sear and the shaggy thickets and tried to pierce the black tangle of spruce patches all at once magically it seemed my gaze held to a dark shadow a bit of dense shade under a large spruce tree something moved then a big bear rose right out of his bed of leaves majestically as if disturbed and turned his head back toward the direction of the baying hounds next he walked out he stopped I was quivering with eagerness to tell Koppel that I waited then the bear walked behind a tree and peeped out only his head showing after a moment again he walked out then aren't you ever going to see him I cried at last what ejaculated coppell and surprise bear and i pointed at this side of dead spruce now reckon you see a stump oh by golly I see him he's a dandy reddish color doc he's one of them mean old cinnamons watch what will he do Ben he hears the hounds how singularly thrilling to see him how slowly he walked how devoid of fear how stately sure he hears them see him look back that son of a gun I'll bet he's given us that bear left more than once then how far away is he I asked oh that's 800 yards declared Koppel a long shot let's wait he may work down closer but most likely he'll run uphill if he climbs he'll go right to our ceased and I said to gazing upward sure will there's no other saddle then I decided that I would not shoot at him unless he started down my excitement was difficult to control I found it impossible to attend to my sensations to think about what I was feeling but the moment was full of suspense the bear went into a small clump of spruces and stayed there a little while tantalizing moments the hounds were hot upon his trail still working to and fro in the oak thicket I judged scarcely a mile separated them from the bear again he disappeared behind a little bush remembering that five pairs of sharp eyes could see him from the points above I stood up and waved my red cap I waved it wildly as a man waves a red flag in moments of danger afterward RC said he saw me plainly and understood my action again the bear had showed this time on an open slide where he had halted he was looking across the canyon while I waved my cap then could he see us so far I asked by golly I'll bet he does see is you get to smokin him up and if you hit him don't be nervous if he starts for us cinnamons are bad customers layout five extra shells and make up your mind to kill him I dropped upon one knee the bear started down coming towards us over an open slide aim a little course and following said Koppel I did so and tightening all my muscles into a ball holding my breath I fired the bear gave a savage kick backwards he jerked back to bided his haunch a growl low angry vicious followed the echoes of my Eiffel then it seemed he pointed his head toward us and it began to run down the slope looking our way all the time by golly yelled Koppel you stung him one and he's a-comin now you've got to shoot some he can roll downhill and run uphill like a jackrabbit take your time wait for open shots and make sure Coples advice brought home to me what could happen even with the advantage on my side also it brought the cold tight prickle to my skin the shudder that was not a thrill the pressure of blood running too swiftly I did not feel myself shake but the rifle was unsteady I rested an elbow on my knee yet still I had difficulty in keeping the site on him I could get it on him but could not keep it there again he came out into the open at the head of a yellow slide that reached to a thicket below I must not hurry yet I had to hurry after all he had not so far to come and most of the distance was undercover through my mind flashed out story of a cinnamon that kept coming with ten bullets in him dog he's paden along warned Koppel smoke some of them shells straining every nerve I aimed as before only a little in advance held tight and pulled at the same instant the bear doubled up in a ball and began to roll down the slide he scattered the leaves then into the thicket he crashed knocking the oaks and cracking the brush some shot yelled coppell he's your bear but my bear continued to crash through the brush I shot again and yet again missing both times apparently he was coming faster now and then he showed dark almost at the foot of our slope trees were thick there I could not see there and I could not look for bear and reload at the same moment my fingers were not very nimble don't shoot shouted coppell he's your bear I never make any mistakes when I see game hit but I see him coming where by golly that's another bear he's black yours is red look sharp next time he shows smoke him I saw a flash of black across an open space I heard a scattering of gravel but I had no chance to shoot them both of us heard a bear running in thick leaves he's gone down the canyon said Koppel now look for your bear listened been the hounds are coming fast there's Rock they're soo I see him old Dan what do you think of that old dog there your red bears still coming he's bad hurt though Koppel tried hard to show me where and I strained my eyes I could not see the bear I could not locate the threshing of brush I knew it seemed close enough for me to be glad I was not down in that thicket how the hounds made the Welkin ring rock was in the lead sue was next and old Dan must have found the speed of his best days strange he did not Bay all down that slope when rock and sue headed the bear then I saw him he SAT up on his haunches ready to fight but they did not attack him instead they began to Yelp wildly I dared not shoot again for fear of hitting one of them old Dan just beat the rest of the pack to the bear up peeled a yelping chorus I had never heard old Dan Bay a bear at close range with deep hoarse quick wild roars he dominated that medley a box canyon took up the bass crackling them back in echo from wall to wall from the saddle of the great ridge above peeled down our seas wahoo I saw him Scylla waited dark against the skyline he waved and I answered and then he disappeared Nielsen bellowed from the craggy Cape above and behind us from down the canyon ed sent up his piercing kawaii then Takahashi appeared opposite to us like a goat on a promontory how his buns I rang above the baying of the hounds we'd better hurry down in a cross said carpel reckon the hounds will jump that bear or someone else will get there for first we gotta skedaddle as before we fell into a manzanita thicket and had to crawl then we came out upon a rim of a box canyon at where the echoes made such a den it was too steep to descend we had to head it and Koppel took chances loose boulders tripped me and stout bushes saved me we knocked streams of rock and gravel down into this gorge sending up a roar as a falling water but we got around a steep slope lay below all pine needles and Lee's from this point I saw ed on the opposite slope I stopped one bear I yelled hurry look out for the dogs then imitating Koppel i sat down and slid as on a toboggan for some thirty thrilling yards some of my anatomy and more of my rags I left behind me but it was too exciting than to think of hurts I managed to protect at least my rifle Coppell was charging into the thicket below I followed him into the dark gorge where huge boulders lay and a swift brook ran and Lee's two feet deep carpeted the shady canyon bed it was gloomy down into the lower part I saw where bear had turned over the leaves making a dark track the hounds of quit called coppell suddenly I told you he was your bear we yelled somebody above us answered then we climbed up the opposite slope through a dense thicket crossing a fresh bear track a running track and soon came into an open rocky slide where my barely surrounded by the hounds with old Dan on guard the bear was red in color with silky fur along keen head and fine limbs and of goodly size cinnamon declared Koppel and turning him over he pointed to a white spot on his breast fine bear about 400 pounds maybe not so heavy but he'll take some packin up to the rim then I became aware of the other men Takahashi had arrived on the scene first finding the bear dead ed came next and after am pile i sat down for a much-needed rest coppell interested himself in examining the bear finding that my first shot had hit him in the flank and my second had gone through the middle of his body next coppell amused himself by taking pictures of baron hounds old Dan came to me and lay beside me and looked as if to say well we got him yells from both sides of the canyon were answered by Ed our sea was rolling the rocks on his side at a great rate but Nielsen on the other side beat him to us the Norwegian crashed the brush sent the avalanches roaring and eventually reached us all dirty ragged bloody with fire in his eye he had come all the way from the rim in short order what a performance that must have been he said he thought he might be needed RC guided by edge yells came cracking the brush down to us pale he was and wet with sweat and there were black brush marks across his face his eyes were keen and sharp he had started down for the same reason as Nielsen's but he had to descend a slope so steep that he had to hold on to keep from sliding down and he had jumped a big bear out of a bed of leaves the bed was still warm RC said he had smelled the bear and that his toboggan slide down that slope with bears all around for all he knew had started the cold sweat on him presently George haut joined us having come down the bed of the canyon we knew you'd got a bear said George father heard the first two bullets hit me and I heard him rolling down the slope well exclaimed RC that's what made those first two shot sounds so strange to me different from the last two sounded like soft dead pats and it was led hitting flesh I heard it half a mile away this matter of the sound of bullets hitting flesh and being heard at a great distance seemed to me the most remarkable feature of our hunt later I asked how he said he heard my first two bullets strike and believed from the peculiar sound that I had my bear and his stand was fully a mile away but the morning was unusually still and sound carried for the men hung my bear from the forks of a maple then they decided to give us time to climb up to our stands before putting the hounds on the other fresh trail Nielsen RC and I started to climb back up to the points only plenty of time made it possible to scale those rugged Bluffs nielsen distanced us and eventually we became separated the sun grew warm the bees hummed after a while we heard the baying of the hounds they were working westward under the basis of the bluffs we rimmed the heads of several gorges climbed and crossed the west ridge of dude Canyon and lost the hound somewhere as we traveled RC did not seem to mind this misfortune any more than I we were content resting a while we chose the most accessible Ridge and started the long climb to the rim westward under us opened a great noble canyon full of forests ticketed slopes cliffs and caves and crags next time we rested we again heard the hounds far away at first but gradually drawing closer in half an hour they appeared right under us again they're paying however grew desultory and lacked the stirring note finally we heard ed calling and whistling to them after that for a while all was still then peeled up the clear tuneful melody of EDS horn calling off the chase for that day and season all over said RC are you glad for old Dan sake and toms and the Bears yes I replied me too but I'd never get enough of this country we proceeded on our ascent over and up the broken masses of rock climbing slowly and easily making frequent and long rests we liked to linger in the Sun on the warm piney mossy benches every shady cedar or juniper wooed astute area old bear tracks and fresh deer tracks held the same interest though our hunt was over above us the gray broken mass of rim towered and loomed more formidable as we neared it sometimes we talked a little but mostly we were silent like an Indian at every pause I gazed out into the void how sweeping and grand the long sloping lines of ridges from the rim down away in the East ragged Spurs of Peaks showed hazily like uncertain mountains on the desert south ranged the upheaved and the wild Mossad cells everywhere beneath me for leagues and leagues extended the timbered hills of green the grey outcroppings of rock the red Bluff's the golden patches of grassy valleys lost in the canyons all these swept away in a vast billowy ocean of wilderness to become dim in the purple of distance and the Sun was setting in a blaze of gold from the rim I took a last lingering look and did not marvel that I love this Wonderland of Arizona end of chapter 4 part 11 chapter 5 of tales of lonely trails by zane grey this LibriVox recording is in the public domain chapter five death valley of the 557 thousand square miles of desert land in the southwest Death Valley is the lowest below sea level the most arid and desolate it derives its felicitous name from the earliest days of the gold strike in California when a caravan of Mormons numbering about 70 struck out from Salt Lake to cross the Mojave Desert and make a shortcut to the gold fields all but two of these prospectors perished in the deep iron walled ghastly sinkholes which from that time became known as Death Valley the survivors of this fatal expedition brought news to the world that the somber valley of death was a treasure mine of minerals and since then hundreds of prospectors and Wanderers have lost their lives there to seek gold and live in the lonely waste places of the earth have been and ever will be driving passions of men my companion on this trip was a Norwegian named Nielsen on most of my trips too lonely in wild places I have been fortunate as to comrades or guides the circumstances of my meeting Nielsen were so singular that I think they will serve as an interesting introduction some years ago I received a letter brief clear and well written in which the writer stated that he had been a wanderer over the world a sailor Before the Mast and was now a prospector for gold he had taken four trips alone down into the desert of Sonora and in many other places of the Southwest and knew the prospect in game somewhere he had run across my story desert gold in which I told about a lost gold mine and the point of his letter was that if I could give him some idea as to where the lost gold mine was located he would go find it and give me half his name was sievert Nielsen I wrote him that to my regret the lost gold mine existed only in my imagination but if he would come to Avalon to see perhaps we might both profit by such a meeting to my surprise he came he was a man of about 35 of magnificent physique weighing about 190 and he was so enormously broad across the shoulders that he did not look his five feet ten he had a wonderful head huge round solid like a cannonball and his bronzed face his regular features square firm jaw and clear grey eyes fearless and direct were singularly attractive to me well educated with a strange comb poised and a cool courtesy not common in Americans he evidently was a man of good family by his own choice a rolling stone and adventurer Nielsen accompanied me on two trips into the wilderness of Arizona on one of which he saved my life and on the other he rescued all our party from a most uncomfortable and possibly hazardous situation but these are tails i'm a tell elsewhere in january nineteen nineteen nielsen and i traveled around the desert of Southern California from Palm Springs to picacho and in March we went to Death Valley nowadays a little railroad the Tonopah and Tidewater railroad runs northward from the Santa Fe over the barren mojave and it passes within 50 miles of Death Valley it was sunset when we arrived at Death Valley Junction a weird strange son said and drooping curtains of transparent cloud lighting up dark mountain ranges some peeks of which were clear-cut in black against the sky and others veiled in trailing storms and still others white with snow that night in the dingy little store I heard prospectors talk about float which meant gold on the surface and about high grade ores zinc copper silver led manganese and about how borax was mined 30 years ago and hauled out of death valley by teams of twenty mules next morning while Nielsen packed the outfit i visited the borax mill it was the property of an English firm and the work of hauling grinding roasting borax or went on day and night inside it was as dusty and full of powdery atmosphere as an old fashioned flour mill the ore was hauled by train from some 20 miles over toward the valley and was dumped from a high trestle into shoots that fed the grinders for an hour I watched this constant stream of borax as it slid down into the hungry crushers and I listened to the choc faced operator who yelled in my ear once he picked a piece of gypsum out of the borax he said the mill was getting out twenty-five hundred sacks a day the most significant thing he said was that men did not last long as such labor and in the mines six months appeared to be the limit of human endurance how soon I had enough of that choking air in the room where the borax was ground and the place where the borax was roasted in huge round revolving furnaces I found that intolerable when I got into the cool clean desert air I felt an immeasurable relief and that relief made me thoughtful of the lives of men who labored who were chained by necessity by duty or habit or by love to the hard tasks of the world it did not seem fair these laborers of the borax mines and mills like the Stoker's of ships and coal diggers and blast furnace ands like thousands and millions of men killed themselves outright or impaired their strength and when they were gone or rendered useless others were found to take their places whenever I come in contact with some phase of this problem of life I take the meaning or the lesson of it to myself and as the years go by my respect and reverence and wonder increase for these men of elemental lives these horny-handed toilers with physical things these uncomplaining users of brawn and bone these giants who breast the elements who till the earth and handle iron who fight the natural forces with their bodies that day about noon I looked back down the long gravel and greasewood slope which we had ascended and I saw the borax male now only a smokey blood on the desert floor when we reach the pass between the Black Mountains and the funeral mountains we left the road and were soon lost to the works of man how strange a gladness a relief something dropped away from me I felt the same subtle change in Nielsen for one thing he stopped talking except an occasional word to the Mules the blunt end of the funeral range was as remarkable as its name it sheared up very high a sawtooth range with colored strata tilted at an angle of 45 degrees zigzag veins of black and red and yellow rather dull ran through the grate drab gray mass this end of the range an Iron Mountain frowned down upon us with hard and formidable aspect the peak was draped in streaky veils of rain from low dropping clouds that appeared to have lodged there all below lay clear and cold in the sunlight our direction lay to the westward and at that altitude about 3,000 feet how pleasant to face the Sun for the wind was cold the narrow shallow wash leading down from the past deepened widened almost imperceptibly at first and then gradually until its proportions were striking it was a gully where the gravel washed down during rains and were a scant vegetation greasewood and a few local thai and scrubby sage struggled for existence not a bird or lizard or living creature in sight the trail was getting lonely from time to time I looked back because as we could not see far ahead all the superb scene spread and towered behind us by and by our wash grew to be a white canyon winding away from under the massive in pondering wall of the funeral range the high side of this magnificent and impressive line of mountains faced West a succession of unscalable slopes of bare ragged rock jagged and jutted dark drab rusty iron with gray and oblique strata running through them as far as I could see clouds sword around the peaks shadows sailed along the slopes walking in loose gravel was as hard as trudging along in sand after about 15 miles I began to have leaden feet I did not mind hard work but I wanted to avoid overexertion when I am extremely we read my feelings are liable to be colored somewhat by depression or melancholy then it always bothered me to get tired while Nielsen kept on with his wonderful stride say Nielsen do you take me for a Yaqui I complained slow up a little then he obliged me and to cheer me up he told me about a little tramping experience he had in Baja California somewhere on the east slope of the Sierra Madre his burrows strayed or were killed by mountain lions and he found it imperative to strike at once for the nearest ranch below the border a distance of 150 miles he could carry only so much of his outfit and as some of it was valuable to him he discarded all his food except a few biscuits and a canteen of water resting only a few hours without sleep at all he walked the hundred and fifty miles in three days and nights I believed that Nielsen by telling me such incidents of his own wild experience inspired me to more endurance than I knew I possessed as we traveled on down the canyon its dimensions continued to grow it finally turned to the left and opened out wide into a valley running west a low range of hills faced us rising in a long sweeping slant of earth like the incline of a glacier to rounded Spurs halfway up the slope where the brown earth lightened there showed an outcropping of clay amber and cream and cinnamon and green all exquisitely vivid and clear this bright spot appeared to be isolated far above it rose other clay slopes of variegated Hugh's red and russet and move and gray and colors indescribably merged all running in veins through this range of hills we faced the west again and descending this valley were soon greeted by a region of clay hills bear cone-shaped fantastic in shade slope and ridge with a high sharp peak dominating all the colors were moved taupe pearl gray all stained by a descending band of crimson as if a higher slope had been stabbed to let its life blood flow down the softness the richness and beauty of this texture of Earth amazed and delighted my eyes quite unprepared at time approaching sunset we reached and rounded a sharp curve to see down and far away and to be held mute in our tracks between a white mantled mountain range on the left and the dark striped lofty range on the right I could see far down into a Gulf a hazy void a vast stark valley that seemed streaked and ridged and canyon and abyss into which veils of rain were dropping and over which broken clouds hung pierced by red and gold Ray's death valley far down and far away still yet confounding at first sight I gazed spellbound it oppressed my heart Nielsen stood like a statue silent absorbed for a moment then he strode on I followed and every second saw more and different aspects that could not however change the first stunning impression immense unreal weird I went on down the widening canyon looking into that changing void how full of color it smoked the tracer ease of streams or shining white washes brightened the floor of the long dark pit patches and plains of white borax flats or alkali showed up like snow a red haze sinister and somber hung over the eastern ramparts of this valley and over the western drooped gray veils of rain like thinnest lacy clouds through which gleams of the Sun shone Nielsen plotted on mindful of our mules but I lingered and at last checked my reluctant steps at an open high point with commanding and magnificent view as I did not attempt the impossible to write down thoughts and sensations afterward I could remember only a few how desolate and grin the far away lonely and terrible places of the earth were the most beautiful and elevating life's little day seemed so easy to understand so pitiful as the Sun began to set and the storm clouds moved across it this wonderful scene darkened changed every moment brightened grew full of luminous red light and then streaked by golden gleans the tips of the Panama mountains came out silver above the purple clouds at sunset the moment was glorious dark forbidding dim weird dismal yet still tinged with gold not like any other scene Dante's Inferno valley of shadows Canyon of purple veils when the Sun had set and all that upheaved and furrowed world of rock had received a mantle of grey and a slumbrous sulfurous ruddy hey slowly darkened to purple and black then I realized more fully that I was looking down into Death Valley twilight was stealing down when I caught up with Nielsen he had selected for our camp a protected nook near where the canyon floor or some patches of sage the stalks and roots of which would serve for firewood we unpacked fed the mule some grain pitched our little tent and made our bed all in short order but it was dark long before we had supper during the meal we talked a little but afterward when the chores were done and the mules had become quiet and the strange thick silence had settled down upon us we did not talk at all the night was black with sky mostly obscured by clouds a pale haze marked the west where the afterglow had faded in the south one radiant star crowned a mountain peak I strolled away in the darkness and sat down upon a stone how intense the silence dead vast sepolcro like dreaming waiting a silence of Ages burdened with the history of the past awful I strained my ears for sound of insect or Russell of sage or drop of weathered rock the soft cool desert wind was soundless this silence had something terrifying in it making me a man alone on the earth the great spaces the wild places as they had been millions of years before I seemed to divine how through them man might develop from savage to a god and how alas he might go back again when I returned to camp Nielsen had gone to bed and the fire had burned low I threw on some branches of sage the fire blazed dup but it seemed different from other campfires no cheer no glow no Sparkle perhaps it was owing to scant and poor would sill I thought it was owing as much to the place the sadness the loneliness the desolate ness of this place weighed upon the campfire the same as it did upon my heart we got up at five-thirty at dawn the sky was a cold lead and gray with a dull gold and rose in the east a hard wind eager and nipping blew up the canyon at six o'clock the sky Brighton somewhat and the day did not promise so threatening an hour later we broke camp travelling in the early morning was pleasant and we made good time down the winding Canyon arriving at furnace creek about noon where we halted to rest this stream of warm water flowed down from a gully that headed up in the funeral mountains it had a disagreeable taste somewhat acrid and soapy a green thicket of brush was indeed welcome to the eye it consisted of a rank course kind of grass and arrow weed mesquite and Tamarack the last name de Bourgh a pink fuzzy blossom not unlike willow which was quite fragrant here the deadness of the region seemed further enlivened by several small birds speckled and gray two Ravens and a hawk they all appeared to be hunting food on a ridge above furnace creek we came upon a spring of poison water it was clear sparkling with a greenish cast and it deposited a white crust on the margins Nielsen kicking around in the sand unearthed the skull bleached and yellow yet evidently not so very old some thirsty wanderer had taken his last drink at that deceiving spring the gruesome and the beautiful the tragic and the sublime go hand in hand down the naked shingle of this desolate desert while tramping around in the neighborhood of furnace creek I happened upon an old almost obliterated trail it led toward the ridges of clay and when I had climbed it a little ways I began to get an impression that the slopes on the other side must run down into a basin or Canyon so I climbed to the top the Magnificent scenes of desert and mountain like the splendid things of life must be climbed for in this instance I was suddenly and stunningly confronted by a yellow Gulf of cone shaped and fan shaped ridges all bare crinkly clay of gold of amber of pink of bronze of cream all tapering down to round knobbed lower ridges bleak and barren yet wonderfully beautiful in their stark purity of denudation until it last far down between two widely separated hills shown dim and blue and ghastly with shining white streaks like silver streams the valley of death then beyond it climbed the league long red slope merging into the iron buttressed base of the Panama range and here line online and bulge on bulge rose the bold benches and on up the unscalable outcroppings of rock like colossal ribs of the earth on and up the steep slopes to where their density of blue-black color began to thin out with streaks of white and upward to the last noble height where the cold pure snow gleamed against the sky I descended into this yellow maize this world of gullies and ridges where I found it difficult to keep from getting lost I did lose my bearings but as my boots made deep imprints in the soft clay I knew it would be easy to backtrack my trail after a while this labyrinthine series of channels and dunes opened into a wide space enclosed on three sides by denuded slopes mostly yellow these slopes were smooth graceful symmetrical with thin tracery of erosion and each appeared to retain its own color yellow or cinnamon or move but they were always dominated by a higher one of a different color and this mystic region slope and slanted to a great amphitheatre that was walled on the opposite side by a mountain of bare earth of every hue and of a thousand ribbed and scalloped surfaces at its base the goals and russets and yellows were strongest but ascending it slopes were changing colors a dark beautiful mouse color on one side and a strange pearly cream on the other between these great corners of the curve climbed ridges of grey and heliotrope and amber to meet wonderful veins of green green as the sea and sunlight and tracery of white and on the bold face of this amphitheatre high up stood out a zigzag belt of dough read the stain of which had run down to tange the other Hughes above all this wondrous coloration upheaved the bare breast of the mountain growing darker with earthly Brown's up the gray old rock ramparts this place affected me so strangely so irresistibly that I remained there a long time something terrible had happened there two men I felt that something tragic was going on right then the wearing down the devastation of the Old Earth how plainly that could be seen geologically it was more remarkable to me than the Grand Canyon but it was the appalling meaning the absolutely indescribable beauty that overcame me I thought of those who had been inspiration to me in my work and I suffered a pang that they could not be there to see and feel with me on my way out of this amphitheater a hard wind swooped down over the slopes tearing up the color dust in sheets and clouds it seemed to me each gully had its mystic Paul of color I lost no time climbing out what a hot joking ordeal but I never would have missed it even had I known I would get lost looking down again the scene was vastly changed a smoky weird murky hell with a dull Sun gleaming magenta hued through the shifting Paul of dust in the afternoon we proceeded leisurely through an atmosphere growing warmer and denser down to the valley reaching it at dusk we followed the course of furnace creek and made camp under some cottonwood trees on the west slope of the valley the wind blew a warm gale all night I lay awake awhile and slept with very little covering toward dawn the gale died away i was up at five-thirty the morning broke fine clear balmy a flare of pale gleaming light over the funeral arranged eral today the sunrise the tips of the higher snow-capped pan immense were rose-colored and below then the slopes were red the bulk of the range showed dark all these features gradually brightened until the Sun came up how blazing and intense the wind began to blow again under the cottonwoods with their rustling leaves and green so soothing to the eye it was very pleasant beyond our camp stood green and pink thickets of Tamarack and some dark velvety green alfalfa fields made possible by the spreading of furnace creek over the valley slope a man lived there and raised this alfalfa for the Mules of the borax miners he of there alone and his was indeed a lonely wonderful and terrible life at this season a few shoshoni Indians were camped near helping him in his labors this lone ranchers name was Denton and he turned out to be a brother of a denton hunter and guide whom I had met in lower California like all desert men used to silence Denton talked with difficulty but the content of his speech made up for its brevity he told us about the Wanderers and prospectors he had rescued from death by starvation and thirst he told us about the terrific noonday heat of summer and about the incredible and horribly midnight furnished gales that swept down the valley with the mercury at 125 degrees at midnight below the level of the sea when these furnace blasts bore down upon him it was just all he could do to live no man could spend many summers there as for white women Death Valley was fatal to them the Indians spent the summers up on the mountains Denton said he defected men differently those who were meat eaters or alcohol drinkers could not survive perfect heart and lungs were necessary to stand the heat and density of atmosphere below sea level he told of a man who had visited his cabin and had left early in the day vigorous and strong a few hours later he was found near the Oasis unable to walk crawling on his hands and knees dragging a full canteen of water he never knew what ailed him it might have been heat for the thermometer registered 135 and it might have been poison gas another man young of heavy and powerful build lost 70 pounds weight in less than two days and was nearly dead when found the heat of Death Valley quickly dried up blood tissue boehm Denton told of a prospector who started out at dawn strong and rational to return at sunset so crazy that he had to be tied to keep him out of the water to have drunk his fill then would have killed him he had to be fed water by spoonful another wanderer came staggering into the Oasis blind with horrible face and black swollen tongue protruding he could not make a sound he also had to be roped as if he were a mad steer I met only one prospector during my stay in Death Valley he camped with us a rather under sized man he was yet muscular with brown wrinkled face and narrow dim eyes he seemed to be smiling to himself most of the time he liked to talk to his burrows he was exceedingly interesting once he nearly died of thirst having gone from noon one day till next morning without water he said he fell down often during this ordeal but did not lose his senses finally the Burl's saved his life this ol fella had been across Death Valley every month in the year july was the worst in that month crossing should not be attempted during the middle of the day i made the acquaintance of the Shoshoni indians or rather through nielsen i met them nielsen had a kindly friendly way with indians there were half a dozen families living in squalid tents the Braves worked in the fields for Denton and the squaws kept to the shade with their numerous children they appeared to be poor certainly they were a ragged unpick direst group Nielsen and I visited them taking an armload of canned fruit and boxes of sweet crackers which they received with evident joy through this overture I got a peep into one of the tents the simplicity and frugality of the desert Paiute or Navajo were here wanting these children of the open war white men's apparel and eight white men's food and they even had a cook stove and a sewing machine in their tent with all that they were trying to live like Indians for me the spectacle was melancholy another manifestation added to my long list of degeneration of the Indians by the whites the tent was a buzzing beehive of flies I never before saw so many in a corner I saw a naked Indian baby asleep on goatskin all his brown warm tinted skin spotted black with flies later in the day one of the Indian men called upon us at our camp I was surprised to hear him use good English he said he had been educated in the government school in California from him I learned considerable about death valley as he was about to depart on the way to his labor in the fields he put his hand in his ragged pocket and drew forth an old beaded hatband and with calm dignity worthy of any gift he made me a present of it then he went on his way the incident touched me I had been kind the Indian was not to be outdone how that reminded me of the many instances of pride in Indians who yet has ever told the story of the Indian the truth the spirit the soul of his tragedy Nielsen and I climbed high up the west slope to the top of a gravel ridge swept clean and packed hard by the winds here i sat down while my companion trapped curiously around at my feet I found a tiny flower so tiny as to almost defy detection the color resembled sage gray and it had the fragrance of sage hard to find and wonderful to see was its tiny blossom the small leaves were perfectly formed very soft veined and scalloped with a fine fuzz and a glistening sparkle that desert flower of a day and its isolation and fragility yet its unquenchable spirit to live was as great to me as the tremendous reddening bulk of the funeral mountains looming so sinisterly over me then I saw some large bats with white heads flitting around in zigzag flights assuredly new and strange creatures to me I had come up there to this high ridge to take advantage of the Bleak lonely spot commanding a view of valley and mountains before I could compose myself to watch the valley I made the discovery that near me were six low gravely mounds graves one had two stones at head and foot another had no mark at all the one nearest me had for the head a flat piece of board with lettering so effaced by weather that I could not decipher the inscription the bones of a horse lay littered about between the graves what a lonely place for graves Death Valley seemed to be one vast Sepulchre what had been the lives and deaths of these people buried here lonely melancholy nameless graves upon the Windy desert slope by this time the long shadows had begun to fall sunset over Death Valley a golden flare burned over the pan immense long tapering notched mountains with all their rugged conformation showing above floated gold and grey and silver edged clouds below shown a whirl of dusty ruddy bronze haze gradually thickening den veils of heat still rose from the pale desert valley as I watched all before me seemed to change and be shrouded in purple how bold and desolate a scene what that scale and tremendous dimension the clouds hailed turned rosy for a moment with the afterglow then deepened into purple gloom a somber smoky sunset as if this death valley was the gateway of hell and its sinister shades were up flung from fire the desert day was done and now the desert Twilight descended twilight of hazy purple fell over the valley of shadows the black bold lines of mountains ran across the sky and down into the valley and up on the other side a buzzard sailed low in the foreground fitting emblem of life and all that wilderness of suggested death this fleeting our was tranquil and sad what little had it to do with the destiny of man Death Valley was only a ragged rent of the old earth from which men in their folly and passion had sought to dig forth golden treasure the air held a solemn stillness p how it rested my troubled soul I felt that I was myself here far different from my habitual self why had I long to see Death Valley what did I want of the desert that was naked red sinister somber forbidding ghastly stark dim and dark and dismal the abode of silence and loneliness the proof of death decay devastation and destruction the majestic sublimity of desolation the answer was that I sought the awful the appalling and terrible because they hurt me back to a primitive day where my blood and bones were bequeathed their heritage of the elements that was the secret of the eternal fascination the desert exerted upon all men it carried them back it inhibited thought it brought up the age-old sensations so that I could feel though I did not know it then once again the old satisfying state of the savage in nature when I returned to camp night had fallen the evening star stood high in the pale sky all alone and difficult to see yet the more beautiful for that the night appeared to be warmer or perhaps it was because no wind blew Nielsen got supper and ate most of it for I was not hungry as I SAT by the campfire a flock of little bats the smallest I had ever seen darted from the woodpile nearby and flew right in my face they had no fear of man or fire their wings made a soft swishing sound later I heard the trill of frogs which was the last sound I might have expected to hear in Death Valley a sweet high-pitched melodious trill it reminded me of the music made by frogs in the tamale past jungle of Mexico every time I awaken that night and it was often I heard this trill once too sometime late my listening here caught faint mournful notes of a killdeer how strange and still sweeter than the drill what a touch to the infinite silence and loneliness killdeer bird of the swamps and marshes what could he be doing in arid and barren Death Valley nature is mysterious and inscrutable next morning the marvel of nature was exemplified even more strikingly out on the hard gravel strewn slope I found some more tiny flowers of a day one was a white daisy very frail and delicate on a long thin stem with scarcely any leaves another was a yellow flower with four petals a pale miniature California Poppy still another was a purple red flower almost as large as a buttercup with dark green leaves last and tiniest of all were infinitely fragile pink and white blossoms on very flat plants smiling wanli up from the desolate earth Nielsen and I made known to Denton our purpose to walk across the valley he advised against it not that the heat was intense at this season he explained but there were other dangers particularly the brittle salty crust of the sinkhole nevertheless we were not deterred from our purpose so with plenty of water and canteens and a few biscuits in our pockets we set out I saw the heat veils rising from the valley floor at that point 178 feet below sea level the heat lifted in veils like thin smoke Denton had told us that in summer the heat came in currents and waves it blasted leaves burned trees to death as well as men prospectors watched for the leaden haze that thickened over the mountains knowing then no man could dare the terrible son that day would be a hazed and glaring hell leaden copper with Sun blazing a sky of molten iron a long sandy slope of mesquite extended down to the bare crinkly floor of the valley and here the descent to a lower level was scarcely perceptible the walking was bad little mounds in the salty crust made it hard to place a foot on the level this crust appeared fairly strong but when it rang hollow under our boots then I stepped very cautiously the caller was a dirty grey and yellow far ahead I could see a dazzling white plane that looked like frost or a frozen river the atmosphere was deceptive making this plane seem far away and then close at hand the excessively difficult walking and the thickness of the air tired me so I plumped myself down to rest and used my notebook as a means to conceal from the tireless Nielsen that I was fatigued always I found this a very efficient excuse and for that matter it was profitable for me I have forgotten more than I have ever written rather overpowering indeed was it to sit on the floor of Death Valley miles from the slopes that appeared so far away it was flat salty alkali or borax ground crusted and cracked the glare hurt my eyes I felt moist hot oppressed in spite of a rather stiff wind a dry odor pervaded the air slightly like salty dust then dust devils world on the bare flats a valley-wide Mirage shone clear as a mirror along the desert floor to the west strange deceiving a thing both unreal and beautiful the pana meant towered a wrinkled red grisly mass broken by rough canyons with long declines of talus like brown glaciers seemed and scarred indestructible by past ages yet surely wearing to ruin from this point I could not see the snow on the peaks the whole mountain range seemed an immense red barrier of beetling rock the funeral range was farther away and therefore more impressive its effect was stupendous leagues of brown chocolate slopes scarred by slashes of yellow and cream and shadowed black by sailing clouds led up to the magnificently peaked and juddered summits splendid as this was and reluctant as I felt to leave I soon joined Nielsen and we proceeded onward at last we reached the white winding plane that had resembled a frozen river and which from afar had looked so ghastly in stark we found it to be a perfectly smooth stratum of salt glistening as if powdered it was not solid not stable at pressure of a boot it shook like jelly under the white crust lay a yellow substance that was wet here appeared an obstacle we had not calculated upon Nielsen ventured out on it and his feet sank in several inches I did not like the wave of the crust it resembled thin ice under a weight presently I ventured to take a few steps and did not sink in so deeply or make such depression in the crusts as Nielsen we returned to the solid edge and deliberated Nielsen said that by stepping quickly we could cross without any great risk though it appeared reasonable that by standing still a person would sink into the substance well Nielsen you go ahead I said with an attempt at lightness you weigh 190 if you go through I'll turn back Nielsen started with a laugh the man courted peril the bright face of danger must have been beautiful and alluring to him I started after him caught up with him and stayed beside him I could not have walked behind him over that strip of treacherous sinkhole if I could have done so the whole adventure would have been meaningless to me nevertheless I was frightened I felt the prickle of my skin the stiffening of my hair as well as the cold tingling thrills along my veins the place was the lowest point of the valley in that particular location and must have been upwards of 200 feet below sea level the lowest spot called the sinkhole lay some miles distant and was the terminus of this river of salty white we crossed it in safety on the other side extended a long flat of upheaved crusts of salt and mud full of holes and pitfalls and exceedingly toilsome and painful place to travel and for all we could tell dangerous too I had all I could do to watch my feet and find surfaces to hold my steps eventually we cross this broken field reaching the edge of the gravel slope where we were very glad indeed to rest Denton had informed us that the distance was seven miles across the valley at the mouth of furnace creek I had thought it seemed much less than that but after I had toiled across it I was convinced that it was much more it had taken us hours how the time had sped for this reason we did not tarry long on that side facing the Sun we found the return trip more formidable hot indeed it was hot enough for me to imagine how terrible death valley would be in July or August on all sides the mountain stood up dim and obscure and distant in hays the heat vales lifted in ripples and any object not near at hand seemed elusive Nielsen set a pace for me on this return trip I was quicker and surer a foot than he but he had more endurance I lost strength while he kept his unimpaired so often he had to wait for me once when I broke through the crust he happened to be close at hand and quickly hauled me out I got one foot wet with some acid fluid we peered down into the murky hole Nielsen quoted a prospector saying 40 feet from hell that broken sharp crust of salt afforded the meanest traveling I had ever experienced slopes of weathered rock that slip and slide are bad cacti and especially joya cacti are worse the jagged and corrugated surfaces of lava are still more hazardous and painful but this cracked floor of Death Valley with its salt crust standing on end like pickets of offense beat any place for hard going that either Nielsen or I had ever encountered I ruined my boots skin to my shins cut my hands how those salt cuts done we crossed the upheaved plane then the strip of white and reached the crinkly floor of yellow salt the last hour taxed my endurance almost to the limit when we reached the edge of the sand and the beginning of the slope I was hotter and thirstier than I had ever been in my life it pleased me to see Nielsen wringing wet and panting he drank a quart of water apparently in one gulp and it was significant that I took the longest and deepest drink of water that I had ever had we reached the camp at the end of this still hot summer day never had a camp seem so welcome what a wonderful thing it was to earn and appreciate and realize rest the cottonwood leaves were rustling bees were humming in the tamarack blossoms I lay in the shade resting my burning feet and aching bones and I watched Nielsen as he whistled over the camp chores then I heard the sweet song of a Meadowlark and after that the melodious deep note of a swamp blackbird these birds evidently were travelling north and had tarried at the Oasis lying there I realized that I had come to love the silence the loneliness the serenity even the tragedy of this valley of shadows Death Valley was one place that could never be popular with men it had been set apart for the hardy diggers for Earth and treasures and for the Wanderers of the wastelands men who go forth to seek and to find and to face their souls perhaps most of them found death but there was a death in life desert travelers learned the secret that men lived too much in the world that in silence and loneliness and desolation there was something infinite something hidden from the crowd end of chapter five and of tales of lonely trails by zane grey | Priceless Audiobooks | UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA | 2017-04-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 10,882 | 57,185 |
ZpNSj3DK3AQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZpNSj3DK3AQ | Pursuing Uncomfortable Podcast Episode 24 Pursuing Mental Health with Jonny McCoy includes bonus epi | hello everyone i am eager for you to meet my friend johnny mccoy johnny welcome to the pursuing uncomfortable podcast well i'm just thrilled to be here melissa it's uh great to connect with you and uh you know i i already feel great just just hearing your voice um through the microphone i can tell why you're while your listeners enjoy your podcast so much so thanks for having me thank you and as you can tell johnny is a southern gentleman and he is very polite and very gracious and just going to put this out there at some point during our conversation he is going to call me ma'am and i'm going to just blow this thing up and tell him to stop it and call me melissa but you know with everyone here listening i will have some grace and just appreciate you are who you are so i appreciate it yes ma'am i well there it is first one i you know in uh in in my upbringing and then my upbringing transferred into you know being an attorney and having to you know make sure that i'm always on as far as manners and personality-wise goes but i i'm in recovery i'm in i'm a southerner in recovery to the point where you know i know that i'm not going to offend you if i just say yes even though that hurts well this is pursuing uncomfortable but you you're not alone we're here with you but now all kidding aside johnny it's really such a gift to me to have you here i cannot wait for people to to meet you and become acquainted with all the incredible work that you're doing in the world and to hear your story and how you can impact others and give them hope so let's just jump into it shall we absolutely of course thank you for having me again and let's start out i'll let you tell us about it tell me about your app and what it does for folks absolutely so um the app is a mental health peer support app it's peer-to-peer support it's anonymous and it's free it's located in the apple app store and on google play and it's been it's been long it's been available since about october of last year what white flag is is a a place for people who are struggling with mental health and addiction issues or their family members are or their friends are or they just want to help other people who are struggling they go and they come on the app and you can either raise your white flag and then specifically ask for things to receive support for like ptsd anxiety depression suicidal ideation and then you know you can also discuss some of the stuff you're using to cope with alcohol xanax whatever it may be that you are using to kind of deal with your pain and then finally your background issues whether you know you are adopted whether you um you know you've incurred some some sort of trauma you can really uh raise your white flag and be connected with somebody who's going through the exact same things as you and uh upon raising your white flag the group of people in the app that are already there are notified that somebody with issues in common with them is seeking somebody to talk to anonymously and so what we're seeing happen is once you raise your white flag multiple people are starting to reach out some of them are veterans some of them are moms talking with other moms dealing with postpartum depression you know we have you know people who are going through a divorce child custody dispute stuff that you never really think hey this person is going to i think there's a helicopter flying over hey this person is the uh uh my issues are are my own i'm not d no i've never met anybody else who's dealt with them but white flag changes all of that white flag shows you that you're truly not alone and exactly what you're dealing with and so uh the other aspect of it besides raising a white flag is just going on there and uh perusing through people who have raised their white flag you can go to their profile you read their story their mental health journey you can go through and see what issues that they want to talk about whether it be depression anxiety um you know you know paranoia bipolar disorder and you can reach out to somebody who's looking for help so if you're the person if you're the type of person who's like listen i don't want to ask for help that's me i don't want to ask for help you know but i tell you what i get a lot out of helping other people intrinsically it elevates my consciousness it it you know when they talk about uh teachers who are teaching stuff you the the reason that the teacher knows so much is because they continuously talk about it over and over again and they learn new avenues of what they're trying the topic that they're trying to teach you and so the more that an individual is open to talking about the stuff that we really don't talk about which is nightmares you know i'm a civil i was a civil rights attorney before opening the app and i used to wake up with my fingernails broken off in the paint and the walls and because my nightmares were so bad that i would try to tunnel out of my house and i would wake up with blood on my hands on the wall then i would wash off and i would go to court and everybody like what a great this guy's great he's doing great and uh you know we'll get to my story later but but the truth of the matter is is you know we're we're all struck we're all struggling if i would have met somebody during that time period who would have said for my example about my nightmares he would have said yeah man listen you know i go through the same things i i put you know items in my way to make sure i can't escape the room and i finally did meet that when i was in treatment for uh ptsd i met a veteran who described it and it was the most impactful moment of my life and we we've been together ever since he and i are very close i went and picked him up when he graduated from the treatment facility we talked all the time he actually has my dog shout out to my dog um but you know doug's name reya reya is the she that is a i i'm big into philosophy and greek mythology and rhea was the mother of zeus and so i um rhea uh she was basically like my support animal and she lives with him now you know because he's alone and um you know he's still in recovery and whatnot but i miss her every day but uh uh you know it's uh it's wonderful you know for them to to be together but back to white flag and so when you're on the app you can either give support or get support and it's that it's that conversation that connection with somebody where you just say are you okay and they're like no not today but you want to talk about it and you know then the conversation turns into well not right now but maybe maybe tomorrow check in with me we have people on the app checking in with each other we have friends who have found each other and now they talk all the time um and so you know white flag is just a safe and healthy space for people who are suffering to go uh and give support to others like they do in support groups or get it themselves and they don't have to they don't have to post on facebook they don't have to make it a cry for help that their friends family think oh it's you know she's just crying for help come to us come on our app and you're going to meet real people who are struggling with the exact same thing that you're going through and when you connect with that person you know it's it's gold that we have inside of us experiences that that we've been through and trauma that we've been through and overcome it it hardens into gold inside of us and if we can break it off and give that to somebody else who's in poor mental health who's in poor health at all if you give them the gold and the value of your experience through that i mean you know we've really got an opportunity here to impact you know on a grand scale and so to your listeners um you know if if you're struggling or if somebody else you know is struggling you know tell them about white flag app you know we're there uh 24 hours a day it's anonymous you don't talk to a white flag team member you just talk to somebody else who's going through the same things and so i'm always hoping to improve the app in many ways and if you've got any feedback you can find me as well but uh yeah so white flag has been a blessing the the messages that we get the emails that we receive on you know through our website and just me personally um you know the antidotes antidotes that i get from people that i actually know it makes it all worthwhile you know and we get caught up in fundraising and you get caught up and growing your startup and added team members and you forget to check the email and so i i i need to remind my staff to send me the emails more often because um it is literally the fuel for my fire my purpose is is these individuals who are saying you know i i my wife told me she was suicidal last week she got downloaded the app and she's talking with another lady that she feels comfortable with thank you so much i didn't know what to do you know my son's away in college his roommate committed suicide he's on the app talking to other people who witnessed a suicide and you know it is it's it's it's just no words there's no words yeah and the timing for this coming through the pandemic we all had our own struggles and i think the pandemic revealed what it was that we were struggling with before that i think that we were busy enough or successful enough or life was okay enough that we didn't have to look behind the curtains of our own lives or we didn't have to investigate things too much we could just stay busy with stuff and keep going but the pandemic was a revelation it revealed what our weaknesses are what our fears are where we are uncomfortable and where we can't hide anymore so this app coming out now and i mean not this moment it's been in the works for a bit but the timing of that is really powerful there's such a need and i love how you've created community community is so powerful right there's so much redemption and hope and encouragement and compassion and kindness to be found in communities and finding a community that sees you that hears you and understands you golly right first time ever first time ever you know for me to have ever been fully you know truly understood was when i matched with somebody who could understand what i wasn't able to say i mean that's just the that's just the basic uh fundamental uh property that happens when you connect with somebody who's been through the same things as you you're not able to uh you're not able to put in the words you know like like some of these veterans that i'm close with now because i have complex ptsd it's a little different but some of these veterans you know um i i just broke down you know i was i just broke down and i wasn't able to talk and communicate and then they you know the individuals who i'm connecting with they understood that language they understood that pain they understood oh i recognize this sorrow and i can't tell you what it's like to to be a work you know somebody who people consider to be you know a master orator and somebody who people believe you know think has can always find the right words i mean i've done closing arguments and you know i've you know had cases where you know ridiculous amounts of liability on each side and the fact is when somebody says what what's it like what do you mean when you're trying to say i'm suffering crickets it's hard it's yeah it's hard i mean how do you describe how how do you describe something that you've never heard described before that's what it is and you know i've said this before but i truly believe that we are in the beginning of the mental health revolution and what i mean by that is you know we had you know we've had an industrial revolution a civil rights revolution we had the uh the tech revolution that took place in the early 2000s and if you look at the trends and you look at what's what the more that we're starting to understand the brain and consciousness and mental health the more people are going this is this is this is everything because worker productivity is that you know people only care about productivity workers when you talk about change well imagine if your worker was mentally healthy for 90 of the time that they were there instead of 60 or 50 which is the case nowadays imagine all those days that you go to work you know people are listening at home in your cubicle or in an office and you get there and you're you're trying to get to noon so you can go to your lunch break and then you're trying to get to five well imagine if you were healthy how much better it would be you know your quality of time at your employer's office or even for your employer to see you know customer service going up accounts going up the reality situation until people understand that when we go in and we affect change with people's mental mental health everything change we're going to bring up everything we're going to bring up productivity we're going to bring up consciousness tolerability empathy crime is going to go down crime is going to go down significantly and what you know once you understand well that guy right there is struggling hurting people hurt people melissa hurting people hurt people and this guy over here is screaming he's causing a scene at mcdonald's you know maybe the guy over here who normally would punch him in the face will understand this guy over here he may have just lost his mom this guy over here this is not i'm better than your behavior this is i'm suffering and i don't know how to describe the behavior and if if we start you know i mean if we could if we could just start chipping away at this what a harmonious place this would be now you know spirituality is one way to do it but it's got to be full circle on the brain and mental health and everything's got we've got to work together to uh illuminate what could actually happen if somebody is given the opportunity of a good mental health and i am what can happen you know my story is what can happen where you are at the top of your game in another profession a respected profession whatever as an attorney and once i got healthy i was like i got i've got too much in me i've got too many ideas of ways that i can pull other people out that are still down there in that place that i was in but i i i wouldn't be here we have you know 15 employees we're on the way i'm just speaking from you know a society standpoint helping people heal is good for the planet it's good for society it's good for humanity it's good for your family i know that you don't and i'm speaking to your users at home i know that people don't realize it but one in four people are suffering so if there's four y'all at the dinner table one of y'all's not telling the truth and that number sounds low to me it's low it's low but it's still shocking that you know that that's one out of every four and if you go into professions it's even scarier you know police is one out of every three have ptsd so there's truth right now oh nurses is i mean bless bless the heart you know i i got i had cover and i actually had to go to the hospital because i have crohn's disease on top of everything else and for me it was a horrific experience having to go to a hospital where there's a bunch of people sick and a pandemic it's very scary i can't imagine what you know not just through the pandemic but you know through being a nurse uh on a daily basis dealing with mental mentally ill people who again like me like i used to be lash out they don't know how to communicate so it's just this mess and they're on the front lines the nurses are there we have a lot of nurses on our app a lot of nurses alright well there is a pivotal case criminal case that has changed everything for nurses but that will take us off in a different direction next time we'll dig into that next time i would love to so johnny well before we go any further i want to be very clear white flag app available on the app store available on google play it's online you can go to whiteflagapp.com and it's there on your desktop or laptop as well but make sure you check that out if you don't feel like you need the support there maybe you're the perfect support person for someone else right so make sure you download that app but uh i would love to hear more of your story if you would like to share it yeah absolutely um i'll finish my plug so um yeah if you guys like the app write us a review that reviews they reach people that you wouldn't imagine and we could really use it we could really use the you know the positivity because people say are they using it and we're like yeah we've got the analytics and the they love you know the feedback and that's how we can continue to provide the app and grow as if we as if we know in our you know our people around us know that you're enjoying it so please do um but yeah i uh you know i built the app um white flag app through uh in my own experience and when i was struggling and this is a preface and i'll get to my story but when i was struggling i would go through um every viable resource that i had at my disposal and i was an attorney i had great excuse me great insurance i had great connections and um i spent about i think it was about 16 months writing emails to insurance companies begging them telling them i'm going to commit suicide tonight i need to get into a treatment place for 18 months and that's still the hardest part is going back and reading those emails but what i what i was also doing was i was researching through apps and looking for i just wanted to hear somebody say i know how much pain you're in and you haven't surpassed the moment where human beings should take their own life you still have more to go that's what i wanted because i was in so much pain i mean i was sleeping in the woods across the street from my house you know i was uh overusing medicaid i sleep until 4 pm in the day and you know i i still couldn't find a way where i where i thought that um that i i would be comfortable talking about the stuff and and couldn't find it couldn't find an app couldn't find a solution couldn't find peer support so i drew on a little piece of paper and it just had a list of names and next to the names was everything that the person could be going through so you know i said mark ptsd anxiety teresa you know bulimia anorexia nervosa binge eating and just had this list and um and that i went back and looked at that list after i got out of my own treatment and that was what kind of started the product design but my story starts um you know long before i was born and anybody who is who has struggled with mental health issues and you don't know the cause as in i don't know if my daughter has any trauma i don't know if my son has trauma i don't know you know textbook generational trauma being passed down is what is what i'm about to talk about so before i was born in the 1950s my father lived in a rural rural area of south carolina you think i'm country my father was he's very country and um he was he worked on peach farms tobacco farms corn in the corn mill uh in a little teeny town called macbee south carolina less than 800 people 30 people in this graduating class and back in those days uh the houses were very very far apart a lot of people grew grass and wheat and all the other stuff on their land and my parents didn't have you know my father didn't have a very wealthy upbringing his dad was a mail carrier very respected person but you know um and so my father um uh he was used to this you know kind of country style life and entails in that is you know houses that are way out in the middle of nowhere and in one of those houses was my great grandfather's house and my great-grandfather uh my father uh my great-grandfather um he he got a divorce from his first wife moved from where he was in a big city back into his little tv farmhouse in the middle of nowhere in macbee and my dad who was who would have been hit by my dad who was his grandchild uh used to visit this man and uh his brothers uh that the man's brothers would would as well my father's you know uncles and and and whatnot and uh the reason they would visit him is because he they called him very sad he was heartbroken so they would take turns staying with them and then liv you know spend the night and then they would pass off to the next guy and it was my dad's night uh and he got dropped off in front of the long long road dirt road he walks all the way down and finally gets the house there's no electricity and there's no phones but there's always candles and fires burning and there wasn't any that day and it was almost dark out so my dad you know he was like well you know he's we know he didn't go anywhere um so he starts to look around the house and you know he sees that there's a there's no fire burning and um he went to the room where he was to stay with my great-grandfather and laying in the bed fully dressed with a note in his left hand and a gun in his right hand he had he had put put it in his mouth and taken his own life and my dad was 12 years old and um he didn't know what to do he didn't know where to go or you know there's nowhere to call or so my dad he didn't know if he was gonna wake up didn't know if a ghost was gonna pop out didn't know and uh so he laid at the um sort of at the foot of the bed sat right outside the door um and kept going back in between the room for 12 hours um and the thoughts of why would he do this he had to have known i was coming over he knew i was coming up is the note for me should i open the note what will happen if i look in the note um so my dad leaves the house the next morning you can imagine the sun coming up and him strolling out you know onto the dirt road and he walks you know however far he had to walk to get to the bus stop and gets on the bus goes to school goes through school goes all the way through football practice comes home tells my sweet little grandmother what happened and she looks at him and says whatever you do don't tell anybody especially your father and that was the last time my dad spoke of it and uh you know at the funeral they never discussed it and you know it was just a death um you know and so that's the way that it was told and years later my father without ever healing without ever talking about it without her disgusting he marries my mother and my mom comes from a very mentally ill background as well alcoholic father and mother abused throughout the home my mom's struggled you know she still struggles to talk about it um seven brothers and sisters uh and she was one of the youngest and after her dad died at a very young age she helped raise some of her younger siblings uh and her her and my father met and my dad you know he had the collared shirts on and you know he's an executive and you can you the the 70s wife was you know this was this was my mom and dad including the the abuse and beatings especially the abuse and beatings and um you know she had nothing and nobody go call or go to and uh i don't have you know we were never close with any aunts uncles cousins or grandparents i don't have any of their phone numbers not one of them and in those days she would not have had any or very little support right i couldn't have opened a checking account to support herself she couldn't have rented an apartment or anything else those things just simply didn't exist as soon as the boys were born it was over because i think in the beginning it was sort of like okay she could still you know leave and get a new man but the reality situation is once the boys were there the anchor was there because she knew you know it's the 70s 80s vibe it's i will never leave my husband i want to stay together for the children which is the worst you know i mean from my standpoint and my wife's standpoint you know staying together for the children almost cost both of us our lives um and so you know i used to i used to come down and on the staircase and i i always wanted to know i always wanted to hear the abuse i always wanted to hear her worthless and then b word or the p word or the c word i needed to know what she was going through i was the middle child and i was her protector i thought but really what i was doing is i was triggering myself over and over again because we didn't know it we called it a nervous stomach but i was born with generalized anxiety disorder i started having panic attacks when i was five and six years old so imagine a five or six year old right that they just called nervous the you know the nervous one and i was an athlete so i didn't get picked on you know for like being scared in the corner but when your father tells you at night you're going to burn in the lake of fire you believe it when you have anxiety and you're sick and when he tells you that you know his sins are your sins that you you become so scared of life in reality that the only people you'll listen to are these toxic individuals this guy you know like this this is the only guy i think who can who can you know beat the demons away that are coming for me and that are already here and by the time i had reached 10 years old um you know the abuse had gotten so bad that my father had thrown a butcher knife with my mother and it went right in front of her and landed right over the stove so that was his spot he would throw from the we had a table here and he would throw stuff at her and i remember one time there was a police officer who came to our house small town this was in orlando florida and i pointed it out it's where my father threw a knife and i remember my mom you know she she would tell the story we all laughed they all laughed i guess i mean you know kids are i was like this is where i look at this hole that's where my dad threw a butcher on his big butcher so uh it was that same setup that changed my life forever the dad here at the table throwing stuff while i'm here cooking and you know um as as it happened i thought it was no big deal and then as i started to grow and become an 18 year old you know in the south it still was no big deal what i had gone through and then eventually i learned that what i went through was horrific because i was i am allowed to say that even though my dad my brother and my mom well not my mom but my dad and my brother you know initially he just hit her in the f he just hit her with a bottle he just hit her with a bottle so mom on this fateful day i mean that that's kind of you know what i heard i was 10 years old and the three boys were all athletes we all played sports and that was our big thing we had baseball football basketball year round this was baseball season and my father was like the father of varsity blues most controlling fathers in the south they they control you over your athletics it's that that's their way to relive things it's very very true i know i'm not not in that age group but i grew up in a house where if you did not have a good game you know you were shamed and you were threatened that you weren't going to eat that night so and that's just the way it was and i don't even consider that to be abused you know compared to the other stuff but on this day i had been given permission to miss baseball practice by my mother because my friend uh it was some sort of day where he was at another school and and this was our only day that we were going to get to spend together so my mom gave the okay to miss baseball practice and we went we used to get like a dollar two dollars we'd go buy a snickers bar a little convenience store on the dirt road and come back so we're coming back down the dirt road in orlando florida's pine street pine street was the name of the street there's pine trees oh it's beautiful and i remember how thick the dirt was or the the sand was the dirt road sand you know i'm pushing my bike through it my buddy and i are kind of talking we got our little bags you know you're just kids and i tell we turn the corner to go down our road there's only like less than a dozen houses on our road my house was there the second one on the left and you know that was the first time i'd ever seen anybody being arrested and um they were placing my father in the back of a police car you know in between us and the house he had he had already been escorted out and um he looked he looked at me and my best friend uh my father was in handcuffs without shoes on and the only thing that he could muster to say to me was make sure your mother calls my attorney that was the first time i ever heard that word too you know attorney and um and how old were you again 10 i was 10 i was 10 yes ma'am and so uh at that point you know you it doesn't register what's going on so i was just worried that my friend was gonna have to go home you know like i'm like what you know i didn't understand what was going on until i got inside and my mom had a huge you know she had stuff all over her her eyes she had a ice pack and you know his bandages and there was police officers and uh ambulance where emt's in the house and they're chasing her around and she's just screaming like do not take him to jail whatever you do please don't take him to jail and i just remember them saying he has to go to jail and her taking ice back and slamming it on the ground and cussing and that was when i saw her eye and her nose and i was just like i just remember thinking well if he's gone and she's shook up like this who's got me yeah and you know um it was tough uh a girl who the same girl told me to paint myself black when i started hanging out with kids on my football team who were african-american she brought a newspaper cut out of the arrest to school i was in seventh grade or sixth grade and handed it out i just remember like the news cameras got involved because my dad was involved in some other stuff and because he was president of the little league it was very public and uh we had to move of course but we moved states i was 12 years old we moved you know from everything we knew and loved and felt comfortable with into a little teeny bedroom we're all on top of each other we're all mentally ill all of us are mentally ill to this day and every fragile foundation you clung to had been taken right and then and then it gets worse because once we moved my mom saw the toll that it had on my older brother my younger brother because they had social issues and i didn't so i i met the quarterback on the first day shout out to robbie and robbie introduced me to all these friends and i'm so grateful for that but that didn't happen for my brothers and it didn't happen for my mom because she started drinking and once she started drinking and started using medication xanax pills otherwise i had lost my only ally for sure and as i fought to bring her back i did the only thing that i knew that i could do which was show my dad who now had been through all this you know uh court-ordered anger management to where he knows now i can't hit these people anymore but the verbal abuse was just onslaught still worthless is the word i can't i can't if you if somebody calls me worthless in front of me it's a big issue it's a big problem um and that's what i just can't imagine calling somebody love worthless it's the worst thing that you because if they believe it you know so my mom starts drinking white wine with chablis heavily she always drank it because i remember in florida before the move can i get a little glass of ice with my chablis i used to always make mom hang on glass ice with my chablis so by the time we got to myrtle beach after the move you know she was drinking over a gallon of chipotles a day and uh you know again battered housewife at home and it progressively got worse and my older brother was uh my older brother's got a lot going on with himself so let's just say that he was apathetic to the situation then he goes off to college so now it's me i got this this guy this dad figure here you know as far as like love and protection and all that good stuff you know that just like he wasn't somebody who would step in and say hey i know that your mom is you know dying in front of your eyes but i'm here for you that never occurred and uh you know it got to the point where i would say dad she's drinking dad she's drunk and then my mom would say oh well he called me a [ __ ] and my dad would turn to me and come at me because that's all i cared about that's all i need and i'm i'm 15 years old i'm not calling this woman cuss word i'm trying to bring the attention so eventually i went into the garbage and i started pulling out i said dad how long has the garbage ban he said oh it's been uh it goes out tomorrow i got a full week yeah full week so i pulled them out one bottle two bottles three bought then i went all her hiding spots for trunk the washing machine everywhere and i pulled out 11 bottles of cheville blind in sort of chablis wine that had been drank the gallon you know with the little handle in seven days and um we finally sent her off to rehab the next day or a couple days later however long it took only because i threatened to call the police on my dad um and and you're 15. and i'm 15. yeah and my older brother's gone it's just me so they take mom away to rehab she goes to cottonwood arizona and i had pretty much you know given up i was like all right this lady she's out she's gonna be alive you know she would be covered in feces like i'd have i couldn't have friends over i you know popular guy and if she would come out of the room she had all these skin issues from the alcohol her hair was falling out i mean this woman was beautiful she was my angel growing up she you know every night it's just mom and i and so i've pretty much given up but but then her therapist started reaching out to me and asking me you know hey you know she really wants to repair this relative none of the other ones you know she really so i started asking for recipes for the dinners that she used to make so i could cook for my little brother you know kind of give him a little sim you know symbolism of family or togetherness or whatever and you know i i went off to college my mom got out of rehab you know she she went got a little job as a hotel front desk clerk you know how they do in recovery and uh eventually i started seeing you know i zero zero zero in my bank account always eventually i started seeing like 250 a hundred dollars and i i called her i said what is this and it was she was getting her checks direct deposited in my bank account and she knew that i was struggling in college i mean we didn't have any money like my dad you know i was on the pell grant which is for people who are below the poverty line um and so we we began to to patch up our relationship and when i got into law school you know they were very very my mom and dad were both very proud of me and i thought that i was going to move on with my life and then on october 17 2009 another horrific trauma happened to me worse than the other stuff i described i i was practicing corporate law in downtown columbia south carolina big job thought i was a big wig you know first person in my family to become anything really uh my older brother ended up going to law school after i did which was the purpose of me going i wanted to open up opportunities for my family that weren't there for me and uh after i got out of law school i had this good job corporate downtown but i i got diagnosed with crohn's disease several years earlier via surgery so my drinking wasn't you know on par with what it would have been for a guy fresh out of law school at that point and on this fateful night there was a wedding in town the next day so this night was a rehearsal dinner and all my friends are coming into town and they're staying with me from out of town um and they're going to the rehearsal some of them are going to the rehearsal dinner and one of the individuals is i went to pick up after he told me hey it's over with come get me from downtown and um as i got down there he was standing outside of the restaurant the bar where he had been earlier um and you know kind of a bigger group was inside as well um so i kind of went inside and by the time i'd come back outside to check on him he was on the ground and three police officers were on top of him well attorneys hang out with attorneys this guy was a prosecutor and he was a prosecutor for a very very famous prosecutor in our states ron thurman jr and i've heard that name yeah yeah i bet you have and so i i wait till they lift him up he's writhing in pain his his hand was flapping behind his head so when they put him on the ground imagine your hand in here and i was worried but i didn't do anything aggressive i wait till they stand them up and i said listen you know why don't you guys just release him into my custody i'll make sure he gets home no problem i didn't know what happened they say they pushed me away and said who are you back up i said whoa whoa whoa all right if you guys are really taking them to jail just tell me are you taking them to alvin glenn are you taking down the city so i can pick him up take to a wedding well who you know doctor who are you okay well i'm an attorney i know it because they were confused how do you know about the two different jail systems so i'm an attorney and as soon as i said i was an attorney they they left off for him one guy stayed on him and they came at me and they flipped me around and they put me in handcuffs and they walked us over the cop car and i kept saying wait what am i going to jail for you don't have to tell me what am i going to jail for and he kept saying the officer on the surprise kept saying for that right there for asking questions and i was and i i said list this the only thing i learned was that you can question government you can question law enforcement and it turned out that kip was being arrested for trespassing which was you know 80 80 feet away from the front of the build from the front entrance to the building and i had been arrested for interfering with an arrest but what happened was when they took us down to the jail that night i remember thinking to myself all of the times that my dad described his jail experience to his ten-year-old son see when my dad got home from jail he sat me down and told me all about the lights and the screaming and the drug addicts and the violence and the abuse and this is this is goliath telling me this stuff and i found and then and then it then it was that was when their programs became became prevalent in schools you know dare drug awareness resistance education shout out to dare in the 80s and so every month we're being told these are the things you can go to jail for you jail jail jail and i was i was so afraid of committing a crime that the only way that i could regulate that was to just stay away from anything altogether so i had never smoked weed i had never done any drugs or anything like that so by the time we get to the jail that night i am in full anxiety breakdown and they put us in this little room when we get there and they come one by one and there's eight of us in there total and we come one by one they ask each person what you know uh what do you do for a living we need to put you on bond paperwork so we're listening all these other guys and they they tell your charges murder attempted murder burglary guy standing next to me uh had just had just attempted to kill his girlfriend then my friend and then another guy with a dui only two of us in there for you know trespassing appointment one by one they let all these folks out to bond hearings one by one until there was three left me my friend and the guy who was in there for attempting to kill us his girlfriend for us they walk us they walk us uh up to the door our orange jumpsuits and they tell us you need to go change you're being shifted to general population what and i remember i i remember at that moment like it happened so fast and that and they put us in this little shower area and it was me and my buddy and the other guy they weren't even worried about changing because he was covered in blood so it was me and my buddy and i i just remember thinking we're gonna have to stick together in here like what what's gonna happen and i remember him who was a prosecutor dealt these situations looking so afraid so afraid and i and that was when i i remember thinking to myself whatever happens whatever happens it's not as bad as your dad says it's not as bad it's not going to be that way you're not going to stay overnight boy was i wrong so they come and they get us kips the the correctional officer comes and gets me and the other guy and he's walking us down and there's a big door at the end of the hallway and this guy this huge huge guy turns to both of us because we were shaking and he goes do not let them see you scared and then he opens the door and all 86 inmates were eating lunch all of them and i'm thinking well this is worse fruit because we we did not we were not well versed in what to do where to stand what you know and we were immediately picked on and you know commotion in our room and so they moved our room down to be a little bit closer to the desk so they could watch us and then after dinner that night um as we're walking back to our cells i hear one of the guards screaming and running and by the time i turned around they opened the door and the guy is hanging there and so i i witnessed a an inmate take his own life and i just trauma on top right and i just remember like you imagine what it looks like when a bomb goes off and the first thing that you think about is like the colors change and that's what i like as soon as that that as soon as the noise started because the officer went and shot a trained officer fell to the ground right in front of the front of the jail cell so another guy so now i'm just like face to face looking at this guy who had been who hung himself and it was obvious that he was dead he had his tongue out and his eyes were popping out of his head and this guy comes running down from the entrance way i mean this was like three minutes so you can imagine something happened to one of us runs down from the entrance way and he's yelling at his mic suicide code whatever and by the time he gets down there he cuts the guy down and when he rolls them over i that that's the memory that i have and when he rolls him over because that's when i got the best look at like everything and you know people are like well why didn't you look away are you serious i was in a gym i was in jail i didn't like you look where the commotion's happening as a as a trauma response to process it but also protect yourself like are they gonna come is this you know is this a threat that's coming to me so eventually you know they put us in our cells they made sure we were locked in there and a judge came down uh after she had gotten word that you know these guys were in the jail who witnessed the suicide and the guy was still on the floor when they took us to our bond hearing at midnight it was a crime scene so i'm in there like my dad with my grandfather with a dead body near me for you know five six hours seven hours before they took us in the bonnie and just let us out but it was the tracks the inability to move to get away from danger that put me into a permanent state of of fight flight or freeze and i was in a permanent state when i left that jail and i was diagnosed with ptsd anxiety depression trauma and giving my first benzodiazepine two days after i got out of jail a week into me getting out of the jail i started seeing pop cars coming around my house i started hearing from friends all my buddies you know dating this police officer and you know they're talking about coming to get you for something real because they heard that they got you for something that wasn't real and that there's a lawsuit so they're going to try to find something on you and so i mean i just broke and i told this guy who i was living with i gotta get out of here man i you know i think i'm gonna kill myself i think i'm gonna take my life if i don't get out of here and um the only place i had to go is back home where all of these dark memories were and where there's this idiot dad of mine who still hasn't come to grips with how toxic he is with his with what he says and does and how he talks to people so i go to get my hair cut at a hair salon the same one that you always go to you know we all got her i i just went and when i moved home three hours away two and a half hours i wanted i just wanted to to make sure that i got a haircut got a couple of my stuff out of columbia so i'd never had to come back and i didn't return for four years and the reason i didn't return is because when i went to get my hair cut the young lady cut my hair told me hey there's a surveillance video of your arrest and that's when everything changed she told me with tears in her eyes so i ran to my old law firm who i was still working at the time i got a usb and i typed up a spoilation of evidence letter and i called the owner of the bar and i called his attorney and they met me there the next day and it looked like steven spielberg had set up cameras in this little rinky-dink bar and at that moment and i watched and i and i because the officers had to claim that i physically touched them or it's you know now they're learning the law later so they put in there grabbed an officer by the arm now i didn't get that news until a couple days later and so when i got the video and it showed that i didn't touch anybody that that the guy i got arrested with was standing on the wall educated away texting with his head down they assaulted both of us we didn't do anything the video goes viral because we attached it to the lawsuit and uh and that's when they i thought that hey they'll admit what they did they'll give you my piece of mind back they'll give me my soul back because that was taken from me and they didn't they didn't they pushed the pedal down even further and they said you know what there's less than one tenth of a second where you're not where your hands are not seen i guess because i turn like that and my hands are up the whole time and we think that that's that's the time that you went down and touched your arm i swear to god that that is what they claim and they said if you don't drop your lawsuit we're going to elevate it to assault battery on a police officer and put you back in the same jail cell i went through that for four years four years they they deposed my ex-girlfriend and asked her how many times we had sex after i came out of the jail as if to say if the guy's got mental illness you know why are you guys having fun in the bedroom she was married with two kids at the time of the deposition they deposed my mother and said don't you think your son was drunk that night because you were an alcoholic and ruined his life they opposed my father and said don't you think he grabbed that female because you used to beat your wife and he's a wife beater now too they deposed my older brother my young everybody and then after i got done with that lawsuit i won to change the law um and you know it's forever be known as mccoy versus city of columbia stands for you cannot arrest me for asking a question it meant a lot to me meant a lot to me but the damage had been done i had i had suffered severely for those four years i had been diagnosed with peripheral neuropathy from pain in my legs botox injections for pain in my head my eyes were twitching so much they were closed the majority of the time when i would try to focus on things the anxiety was so bad that i mean i was you know i was 60 pounds less than i am now and i would continuously wait for them to come get me at the door wait i was just waiting for him to come kick the door and get him and then eventually we won my case and i took the money and i put it all into doing a criminal defense practice now this was not something i ever imagined i wanted to do but i knew that if they were doing this to me and what were they doing to people who don't have a law degree what are they doing to people who you know don't have access to this kind of defense and so i i started getting triggered every time a new case would come in they'd pull somebody over for a tag like violation they'd search for nine and a half hours you know find a pill in the back of the you know a six-year-old woman's purse and they'd take her to jail for controlled substance and i just couldn't deal with that properly but i was making money and i knew i had to to cope i knew i needed the alcohol i knew i needed the traveling and you know the wild party because i was in full-blown ptsd full-blown every day all night and it got to the point where i would get a case in and i would read the facts the case and the first part would be the police executed a search warrant at 5 00 a.m they kicked the door down they breached they got inside what do you think i dreamed about that night so eventually i started sleeping in the woods across the street from my house i'd get really drunk and i would you know go over there and i would just sit and i would wait for them to come and then i would go inside i would shower i'd clean off and i'd go to court and i'd win and i'd come home and i'd collapse so eventually i i would travel around the state in the country to get away from these police uh these people who i thought were coming to get me and i learned that traveling out of the country was very therapeutic for me it was like i could you know rest now i'm sick i'm not saying anybody should be afraid of cops like this i'm sick and when i would set down so i decided as i started planning my suicide as i started like walking through like how many pills are you gonna have to take should you do it outside so you know i i took it upon myself to leave the country and try to connect spiritually with a higher power because well after you've gone through all i went through i mean i was in denial of god in the universe atheist i mean you can imagine and i go and i climb machu picchu with a buddy of mine down in peru and i got up to the top and there's no ropes and i'm thinking how in the world these people not slip on this thing but i remember thinking this this is your this is your chance bro either right now or make an agreement and i and i looked up i mean you're in the clouds it's overwhelming and i just said i just need a break just one break and that and uh the next day we we flew to brazil and the following night i met my wife teaching samba on her birthday and a veranda in rio and she is i mean i'm only alive because of her she's the only reason that she's all my reasons she's but she struggles too you know and on our first date the first time you know i got her to go to dinner with me the first time um and her dad was being released from a involuntarily committed facility where they treated you for drug alcohol abuse and other symptoms that she got interrupted in our in our dinner our first dinner and said i'm really sorry i have to take this call first of all the girls i'm used to would just picked it up walked away so i'm really sorry i need to take this call and she takes her portuguese and she puts it down and i you know i said you don't have to tell me what it was about she tells me what it's about and i tell her what i'm about and that was it that was it i knew that i would never be apart from her ever again and then i went home i me we only known each other for four days i went home and i immediately applied for a tourist visa and it got denied because she was so poor then i called two legislators lindsey graham and tom rice who were my legislators and senators they sent letters they called they did everything the response they got back was her family makes less than two thousand dollars a year seven people in a two-bedroom house why would she ever go back we don't allow people to visit here who have no reason to go back and she had jet her her nephew had just been born her family her grandma everything and she's going because now she's from a totally different culture she didn't live in rio she lived in central central brazil and now she's going well what do i you know uh i i don't have anything so they're right like i i'm gonna come back though because it's my family and that in the in their culture that's all the reason you need she's going why why are they all let me come i'm done so i started having so you can imagine how my mental health went this is the key to me being able this was the only time i felt like i was okay so i started flying her over to the bahamas because our own country wouldn't let her lay over so i started flying her this poor girl's never left her country never been on a plane flying her all the way in the bahamas and i fly my brother over to meet her and you know it was a really tough time and then eventually we got approved a year later on a fiance visa we got married on may 5th 2018 and i i took a bunch of sleeping medicine on in july and i tried to go to sleep forever and i i just been i've been awake for several days and i guess i knew that when i woke up she was going to take care of me she was going to tell me you know what to do and where to go because i didn't have anybody you know i'm everybody's hero who tells me what to do and i enrolled in a trauma treatment facility in ocala florida called the refuge when i got there i had i upped my dosage of xanax to six milligrams with my therapist and if or with my doctor my treat my treating physician and if the your users are listening if you guys take one you'll be asleep for 12 hours and i was practicing law at a high level but this is very dangerous medication very very dangerous it's impossible to get off of that much without getting getting help in a treatment facility and so i did but i was supposed to i was supposed to come off over the course of 18 months and i promised my wife i left on january 20th and i said by august 20th i'll be off of the xanax so that you can come for family week and i just went to the to the doc to the doctor there on the campus of the treatment facility i went to i said is it possible for me to come off this annex in 30 days he lied and said it was and he switched me to value and i just went home that night i was on 60 milligrams of value and i just wrote at the bottom of my journal 60 55 50 40 45 you know all the way down to zero and by the time my wife got there i was non-verbal um i was horrific i had gone through horrific withdrawals i had ripped an organ that needed to be repaired surgically i laid in the bathtub for so long having the water run over me that my skin got raw and i was you know bleeding from everywhere the withdrawals from what i went through were something that i mean i knew that they were gonna be bad but um i remember just thinking let it let let this take me i know i'm suicidal already just let this finish it finish me off please so that so that my wife doesn't have to you know be a widow because i took my own life and the craziest part about all of this is and the reason i tell this whole story when i enrolled for treatment they asked me do you have a history of mental illness in your family and i didn't know because my father never told me what he went through so so this guy saw me dying because i witnessed a suicide and was around a dead body he saw this from 2009 until he finally told me his story in 2021 last year i almost died not knowing that my father and i had a similar experience and now you know it made us a lot closer but the reason that i tell my story is you may not think that what you went through is that bad but if your kids are hurting your loved ones are hurting your family members are hurting it was i get all that i just told you all i didn't even think was bad until after i got out of treatment i never thought any of this was a story none of it i just thought this was the way life was and so when i got out of my treatment facility and i learned about that peer support by the way my wife came down and we had a wonderful well not a wonderful i was non-verbal and drooling and shaking but she learned about my disease she learned about ptsd and xanax addiction and she absorbed it and you know we fight for each other because i you know i fight for her mental health like she does mine and the important thing is after i got out of the trauma treatment facility i understood the value of peer-to-peer support of somebody understanding you i mean i only met with my therapist it was you know it's 30 grand to go to this place i only met with my therapist once a week that means the rest of the time i'm just talking to other people who are going through the same things as me they put you in groups according to your background so when i got home to myrtle beach i looked for groups and guess what there were none there were no trauma groups so we're no anxiety groups there's nobody talking about anxiety which is which was my big thing and so i created them i created the areas first we started off with two people in a garage um and uh we eventually were able to get a loading dock we had you know 10 people loading up eventually a state representative got us a big meeting room in the ymca we went from two members to 60 in person every month and over a thousand people online just watching you know getting memes and inspirational quotes and whatever and then like you said covet hit and i i moved everybody from all of this stuff all this other things i got going on with the groups and i moved them all into a group chat and i watched as they just they helped each other throughout the day and throughout the night and i i would silence the chat at night but they would just keep right on talking all the way through the night and you would see it only be like five or six of them but you would see all the little heads go down so everybody's reading everybody's learning everybody's everybody's you know getting something out of participating and watching or uh or learning about somebody else's mental health issue so i immediately after cloven i immediately created a non-profit called the original citizens crisis response uh that was to pair people who are struggling oh sorry the horry county citizens crisis response we closed it after the phoebe was over which is you know the right and ethical thing to do i think and so uh i i found a way to match people who were looking for stuff with people who needed stuff whether it be diaper formula or whatever and i learned that even if the people were like hey i need diaper formula and everybody in the comments was like this lady asked for it yesterday she's just trying to sell it you know she's just trying to get money from it i learned that people would would say it doesn't matter it what she does with the with the support it doesn't matter i'm here because i want to help a problem and if i get duped or whatever that's all her that's her bad energy her karma i'm here and once i saw that i i i hired an executive director for the for that non-profit and i immediately went into building a white flag based off of my experience what i'd seen in my trauma treatment facility in my life and i created an app that i would use i created an app that everybody would use there's no hearts there's no lights there's no patronizing comments and walking on the beach just breathe deep there's none of that stuff white flag's a place where you go where you want to have a real conversation that's it i'm speechless i mean i have no words just the sheer breadth of your experience is it's just overwhelming it's just overwhelming that one person would experience that but what i want to draw attention to is you're telling the story from the other side of this that there's hope that while we're telling our stories from the thick of it or from the pit there are other people there who found their way out who are telling their stories of survival and they're walking with you that's so true man when i was on the website the white flag app website i was looking through the blog and you know the sentence descriptions that go with each one were just each one would grip my heart and i kept reminding myself they're writing this having recovered that doesn't mean that life is perfect and will never be bad again but they're reading this to give hope that things can be better so as you hear the depths and the breadth of all of this as you hear the pain and the difficulties you're hearing it from someone who is experiencing hope who is experiencing another day and another opportunity another possibility and that is the true miracle to me and and you hit it on the head and that's why i tell the story you know like again i'm still learning that it's a story right like i'm still like putting it all together and my father just told me about what he went through last year so but there are you know there are important lessons from trauma stories that should be learned and there are heroes all along the way and people don't understand always what that means to be a hero but if you can impact somebody who is suffering slightly i mean do you need to know that you saved their life because i'm here to tell you it's a good possibility that if you come across one of these four individuals who are suffering your act of kindness whatever it is your break that you give them whatever it is maybe it may end up being the story that they tell later and and what i mean by that is my my my lawsuit versus the city of columbia went in front of a lower judge and this this individual she was the first one to rule on whether or not the cops were wrong the law is wrong or i was wrong and this individually judged the federal judge she ruled that i was wrong and the police were right and i remember getting the update from my attorneys and i just remember thinking to myself it's a friday just wait till monday wait till monday to end your life and i remember going through the weekend and trying to put together what i had done to deserve what i've been through because that's all it was at that point was okay god universe whoever how to you know please just at least tell me i was in the right that's the only way i'll be able to survive this thing so i meet with my attorneys at the beginning of the week and they say it gets reviewed by the upper judge and then he'll make the decision and the upper judge he ruled that the law was unconstitutional that i had done nothing wrong and everything in between but it took him three or four months to review and it was the work it was one of the worst and darkest times of my life flash forward to 2018 and i'm representing a client who was shot at by the police 29 times hit nine times and um the case was to see if you know the police were in the wrong if they operated operated appropriately and there was a surveillance video in that case showing that they acted inappropriately so we kind of knew what what was coming down but it's a big case it was the biggest civil rights case in the history of the state at that time julian between b-e-t-t-o-n and that judge had to decide whether or not julian was in the right or whether or not he was in the wrong the same judge and my heart sank and i thought he's going to go through the same thing because he's paralyzed and he's been through he's been through you know multiple surgeries you know he's got rods in his legs he doesn't really have much muscle he's in a wheelchair and i didn't want him to have to go through that question of did i deserve did i put myself here and uh she issued her opinion and in her opinion she quoted uh johnny mccoy versus the city of columbia in her ruling that uh my client did nothing wrong and uh wow i can't ever make through that part because it's the heroes you know like she didn't have to put that in there but it was the law at the time and it was that nod that gesture that hey you've been through matters to other people what you've been through matters to julian that it matters now it didn't matter those police the prosecutors who came after you but it matters now and it doesn't matter it became a yardstick right it became a canon right and she has no idea what that did for me i don't think i mean i don't really think i know yet you know if i have to look back on that time in my life and some of my notes and stuff but it's the heroes so if you're out there listening to this story and you're going why you know i didn't go through all of that but you know i certainly empathize and you can empathize with me because it's not just hey i went through all this trauma and you know you know my life is harder i have you know bigger mental health issues than you do that's not it at all because we're all born uniquely uh you know enshrined with genetics that will operate throughout the multitude of our lives and without my father being arrested without my mom you know coming into alcoholism without me witnessing the suicide and without me getting hooked on xanax i still would have been sick and i still would have been able to look at you and hear your story and say my god what a struggle this human being is enduring and i heard that there are heroes along the way and i want to be one of those heroes i want to be somebody who gives somebody a break when they need it the most and you know that's what we hope that people can find on white flags just a break just a moment of peace i work a lot with psychologists and mental health professionals and they share that the latest neuroscience shows how the brain can rewire itself how the brain can make new connections and form new memories and new pathways and one of the ways that happens in trauma victims is someone listening compassionately right that is something each of us can do you know marvel has the marvel universe has us thinking that superheroes wear capes and can bend time and steel and all of these other things but the real heroes are those everyday folks among us who listen with compassion easing suffering change a life forever forever it changes their life it changes their wives lives there's kids lives so you know i guess the message here is just give you know if you can give somebody a break this week somebody who wrongs you or somebody who hurts you just remember hurting people hurt people and everybody looked at me as this arrogant probably arrogant attorney with money and you know new suits on at the courthouse but it was all a facade it was all just me trying to survive if the money wasn't you know coming in and you know paying for these other things i'm using to cope with you know then those voices may have been right right right exactly exactly so you know i i hope that um i hope that that individuals out there who can relate to my father you know being closed off and not discussing it you know just know that i am a you know a child of the south and a child of secrecy and a child you know let's let's keep this within the family let's not even talk about in the family and i'm telling you my brothers and i it's a consensus we would much rather hear from you what's really going on so if you're there and you know you are in and you're lashing out let's talk real let's talk about you're hitting your spouse or let's talk real you're abusing alcohol you're showing up late for work it can't get worse so why not just start to try to talk about what it is that is it is underlying all of this negative energy that you're putting out into the in violent energy that you're putting out into the universe because it's underneath all of that that's your way out this is your way out it's finding out why you need to numb the pain well and johnny by healing yourself you have healed a whole family cycle a generational cycle of abuse is going to have a different story now whether you have zero kids or whether you have 20 kids by doing the work that you did on yourself and healing yourself and all of that that you faced that story has a new chapter now that wasn't available before yeah and and i thank you for saying that it means a lot and i you know i need to hear it because now i'm a ceo you know and as a ceo your problems are supposed to be different you're not supposed to have mental health issues you know you're not supposed to have all these other things and so there there's a lot of pressure to be perfect because i i am representing mentally ill in the workplace and you know i'm doing it vocally and i i want that challenge you know i don't mind it to to hear that you know this guy's pr practice law at a high level i won a bunch of cases during all this time no i'll go ahead and say it when i was struggling i never lost a felony trial and you know if you're sitting out there thinking you know mental illness means that you are in some way shape or form you know deformed as a human being uh socially or professionally or you know handicapped you know of the mind to where that you are not as useful you're wrong you're wrong because once i started healing i started realizing that i have all this other creativity and and passion for stuff that i acquired along the way and so when you're ready for your healing journey to begin just know that it's not like a light bulb goes off it's not rock bottom it's just when you're ready for your life to get a little bit easier that's when you start your journey when you're ready to say you know talking about what i'm thinking about talking about what i'm going through is slightly easier than drinking and abusing and hurting once that becomes easier once the talking becomes easier that's when you start to heal that's what most people think if i could get it to you hey listen even though it's the hardest thing you ever do get out there and talk go do it if i could think that that would actually work uh you know i would be more inclined to to just go around say hey you guys should start sharing but the reality is people will start sharing when they realize that the cost of not doing it is just too much yeah and i think something that's lost on us is all of these coping mechanisms that seem so life-draining they are life-draining but they're writing mechanisms they help you to survive to the next day they're ironically a comfort zone right and the healing is uncomfortable that's good man you're right on the money with that it's incredibly uncomfortable it's the most uncomfortable thing you ever do and you know i'll tell you i don't name names but five tours of duty of in iraq fallujah hardest thing he'd ever done was talk and talk about his feelings at that treatment place and he would say it every day and i was in a place where the worst of the worst were mentally ill wise you know so you're not alone out there guys that's for sure and um you don't have to pretend to be uh to be normal quote unquote you have to pretend to be okay because it you're you're you're you're fooling a fooler the person who you're like i don't want this person to know that i'm suffering they are suffering and they would love to talk to you about their issues just like they want to hear about yours and if you ever run into somebody who one-ups you and says oh you think that's bad i've been through this this and that's just no that person has not started their healing journey yet they're not trying to offend you they're not trying to belittle you or make your uh or make you feel less validated that's a big word and you know treatment just know that there's that person has the issue okay not you so anytime that you are one-upped or you feel like i'm never going to talk about that again because that's what my dad said my dad said i never want to talk about it again because i was told wasn't a big deal it's it's just a death but i'm here to tell you that your feelings are valid and anything that you got to say i want to hear it and so do the other people on white flag telling you thank you johnny thank you melissa | Melissa Ebken | UC6eA1kGsPkdfTswd9jO8hMw | 2022-05-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 14,439 | 72,101 |
obGS27aQlJA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obGS27aQlJA | Make Your Pitch Stand Out: What do you do with your hands? | if I stood this way giving a pitch with my hands in my pocket so my hands behind my back or my hands in front of me like I was really nervous or a common thing you see on Shark Tank when people are nervous is even just holding a body part that makes you look nervous to the audience so stand with power with good posture your hands should not be holding onto your body or covering parts of your body your hands imagine that you're holding a beach ball so your hands are out or let your hands just rest at the side and you'll naturally gesture putting your hands in your pockets doesn't allow you to be animated enough now some people may intentionally hold a certain posture for the audience to relate to them but know that you're not open enough if you're not showing your hands so the hands and gestures are very important | speaksuccessfully | UCB2THjE16_NxnxzIF-vk9RQ | 2022-12-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 159 | 824 |
5PijEk859SY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5PijEk859SY | Proactive IRCON to enable ease of travel and rail connectivity in Nepal | India and Nepal enjoy multifaceted bilateral relationship based on age or linkages of History culture tradition and religion the long-standing indo-nepal relationship have been given a renewed momentum in the last few years by government of India and honorable PM SRI Narendra Modi it is getting more stronger this time with the inauguration of goods broad gauge Railway services from bhatnaha to Nepal custom yard under the jogbani bidatnagar rail line project and Handover of the second phase of passenger train service from kurta to bijalpura under the jayanagar badhi bus rail line project built under government of India's Grant assistance and being executed by ircon International Limited the connectivity between batnahar and Nepal custom yard is expected to cut Transportation costs and delays for trade between Nepal and the Indian seaports of Kolkata and haldi are significantly this eight kilometer line comprises of one takeoff station at botnaha in India and traverses through the Indian and Nepal custom yards at the international border in April of 2022 Jenna got the bus rail line Project's first phase from jayanagar to kurta was inaugurated the second phase connecting Kutta to bijalpura covers a total of 17.4 kilometers and this stretches dotted with five stations namely kurtha pipradhi lohatpati Singh yahi and bijalpura India wants its economic prosperity to bring development in its entire region especially to our neighbors [Music] applies not just but beyond our borders to our friends and neighbors as well [Music] | Narendra Modi | UC1NF71EwP41VdjAU1iXdLkw | 2023-06-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 243 | 1,541 |
GDfYkwJ9Idw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GDfYkwJ9Idw | Cooking Leg Quarters and Drumsticks for Work (Preps) Pt. 1 | [Music] what good YouTube fishing boy mr. B from that yellow barbecue positive down we have talking section real quick before we go in this kitchen cooking for coworker let's do it all right we can go cook or not cooking today cooking tomorrow but we're gonna season up for me so let me show you what a case of leg quarters look like the price I paid for and I define a product on when I season when I put them in when I stick them in my refrigerator I'm gonna split it up not cooking the whole case I'm doing a half a case roughly get about 58 to 60 pieces um I was lucky in this video right here on to get a heavier weight I'm I don't know maybe I was in uniform and they like me or what 98 whose meal because they took up dialogue too so maybe I should go all the time uniform hmm anyway I was I'm going this kitchen right also I got a 5 pounds of drumsticks to we're gonna go in this kitchen and show you what a case of chicken looks like what it comes in with the cost of it typically is about eighteen ninety-nine on a good day um I told you how many pieces we get I'm in leg quarters and that's a good idea like if you're cooking it invokes for a lot of people you can't go wrong with leg quarters unless they just don't like dark meat on leg quarters and then you got a drumstick drumstick a case of drumsticks use there's about 25 dollars okay and I'm not even tell you how many to get it in because I just stopped captain man just blew up and that's a cheap way to feed a whole bunch of people with a bunch of meat um you get a case of leg four divided about 60 pieces average and their leg water it's probably get about 120 pieces maybe more than that shoes um you can see a lot of people with about twenty forty five dollars so just think about that so you're spending all your money on briskets on Boston butchers going as well on the average about ten eleven dollars at any given time all year round for all a pork shoulder or Boston butter they call it but anyway just going to the kitchen let me show you what this case look like what's up YouTube we back in this kitchen but to put in some work what we bout to do right now industry this I bought five pounds of as I call them drumsticks or the legs people called I gotta clean them up seizing them up alright have a case of leg quarters no I'm saying what it takes of leg quarter they generally come in a box like this I'm gonna show you the price to a pretty decent price $17.99 I mean even a human comes it up I don't know average about 50 or 60 ll a quarter let me show you all what they look like they're all sealed up in plastic I got to take them out and clean them up that sucks man probably I'm taking about a good hour or if you're gonna clean them thoroughly or things like that but yes that's how I came for chicken look go I'm gonna put this on the grill cooking up half a case of lead quarters for the job you know they are they are like my barbecue or at least they eat it maybe they'll say I haven't had anybody tell me they don't like it yet on but on your mom about destructive criticism one thing to note when you cook it for multiple people on with it um co-workers um anybody job anybody in general if you're doing cooking for somebody 16th birthday which I've done before if hit or miss on what pick what flavors people like so what I tend to do is do multiple flavors so that you you can hit each person like what I'm gonna do with this I'm actually uncooked half a case but depends on how many pieces I get out of this and we count them all up and then whatever that is divided by two obviously and that'll be half bad enough and cooking for probably my office is about is he maybe 15 strong 12 strong um but the company I work for um or the location I work for it's about 200 people total not trying to feed all in out of my pocket but like I said it was on 20 bucks it was like five dollars for the five pounds of leg quarters hence wiling only have that many leg quarters I clean them up to see them up this is a Saturday I will do the cook tomorrow on Sunday so that it'll be fresh for Monday I wish I could just cook you know I mean late Sunday into Monday as if I didn't have to work into just bringing in straight off the grill which is taste is better once the UH the meat cool down by fortunate I'll have that luxury got to go to work on Monday so I'm cooking on Friday um let the meat cool down put it in a little bins or whatever and then I'll put them in the refrigerator in the following morning I just bring the working neck warm it up I will go over there sometimes even on wonderfu things better than no the day you look that strange but depending on the cut of meat and season you you are trying to think of what seasons that goes good for the it becomes Italian dressing if you're cooking a turkey and you use Italian dressing cook it the day before Thanksgiving that's a fun effect right there um over history of meat cooking turkeys or smoking turkeys if you're using a Italian dressing the meat when it cools off the taste is okay I mean bearable but the next date is off the chain so that's what's helpful if you tried to prank this do a carnage here some cooking in our linen pants on with the dressing in there every so often you take a spoon you know you know you different to the dressing just to cover the UH the meat so doesn't dry out and you'll notice total total difference man tonight the next day it's crazy how that works with that particular seasonings you want to call it marinade or whatever um they still dressing but in this case would be marinated but it's crazy how that works anyways I got work to do y'all I got to clean up its chicken so stick with me if you got any questions on anything you to buying cases and both in a cheaper things like that anything hit me up um actually you know what give me a second I'm cutting this open let me show you what a couple pieces look like we'll be back in a minute all right check it out y'all start cutting sago oh now once you cut this opening you are all right supposed to down you guys do 1 2 x 3 Z the need of it or either Glade clean them and they'll get them in refrigerator the key is not to allow a chicken right there's almost have another poison o-deca not want that just Glidden keep putting your finger away like I said or even it low room temperature and go and then freeze it like that's what I'm gonna do I'm not gonna clean all this and cook off clean what I'm gonna have to cook and then we're gonna go from there all right let's just take one out actually not too bad you got clean to your adjusting inside of it you know still got veins and stuff in it stuff like that that's what it looks like y'all pretty decent arm be a close-up oh there you go that's what a case of leg quarters looks like y'all anyway all right so after cleaning them up give them ready to go nighttime to season let them marinate for about 25 we get close up to different seasons can you tell the difference yep the boy don't play you | Backyard 'Bbq-R' | UCnseisJbLn377wv_DbCpJWw | 2017-03-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,416 | 7,003 |
GLwwFXqhQu4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLwwFXqhQu4 | 03/20/20 Dave Landry's Market In A Minute-New Inflection Point, Possible Scenario | [Music] well uh I'd boarding today it's Friday March 20 2012 a Flanders market Minsk oh wow he's got a little bit of a rally I guess we'll take anything that we get up about a half percent this gives us a little bit of a pivot low in here continue to watch these lows as they get taken out obviously the downtrend remains intact when we begin a retrace we won't know if it's the bottom or not and I doubt that it will be but we should get a retrace at some point from these oversold levels back up towards the old highs where it stops nobody knows for the next leg down would likely retest the prior lows that's a scenario that I'm looking to play out at least for now you never seen one day at a time but the point is watch yesterday's low Thursday's low as you're new and flexion point as you would imagine going through most sectors most look pretty ugly like the market itself and just kind of maybe bouncing a little bit yeah here so what do we do well sit tight a short side let this market retrace a little bit and then look to reload all your stops on any existing positions obviously any questions david dave' letter comm I'd be Landry and you start to mark a minute everybody stay safe stay sane and God bless [Music] | Dave Landry | UCds8yYeLY5lgXWG0dl5UxTQ | 2020-03-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 240 | 1,227 |
viq9ClAdHsg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=viq9ClAdHsg | Turn Up And Go, National Express style | please can three of us travel on the three o'clock me and two other people think million - of Oh are you going to when clean no one said anything a very to prosper wheelchair when we do pocket that's a reason was forced out 24 hours an artist are you mobile if I send your can you swap all down to the front seat possibly but my winter I'm sorry but you've gotta go and see them downstairs about Zacchaeus that's what technically staff and our tent the seats out yeah yeah no it's just a sport you see what it is if you give 24 hours notice the mechanics take the seats out yeah but those Flores River will turn well it ain't we the ticket no right you should have mentioned that to me when you were computer case you should have asked yeah well I assume that you you've traveled Department that you're taking it before and that it dismantled a sure can it not fold on each side no no it's this rigid it's all rigid right there's no problem well give us 24 hours in autism mechanics hit the floor seats out it's not a simple job all right everything okay | Doug Paulley | UCpBGTlcCnAf1SJuzVtNghjg | 2018-02-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 207 | 1,054 |
oHUgtgepnm8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHUgtgepnm8 | 'Democracy or bureaucracy.' and the astounding of Capitalism.' [The mirror of the true] | for you how think with our own brain and feel with your own heart the majority do just what are being told and that's one of the reasons democracy is just one huge notion and something that humans be not capable of it seems to me the majority of [Music] humans because it take one skeptical one pessimist to see what it goes to I see myself as one of the people that maybe can see between the lines and the Illusions I and the ideas and the resolutions and the lies of the ideas I will not say that I've been always pure perfect in this but my skepticism and my L stuff learned around my life can make me a very good strus in this part if democracy Apple wants work then we have to learn to think in another way and we have to put own the SES away because democracy in combination with capitalism is insanity capitalism is also one a very weird idea capitalism is the extending Bel that the most wickedest of men do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of anybody and that it be not something bad and good it R being human actions that's creat actually the mindset of mentally in in person because the world cannot give an unlimited amount of materials and are being lost that humans not been told what reason school is also a cute brainwash Center because most of things of school you don't need to know you don't need to know any name of any material you also don't need to know um the difference between helium and [Music] plutonium you don't have to know the difference between helium and and CO2 you don't need also to know that um Henrik the force abused his children and his wife and how horrible person he actually been if you find that interesting yes but it's not something that you actually have to know you also don't have to know that I been a magical genie in the sky that love anybody with one you do something that I don't like they going to put you in h and let you burn for eternity there also you also don't have to know a lot of stuff that you get on school if that if you like that oh yes then but it have to be a choice actually I've been for a kind of U schooling system where the children actually actually can choose which kind of stuff they want to do that they can themselves choose if they want to do um mathematics or don't want to do mathematics or if they wants to do uh history or don't want to do history if they want to have art classes or they want not to have art classes if they want to have um Christianity on in their last or don't don't want to have Christianity if they want to have woman's studies or they want have to woman studies but I think anybody have at least to get some little bit of philosophy because uh philosophy classes from from many sources and from many sides not only from humans perception but also they have to learn to think more out of themsel in that they live in their shallow little shell and in the own reality and there have also to learn that not whole worlds thinks they are been important and that have been just a part a little part in our system far bigger than them but now go back to capitalism and to democracy democracy only works when it's been in small communities for example in one little village where nobody can manipulate the outcome or it become very hard to do that then they can work but in lot big way just like um in most lands democracy is just a cute knowledge a fantasy because we will always be corrupted if it not been by a f directly it will be by the people that believe the lies of their politicians the the politician the only thing that I do is lie be rich and take profits they belong to the rich subculture and they really give about themselves they don't give about the poor man or the poor animals rich man give about the rich things and that they can do the rich things the can and live their kings and queen lifestyle so the B person on the place the king and queen's position or the big wealthy industry system is somebody that's being poor somebody that's of Navi somebody that also don't want to be Rich somebody that's alistic and it is not from having that the best leaders mean the ones that don't want to be a leader that's that's not 100% f but in general there been more good leaders that don't want to be a leader would become a leader and not give so much about himself and want not to have a lot of money for example Dandy I think Dandy he have to can be a good leader because Dandy don't believe you need a lot look who he walks around in that time here P closing he walk yeah you have not so much belongings was itarian and in that time that means actually something is the end of today because uh in that time mean that you absolutely don't eat any animals in the most of the time and not only eat not meat but also don't drink Dairy the nipple secretion of the cows or another mamal that be not human because all animals have their own all mammals have her own um breast milk cow's milk is for no not for baby humans or adult humans this for baby cuffs just like Sara milk is for baby s syrup so like horse milk is for baby horses just like dog milk is for baby dogs for puppies for and cats milk is for baby cats or kittens there be adust there have been also a lot of grow owns in their stuff like insulant grow Factor one that been proed to cat cancer by humans not only by rats because animal experiments being delusional and not trustful because animal research is a qu is fr you don't can um transplant the research from animals to humans for example in a scientific research where do a research on monkeys and chimpan and bobos or some animals like that there's not important that's 99% of the DNA is um equal to of a human there's more 99% equal this important that the 1% that's one that make all the studies totally a waste of money space and instant lives animal research will not and go to nothing ever save one one body in their whole life animal research is a fraud the scientists that still use animals in their experiments for human diseases be not only frauds but are also addicted to an outdated form of um research Dr um nicore is nothing more than an than the M scientists in the movies that people watch in the 70s is nothing more than one fra I've also sold kittens for U Medical Treatments and mutilate them is nothing more of a true scientist than Dr Frankenstein | The mirror of the truth | UCjQQiROmealqhLnDn77TNyQ | 2017-07-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,229 | 6,323 |
QWXv1LhuKII | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QWXv1LhuKII | Halloween Safety Tips | Skylanders Academy | Skylanders | skylanders academy presents halloween safety tips brought to you by our favorite evil genius chaos seriously with us always trick-or-treat in a group with adults present which is no problem for yours truly since i never go anywhere without my loyal entourage guys stay in a welded area and keep on sidewalks and paths although for some maybe staying in the dark is a better idea chaos you bet your sweet beard make sure you look both ways before crossing the street but a load of baloney looking one way is perfectly true fine use a flashlight or decorate your costume or bag with reflective tape it will be dark out there or just give that dome a good polish and you'll be able to see for miles very nice we may have found you another career as tempting as it is to eat your treats right away always have an adult check your candy before you eat it and if you can't find an adult use the nearest troll dabble with this and lastly after all those sweets remember to brush your teeth before bed yeah you might have some candy stuck in there and why let even a single ounce go to waste so have a fun and safe halloween share this video with your friends and be sure to check out an all-new season of skylanders academy now streaming on netflix this is gonna be amazing it's filled with exciting tricks and treats [Music] harmony [Music] | SkylandersGame | UCC2tqi4uzSWEifmyxbb5ltQ | 2017-10-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 249 | 1,334 |
Mj0U_FHwQmA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mj0U_FHwQmA | Play TEN guitar songs with two EASY chords Beginners first guitar lesson | hi there my name is andy and i'm going to show you the easiest to cause to play on guitar and then show you how to play them in a chord sequence so that you know how to play along too many of the songs that are on my website already and this is an example of an absolute first lesson with me you can use this video so that you know what guitar lessons going to be like or to get a head start before you first lesson with me so let's look at our first chord which is an E major and let's get you in for a close-up so here we are I've moved the camera so that not only can you see my call iulian Jack rug which looks amazing and you can also see the guitar from your point of view this should be the angle that you're looking at your guitar at a little bit on the anatomy I'm going to number your strings 1 through 26 so that's from the thinnest to the thickest and I'm going to number your frets 1 2 and 3 open strings are considered to be 00 fret and I'm going to get you to put your first finger on the 3rd string inside that first fret so that's string 1 2 3 and position wise you wanted to stay on the tips of all your fingers and you want to be at your side of the threat so the threat even though the threat is technically the metal strip that goes down fret one is this area here the wooden part of your fretboard and you want to be put your first finger at this side of this area the side closest to you kind of butch top against the metal threat there so that's what your first finger goes middle finger second fret on the fifth string then your third finger directly underneath that middle finger so that will be on the fourth string also second fret so if we do those three again we have one two and three and if you push those down with the tips of your fingers so you kind of make a nice arch shape with your handle kind of like a claw hand I guess for once a want of a better term press those down strum every string with your right hand and that's what your first chord should sound like and both of these want to be again at your side of the threat here if it's over this size it might still ring out just about that you'll have to press down significantly harder to get this note to ring out if you press over here you'll more slightly be very surprised how much you don't have to press down and it still rings out and sounds great if I play that same correct chord but I'm over this side it doesn't quite ring out when I'm pressing down the same amount so we're over this side and that's your first chord now here's that same chord from another angle here's our E chord which sound like and your first finger is on the first fret third string so one two three and this is also the first string that we'd call out our wound string so you've got two strings that are like cheese wire and then you should have three bronzy colored or silver colored strings with kind of metal wrapped around them and that's the first one that is wound middle finger on the fifth string at the second fret and then your third finger directly underneath that try and have your little finger urged against your third finger and it just keeps it make sure we know what it's doing and it's not kind of down here or hurting your hand at all you want to keep everything as close to this position as you can really to make it a nice strong okay your second chord is going to be an air and we're going to learn this second chord from your first chord which is an E major so I'm going to put that first chord your fingers back where they were for this first chord one two and three and then I'm going to get to take the second and third fingers away and just keep that first finger down this first finger is going to be what I'm going to call your anchor finger it's going to stay on this first string and it's just going to slide across the second fret this is so that the change will be significantly easier and you'll be able to remember your chords better so for the first three chords which that we're going to learn that our e a and D this first finger is going to stay on this third string it's just going to slide across like this so this is where it was funny and your first finger stays on the same string but it's couch is over or slides over just inside the second fret now it's okay if it's at this side of the threat for this one not over this side because we need to put your middle finger directly above it and then your third finger directly below it so I've missed out I've not got my third finger here kind of like where it was for the e I moved it one further down and my first finger is holding the note down in the space this is your a chord or eight major or your second chord that with them today and it should sound like that so first fingers on the same string middle fingers just above it and third finger just below it now on this for this air cord and we're not going to strum this thickest string I just want you to strum it from the fifth string all the way down to the first we'll get into hows and whys later but just take it from me now that it just sounds better in my opinion we've got this low string that is kind of spoiling the cord a little bit and we want it to be this thickest a string bet heard just a short bit reason why that sounds better and why that's what I want you to do and this is your open-air strength which is the root note or the bass note of this a cord of your ear major and that's why we have that one as your thickest one that we want to hurt so and we'll go back to the e chord same methods keep you first finger down scoot it back to that first finger first fret and instrument one more time to the aircard first finger stairs down slide it over to that second fret middle finger and third finger middle finger above 3rd finger below and strum it sounds great second chord first finger stays on the same fret dealer to come away slide it just over that fret middle finger above 3rd finger to below and strong from that aired string 5th string can be quite hard to get the middle one ringing out so again you've got to stick right on the tips of your finger to get that one ringing out everything inside this second fret here so 012 that's your a chord first finger stays down slide it back strim your e chord first finger stays down but scooches over to the second fret middle finger above 3rd finger below and strong you may also see this court written down or you may have learnt it as kind of three in a rule like this this way of learning in a is absolutely fine if that's something you've done before but if you struggle changing between an E and the a or an heir to a D or if you struggle with any of the chord changes when you try and play this in a song I recommend that you go for this a that I have taught with you today because the idea of using this fingering is sort of this first finger stays down e and the next chord that you would do in the course which is a D and it it just gives you that anchor point and saves you wailing you taking all your fingers a day and then thinking hang on where do these go I've lost my reference point right so now you know you too cause how do we play songs with them we need to know about bars and beats there are four beats in a bar and a beat is a pulse through any kind of music so if you're tapping your foot to a song or you've seen or you've clapped along two bands as they're playing I'm gonna champion motion you're clapping along to the beat or you're nodding your head to the beach so if I play this pulse that is the beat and and we play that beat to a counter for for example notice and playing them all totally even with an even spacing between each of the strums if the plays some slower some point yet it's impossible to tap your foot to it or nod your head to it because there's no rhythm so you need to keep everything so literally even so get you tart and just strum along to me now playing so 343 so a chord sequence is playing a certain cord for a certain amount of time and then playing another chord for a certain amount of time for example this is what a bar of e looks like and this is what one bar of e and then one bar of it looks like when written on a sheet of paper and this is what that should sound like for example you could just do one strum at the start of each pass on the first piece to three then two three four to three then two three four that will be for the chord sequence above and there's plenty of song has that happen like that the song example I like to give my students to get them playing along to a record as soon as we can is for what it's worth by buffalo springfield which was neil young's first band and so there's a bit of raucous before you so if we play this chord sequence along to me you'll be able to do it along to the record as well and it's one song under your belt that you can play along to a song with so get ready with your first chord that a major give it a strum to three then three four one two three four three so that's just roaming one strong / bar which when you've got a new chord sequence is very handy and it just allows you to get all your chord changes and for you to know what's going to happen later on it does sound rather than learning harder cause it sounds much better certainly earlier on if we can get more strumming in there so when you learn a new song just play one strum per bar but once you've got the chord changes under your fingers only a little bit more comfortable default to playing on the beach if you can play on that pulse that you would tap your feet to and clap your hands too if it was being played live by a band and you will be able to play along to the record which is such an important skill to be able to do many people who get up to such a high level on guitar still can't join into their favorite records or play along to the rock riffs that they know I'm onto onto the record so there's there's a skill there and I want you to be able to do it straight away even in this first lesson so I'm going to count you in and I want you to this time long as the other one went okay oh it's a strum along to that beat ready two three four three then 230 me then hey finish on III for beautiful if you can do that then you can put that record on our YouTube that song Buffalo Springfield is the name of the band for what it's worth is the name of the song and it will sound great if you so wish we can have a little Jam now I'll sing a little bit of it for you and we can we can play together okay so you ready from your e chord from that first chord that we did 1 2 3 4 e 2 3 as one more time e and I just keep that going something happen what it is exactly I think it's time we stop children what's that sound everybody slowing down one more time and ends on e there you go and stop there beautiful I feel I sounded great and if that wasn't a level that you can get to if you couldn't join in to me then go back and change between Justine and a make sure you changes are absolutely solid and you can also just play them on to the record just within ecord just to kind of get used to playing along to the beat it's some people it's more straightforward than others so if you play that first chord that II cause you can stay on that first chord just from a long try and count in your head every time you hit a change to keep in one two three four 1234 in your mind you can count out loud if you want and you can even try not count them as well so try and try and just feel where for is or I'll just count that that one may be so just go one but at the end of the day the acid test is can you do this along to the record put the song on and you strum along to me count yourself in and strum along just two three four and start playing if it sounds good along to the record then you know he's doing it right and so have fun with that and i'll hopefully see you for a later lesson | Nguyen Van | UCUszA7Hm5PAtWwODjnKzSkw | 2016-10-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,436 | 11,878 |
-Noaadolrmw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Noaadolrmw | [Reupload] Nikocado Avocado dropping food and crying ULIMATE COMPILATION 1 9 | Birds which are supposed to be Gourmet because they cost 15. others [Laughter] where's the lettuce I asked for that stuff ah [Music] I asked forever okay oh Walmart Walmart [Laughter] [Music] [Applause] hahaha it's your fault [Music] bye bye Birch a lot of food it's your fault Ashley oh my vitamins look how extra healthy I am today [Music] your boss it's your thoughts make me show you my victims [Music] I love cheese I love [Music] [Laughter] ah I can't cry I have no voice box very first video I ever saw I put you on my Instagram and that was before I knew I before I decided this is such a bad day [Laughter] because what much ouch ouch ouch remember to tell me something french fries went all over the floor this house forkless Feasts hey [Music] your fault forkless Feasts I love cheese [Music] [Laughter] oh these nuts have no souls [Music] foreign [Music] [Laughter] that only happened because of you I like being thick because I can eat what I wanted [Laughter] [Music] oh oh me me me we lost one okay let's start with some crunchy chicken okay KFC chip I'm we're not even gonna start I go through life uh it's your fault Hildy great because they have traces of peasants in there [Laughter] where's my Ranch ouch [Music] it's gone back [Music] [Laughter] did you just take one no that makes it happen put it back I'm gonna start oh that is a lot of mayo oh my God [Music] if you allow me a chance to say I can oh you can always say what's on your mind yes I do thank you [Music] I'm gonna try my first bite hey hahaha [Laughter] ouch my slushie you did that you can save it you did that you can save it [Laughter] I always try to be Hulk this is very very good [Laughter] some ranch from WingStop so I like to put my [Applause] Infinity for um breakfast foods okay hahaha [Laughter] [Music] my hammer um [Laughter] we lost one thank you excuse me for this restaurant oh my gosh oh my gosh oh my gosh oh my gosh oh my gosh hash browns oh my gosh hash browns oh my gosh hash browns I love my hat [Applause] this is my don't fall um oh here's a little crunch let me show you these oh before you [Music] hey it's your fault I asked for Crunchies the roasted well all right [Music] your fault great now there's I'm Karen because I decided to call hahaha [Music] that's expensive with money on it Hobbies Popeyes chicken sandwich oh [Music] ouch they're buying french fries [Music] first we're gonna try this chicken sandwich from Mr Beastie boo oh it's big here we go here we go Beastie boo-boo's sandwich Beastie boo boo set ah not enough about these fruits not enough these fruits are very healthy for me what's wrong with you okay sweetie we have to push but we have to be very careful [Music] spicy cheesy and also easy to love ha foreign [Laughter] [Music] [Laughter] [Music] bye one two three minutes [Applause] [Music] [Laughter] [Music] foreign my favorite curly fry ever [Laughter] [Music] [Applause] thank you look at that [Laughter] look at the chicken put this down [Laughter] [Music] hey [Laughter] all right your thoughts no it's because your fingers are always greasy okay it's your faults and I trust you Little Fork get out of here Passage [Laughter] of the peasants making done get out of here [Laughter] guys while I'm up [Laughter] here I know you're all watch it he lost my ball let's do more chicken that's a Nintendo After the Storm have a bite I have a bet for you oh my God it dripped on my new Walmart shirt your fault [Music] there's your video it's so greasy [Music] [Laughter] [Music] I don't even care I can't keep missing my mouth oh [Music] it's your fault [Music] [Applause] can you stop doing that my bad back I'm not you guys this is my new purse ouch disabled [Laughter] oh no it's it's done this this is not a good way to behave it's [Laughter] like this [Laughter] so my arms there's way so when my arm my arms their subscribers are a bunch of squirrels let's see [Laughter] [Music] your boss Korean now I could do two no you're not correct I could do one literally the Ukrainian cabbage farmer [Laughter] [Music] your fault diabetes I don't even have to be an amateur actress [Laughter] [Music] [Laughter] what's up are my new sheets [Applause] I dropped my Fork Dropbox [Music] I lost five chickens I'm gonna start [ __ ] [Music] don't make anything full [Laughter] [Music] oh my God it's a bit no I was just thinking about him the other day it's your fault James where's my I'm gonna starve for the um that's my career [Laughter] [Music] fun never mind I was trying to like cheese put excuse me laughs are you crying because every time I try putting on camera mode every time I hide and stay back cause we're eating pop [Music] it's your fault [ __ ] [Music] that nasty ass mother this all right coin garbage I'm gonna starve a long way from starving oh [Laughter] [Music] french fries let's just get back here for a minute I keep dropping everything what are you looking at lady I'll give you something to look at ouch my finger ah don't touch me I'll press your chicken expensive chicken it's my chicken thank you my natural spots oh I also got a a ball [Laughter] your butts for the food Brothers on your way [Laughter] [Music] now let's try the Chick-fil-A yeah so penguin [Music] ah it's your fault I love cheese [Laughter] it's your faults three oh okay [Music] that hurts why hahaha [Laughter] [Music] it's splattered and splish on the floor Chris is up there with Wingstop [Laughter] let let's shoot uh I have the drop C's real bad today literally it looks like if this was a shrimp it looks like a shrimp it's fishing and then the shrimp got it the shrimp's dead how about my hair [Laughter] match that is cheesy cheesy chick [Laughter] | Chris Denny | UC_g09EMubH5iwXAbmuQAEYw | 2023-06-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,057 | 5,713 |
8bKGmi07adI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bKGmi07adI | Enjoy - Gunshot Ina Jungle (www.ictus.pl) | [Music] your brother and your sister brother and [Music] S your brother and your sister love your brother and your sister [Music] every day is a and another one get dropped every day is a shot and another one get every day is a sh and another one every day is every day is every day is every day [Music] every [Music] I every [Music] day [Music] I another one get dropped every day is that and another one get dropped every day is a pH CH and another one get job and this is be better yeah oh yeah yeah yeah [Music] yeah [Music] got [Applause] oh | ICTUS LABEL | UCDqqxuZr3ONTAHPT-LYv0eA | 2011-12-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 108 | 546 |
MUQZheZqAs4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUQZheZqAs4 | A Different Atheist Reads: A History of God #4 | [Music] hi welcome to a different atheist reads a history of God by Karen Armstrong I'm Christy Winters in the last two videos what I've done is laid out Karen Armstrong's theological perspective and my atheistic counter to her perspective so that you know where we're both coming from as we go through the book what I would like to do in this final video is present some characteristics and attributes of God that I think will be helpful as we work through to care compare and contrast the concept the conceptualization of God um by people over time now I think I've been a little bit sloppy in my language in the last couple of videos I think I've used the term Theory and I've used attributes and I've used Concepts so before we move on uh I want to say that when I say a theory of God I don't mean a series of inner related St statements that describe some sort of external event that happens a causal relationship that we can make a prediction about in in the empirical sort of world that's that's not what I mean by Theory um and I hope that's a pretty good off-the-cuff definition of theory what I mean in terms of the theory of God bringing to the book is more about the way that noticing the way people put together the concepts of God so I would say that each person based on the attributes that they pick up and their value system and the way they put them together they're giving us their functioning notion of God um as a as a workable sort of model uh that represents their understanding and that's probably not a great use of theory I'll see if I can come up with something a little bit better but until then let's go ahead and look at attributes that are commonly attributed to God and their counterparts because it's uh not enough to just say God is eternal because in some ways in the Bible God has presented as as being temporal and we need to be as sensitized to both of these things to see how people use God the concept of God in different ways so uh what I did was I went to a website a Bible website and just looked at the attributes that they attributed uh and they're all the the really cool Omni Eternal ones and then also came up with the antonyms or a counter position to to those attributes I think when we look at them we're actually going to be able to come up with examples of how both um a positive and its antonym are represented in in the Bible and I'm going to break these down these attributes of God into three sections the first one is of seven characteristics and these characteristics speak more to the way that God exists um his sort of fundamental nature I might slide into a gendered pronoun I should say and say God he but I know that if I'm being honest to Karen Armstrong's perspective I would probably say it um rather than he but forgive me for any sort of slips of the tongue um so we've got these I've got seven characteristics that go to the nature of God and sort of the being then I've got three characteristics i' I've put under the phrase moral correctness um and uh you'll see what those are when we get to them the last one is moral emotions or or yeah like empathetic experiences that that we value so I'll explain a bit more as we go along but let's start with the first one in terms of the nature of God so Within These uh my sub my subcategory of seven of them we've got Eternal omnipotent omniscient omnipresent immutability self-existence which I'm also going to classify as monotheism and Transcendence so starting from from the beginning Eternal obviously meaning existing throughout time and not being bound by time an opposite to this would be God being a temporal being and located in within a temporal frame for an example of this in the Bible we can look at the second account of Creation in Genesis which starts about Genesis 2:4 these are the generations of the heavens and of the earth and when they were created in the day that the Lord made the Heaven and the Earth so um sorry made the earth and the heaven so God seems to be fixed within time in that story which is is different from saying that God is eternal and again we discussed in the last video God existing outside of time and space and why I I find that conceptually difficult um and logically contradictory so no point in going over it again but if you haven't watched it um maybe go and check that out the next idea is God being omnipotent being completely and I Define that as being completely unconstrained in doing whatever it is that God wants to do uh an example of the counter to that is obviously any kind of external constraint or presumably internal constraint that would limit God's power in any way and perhaps a a good example less from a Bible text and more just from people's real life is the problem of evil if God is all powerful and doesn't want people to suffer yet suffering exists why does God who is all powerful why does God allow that suffering when God could fix it in an instant so that's omnipotence versus a constrained or limited power omniscience perfect knowledge of everything at every moment in time forever and ever and ever uh and that is countered with any kind of ignorance anything that God would not know about right an example of God not being omniscient in the Bible would again going back to the creation story be when God was walking in the cool of the day and he called out to Adam where are you as if God didn't know and you can have different interpretations that's fine just from a reading of the text you wouldn't infer God's omniscience if you had that passage you kind of have to bring all your God stuff with you and contextualize that story in order to make that inference but the inference isn't there in the text the next one I wanted discuss is uh omnipresence the idea that God is everywhere at all times um and exists everywhere the counter to that is that uh right back going right back to the early polytheism of of Judaism and and that area would be the idea that gods are local gods are geographical gods are even spatial and that when God that the idea that gods are actually physically tied to the lands and an example of this is it comes from from Psalms how can we sing to you the Praises of the Lord Jehovah in a foreign land so when there was the Babylonian exile one of the big crises of Faith was by exiling an entire group of people who believed in a God that was tied to that land you were essentially exiling them from their God you were physically removing them from where their God resided and we know from reading I think it was in Deuteronomy that once the deuteronomic deuteronomic once um Deuteronomy was discovered it was stated that all sacrifices had to be made in Jerusalem so you know on the one hand you have the idea of God is omnipresent on the other you have the idea of God is being local and spatial immutability is the characteristic of being unchanging an unchanging God and obviously a god that changes God's mind or does something in the past and then regrets it would be an example of a God that was not immutable self-existence and monotheism that I mean that God exists On By God's Own will God self exists um and if you come at it from a typically monotheistic point of view God would not make other gods right so that's why I'm kind of putting these Concepts together existing with other gods would obviously be the counter to this um if we look in the again going back to Creation it's a nice uh Source because it's very early belief system now God now man has become like one of us knowing good and evil who is the US um and so again there are there are theological answers to that question but just by reading the passage straight you couldn't infer say the Trinity from that passage so looking at my clock I see that we're down to a minute and I didn't know take quite so long to get through all these Concepts so I'm going to finish up with Transcendence and then I'll finish uh the other characteristics in the next video so ends up being a two-parter um Transcendent is the final nature characteristic I want to discuss and that's the idea of God being sort of above and beyond um distant uh you know not accessible the way that we can access reality and the counter to that is that God is a very personal God and if we look at uh Abraham in in the Jewish scriptures what we see is a very interpersonal relationship between God and a Believer so uh with that in mind I'm going to continue on in the next video discussing moral correctness and um moral emotions attributed to God and their counterpoints and then we can finally get on to the book all right this has been um me doing a history of God I'll see you on the other side and what I want to do in this final video is just go over the attributes and their antonyms in what I have put together is the moral dimensions of God the first one being moral correctness and maybe if I just list off the first three um in this sort of moral correctness category you'll see how they hang together there's the Holiness uh God is holy God is righteous and God is just so you can kind of see how those kind of uh hang together and the antonyms of those I would say that the opposite of of holy is is profane not like in a swear word kind of way but more like a spiritual profanity we can also think of uh sort of the ritual Purity when being pure and in impure and there's righteousness and I've countered that with unjustified not unjust unjustified as an excuse but more like um God being or God being righteous mean God is sort of rightness itself and anything that that goes um outside of that you can't is unjustified uh not a great series but I think that that's more something that we need to deal with um a little bit closer to the the Christianity um rather so much with with righteousness because people and God are righteous in the Jewish scriptures Noah was righteous and Abraham was righteous so all this comes from a Christian Bible site so righteousness as a characteristic of God obviously is one that Christians hold slightly differently from what we see in the text of the Jewish scriptures then we' got Justice God is just I I don't know if that's like a god is Justice or Justice is inherently part of the nature of God so God cannot not be just or something um but anyway Justice is an attribute that is put in onto God and then there's also unjust things can be unjust and and we see that all the time so don't need tooo much of an explanation of what Injustice is the final three characteristics that will use to compare um are what I call moral emotions and I call them moral emotions because they are basically kind of based in in empathy or in a valuation um uh of of what we would say is human goodness so one of these moral emotions is goodness itself what it is to be good and anything I would put outside of goodness is anything that's morally questionable right so there's positive and then maybe there's neutral and there's negative so anything that is morally questionable is is not good then there's Mercy the notion of of being merciful and its antonym which is being merciless and the final characteristics from this Bible website were was love that God is love and obviously the antonym for that would be any kind of hate or contempt possibly even apathy um it depends on how expansive you want to make your antonyms so when we go through the book and we're looking at for instance the early Jewish writings we can take this framework of attributes and say well if we look at this particular author's depiction in the text we can see that Abraham is worshiping a god that is not monotheistic it's not self-existing it's a it's a polytheistic worldview that Abraham is holding that God is temporal God is exists in in a particular place and God is personal so God's not Transcendent in the story rather he's actually having a conversation with somebody and I think by organizing it again um into these different categories we can see how different authors take attributes of God perhaps at different times within the same work or within their own writings in order to create a functioning model of God that they take and then present present in their in their writings so we actually get to move on to the introduction now I guess I bet you guys are really excited I know I am um but I also think that it was really important to to lay the groundwork for this and that it will pay off in the long run so thanks for sticking with me this far we can actually now get into the book so exciting um and I'll see you guys next time so thanks again for watching [Music] bye God's sort of nature in terms of what it means to be God omnip poent omnipotent I guess I could say it either way | Kristi Winters | UC3TbT_taTdB5_pxcHnNNHAg | 2014-09-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,407 | 12,704 |
GIuWFD2HTyo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIuWFD2HTyo | What is Skin Radiance and the Future of Skin Rejuvenation? | [Music] welcome to the rachel varga podcast i'm your host rachel varga double board certified aesthetic nurse specialist since 2011 with over 20 000 rejuvenation procedures performed i'm an international clinical trainer for other physicians and nurses as well celebrity skin expert having been featured on some of the world's top proactive aging podcasts and much much more learn more at rachelvarga.ca and enjoy today's episode welcome my name is rachel varga and i'm a double board-certified aesthetic nurse specialist since 2011. i love to study the skin which is the largest organ of the body but i also love to study the future and predict what could be next in the space of health and wellness optimization and in particular slowing cellular aging now what i have come to do in my practice is look at certain clients and what they are doing differently than the rest what i noticed in a subset of my clients that are aged 60 to 80 is they are more radiant they have a higher vibration essence to them they're navigating life with a little bit more grace and ease and positivity and they all have body mind spirit and energy practices that they have learned to cultivate over the last decades of their life that they've looked after themselves on now clients often seek me out that really want to look at as good as they feel and oftentimes they'll seek out other functional practitioners that they don't feel great and they're noticing things on their skin and then they do the work of clearing out overgrowths of things like fungi yeast toxins parasites and other things working with other practitioners to restore the blood to restore the life force to optimize and reduce inflammation and funnily enough when all that happens the skin usually shows that things are improving and moving in the right direction now what i'm very interested in is the future of health and wellness and of course aesthetics rejuvenation and regenerative medicine and in my discussions with the pioneers in the space of exosomes and utilizing the body's own biological products to improve things like tissue regeneration wound healing skin rejuvenation and hair restoration there's some common trends that i'm seeing the application of medical aesthetics procedures for softening fine lines wrinkles and all sorts of things it's been around for a couple of decades now and in my experience once something hits the market it takes a good seven to eight years for the product and the application of the product to be honed in now in the space of peptides and exosomes and even stem cells i think that we are on a cusp of being able to harness the body's own ability to heal itself but i truly feel like the future of health and wellness is in energy medicine now this is what i am this is what i am observing is that those humans that enter a room and they light up the room and everyone is like wow they're so captivated by this by this person and are hanging on their every word and it just also so happens that this person has amazing hair skin and nails now why don't we study people that are already doing really good things in their life and are navigating their life a little bit easier could they possibly be harnessing things like biohacking and energy medicine and improving their body's energetics in order to live their best life and as a byproduct have the best hair skin nails of their life as well is truly the study of the space in between which makes up 70 to 80 percent of our universe most of our physical form and people places and things that we interact with is comprised of space of dark matter the actual physics term is called quintessence and it wasn't discovered that long ago less than 10 years ago so is in fact optimizing the space between us not just our cellular health but deeper than that between the molecules between the atoms between the protons electrons the neutrons the space between if we optimize that shouldn't everything else fall into place that's what i'm here to study and you are more than welcome to join the ride of what i like to call the study of the holistic science of radiance join me my name is rachel varga i'll be your guide in this journey | Rachel BScN, RN, CANS | UCZUxR4hUHm4Lf0WisIrudqw | 2022-09-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 746 | 4,184 |
KWEfe2Cijn4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KWEfe2Cijn4 | Stockfish Analysed Round 13: Ian Nepomniachtchi vs Ding liren | World chess championship | Chess | chess friends how are you today is Tuesday night and I will show the Friday championship game 13 Ding and Ian have the same points they can't make progress because Ian and ding is emotional and fearful don't play chess with heart play chess with the mind and this is your today's puzzle 125 IQ chess puzzle solve it and comment me so let's go Ian started with E4 we have E5 Knight to F3 Knight here and we have the rui Lopez because it's of high winning chances A6 and Ian played Bishop A4 another tactic is to take the Knight let me show you the opening tactic after takes takes it's not Knight takes porn because the queen will come to the D4 Square to to play your drum after Castle Bishop will come to the D6 to protect this Pawn so D4 and takes Knight takes D4 then black will play Queen here to mate in one move play E5 here best move for black is to go back but if you dare to take the pawn on E5 let me show you after takes there is Knight F3 to Target this and this and if you try to protect the bishop with Queen F6 you may say where is tactic never doubt stockfish after takes takes Rook E1 black queen will be trapped message your opponent GG but in our actual game we have Bishop A4 not bad Knight here Castle on kingside you shouldn't take the pawn do you know the tactic rook and Knight is line up on there so ding blocks it with Bishop E7 we have D3 A5 Target to this bishop and he want to play Knight here to Target the bishop again and progress in the queen side Bishop here D6 C3 castle by black H3 try to protect that Square from the bishop and Knight entry Bishop B7 and this opening is almost played in game 10. I can remember ding was played Knight here rookie 1 to re-rotate his Knight on G3 to have control over the king side with the queen but here nepomniachi played Bishop E3 Knight A5 light Square Bishop is more important than the night so save it we have C5 black can play D5 to break the center Knight D2 Rook to E8 A4 you shouldn't take the pawn because the file will open for the enemy Rook so ding play H6 pausing move we computer engines don't like moves like pausing move or healthy move when there is no move for you then improve your queen position or you can improve your up position D4 and we have the center exchanges last day they created headache for me by playing their wonderful blunder moves but today this game is almost good Ian is targeting to the pawn with two pieces so dingleren played Knight C4 I will not roast a grand master if he don't play glundar move because chess is for all he is threatening to take the bishop and double up the E Pawn so Ian have to take the Knight so after Pawn takes the E4 Pawn gets targeted by the two pieces and he played F3 but it's not necessary to play F3 because it's not even a close position your king Position will remain main week black will play D5 to break your structure and the Knight will come there to create problems once you lose your dark Square Bishop you will face weakness on this diagonal the dark square of King Position will be a permanent Target for a long time because black can break the structure position is not totally closed best was to play B3 let me show you the variation if B3 happen to Target it even if black when the pawn you can simply take back your Pawn the Paul is gets weak so Rook C8 Bishop takes Knight takes Rook C1 and that's it this ball is well protected by the rook and blacks further plan is to play Bishop here to Target the Knight Queen D6 where white will push his Knight forward Queen will go there to Target this and this game could play like this but inferior species 6 Gigabytes Ram Ian nepo played F3 Bishop backs Bishop F2 D5 targeting to the pawn and weakening white structure so Ian drinks water and takes the pawn Nike takes Bishop here Rook E5 mistake move why you pushed Rook for no reason best was to play Queen here or Rook B8 we do see here Rook C1 Rook c892 Ian's plan is to play Queen D4 Queen E7 here ding's strategy is not less than Ian let me show you what ding thinks on his mind if you play any normal move A5 the night before will come this targeting to the bishop with one two three pieces so Knight G3 to protect it Bishop takes Bishop will come anyway Knight takes then Knight D3 the Knight will create so much pain for Ian hippopotamus the Knight will get a permanent Outpost protected by his pieces and ding octopus will seize many squares if you try to save The Rook by playing Rook here you may say I protect this no fool Knight Will capture the pawn queen here and this position is -5 position because black half positional play he have the past Pawn so back to the position hippopotamus played Queen D4 the elephant is coming so F5 by dingler n because he's my subscriber if you want to become smart in chess then you can like And subscribe to my YouTube channel to get more episodes this targets the bishop and the bishop can't Retreat because of Rook takes horsey so we have Bishop G3 to Target it ding says I am a stockfish subscriber so let me go for a brilliant level he sacrificed his rope Ian takes it and after Queen takes weave Queen exchange on e4 Square Rook slides on D1 Knight on D4 Rook up to D7 The Rook gets the seventh rank so Bishop goes for a check King H2 Bishop C6 what Ian will play Ian played best move Rook C1 I already said that if Ian ording plays best move I will not roast them laughter takes takes we have Bishop here Knight C3 and Knight D3 this structure with Knight and Bishop pair is unbreakable even The Rook can't break them also black can't make progress on there because they can't touch white king or threat any white pieces or pawns you know what what that means that means that the game become totally draw King here but best was to play G5 Rook here inaccuracy move best was to move the Knight on there Knight C1 inaccuracy move best was to improve your king position Rook E1 another inaccuracy best was Rook C2 they are just focusing to make this game Draw next day is rest day and that day Ian will drink hush apathy silky drink to increase his IQ ding will drink some assass attacker Parry IQ drink to increase chest skills and you need to subscribe to my YouTube channel they make this game Draw sleeping on the table so wish you all the best thanks for watching subscribe for more bye bye take care see you | AI Chess Channel | UC1_ubEMHUjm8M5ujzv_g8BQ | 2023-04-27 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,233 | 7,497 |
csunVX93IzU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=csunVX93IzU | Prospects for Peace in Yemen | i'm alex stark i'm a senior researcher at new america and i'm thrilled to be hosting this panel of experts on yemen on behalf of the political reform and international security programs at new america there have been a number of political and humanitarian developments around yemen's war in the past month or so including a u.n negotiated truce and kind of a reshuffle of the internationally recognized government of yemen at a meeting in riyadh and i'm thrilled to be speaking with some of the absolute top experts working on yemen today to really learn from them about what all of this means where they see the direction of the conflict going um each of these panelists has extensive experience and i'd really encourage you to read their full bios online um i'm just going to for now give you the kind of the brief highlights to introduce them uh nedwell dalstree is a conflict and policy analyst and a specialist in yemeni tribes with over 18 years of field experience in conflict management and civil society development in yemen including at several international organizations like the national democratic institute and center for civilians in conflict my son shuja adeen is a senior researcher at sana center for strategic studies she holds a master's degree in islamic studies from the american university in cairo where the focus of her thesis was the radicalization of zaidism abdulwasiya muhammad is oxfam's advocacy media and campaigns manager in yemen and he has worked with several ingos in humanitarian and development settings across yemen and adam barron is a writer and political analyst who was based in sanaa from 2011 to 2014 and he's also a former new america isps fellow um so i want to start with with kind of a basic question for all the panelists maybe we can start with mesa and and and then we'll go through but um what are kind of the most interesting or surprising effects of the recent events uh that have happened around yemen including the the truce and the replacement of president hadi with the presidential council how do you kind of see those events shaping the conflict and um are there any particularly overlooked or maybe under analyzed aspects of that um is it for me i will start with me okay um i think nothing is surprising until now the saudis they are trying for one year since they um they announced their initiative um with uh to the houthis last year and march last year that uh to step to stop the war i think this is part of their attempts to end their military intervention in yemen um first they replaced hadi president hadi by presidential council which was one of the healthy demands and also because hadi has become a burden for the saudis have become a burden for the saudis so they have to get rid of him and also they try to negotiate it with the iranian and it seems this negotiation it goes far somehow but i have to clarify that the iranian that can influence the houthis definitely especially in the decisions that are regarding the peace and war with the saudis but still some internal issues they can't they can't influence the iranian the houthis on it for example i think mara for the houthis it could be an internal demand it's not something also it's not only a regional demand it is for them because they want um to establish their own state they already they already start to establish their own state they challenge they change the education curriculum or what all their behaviors inside sana seems that they are going to take this state and they are not going to uh to concede this this power in this areas for sharing power with anyone else so i think the health is they are establishing their own state according to their vision which is a religious division it is a theocratic state and they want a financial resources for this state which is married can provide this financial resources and also i think they want also to unify what was known as the northern yemen before the unity in 1990 so i think marab is for them it is an internal demand it's not an iranian one so the iranian can influence the houthis this is true but to what extent and some internal issues i don't think they can enforce them and they can't limit their ambitions especially in the internal uh on the internal level uh this is my first intervention thank you thank you ned what would you like to go next um yeah so the the i agree with mesa nothing is surprising uh the one very important thing that happened is howdy's removal um and i think that's a good thing um and a little overdue heidi was not a good leader um and his lack of leadership created divisions within the antagonistic forces which you know fed into um which kind of played into the hands of the houthis um militarily um and um um so this could potentially open up the opportunity to kind of unite the entirety forces politically as well as military and that could be you know one step towards peace um if things work well between the eight members um i mean these are eight members every one of them have a different agenda and their backers also have different agendas the emiratis and the saudis have different agendas so if the agendas did not align this could be this could make yemen's conflict ten times or eight times more complicated uh adam what do you think were kind of the most important uh or interesting takeaways from the the last month or so in yemen i mean i think all of the points of our debate are quite are quite um are quite valid one thing i mean just based on my own personal experience i happened to be in aden basically up until maybe a week before uh actually yeah up until three or four days before the the gcc consultation started and what was interesting then is there's been a real shift in terms of the tone and momentum of how um how different political factions have been speaking to each other so on the ground in odden for most of march despite everything it was quite a competitive tone you know different factions were looking at you know if you look at areas particularly shabba was emerging as a major flashpoint uh with different political groupings really non-violently but the political competition was was quite strong the tensions were quite palpable both in chabot on the west coast which you've seen that's dramatically changed now is a shift towards at least for the moment a more collaborative um and cooperative um politics between different groups in the anti-houthi front um you know to some extent i've joked calling the riyadh consultations a handshaking festival but at the same time there's nothing wrong with the handshaking festival in terms of it does suit a particular set of sets of means and if it does shift sort of the the tone of everything if it does shift the momentum perhaps that can have significant follow-on effects uh with the rest of the conflict of course what the houthis are thinking is the elephant in the room um for the houthis and many other and their allies in sana um a lot of what's happened in riyadh they've been remained quite at least publicly and to some extent privately dismissive of what's happening um in riyadh so in a way the ball really is in there is is to some extent in their courts um and i think you've seen as this truce has extended tension's starting to emerge different factions within uh the houthis are figures sort of raising issues with what they view as unfulfilled elements of of the ceasefire um we can all debate whether or not that's valid or not um and and the fine points of that but the larger point is the fact that it shows that there is um a new stage potentially is about is about to emerge um and and we'll see how that goes of course the speed of shuttle diplomacy from key international factions i think has never been has never been as high um but i mean it comes down to the fact of of what people ultimately see as their red lines or their must-haves on the ground uh abdel bassier um you're uh working in cinahl with oxfam can you update us on the the humanitarian situation on the ground do you see anything that's changed as a result of of the truce um and and could you also comment on maybe the likely effects of of rising global food prices that we've seen recently uh due to the war in ukraine uh yeah thanks i'll be happy to do that and alex and uh yeah before i do that maybe just do one one short comment on on the first question um i think the truth is is very interesting because this is the first time in six years you know both parties have sort of committed to to a truth that long and we know of the history uh in the previous years parties have failed to commit to the numerous attempts from the international community to bring them into the table and also the replacement of haddies is an interesting um it uh it represents a change especially in the the south but it's yet you know for civilians to see the real change in on the ground uh especially that the same cabinet the same structure is running the show for the past seven years um but in general the truth represents an ample opportunity for for all parties to make or bring about a tangible change for civilians which we are yet to see um on the humanitarian situation it is or it remains dire with families still struggling to survive um amid shrinking economic opportunities uh the people suffering or experiencing the lack of salaries price inflations and deteriorating services and conditions food is available in the markets in large quantities however uh not everyone can uh afford them actually the majority of the population can afford that uh the the foods uh on top of that also the humanitarian response is uh underfunded and if it remains so uh it will risk the suspension or reduction of uh life-saving aid um the uh what we have been witnessing uh in the past one month and and almost nine ten days now since the uh start of the truth um is that there was a remarkable reduction in violence and in in in security uh these are the the key outcomes of this rules also access has improved you know both for civilian movements as well as for uh humanitarian access humanitarian actors were able to reach hard to reach or no-go areas roads in some key areas including hodeidah have been opened for the first time in in four years and the overall security situation has improved with much enhanced access for movement across government rates also public utility services uh especially in the southern part of the country has enhanced and this has to do with the presence of the government in in adan also the the uh uh the the starts of department sessions in in in aden as well um and uh this will have you know further effect if it continues uh because uh people will have a sort of you know repel the trust assist with the system and also they will institutions will also be effective fearing accountability at least from the presence of the government and and that sort of consensus among the different factions in the government is quite promising because it it uh uh it brings back stability uh especially in the uh especially with the reduced political tension in the south um coming to the ukraine crisis it had a major impact on the prices of key commodities in yemen as as most of you all know that yemen imports over 90 percent of its foods medicine and ukraine is an important source uh for the imports especially of key commodities like wheat and uh oil now a million uh haven't seen their salaries you know for four years and and some see it delayed for up to six months and even when salaries are available uh they are not even enough because the average value of the salary is still the same compared to the pre-conflict level and this you know leaves people struggling especially with the deterioration of the currency and uh also uh you know this leaves families uh hostage to to a debts forcing them to sell their personal assets belongings and also you know they further lose hope for progression over thank you um for folks in the audience please feel free to drop your questions and we'll we'll try to integrate as many of those as possible into the conversation so we have a question um from muhammad al-shanawi of voice of america what could make or break a peaceful settlement in the war in yemen and and i'll add to that maybe what um what are after the title of this event what do you see as maybe the prospects for peace and how that has changed over the past uh month and then few days um myself would you like to start oh you're on mute thank you uh definitely for the saudis they have many more motivation to stop the war because this war um it is a disaster for them for the repetition for the economy for many things um for this i think they have they are under economic pressure these days and there is a kind of popular resentment in sana and other areas because of the oil crisis because of the crisis of the oil and gas and there are many accusations that the main reason it is their corruption and the black market it's not about the blockade and the war as they say so there is an increase in resentment that you can see it in the social media you can you hear it always from your family from our families from our friends and so now so they are under pressure and they need they need to um and they need to apply their vision i mean they have a vision uh and ruling yemen i i don't agree with it but they have this vision and this they want to apply it in a peace way not in a peace way to apply it i mean in state and state that it is internationally recognized it's not necessary to be independent this state it could be a very loose federal state um a very decentralized state and they have a kind of of their autonomy in their areas but um i mean they they want to um establish their own state i think they have their network that they want to benefit from ending this war but definitely they have a big military wing and it's a very radical one and also it is very connected to iran so also the iranian intervention here it is very critical to to lay some pressure on the houthis to stop the war thank you nadwa what do you think about prospects for peace um i mean the houthis like myself said the houthis have a very radical uh political ideology and their vision is to control all of yemen and liberate mecca and jerusalem and that's no joke that is that's at the core of their vision um and if they have setbacks they might kind of you know slow down just to recharge and then resume um they're not going to stop military operations because it goes against their vision it goes against their goal um and so i don't see any they're they're also part of you know iran's expansionist agenda in the region i can't talk about iran uh but i i know that the houthis um are not going to stop voluntarily they're not going to compromise they're not going to accept the powershare unless they are the they are in control um so in my opinion the only way to bring peace is to weaken the houthis militarily uh now we've seen the houthis soften a little bit after the operations in uh in shabbat pushed them after the you know the giant forces pushed them out of shaboa and parts of mario um and it's it's the hudi's way whenever they feel threatened militarily they soften so that the other side slows down and then they they take that opportunity to reposition their forces and they've been repositioning their forces to matter um they've they haven't respected this truth um and so if you know they need to be awakened militarily in order to open up you know an opportunity for peace um the problem was that i don't know if that is what the saudis and the other yemeni forces want um and yeah i know that the other many forces want to work in the houthis military but they're entirely or almost entirely um subject to the positions and the uh decision of the saudis and the emiratis and i don't know where the saudis and democrats stand it seems to me that the saudis i agree with mesa they do want and this conflict they don't want and their military intervention but i think they're confused how to do that without you know um military pressure and i don't think that they are interested in a serious military pressure that will uh weaken the houthis and you know bring them to a point where they feel that a pea settlement is their best alternative adam you mentioned that the houthis are kind of and where they're they're looking is this kind of the elephant in the room here and and nava mentioned that there have been some uh violations of of the ceasefire could you talk a bit about kind of how you see um the houthis fitting into all of this and and what are the prospects for them to to potentially come to a peace agreement i mean there's a few wider elements and i guess it's almost like how they fit in with with everything it's not necessarily even about their own internal thinking one i mean this is a war that has its manifestations all over yemen but i think the more it looks at it if you look at the bulk of the fighting it's been concentrated in a few areas and unfortunately for the people that live there it has be so much of the fighting has become concentrated just in a single small strip of mata when you look at it and it's like sometimes i increasingly wonder whether the bulk of the fighting could be concentrated in just a handful of districts in merav indefinitely in the sense that this has become when you look at the houthi uh forces in powers in sana'a's assessment of what they want what they need out of the war etc both need in terms of how they view the economic situation need in terms of how they do resources and need is in terms of having something to give to their constituents i i do wonder to what extent the battle for mata could go on quite indefinitely and if you look i mean sure has been an active front line since since before decisive storm even started it's it's astounding how long this could go on two i think you have had at least prior to the riyadh consultations you had a situation where despite the fact that all the all of the parties are against the houthis are saying we are going to fight the houthis they were focusing more on competition between themselves in areas where the houthis are no longer are no longer present so for example it's very easy if you're say um one of the anti-huthi factions to say you know we want to go we're going to take land but it's much it's much harder to take land from the houthis that it is to go against um one of the other anti-houthi factions in their area that sort of battle for influence and you've seen that manifest itself in places like thais in shabwa in even in adam to some extent in hadromote so the real question is has the foundation of this presidential council and the theoretical inflection points of the real consultations has that changed that are the anti-houthi factions now whether due to certain agreements that have been made the encouragement of their of their funders um are they now more willing to work together to fight the houthis because that could be that could be a game changer if you have according if you had theoretically coordination between all of the key different fronts you know uh tirex guys the national resistance pushing on the west schools the stc guys pushing on their respective fronts uh the people in mata pushing their tribal resistance etc etc that could be a game changer um but i think it remains to be seen whether that's going to happen um and i think essentially the ultimate fate of this presidential council also remains remains open this can be a council of peace you know this could be the group that goes and negotiates directly with those is um leads negotiations for some sort of peace settlement it could also be you know a council of war in terms of something that provides some sort of manifestation uh you know the unification of the fronts um they could help to greater mobilize um [Music] the the efforts against the houthis or or the third option is you continue sort of the the broader pattern of the past few years uh just in a new face you know this kind of slow motion muddling on fits and starts a word of attrition etcetera etcetera and of course the unfortunate part of the war of attrition is it'll continue to be hurt i mean it will hurt the entire country but it will hurt people in in a small handful of places the most let's face it we'll hurt people and not it dies etcetera um but always gets hit hard so we'll see we'll see what happens moving forward as part of the the truce agreement there were also uh pieces about allowing some commercial flights into sana and and fuel shipments into hodei to port and a conversation around opening the roads to ties can you talk about um how how implementation of those pieces of the truce has has happened is it happening and also kind of how will that potentially affect the humanitarian situation uh yeah well uh you know that's what makes the truce itself um you know over the past uh couple of weeks now we have seen parties not agreeing on certain aspects or orbits and details including on the reopening of the sana airport apparently there have been some differences on some details related to passports and all that and i think these are gaps that the international community should invest on you know when considering uh pushing for an extension of this uh truce now when it comes to the hodeidah port uh we have seen a a good flow of fuel to the northern part of yemen through the hadith port fuel has been one major issue you know for for the northern areas because the houthis have been importing fuel through the data port and with all those things those inspection uh processes constraining the smooth flow of of uh fuel imports this has resulted in uh you know shocks to to to prices it did it contributed to increasing prices it affected even life-saving sectors like health uh now for example in some other governors we have been witnessing uh before the truth have been witnessing a severe fuel shortage that led to uh severe impacts uh on prices where people they they they already struggle you know to find or to afford uh prices um and and i think you know when we when uh talking about prospects for peace i think this is an ample opportunity you know since we have seen this unprecedented agreement between all parties that the international community should maybe invest in bridging those gaps and solidifying you know an agreement maybe by pushing first for a an extension of the truth and maybe engage different uh regional actors those who may be depreities uh perceive as neutral including the romanis the kuwaitis we have seen how the romanis have done over the past uh month uh um with their missions you know through and actually managing to get a lot of things done and and i think uh we should we should build on on on these developments because i think all these factors play a major role in uh shaping uh uh the prospects for a lasting peace in india mesa you have written about the um the how the presidential council reflects the political and military situation on the ground but also that it could end up kind of reinforcing the divisions that have become deeper throughout the war um we've talked about a little bit about how the presidential council could become a council of war or council of peace what do you foresee for the presidential council and and its potential contributions towards a longer-term piece or not yes uh in the statement and the first speech of the president of the presidential council they talk about the houthis as ansar allah they are willing to negotiate with them so um they said we are going to fight in defense so there is no longer talking about any kind of retrieving sana or returning to entertaining the legitimate government to sana or all these things or even forcing the what is called the three references the three references which is uh the u.n resolution um in the first of the war it is 20 20 16 22 16 and the national dialogue conference outcomes and the third one it is the gcc initiative so it is no longer no one talk about this uh references and definitely the house is especially the u.s resolution they refuse this logical references and they want to establish a new situation according to what the war results resulted so what happened it is that this presidential council it is a result of this war so the houthis can join this residential council because this criteria it is not something belong to yemen before the war it doesn't belong to the yemeni constitution it is something that represents what happened during this war what had what had happened during this war what militia that had been emerged during this war and this militias now they are representing in this residential council and the houthis they can represent themselves as well as any other uh forces or militia or whatever we can call them now so i think this presidential council is a turning point uh about the truth it's about the political will of both parties i have to say that the coalition their appetite their military appetite stopped or it's becoming very low after ending after the international intervention to end the the coalition advance in the western coast in tahamah after the agreement of stockholm in december 19th uh in december 2017 after that that coalition appetite to expand in yemen military military-wise there is no appetite so i think all what they want is to protect their areas to make to keep the division in yemen and to keep controlling the areas that non houthi controlled area which is which they have now and they keep it this is all their ambitions now so it's about the houthis if they are if they are going to join this to be serious now and to stop dreaming and marry because as i said marip is important for them for their own state for their what they what they dream in this state and they need financial resources uh so and also if happened if it happened that the truth collapsed and now the marriage it is most potent most probably mary will be the next bottle after this cruise if if it collapsed so it depends to the results of the problem in marab if it's in favor of the houthis which will weaken a lot the position of the uh the coalition and the allies them and allies with the coalition or it will be in the favor of that coalition either protect didn't fall in the hands of the houthis so this will keep the situation as it is now nadwa you have written about the role of local mediators and tribal leaders in preventing violence and negotiating the release of prisoners for example um what roles do you see local leaders playing in mediation efforts and how might those sort of local eff efforts be linked up to the national level and the un process yeah i mean the tribes have have actually been instrumental in maintaining order and stability and security in yemen since the beginning of the war and well before the war um they they provide justice they resolve conflicts they've been instrumental in exchange of thousands of prisoners um and they have um also helped protect civilians evacuating civilians from you know conflict areas um negotiating passage for civilians um and the interesting part about tribes is that during conflict tribe actually tribes have revenge killings and conflicts amongst them which they manage to contain but when there is a conflict they also freeze their internal conflicts freeze their ventricling and tribal conflicts and one of the really interesting things that i've seen um over the past few years is that a lot of the tribal in in tribal areas um some conflicts that have been around for decades have been resolved um like really uh complicated land disputes and revenge killings um so and that's tribe's way of neutralizing their internal conflicts in order to avoid um the potential for the war or external conflicts to come and decimalize them um the the tribes cannot the tribes the influence of the tribes is really at the local level um in their areas within the tribal areas between tribes uh so they function at that level um the tribes cannot influence when it comes to political conflicts and national level conflicts the tribes don't have the leverage or influence to change those dynamics or to pressure the conflict parties to even de-escalate um again you know the the maximum thing they can do at that front is really prisoner exchange and allowing passage for civilians and things like that um but if the conflict parties and that's a big if if they did decide to end the conflict if they decided to commit seriously commit to this to ceasefire including the houthis if they decide to commit to ceasefire um in de-escalation the tribes can be very um the tribes will be instrumental in kind of implementing the ceasefire mechanisms and at the local level so what they can do they can open roads they can negotiate open doors and there is a lot of negotiations about open roads it's not just going to be okay we're going to open the road there's a lot of logistics that go into that and the tribes can help with that they can negotiate the release of prisoners they can negotiate uh for example uh clearing landmines um protecting certain public facilities and making them again accessible to civilians and you know others as well um [Music] they can also help implement the ceasefire if there are you know uh uh you know uh the parties agree on certain you know process to implement the ceasefire and you know the one thing is the international community does not need to engage the tribes because the conflict parties actually will use the tribes it's it's that to go mechanism for every yemeni politician every yemeni you know um power uh you know um player you know since the beginning of time they will use the tribes automatically because again a lot of these people in power also come from tribes you know half of the presidential council come from tribal background most of the people in the military commanders and others come from tribes so it is embedded in yemen's rich peace building and de-escalation mechanisms and so right now they can help mitigate the conflict at the local level make it a little you know easier on civilians uh but if there is a genuine ceasefire genuine commitment to ceasefire um in the escalation and the conflict uh the tribes will will be the main element of it in terms of implementation thanks i'm going to um pull out a few questions from the audience and and kind of throw them out and um maybe you all can decide which ones you'd like to answer and just a reminder for folks in the audience please um leave us your questions so we have a question from hannah porter how do southern secessionists feel about zubaidi's membership in the presidential council do they see it as a win for the southern cause or a betrayal of it another audience member asks uh whether you could elaborate about future scenarios in in marib especially if the truce collapses um i'll take this other one i guess um i think with regards to by and large i think it's when you one of the things that people don't appreciate enough about the stc is the extent that they have been playing a long game um i think a lot of times because i mean going back particularly pre pre-war um and then going back even further pre-2011 the south has been marginalized in many saunas not just the south all of all of the areas outside of the sauna ali but particularly the south has been largely marginalized in sana centric um narratives regarding regarding yemen so it is i would say when you look at how the stc is playing is playing things strategically in terms of incorporating and the networks that ended up for that matter the networks also that ended up making up the stc have played in terms of incorporating themselves within power structures in order to create their own networks i would say that in a lot of ways having either in this position is is a significant victory for them this is a legitimization of the stc by in some cases literally people who are now members of the of the council who were extremely critical of the stc and said you know you know rather you know you can say things that now look quite radical by comparison considering they're all shaking hands and hanging out in riyadh together um i would say that for the vast majority there is has always been this tension before the sec even existed between sort of the formal southern movement leaders and leadership and and the frustration on the streets and there's always going to be that tension between um you know the aspirations of immediate succession and the immediate restoration of the state and all of these things and and which is is politically possible perhaps um but moving forward i think this does represent um a potential opportunity for a shift in how and how all of this is done you know for the vast majority yes aidarus was governor of aden yes lemnos was governor of xhabwa yes uh you know after the riyadh agreement almost was named was named um the governor of governor of aden that being said i think by and large the way it's kind of been in terms of incorporation has not worked as of yet so now we get to see whether it was a matter of of the structure or not and i think there is a there is a sense of this from people i speak to uh that this shift in the structure um does present a potential new opportunity um that being said i don't think anyone is is overly optimistic um and i think there does you know that's let's face it in in many regards the past five six seven years have have only served to increase um separative secessionist uh pro-restoration of the state whatever you want to call it uh sentiments about southerners among southerners over abdel basia do you um on the question of marib has i i know there have been some violations of of the truce there but has the truce allowed for uh an alleviation of of the humanitarian situation in there and how are you um and humanitarian sort of thinking about uh the future of maru yeah well obviously the truth was um a good outcome in terms of the reduced violence um usually when fighting and as adam mentioned uh serwa and other fronts in meredith have seen uh massive fighting and um you know the displacement was on daily basis and and that has meant increased needs and and more people you know push to areas where where they cannot easily access services and and some families as well you know had to walk for days uh to get to safer places and um yes there have been uh some minor clashes here and there but uh the the reducing violence and um across the different front lines in mary um has been significant and um by the end of this rules you know where i mean from my own point of view is that you know where we may uh be faced with two possible scenarios maybe an extension of the truth and um another scenario would be a total breakout of fighting uh and and mary would see the the you know the um the the most share of it of the fighting especially across the different front lines in the south with you know already reports uh indicating that there has been reinforcements to the um uh costs or to the lines of uh the front lines in mary um and and that's why you know we uh if we the the narrative of the good narrative is always to support peaceful processes and and to uh because we have seen how seven years of conflict of military operations have resulted in in a good outcome it's always adding up to the burdens and to the multi-layer crisis people are facing and the suffering of civilians and um and and this is all happening while we are facing a an unprecedented uh short for funding uh and that means uh we're not able to help everyone and and the uh the the scale of the crisis in merit is uh way bigger than uh the humanitarian community can can do anything you know to to alleviate the suffering with people there i think this is a good question for for nadwa but maybe others will like to chime in as well um this is from yasmin farooqi from mercy corps how strong would you characterize um the presidential leadership council's current command and control over their respective factions on the ground um and do you expect that this could help overcome opposition at lower levels um wow okay that's a really good question so um there are three uh members four members of the presidential council who command different forces you have tara absalek in command of the forces in the west coast which includes mainly the national resistance but also some of the tihama brigades you have um who commands the giant forces which is probably one of the strongest military force on the ground uh backed by the emiratis um you have uh bassani uh who commands the second military region the elite forces had elite forces about 20 000 uh soldiers um the st is either surveyed also stc commands most of the forces in aden and and surrounding areas um and so these are four different system forces that are under four different you know command centers the president of the the council does not really control any forces um um so that's the other part and adam talked about that a little bit you know i mean the antagonity forces had a history of you know fighting among themselves um and it wouldn't be a surprise if that manifests in the coming years um um i mean if they unite they will make a formidable force and they can weaken the houthis militarily but then how are we going to move from that to bringing all these forces under you you know unified command of control it will be a challenge and i think you know in my opinion this would be the reality of human's future it will be multiple forces and there are multiple command structures and i don't think it would be possible to unite them any any time in the near future i mean that's giving the you know very optimistic scenario of you know weakening the houthis and then kind of you know prevailing for these forces um but if the houthis are not weakened then you know i think we will see um you know we will see this this situation where you know you have all these forces and then they clash with the houthis uh kind of low uh low intensity conflict um and you know i i think that that's likely to continue to happen um provided that the houthis don't take matter if the houthis take matter then that's a whole different scenario but you know to respond to the question i don't think we will see military or security forces in yemen under a united command and control structure or even two united command and control structures um anytime soon mesa um do you have thoughts about the connections between those members of the presidential leadership council and and the forces on the ground yeah um first of all all of the all of the presidential council it is in the host of alderus because either is the beauty forces controlling adan and controlling massive palace where they live all of them so this is a big achievement it is a big credit for him and make him the strongest man inside the presidential council because he's the one who can decide if they can gather an adam or not they can stay in adam or not he's the one who said that so i don't know if they can't balance this situation afterward because the the head of this presidential council he doesn't have forces he's the only one who doesn't have any forces actually which is a very unique situation it's a it's a very weird one actually and this is and actually i would say they will not fight each other since there is coordination between the saudis and the uae because it is a result of the coordination between the uae and the saudi arabia if there is a kind and definitely there is a history of competition between them inside yemen so i can't say this can last for long um this kind of collective ruling i have to say it can work for temporary period but for long one it's very difficult uh and that executed yeah i mean the top authority in the country to be to be ruled by different people by different forces but this is this the situation of yemen that now the state doesn't have uh the biggest military power as it is in everywhere in the world it should be and it should be before or it was the state the situation of yemen before the war that the state okay there's an armed society but the state has the biggest military power in the state and now the situation is different um we have tara salah it is in the western course we have atmanjali um he doesn't have that big power he's his importance coming from being an enemy for the houthis and he's a tribal ship from sada um definitely bossini he represents this is very important for him and it's very interesting that two of the military two members in the military council they are also governors for example [Music] until now they are keeping the two positions which is i mean it raised many questions about what is the future of this governance and it should be a new governor in this place especially in bosnia i mean okay i would say it is an exceptional situation because he's facing the houthis okay i will say that but what about albertson and haderman so there are many questions i have to say also there there was a legal committee should be formed to set the regulation of the presidential council and it's never gathered and because even the head of this committee he apologized and said he will not take this position um definitely i have to clarify that the economic situation threaten everyone inside yemen treating the houthis treating even the stc i mean the polarity of the stc decreased a lot because of this economic situation so now which is the biggest test that is facing the presidential council it is the economic situation now the summer is coming the electricity in saddam what about the situation of the electricity and then this is this is the real test this is the real challenge otherwise the other things is not important for the people what concerns the people it is the living conditions it is the economic situation if their problems will not be addressed so they will be their anger will be against everyone even the stc so it is the biggest challenge for everyone in yemen it is the economic situation thank you so for those of us who are kind of following this from from the perspective of u.s policy i wanted to ask each of you if you were able to brief the biden administration white right now and what the united states should be doing um what would you tell them and what what should the role of the us of the u.s special envoy the international community even what should their role be in uh hopefully increasing the likelihood of a sustainable piece and helping to alleviate or stabilize the humanitarian situation um adam do you want to start i don't particularly want to start but i guess i have no choice um she called me out um if i was advising i would say i mean i would say one of the biggest things is to know is to know the limits and i think the limits of and i say this with with all due respect to all of the actors involved the limits of of different countries were dramatically uh underlined by the conference that was held by the gc's or the consultations were held by the gcc in in riyadh this showed that certain countries certain actors namely the saudi arabia particularly the gcc is an institution and the uae have a far greater capacity than than other actors in that are that are putting it in in yemen right if you compare what was happening the buzz etc with say the gcc consultations versus the consultations that happened just before they were held by osesky it was it was quite notable right um but that's because certain countries have the leverage they have the power they they have yemen in their backyard so to speak um not of course not to say that the us uk and other key powers don't have um and key global powers don't have significant leverage in yemen but the flavor of it is different i think when it comes to different powers so it's in that kind of i would say embracing complementarity um and keeping lines of communication open um i mean i remember a few years ago there were questions of people you know the idea of speaking with the stc was was kind of something that was people raised questions about now the sdc is literally um legitimizes the mainstream political political movement um so i think and finally i would say there needs to be a focus on what is actually happening in the ground rather than what is happening in various exile locuses of of exile political activity um in some regards you know it feels like it's a completely different world in terms of what's happening on the ground in yemen and this is not just in whether it's areas that are under control of the de facto authorities based in sana uh whether we're speaking of aiden whether we're speaking whatever there's a whole new political roadmap that's emerged to some extent yes this political council the presidential council rather does reflect that to a greater extent than what was there before but that doesn't change the fact that there is a remarkable disconnect between policy on yemen you know whatever and what's actually happening on yemen and the only really way to combat that is spending more time on the ground which i understand is difficult due to the security situation but but not impossible because you have seen progressive improvements in that uh particularly with visits earlier this year from the europeans and the americans for at least europeans to uh to sana and aiden and other parts of the country and the americans to uh uh to visit bosnia and sheikh awad um um and i think i mean but then it all comes into the biggest the biggest larger conceit of regardless of what we think about it um the yemen that existed before this conflict no longer exists and we need to sort of move on and deal with that i more than as much as anyone else in the world would love to go on a time machine if there was a magic fix that brought yemen back the way it used to be it would be pretty great i had a great time in sauna before all of this happens you know loves it fantastic but it's it's never gonna happen um so we need to disabuse ourselves of the notion that you can put things back in pandora's box pandora's box has been open the spirits have been floating around uh freely for now six seven eight possibly more years now uh so the only thing moving forward is something that will be a solution that is impo that is reflecting um the inside and as interpreted and put into framework by outside parties for that better way to put it rather than something that is imposed from the outside and i think if there's one thing of the past if we want to say 10 possibly more years of yemeni history and regional history it's not a yemen thing you know solutions imposed from the outside um tend to have a pretty limited shelf life um look at the stockholm agreement uh and that's my two to seven cents um mesa what what should the biden administration be doing yeah the problem in the u.s um there is no actually there is no consistency in yemen i mean in trump he will leave the final fiament to the saudis and by the know the soldiers they are the wrong people they are the bad guys and we have to be against them it's not about that it's not about it's about it's always a reaction to what the relationship between the u.s and the saudi arabia maybe it's not about yemen they are always handling the yemeni 5 from this perspective i can't understand they have many interests with the saudis and nothing about yemen but even if you are dealing with yemen if you don't have interest with yemen and you have interest with the saudis i think you should if you are not in good terms with them you should have um a kind of consensus consistency with yemen um for example to secure at least the cost to secure at least the region because it's along borders between the saudis and the yemenis even between the yemenis and the omanis so it's important to protect this entity to make it at least relatively stable it is not treating their neighbors so uh i think they have first of all to realize that yeah man is yemen it's not only south or south of saudi arabia so yemen has its own problems and it's not about saudi arabia and iran only it's about many complicated issues and it can be solved totally it's not kind it can be completely solved but it can be at least reduced uh the bad consequences or the negative consequences of the many conflicts inside yemen and decrease the degree of this conflicts um this is the issue i mean they they can they have to realize that they have limitation in in their intervention in yemen especially with the houthis and um and they can do some pressure on the saudis maybe on the and i think the houthis they couldn't do some pressure on the omanis if they can't do pressure in the iranians the omanis they are allies they are not mutual and they provide the houthis many logistics many services the houthis cannot live without them so the money is you can reach to the houthis through the always if you can't reach to them through the iranians because it's very difficult for you so at least the romanis they are a good a good area that you can do your pressure with them because you have good relationship with the omanis and they can't and they need it they need the us and they need the western to have good relationship with the west so i think you have to balance your situation if you want a a relatively stable place in yemen so you have to do pressure and with the saudis and houthis and recognize there is no good guy in yemen it's everything is bad and all what you can do is to use the negative consequences thank you thank you uh abdelasia what should the international community and the united states be doing from your perspective yeah i i think that the u.s should um invest maybe more in the great work that is being carried out by its invoilander king and uh i think one key step is to secure an extension to the truth and maybe continue support for the un working with with the its allies in the region especially those regional actors including roman as mesa mentioned and um i get that we always you know mention iran but if if the us also can do is to eliminate you know that line of of supports if if if it's evident and um it can be effective in um ending the conflict um i think also the us code um and also the international community could push on back on the harmful potential decisions that would have huge humanitarian and economic impacts um on the yemeni people including the blanket designations and that would have you know huge humanitarian and economic impacts uh in yemen and also where it has leveraged uh the us crude supports to to ensure there is an accountability mechanism in yemen which we don't have since the um the ge was uh voted uh uh two two weeks fire back in october 2021 um and also what is also important is that the us could use its leverage with the irg to uh ensure uh women are engaged and civil society are engaged also in case processes now we see that the um the presidential council has no women zero represents the representation of women uh the uh committee for the reconciliation reconciliation and consultations has only two women out of 50 members which is quite shameful and it's a failure you know to uphold the commitments to empower women and it is important also that the us uh ensures uh funds are being provided for the humanitarian response it could use this leverage uh on the us and and and on the uae and and saudi arabia to provide funds to the humanitarian uh response as well and maybe more investment on peace than on armed states uh that's all i have to say thanks edward give you uh the last word what what should the us and the biden administration be doing yeah thank you um i so i would say um watch how you use your leverage uh the us has leverage on the saudis has leverage on the govern yemeni government it does not have leverage on the houthis and when you apply a pressure on one side um most likely automatically uh help the other side and we've seen what happened after the stockholm agreement when the u.s pressured the saudis and the emiratis and the government to stop the um you know operation uh to liberate hodeidah from the houthis and how the houthis then repositioned their forces and made massive military gains and how that further complicated the conflict in yemen and played into the hands of the houthis military so that's one thing um i agree with adam and and with everything that my my uh the other parents said um we have to be realistic uh stitching yemen back together is not gonna happen um and if a peace settlement looks great on paper you know a unity government or a political settlement where the houthis and every other party will come together it does not mean that it can translate and we've seen that in 2011 and 12 how the gcc agreement seemed to be great on paper but then it actually it actually um planted the seeds for the current war um so be realistic uh use your leverage to help yemen um one piece at a time uh right now i think you know the yemen conflict is is complex uh it's probably gonna continue for a while so focus having said that there are areas in yemen that are stable there are a lot of things that can be done to help mitigate the impact of the conflict and kind of build blocks for future peace so focus on things that you can do which is supporting local economy supporting local governments um you know uh training supporting local forces not in terms of fighting but also but supporting local forces um training them on laws international humanitarian law you know this way you can promote accountability um and and again don't pressure or don't sign don't use your political pressure to uh uh to force a premature political settlement um um also i think one important thing that the us can do is help with the software tanker this tanker if explodes or if spills uh into the the sea it will cause you know the worst the worst environmental disasters we've seen in the region um and right now the un needs only 144 million dollars to fix it and if it spells the cost for cleaning up will only would be 20 billion dollars so and the u.n is struggling to secure the money so contribute to that but also talk to the saudis and the mris to contribute money to that kind of use that put your political pressure and your leverage on the saudis and emiratis to force them to contribute to that fund um so final word yemenis complex embrace the complexity thank you i want to thank all all four of these panels so much for taking time out of your mornings and evenings to um speak with us and and thanks to new america's events team for helping us uh to organize everything uh and and thanks for the audience for joining this conversation so until next time bye | New America | UCvQQMY6TyUdt5VeHpuHv_Dg | 2022-05-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 10,183 | 54,892 |
cBVLZr5h82I | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBVLZr5h82I | Darren and Friends S5E10 - The Road Trip | [Music] so [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] the road trip hey christina riley sabrina and asher we are going to drive to somewhere that madison has requested us to meet her and the other my scene girls we'll just drive and see what we can find who wants to play a game let me give it a shot okay christina for this game you have to look for a sea container on a trailer i think it is ocean network express a pink one that's what it is fantastic how about a car hauler carrying four cars with a chevy colorado a ford focus a chevy monte carlo and a mini cooper on it i saw one good now let's look for something that is owned by abilene motor express i see one being pulled by a freightliner well guess what time it is time for us to stop for lunch and fill my car with gas the reason why the gas is going in my car is because the numbers are showing how much gas is going in right now it's a lot i already knew that gas is like food for the car gas makes the car go we're going to have lunch and the car is going to have lunch too and speaking of lunch let's go get some grub at a restaurant but marion raven i said i wanted a burger two orders of large fries three diet cokes and four brownies and that's final trust promo for the love of god fender stop acting like a spoiled brat you can either have green eggs and ham or you can have nothing at all marion raven i said i will not eat them with a goat i will not eat them with a boat i will not eat them in the rain i will not eat them on a train not in the dark not in a tree not in a car you leave me be i will not eat them with a fox i will not eat them in a box i will not eat them in a house i will not eat them with a mouse i will not eat them here or there i will not eat them anywhere i do not like green eggs and ham i definitely do not like them marian raven i am now shut up and give me the burger fries drinks and brownies right now you crazy cat in the hat oh oh oh fender i can't believe you called me the cat in the hat you know i am not a dr seuss character that's it we are going home and you are definitely not getting absolutely anything at all well that's kind of awkward you would have got this on camera i know asher let's just eat our food and forget about it it's madison keep quiet and let me answer hi madison it's me darren i was wondering if you could meet me in front of the hot topic in the mall later on when we get there that sounds brilliant see you soon we're going on a ferry boat right now well madison i'll see you there bye this is a ferry boat that can carry 25 vehicles there are big ferry boats that can carry between 50 and 150 vehicles the birds are following us these are called seagulls caw call the captain is controlling the ship and when we hear the horn it means it's time for us to head to the car so we can go to the mall it's a miracle that no one slept through the whole ferry ride i have found the nice surprises we have enjoyed today the cows the gas pumps the semi-trucks and the restaurant where me and you guys ordered for ourselves and even the fairy boat with the awfully loud horn i like car trips even when i'm driving and don't worry we are at the mall right [Music] can't now afraid to leave this out we got this [Music] just like this [Music] e a sports it's in the game [Music] you | Tailslandian Gardens and Elysian Siemens | UCRpuTtRWiHPszYABs1SUu5w | 2021-10-23 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 690 | 3,304 |
dg4jqG3DJYU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dg4jqG3DJYU | Local Coin Shop CLOSED! Yankee Stacking During Crisis (And Criticism!) | they'll see us a shutdown what's it been like Yankee stacking during crisis and criticism hey everybody thank you so much for watching Yankee stacking really appreciate you guys as always watching my channel checking out my videos thank you for liking and subscribing also don't forget to check out the description of my videos I include a lot of links in there some other information that you might find interesting so yes it's shutdown time guys a lot of you out there know exactly what I'm talking about local coin shops shut down all over the place obviously the inventories are small prices are high and well you know it's been a real challenge the other thing that's been a real challenge is my last video oh my word I'll put it right up there if you haven't seen it but oh my goodness I got Wow over twenty thousand views on that video I really appreciate that but I totally triggered people up the silver bugs went nuts on me like frankly I got some hate out of it granted most of what I got was probably people that you know are new to my channel you know don't know Yankee you don't know you know stacking the Yankee way and all that right they they came in taste maybe even didn't listen to the whole video or maybe even didn't even listen to it at all just saw the you know the title of it and just went off how dare you say that about silver what's wrong with you haven't you ever heard of the gold to silver ratio Yankee this is an outrage you call yourself a stacker that's it I'm unsubscribing goodbye that was not exactly what I expected I did expect some people to think I was joking yes it came out on April 1st I get it my good friend silver dragons dropped a phenomenally funny video and I think when they saw mine they said mmm Yankees pulling my leg but it was legit maybe sort of a double fake ok but oh my goodness I hadn't I just couldn't believe what I got you would have thought that I literally hate this stuff that I don't want to stack it that I you know want to sell all my silver I had some people telling me hey Yankee if you don't want to have silver fine I'll buy it you idiot I'm not selling one single ounce okay I love silver but I'm done focusing on silver right now and I gave the reasons I'm not gonna go into it but jeez you I guess I guess if I if I don't sleep with this stuff I'm somehow an unfaithful stacker right you know if I'm buying gold instead of you know this I'm you know cheating on my stack it's like precious metals infidelity oh my word ah just let me go on record as saying I do love silver I see it's worth its value I understand that it's a good thing to stack and I have hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of ounces of this stuff okay so enough with the hate mail no it's just it's just amazing um you know I let me just say if you maybe I don't know two or three more things about silver that I need collected to mention in my I'm done video okay and then what we'll do is I'll show you the interesting visit that I had with Tim my local coin shop dealer under the current medical crisis that were in and you know I you what I got because I'm really happy about it it's um ooh it's exciting and while I said I was done with silver as a focus of my stack and of buying I did pick up a couple silver items so I will show those to you as well okay because I mean it was just fun ice cream cone silver as I call it so let me address a few comments and questions emails that I got about silver okay I said silver was not a monetary metal it was primarily an industrial metal and I still hold to that okay so don't don't you know quote me was an article one section 10 of the Constitution I get you know silver and gold's place in our Constitution and how it's real money I thoroughly understand that okay but just because it's in the Constitution doesn't mean that our government honors that it is not seen as much as a monetary metal it really isn't do I believe one day it will be yes do I hope it is yes so one of the reasons why I stack it it's just it it's just not seen that way right now it's much more of industrial metal gold is more of a monetary metal some people were saying yeah but Yankee you're saying that Silver's barter between people and gold butter between nations actually it was Tim who coined that phrase and then they were like well that's what I'm stacking it for I want it to be barter between people I need it to be that way well yeah absolutely it's why I stacked constitutional silver so much it's fantastic barter between people or potentially barter amongst people totally agree and oh my word the GSR Yankee what's wrong with you don't you understand the gold of silver ratio why you stacking gold it's so expensive well I've done videos on why I believe gold is actually inexpensive right now and I also have addressed many times why or what I believe the natural go to silver ratio should be in my opinion in modern you know economies economies that are not backed or their currency is not backed by gold and silver so I don't discount the gold of silver ratio I understand it again it's a smaller reason why I stack silver cuz you know I think silver is a good play it's it's undervalued it's cheap in some ways but I do not flip or I should say I do not play the ratio when I buy silver it's to keep silver when I buy gold it's to keep gold I have a very focused way of stacking and I stack both gold and silver for particular reasons for me in the future I see silver as potential barter material for supplies first I'm sure if we have a complete collapse you know in shtf situation is going to be supplies for supplies but eventually that's going to be untenable but we won't be able to continue doing that we're gonna need some sort of currency and I do believe that silver will fit the bill there but gold will also be a massive store of wealth and small fractional gold pieces could also be bartered or at the very least bartered for more silver so silver for supplies gold with silver you get my strategy there okay so I do believe that both have a role to play and finally the funny thing was if people weren't like dude you're after a Yankee musket with maples they're Canadian eh what's wrong with you Yankee yeah that's an American oh wow that was that was funny yeah I think most of the comments around that we're just just to tease me that that's perfectly fine but I live in New Hampshire okay I'm a border state with our friends to the north I love Canadian coinage I do I plead guilty okay it doesn't make me an American i I see Maple Leafs in in you know my pocket change all right any time you live close to the border you're gonna see that and I do I don't care what anybody says I do think that that may believe his iconic I promise not to flip this over but because I'm not a big fan of the obverse but these are great in fact just a side note these are 2018 Canadian Maple Leafs silver I might add and boy I'll tell you they are in good shape I think they are quite lactose-intolerant very happy with these 2018 so yeah I I absolutely love the Canadian maple leaf design okay it also you know fits in with my Yankee stacking strategy of purchasing primarily government bullion closest to where you live in in most recognizable with where you live okay so I mean if you live in Europe you know you're getting you silver Krugerrands or the Philharmonic sore you could you know buy a lot of different government minted silver bullion closer to where you live for me you know I have a whole monster box full of American Silver Eagles and the first tubes that I got as a stacker were these two 2018 Canadian Maple Leafs love them so yeah that fits that's one of the reasons why I'm doing it but you know gold gold is what I really really wanted to focus on and I wanted 24 karat gold this time four nines fine for Knights okay I have nothing at all against the American Gold Eagle love the American Gold Eagle my first gold that I ever bought as a stacker was the a key cannon you know what that is right it's 22 Gold and it's a whole tube of American Gold Eagles you know one ounce now I can't just go and buy one ounce of gold as easily as I'm you know did when I bought that tube so I wanted to get fractional gold and I wanted an entire tube of 24 karat this time so I love the Canadian Maple Leafs you know they're just they're just gorgeous and I add four of them so I I stacked four and I thought wow that's it's a good beginning I actually don't know how many are in a tube I should take that back there isn't a standard tube size for the quarter ounce Canadian Maple Leaf found that out the Royal Canadian Mint doesn't have a tube for that so I guess I can pick you know pick how many quarter ounce Canadian maples make up a tube for me right I don't know 20 25 I'm not sure but anyways I was going with the maples and I'm gonna call it a Yankee musket I don't care if the Canadian Maple Leafs alright so that said I will show you what I purchased both gold had a little bit of silver at the end of this video so hang tight don't stop watching right now let's cut to my visit to a closed local coin shop well Tim gave me the text last night his wholesaler and see if he could pick up some fractional ball for me specifically Canadian Maple Leafs texted me Cindy Adam said hide them I'm coming in coming in with my gloves and my mask yes you closed okay all right so we're gonna we're gonna do this unofficially right well officially unofficially Wow I see silver silver canvas you still have pandas little pricey but when you don't have anything you can't really control the price I have to admit I'm glad you're wearing a mask what is this bars I was able to get these for customers yeah wow that's a bar that is amazing I empty the pipeline that's my guess this emptied the pipeline no war do you think they're already the reserved for someone whose order some kindness have to need just like these were reserved for me that's right all right awesome yeah did he did he have a lot of this or did was this it I think he said alright let's do it I'm actually uh I want to shout out another overtaxed taxpayer dude this is for you all right here's the gold envelope you told us you challenged us all to fill the gold envelope as much as it can and use it to buy gold that's what I'm gonna do right now alright it's bulging I can open it up if I can do it alright wanting to do this for a while but no it's to get this stuff around you to that's what they've been doing is just cleaning out this office I keep finding things to a good part of it what what super do you have just four ounce um well I have an order for two rules of Morgan's so I've got to put those together tonight a lot of junk and I'm getting the rounds I don't know when they're gonna be okay there they should be in by Monday maybe Tuesday is it loosening up just a little bit um well I probably mentioned to you before my wholesaler is pretty aggressive yeah you know I had one situation where the material was in Pennsylvania you've literally hopped in his Corvette drove down to pick it out if it wasn't a Corvette I think it wouldn't have been an inconvenience for me so I can't get a little white middle today huh let's see that one is 45 percent of a troy ounce I think okay that's a toy yes that was a toy this something was put out by MTV Banking MTB maggie's it was one of the biggest distributors of silver coins and bars back in the day that's a trade unit it should be one ounce of pure silver so I'm getting a lot of flack from the community for not buying any silver salt I'm gonna buy this I did a video yesterday it was like I'm done I'm done stacking silver for a while all I want is gold and they're like what and you really should open want me to turn this sign around I mean like no yeah you better stay close thanks Tim hey stay safe stay well neck hole I really appreciate Tim it's so neat that he had opened it up and hold that gold for me in fact right here oh man this one it's the older style the younger Queen which you know as far as Queens go that isn't that bad right doesn't have the radial lines doesn't have the security marks in it but it's a 1982 mmm yummy here's the 2016 I'll flip that over this one does have the security features privy mark radial lines very nice another one this one is again 2016 and another 1986 young Queen so for so let's slap these in to some of these and you know I'm trying to figure out the way I should handle this I I usually don't buy you know those those tubes that hold the coin capsules I love that sound getting all the air out yeah so I usually don't do that because it adds to your overall cost right and I did get these for a great cost or great price s teresting so I I think though you know 24 karat is very soft okay that's one of the benefits of the whoops of the 22 karat American Gold Eagle that one is those are are tougher okay they can handle you know more handling than a 24 karat coin for carats very soft you got to be really careful with it you don't ding it you know market that type of thing and I do care about my precious metals so I don't want to do that to these gorgeous bullion pieces pammi they're just so much heavier then you realize that this size Wow so I do think this is going to warrant a coin Castle tube now I have to again decide how many I'm going to put in that tube actually I wonder if there is a specific number for a quarter ounce point capsule maybe that will dictate how many I have to get to technically get the musket but I also wanted something a little less thick for a musket if you know what I mean I mean it's gonna be as big or bigger than the cannon so I might have to rethink it but I do like being able to protect it inside a coin capsule hmm so yeah you know I was thinking more about why people got all upset and triggered over gold rather than silver you know we sometimes have confirmation bias we really do want people to agree I mean I shoot well I like it when people agree with me but you can't be fixated on that everyone has their own opinion and that's fine everyone stacks a different way I know I tout stacking the Yankee way and it's one of the reasons why I stopped at quarter ounce gold bullion because one of the things that one of the principles of my stacking strategy is to try to reduce the premiums you might say well then Yankee why don't you go a full outs like maybe I'm just not quite as patient as you it's a lot to purchase at one whack and if I was extremely wealthy maybe that's exactly how I would do it but I also wanted my strategy to not just fit me but to be just reachable by a lot of different people so I thought let's do fractional Gold Plus as a prepper stacker it would be a lot easier to barter and convert this to silver in an SH TF situation so I'm willing to pay some premium some anything less than a quarter for me the premiums start to get really out of whack so that's where I stopped at a quarter also another key principle in stacking the Enki way is stacking dents I forgot to mention that as one of the reasons why I was focusing more right now temporarily on gold because you know I forget it sometimes but people mentioned in the comments that stacking dents or dents stacking approach and it is important for me again as a prepper stacker to have a smaller stack physically you know yeah I'm amazed and in awe of people who can spread out you know 20 feet 30 feet worth of stack silver it's incredible I enjoy looking at that I admire it but frankly I want to be able to pick up as much of my wealth as possible and be able to transport it be able to hide it be able to you know contain it and not have it be such an unwieldy mass of precious metals so I'm I'm playing a balancing act there between silver and gold I have focused pretty hard on that silver to get the monster box and then when I held it in I saw it's like okay come back yes think dense stacking right so again that's the other focus our other reason why gold is such a great way to stack because it really does hold your wealth in a very small area is silver we're stacking yes it is a more speculative stacking approach and if you're older like Yankee you might not want to be quite as speculative with your stacking you might be willing to forego the potential high return if you will with silver and focus more on a more stable precious metal asset like gold or like me you balance the two oh I almost forgot the other silver okay okay okay let's move this gold out of the way and let me show you well first let me show you this little beauty holy mackerel yeah that's the big one guys that's the 20 19 s enhanced reverse proof this was sent to me by Fiat destroyer just to rub it in he and pretty much everybody else that follows my channel knows that I blue it by not you know what canceling my my meeting at work telling the boss to take a hike in because I had to buy this thing right in the middle of the day no I didn't do that so I missed out on this and it was really nice enough to send this to me in a wonderful package where he wanted me to open it live so that everybody in the community would realize that he was just lending this to me - Eagle and hold before he wanted it back so he gave me ten bucks to send it back very nice a.m. to do that and I am after this video packaging this up and sending it back but that is just unreal love that piece of silver and the other two pieces you saw this one in the video the Liberty trade dollar I'm gonna bring this a little bit closer so you can see it 1985 I didn't know much about this but I was very very impressed Johnson Matthey J sorry JM right there you can see that so Wow and then on the reverse right there you can see whoops back off gorgeous torch again this is a Johnson Matthey I think ankle hard made one of these you'll see it II on the reverse these are pretty cool very nice this is uncirculated it's not there I think there's some proof out there but this is the uncirculated version he gave it to me for a pretty reasonable price so thought maybe you placate some of the silver bugs out there that hate me and then the last thing I showed this on the coast-to-coast show but for some of you that might not have seen it this is really cool nice velvet case look at that Bugs Bunny happy birthday bugs that is so cool I mean growing up I love Looney tune I would shoot I've been memorized these cartoons when I was a kid and get up on Saturday morning and and watch him he put it in the comment let me know if you remember getting up on Saturday morning to watch these cartoons that this is a 1990 celebrating 50 years of Bugs Bunny is 50th birthday so what we're at the 80th birthday right now that's that's incredible so really cool round that's so nice on the other side you go what's up doc I mean that's that's cool right that's a fun ice-cream cone when it comes to stack and silver really enjoyed it and I had to get it so there you have it there's my silver and gold pickup I appreciate your watching again like subscribe check out the description leave a comment do you still think Yankee hates silver do you still think I'm making a mistake with gold well I hope not but regardless I hope your day is a ok [Music] | Yankee Stacking | UCSlo5dl8jvbmpJi-zcbqq6w | 2020-04-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,832 | 19,242 |
nwym4D95lX8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nwym4D95lX8 | What unites London and Athens? | hello everybody today we will discover what nice two very different cities london and athens athens is the capital of greece and symbol of the culture of ancient greece here were born influencers and figures of antiquity and were hosted for the first time in history the olympic games in athens you can find remains of different civilizations and cultures from the neolithic to the modern age today it houses important buildings and monuments such as the national archaeological museum the hansen acropolis and the pertinent symbol of the city it is said that the region of artists begin with a myth which is told guess where in london london is the capital of england and the united kingdom syllable of modernity and cosmopolitanism it is one of the most important metropolitan city in the world and the third most visited city in the world it's first remains that back to the britons but the most important evidence we have since 43 after christ with the romans london has experienced a great period of extraordinary power such as the two-year period the elizabethan age and the victorian age it has a great history and it is also demonstrated by the monuments we can find such as westminster abbey buckingham palace merbolas and soho to discover however the origins of huttons we must go into the british museum what unites london and athens are the parthenon and the british museum let's find out why the myth that tells the story of the athenians is stored partly through the statues of the eastern impediment and the west impediment of the parthenon now in the british museum the british museum is one of the world's largest ancient museums founded in 1753 by sir hans lohan it will get its great importance thanks to the rosetta stone which is perhaps the first translated document of antiquity he reports in fact an engraving written in three different clubs ancient greek hieroglyphics and demotic which will be the penultimate type of egyptian language today the british museum hosts sculptures from all over the world and in 1931 sir joseph tuben an art dealer offered funding to open the duven gallery in the museum which would have host all the patent sculpture but what is the pattern on the partner is a greek building located on the acropolis athens and dedicated to the gods athena it is the symbol of classical greek architecture the pediment of which we have spoken will be a complex there is a set of sculptures that decorate the upper part of the temple in this case of the parthenon the eastern parliament of the temple tells the legend about the birth of athena while the western impediment tells the war between athena and poseidon both are made of marble unfortunately as for the eastern parliament the central part that is the predators the moment of the birth of the goddess was lost and were found only the remains of the god that completed the sin like dionysus the myth tells that the girl satina daughter of dallas was born from the school of the latter they say that athena was the founder of the city but many other myths just say that she conquered the city and became its protector others was means to become a rich and powerful city so athena tried to conquer it but someone else had the same idea his name was posidon and he started a conflict that not even else could stop so they decided to make a gift to give a gift to the city posadan wanted to donate a horse symbol to strength courage and war instead atina wanted to donate an olive tree a symbol of peace serenity and prudence the eldest of the city said that the peace was more secure and lasting though not conspicuous but the war was dangerous and insecure so they choose athena and thanks to this athens became a great city did you know this connection between those two cities have you ever visited any of those places let me know in the comments and don't forget to follow me and activate the notifications i'm on instagram facebook tick tiktok and youtube in the description you will also find a link to my website see you in the next video we will discover the shadow of | GIAV- Gaia Iavarone | UCdhW318EDdyZ-7XJ28vQY-w | 2021-05-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 729 | 4,073 |
MP1eUSHh1eo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MP1eUSHh1eo | Eco living | I AM NOT a CYNICAL SWEDE | will it be worth it though? | I want another kid this is not the game that I want I can feel it I'm starting questioning everything maybe I'm just sick of the game itself maybe I'm too old to play The Sims hi everybody so I am still alive I will not be apologizing for not making videos so this new expansion pack came out I was so sure I was like watching this trailer and I was so sure it was a stuffed pack because we had tiny living of Pocky right we had all right we had salami this austere and that was an expansion pack so I guess it makes sense okay everybody has been making reaction videos to this and I was thinking about doing like a cynical Swedish person video about it because I was so salty that they was this was going to be the expansion pack that we get this time because I was so not into it I'm starting to warm up to the idea I will probably buy it I guess I mean it depends on what we get with it so um okay so if we would if we go back here and watch the beginning of the video I think this looks like what I want became I want this dystopian ugly thing of a world look at all this trash this looks like reality to me this is a harbor apparently or obviously I mean there's cargo containers and maybe ships would come in and pick them up and there's cranes to load them and yeah and then there's all this crap on the ground because who would care to pick them up nobody that's who unless they were getting paid and she's got uh Smarties going to die because of the air is so polluted I mean I can't like this Sims struggling to stay alive even though they can climb out of the pool without a ladder so we could kill them in other ways okay that that's amazing and look at this look at these cars are these the toy cars that has been enlarged or are they new objects for decorations and I would say well maybe they're not new decoration objects maybe they're already in the game somewhere but I can't find them but it's obviously not the toy cars at too detailed so nobody we will be picking them up and waving them around and that's that and that that's good but obviously you can't drive them probably so there probably has decorations they've done this before like in the glamour stuff or whatever it was called for the celebrity back they had a limo and everyone was like did you see the limo will we finally seems getting into cars and driving off no no we can't have that no it was just uh I don't even know what it was it was some kind of decoration that people were broken around but no cars no like we have cars like all over the game or we can't actually all the way want is own a car we want to see Sims get into cars and driving off like liking the seems to all we want okay but like look at the number of trashes hair like you could probably pick all these up except for these crates I don't know what to do with these crates and oh there's some wait what do they call the EU panel I don't know anyway I'm not excited about new clothes some people have said this skirt thingy over the jeans is horrible I think it's look pretty good but I'm kinda weird like that okay so death by flies is back I wasn't particularly fond of that it seems like too random for me and also who would die for it from it being too filthy around you know you want to be able to live in a dump and not get killed by it unless you get sick but then it should be a look like long drawn-out disease that you can recover from if you go to a hospital or a clean environment not like sudden death like this I don't like it can we like have a hack or mod that disables this so I mean I'm looking into buying an expansion pack and I'm already thinking of things that I want to disable great so yeah I think we had like this exact animation in the sims free and I kind of miss it yeah this will be great for my homeless Sims and there will be a lot of them in this world I mean they will all live at landfill probably and try to stay at form like a community they will not be planting flowers that sure like Oh her braids like did you see how metallic they look look at this this is not like hair he's got like some augmentations going on okay so they're building a house out of container material is this just a wallpaper or has this got some other functionality if we choose to be like is this a special kind of wall that's what I'm wondering because if it is I'm all for it I want a special I will different kinds of all that behaves differently I don't know what they were going to do you know it would be cool just be cool then like you cannot change them that that would be awesome I also wished for like cracks in walls that you can't just get rid of that you have to pay to get rid oh oh look at all the cars that all over here was that the place they were walking just now there's a lot of dust bins over here is this outside a lot so you can't remove this but can you use them because that would be cool like if you don't have to buy a garbage bin up each time but you should have to pay for using that I like what would this turn into if you guys form the town so this thing like I don't I don't know about this I I want a smaller version I want small things I don't want big things like this this takes up her whole yard and and I'm like is this going to feel like a cupcake machine that you like you you place it like once or twice and then realize you need a like separate room for this if you're going to have it and your sims aren't just they didn't they're not that rich and when they are it's not stylish they don't want it why would you have a machine to make cupcakes so maybe this has some use or something like okay so she's taking like presumably trash maybe plastic maybe metal and she's grinding down and she gets the compressed cube and you know maybe we they can use this cube for something or it's just like trash compacting things so that you get less waste and like if that's the case there's no point because you have right here we already have this we have this from the base game I think if you throw trash in here you get monies and I usually don't use it because I feel it cheating stuff like this I feel like they put stuff like this in the game without thinking enough about it there's an object with a clear like benefit this is really strong benefit but it there's no downside it's not expensive it could be inexpensive so that it's hard to get no no no it's not expensive so you can just get it you can just plop it out and then the instead of having trash everywhere you have like money but of course it was glitchy in my game so there seems would walk around smelling trash until I check this out so that's probably why I stopped using it but I feel like like it's it's unbalanced like if you're gonna get a huge benefit from an object you need to have like it's not a game if you can just plop things out and have everything easy for you so that's why people creates all these challenges were with the all these rules that you can't use this you can't use that that's because there's so much in the game that's like basically cheating ok so let's talk about the candle-making so I like I mean I mean let like that's like cool for 5 minutes I've had the mod that okay let's face it the mod is never gonna be as good as as the game because if something that goes in the game needs the game the game's core to change they can do that modders count for obvious reasons so okay so she's made a lot of candles here I'm assuming she's going to sell them or use them like okay now that I look at it is actually having all these candles here they're they're here here obviously I think there's some in the background as well so maybe she's lighting up her house and they do burn out just you can see this is about to change to a smaller piece because it's been on for a bit again you need this whole station and I don't know if she's going to use that cube that she made in the previous scene or if you need to go out and like harvest stuff like I'm not gonna do that to have a light source when you can buy perfectly good candles in buy mode like it's not that's not worth the effort just to have a light source no you cannot Sims can just as easily live in the dark they don't care they don't actually care you did get a buff from these like who knows and there's a big station and she has to get resources from somewhere I assume more money maybe like hopefully you can just go here and create candles so you don't have to gather stuff before but then also where's the game playing that really just making stuff maybe I'm just sick of the game itself maybe I don't maybe I'm too old to play the sims I don't know I'm starting questioning everything alright let's carry on before I get too depressed [Music] okay so here's the landfill and I don't know if we are going to be able to edit this load but I mean imagine if these are can be used as houses but is a community lot but you can go here and sleep but other people won't sleep because community lots are stupid like that even if you put beds down none of the other sims will actually sleep there so can I make this a residential lot of course I can but then I lose all the functionality of the community lot I can pretend the other sims are like sleeping in here but then I will get different Sims walking about I want to play the game in a totally different manner than I know that is made so I'm constantly thinking about how can make the game work in my favor when I want to play out the story and it's really hard most of the time I don't know about you anyway we have like a little dumpster here a broken wardrobe I wonder if we're gonna have things break down probably not but it would be nice would it be nice you have stuff and they decayed so you had to buy new stuff and you didn't buy like if you put up wallpaper it decayed so that after like three generations it would not look good anymore you had to put up new wallpaper for it to look good or you would end up with it like ghost looking house that would be so cool I want another game this is not the game that I want I think feel it like I want more decay nothing is decaying in the sims everything is perfect all the time so annoying and these are like okay so this seems like found this lot mirror-like okay so Jonah is going to love this Lord we're going to change it up so that she doesn't love it anymore because this is perfect for like a runaway teen or someone that has been like thrown out from home or like lost their home or you know they had some kind of catastrophic in their life so that they have nowhere to go but to dump and they don't live here but then these people come along and they're like we're gonna like plant a garden here you're not then then we're gonna like put up stuff and sell stuff and we're gonna be here all the time and making noise you can't sleep what are these guys doing they're like we made a living room here we put up a TV what is he doing I mean okay to be fair okay look there's a lot to do here's that same machine in a different color fantastic okay so this is something else completely I think what is something put here and then the stills down here so you make alcoholic drinks without alcohol of course it's the Sims wait but it's dis though like this looks like Mario or some thinking and he is yeah I do not know and then just a doping thing like I wonder how like for me to be satisfied with that voting thing it would have to be my vote for something but I do not get it all the time like I get it like 25% of the time I get what I wanted but other times like I don't get it because that's how the thing works in reality and like the elections in Sweden I never get what I want and if this can happen without me wanting it I don't like that could be interesting I guess like I voted for for us making Industrial Park hair they started planting flowers and and I'm like no I'm gonna sabotage these flowers because I didn't want this like you you voted against my perfect idea so I'm gonna trash this place also what I said oh it's a Jew collector right and there's one over there too and solar panels beneath did you collect okay it's in the shade it's weird okay but for my Saints that actually like these kind of things this planter is actually very useful because I can make a bigger garden in less space if that makes sense I think it's yet to be seen if this actually saves space because it looks like it does hi as am i editing this I thought it would be easier to show you what I mean so here's a lot with stuff that we already have and we can move these plants what is it is a great point I usually have it like this so as you can see like in one square I get I can fit two of them so with that object I can fit two of them in one square so I may not be saving space that's what I'm on about this is one bush and this is one bush and you need like one grid square to put them but you can put these on half grid squares so you can put them fairly close to each other if you put them on the ground so am I actually saving space or does it just look cool because I wanted to actually be saving space otherwise it's stupid this yeah obviously it looks cool is this hydroponics that's cool but not very useful in the Sims I mean in the game because what difference is it gonna make and all the number of people that has looked at this thing I mean don't just see the caterpillars crawling around here like there they're moving don't you see that and then this part right here and this part right like it's obviously a bug hotel or insect home or whatever you call it like it's so obvious to me it just screams it and he picks one up and people are like all those chickens no they're not chickens why would you be keeping chickens in a box actually do keeps you against in a box don't you but not in a box like that you in a lower box with a lamp that's kind of funny me I said on Twitter you can't name the caterpillars you can only name them or grubs they call them grubs I don't know why one grabs the thing you go fishing with so are we going to use this for bait if you can't if we do use them for bait I don't know what that would add to the game really because we can already use so much for bait all the fruits and vegetables we can use here's the tech sim that we always get I hate yet to make a lab for my tech Sims I have yet to make a robot because there's no natural way to get into that I never stumble across the hatch in the game but she is going to make a drawing in this new pad or I guess alright wait wait I saw some goggles like what is this that could be if you if we lift this up it could be a VR headset I don't I don't think it is I think it's just for welding or something there is a new computer desk that looks sciency maybe not gonna use that but these counters everyone is like we don't get new counters but have we seen these counters in the game I don't remember seeing those I don't know let me know if you have seen these counters and just don't use them because they're ugly I know now she's very proud of herself did anyone else think that like these earrings like before there was some like game changers or whoever it was that got earrings that was like design for the game but they got in real life it should have been these earrings just saying they look way better there has been a debate if she is actually sucking all the pollution out of the air or if that just garbage picker upper that she invite vented and they're using it to make a nice transition in in the trailer because it's not but it doesn't say anyway not actual gameplay but by now we should know that not actual gameplay like for everything that we see we can't be sure we get like this exact animation we probably get that animation but we can't be sure that this is actually what it does it changed this entire house okay so someone was impressed by the grass roof over here I'm like yeah because we could never have thought of doing that texture ourselves it's just a green texture right like what is it actually going to do except look nice and then the ladders that we are going to get in a free update thank you for that yeah thank you for telling us so that we don't buy this expansion pack just to get a letters just to get the ladders for free anyways people going mad so I like these pine cones I don't know if anyone has know mentioned that was before I think they're really cool won't be buying the expansion pack just for pine cones now we finally know this is where we get these power generators we will not get them in tiny living even though everyone was like tiny living is like she eke a living and I was like it's actually not because it doesn't say that anywhere it just says like if you build a really tiny home your plants will grow better for some reason but nobody knows why it's not explained so like this home is probably tiny and then you can also have power generated and please stop telling me that dishwashers are not eco-friendly because if you generate your own electricity and this roses actually use less water and if you would if you watch a dish with your hands when you can't you can't have your hands in like sixty degrees water it's not nice yeah that's the temperature I set my dishwasher I usually use the Eco setting so don't tell me that's not eco-friendly because it is we come out but I think I think I like this better I mean look at the stories I can tell over here oh look at these really big concrete pipes laying about and like this dirty thing we could have like teenagers being you know angsty and like oh the world is going to I'm hating everything I'm gonna pick up painting they're not gonna knit that's for sure oh and older people won't go outside but when when the world looks like this and they will sit at home watching TV knitting and yeah so I mean I mean look at this it's nice look at this it's all gloomy like a Swedish morning in Stockholm or something look at this it's nice I like it now I wonder if EA and anticipated so many people sitting around looking oh my god I want this dirty world or if they were like truly believing that we would buy the pack to clean the world I would probably do it once or twice but most of the time I probably will leave it like this because look at it it's so realistic this is what the world is like now it's all gone to there's we're back to it like this looks like just the sheer amount of colors makes me think that this looks like every other same world that we already have because it's all like sharp colors like saturated like all everything is like so happy and dandy and I don't feel at home like it doesn't feel real to me this is that this does not feel real like this feels like photoshopped picture of a town that is in a brochure for getting people to move there and then when you actually get there this is what it looks like you feel like this is the reality of the thing of it like and then you go but I look like this in the brochure but this is what you're getting it's my thought they're having a party up on the top now let's talk about parties for a second they do not look like this when I start a party in my game people come around they all going to into the bedroom for some reason they sit on the bed they don't talk to each other no one is getting a drink no one listens to the music I put on no one dances you have to like force people to dance I always failed parties because it says get three people to dance at the same time and I'm like trying that all night and I get my same to dance and maybe another and then when I get another sim to come come dance here come with us come dance the first same stop dancing and I'm like okay now you get to come back okay you had to go to the loo yeah alright because all over the drinking you have been doing okay and then the party is over and I'm like what was the point of that no one had fun a fun meter is in the bottom I need to read a book because that's the height of fun for myself apparently thank you maybe this is the cynical sweet video okay can we have this in every world please I don't I would I especially want this in Granite Falls and like yeah occasionally it should be a rare thing it shouldn't be there all the time it should be a rare thing that and and sim should notice that like they got oh look at that you can't see it if there's lights about so you need to go out in the woods to see it did you know that's why you never saw this if you live in the city because there's lights everywhere and it's actually very annoying we never could turn the lights off in cities I hate that but let's just say that I'm like I'm both very cynical and I'm like if they haven't shown it to us we're not gonna get it it's not like the sims free or the sims 2 like in the sims 2 we got an expansion pack it expanded on the gameplay like on the everyday gameplay you constantly discovered new things like even years after you got a pack you could discover a new thing with the sims 4 I feel like like everything is right there you know you're not discovering anything new because they have shown you everything in the trailer or in the livestream and if it's you if it wasn't there then it's not in the game like they're gonna show you everything and then go I'm gonna try and make you feel like there's more but there's never more so I think you get disappointed that's why you get disappointed because you expect more you expect to be surprised at some point playing the game but you never are you're like yeah this is what I saw in the trailer this is exactly what I saw in the trailer and this is exactly what I saw in the one playthrough for half an hour that they did never like oh I got this no that's that never happens but all the way to get surprised by a pack is like preorder it now and stay off YouTube until it gets out and then play it don't get me started on pre-ordering no don't pre-order because okay okay this is a pet peeve of mine so if you pre-order that means you're giving them money guaranteed like at this stage they have only showed you a reveal trailer they have all sorts a few questions on Twitter but that's all you know like what you have seen now could be all that you're getting and you might not even get all this it doesn't say that this trailer might include things that's not actual gameplay but you know that official big trailer for University it had animations in it that we we don't have in the game after we have bought it if you preorder it what you're not getting it's the chance to wait and see a review like an honest review of it before you decide to buy it so you're guaranteeing the money without knowing what you what it is you were exactly getting and for you to do that that is really I mean loyal of you to give that a company I trust you with my money here take my money beforehand so you should get something you should get it earlier because you preorder it it so you have ordered it before everyone else so you should get it earlier like early access or something obviously they can't do that because then you're gonna play it on YouTube and or someone is and like everything will get spoiled because they have no surprises in there so they come to that you can't get it earlier but you should get it cheaper or get more like some special bonus objects or something maybe I think you should get both actually because this special object is usually something useless like an extra dog bed that you don't really gonna use because it's not that special and then if it is is that special you don't want it like in every game that you have because then it's not special anymore so you should get it cheaper but they're not discounting it they're not saying buy it now and get it for only blah no they're like get it now pay full price now before you have even seen the official trailer for is I mean this is the reveal trailer so they're just showing you the idea of it ya know don't give them the money before you know what you're buying because then they learn every time they can do a game expansion pack that doesn't really contain anything everyone's gonna buy it anyway any good get mad and complain all over Twitter but that this matter because they already got all the money and I mean there's no such thing as bad publicity and then there's lots of youtubers gonna buy it because they go they're like I gotta see what's this fuss is all about and play it on YouTube and then everyone's gonna see oh all my favourite youtubers is playing this expansion pack to see what the fuss is all about so where to get it because I feel yellows now there's no such thing as bad publicity so yeah I'm gonna wait and see what they actually tell us in the game it would be cool if we could have I mean it's not even revealed properly yet and I'm already resorting to mods but I want a mod that makes this affect all the worlds hi it's me editing again so since recording this they have confirmed on Twitter that is actually going to affect all the worlds and that made me think that yeah I'm definitely buying this this is like whether to me now so and you gotta have it yeah I might as well pre-order but I'm not gonna do that out of principle so that's my main thing I want it to be everywhere in the game I would say that I wouldn't get it otherwise but I have to be honest like it's gonna come out I'm gonna see all the fuss it's made about it and I'm gonna feel left out if I don't have it and then I'm going to buy it because I do have the money for it but I will not preorder it yes because that's my way of making a stand also what usually happens is I'm so excited for a pack and then when once it actually comes out I play it for like a half an hour and I'm like they're done let's go something and do something else and I don't even play the game for like a month or something so buying it on launch feels and a stupid especially if everyone's gonna hate I'm gonna get it on this count later yeah so that's my like 50 cents like it's not just to censor is it I'm gonna stop talking now it's it's her it has been a fun video for everyone involved I'm sure I'm sure you love this click you know click all the buttons down there I don't even care what buttons they are just click them yeah take it stay safe and stay at home [Music] you [Music] | SuperVidde | UC12XUeQgiWXG8Ml-9VOJ_Gg | 2020-05-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 5,275 | 26,282 |
63TrLza1OgI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63TrLza1OgI | ROSS EDGLEY | World's Fittest Book | Q and A | School of Calisthenics | okay welcome back to the score casa is Tim Jackie we have special guests with us edge do with us and before we sit down to a massive rack of ribs courtesy of I guess today's podcast spot authors of a podcast concert yeah I believe they don't know but they've given us such a good product with attributed yeah and dedicated our podcast this evening and YouTube today to athletes so we'll put some details of it because if copters of them if you if you look more posting photos because there isn't there is a significant amount of beef which you're going to get using around this table in about now I'm sure every single person watching this will know exactly what Ross some of the incredible things he's doing the journey he's been on as as an athlete adventurer as you call yourself now is there anybody else to go who names ourselves an athlete adventurer as that is I yeah I think it's a great mother do you think I did it before this goes out you know a hybrid you know I'm not an adventurer I always say that there's not going to be mountains named after me but equally I'm not I'm not gonna see you know beauty loop picks challenge even Bear Grylls a fine artist special forces but for the warm person watching that might not know who russ asnières in like what him give us the like the fast version of like your journey yeah to do fitness and whatnot to get to this point yeah so like real short it was just kind of I used to sort of swim and play water polo internationally but built like a whole bit so a five foot nine yeah my character is like Ross you mean you need to grow or find another sport so vaguely when you're doing that so yeah I'm sort of playing into actually the men's squad at 16 and I just I'm still waiting for my growth spurt now I never grew so I ended up studying sport science yeah I just became very round and yes for this for science locker university and kind of really became fascinated with how you could manipulate your physiology kind of very similar to you guys in a sports background but then you wanted to look at the the systemic strength and conditioning of the human body like human optimization basically and then I started doing that but then I just kind of got a little bit bored with conventional sport so then I ended up for you as you guys know ran a marathon pulling a car climb the rope the height of Everest and and it's just it keeps getting weirder every year and then so last year well swallow my was gonna swim from Martinique st. Lucia which is 40 kilometres towing a hundred pound tree the currents were so bad and I couldn't find the beach that I ended up swimming 100 kilometres with a hundred pantry and I still couldn't find these but I found out a lot about the human body in the process so that's good that's funny and that's why I would say a flea adventurer because it's you're not just an adventurer but you're also exploring your body weird no expiration like we're the same sort of thing insensitive calisthenics is like or what can I do like what I got to do to be able to achieve that like you're a pawn shop for ridiculous endurance events no jack rely less so but I think that's the process of exploration of understanding you might actually I want to do something which I don't know if I can do but I want to go through the process to understand how but along that way you go actually not it's not hard but you just enjoy that for me I enjoy the problem-solving nature of it and I think we get quite geeky about my level ensign weight distribution that sort of stuff like yours is probably more and I understand them that the psychology and the conditioning component and like some of the stuff I've seen you you you talks about you've done like write back some of the things I'm quite interesting to go back to beginning aside you travel to some quite interesting places and how those sorts of things came by you've spent time with with some really interesting people and a lot of us that know just kind of shapes how you think so there's that started stuff that I think it shows you as an athlete adventure but then also like I see you crawling across your flats because you like one amazing book content it's so like you're doing that because you're you're exploring the some of the most brutal ways in which you can develop mental toughness give you the skills that you need to go to achieve these incredible feats off yeah that's that's such a good point because I think for for so long sports science about that your physiology was the limiting factor so we look at you and go right let's take you know a marathon for instance and be like right we have been a monitor what your potential marathon time will be will look at lactic threshold vo2 power to weight ratio all of these sorts of things running biomechanics everything and at the end we'll go right okay cool do you can run you know three hours you know so two hours yeah physical back but that was always looking at physiology and then what I found really interesting team notes in the central governor theory but it's been a lot of research on it was saying that fatigue is an emotion the driven state that basically gets you to kind of like pull the handbrake a little bit because it's going oh this is horrible do you know don't do don't do yourself damage I would have all experienced this if you have run a marathon or you know even like 10k or anything like that you would all know that there becomes a point where you're on this is horrible this is absolutely killing me but you know when you get to the finish line and those on your family's there and giving you kids cheering you are you save both your biomechanics change you know you are up right you know your cave it's all on something and and it's like where did that come from and that's because your brain was telling you oh hold up hold up you know and it was just it's self-preservation you know your brain is telling your body oh well this is horrible don't go on and what's amazing is I found when you look at people like a meal Zatopek so widely considered to be the greatest endurance athlete ever winning two gold medals one Olympics Helsinki I think he was never ran a marathon before so I think it was a 10,000 he'd already ran and he I'd do a terrible Czech accent so I apologize for any of your tests especially because I want to run marathon and they were like but you've never run a marathon before but he came from a military background and he was just like no but I know how to run and I know how to just like be comfortable in The Hurt Locker I know what you propose do you do he goes look he goes surely who is going to win and the favorite then I will sit on his shoulder and they were overtaken with nd you know our tactic yeah my point and that's exactly what he did it was a British guy salmon shoulder and it's amazing miss British girl oh it was amazing I think it is no nice gonna annoy me but the British guys easy you know now and there was this this video and he looking back talking about meals after packing that he was very very sort of the English gentleman and he said because I never forget he goes I was running and I was you know really struggling in a meal that came upon my shoulder and he said because I I have never run this is this good is it too slow and I am being because I thought you bugger I'm gonna stitch you up here so he said so I turned to him and I said oh no you know Emil this is far too slow you know they're gonna captures behind and with that Emil that's effective to me because okay no problem I see which finish IV did I mean I was expert went on the run and won it but it's because of his military background and animals expert was also known for pioneering interval training so he used to run a hundred 400 meter sprints yes when you next think about hill sprints and everything think of a meal Zatopek and just taking it to that level his wife was a renowned javelin pro as well I'm one of their favorite workouts that they used to do for fun she would launch a javelin and he like a dog would run that was fun he used to run in military boots so like in terms of like biomechanics and understanding for foot placement heel striking everything I used to just run a military boot so the one thing about meals a speck and I think this is one thing that I try and do is he just understood how to hurt and be comfortable and I think if you can do that it doesn't matter what your sport you know you trying to break a world record for a handstand are you trying to hold up you know the human flag for the longest hour you're running a marathon are you doing an ultra pro if you do an Ironman it doesn't matter if you know how to hurt and just get comfortable being uncomfortable you know you can essentially win it any sport it's a lot in that like what we talked about redefining your impossible like a lot of things you're trying to do people will say is impossible and your body shouldn't be able to do it and I'm still looking at your arms not going how they that big when all these we were pursuing and I have done for quite a number of years and I know the sets of the guys do and they're not trying to spring the distances you're trying to swim but I know a guy who was a 1500 meters to Migrator Smith you we won a medal in Atlanta and he he is the total volume of a week would be sort of like Manila they were doing 10k and pushing up towards Andre like you're pushing volumes similar to what the guys would be to Guam so 15 meters at the Olympics and I guys I'd maybe go under a week and then I know then I hit half the volume you'll do your training yeah put that training 400 meter so you then starts talking about specificity that's tough but still at the amount of volume that you able to pack in yeah he's impressive yeah what was the first one was it was it the carpals at first it was yeah and I think what inspired that well essentially work capacity so you know within within the book and coming outside of me that I do systematically identify yours that every athlete should do what is is the law of Moore's of work capacity your body's ability to perform and positively tolerate training of a given intensity and direction and it doesn't matter if that is you know my fraternity and powerlessly doesn't matter it's just you know your body's ability to just go yeah you know I can cope with that I'm positively adapt you know if we all again were training for an ultra marathon 100 miles from an affair and we had a month to do it and we all set off and ran the marathon timorous to give us a good start you know some of us would just be on the sofa and he was going what was that in pieces and other people would be like I hurt but I can recover and go again and I think yeah there's this idea of work capacity and the law of Moore is just you know your body's ability to you know perform but positively tolerate it but looking at ways to do that's not just about throwing stimulate the body and one thing that I've always found is with swimming with the mirtha it's looking at something of like work capacity and crazy volume but it's actually a lot of concentric contractions so if you think of swimming for the last the output is on a concentric contraction there's nothing X Centrex not like when you're running if you're running downhill and your rewards no resurrection floors yeah exactly and it's exactly the same we elect drags you know all concentric contractions and pulling a car it's just a very large sled ride so after 26.2 miles of pulling on 1.4 ton car everyone was like oh you must have been a veces afterwards and it was like no because it was all con centric contractions and because I've developed over those those ten weeks of weight training there are absolutely great ten weeks for that yeah and then and then the day after just ran a half marathon as well just doing sort of burning curiosity just my legs don't work and I think it's the same with with swimming that yes it is a lot of volume and when people go that's crazy I'm like yeah but it would be very different if I was running it you know I'm sort of 95 you know it's built like a hobbit on running downhill my legs you know just that eccentric contraction the impact you know go for each foot you you put about three times your own body weight for each foot so going downhill it's just like you know on a big descent that's like doing you know 200 eccentric squats and that's that's a recipe for disaster but with swimming especially long distance it's all aerobic you know never out of breath it's all concentric contractions so looking at something like training for three hours and smashing you know sort of 15k people gotta watch crazy and what but when you actually look at the science of that 15k low-impact not weight-bearing concentric all aerobic yeah I've got a thing about women are being tested from mindset perspective but I quite I never do a lot of swimming and then when I started working with the apparently team I am we were on training camps is obviously 50 metres it there's long course it's me a swimming pool there as I start swimming because I don't really know what these guys are going through and I'm not conditioned for at all and what I found was from like I'm not really right shapers for me like you a bunch of smaller version obviously but like the elite swimmers I see that they just don't have a sim they're not the same build but I thought I could go but I was so deep conditioned for it that I was like I would swim 25 meters and my lats and my shoulders room bit but I kind of pushed through my first set was lacking in 2000 meters that is like one ruler and that was like hard and then I was I was a trainer the good actually bottom used to be very close to it she lets do a kick set and I literally couldn't kick 25 minutes my hip flexors room biz but you start going well actually that like I've never trained like that my sports back meals or feel babies but you realize how badly condition you are for some of these sorts of tasks but I got better answered it but I remember like I was up for that for some long course for the first time 15 years and I was with one of the guys who's the head coach that time was own with the next very hard or international level swimmer long course today he goes it's awful isn't it first time suggest you do you go towards that I thought you flipping kidding like I don't arrest my god yeah boy we realized that at the same time around hero training if I needed to scream for my life could I know like I would drown so having this like this this base level of the sorts of things that you're able to do if I could do triathlon you can swim you can pull a car like I think that having that athletic ability and diversity near training you know you can benchpress Arbour much you've got strength training in there ISM is the thing that we can learn a lot from I look at my trainer go I'm missing a massive part of it and there's a number of different reason we can't do everything all the time because of service that's but I do think that you take it to the extreme what your general sort of person like is just as involved in fitness having that array or that foundation of different attributes and that's something that we should cover in your book mmm but actually going back to first principles of fitness tell us a bit about it which is some amazing information in there mm-hmm I watched a concept behind it and what you trouble was a big sort of message you trying to get across hey it's very similar because I know we all weak eke out when we will capture hubris we it's basically our I was sitting there going how could you systematically train the body of human body so he said I wanted to create almost like a user's guide or the body it's like you'll give it a body how do you use it and I don't know we were talking about this Jacqui like so many people when they're in the gym you know they'll go in and they'll kind of there are yeah I'm gonna I'm gonna do bicep curls I don't know if the book to squat but I've got to do my legs oh cool your me on the straight across training their bike we and it's just not on a cellular level what's similar you trying to send your body to adapt to this is all over the place and so it was really to bring some clarity a lot of what's in the book I mean human biology hasn't changed for thousands of years we've known about this you know the laws of thermodynamics when you start looking at good diet you know macaroni I said it's all been there but no one's ever put it into this this framework a cohesive framework and so with this I want to say it's like a literary buffet in that like once you read it you can go I want to get strong brilliant there's a whole chapter and Ebola the first guys to deadlift a thousand pounds help me write that chapter I want to get quick you know next month you know Wilson have a clear direction cool I documented everything that I learned from limb for Christie to love bring University and everything you know there there is no better coach really then someone might live for Christie I want to learn about endurance brilliant it documents one of my time with the San Bushmen where we were running in Africa over an ultramarathon the day and then I came back as well and started to learn from a lot of fell runners like my friend James a person whose world obstacle racing champion so it's like you taken like this melting pot of geniuses I know what we always get on that's what we've done and what I've imagined if you could just create an athlete who understood bodyweight conditioning like you guys endurance like the Sun Bushman you and compiled that hold into a book and for ten years like I said it's taken me ten years I think it was all well if you said you know how dare you sit down and write when you haven't stood up and lived and so that's why people love not what is he taking you ten years and only way because that's I mean when I handle it it was two hundred thousand words and they were like this is ridiculous we commissioned you for seventy had to completely you know sort of get it down and condense into this this framework and but and this is certainly how I came to learn about you guys at the very start that if you if you imagine a pyramid of priority as I call them so this hierarchical way to run your body so it doesn't matter if you call it strength speed stamina there will always be something at the base of your pyramid that you should start with so we were talking about this because you know for those listening and producing on videos Tim possesses an unbelievable handstands for sure but it's just obscene so to get strong it's like what must you do but then you were saying that your military press it felt a bit weird only different so absolutely in terms of that strength pyramid of priority strength is a skill people don't realize that you have to drill the movement there's no point putting loads of weight on the bar when you're just drilling bad biomechanics if you've got good genetics and raw strength you might be able to muscle your way through certain movements but there will be kind of time when you just completely plateau and it starts to look at their work capacity so again coming back to the fact that okay if we're designing a program for you and we say right you want to get good on deadlifts cool you know tense us is that during a volume training new bodies going well what was that it's like we didn't have the work capacity to tolerate that and then we even covered that today when we were talking about there will be a point where neurologically you're recruiting all the muscle fibers we would all seen it to put it in sort of simple terms you know those sort of quite lean smaller guys who are insanely strong climbers exactly climbers is the best example you know neurologically they're recruiting all of their muscle fiber that's you know possible and they are in clutch stupidly strong and then they'll get you know some guys are huge but not very strong in proportion to how big they are and that's one around their strength deficit and there becomes a point where if you want to looking to get stronger if you can honestly say like neurologically I'm using my full potential my muscles here then muscular hypertrophy is is your sort of only ever option you need to get bigger it's like almost like you need a bigger engine in your car yeah just as simple as that and again I think what's nice about the book is is it gets people to think outside of that I suppose you know hypertrophy is not it's not bad word do you know what bodybuilding no I'm trying to get bigger so I can get strong yeah you didn't bodyweight conditioning that's that's all it doesn't make me a bodybuilder yeah and we were just talking about this as well because all I want yeah wanting labels mean that's probably a little bit and we got a bit too deep outside the outside of fitness slope but so people wanting to like we almost want to label either I'm a bodybuilder I'm a cast emic someone and there's some of that and now I live and I played rugby oh yeah it's like my weapons where that's taken away and that's not that what's the reason what's the why behind your training you're doing what you're doing it was you know one of my first questions I feel like why like these crazy things you're doing like why are you doing like once the reason behind it it's the same question that the example you gave him the someone in the gym go for one thing so next thing that I was a squad that they don't know they don't know why there anyway to go it yeah like what's the reason for it remember a guy he had them it reminded me of being I was left with to trading them there's a guy had done like massive chest pain session before the date the day before and then he wanted to come to do with us and he was like oh we didn't know they didn't chest as oh yeah just the wires like the why was my mates are doing that session yeah and I've been yeah yeah not like I'm trying to hear the replay was the heart burns like he should have been trying to improve himself physically for the for that purpose but it was sort of lost I think a lot of us we all go through that and I think there's a general sort of if I'm I'm just I'm not fresh luckily I'm just like my training and I know it's good for me to work out and stay fit and healthy like having having understanding why are you doing it and what are your sort of goals and what's good to have goals like yeah that can really help sort of not just motivate you but channel your energy and your time and so you being effectively the training but yeah I think him you know on the idea of actually you know being so easily influenced and jumping from one thing to the other and understanding like you know am i body builder am i a sprinter is a-- and i think that's what's so nice about the book it was so heavily influenced by Ralph Waldo Emerson and who one of my favorite quotes is if you teach a man principles he can create his own methods and I think there are so many methods out there diet plans of workouts that you are expected to to blindly follow like you know to use in training unit German volume training in a 5x5 and you know these are all methods they're great but if you learn principles so as we were talking about let's stick with the you know increasing muscle mass so you know the three principles increasing muscle mass you know hypertrophy a chemical attention metabolic stress of muscle damage if you learn those three principles it doesn't matter about the workout because you understand how to actually create we really probably frustrate people since I should you'll get a lot of questions when you come from an ecstasy background and you develop you've always got that gold at the end of summer working toward something and it's a season long way for us it's actually four years long is this cycle that were prepping for when people like Sheila do this exercise I should do that or how should I go about training for a hands and were like what depends we want and there's so many time as far as what your questions go well the answer is it does he feel bad because you want to give them a really simple as I know you but the truth yet but is like it depends yeah can't hide that even though it's frustrating to hear that probably yeah it's exactly that so again you know he was an economist but one of my favorite authors erm the scene talent you know one of my favorite quotes appears was you know as humans facing limited knowledge always resort to prescribed ideas and narratives it's so true we didn't mean that for fitness at all but it's so true as humans facing limited knowledge so when we don't really understand how to train how to diet we resort to these prescribed ideas of narratives so we just want to be told oh that's the workout I'm doing today but that's just not how it works the optimal you know it would be like a comfort blanket and you'll go like oh yeah you know I'll just follow this diet if you don't understand the principles they're so common stuck there you think that our access to information today like technology and our fingertips and the prevalence of people with voices but also the medium in which people have got it's easy for people to communicate has just completely climbed back there would have been a time back in the day when we didn't have social media internet but if you wanted to learn how to get bigger you got to go on go to a library and get a book and read about it or go and speak to somebody in the Jimmy didn't have you might have one you might gone to the biggest do to the gym and gonna help me to get bigger or the fitness person where you were trained with him a better mother tell me what you've done that person would take me one of the living and to be fair that was probably somewhat where the bro science started to come from but you're a doctor ated or we were following one person's thought process which actually probably yield quite good resource for whereas now you can follow well an unlimited number of different people's ideas and people interpretive fitness no they're different what their theories are around it's all of us and I think it's become a massively complicated thing and that's what we've tried to do with a framework is gone these are the principles that you need to understand if you're going to learn any class next movement so you need to prepare for the session you gonna do you have to teach yourself a skill component you've got to get specifically strong and you've got build that engine of capacity strength doesn't matter if it's a pistol squats under the same principles and then you just gotta meet you've got to be there's a little bit of our team about which exercises are you gonna use and understanding what your body is created to doing where your weak links are mm-hmm you made a comment before what my shoulders I was actually reflect on the way her a little bit about it and I was gonna I started to learn to handle some because I've got bad shoulder because it dislocated and had surgery on it and it was it was that was the meanest the reason was if I could handstand my shoulder stable the irony of values and I think it's probably from were cases he was it probably similar but II then turn that into your biggest strength that's nothing I'm best at cuz I said man she's not even a thing that was weakness that when I begun I just think that that's probably aside from the point of the exposure we've got some massive amount of information I could get confused in the dance you don't know they're doing this I don't know about your book is you've come back to first principles of fear so there's no because it's not these things are black and white like there's more than one way to get strong for exactly one reason and in the past before is there before internet for social media if you were gonna read something it was published paper it's no one could just write what they want mmm and it get pacified foods are actually going to print so there's been a there's been there's like a consensus that this information is valid and therefore it's been published in a research paper for example where is now I can write a blog and I can write whatever I want it could be a little tough but people might believe me and it makes it what it's already confusing without that and then it just makes it so much more there are countless examples of people that are putting out information and they sound like they they they talk the talk mmm but when actually when when when you look Helen we've benefited from a number of years in the game where we've actually got some context to put that under it looks convincing but you dig in sweetheart this is I'm not sure and we have to change ourselves and go or maybe you're seeing things differently what can I learn from that and then you are constantly critiquing as we do it with research papers but there are some things that and that's why I says that go back to why I like what you've put in the book he's actually nobody in sports science is going to argue and actually you've gone back and ganya these are the laws and the principles that we need to follow if you're going to create a physical relationship with the level of understand that we currently have about human body yeah it's not to say that it's not going to change and we can't tweak it but those things that like you say have been around for a long time and they've been tried and tested by athletes in all different endeavors in a sports recreation whatever stick to those and them and the thing is like a lot of the extreme cases that you're an extreme case of what you would do but for 99 percent of people actually we just need to follow some really simple basic principles and they're all the same that's what I find as well that the laws that I've identified in the book have been around for thousands of years so it doesn't matter if you want to take them to the extreme like me you know so the law of more and and and you know work capacity in the exactly same for a beginner and we address that in the book so I say if you're a beginner amazing you know I was like oh my god I'd love to be a beginner do you remember every week you put on what muscle like you benchpress we just go up like either 5 kg you know your rate of improvement was this you know and we see that you know in it but again pyramid of priority within the book like to take strength in an example you know as you move up so you've looked the skill you have the work capacity you have the adequate amount of muscle mass and we're stopping up that's when you can start to look at bands chains looking at your rate of force development and you can start to get real creative with this but that's at the top of the priority you know you you can't do this until you've got the base of the pyramid set and it's exactly same with everything but I love will user there's a man and that's what I said about the book that I wanted to create an army of experts not followers because you will be your own best expert so looking at a usually in Sandow you know the father of bodybuilding if you've if you've ever read any of his books it's written in sort of ye Old English so it's kind of hard to follow and stuff but what's amazing and I've sat through so many pages of it and that that's probably the book but he believed in just self empowerment so there was and they said that I'm gonna butcher it but he talked about this one point where he says you know I is often asked to you know when thy best time to train when the moon sets in the sky I think it's awful mother basically saying mom often asked when the best time straining and then he starts going off on one but he's intricately talking about hormones and the circadian rhythm and your body is 24-hour biological clock now your circadian rhythm everything a physiological everything like this and how testosterone is higher in the morning dips in though we all understand that now but what usually it's and those will them at an 18th century strong man and the father body building was still true it's exactly the same we've just got nice terms now and we'll apply it and you can say in some really clever but it doesn't mean that you know what usually was describing was exactly the same and what I love about the book and what I encourage everybody to do is Aristotle II he basically that the term is an epistolary he wanted everybody to hold knowledge including their own in such kind of suspicion you know so just question everything be a critical thinker and at the end of the book I say you know question this book question--my question yourself Western everyone because that's the only way that you'll you know ask questions you I bet your best students are those you say like why yeah and why am I doing this because you go oh you know I know you are and that's why from from this book that there are workouts in there there's work every single goal you could ever want to achieve lose fat you know the recipes are amazing you know to build muscle develop speed improved endurance but the reality is once you've read all 320 pages of it you can actually write your own and that's what I want people or not this is here is a workout but please adapt it to your own biological individual all the time we always been fighting with our like I've got like will and you see with all the graduates and we love we love them when they come through and they've learned the thing that they're working towards the goal that sets up their impossible and the guys to take people through them some people find it difficult that we haven't actually just gone on day one you do this a bit to this and three days because it's just not realistic cuz we have no everyone's day one is different and have on progress is a different rate so trying to educate people to be able to like understand place they understand the why what are you doing and then be able to write your own program think sort of they hunt well I paid you to write it actually giving you the information to write yours program this one and the next one and for infinity isn't that worth more than just having one runs out of initiative yes what was on the week number seven we always yeah you don't know if you don't save you haven't got the them the ability to write your own training program you haven't got the principles you can't create your own methods and she then just become reliant and I think that's part of my people as I get frustrated by that right you intend this you then to jump around a little bit actually I think if you if you if you took and if people took a little bit of time to read you really really well anybody could pick up and we don't have to be a sports I this is know me to be but if people took the science educator selves in a way which is which is easily accessible you've still got the option to go around and go which trading mode dad to do I like I like your style like we would try and teach it might be kind of sensing like body build my power lifter when you're in that you're actually understanding the bigger picture where that says I think I want to touch on bodies something back about 18th century people talk about body building I look back at that there's the old circus strongman and we've seen some unfrozen calisthenics back in like the early nineteen hundred's late just those dudes were yeah we've seen picture this guy's you're probably 15 16 17 stone and a one guard in a single arm handstand on top off ease of the mate who's about 80 stories on the bottom is because he's a stone lighter and we're just looking we're going up people got strong people were functional and yeah we cool because over this probably looks bigger concepts about but then arguably knew less but did more with it yeah there's we know loads I think I even I overcomplicate much anyone I don't train hard enough because I'm like doing this complicated thing yeah I'm down and I don't pull up were kids on science to get an exchange actually there's two basic principles do work today two mistresses within the spices timid squeeze down it's not around at that point I was doing handstands on there so I was doing push-ups on my knees and that is again within the book the law of progressive overload here and I detailed and I wrote that entire chapter from the the raw Marines as well that was just the one thing that the Royal Marines understand is stress and stimuli and you know that you are only gonna get fitter stronger quicker it doesn't matter from stress and stimuli 19:36 hand cell yeah you know if you coined that general adaptation syndrome and it's just like it's gonna be uncomfortable and I think now you know it's marketable to say it's easy this isn't gonna hurt you can vibrate yourself easy you know stuff but it's just like your picture that's 30 seconds a day exactly means is like the PT eyes they are almost experts at stress and stimuli and it goes back to that it just goes back to exactly that that you can you can you have all the knowledge in the world but unless you apply it with you know are we looking at again my Dorian Yates and it's high-intensity training if you've ever seen some of the videos you're like oh that's what it takes to grow muscle mass you know it's the same you look at some of the gym that's we were talking about you know Sam Oldham and you know friendly money's just I was talking about the pommel horse and I was like I'll - how did you get good at this and he was just oh you know one weekend we would just get on there and put our feet in a bucket you know and then we would then just leave us for 20 minutes I was like 20 minutes so when you talk about time understand vision and stuff it would just leave you in a bucket and they're like yeah just swinging and it's like what so for all of the intricacies of let's break down it's like no big feat in a bucket and spin you know just a lot of time from a young age doing search on one of the sections you put our body weight training the books I'm interested how you see it fitting into the bigger picture I was particularly but you talk about around mechanical energy just talk about mechanical energy and then how you see what are you eight training being a benefit around that concept and feeding into whatever else is you I do from there onwards yeah so looking again at this is pyramid of priority so if you listening on the podcast kind of imagine you know this pyramid and you've got the five laws and the very first law is the law of body basics you can stenick body weight conditioning and it doesn't matter what you want to training for what sport you want to training for weight you are on your journey it doesn't matter you need to understand how to move your body weight before you even think about running a marathon because running a marathon is a bodyweight exercise you know if you want to go and ship the barbell you want to be a power lifter well you better learn how to move your body before you move a barbell it doesn't matter you need to have this is foundation and this goes back to a Soviet Union training principle I mean you know Soviet Union sporting principles you look one of the greatest sporting success religion I mean obviously you know point out but when you look at people like verkhoshansky who you know pioneered plyometrics and the death jump you know that was during the time so the depth jump for those people you know not familiar he you basically you use focus chance he understood that if you wanted to jump on a you know do an ordinary box jump or you know you were doing long jump that if you were to jump from another box land and use that kinetic energy so you land your quadriceps hamstrings everything been elastic energy eccentric contraction that the concentric contraction so as you jump is more powerful he understood that during a time when all of her athletes around the world the Olympics were like touching their toes and doing jumping jacks you know that's how pioneering he was and so yeah going back to how the Soviet sort of sporting nation understood how to take an athlete and make them amazing they understood what was general physical preparedness so when you were a kid you know if but if I'm like a Soviet coach here and I've got you know young Tim and a young Jacko standing in front of me you know fresh-faced five years old goes I wanna be I don't know if you're gonna be big strong I don't know if you're gonna have like stupid strong shoulders or an amazing flag I don't know because you're just kids so what I'm gonna do is this this idea of general physical preparedness I'm gonna get you to crawl run John pull-ups you know calisthenics bodyweight conditioning and what that's gonna do is lay such a strong neurological foundation that you understand how to move your body that later when we go oh hang on you know remember that kid Jack oh he's quite strong no no movies stick him into rugby but he has the neurological capacity he understands how the work capacity as well the Lord more everything when this work he understands he can then apply it to the laws but we were kids like what we used to do is we can go and play all day yeah and I just mess about play football swing on trees if you're doing that like via Jersey exploring the world and just yeonbok your little world as a kid you know me but it's an athlete really doing that he's exactly now it's been suppressed these days and I saw Nanook SCA speaker every favor bomb and he was usually fix up a picture of an amazing kids play park his big thing is rad getting kids and youth development of bringing back athleticism bringing back basic fundamental movement skills and movement literacy in schools and actually we were working with his youth population junior population it's not all about top end because obviously we know if it build the youth at the top end is going to get better anyway when you fix up this great picture of play pocket he goes if we build that in your neighborhood with the kids come play it's amazing what great play box a roomful of SSC coaches it wouldn't look like they would go themselves yeah and you guys know about kids won't come because they're not strong enough to use it and it's monkey bars and it's tough to swim on can climb one and he's just like kids are not that physically able anymore and then they throw they make a contrast that with pictures of so high school like gym classes or PE classes physical education classes back in the day and they're do it in calisthenics they're climbing ropes and they're swinging like it was like gladiators are hanging tough but we don't do that sort of in on when we would look at that and go hang stuff like swinging from one ring to the next we were like that is a single arm active hanging it's the primary movement that we use in shoulder stability right now we don't exactly know um yeah that's that is essentially some bodyweight training all the lower body basics and if I can open the world face book sorry for those listening on the podcast automata very best kind of paint a picture as you listening if you imagine a pyramid of priority so this is this goes back to you know your body's user guide so how you can systematically program your body and at the very base of this is the lower body basics which is just kind of sending its body weight training so it goes back to a Soviet Union sporting principle so you know one of the greatest sporting nations is obviously possibly using it over decades so but worth noting is is a lot of their principles that they were pioneering so the Deaf jumped verkhoshansky one of the the probably the creator of plyometrics as we know today ballistic training speed training he came up with the death jump but it was very simply if you were to perform a box jump he was a jump onto the box he found out that by jumping from another box so you'll and store that kinetic energy eccentric contraction in the legs will then produce a more powerful concentric contraction so you'll be able to jump higher afterwards he was the one who actually pioneered that and this was during the time when you know some of the world's best athletes were touching their toes and you know straight up their arms and doing jumping jacks and and everyone was looking at these guys jumping off boxes there what the Soviet guys dude look at that man they were jumping forever running cutting their name what else so sorry to come back to that so mechanical energy always state that the the law of body basics forms the absolute base of this pyramid if you want to to systematically condition your body you know how do you become a better physical human and all that is is just you know before you specialize in any sport it doesn't matter if you are an expert at beginner male or female it doesn't matter you have to understand how to use your body because it's this mechanical energy and and it goes back to the Soviet principle of general physical preparedness so you know like I said at the very base of the pyramid if we were here I was a Soviet Union coach and I had a young Jacko and a young team you know before me five years old and you know your parents handed the unit to me and said trained them to be future Olympians and I'd be like no I don't know if he's you know jack is gonna be big or small or Tim is gonna be like quake or good at endurance so what I'm gonna do is teach them body basics calisthenics what do you what condition your general general physical preparedness doesn't matter water him it's the same thing I'm gonna teach them to run jump crawl pull-ups press ups squat hit full lunge because they'll then develop this proprioception kinesthetic away they'll understand how to use and move their body to then lay a neurological foundation to specialize later when we know that Jaco is going to be a beast in its like rkz becoming quite big they send them into rugby ah you know he's gonna be an amazing swimmer you know then we can specialize but we can only specialize once they've developed as I said mechanical energy proprioception kinesthetic awareness Jennifer support penis doesn't matter what you want to call it is the lower body basics you know and that's that's what we stress in the book that to start with that and I think now I mean you were touching upon you know even looking at you know kids nowadays I just think I look back and like the old school gyms when I was an infant school either that we had rope and we had like the wall bars he would govern when you climb up women and I think there's just a certain amount of you see videos a bit of a high school pee in gym class and it was just general I said general preparation training and they were like swinging on climbing ropes how many people can climb a rope these days that it's not easy I mean they were doing that screaming from one ring to another and we were start that as I would last a foundation of a human factor and it actually built a single arm active hang and that's this foundations of scapular retraction depressions and shoulder stability and being able to do that there's some really interesting thing about what happens when you're gripping how that interacted his shoulder would go about his basic their human natural human movement patterns but they were incorporated in exercise I just gonna lose that been says a lot for just building that foundation level whereas now I know a huge amount of what happens in PE infant school apart from what I hear that you're probably not huge amount of time dedicated towards it weights more games base but I think we've probably lost the strength component of it and we take powers and I'll say finally because I don't put a fall off stuff we didn't just play yeah I don't know whether there is less of that now for various different reasons but you know we were we go out all evening and come back for tea and that was whoever you want a lot of that be messy man playing about and where the kids now do want don't have the opportunity so you know I'm a bit there were in accusing on the ferry last year I was driving there we are they were treating more zealand i had to drive to take all the equipment and we start the queue for the ferry and like everyone I mean for whatever the kids at carnivals in the cars then because a few of us like would get out of the car and then actually there was a family they had a few kids that it was just like a big pot big bar across the road like hip high and they were just they were skimming the pan yeah I didn't know this again in the car there is play they were trying to do a Muslim one of them again right there they've just automatic last look at rest captain do custom eliciting a purpose let me show you the rooms like notice let them explore about no she's not quite doing about like Jonny actually let them explore they're having fun and I think there's giving people that opportunity to do that rather than against it and in many ways it happened by accident the world's fittest book it's just taking sometimes what happened by accident but making you very aware of it everyone yes Milan them join they were laughing yeah man that's a great there's no one more roach it's such a good point until I step but it is looking even at a dealer so as you know sort and this is you know everything that you can put down in theory what happens in real life is sometimes very different and genuinely I'm not just saying it but that's what I love about what you guys do in that you know because it is the school kind of sex but you teach people the principles so they're able to actually then go forth and if something happens like you know you got to take the kids to school and that messes with their prey and they didn't manage to do the work at that day it's fine because they understand the principles they can just rewrite the Mefford and white workout plan and it's fine it was still go on base those people and you know Ralph Waldo Emerson if you only understand principles you will come unstuck and so those people who go oh god you know I missed today's you know yeah the beginning that the human flag died I missed one day what do I do but start and a wall of it and it's just like gonna panic I understand and genuinely that's what I love about your guides you know once you've read it you're equipped you know so what you do with it is up to you and you can modify it you know edit and that's what's so nice I think when you touch your own with here it's like enjoying what you do that we all just left there but with them like when me and laughing when you smiling we enjoying the things that you do like everything else becomes easier and here is their motivation to it like I don't know how much of each other like within the club but if you enjoy what you're doing you're gonna you're gonna be so much more successful happy yeah at the end of it I think is one of my things I can take away from today's is that there's an opportunity there to start to yes because specialize we've taken the bodyweight basics to it to a more extreme level and not that it's like you she makes it sound extreme because all we do okay why I think you actually look better this is me than they remain I also need to have some time and create some space for the other things we've done no I enjoy what I get time to do that like so it might be trying it back it's in a bit of suing because I liked you in a while that's something because it was hard and he pushed me to do something which actually made me feel really uncomfortable but I knew that swimming was actually really complement treats and my calisthenics because of my shoulders were getting tight and stiff I could feel my stroke length decreasing and actually getting into the water and driving out it's almost like active stretching if I'm not swimming intensity I'm just driving out nice distance per stroke long stroke lands and I miss it and I miss I missed that Hurt Locker that you talked about before because when we train calisthenics like we're nearly quite challenged and we're mentally quite charge because this with endless frustration who tried teacher so as these different positions and moves them and whatever else and it get we hit the plateaus and you can find something a real kind of frustration around it but I missed that bit of being put through the mill like I did when I was playing a bit I don't create that for myself anymore I think that's something that I need soon and to find some way of doing something that I enjoy that I can't hear too and it's nothing like I could go to the gym I could do a class or something I could hate it but I'm sweating enough but I can find that enjoyment in something that I enjoy and then I'm gonna do it for longer yeah because it's actually become something which you give me get I'm looking forward to doing that no I'm gonna hurt but I'm gonna feel great when I finished I think I've said it before so how I think is it Walter Harvey camera got it that like how we train this isn't any disrespect how we train now compared to our training for a little bit I guess it's debit different because someone else was pushing if you've got a coach and all that sort of thing and you were paid to do it I used to train so much harder than scream kind of yeah and I'm not I'm not now saying this this isn't BS I'm not saying it because roster sat here with me but it's literally because the conversations a day of challenge be exactly the same to go like am i mentally like telling myself like well we can't do to my heart and i am i holding myself back and live challenge i am going definitely other type of guys I'll do this now for two days yeah then I'll forget about I'm going to try and carry on a bit longer but I'm transferring morning it's so true this a lie or something like an attack you in like an air bike or in taboos and you know when you like you think on mobile my lungs are on fire but but honestly in that moment on everybody listening when you are absolutely on fire because a few people when I was you know on that hundred kilometer swim which was only men's before the collectors and and there was a moment when I was getting stung by jellyfish you know I'll still put in 100 pound tree I was cramping up like the song was beating down on me at the Caribbean and and I simply just asked myself repeatedly like kilometer after kilometer and it's not to sound morbid but I was like what's hurting honestly Ross like take like oh no I heard but what he's actually hurting I thought my shoulders a sore I'm pretty badly sunburned I can't cook be honest be something but but is there anything stopping you something a hundred meters moon no it's just a bit on plaisir yeah then swim 100 more you know at some times it was actually like going like I don't know this has been more good but like are you dying and my little oh no I think I'm dying keep going there what you do you know some poor not hurts gonna went right back please one thing I need to get to for me my favorite tennis players Rafael Nadal because he just gets in a dogfight and he's like feather is so graceful he makes it look like house tennis social be true outcomes act passionate he's fire it up and I love it but I've seen I've read a report from him before that he approaches games when he was in his peak he's like all I've got to do is outlast you like the pains gonna stop the discomfort it's gonna stop I just need to last longer than Yuka yeah and it's a real simple principle book the other thing I watched and read the book and touching the void quite a few years ago this guy event like Manson a historian that guys were on k2 I think it was and we were wrong with that actually most of us were in South America he ended up falling into capacitors may put a line he dropped down and he crawled in the crevasse he couldn't get or broken legs couldn't get out so he just was like stuck there for a day or so then I might go down into the abyss so just starting to die anyway so he starts going down into this crevasse and he actually sees a piece of wire comes to this thing crawls out and he's got two broken legs pretty much and he drags himself down his mountain to survival and he's literally like he was set a thing about a rock in front of him and him crawl by his fingertips two broken though that in a really bad way but he pulled himself off the mountain and he like that's me and I you you wanna back in made me think before that you go in it's almost I think those are the extreme examples but I'm doing like blue test of fitness test when we're training you drop out and literally 30 seconds afterwards I could do more than that you know it yeah 100% you disappointed because you've now lost opportunities and go on do that a little bit more right and they are extreme examples but it will happen daily here the amount of times showing our bed right now yeah get out of that what's stopping you you know do a workout you know you call them hammer intervals in that like honor imagine an air bike or hill sprints where you'll wait until the final one and then you'll push hard and they manage whereas hammer intervals and this is one thing the wrong marine PTI's do better than anyone it's just in the middle of it oh just go go now go hard unquestionably go on and you will but then like you can look at right now if I more over the last moments just using science around that but she said nothing something goes on five reps and you go okay I'm gonna do five reps and then that she then you see what can you do when you have five more yeah and there's two really it was actually some research around things so apology and that's the consensus any times you can do those okay yeah there's also one where they put plastic bags on the weights with barbell so you don't know sec yeah well I enjoy suppose this conversation about real question okay so the ribs I can do that mental thing pushing when I'm what I'm running like CV so like I do like part of a 5k and I don't know I have that same conversation or something I'm gonna like going I can't can you not go a bit faster this jacket like exactly like what's hurting compared you know not another I find it much more difficult though if it's like a pull-up session or maxing dips or whatever and is there anything is there any is there anything that you found like just trying to get at like trying to get into that place women when it's strength compared to when it's your cardio that's it yeah I mean with cardio and stuff so so what you look is strength that strength is your body's ability to generate force so quite often you know if you were absolutely wired that is you know and capacity yes granted there are stories of you know moms lifting cars up their kids transit you know so there is that potential that we're not locking into so from that you know it just comes from you smelling salts your friends slap me on your back but there is that but it's a very different mindset to to endurance and I think that's one thing with all of the best ultra marathon runners I've ever met you know they're not getting why they're not on the start line on smelling salts because they're like well this is gonna take it so it is very very different however if you're training for you know muscular hypertrophy and you're using a metabolic stress where it is a horrible disgusting and drop set you know ask yourself afterwards that yeah if you could do another set after that one that wasn't hard enough I think there's something Palestine so I was thinking about actually after we left the session today and well sometimes we like with a lack of pull upset doing one more rep or two more up she's actually hard if I found that fatigue or I'm really favorite lattic acid buildup but you're just not functioning and actually try and do another rep of the same thing he's actually almost impossible because she's not strong enough I'm maxed out well an example me today when I handle some push-ups feet elevated push-ups in to put us on the floor to push us up knees there was there was four different progressions there with each she could move from one to the next one thing I think with that were the pulling sessions we need trying to create override and stress that that you've got a plan your session a little bit more so actually you can go pull-ups but the band's already ready I'm gonna drop down from the bar from the from bodyweight and I'm gonna go to the band and my them be like a horizontal row but having that structure to you playing they actually V this is how I'm gonna move through and I've created the conditions out of your walk where of success Society create the conditions you get the result and you then go actually have created conditions I'm not facilitating that rather than dropping down for septum and pull up and go and ask the order but could do any more mother's eyes even it West Committee here it is often what I do it all goes back to you know Laura progressive boatload doesn't matter is it pull-up is it not can I apply more stress to this situation you know less rest more way eccentric contraction can I apply more stress and sometimes for me with swimming at the moment you know on what I'm going to do 10 K today yeah I'm going to do 20 K today can I apply more stress I'm sorry resistance all like the other day in Glasgow you know swimming in two degree water it was chilly how is the stress you know so no one out of the palo de l'eau insane were you walking with it's more the picnic a food just an eating competition with its women but I think jacket what we can take away from today is that we can hold ourselves when we train together accountable for maybe drop it in a stash we've got us quite specific goals require special screws long such we should also just Douglas let's say it's tomorrow morning tomorrow morning I try straight smile I visit but we'll talk I'm a lot about tomorrow morning a bit of my life is a what is it like what's the word I'm looking for when your accountability yes so I'm gonna say it tonight live on i-90 it's gonna happen yeah like if you make me do my demonstrations works when everyone's watching is so much better than if I was just trading away a vacation of like you're gonna do this right might not in mine it's just what I'm telling her that one-handed discount from all your money back from Thomson Holidays finish out podcast by asking that our guests what their current possible is but I think with Ross it's almost a wasted question unless there is something is a [ __ ] opera or anything you particularly look at you don't you know what that's the string could be as skinny as us I've got stuff in my impossible box because buddy Barlow can't go within their temporary nothing's firmly rooted there anymore but she said I can't do so if I try to sing our problem oh it's impossible all I need to do is prove it so I'm gonna move that out so there's anything you couldn't look can't you gradually these are big audacious horrible nasty thing that want to do yeah it looks like it's impossible but I'm gonna start the process using a great book such as your own yeah there is there is actually something in describe is this an explosive well I saw I'm not gonna say yeah this thing no but I'm gonna actually talk to you guys at that because I actually need your advice on this so genuinely I can't say but you will be well you will be the first to know about it but you'll also be the first to broadcast it because genuinely I want to do some some really cool stuff no no I'm not just saying but I think you know talking very cryptic but basically you spoke about and what you are actually genuinely pioneering at the moment in terms of you know shoulder mobility strength rehab and everything like that I am gonna need in in to the bucket loads and stuff so yeah off air will talk but on air you will be the first to know what my muscle is but I think Ivan is actually even up to stand against the wall I can beat him and show you that's bad right you also know how to wrap this stuff don't you the silo I do must dismiss we're gonna use the guests get to get to finish this up so thanks for joining us guys you know because a longer along of course was when we get we don't get the opportunity to pick up a guy's brain like right and I Ross on an everyday occasion you're right jacket I would rather on forever but I was somebody we want to give you a little more value so on that note jacket this way well just if you are interested in finding that way behind Ross if you don't follow Molly's unsociable you don't you haven't seen this book you know that the the links will be in the description obviously so just make sure you check them out and give them apart so until next time class dismissed [Music] | School of Calisthenics | UCKIPOflZbfGRM8-IehI775w | 2018-04-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 12,501 | 64,930 |
AVprDuJ1RTo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVprDuJ1RTo | Princess Beatrice and Eugenie confess their fear to Prince William's pranks..!! | [Music] prince william terrified princess beatrice and eugenie with easter prank prince william once terrified princess beatrice and princess eugenie with an easter prank according to a former royal chef darren mcgrady who worked for the royals for 15 years recalled a hilarious episode involving a young william and his cousins and described how he made a chocolate egg with a sugar mouse but william left beatrice and eugenie terrified after biting the mouse's head off according to the former royal chef mr mcgrady told ok magazine one year i made a chocolate egg with a hickory dickory dock nursery rhyme theme it had a clock on the top striking one and a sugared mouse peeking out of a mouse hole we sent it up to the nursery on the silver tray but 15 minutes later the footman brought it back he said nanny asked me to return this prince william has just stood on a chair and bitten the mouse's head off frightening beatrice and eugenie we had to quickly make another mouse pop it in the hole and send it back to the nursery i think nanny put the egg out of william's reach to make sure it didn't happen again royal rift expert spots pivotal moment prince harry avoids contact with william and kate in april 2019 the royal family attended a special easter sunday service at st george's chapel windsor castle prince harry attended the church service alone as his wife meghan markle was heavily pregnant with son archie at the time instead the duke spent time with family members and a body language expert has pointed out tensions clearly existed between harry and his older brother prince william photos from the event showed harry walking behind his brother and sister-in-law kate as the pair appeared to avoid talking to each other at the start harry and william later reunited and stood side by side as they greeted the vicar but body language expert judy james said the encounter was rather frosty she told the mirror the body language between the two princes here doesn't just add to the speculation that pair are no longer on speaking terms it seems to suggest that any rift might have got even wider when he was single harry was always forming a tight and happy trio with william and kate but here it looks sadly as though he is going out of his way to have a lack of communication with his brother not only does he arrive and leave walking apart from william and kate his antics when william closes in by the church entrance make him look awkward and hints that he could be desperate to avoid him his facial expression looks dour and he seems to raise one hand to touch his face in what looks like a partial cut-off gesture suggesting a desire to hide | Catherine, Duchess Of Cambridge | UCF1G7I-vFeucU5V74_O7VBw | 2021-04-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 480 | 2,665 |
ANWXrYgCCiw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANWXrYgCCiw | CONSENSUS MEETING NAVIDENT ROME 2022 - DR. S. JAIN / TOTAL EDENTULOUS PATIENT | a protocol which is easier so this is about My Views and experiences uh I'm I have kind of statistics that I made in my practice since the time I have taken this Navigator in 2017. out of the total 72 cases that I did of all on four fast and fixed upper and low 6 16 plants or 818 plants the ones which I have done without the help of a navigation or without the help of this Navidad is almost 45 and this I give some static guides and some freehand then since the time I got this navident 2017 and uh from 2018 uh December onwards I started doing a lot of all on hold and fast sentence cases with real-time Dynamic navigation so my experience today is about the cases that I've done I've selected two cases two different variety of cases one case which has teeth present which we extracted implants already present to implants adaptation we extracted we went ahead did with Dynamic navigation taking teeth which were used to trace and placing implants in that situation and another is a complete extraction and followed by immediate all on four days all right so I'm going to talk about her bedroom classification I'm going to basically speak only on one two and three and the rest of the speakers will talk on the complete entropy this is so what I realized is this is very total extraction is the only way out we have a lot of options you can do eight implants in the upper jaw you can do eight implants in the lower jaw you have a six implants that is possible a lot of companies have come out with six implants the upper and lower jaw which you can then go ahead and do full mouth rehab I somehow like all in four especially when I don't have to uh go into the sinuses or into telegraphy areas and this most often is a graphless solution so you don't need really to go ahead and do a lot of grafting in these cases so a lot of factors play a role and uh in our decision making in what case so we follow a protocol to select a case also uh it's basically the amount of post bone available the amount of soft tissue that is available so I'm going to talk about two such cases wherein I am going to discuss the protocol that I follow basically I follow the good book of what has been given in 19 tutorials tips few modifications which help me achieve better results I did realize the major problem that I had was initially with tracing and uh over a bit of time I realized uh that you can evaluate your tracing after every tooth is being traced and you can get a better score so coming back to this slide as I said there are many factors for me to choose what implants and what how many implants I need to do in that system it it is a surgical factors prosthetic factors what are the other material that I have in my practice uh what biologics we need the graphs the membranes and most importantly the skill of the treating doctor so the decision tree that happens in my practice are the protocols we follow is first is the case selection and in that after the thorough case history that has been taken we in the first visit do a thorough clinical examination we go ahead and get the patients photos and then uh we used to earlier take Impressions originate based Impressions and core models and then evaluate after the patient is gone but these days we have in trouble scanner so that makes it much more easier and then definitely we go ahead and get a cone beam computer tomography and once all this data is ready we send the patient back we sit down and then me and my team that includes a prosthodontist we discuss the treatment option that we have for the patient and the next visit the patient comes in we discuss the finances we discuss the treatment plan and what are the options the patient has and lastly that's when we decide how to go about it as far as the protocol that I follow for immediate extraction and implant placement is is as we all know once the dicom data is ready we load it once we have the data we check whether there's sufficient landmarks for tracing available or not most fortunately uh most often I've been very fortunate that the teeth that are indicated for attraction are the areas where I need to do implants but there are certain teeth which I did not extract immediately and I use them as my traces as I trace them and keep them as a reference point and once my implants are done I take this teeth out and since I already have an internal scan of the patient the lab is communicated the case is then uh the same after the apartments has been selected we send it to the lab and that's how the process goes ahead which we'll discuss later in the lab communication so once we select the landmarks for tracing we go ahead and start so this is what I have realized in my practice is certain tricks is uh one definitely we cannot deviate from the standard protocols we need to follow that let's uh take teeth in the different zones okay especially from like a triangular track so that you have more area to cover for tracing second always use fixed and firm heat as far as possible now in my cases whenever I had teeth which were mobile and indicated for extraction but I was not planning an implant there I splinted those teeth so that I could trace it and I splinted it before we go went ahead and bought a cbct term so that's how the error is minimized so all those people who think okay this is a full mouth case with your extracting heat and but you're only placing four impacts how do we take the tracing fixed reference points so my uh my solution here is that those teeth you you split it either with the orthodontic luggage or wire or in periodontal uh specialty you have a fibrous plate so you use a fibrous plate explain those teeth Trace them once your implants are gone you get them out so selection of the landmarks The Creeks keep critical step and what I do always is I believe in getting the score of one once I select my teeth and tracing and I make sure that nowadays since the time I have internal scanners this last few years uh it's been two years so I always prefer loading the patients into our scan and I prefer doing a surface scan registration rather than with a diapform case so this is my first case so I'm going to discuss this two cases in this first part of presentation this is Mrs Irani uh she's a 65 year old female she's a science teacher no systemic history she lost her teeth because of pork oral hygiene otherwise her General systemic health is good no diabetes no blood pressure these are her pre-operative photographs if you look at her lower job she has got just 40 percent and upper job this is the implant that had been done few years back and these are all the teeth which are almost greatly mobile and if you look carefully the there is lots of hard and soft tissue component with the upper six the sinus is dipping here and she's not keen on going ahead and doing too many of graft procedures so she came to me specifically with a request dog I want minimal implant to be done and rehabilitate with that we went ahead this is the occupational View I guess this is the site where the implant has been placed we did the cbct planning of this case so earlier whenever she got the implant done I guess the root has been submerged because they didn't want any bone loss to happen there and these are the teeth the upper six which has a fracture this was only one song tool that she had the whole of this bridge was mobile these teeth were almost grade two to grade 3 mobile what we did in this situation we went ahead we did our planning I said okay you have two implants here let me add four more and then I'm going to connect it I'm going to remove that school routine processes that she has there and I'm going to join all these four and the early two implants and give her a prosthesis so we did the surface scan the interim scan and we merged with the cpct data so in this case if you look at it I have utilized one molar which was four this was an implant prosthesis which was formed and then I splinted these two teeth which were Mobile in my earlier cbce that was checked in the earlier photograph that I showed it to you so this is how I went ahead merged the scan and then in this case since she is a teacher and she runs the academy at her place she's a dog try and give me teeth at the earliest so I said okay I would need around 24 to 48 hours for you for me to give tea to you uh so we did an abutment selection in this case we planned the apartment well in advance and then that's how we shared this with our uh laboratory so this is how I said getting a score of one uh I keep it as mandate in my practice and that's where the accuracy comes to the best possible way okay went ahead and then we calibrated the Tracer tape the registration part we extracted those teeth they were quite mobile and you see that with the grocery some of the calibration of the drill was done most often for maxillary Arch I calibrate my density system I use this option institution because identify the boat as well as make sure that we are able to get good primary stability with those implants in the maximum Arch [Music] but then look what happened I initially selected a tooth here for an input but while the track should this blue is fractured and while using the rupees I realized that some amount of buckle plate of hole is quite thin so this is the biggest Advantage we have compared to our static price so while the surgery was going on I shifted my implant position from two two to two one that's from the lateral incisor on the left upper corner to the central incisor on the upper left corner this is only is only possible with Dynamic navigation and which cannot be achieved with your static guns I have done those two more than 75 study guides right from single two to full month and this is one big Advantage I feel we have is a navigation system so then we change we went ahead we did with the now this was originally the site that we planned but then when we had a deficit board here I went ahead and did an implant in the region of two one so with the help of Australians prediction bursts and with the help of navigation getting my implant in the post secure code helped me achieve good prime minister ability and that's how I decide for an immediate implant in such situations so you see here where there's deficit on the buccal plate of bone where the lacking incisor boot was captured I went ahead and did little crafting there suture these are the free and post or these are the post of radiograph that we have of that situation very interesting case Mrs Biryani I have made a video also of this case so that it was as a self-explanatory so let's play this I think we need to so this is the implant planning we did this is how we are calibrating the Tracer tips so this is all on four again see very interesting part is here I have taken just three teeth but they all were firm and the issue came when I wanted to place this implant in this angle that's when this tooth was obstructing it so again what little I did was since this truth was why fixed reference point for tracing I chopped the tooth into half so that my drilling gets in easier and after my implant was done I extracted the tooth so see here so this especially this angulation this molar was obsessing my drilling sequence so that's how I went ahead we did four implants one at an anguation on both the posterior segments and in the anterior we did two straight Inverness all four we went ahead could get good accuracy in this situation the implanted site 2-2 that the upper left lately incisor this is the site to file now another big advantage that I feel with Dynamic navigation is I'm able to be very clear and away from the science that role of the sinus and absolutely not perfect so this is the post of RBG we went ahead and gave across this is the same time the same case discussed through this so this is how I did the planning for both upper and lower and as I said why I'm showing this case in particular is first I took only three reference points one two and three for tracing now these were indicated for extraction but I said let me first drag these two place the effect let me keep this this and then we went ahead and started doing implants so when I was planning to place an implant here when I was trying to drill through the Earth this tooth was obstructing my view so what I did instead of extracting these two I just chopped a bit of it which was coming in my way of implant placement so once we did that we extracted this tooth I kept in place because it was her lower RPD which was maintaining the vertical height so till the time I didn't give her a prosthesis which came from the lab after 24 to 48 hours I kept that one last molar just to maintain the vertical height and also I realized that when we do uh these all on force and when the patient feels to bite the healing Apartments tend to hit each other with a lower Arch and that causes sometimes trauma so that's why I kept that with her temporary partial denture so that she could come back and later on we could go ahead and do the processes Luca I'm done with my two places good | Luca Casalena | UCT2TxF-zTWOwhOzyBxl1crQ | 2022-10-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,534 | 13,124 |
50ojrvj7vGo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50ojrvj7vGo | 07 Aug 2020 | Solinst 407 Bladder Pump Vs. 408 Double Valve pump | joining us here for another short webinar hosted by hydroterror i hope you're all staying safe out there in these trying times these webinars will be an ongoing exercise for us for the coming weeks and months on a whole range of various technologies and supplies that we represent here at hydroterror so just be on the lookout for these in the not too distant future as we continue to provide you with these short webinars and appreciate you all taking the time to hopefully expand uh your knowledge and guide your decisions a bit better when selecting appropriately in this instance a silenced pneumatic pump that may meet your needs for those of you that aren't familiar uh with myself my name's kyle mclaren i'm the sales manager here at hydroterra and i'll be taking you through today a bit of a comparison between two of the solons pumps in the 407 ladder pump and the 408 double valve pump i'm also joined by michelle who is the general manager here at hydroterror and is our organizer for these webinars so thanks michelle for making sure that things run smoothly with these so just a bit of housekeeping firstly for those who haven't joined us in a webinar before we have a questions or q a box at the top here and please as we go along if you guys have any burning questions feel free to type those into the questions box and and leave a bit of time at the end uh to read those out and i'll answer as many as i can we run out of time i'll endeavor to answer those uh individually but we'll we'll try and answer as many as we can today with everyone present so we see this opportunity when a lot of us maybe have a bit more time at home in the case of fellow victorians at the moment to be able to generate greater technology awareness i suppose on what may be out there and what we've seen stimulate some learning through training but also just get insight into what you guys are doing we're always interested here at hydroterra in the new and exciting projects that are out there and you know what what are you guys missing what would you like to see this really helps us i suppose develop and grow into a business that can assist our clients as effectively and efficiently as we can so just quickly as i'm sure many of you are familiar uh with silenced but on the off chance that there are some of you which may uh not have heard of them we've represented silence here in australia as exclusive distributors for around 14 or 15 years now they're a canadian company with over 40 years in developing environmental monitoring technology and one of the few remaining environmental companies are still independently owned in the coming weeks and months we'll be going through a few of the technologies offered by silence in particular the level loggers which are quite popular with our clients multi-level systems piezometers and in this case today some of the pneumatic offerings for um for ground water pumps so the program today i'm just going to run through a bit of the specifications on both the 407 and the 408 double valve pump we'll look at the differences between the two pumps a bit of a cross comparison between the two which will open your selection process a bit of the silence controller options and air supply options as well we'll probably do a separate webinar on on that um i'll just touch quickly on that um today but there's a lot to talk about in that space so there'll probably be a separate webinar which will delve into those in a little bit more detail the troubleshooting tips that we've found um in our time here with these pumps um and our experiences with them that can probably assist you guys in future when utilizing these types of pumps from silence and just uh a few previous case studies that uh we ourselves have worked on and that might be of interest to you uh following up finally with a bit of a q a at the end here so it's a program that we're going to be running so we'll jump into it uh the 407 bladder pump um is a 316 stainless steel pump which comes in a couple of sizes there's the more common sort of 1.66 inch diameter and that's for most two inch bore applications that we see with our clients there's also the more narrow one-inch pump which just gives you a bit more flexibility i'll talk more extensively about the point shortly in the maximum operation depths but the the bladder pump has a maximum lift of 150 meters below ground level and that's within both of the diameter ranges there so the bladders are available in your more common uh low density polyurethane um sort of in the more portable systems and changing them from bore to bore that's commonly what we see there's also teflon bladders which are much more durable and more so for the dedicated applications when wanting to dedicate these pumps in the bores having the bladder in these pumps obviously means that we're avoiding as best as possible the contact of our air supply or gas supply with the sampling water which is good for our sort of voc monitoring so if this is a requirement or and sort of tossing up on pump pumping options then the bladder pump would probably be best suited for this provided again you don't have the depth limitations as said above when we say when i say less fine tuning there in the operation what i mean by that is when talking about our drive and vent times meaning the time where we apply our air source being the drive and the time that we let the ball actually recover being the vent it's a bit more forgiving unlike the double valve pump which we'll cover in a minute um but essentially if i have my little cursor here um the drive time we're applying our air through the driveline and compressing that bladder and our event time is allowing that bladder to re-expand and have new water come in which allows us to repeat the cycle and send that back up the line so and we see sorry obviously to slide there we see the maximum flow rates um they have about 1.5 liters per minute you can expect that the closer you reach to that maximum deployment depth you may be struggling to reach this amount most commonly the bladder pumps aren't typically used for purging purposes so there isn't too much of a worry on those maximum flow rate numbers this more so comes into play a bit more with the double valve which we'll discuss there is the capability of the drop tube assembly to put onto these 407 pumps so this moves the screen intake of the pump uh to deeper depths uh with some tubing in between so some 3 8 inch tubing whilst keeping the pump at a level uh that is still capable uh for your equipment at the surface so what we're doing is we're taking this lower section here of the pump screen intake down further with some 3 8 tubing but we're still calculating our psi and our drive and our event times based on the the where the bladder is situated still within the ball so hydrostatic pressure is going to lift that water from wherever you've set that drop tube assembly and pump intake um as an example if i'm setting my pump you know 50 meters and putting my drop tube intake at 200 i'd still be calculating my pressure from from 50 from 50 meters but i'll be drawing water from that deeper depth with both the the 407 and the 408 we have the ability and have done so quite a lot in dedicating these pumps to individual bores so why would you maybe want to do this well um we know that having dedicated pumps provides us with some of the best sort of representative aquifer data obviously we're going to get less mixing of column water due to the fact we're reducing that installation amount to and fro that particular bore um we'll get quicker sampling rounds if the pumps you know if we dedicate these pumps uh in the first round you know and you have maybe slightly deeper deeper applications which take a bit longer to install these well if they're already there and they're dedicated you can save a lot of man hours coming back and having to sample these maybe quarterly or buy annually that type of thing so the dedication is capable again with the 407 and both the 408 so with the 408 available in some different a couple of different sizes there's the 1.66 inch this is again the most common but there's also the much narrower 5 8 inch double valve pump and also the micro double rail pump for cmt so multi-channel tubing that sort of honeycomb tube we'll talk a bit more about the micro double valve pump when we do our multi-level webinar so we can touch more on the inner workings of that particular pump um the maximum operation limit and this is probably the main differential between your 407 and your 408 is that if we have we're actually calculating our pressure range is not based on the pump intake but actually on our standing water level so if the standing water level is less than 150 meters theoretically we can put this pump anywhere so as an example the sort of maximum depth that we've sampled from is around the 1200 meter mark below so you know quite deep you just have more flexibility there the pump doesn't contain any bladders so when i talked before about the 407 bladder pump having less fine tuning with the 408 you might have more flexibility of having an option for quite a low flow application so maybe less than 100 mil per minute all the way up to some sort of flow rates in the 3.5 liter per minute ranges but again we require a bit more fine tuning required in terms of our drive and vent times if we want to limit the contact of our air supply with our sample water so what we're doing is that we're actually applying our drive gas onto uh the drive line that's the water has come back up to static water level so if we want to avoid having that contact with our sample water down here this just needs to be a bit more fine-tuning our driving vent which in the next slide i'll just discuss how to work around that again there's no need for the drop tube assembly with these because we're we're calculating from the standing water level as i said and there's also the ability to dedicate these double weld pumps so what's a bit of a what are the differences so a bit of a cross uh side by side comparison of these two pumps aside from the pump materials both being 316 stainless you have a couple of different diameters which i mentioned earlier that just gives us i guess the point being that there's flexibility there to potentially have an option no matter what diameter your bores may be there might be a narrow enough pump to utilize with any sort of bore diameter in that instance so there's just a range of different sizes there that we can suggest calculating our psi uh calculating our drive and calculating our event uh the three points that i'll speak about which is the main point of contention i suppose and the questions that i get asked the most so what we've tried to provide here is just a quick way of being able to calculate your psi ranges calculate your drive times and calculate your events quite quickly so as i said previously in the 407 bladder pump we're calculating our psi based on the pump intake so where the pump is sitting basically if the drop tube is in there you've actually put the pump intake down a bit lower you're just basically calculating where the bladder actually is in the pump so this calculation here which is the times 3.3 divided by 2.3 plus 10. is directly coming from silenced themselves where they say that one psi can lift a 2.3 foot column of water so what we're doing is we're taking wherever our pump is sitting in meters and we're times it by 3.3 to get a foot conversion dividing it by that 2.3 foot and then the plus 10 there is what we call line loss so allowance for that so you will get some bleeding through your tubing and that sort of thing so it's just good to put a number there that can compensate for that that line loss bleed calculating uh the psi for the double valve pump the equation is exactly the same but instead from of the pump intake again we're actually calculating from the standing water level so you're going to get more flexibility in being able to sample from deeper depths but maybe require less hardware or less robust hardware at the top to try and meet massive psi requirements so that just gives you a bit more flexibility there so calculating at drive there's a couple of easy ways to to do this in the 407 bladder pump the quickest way to calculate a drive is that if we've set our pump down where we need it to be we can actually time application of our drive and we can submerge our sample line which will be our 3 8 inch line tubing in just a bucket of water and so if we apply our drive gas and we see bubbles coming from that sample line what that's telling me is that our drive gas is compressing our bladder as we want it to be and it's forcing water up that sample line and actually expelling the air within that sample line as well which is the bubbles so if you're seeing uh if you've submerged your your sample line just a bucket of water and you're applying drive gas and you see that there's bubbles coming out of that line that tells you that water is on its way basically and when those stop that when the bubbles stop in that line that also tells me that the bladder is being compressed to its maximum amount so no more water is going to come out as i'm applying my drive gas so we say about 80 of that time is a good time to encapsulate sort of emptying the bladder as much as possible once we've applied our drive gas um and just allowing uh when you when we're calculating our event to have that to be about two or three times that drive amount as a minimum now that's going to be based on uh whether it's the four or seven or the four right it's going to be based on your recovery of your ball so just calculating event quickly if you can do it two or three times multiplier on that drive time it's a good start point but always each board is unique as we know just make sure you're not drawing down within your guidelines and you can bump up your vent to allow a bit more recovery on that so with the 408 double valve pump if we move to the calculation of the drive there a little bit trickier that our purge sample line of all the water once we've actually set pump in place at the start and then what we can do is we can apply our drive gas and we'll see water being expelled from the sample line and eventually the air will be expelled now that tells me that the drive gas has made a full loop from the tubing where the air is being applied all the way down through the pump and back up the sample line to complete a full circle so we say 40 percent of that time that we've timed whilst we've applied our drive gas is a good start point in the double valve pump y if i just go back one here and you can see my cursor there why would we say 40 percent well if we assume that the drive line the pump and the sample line is a hundred percent if we've applied our drive gas and we've put it all the way through this tubing it's gone down through the pump and back up the sample line to be expelled at the surface that's completed a full loop so 50 would be if we sort of cut this pump down the middle that's 50 percent of our time being applied in the driveline and obviously a little bit less than that will allow us to not have the air whilst when we start sampling to be in contact with your sample line with your sample water in here and just allow that recovery so each time we vent the drive water will come back up to standing water level which is here so all we're doing is applying gas getting down just before the pump allowing it to vent and coming back up standing water level and repeating that process so if that process is done correctly we should be avoiding our air contact with our sample water so again our maximum depth ranges i've also included there on this table um 150 meters below ground level with the the bladder pump and again less than 150 meters just get that if you just keep those point uh in your mind that if you have a standing water less than 150 meters then the double valve comes probably where you want to go if you want to sample deeper than 150. just a quick touch point as well is that the drive and sample lines on the tubing out of the box these pumps will have the air and sample line swapped around so on the 407 bladder pump you have the quarter inch tubing being the air and the 3 8 inch being the sample uh on the 408 double vale pump you have the 3 8 being the air and the quarter inch being the sample now i've put that this can be changed here because uh nine times out of ten we do change that if we go to add double valve pumps into our rental fleet for example we simply swap those connections back around to have our preferences having the quarter inch air 3 8 sample it doesn't affect anything internally in the pump it just allows us to have less psi requirements um when we're calculating that sort of stuff for deeper applications um due to reducing the diameter of that drive tubing from three-eighths to a quarter we're just allowing ourselves to have more allowance with our gear so i always suggest to switch them around but just to be aware of that so the silence controller and air supply options as i said previously at the start uh we might do another webinar on this because it's quite a bit of extensive um things that we can delve into on this but just quickly i'll talk about the 464 controller and the 12 volt compressor from the silence range the silence 464 controller comes in a 125 psi rating and a 250 psi rating there's a manual drive button uh on the controller which eliminates electronics and i'll just talk a bit about that a bit more when we get to the troubleshooting um there's also the option to store up to 99 saved channel logs in in the actual controller itself so for example if you've dedicated a suite of bores and you've got 30 pumps in there and you've done your first round of sampling you've worked out with your calculations your drive and vent times are all sitting fine and the bore's recovering nice you're able to save those settings that you previously had in your controller named under the particular bore so if you're going back you know and doing quarterly analysis or by annual analysis then you can just again reduce those times of having to calculate those things and restart to reduce your man hours that way so that's a good little feature with that control unit the silence 12 volt compressor we say is ideal for uses in bores of sort of less than 30 meters we say that because what we know about the compressors is that they're trying to maintain a pressure rating within the chamber so the solon's 12-volt compressor does have 125 psi uh maximum output but if we have a large sweep of sort of deeper bores um it's the compressor or any compressor will be trying to maintain that pressure within the chamber constantly um if we're applying high psi uh air to a lot of our bores and utilizing the same compressor it will be running for quite a long time to try and maintain that pressure within the within the compressor and can run the risk of burning out so blowing a fuse or something like that so we sort of say it's really ideal for the shallower applications just to try and limit that you can utilize them for maybe a couple of a couple of deeper bores if you wanted to but we you know just as a rule of thumb better for the shallow applications because again you can run the risk of blowing that uh fuse or burning them out and so there is a lot of technical guidance on changing uh fuses and and troubleshooting on the on the compressor if that was to happen um both on our uh hydrator website and the sunless website also um the main the main ones we start to move to is the compressed gas with anything sort of deeper so our co2 or nitrogen is typically used as our inert gases there the preference for one or the other can depend on um what you may be sampling for sometimes people typically like to use nitrogen that's typically a more if you will in that gas and you can actually achieve a bit higher psi ratings if you're wanting to do deeper applications mostly we utilize co2 at hydroterror but again you have the flexibility uh there of being able to choose so what are some troubleshooting tips for these um if you guys are familiar with the science controller i try and get this point across in that there's some preset low flow settings suggested on the controller face in terms of recommended low flow sampling rate we always i always ask that you you don't use those preset settings um for a couple of obvious reasons um example being that the low flow setting that's a preset on that science controller is set to 50 seconds drive and 25 seconds vent if you remember previously what i said you want to try and have your vent to be two or three times your drive not the other way around because we're trying to allow that board to recover and be able to take as best as we can a representative from that particular aquifer so i just suggest that those calculations that we've talked about before to utilize them and to not utilize the preset settings on the science controller um in our rental fleet we've taken steps to provide people with a bit of a cheat sheet on those calculations and refer them to that from the um science controller if that's something that might be of interest to people we're happy to send through that that cheat sheet to you all um don't forget to use your manual drive button so that's helped me um personally with a couple of bores to get that final couple of samples what that does is that that silver button on top of the science controller will allow you to bypass any electronics or anything like that so if i press that manual drive button down that's actually applying a drive cycle if i release it that's that's a vent so i can sit there with my watch or my phone and uh if i've maybe forgot to pack uh the batteries uh i can still utilize the controller and just bypass any electronics with that manual drive button so that's a handy thing that's that's helped me in my time don't be afraid to slightly increase your psi so if you're not seeing water coming up those calculations that we've suggested previously aren't um you know set in stone they're just uh guidelines to initiate um so if you're again utilizing that that method of submerging your sample line at a bucket of water and you're still and you're seeing bubbles maybe not so many um it suggests that you're probably um you know water's coming up but you might just not have enough psi to to get it up there so don't be afraid to sort of bump it up or reduce it from your calculations and just be sure to adjust your psi on the control unit first not increasing the gas bottle so sometimes people will try and get that extra 5 or 10 psi through increasing the gas bottle regulator quite extensively and then might be getting nearly there and then start to adjust on the controller that can cause you know once you open up that controller if you've if you've opened up extensively the regulator uh on the gas bottle that can cause that to over pressurize and potentially blow solenoid or something like that so just be sure to adjust as best you can as most as you can firstly on the control unit and goes without saying but good solid connection on all your tubing gas fittings push fittings you just want to make sure that all of those are nice and tight before you do it instead of having to pull the pump back up again that little thread in between the your twin bonded tubing is good to just remove that before you put it into your connections and just things like that so we're utilizing some previous projects that we've been done uh which we'll finish on and then we'll just move to the q a so jacobs we partnered with jacobs and and delp a few years back to dedicate some of the 408 double valve pumps there was a number of around 30 bores which needed to obtain some samples from up to 1200 metres deep this is quite a unique project in that um it provided a lot of challenges which needed to be overcome in order to achieve this as you can probably imagine um so we utilized the we did a extensive research onto what would be the best pump for the job and we ended up utilizing the 408 double valve which we found was able to obtain the best samples at these particular depths the issues that come about from this we encountered some buoyancy issues at around the um 300 meter mark when wanting to install this so if you can see on the image there we had to actually install a bit of a custom milled spike at the bottom which is literally just a solid piece of milled stainless steel that would just allow enough weight to counteract the buoyancy of the long sample tube and the long driveline tubing to stop the pump from coming back up on itself we also altered the tubing from the more common ldpe to a thick like hdpe because we were seeing pressure influencing the compression of the more thinly walled ldpe at these greater depths there was also the issue of dissolved gas samples which were required as they come up to surface and we're depressurizing from that that type of depth so we had to basically take a set volume of of sample into a water gas chamber and and sparge it with nitrogen gas to essentially strip the sample of dissolved gases and store those dissolved gases into sumer cancer and analyze them at the lab so that was a very challenging process and the image of that actual contraption is is there so that was a difficult process that we had to overcome for that particular project but it was a very successful one at the end of it and learnt quite a lot in terms of deeper application pumps and able to there's a full case study of that on the actual science website and on our website as well if you wanted to delve more deeply into that the snowy hydro projects we dedicated and have dedicated quite a lot of the 408 double valve pumps around numerous locations that's again having ongoing expansion so the 408 double valve is is the pump of choice for those guys when they're uh dedicating all of their sampling boards and monitoring boards and so that's seen a lot of success there and with some great countryside to be installing those pumps at the applications again were sort of in that deeper range of around 200 and 300 meters and i'm still seeing uh more of that more of those type of depths as we move on through it uh the ninja gold project there was some bladder pump dedication as well so you can dedicate those the bladder pumps as well as i spoke about the dedication of those um you know why we move to having a bladder pump with the drop tube versus the double valve again this this might be some considerations for your voc sampling so there might be a choice over one of the other we found that actually getting a sample up and getting an amount of sample is a bit easier for example having a double valve pump at 300 meters versus having a bladder pump at 100 meters and putting a drop tube assembly down to there so we typically just say for the much deeper stuff to utilize the double valve and there's a large network of dedicated double valves in the heathgate resources as well so we've utilized quite a few projects where there's a lot of these pumps around and continue to work closely with all these clients so i guess that brings us to the end there so thank you very much for watching um we'll take this time now to answer answer any questions that you guys might have and i'll just bring up some of this we just had a bit of technical issues with the screen sharing so you guys will be able to see these questions but i will still read them out anyway um so jasper you have you got any data of pfas contamination by the pump through seals valves etc and samples is there a difference between the two different pumps in this aspect uh recently we've had some uh inquiries into whether these pumps can be utilized for pfas sampling there is ongoing talks with silenced and we are coming up with some solutions to have these pumps be utilized for some potential pfas sampling there is some declarations from silenced around the uh pfas there's no pvas contamination in a lot of their components within the pump and we take the steps of also changing the the common teflon check balls to stainless steel ones uh we've got we're doing some more testing on that particular setup but we are coming to something along with the declarations and also changing a few things from the teflon obviously to stainless steel to hopefully have a very robust sort of capability to suggest these pumps for further pfas applications if i have a fast recovering bore is it still not recommended to use a vent lower than your drive yeah if you have a very fast recovering bore just but that that might be okay as i said you can have you can have a reduced vent time again it's really just dependent on your ball if your ball is recovering immensely then by all means you know if you can increa if you can have a drive time that's uh more than you vent then then you're in a really great spot so it's just really um determining on your recovery of of your ball so just don't take those um what i'm saying is just don't take the vent um to be less than your drive nine times out of ten will probably be the case and so don't try and implement that with a lot of the boards if you have really fast ones then certainly you can you can do that so joanne cheat sheet would be excellent thanks that's no worries we'll make a note there to send that through to you and that's no problem at all does the 407 pump need to sit below the standing water level or only the drop tube andrew the 407 pump will need to sit um below the the standing water level because we're relying on our hydrostatic pressure to move the water up from the pump intake wherever you want to sit that up into that bladder so yes we will need to sit that you actually need to sit the pump below the standing water level are there any other pumps that would be recommended for pfas jasper it's a point of contention at the moment and quite a tricky process i've come into contact with suppliers that maybe suggest that they can have some pumps recommended for pfas i just uh take the caution there in that you want to make sure that as we know a tricky beast of pfas being that you analyze each and every component of the pump before you make that choice and if you have declarations from your supplier that say that there's no known contaminant of pfas in their inner workings of the pump that's probably your best poise um people some suppliers out there like to claim they have a pfast free solution but they might not have checked that you know the internal o-rings it might be teflon or something like that so just important to make sure you have declarations from all of that um if i do find something that's a fully um pfas free recommended pump i'll be sure to let you know again as i said i'm working through that with um with silence at the moment and we have probably the best poise place where if we change those teflon balls with stainless steel and we have declarations from silenced as a general one saying that they are not known to have pfas contamination and their veton o-rings and that sort of thing is a component within the pump are not known to have pfas contamination and can provide those declarations to you that's probably one of the best poised so far solutions that i've come across so i'm happy to do that for you just for if you require thanks luke um what are the pumps rated for psi um the pump's rated for the psi it's not a huge um there's no real rating on the psi for the ad particular pump it's more so you have problems with the controllers um i don't think there's going to be an instance where you'll damage any internal components with high psi ratings within the pump or that certainly i haven't come across that but if there's uh something else i can derive from that from silence then i'll be sure to let you know but i'll just take that that one down joseph but for my knowledge it's also going to be your components at the surface rather than the actual internal workings of the pump rated for your psi um what you can find though is if you have really high psi ratings in your in other pumps with your bladders that has a potential to blow off the way that the silenced bladder bladders actually install gives yourself a great allowance to avoid that happening that's probably the only instance i've seen when any internal components are affected by higher psi ratings is it possible to provide these slides to us and share with colleagues who could not attend yeah certainly patrick i'll be able to um get some slides um to you for sure on that so i'll just make a note of that as well and be sure to let you know with some of those slides so that might do us uh for the questions i don't see any more coming in so um once again thank you all for uh attending this i hope you might have taken something away from it all um as i said in the coming weeks and months we'll be putting out these other short presentations uh and that sort of thing um so just be on the lookout for those if you have a little bit of time in your lunch break and appreciate you guys taking the time to uh to listen to us so from heighterror and from myself thank you all for attending and to those people that have put the questions and have asked for some more documentation we'll get that through to you so thank you all and enjoy | HydroTerra Pty Ltd | UCJUgOUSBeic18XQfhLOJORA | 2022-08-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,364 | 33,530 |
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