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LYxaXmfIn2I | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYxaXmfIn2I | Naturally Occurring Food Toxins | RTCL.TV | the FDA has implemented various measures to ensure safe consumption of food products including setting maximum allowable levels of toxin content in food products establishing warning labels and banning certain food items altogether despite these efforts it is impossible to completely eliminate the risk of consuming toxins in food as they can be found in both naturally occurring and processed foods however the risk of toxicity due to food toxins is generally quite low and most people will not experience any ill effects from consuming small amounts of these substances this article was authored by Georgie Burdock Ray matulka and Lori C Dolan | Medicine RTCL TV | UCJvZYspa9qxhoccHGQfYIFA | 2023-09-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 103 | 646 |
XHJZcaNcWZk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHJZcaNcWZk | Extraordinary Heights S3,E4 | [Music] welcome to the life Annie news media presentation I'm Andy Cohen and I'm Paul Romano we hope you enjoyed this glimpse into the life of Brooklyn friends school [Music] tell me about the show what's the call well we're doing in the heights um by lin-manuel Miranda and it's just really fun it's about three days in Washington Heights theatre has always been a big part of my life so I was very happy when lorna jordan theater teacher and director invited me into a rehearsal and to speak with the cast and crew of the middle school upper school fall musical I've done the musical every year since seventh grade and how is this different I guess like there's more cultural inclusivity regard especially regarding like people apply next community which i think is really good we've never really done that before I play Kevin Ross Audio and I'm an immigrant from the DR and I guess I'm a bit old-fashioned I own a taxi company and I'm just trying to enable my daughter to have the best life she possibly can how do you find motivation for that well he's an immigrant and he was a farmer and I I guess like my family has that same experience where my family is originally from coração and they were farmers and they farmed like plantains and yucca pretty much so I can draw inspiration on that and the fact that they immigrated to New York I play sunny which is the cousin of the main character in the show and with sunny like he's really passionate and he really wants to change things any worse in a bodega how do you relate to sunny do you relate to him yeah I really do sunny because he really wants to make a difference in his community and I feel like I to make a difference play the lead role owner of a small business the bodega in Washington Heights it's basically like him going through it like a few days and him finally reaching his goal of leaving the barrio to have a better life I share that kind of drive for like betterment of yourself like growing up in Queens and coming here to like the you like other class parts of Brooklyn like you kind of I kind of like use that as a drive to like come here and work towards excellence each year we focus on something a little bit different and especially this past like two years I think we've been focusing on communities that are not usually represented in media and popular culture so I really like especially like Wisla Kosh and now in the heights we get to see like a new side of life like a different view of it all right and what about your part what part do you play I play Camila she's very I think she's very strong-willed but she's often like pushed aside and she does a lot for her family and she's often overlooked for it and she always has to go along with like her husband's like what he wants to do and it like she has to kind of like find her voice relate to the character I consider myself very strong-willed but there are times when I have been like pushed aside and like silenced and it's weird because I feel like especially these last two years in high school I've been trying to like find my voice and like find a way to tell people who I am so I think I get inspiration from my own experience and just trying to make myself known I played Benny do you relate to your character is it hard oh yeah yeah I can relate so much when we get to the lottery ticket side of the story he's pretty much talking about how if he won the lottery what he would do with the money which was he wouldn't do what most people do he wouldn't go on vacation who wouldn't spend all around you he said he would like going some business school on his own car service in order to help students better understand the motivations of their characters lorna sent an email to faculty and staff looking to gain as many perspectives as possible from community members who have immigrated to New York City her goal was to help cast members to make truthful appropriate choices and to deepen their understanding of the power of art to provide an entry point for learning and empathy we have lived in the heights ever since because Lorna like Loki shaped my life with jazz and Jack I've been wanting to interview them for a long time you are my heroes can you tell us a little bit about what you do on the show yeah so we are stage managers for the production that means from day to day we take rehearsal reports so like attendance we list out what happens we sort of know where everyone is and what's happening we block the show we do block the out the entire show so making sure we right now miss and on what they're doing and try to do very many things we are in charge of also calling the show and running the show technically during the show so we do all the lights and the fun stuff we have a bunch of little crew people who come and help us towards the end sort with abilities making sure that they know what they're doing men working with our technical director had a lot of technical directors over the past five years and Larsen is really good at his job Merson really cares a lot at he was a set designer little model so we sort of did what we were going into the hand just like star fashion theater very how is it working with the actors we love it it's exciting yeah there's a lot of different things to do every day and during the show we're definitely constantly following around making sure things are happening it's a lot of damage control very much you find that there's a lot of ego there gosh I oh my gosh I wish I wish that there was an actor that I had met in a BFS who was just so full of themselves and I could just like well are you on booked for actors sometimes we even we are unlettered further from the very start of the play it's sort of them they follow along with their scripts but after they learn lines there's sort of there's a chunk of time where they might not have memorize their lines and they should have yes and so we sound are saying our book but as the show as it progresses into the final week we're sort of we've shifted our responsibilities to more focusing on the technical aspects of the show so we come in from a very early point and we begin by focusing on the actors and then we sort of tell the truth do you know everybody's lines and can you do every part yes yes jacket can really do the entire show all by ourselves you tell me what it's like in the booth on the night of the show it's very exciting it's very exciting it's like it's just like pure energy in the booth I would consider more of the energy to be backstage for this show I'm gonna be backstage so that's it's a lot of fires that are getting put out constantly it's a lot of energy especially opening night they're loud they're very loud they're all very exciting closing night it's very sad they're all they all have so like so much to say and we have so much to expect from play from each show we sort of know how things run where our first show is so it is is sort of the getting everything together and then the set shows sort of where everything I don't want to say it falls apart but the second show is where we sort of have done such a great job in the first yeah I give you or both of you have an incident that you want to describe that took place like it was the worst or the best thing that happened into the in the booth I have backstage potential worst thing that I almost did I almost erased all of the lights for into the woods right as everybody had just sat down in those seats like completely all the like he's gone because I was just trying to turn on a lamp and the lamp wasn't working you know and so because I'm an experienced technical director I thought why not unplug it and plug it back and so I unplugged the power strip from the wall and the computer was plugged into the power strip and the computer is not the system that just saves automatically and so it took about 20 minutes to turn back on and the whole time it said incorrect shutdown may not have been saved stuff like that so we were Sofia lipkin and I were just panicking about whether we had lights or not we were thinking were gonna just have to like wing it the entire time just like manually do it luckily I did talk to you that that would have been horrible but but it worked out it wasn't out it was all safe we were all good but that would have that would have definitely scarred me for life I think that the craziest parts are when you're in the booth and you're watching the actors do with their things maybe it's not exactly how it's been blocked and we're just of it oh yeah yeah motioning wildly cuz they can see you in the video thank you so much for all your thoughts I have a question do I say can I say break a leg to you say that to you I did until one of our actors almost did break a leg anyway break a leg thank you thank you so I had so much fun talking about theater with the cast and crew of in the heights Thank You students let's remember none of this would have been possible without the extraordinary efforts of musical director Lisa Burns technical director Larson Rose choreographer Gemara Hill Spanish language coach Maria Sanchez and of course our director Lorna Jordan let your play speak | BFS YouTube | UCvneC-KIV-cP-TeP-nkVemw | 2018-11-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,779 | 9,174 |
VnFfZduTghA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnFfZduTghA | WJLA: VHC Pediatrics & Outpatient Clinic awarded $255,000 for Grocery Assistance Program | this food insecurity and hungry children abc 7's victoria sanchez with how virginia hospital center is helping families and the big grant it just received to keep up the work americans on average spend more than 152 dollars on thanksgiving food and drinks according to lend edu but thousands of arlington county residents are struggling to provide day-to-day meals let alone a holiday feast when we did this survey pre-covered we found that about 30 percent of families were food insecure that number jumped to 55 percent in 2020. michelle altman with virginia hospital center says a half million dollar grant will help struggling families we're very excited because this is the way the families can take these to the supermarket they look just like the grocery gift cards that you or i would buy each month for six months more than 200 families will get grocery store gift cards loaded with 200 bucks the appreciation from these families they're just so they're crying when we give them these gift cards because some of them don't even have food coming into the week the cards come with the freedom to choose we have great food banks and other organizations that are donating food to families but to be able to give the patient the ability to walk into the grocery store and buy whatever they need that could be feminine products it could be toothpaste could be cleaning supplies things that they know that they need for their family with thanksgiving a day away the help couldn't come at a better time and will last past the holidays victoria sanchez abc 7 | VHC Health, Arlington VA | UCB3EftUTf_b0moo9cg6gR0g | 2020-12-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 272 | 1,558 |
Z2AZ1cyNvu0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2AZ1cyNvu0 | Hells Angels and Pagans Clash | welcome back to the original gangsters podcast I'm Jimmy buccillato here in studio at the OG command center with my colleague and uh friend the Intrepid Mr Scott Bernstein hey now and we've got Benny the producer and engineer extraordinaire in the house as well uh thanks for watching thanks for listening just want to remind everyone before we get started to please subscribe to our YouTube channel it's growing we're pretty excited about that please share it leave comments and we're also active on social media Facebook Twitter Instagram uh I enjoy interacting with people on these uh through social media and we appreciate your support it's a it's a big help in terms of spreading the word so so please keep that in mind um we have a pretty exciting show today a popular topic we can tell from the analytics that whenever we do an episode about outlaw bikers that uh it's very popular and this is a very timely very hot topic going on here uh we're going to talk about the Hell's Angels and um we're also going to talk about the Hell's Angels and they're Feud with the pagans so we're gonna Deep dive this uh you want to get us started Scott just uh well uh there are you know kind of two pieces of this um and and it's and it spans the nation you know goes from one side of the country to the other uh so in the last couple weeks uh first there was a uh search warrant that had been sealed on affidavits that were tied into that search warrant um in some court filings out in um in New England that uh were unsealed in the last couple weeks that have revealed that uh the Hell's Angels have a quote-unquote green light order on the pagans and it's a Fallout from the pagans Blue Wave expansion campaign that we've talked about on this pod that was launched about five years ago and has has had quite a few Ripple effects um and and it's I think it's been successful there uh they're expanding rapidly uh across the country and uh it's the brainchild of of the the kind of Svengali Godfather of of the pagans right now uh Conan the Barbarian Keith Richter will be coming out of prison in the next couple weeks or probably the next couple months um but so there there was some conflict that was stem from the Blue Wave where the pagans were moving into New England and we're going into territory that the Hell's Angels uh had previously claimed uh there are some dust UPS last year uh no murders but uh some uh very very violent clashes uh where people got stabbed and shot and uh from that unrest there was a search warrant of a pagans Clubhouse in Fall River Massachusetts which is kind of the middle point between Boston and Providence it's a real you know it's a factory town very A working class very multi-ethnic and uh from that search warrant we found out that there was a Hell's Angels there was a meeting of bosses on the west coast in at some point in late 2021 so this is not that long ago and there was a confidential informant in the meeting and as the meeting came to an end the confidential informant stole what's being described as a minutes sheet where they they took notes on what was being discussed at the uh meeting and in those notes it said that uh there was a vote and that because of what was going on uh with the pagans moving into Hell's Angels territory not just in New England but around the country that the the bosses in the house Angels put out a green light order which is a is a shoot on site order uh and in order to engage violently any Pagan that they see um so that's one part of it and then just a couple days ago there were uh guilty verdicts in a very big Hells Angels racketeering and murder case out in San Francisco that had some ties to New England and the Hell's Angels Boston boss uh Chris rainieri who they call the Rain Man um people that I've talked to said that the impetus for the pagans pushing into Massachusetts was rain man's inclusion in this big 2017 uh murder and and racketeering in day Mata California pulling him off the street and getting him uh put behind bars and that was part of the uh reasoning or part of the first a portion of the first part of the Blue Wave was to go into New England knowing that the Hell's Angels boss there had been taken off the streets so I just want to ask you something you said they raided the pagans Clubhouse but that doesn't make sense to get minutes from a Hell's Angels no no the search warrant to raid the pagans house yes right was based on was based on or not mentioned in that search warrant yeah was the fact that a confidential informant had stole a minute sheet um from a meeting in in California months earlier and that was part of the search warrant that gave the feds the right to go into the pagans Clubhouse and I believe they also used um that information to raid Hell's Angels Clubhouse in um in in a part of Massachusetts as well yeah so I know it's confusing no yeah so let's let's break it down so as you point out there's this Blue Wave mandate and my understanding was New England traditionally was Hell's Angels territory in the Outlaws came in there uh in the 80s a pretty heavy but uh yeah and so according to these documents um Salem is like the sort of the Nexus of Hell's Angels boss I think the chapper is called the Boston Salem okay Salem's like 45 minutes okay maybe I'm not really familiar I mean I've been to Boston but not the larger area um so it seems like for a while the Hell's Angels were um I don't know if you want to say dormant but there wasn't a lot of activity there in that particular um I don't know about hell's Angel's presence in Boston Proper so I don't want to speak out of turn the the unrest or the the tensions that have boiled over according to this reporting um in The Daily Beast shout out to them for for uh first reporting this this uh what this information we've gleaned off of the search warrant that was unsealed a couple weeks ago um that you know the I'm sorry I'm losing my train of thought well just I was saying that it seems like the Hell's Angels had neglected right okay this kind of area so right Rhode Island so this area is is considered the Southeast coast of Massachusetts um it's not Boston right you're probably an hour and a half out of Boston yeah so it's it's Cape Cod it's um other cities in in South in southeast Massachusetts and and the two major players here territorially uh were Cape Cod and Fall River and the pagans had no Presence at all in Massachusetts Hells Angels again I'm not positive about Boston other than the fact that we know that Ranieri the rain man was leading that Salem Boston chapter but I'm not exactly sure if they have a clubhouse in Salem or they have a clubhouse in Boston but what as you mentioned the the Fall River Hells Angels had kind of gone dormant right which uh emboldened or uh inspired I guess the pagans to not go to Boston or Salem where rhaenery and and that Hell's Angels Camp was they went to a place that had been abandoned by the house by the Hell's Angels in in Fall River planted their flag there and then in response that previously dormant Hells Angels Southeast Massachusetts group regrouped right and opened uh chapters on Cape Cod right right and so they re-established their um their uh presence which uh you know I I imagine the pagans found provocative and um and then we know from the court documents here that uh this was not going they were not going to coexist peacefully that the the Hell's Angels also gave the order um the green light order to to go attack right we're gonna drive them out of here oh and they went and they staged um a group attack on the Fall River Clubhouse uh the pagans Fall River Clubhouse where uh over a dozen if not two dozen Hell's Angels showed up in like Vans and unloaded uh a lot of artillery and came out with with knives and bats and Hammers and uh attacked the the fall the Fall River pagans headquarters and there was a hour-long brawl in the middle of the street uh one of the pagans I guess was left like impaled he survived but then there was blood all over the yeah they said it was pretty yeah pretty pretty gruesome and pretty public it's interesting to this reporting because it's it's actually even even more dramatic than that according to the reporting and which is based on this court documents more than a hundred hello Angels so I'm I'm so it's even more I said a dozen or two dozen yeah okay five dozen it's even more dramatic yeah than a hundred uh gathered at a rest stop in Bridgewater Massachusetts and that along with support clubs like the Sidewinders were there too so it's just really extraordinary like 100 dudes I mean that's no joke you know what I mean yeah and this was last year yeah this wasn't right right this was in 2022 not like in the 70s or something yeah so it's interesting that also according to the documents that they they took pictures for social media yeah enroute and I wonder what you think about that because we were just having an off camera discussion about um certain Wise Guys that have a presence on social media and that doesn't go over well with the ogs and I wonder what with with the biker World maybe someone could comment and share with us but um you know what my first I'll tell them impulse in terms of where my brain goes here is the that there is probably a difference in motivation or to at some levels of motivation where I'm guessing that when members of the Hell's Angels are posting on on their socials as they prepare to go take take the fight if you will to a rival group I I think that's probably a promotional tool flexing right and and uh recruiting tool yeah as opposed to some of the Italian um Wise Guys or the you know African-American drug dealers who are just kind of glamming out yeah yeah good point just kind of boasting and and uh showing off yeah I think with the with the bikers it's more of like come join this you can be part of this yeah it's more of a cultural than like an individual kind of thing so there's something else that was in this uh reporting I want to ask you about so the reason why they know this obviously they they monitored social media after the point but it says cameras I'm reading from the reporter cameras operated by the Fall River Police Department tracked the 100 strong group of bikers as they rode to Fall River and carried out the attack now if that if that's true my question is why didn't they interview why didn't they stop it why did they stop it yeah if they if they knew that was about that and I realize if they if they got 100 dudes right you know logistically cops are gonna are gonna throw themselves in the middle of that tornado but you have they have access to other resources they could have called in swat or something like that um so if that's true um I don't know if you have any thoughts on that if you if you've talked to anybody I don't think that's an outlier of a situation I mean and on this podcast we've talked about scenarios where uh you know law enforcement will in some cases create yeah well manipulate variables to create a a crime to watch and then um use to that as a predicate for indictment but I think a lot of times there there'll be there's this push and pull between well if we stopped it now the bust is a lot less sexy no I agree with that and and as we've talked about in the world of law enforcement you it it's political you you rise Yeah the more high profile bus you make the further you rise in in whatever Department you're in if whether it's federal or state so I think a lot of times there's like personal personal motivations to allow the situation to play out as much as it can play out without causing a murder I guess yeah in some cases I think there's been situation now I shouldn't say I think I know I mean with with this the whole Scarpa FBI things so and Whitey Bulger where you know they were being allegedly tipped off by FBI agents who to go kill right and and while they were in the process of planning hits we're being told where surveillance units were so they would know to avoid them yeah yeah um and also we know from from that in some cases informants especially in in the biker World informants all the time tried to incite all sorts of things uh you know here let me sell you a gun because that help again it's it's a self-preservation factor yeah they know the more bus they can they can feed to their handlers and the government the more a leniency the more money yes you know the the more uh prison time cuts reduction they'll receive yeah so it gets it can get pretty can get pretty sketchy but that's one thing what about the fact though that a there was an informant in this meeting of of national bosses yeah B that informant had the balls to steal the notes from the meeting and give it to I mean that's pretty yeah I think that's in some ways even being lost in some of this reporting is how did we get the knowledge that there's a green light order yeah it must be someone well placed yeah to have access to that kind of information and feel yeah confident enough they could walk away yeah um so the um according to this some of the guys broke off from the group so guys some guys were blocking traffic and as you point out they swarmed the pagans Clubhouse and then a fight ensues with the bloody melee as as was already established no one was no one was killed um but um it again says here investigators surveilling the property watched as cars and motorcycles sped away again it doesn't seem like the investigators were too interested in an interesting and actually arresting people right intervening here which which I think is I don't know it could be that could be uh problematic so um the um uh it says here that the informants as investigators that Hell's Angels plan the attack because the pagans MC members had disrespected the uh the Hell's Angels um now I don't know it's not specific enough I don't know if there was like some specific inter uh um altercations or do they just felt by opening up a clubhouse there in the first place that was an uh in the flag wearing the colors of the pagans um in that area whether it was you know offensive to the Hell's Angels or offensive to The Outlaws because there's been a a lot of dust UPS there and and on an aside and we're monitoring the situation you know I I'm getting really really good sourcing on the fact that over the last five six months there's talks between the Hell's Angels and the Outlaws who are like the the biggest rivals in the history of the biker world are considering calling some type of truce and and joined forces to combat this Blue Wave and you got we got Richter coming out of prison in August uh under normal circumstances he would have hit a halfway house by now um but I'm guessing they're going to keep them for the last possible second he's doing uh two years on a uh a violation of supervisor release he was caught with a weapon uh leaving a pagans party and I'm confident in saying that there's a informant in his inner circle the house because he gets pulled over uh you know shortly after leaving that It's too convenient and they and he wasn't even carrying the gun the gun was in a like a secret compartment and they arrested him initially and they didn't find the gun for another like five six seven hours when they they knew where to look so it's a powder keg of of a scenario right now um well again to give context the pagans until Richter's plan to uh to um expand was was a very big deal in places like Maryland Virginia West Virginia Pennsylvania uh parts of New Jersey New York but at Florida but that was it people didn't you didn't know about the pagans west of the Mississippi they didn't know about the pagans in the midwest they didn't know what Kentucky it was another they didn't know about the pagans um in New England and now there are literally Pagan chapters that are now being opened or that have opened in Washington state Montana Oregon they're going down to Texas uh Oklahoma right um they're making alliances uh with with um the Mongols so it's uh it's it's a very real time I I don't want to necessarily compare it to what's going on in the mafia in Canada but it's it's it's not it's not the same thing but it's there's a destabilization factor there and an unpredictability Factor there that I think is a parallel yeah I mean it was interesting a few years ago or a year ago whenever we did an episode about this and the pagans uh expansion and I and I said well you know it doesn't seem like anyone's like really standing up to them well now that's we see that that's not ever since that episode um that's actually not true it seems like you mentioned some other prominent clubs are starting to reorganize and uh I think they'll recognize that this is you know maybe not in their best interest to just I heard as the get out of the way as the pagans and Mongols have fortified their Alliance or quasi-alliance I've heard that the Outlaws are aligning with the Banditos for the same reason oh yeah and outlaws don't have a presence really west of the Mississippi and I don't think they want to have a presence west of the Mississippi other than you know your your enemy's enemy is your friend yeah wasn't there shooting in Texas not long ago uh bandinos and uh probably but that had nothing to do with it okay The Outlaws are a Midwest down south yeah uh East Coast Oklahoma's probably as far west as they go right yes I would guess but there were some Outlaws dudes who were who were wearing their patch around Texas remember that story no you're right though the Outlaws I've heard um have kind of a I don't want to say free pass but where before it would be difficult for them to go into Texas and wear Outlaws gear because of this relationship that's forming between them and the Banditos they have uh all clear okay um so um by the way uh talking about the pagans on the East Coast I I've um I've heard from people and I know that sounds vague and some people there's haters out there and say oh that's [ __ ] but I don't know what you want me to say I'm not I'm not going to sit here and tell you who who we talk to like that's never gonna happen so you can either believe us or not but we're it's just never going to happen so um and I hope you know I think our a lot of our fans respect that I think our reputation right is is pretty our batting average is pretty good yeah um but but I've heard that you know the Hell's Angels in New York have good relationships with kozanostra which makes the pagans nervous apparently from what I've heard but then I've also come across information you and I said we're going to look into it that the pagans have their own kosa Nostra right what ties in New York so that's kind of interesting yeah and the pagans have always been closely tied in Philadelphia has always been a um a home base sure for pagans even though they were founded in Maryland um but Philadelphia has always been a real power uh Power base for the pagans and um there's a little bit of a love-hate relationship there's been some blips um over the years where there's been some issues between the mob and the pagans but for the most part in Philadelphia the pagans in the mafia are are aligned yeah um you know Joey Merlino has really good relationships with the pagans again I don't want to everyone loves Joe yeah uh I I don't want all the other the five families I don't want to do to digress too far but I I hear there's some new um relationships burgeoning in the Merlino camp uh with the modern you know the the pagans current leadership in in Philadelphia which is another uh what's old is new again uh uh the gorilla uh a Stevie mind virgin I know I'm butchering his name just call him the gorilla uh he was the pagans boss in the 90s and was actually the National Boss um fell out of favor uh was on the shelf for a little bit and then Richter who was very close with the gorilla in the 90s when when uh uh Conan the Barbarian Richter was was rising in the Long Island pagans um he brings uh uh gorilla back into the fold in 2017-18 when he takes power and he makes gorilla a big part of this Blue Wave and puts gorilla back in power in Philadelphia um there was he's an Italian guy right Mander virgin I think he's French oh is he but maybe I'd have to yeah I can't remember I I he's got a weird last name he's a former cop oh um back in like the 70s but he's a he's like uh for people that that know the biker lingo you know gorilla mondra Virginia is the Taco Bellman of Philadelphia you know the face of biker oh the face of the biker World in Philadelphia over the last uh 30 years even though he was shelved for part of that you know is is the gorilla and um yeah I'm sorry I'm I I just I don't know as much about the pig and so I I didn't no that name didn't sound familiar to me but I'm uh he he there was a internal mini I don't want to say it was a war but a power struggle um in the early 2000s late 90s within the pagans were gorilla um yeah how would he pronounce it last I don't know I think it's Monda virgin yeah it could be uh um where where the gorilla got into it with a guy named Tim flood who they call Timmy casual and lost the power struggle uh flood took the club over the gorilla was like kicked out and then flood ends up flipping and the the power in Philly with the pagans went to somebody else and then the gorilla makes his way back uh into the fold underneath Richter but again the LA the last thing I'll say about this and then you can look forward to some reporting I think in the next couple months we'll we'll try to touch on it the more I learn about it there's a picture that has surfaced in the last month on social media from Joy merlino's underboss uh handsome Stevie mazzoni oh and it's in prison just uh reported this winner to go serve five years and the first picture of him in prison that surfaced is him with someone that I'm told is a high-ranking pagan and that that there's some foreshadowing yeah well that makes sense yeah although it's ironic Merlino with his uh that family's history with the pagans back in the day right well we're complicated what's what's funny is that Merlino was really close or is really close to a lot of these pagans what Jimmy's talking about is Chucky Merlino right Joey's dad who was erratic at times right big time Drinker yeah lost his stripes because he was such a drinker yeah and the incident that you're referring to was I think one of the it's not the impetus one of the straws that broke the camel back is that Chucky gets into a a pretty big time beef with the pagans in the mid-80s and they start threatening to kill each other and kill each other's families and uh and Chucky took his got drunk one night and took his uh BMW and and slams it into the pagans like outside the pigeons Clubhouse where all the bikes are are lined up and and uh and that that was kind of interesting because it started off where Molino actually was close with those guys Chucky and Nikki through the drug connection right they were kind of the leaders with Raymond with long john Mariano they were moving a bunch of drugs together so he he he started off getting along with the pagans but then things went sour um I think that had to do with a power shift where a new guy had taken over from the pagans who wasn't the same guy that had been um again I could be wrong I know there was a guy named the Egyptian and I'm not sure if the Egyptian was the guy that left or the guy that came that right some of the issues came with but uh part of the Blue Wave is the pagans fortifying their connections in their network with groups like the Mongols groups like Italian La coso Nostra yeah and uh Hispanic Street Kings the Latin Kings The Outlaws have responded by fortifying their alliances with LCN and I've heard making some strange bedfellows were there aligning with some black street gangs to try to combat what the pagans are doing um but let's segue to that yeah yeah one of the it's interesting because we're talking about Outlaw Bikers on the east coast and one of these prominent guys from the from the New England Hells Angels is also linked to a big bust out west yeah which is something you you previewed at the beginning and I just want to add something um if for people who who watch our program or listen to the podcast and they're not from out west um you may not realize like the Hell's Angels are reported on all the time yeah if you're out in California I lived in Arizona for a while um Nevada it's it's pretty cool it won't go a week yeah you won't go a couple days I don't think with with Hell's Angels activity not being reported on by the various newspaper options in California nightly broadcast and so if you're from the Midwest um you you've probably heard of the Hell's Angels because they're so iconic and famous but but you you may not be aware of um uh how active they are those are their Superstars those are their Superstar criminals the way that the joy merlino's and the John Gottis and the East Coast um Joey Lombardo's from Chicago are are the uh for the Midwest or the other parts of the East Coast yeah so this was this was huge news especially out west yeah this this at least that the New England guys connected yeah and let's draw a line uh I think that it's noteworthy that when the rain man Chris rainieri the rain man who was the boss of the Hell's Angels it seems like he's the boss of the entire state of Massachusetts um but I think officially he was the boss of the Boston Boston slash Salem chapter he's taken off the streets in either I think it was 2017 it might have been 18. uh and that coincides with this move that that Richter uh I think strategically looks at the house Angels losing their top yeah their top Skipper in that region and pinpointed it as a place to expand to sure now let's talk about what brought Rain Man rainieri off the street um so he was indicted in 2017 I believe with a number of Hell's Angels on on the west coast but most prominently a guy that I want to make the the focus of the second half of this episode on is Ray Ray folks and maybe outside of California Ray Ray folks isn't a big deal but in California um Ray Ray folks is the modern day sunny Barger from what I hear he is the most powerful most respected most feared uh Hells Angels Shot Caller yeah at least in the United States um and he kind of took that reputation uh from the from what used to be in that Barger crew uh even though barger's been out of California for a while he's been he was in the end of his life he was down in Arizona right but uh Northern California is traditionally uh housing yes like stronghold right so uh because Barger was from the Oakland right area so Ray Ray folks um I'm just kind of learning about him and talking to some people and and doing my due diligence uh but just what's on paper is pretty scary I mean the guy is uh is a real um hurricane of of uh criminal activity and uh it seems to be a real you know cowboy and and a lot of his behavior and and what he was convicted of last week a rain man was convicted of a murder and we're going to get into that in a second and that murder actually ties back to a Hell's Angels um a rally motorcycle rally in in New England but the Ray Ray folks part of this case was tied to and Ray Ray's done a lot of prison time in the last 15 years and I think he's got a probably another four or five years left but he'll be in his I think mid 60s when he gets out and early early 60s maybe mid 60s and he'll have some time uh you know at the top of the Heap so he was in jail for something he was a leader and let's also be clear that uh Ray Ray folks comes from or was a little that is the head or was the head of the Sonoma Valley uh Hell's Angels chapter up in wine country and he was serving time in the early 2010s and got out found out that when he was in prison one of his lieutenants was sleeping with his wife they take that lieutenant they beat him near death RayRay folks leaves the beating summons this guy's wife to The Clubhouse in Sonoma Valley sexually assaults his wife after sexually assaulting his wife returns to where this Lieutenant is beaten and bloodied and they jump on top of them hold them down and tattoo his face uh it was just a vicious retaliation and a Vengeance plot with minus killing this guy uh it to to assert his authority uh Ray Ray folks and I believe very shortly after that he was uh picked up on that assault which was then rolled into the racketeering case that uh went on trial uh this past couple months yeah I don't I don't think just to be clear I don't think folks was convicted of sexual assault it's I think it's alleged that's part of the okay but I don't I don't think he was convicted of that the allegation right is that he sexually assaulted his victims right right um but I I don't I don't I can't say that he was convicted of that just to be just to be fair here um but he was convicted of some of these other things um racketeering assault um so yeah let's let's un unpack this a little bit um uh no and it doesn't Okay um so I'm gonna look it up because part of part of the um well as you point out this is an invest this this is stems from an investigation uh uh an event investigation that went on for three years that was one of these Joint Task Force investigations feds State local this will be a young dude I mean at least he'll probably have about it will be a 10-year sentence for this but he's already done five waiting for trial he'll be out by the time he's 61-62. so this was a joint investigation in the Sonoma County chapter and uh there were charges for murder assault home invasion extortion witness tampering 11 indictments um but it also includes a murder conspiracy right which dates back to 2000 and it's 14 I believe which involves race man that's the connection between out New England so there was a a rally in New Hampshire were all of the Hell's Angels uh from the West Coast traveled East and Ray Ray folks living up to the reputation as as this you know Cowboy gangster biker um has a sergeant-at-arms of his Sonoma Valley Chapter named Joel Silva who went by the nickname Doughboy and they call themselves the [ __ ] around and find out crew um and or f a f o uh and they were like a elite enforcement unit that the national bosses would send throughout California to regulate internally internal house cleaning yeah yeah not other clubs but like I mean other clubs too but yeah but yeah just to keep everybody in line and uh I think there was another group within that chapter that called themselves the young guns that were a group of younger uh initiates and so forth so this was a real heavy group uh out of the Sonoma Valley guys that were quick tempered um quick triggered and uh you know at least amongst their club or in the biker world this was their calling card they were tough guys and and they were uh you know relentlessly brutal so Doughboy begins to get a reputation in the in the 2010s in addition to being the head of this crazy unit under uh Ray Ray it becomes a drug addict or maybe he was a drug addict before but the the drug habit that he was dealing with began to get increasingly worse and it was causing Rogue behavior and when they were in New England when they were in New Hampshire in the summer of 2014 for this rally you had all the West Coast guys and all the East Coast guys there and I guess Doughboy threatened rain man rainiery's right hand man his his I don't know who that is um but what was his best friend and uh you know top Lieutenant yeah and at according to testimony and and court records that very afternoon or evening that that happened a contract was placed on Doughboy Silva's head uh the California bosses and rainieri I guess wherever the wherever the altification occurred they removed themselves from that went and held a impromptu meeting between Ranieri and I believe the boss of the Fresno Hells Angels chapter and they decided that they were going to go back to California get Ray Ray folks to sign off and which we don't know if he did or not he's not um implicated in the in the murder but uh they allegedly put the contract on his head out there and they planned it for a week or two and then Silva was was lured to the Fresno Hells Angels chapter uh under the pretense of uh of a marijuana deal a deal that that had that I think the guy said he needed Doughboy as muscle that he was afraid that the other Hell's Angel was going to be confrontational but it was it was just a ploy to get him there they shot him in the head and then cremated him at a uh a crematorium in a funeral home yeah so allegedly right so yeah I mean that's one thing I want to ask you about and I we I texted you earlier about this you know privately but your legal analysis uh among your many uh hats you wear you were also have a law degree um so I'm interested in your legal analysis here so as you point out right he's lured to the clubhouse according to this uh one of the guys who was convicted shoots Silva in the back of the head and they take his body to a nearby funeral home and The Cremation oven with another body that was that was there legitimately uh then they set the car on fire um so so these guys two of these guys were convicted last last year of this right of this murder conspiracy and and the one thing that stands out to me as I'm reading this is how do you get convicted of a murder conspiracy when there's no body if the body is cremated allegedly how do you like nobody I don't understand how this is rare it's rare indicted on on a murder case when there's no there's no when there's no body it's rare but it happens um I I there have been a number of high profile cases the one that I can think of immediately and I texted this to you today was the Billionaire Boys Club case which was made into a television movie in the 80s with uh Judd Nelson mm-hmm oh yeah actually that was a great TV movie um the murder that put him away for life uh they never found the body and to this day Joe hunt who Judd Nelson played in that movie who I think is in the 60s now uh insists that the guy's name was Ron Levin insisted Ron Levin is living you know on a tropical island somewhere drinking a pina colada laughing that I'm in this is Joe hunting and laughing that I'm in prison and that it was all a ploy to get him locked up uh I think in both that case and in this case you can get around it if you're a prosecutor and still get a guilty verdict if you put people on the stand that claim that they participated in this yeah and are saying firsthand I did this either with the person at the defense table or at the behest of the person at the defense table yeah and you're you're believing the first hand account on the witness stand more so than than a physical evidence of anybody but it seems like it'd be very difficult yeah I mean that's what happened here because they have some they had some high profile snitches here who testified that they were that they participated in this murder but if I'm a I mean I I wasn't on this you know I didn't sit on the jury obviously but if I'm on the jury and and you've got the relying on the testimony of presumably someone who's probably a sketchy dude in their own right and and there's no forensic evidence I I know you obviously you can be convicted without forensic evidence that's been sort of this myth of like the uh the CSI effect right like now everyone thinks like oh if there's no forensic evidence yeah you don't get convicted that's a myth people get convicted all the time without forensic I get it but a murder like I mean that's um I mean uh um wasn't um well whatever I don't it seems like that would give you a leg up as a defensive term that's what I'm trying to say they're trying to take my client and pin a murder on and we don't even know if there was a murder that's precisely that's what if I'm the defense attorney that's what I'm saying right precisely this guy for all we know this guy took off and is living with his girlfriend in Switzerland right yeah so I'm I I find it really interesting go find him or go find his body or let my client go home because there is no there's nobody there's no murder that's what I that's what I would say and I I presume that these defendants will appeal this I mean I certainly would two things that pop up my head we're talking about if we're going to tie this to the Kozo Nostra uh first is Jimmy Hoffa there's no there's no body yes so I don't think they're ever going to bring charges but if they ever were going to bring charges they would have had to bring charges with nobody right um and then you know more recently out of New England Cadillac Frank salemi had I don't want to say he had skated on a murder there was never any murder charges brought on the death of Stevie DeSaro because there was no body right the body had vanished for for 25 years um and was Unearthed via a tip from a guy that got jammed up in a a drug case didn't want to go to prison and said oh by the way 30 years ago I I helped but 25 years ago I helped dispose of a body in my backyard of my uh business and they dug it up and then all of a sudden salemi who didn't have to worry about that case because there wasn't a body right all of a sudden has to worry about it because there's a body yeah but to your point the prosecutors in Massachusetts or I I don't know I don't remember if the case came out of Massachusetts or came out of uh Province they found the body in Providence but the murder took place in Massachusetts I'm pretty sure the case was out of Boston but the prosecutors in Boston were not going to charge anybody with Stevie desiro's murder without a body even though they had been told from pretty early on by Whitey bulger's partner Stevie flemmy who flipped that flemmy was present when the murder took place yeah so they knew back in the 90s that salami was involved in it yeah so even if you're pretty confident based on your sources even if you're pretty confident that that's what happened without a body that's tough to make isn't that but that's isn't that always the um if you're my boss and you wanna or if you're a mob if you're any criminal that murders somebody and you wanna get rid of the body right it's because the idea is nobody no crime right Reasonable Doubt right I mean so um there was really striking to me and and um and nobody no physical evidence yeah and I know like uh you know a lot of people might think well let's just talk about the the crimes and it's you know it's kind of fascinating but this legal part of it I think is interesting and I think our audience appreciates that uh we do like to talk about criminal justice policy and sometimes we like to get in the Weeds about the legal things here but I I think it's relevant I mean they could get a conviction on this and when we're talking about you know legal order of operations or proper protocol you know folks as attorney was saying my client it's very rare to be locked up for five years before you see the jury yes it's normal that you to be locked up for a year and a half two two years three years is kind of but once you hit five years yeah that's a little extensive the the good thing for him is that he's done five years of a ten year bid right which will come to right right so he probably only has four years left to do um and if and if you're in from uh you know a tactical War point of view if you're Conan the Barbarian Richter and you're thinking I mean that's where his mindset is oh you have an eliminated Ray Ray foe it's not like Ray Ray folks is gonna have to be a um uh a incarcerated shot caller right maybe for a couple years to be on the street but he'll be on the street by the end of this decade yeah formidable yeah Conan's relatively yeah Conan's relatively young too I think Conan 62 or 63. yeah um so with Conan Ray Ray folks and then uh Tommy o who's the the national or International Boss Of The Outlaws out in Buffalo you got three shock collars of the three or three of the Premier motorcycle club brands in this country with you know very robust uh and and energized leaders the leadership it doesn't seem to be going anywhere no I mean it is interesting one thing else I'll point out as we wrap up it it is you know pretty dramatic examples here of assault um but notice in it you know they beat up the guys at the pagans Clubhouse but um I understand that all that's illegal but they didn't get anybody on any organized crime stuff here right and even what they got rainerion it's a murder conspiracy it's not the murder itself and he's only gonna get 10 years for it yeah yeah I mean I I look at it if I was involved in a murder and I only got 10 years for that murder that's a win for me yeah yeah because I I think the sentencing hasn't been set yet no but the I I read the sentency recommendations all the recommendations or it would be 10 years yeah okay for both for both of them yeah for Ray Ray and uh um but there's there's nothing in it even though it's dramatic it's worth reporting it's worth talking about and and I think it's fascinating well but they didn't get anyone on any narcotics gambling um and I should say that Tommy oh The Outlaws boss isn't facing any cases right now yeah he's in his uh I think early 50s um who knows how all of the Buffalo locoza Nostra investigations could eventually yeah blow back on him because of his there's something he has very close ties to the magadino crime family he's the head of security at the strip club that the the Godfather's uh nephew owns and that nephew is going on trial this summer for drugs and racketeering and prostitution yeah we need to do it just based on in that club a buffalo I'm sorry we get a lot of requests to do a buffalo episode yeah we should based in that strip club it's called pharaohs right um so like I said you got three bosses that are uh you know in terms of shock calling age are kind of in the prime of their careers in that world yeah that's pretty young in in that world I mean a lot of other professions maybe not but in that world uh leadership usually our senior you know guys guys around that age so two more quick tidbits um of some nuggets that I would I'll pass along that I've gotten fed to me and you know take it with a any amount of salt that you want I haven't fully vetted these two things uh first I've been told that I don't know if Ray Ray folks I don't know what his take on this potential merger or ceasefire or true with the Outlaws is I wouldn't be a merger right now right it wouldn't be a murder is the wrong way right uh I don't know what his opinion is I'm gonna I'm gonna try to find that out um what I've been told though is that these conversations have been taking place um in the midwest that that there are um Michigan Right some of them took place I've heard they've I've heard they're taking place like in Indianapolis oh um but there was an issue in Michigan that got kind of nipped in the bud by these conversations where okay there were maybe there were some guys there were reports uh last year in an indictment that uh informants were talking about a war between the Hell's Angels chapters that had just came into Michigan the last couple years and the Outlaws but I was told that whatever conversations were being held has put that dispute on hold yeah and uh that there that Indianapolis this is what I was told that Indianapolis is the only major city where Outlaws and Hells Angels operate like within a couple mile radius of each other and they might not be friends but they're not trying to kill each other yeah and that they're using that relationship I guess um and Hal's Angels just came into Indianapolis I think in the last 10 years um as a kind of a jumping off point for if they're going to be able to join forces to combat the Blue Wave so that's that's one little piece of evidence or one piece of information that I've gotten which I found interesting sure um Peace biker piece Summits in in Hoosier land yeah maybe they go play basketball after after after a hard hard afternoons work of trying to carve out a peace deal they go shoot hoops or they jump on the uh they'd probably go ride right or they jump on the Indianapolis Speedway with their uh Harleys and start start driving around yeah I mean uh it'd be interesting to see uh hopefully they can uh you know for for the sake of everyone uh coexist and uh keep violence to a minimum uh forever sometimes I mean not to sound too trumpy but uh some sometimes you gotta show strength and um as a means to to create peace at least in in these worlds yeah yeah yeah in that world but we I it's interesting I we do get feedback from some people in this world who um who do their sentiment is that the different clubs should try to get along with each other because they have more in common than than they don't and that the real enemy is the FBI the ATF the D but you but but if we're talking about Outlaws in Hell's Angels I mean you're talking about bad blood that goes back a half century I mean the war erupted I think in 73 or 74 uh related to some murders down in down in Florida from a dispute at a New Year's Eve party in uh New York and they were Massachusetts Hell's Angels that were at this new New York Hells New York uh New Year's Eve party got into it with Outlaws these for these three Massachusetts Hells Angels beat the Outlaws down and then the Outlaws invited these guys down to Florida feigning wanting a peace agreement and yeah killed them like in a in like a triple slain and that erupted this war that's been going on it is interesting the the politics of it because we know there are clear examples where there are times where these guys do coexist with each other and and I've heard from guys who say I don't have a problem with with a dude from another club and um but obviously things get complicated sometimes and we know from our interview with George Christie yeah as well as the former Hells Angels boss as well as this was documented in in court filings that in the 90s there were peace talks sure oh yeah with George Christie and taco Bellman yeah to quash squash the beef um between the two clubs and according to George it was all derailed by this guy Spike O'Donnell who was the boss of Milwaukee or one of the bosses of Milwaukee who there was always a lot of bad blood in Milwaukee between Hell's Angels and and outlaws and uh well Harley Davidson is yeah from Milwaukee and uh that he he's that he he put a wrench into it that O'Donnell made it so Christy couldn't make the piece right so it's not unprecedented that there there are there are talks uh and then the I'll end with coin Richter Conan the Barbarian Richter uh is supposed to come out in August officially he's not the boss anymore he gave up the boss title to a guy from Virginia Big Bob Francis and uh Big Bob is a an OG a guy I've heard a guy that everybody loves um is known as uh uh you know salt of the earth um gets along with a lot of different factions and doesn't have Ambitions of anything more than being a a seat warmer um and that I I had heard that it was possible Francis was going to get removed before Richter comes home but Francis has been in according to uh some some affidavits that were signed by D agents a couple years ago francis's had taken over for Richter when Richter went to jail in 21. um and the common belief is that either Francis has already stepped aside or when Conan the Barbarian comes out of lock up in August will step aside and Conan will then become the boss again so officially Conan even though I've been calling him the boss I've been calling him the president officially he has not been for the last two years when he's been in federal law attainment but it sounds going to be a peaceful transition yeah I don't think Bob Fran I think that that was the reason they put Bob Francis in there they're like you've done great things for us in the last 30 40 years you got a ton of respect you want to give you the title for a couple years so you can say you were the boss the National Boss um but really it's not a it's not a long-term thing you're just here to kind of make sure everything's steady when Conan it happened with uh and now we're geeking out but that happened with preachiola in Detroit with the in between you'll have the title for a couple years yeah because pretty chill it was an OG well internationally well and you can really geek out it can go wrong I mean Jimmy Hoffa he thinks yeah he's putting Frankfurt Simmons yeah his right hand in as a seat warmer right and Fitzsimmons was like I kind of like this seat yeah yeah and I have Ambitions and I I want to be the boss yeah you had your time in the sun yeah uh so I don't think that's what we have here and I think Richter will come back and there'll be a seamless transition the question becomes does Richter take it into even a higher gear for the wave now that he's out because there's been a lot of activity when he was when he was in lock up I mean that that the fact that there's a chapter in Montana right now it really blows my mind yeah yeah that's really far west yeah so uh we'll see and we'll we'll keep we'll monitor it and uh we'll keep giving you the information on the biker politics because there's quite a bit of uh Outlaw Biker politics that that's permeating or percolating in the United States it's really interesting a fascinating uh subculture and so we we thank everyone for listening and and for watching uh again please subscribe follow us on social media I'm Jimmy buccelato Scott Bernstein we're out | Original Gangsters Podcast | UCmVKYKqMW_y1K6hoQ7h-OiQ | 2023-05-31 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 9,627 | 49,667 |
P_ASJTkmP98 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_ASJTkmP98 | Randi Thompson.Training level Canter/Trot. Contact for the the 7th time! Dressage | this is Randy Thompson coming through live we have Trudy Adams and Miss Annie we're at another bar now because Annie's getting ready to go into training level dressage competition and we want her to be comfortable in new surroundings this is the fourth time we've asked her to stay connected in the canter where she's somewhat on the contact' and somewhat on the aids from Trudy's legs so we don't expect perfection again it's only the fourth time we've asked her for this it's alright change directions try something different there's nothing right now it's just a time where you're just gonna keep doing it until you get comfortable it's not going to be right in this day oh you're doing this hoping she'll stay connected good try the twos two strides one rain two strides the other ran good praiser two strides scooter just step up to one where that's alright put her into balance trot two steps one rein two steps the other so what we're doing is we're having Trudy concentrated on asking Annie to step up into the contact of one ran for two steps and then to switch to the other ran for two steps it helps her from locking up and of course she's asking her to do it's good get her to step up where she makes the rain alive if the rain is not alive you're not asking her to stay connected get her to step up into your live rain two steps one side are three if she'll do it it's alright we don't care how she picks up her canter right now good two steps two strides shorten your reins so her nose is down a little bit more right there there now she's getting elite praise or a lot okay now you're gonna slow down the canter for a couple strides and then lengthen instead of trotting if you can if you can if you can all right right not quite that slow and this is new for her we've never asked her to shorten and lengthen our strides before but now you're gonna do it on purpose as a schooling exercise slower slower slower that's right and then you're gonna move her forward in the canter before she breaks nope can't punish her because she's never done this we've never asked her to shorten their strides in the canter it's just a game now you're just seeing if you can keep her connected Arden astride leg half halt halt now lengthen good now shorten shorten the length of your reign so they're above or whether it's good now lengthen good that's that was good she gave you a couple steps that was good good that's it Trudy because she has never shortened and lengthened inner canter that was really good wasn't it what we all do yep those mind brakes are important good now play with it at the walk before you can Tura gehen Chardon the steps and lengthen the steps so she's just acting like a green horse here looking around acting like she's never been here I think she's been here eight times I'm not sure but this is typical she's looking for the rest of her herd and they're not here she's all by yourself with Susan's horses that's it think two steps short or do a couple steps short and then you're gonna lengthen her at the try so you're gonna do a lot of lengthening and shortening now it doesn't have to be two steps it can be four steps whatever you think she can hold that's right now Chardon it shorten steps Frasor now lengthen good now short keep the spring shorten steps that's right keep changing directions and lengthen once you get 'spicy you're going to lengthen her good shorter from the shorten trot is what you're gonna ask her to canter from now you want to think the short trot for the canter so you're gonna start teaching her the canter from that shorter tribe that's alright take your time shorten the canter and lengthen the canter that's alright it's alright she's this is new to her she doesn't know she doesn't know but good good Trudy I like your attitude about what she's doing so now you're just gonna add shortening and lengthening when you feel she needs it that's right what she gets fussy is under forward prazer remember to shorten the steps of the trot before you can turn now good there feel rebalances good yep now you're gonna play with shortening and lengthening good and shorten that's it look at your rebalancing are different in lengthen and come across the ring shorten turn and shorten and lengthen good turn across the ring shorten that's good good good try the other leader do you need to take a walk break that was good it's not that you're all true do you keep forgetting out the nice thing about this is that all writers realize that this is so much harder than it looks the average rider can make it like three minutes maybe on a horse learning how to do this this is the harder direction alright so you're gonna have to really keep her connected you might have to ask for a little bit more on your outside rein but only you'll know at that second in time good Trudy can you believe she can shorten and lengthen at the canter first time ever what a good girl Missy Annie keep the activity behind remember if it's not a seven if you're not doing a seven behind in the dressage test it's gonna be a four and your score so you just get her used to doing that big walk every step now don't worry about it right now that's not your focus she's worried about where her head is right now and I'm like you've got enough to worry about in the canter to not get fussy about the head at this moment that's it that's it take your time slow trot in to Canter's now oh look at the difference in your balance did you feel that did you praise her praise her if she's gonna almost feel like she's going to buck so you're gonna shorten lengthen try to go other places run a 20 meter circle yep shorter lengthen prazer that it's alright but you expect we have to expect you to break she's never shortened in her canter on this lead in her life in fact neither leave right so she doesn't really know what you want good thank from the shore if you have to do a couple trots just remember she's going to canter out of her short trot now and lower to make a lot of mistakes I don't Andy thinks about this stuff she gave me that hook salute good Trudy that's it start a curve shorten the stats but keep your leg on and then lengthen the steps it's alright go back to your slow trot to ask her for a canter again there's nothing wrong with what she's doing especially this is her weaker side take your time slow trot yeah see if you can slow down her steps half halt half halt half halt tender forward good good good Trudy that's alright you didn't know what to do but you're gonna feel like a cowboy at first that's it try it a couple more times and that's probably enough for you today take your time remember slow trot see if you can get her to relax her jaw and pull before you canter notice I said see if you can because she's never cantered out of this slow trot before right so try to supple her before she Cantor's get her back up as what we're doing all right two steps one side two steps the other so this is a big change for Annie she was a green coming from the green horse oh that was nice did you feel how soft that was so slow trot into long-long Cantor's into short Cantor's that's right when you feel they're getting ready to break you're gonna send her forward that's alright doesn't matter this is new to her it doesn't matter trot don't walk don't walk no walking it's always a trot to a canter good slow trot get her more supple so if she breaks gait she's not allowed to come back to a walk supple supple good girl now when you feel her get ready to break that's when you send her forward good right there send her forward and shorten her step supple her supple supple supple supple 2/3 supple send it forward that's all right that's right it's okay well that's great cuz that's how you'll be able to fix it that way until you feel it you can't fix it that was very you're right that was very good what did you like about what she did on the left leg that's all no I know and not only that the rest of my herd isn't here I know so it's true it there well that was very good Trudy | Randi Thompson | UCqeo57jYyK7YJHk40j6Eo9A | 2015-05-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,543 | 8,039 |
dRF0y4bN3dI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRF0y4bN3dI | Getting Scammed At The Arcade | [Music] oh i just realized i've been speaking to a camera that wasn't even recording and i'm going to say all that stuff again but in summary i'm done now finaster i'm completely done so i'm done i'm complete i don't have to do anything more about it it's been a long and hard three weeks of just solid editing and checking off and uploading and downloading and a lot of storage has been used but it's done and it's weird to think that like the amount of stuff we've done this year even with the circumstances it's mental you'll see it and if you go to uh the youtube channel on the ice tv youtube channel you get to check out for yourself and i definitely suggest subscribing to it because there's gonna be even more fun stuff coming up next year like this is any good indicator of what we've done like next year is going to be even better and it's mental to think about it's crazy and you're going to love it it's going to be amazing i can't wait to show you all happy max i get to finally relax a bit on with the next edit uh yeah i'm doing that now so that's fun yeah looks like i'm going out tonight we're not out i'm going out with an old friend [Music] hey sexy this is joe you didn't even want to come at me you just needed the vlog footage no no i was actually just looking for something to do for the vlog today i didn't have exactly didn't have anything so i needed content no i haven't dropped should i accelerate really fast so your camera falls i want to see you try [ __ ] you've done your job right that's a good transition that was a very good transition you know what it would be pretty rude if you didn't just come out and say this really have a look what's inside the bin thanks thanks there's actually an umbrella in there so [ __ ] you umbrellas are useful what is your point there my point is that you know where there's trash there can be treasure you know one man's rubbish is another man the thing is you should have just said that that would have been so such a better comeback all right wait watch video talking talk about come back i just farted and didn't even stay and listen that's not going in the vlog that's not your good friend you might be lost i don't know where we are are you talking to the [ __ ] part yeah i know i did seriously now i'm scared uh should we go inside we're literally the other end of where we're the cost is open fancy your coffee that's half open only open if you're on this five at five you know i'm five for eight i measured myself i didn't ask when did did i ask you no i mean i don't know how you managed to do that that was all the peculiar approach to the course by the champ you missed it it's a good shot it's a good shot you ready for this let's go down here [Music] always doing a bit more than he should i mean just doing a bit too much it's only a youtube video no one's here look look behind him just place an empty where's he trying to make laughs anyway here we go hope he hits the camera he almost hit the camera oh that was oh that went in the middle [Music] because he's a fragile little man with a smaller ego bigger ego sorry almost i'm annoyed i'll take it i'll take oh my god come on oh my god no way no way oh oh my god [Music] what's happened there [Music] | Max Roach | UCNq4xf38sCiGQurHXYAzlIQ | 2021-08-23 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 646 | 3,269 |
orhwfnVEdMM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=orhwfnVEdMM | Girl trip To Cabo went wrong// she went on a girls trip with 135$ MUST WATCH 😳 | this is why our dead ass don't do group trips I don't do girls trips hi guys welcome back to the channel so today's video we are reacting to a viral video of some a girl that went on a girl trip with her friends and then she brought her man that is not her man to the trip to celebrate her friend's birthday and one of her friends had only $135 for the trip and she had a lot to say like she was so pissed that her friend came on a trip with only 135 dollas so we're going to go ahead and listen to what I creators have to say they'll come back and listen to what I have to say okay this is the last video I'm about to make about it because I just see like a little bit of confusion in the comments this girl showed me her bank account it only had $135 in it the day before I tripped to Cabo I already posted that receipt in the video she never gave me my $46 back bro everybody keeps saying like how is she a shripper and she don't got no money she's not a shripper because she call herself Nutella her actual name actually gives grandma like she has a grandma ass first name I'm not going to hold you I saw a lot of people saying oh was it the girl in the green bathing suit on my highlights and my story it was not her the video of you saw me poting in a little group it was not any of those girls in the group did I post them my highlights yes if y'all really want to be nosy enough y'all need to go back and listen to the story time again and put two and two together and really play detective because she's dead in my my highlights for like a quick two seconds not even going to hold you some people were saying like oh your friend knew she shorted you like your friend probably told her like you be the one that be taking up the bill D my friend had no idea if she shorted me the bread because the girl texted me privately while we were at dinner like my friend did not know any like she did not know she shorted me the bread until like two days into the trip and that's when I told her like I sent her screenshots I told her like yo that girl dead ass shorted me money and she's broke like she don't have no bread everybody was saying like oh did she get her phone fixed up to this day this [ __ ] don't got her phone fixed you know why cuz she don't have any money the whole trip to Cabo she did not get her phone fixed my friend end up paying somebody $100 like my home girl pay somebody $100 so somebody can fix her phone they got her phone to turn on and her phone had cracks in the back and they got her [ __ ] to work so I'm pretty sure that girl gave them $100 they would have got her phone to work cuz her phone didn't have any cracks a lot of people saying how did she get home if she didn't have no money well my friend little stinker but picked picked you know picked her up from the airport and she going to ask my home girl like oh is he dropping me home too [ __ ] after everything we done [ __ ] did for you you you want to ride home too so my friend was just like bro you got them out of your own at this point go ask if he could drop you home so she would just say oh can you drop me home and he end up dropping her home but guess what the [ __ ] didn't even say thank you somebody said oh why didn't you fight her why didn't you fight her first of all I never F in my [ __ ] life I'm not fighting somebody that's like 165 PBS I'm 107 soaking wet are you dumb and fighting somebody on my first day of trip I got my hair done I paid for that I paid for my lashes I paid for my nails my bread you think I'm G to fight somebody [ __ ] all my [ __ ] up the day of my first day of the trip you're fried talking about old fighter because like oh she pulled your pulled her underwear down in front of your man my man don't want that [ __ ] like this man has been obsessed with me for the last four years bro we broke up and now we we talking again like come on come on somebody was like oh I would have F her to get my money back [ __ ] if I really wanted my get my money I'm taking to small claims court I'm suing your ass for pain and suffering I got that text message saying you owe me $46 I'm going to take your ass to court I got your first and last name you forgot you told me that [ __ ] while you was drunk stink of butt I want the $46 that you showed me during dinner the money back for my charger you lost the money back for the key card I had to pay for all of that [ __ ] I want all of that [ __ ] and then some people were just like oh what's her boyfriend on the trip like why didn't he give her money her boyfriend was not on the trip that's not what I said she kept trying to use everybody phone to call her boyfriend call her boyfriend and we're like bro you calling your boyfriend so much you so concerned if this boyfriend this man is making sure you're okay tell that man to send you some bread I said tell that man to send you some bread my man said tell that man to send you some bread my friend said tell that man to send you some bread tell that man to send you some bread hello he was so [ __ ] concerned why he ain't send you no money mind you know she did not apologize to my home girl at all about not having bread not no I'm sorry not no I'll pay you back not no nothing all her excuse was not everybody got money like you this is why you don't take [ __ ] out the country and I knew she was kind of [ __ ] slow when we was at dinner and she was just like oh I was like oh there's a allwhite party did you bring a white outfit she was just like no I'm just going to Amazon it when I get there I said said [ __ ] what are you talking about you're going to Amazon it to Mexico she said yeah I got Prime i'm like [ __ ] are you fried because you only drank half your drink I'm confused she was like oh yeah I did it before you Amazon some [ __ ] to Mexico before then 20 minutes into the conversation she was just like yeah she never really been out the country all she been to for real is Jamaica and Canada then how the [ __ ] did you Amazon [ __ ] some how you Amazon some [ __ ] to [ __ ] Mexico you [ __ ] liar and then other people was saying like oh like is my home girl and her still friends unfortunately but like I said not my friend not my problem I hope my home girl post her story time so like the algorithm could put two and two together and when she does y'all all just tell her to cut that [ __ ] off because like she's not listening to me at the end of the day like everybody is not like the same like me like I it it doesn't take a lot for me to want to cut you the [ __ ] off I don't like being played it with in my face at all none my other friend she's a very understanding person and she's more of like I don't know like she's very understanding but she's also one of those girls that's going to tell you like well girl like come on bro like don't do that [ __ ] again but I feel like with somebody like that girl that we [ __ ] brought she doesn't need no girl come on don't do that again she needs to get cut the [ __ ] off because like I said she didn't think about how you felt for her to come to your birthday trip with no bread so don't [ __ ] sit here and think about her [ __ ] feelings let that [ __ ] the [ __ ] go there's so much other genuine people out in this world do not waste your time hanging with a bimbo I blocked that girl on everything before I even [ __ ] got back to the states she wasn't going to [ __ ] notice anyway cuz she don't got a [ __ ] phone but with the amount of shares I've been seeing I'm pretty sure this [ __ ] going to end up on somebody Twitter Instagram whatever the [ __ ] and she's going to [ __ ] see it she's going to know somebody trust me she going to know somebody and everybody like oh you not scared you not scared I don't give a [ __ ] okay cuz there's nothing I said I [ __ ] lied about cuz I had the receipts for [ __ ] everything in my video and I asked my home girl if I could post a situation I told her like I'm not even like trying to be on no funny [ __ ] but this is a crazy ass story and she agreed and she watched the videos and she laughed about it and if you now finding my [ __ ] page just know I'm queen of I said what the [ __ ] I said I'm not taking [ __ ] back I stand on [ __ ] business and I was never scared another never cared never did I say what the [ __ ] I want to say it is what it is if you don't want me to talk about you don't do no dumb [ __ ] around me I wouldn't have to talk about you and beli we call [ __ ] like her chicken heads that I have no sense whatsoever so never care to argue with you [ __ ] out of here are you dumb I was just like if I'm going to go I'm not going to go if she invites just her so money hungry and materialistic nowadays nobody's focused on the fact that this girl ruined her friend's birthday in the same breath how are you mad that you have to help your home girl while she's throwing up on her birthday I just I just listen to the story cuz I actually the drama's actually been pretty freaking annoying on my for you page so I've been skipping every single video but it came up so much I decided to just watch it and the whole world is just eating this girl story up like she's saying something girl I would have fought you too for my birthday the [ __ ] you got the nerve to come on my birthday trip with your man who's not your man then don't even celebrate my birthday with me because you're mad over somebody else who shorted you money when you could have said that from jump and just not had brought all that angry animosity on the birthday trip in the first place you really should just not have went and you on here trying to bash a girl for not having money obviously you didn't have the common decency to just be a friend and be there for your friend even though you were annoyed for her birthday and they talk about before y'all get on me I asked her if he could come that's not the point you should have never asked he should have never been there it doesn't matter if he was the one who picked her up out the swimming pool and as girls we figure that out you're trying to make a valid point onto why he was there or if he wasn't there she would have been in the pool of drowning what so you couldn't concer up no strength to pull your friend out of the pool both of y'all are weird ass friends and I would have dropped both of y'all the [ __ ] all right I'm going to tell you my part of the story because since yall asking y asking asking and I have worked in like a few hours so let me just do this fast I just got out the shower so it was my birthday trip right we planned this about December we paid in January right so I'll let everyone know have funds like have funds we pay for real already in January I'll pay for it early so just because you can have extra funds you pay for it too early my birthday is March 15th so the trip the dinner come right before you went to the flight I didn't know that Nutella ain't have no money I honestly didn't know that you feel me I didn't know I didn't know she even shed Kalia so I'm finding that out days later so I'm thinking everything going fine I'm paying for Uber and stuff like that because I just don't be woring about stuff like that so now it just I honestly didn't D my birthday I honestly want to do it over like I honestly did not D my birthday y'all I ain't going to lie like I was so upset because it's like I came out here for a good time and it's like I felt like I was just in the middle of everybody like cuz I wanted to be C with everybody I don't want nobody feel no way like and I'm a I'm a good person so was like I didn't want to treat her no different types of way because she is a cool person though like I didn't want to treat her wrong but she don't have money because it was a point I was there in life you feel me everyone going to get there you know they time to shine so I didn't want to like judge so it was like I was there at a point so I'm like all right you know cool but it was like at some point I was like I'm not enjoying my birthday cuz I really can't do what I want to do because you don't you don't have the funds you understand and it was like H now what I do do I leave her room I don't want to Kia is having F me out doing her thing I want to have fun too but it's I don't want to leave her because at the end of day we're in the same room it was just too much like I was paying for Cals it was just like I was just so drin cuz it was like am I is it like is this my birthday or no like it's it's not even my birthday like and then when Kalia did not want to um and then when Kalia did not want to sit here and go up to my boat party I was upset because it's like girl it's my birthday and you know already the situation we going through like just comes to my birthday um boat ride and I want to paint an extra 150 because K was not at the boat ride and she booked it off her phone so I was just so like upset and drained like I literally wanted to go home because this was my first girl trip and I wanted it to go a certain way and it did not go as plan like I did not know my girlship was going to be how everybody else be talking about it on internet and I I didn't think I was going to experience that for real like I thought it was just a cat but I actually experienced it in real life and I was just like y'all just want to go home like I barely ate going to trip y'all literally I ate breakfast and that's it like I was just so drained I was just so tired I just wanted to have fun I did not eat luckily I found like I I v I met some people and we want up going to Club they want up getting bottles with me like men you know met a group of men for me like you know what you know what I mean and like it was just like I was just so dream like I just did not enjoy my birthday and I honestly want to do it all again I just felt like I was just so drained I didn't want to make her feel left out and CLE I didn't want her to feel a certain way so I'm just trying to be C with both them and they both not talk to each other so was like now I'm in the middle stuck what do I do like it's like C saying this she saying this K being disant because of her and it's like all right what the [ __ ] like it was just so much I was just I was so over it and it was just like I was just drink cuz it's like I'm H what if I didn't have the money that was that was my main thing like what if I didn't have the money so I had to tole her at the side like yo bro you cannot do this no more like I had to talk with her one to one because it's like at the end of the day I know people go to stuff but it's like you should always have at least 600 at least come up with 600 700 at least like at least I don't care what you got you better stack all them little chump chain to the side do you got to do at least like it was like bro come on bro and I was like you have to call somebody like we need money bro I'm not I'm not like it's like come on I have money for myself but at the end day I have to go home and pay bills like I have my own crib I have to pay bills I have to pay this credit called this that like I have stuff I have to do so it was like I can't be you understand like just splurging splurging I still got to go home and like you feel me like I didn't mind money is never issue but it's like all right we knew we was going on a trip so I was like so y'all honestly but say my trip was probably like a five out of 10 I had fun at the bull rod though my phone was broke I had got my phone fixed because my phone broke at the pool party day one I got my phone fixed so my phone was the only phone surviving like literally my phone and literally when I got my phone back when from the Mexican store in Mexico my phone turned on right but I had no service out of nowhere my phone is on so it's like what TR I dis to my phone so I literally had to get a whole new phone today clear screen everything cuz if yall look at my other videos it was like screen look funny my phone was done so we was literally surviving off my phone y'all she had no phone phone blinked out nothing so my phone was the only phone my phone I was just so over it y'all I was still trying to endure my time cuz I was like right I'm not going to let that ruin it but that had a part to wide and enjoy everything understand then it was like Kalia was being distant so she was doing her own thing and it's like I'm I'm stuck I feel like I was stuck in the middle cuz it's like what do I really do right now like I don't it's like if Kalia was so well off in her finances why do you care that girl owed you $40 and if you were so well off in your finances why do you care that your friend was paying for nut Tellis activities yes do not come to Cabo with $135 yes but regardless of that why you pocket watching your friends if the birthday girl wanted the girl to enjoy the trip as well and she decided she is going to pay for those excursions why do they bother you so much that's between them at the end of the day that had nothing to do with you like to me this is given is deeper than $40 on honestly speaking is given there's a way deeper issue than what khier is telling us right now another thing I also find it weird is the fact that the girl that brought the story time the Kalia girl said that this Nutella girl um slept with somebody for $100 like why are you telling your friends business like this is not something that you do what is get Cod honestly where is get Cod so if I went to do something I'm broke I went to do something and you know about it the fact that now me and you are not in the same situation or like we not in the same we are not friend group or we not friends again means that you have to bring out my business out and they start telling people you people need to really really stay put and then think about yourself you should have calculated and they know that I'm not going to get money for this trip I can pay for everything but I don't have money to feed myself once I get there and that's very very important even if you can buy you take it if you don't have like it's okay to miss out on these things it's okay it's not every trip that you're even supposed to go you get so if you went on a trip with no money you just only bought your ticket who are you expecting to like feed you once you get there or you could have just thought the birthday girl and now I feel like you guys have ruined your relationship mean everybody's are wrong because everybody came out and just their dirty lenss and then start telling everybody's business to strangers now telling us that we shouldn't go bash the person you know the internet is going to do what the internet does like that's what it does it's going to find her even though she's not in social media they will find somebody that knows her connect go to Facebook Chat and then they will find this girl and then bash her all because you went on a vacation broke now for me I'm never going to go on a vacation with people that I don't trust that's one first thing that you're supposed to do people that you don't trust people that you feel like when I'm in need they not going to help me that's the first thing that we all have to put put in our mind that we have to never do it because if you do that these are the things that you're going to like result these are the things so everybody should be careful out there choose nice groups choose people that are going to have your back have a village and then select friends carefully these are not family members that you cannot select friends you can select and cut everybody off if they are not good for you my whole thing with this Cabo story that went viral like yes Nutella should have never left the country with no money but why the [ __ ] did this even hit Tik Tock and then it's like um Kalia the original story poster I believe that's how you say her name um she had like made a video like saying oh I don't want you guys to like go say anything to her to bash or whatever something like that but it's like okay so then what did you want what did you want the outcome of this story to be like I don't get that and then also in one of the parts for the story time she mentions that you can find Nella in her story highlights on Instagram so like you didn't want them to say anything to her or to bash her but you literally told people where they could go find what she looks like why would they need to know what she looks like if they're not going to bash her also you don't want anyone to bash her but your whole story time the whole 30 minute episode that you posted was you bashing her what did you think the comments were going to do if you're bashing her what did you want them to be like no she's not in the wrong no you wanted them to bash her too and then the birthday girl jumped in and I think the only reason she jumped in is because she she saw that Kalia went viral so she was like yeah let me hop in on that and let me go viral too and now y'all both are bashing Nella and it's just like what do y'all expect the outcome of this to be besides a bunch of random strangers going to bash Nutella when they find her accounts which I'm pretty sure they have already done is she in the wrong for leaving the country with no money absolutely I agree with that a th% does she deserve to be bashed by thousands hundreds of thousands millions of strangers because of it no know I think everybody in this situation is a terrible person and somehow Nutella has come out on top of all of you simply because the only thing she did wrong was leave the country with no money whereas you guys have then decided to come on the internet to millions of people to bash her for not having any money and that just makes you a thousand times worse because now strangers are now bashing her for it anyways everyone's a bad person I really don't like this story pack it up thank you y'all can feel how y'all want to feel Kalia what you're not going to do is get on this app and gasl me into thinking that Ella is not in the wrong that girl went out of the country with 135 USD to her name y'all talking about some oh well she probably didn't expect to leave the resort not everybody makes that type of money not everybody brings that type of money stay home stay home every time traveling get brought up in the conversation y'all act like staying home is never an option you don't need to go nowhere if you don't have no money to your name what you need to do is go to work and clock the hell in I thought I'm thinking it's common sense I'm thinking this is common sense and and and and and actually did she really even have $135 because Kalia said that she sent her $135 for the dinner and owed her $46 so it sounds to me if I math is math correctly that you went out of town with Zar to your name and you actually owed somebody $46 so you was in the red $46 out of the country out of the country and y'all justifying that you can't even go up the street with me with no money in your pocket I promise you can't so going out of the country we can't even go to the next city over if you ain't got no money I don't care if you got to go outside and pick up cans and trade them hoes in you better have some money in your pocket or you not going nowhere with me y'all can call Kalia bully all yall want say her boyfriend shouldn't have been there I don't care nothing about that two things can be true at the same time Kalia can be a bully if you feel like she's being a bully but also Nutella is a irresponsible Freel load nult because it gives that she never intended on spending money when she got there in the first place because why are you coming out of the country with no money but you planning the house and fun on who dime exactly on who dime I don't care if the friend agreed to pay for a nella's whole trip and give her all expense paid free trip to coo I don't care nothing about that as an adult a grown adult I was always taught you should never feel comfortable going anywhere without any money I don't even go on a date with a man if I don't have enough money to cover the bill if he can't you can't get me to go nowhere without my own money what I want to know is that did they like plan on going on the trip together or they just met at that couple because the story time is like a little bit of pieces pieces everybody is saying this everybody is saying that and then I I feel like the girl that made the story time was wrong in the first place making those Tik Tok I know right now everything have to be on Tik Tok if anything is happening to you you have to be on Tik Tok I saw a video of a man that her daughter just came out of an accident and he had to make a Tik Tok before taking the doctor to the hospital so I get it that everything is content everything is content I get that part but then you have no loyalty to this girl or what this is these are the type of friends that you don't have to go anywhere with so first of you went on a trip with somebody that your gut was telling you that you're not supposed to go on the trip with so if your gut is telling you not to go on the girls trip why are you going on the first place and second why are you bringing a man that's not your man to the trip and now you are ruining everything exposing everything being the all tell person you could have just said your part not mention anybody's name and then keep it moving but here the type of friends that we need to be careful of we really need to be careful we don't have to trust anybody like to the extent of going into another country and then the thing I I feel like the girl that didn't have the money was also wrong like she was wrong I'm not going to say she was not wrong she was absolutely wrong because how are you coming on a trip a trip outside your country not outside your town outside the country with only 100 or 135 do with you are you not going to eat are you not going to drink are you not going to go on TOs and all those things are you expecting the people that are going on the trip with you to pay for your things this is not free handout so one thing I'll say is that if you know your money you're not going to be able to afford all these things don't don't go where the crowd is this is the thing social media have turned us into some robot or some people that I don't get like I'm sure she went on a trp for Content I don't know whether the girl is a content creator I know she's have about 36,000 followers so I don't know whether she make content or what I didn't really check her page that well so I don't know whether she's a content creator but then that's the thing we've made social media into our whole life to the extent that everything that happened outside our life like we don't have real life everything that happen inside our life you have to bring it on the internet like why the hell are you going on a trip that you know your money is not up to and then you're going and then the girls also are so stingy people that I don't trust them these are the type of friends you really need to stay away from because they're not going to have your back when things are wrong and they're going to humiliate you they're going to embarrass you and then they're not going to have your back like they will never stand beside you when things are done and then I feel like the girl that didn't have the money should have also come up front and say Hey listen I'm short on stuffs or borrow me this borrow me that then I'll pay you that's the thing if you know your budget it's not up to don't do things that is going to make you broke broke just because you want to impress people so that's all I have for you guys today these are the type of friends that I will advise you to stay away from so let me know what you think of this video down below and as always you can leave your opinions and your opinions only be respectful in the comment section and then let me know what you think is the girl wrong for bringing the story on Tik Tok the other girl that didn't have the money was also wrong for going on a trip without money or she was wrong for not giving the girl back here for I will see you guys in the next Vlog bye | Exclusive Gabril | UCUliinv1HEUMVF97P_8JRIw | 2024-04-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 5,819 | 28,704 |
ZwOJlerabV4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwOJlerabV4 | Let's Play Left 4 Dead: Episode 10 (Death Toll, The Church) | whoa get back here nigg jig good job Adam good job that ain't my fault reaction like a cat it actually is your fault that a my fault the best down take 10 bullets kill something what's in here a zombie Capel Capel bomb what witch wit that's a different witch from yeah probably of the same coven of as the other W I don't know if you can crown and left Dead one hey man Hur it's where you run up to witch and you can you can kill the witch really quickly if you with a shotgun okay like before it even stand an auto shoty oh jeez you were firing there for some reason I didn't even shoot anything it's not my fault I didn't do anything stuck to the ceiling okay never mind don't even know where you are Chris I don't know where you are in the right place you're in the wrong place actually well the guy's doing the job you are not really doing I'm just sort of following you around there a second pistol here Adam I don't need a second pistol totally two two more guns makes another one more gun makes all the difference oh a nice little cubicle oh only if you only if you spam your scroll wheel so it makes this annoying sound hell are you doing Francis shooting doesn't look like I'm doing there's a boomer not anymore there is reloading reloading good thing I sniped him that is like right there on the wall she's on the wall huh never seen that very out of the way double pistols yeah now I can out watch out Maniac Mansion over here fire in theole is that really necessary NOP oh well normal difficulty they're they're they're extras so oh might as well then reloading ni fantastic home that Hunter tried not so far but in the end really didn't even matter I agree I'm not really sure what you said I'm just going to hide in the closet you guys you go on ahead I'll just camp out right here oh jeez am here am C eater yeah what I say reloading I'm just going to hospital wonder if I can stay in here and not die I think he can get in here oh no I oh the tank hit the rock or hit the smoker free me the best ever stop it tank why do tanks always go after me because they hate cuz they have to root out the weakest one first wouldn't it be the strongest one think the weakest one is me now oh yeah wait yeah I forgot sorry yeah Chris is stop putting me down man yeah there's ammo there don't shoot the fire the fire cans okay can of fire until we there's multiple some fire there multiple places you can camp but the best one is in the corner until I'm sure you're immune okay son we're immune we tired and there's in did you start it or cut out the ship let us not infected not infected ding oh no ding keep those in the corner what a nice person keep those don't move them you fool what did you do with the what are you doing Delta I'm stealing your death from stand in the fire oh Jesus and you're burning me why did you shove that that was so bad ah oh okay and then we in there and I'm dying cool you know fire makes everything better fire spread moreis it closes your wounds no actually really well I guess it is good for your health um tastes good it tastes good and it's good for you hey you know maybe L is an anti-rt you knowz he seem beand fire maybe he's a super witch oh man so you have to kill like the super devil that's totally oh all right let's go oh we open oh and open it boow he's dead good job team in we don't want witches in here | Dog In Yard | UC5R4CVmi9-mFz8pA1bOS1Ug | 2013-04-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 681 | 3,356 |
FK3Ewp3Qxz0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FK3Ewp3Qxz0 | Sunbathing and BTS outdoor Photo shoot | oh wow what a day it is it is a hot one in offense it's really hot [Music] with every sandwich it says 97 degrees right now yeah a scorcher sport you right you know when you feel that breeze come through the they care for the grass which blueprint is this light breeze like a breeze can't feel rude so we're gonna become reality stores so this is so please subscribe YouTube channel Gyrich co-producer to search everything we're trying to get on a reality show so if you subscribe to our channel you can just find out all the fun stuff we're doing as we as our journey to get on a reality show but we have a reality show that's a juried show so there's like a reality show to get on the reality show yeah and what is that what do we do on our show well we do a lot of music we like to run around Vegas we care a lot about organics and health and we talked about not chicken caffeine benefits magic caffeine or alcohol benefits of smoking read for big stoners and we love making art in music and sharing that with people we love putting stuff up to our website cherish calm do a lot on Twitter would you say your your risk what would you say your toleration for risky is high or low hey and I'm scared to do anything yeah we just love living life here in Las Vegas we've been here for about seven years I think six years ago back in those six or seven years how long we've been apart we've only been apart for thirty days and that what I mean 30 hours 30 hours so yeah because it's kind of very important if I may be unique part about us living apart for 30 hours so that was done by choices because we had to be yeah sorry now 30 days while I've been apart for thirty hours over in seven years cool well that's it and then wrapped up thanks it wolf watching please subscribe your waffle day I know that live scene that'd be pretty crazy to want to go to that let's take the pool right now because there's only be like five people there and you'd have the whole section to yourself every I mean every employee be like at your beck and call I mean some people I'm sure like the Panama people probably love that yeah but I know for us we'd be like being served like that would be like what okay this is better than [ __ ] tanning bed out here you guys if you guys are going to pain beds just go lay out on your lawn and babe just go out in line be sure to beat the grass and you know that's my big thing yesterday and what did some photos here in a minute it's really beautiful that breeze right Jerry smart no now breathe in it and everything that grass and sending me messages just like to the dog you don't know what they're saying but your brain that voodoo should be a man those dudes should be in a band like if they're in a band maybe really would be here and everything yeah we make everything look fool wrap it up Thanks perfect for watching it really awesome now 97 degrees it sure feels hotter than that come on let's go in six minutes just long enough can you believe that [Music] [Applause] [Music] | Jedi Rich, Creative Producer | UCdRvfq8cZki-JWixEAvpMBA | 2020-06-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 596 | 3,018 |
YQyJjecX1Qs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQyJjecX1Qs | Part1|Ukrainian Troops: Has Western Training & Billions in Aid Transformed Them? | however the results have been mixed with Ukrainian troops managing to retake only a few Villages so far and failing to achieve the kind of sweeping gains see in the cities of Pearson and kharkiv last fall the change in tactics has raised questions about the quality of the training received from the west and the effectiveness of the tens of billions of dollars worth of weapons provided including nearly 44 billion dollars from the Biden Administration it is unclear whether this investment has successfully transformed the Ukrainian military into a North Atlantic Treaty organization's standard fighting force for complete updates on Ukrainian military tactics and Western Aid visit our Channel support us by liking and subscribing for more in-depth content | NewsBytesAI | UClboR9hn3V_RCf1QhSBV9Tg | 2023-08-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 121 | 759 |
ddHhMB2aYVQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ddHhMB2aYVQ | HOW TO GET MY BASEBALL CARDS GRADED BY PSA? | PSA professional sports authenticator is considered the gold standard for grading and authenticating trading cards including baseball cards getting cards professionally graded can increase their value especially for valuable vintage cards however the PSA grading process does require some planning and preparation the first step is to choose which cards you want to submit to PSA for grading ensure the cards are in the best possible condition with no creasing water damage or other flaws PSA has strict grading standards so cards need to be in near mint condition or better to receive a grade of eight N9 or 10 which adds the most value carefully inspect each card under good lighting before submitting once you've selected the cards you'll need to register for a PSA account on their website to psacard.com this allows you to track the status of your submissions make make sure to verify your identity and check for any account restrictions like submission limits that may apply to your collecting level next is preparing the actual submission PSA has guidelines on how cards must be packaged and labeled for grading cards should be placed in rigid top loaders or other approved holders to prevent bending or damage during Transit write your PSA member number on the top loader with a sharpie air tily seal the cards between cardboard or in a security envelope for standard Grading Services you can submit up to 50 cards together with no need to break them into separate orders over 50 cards and it's best to split into multiple batches to avoid longer wait times when submitting do not use paper clips Staples or any loose inserts as these can damage cards during machine sorting once packaged correctly you'll go to the PSA website and create a physical subm submission using your member account during submission setup provide your contact details and desired turnaround service level economy takes months while Express can take just a few weeks but costs more per card pay for the order using a credit card then send your sealed submission package to the PSA grading Center using a track method like USBS Priority Mail include a printed copy of the confirmation order details for processing now it's time to wait as PSA authenticates and grades your cards you can monitor progress on the website once complete graded cards will be returned securely in a new holder displaying the numerical grade along with any special designations unsuccessful grades may also be returned with details and that covers the basic process for getting valuable baseball cards authenticated and graded by the experts at PSA let me know if any part of the process needs more explanation | Collecting Baseball Cards | UCAwogl-j-kThGeoLPztxlsQ | 2023-12-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 448 | 2,670 |
5X00E_P-pPg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5X00E_P-pPg | Mumbai Court Acquits TVF founder Arunabh Kumar in Sexual harassment Case | greetings everyone manupatra brings to you the news highlights of 29th December 2022. the Jammu and Kashmir and ladakh high court while setting aside an order directing anti-corruption Bureau to inquire how litigant managed to get hold of the tension order prior to its execution has observed that documents issued by a public servant are supposed to be in a public domain the allahabad high court has observed that removing dead body from the scene of the murder to another place does not come within the Ambit of section 201 of the Indian Penal Code as the removal does not cause The Disappearance of evidence of the commission of the murder other news highlights in the country a Mumbai court has acquitted arunab Kumar the founder of the viral fever in a sexual harassment case registered against him in 2017 citing that no concrete evidence was produced by the prosecution news allies from the high courts the Calcutta High Court while observing that during re-evaluation of bidder's Eligibility tendering Authority must preserve fairness of the process and satisfy the Benchmark of probity and held that tendering Authority cannot simply reiterate its earlier the nationally consumer dispute wrestle commission has held that the land owner is jointly and severely liable for any compensation along with the developer for deficiency in service this concludes the news for today thank you so much | Manupatra | UCLBQi6zuJW8xPl6Q9vpunAQ | 2022-12-29 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 230 | 1,400 |
E8J9WzUNUBo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E8J9WzUNUBo | 7/16 Frank Solich, Nebraska new AD, Horns down, Richard Sherman, NFL top 10 QBs?, Dwayne Haskins | are you kidding me winning cures everything now for your hosts gary and chris [Music] welcome in winning cures everything this is the friday july 16th edition of the podcast i'm gary and we have got chris on the phone today so chris is uh making a little drive around town doing his thing so not uh not too shabby chris everything going well in your world yeah had to uh take a little half day taking the dog to the vet to get his uh get his leg checked out yeah yeah you uh you've been dealing with the leg there for what about a is a year now well no not that long but it's been they've been hurt for a while we have the first surgery went fine second surgery is done and we thought he was healing okay but he's still lifting real bad so don't know if it's the knee don't know if it's the hip come up at the foot but okay so this isn't just anyway this isn't just a checkup on on what has already been done this is something new then well it is a it is a follow-up appointment on what all has been done but the fact that he's still living real bad on it i'm a little a little worried i'm sure they're gonna hit me in the pockets pretty good but oh probably so probably we just had to get blood work done on uh on our dog last week so just all kind of mess going on with these animals man that maybe maybe they are just now getting the uh uh the anxiety from all the coveted stuff like everybody's going back to work and they're like wait wait hold up like where'd everybody go like that's just a guess just a guess all right uh we got some sports topics to discuss and today it is literally all football i'm i'm pretty excited about that so let's uh let's dive in we're going to start with some college football we'll run through the college and then we'll hit on some of the big nfl topics that have popped up but we will start off with frank solich retiring from utah utah ohio god bless america the ohio bobcats he was the coach there for 16 seasons uh won a mac coach of the year award back in i think like 2013 uh if i'm not mistaken um he has won the mac east four times never won the conference but uh just another reminder of of how poorly he was treated when he was at nebraska uh but you know hindsight is 20 20 he was replacing tom osborne you hate to be the guy that replaces the legend because the expectations are all out of whack uh he he did the smart thing man like when he came back to coaching he went to ohio a place that would actually appreciate a guy and not expect to win you know eight nine ten ball games every year uh i mean they made 10 bowl games in 12 seasons at one point like he he did a fantastic job at ohio and this is a a health related thing normally you don't see coaches resigning in late july right before fall camp starts but you know what you and i were both big fans of his uh give me your thoughts on on him retiring yeah i hate to see it we had high expectations for ohio this year and we both thought they could compete for the back and he might actually finally get that uh that monkey offers back and and win one of these jokers you know um maybe the senior team will uh rally around him and uh and do something special but uh but no i mean he he had a hell of a career this is you know we talk about this all the time when guys get fired from big boy jobs and then they go to the lower level and they start succeeding and everybody starts thinking well it's only a matter of time before they leave again and i don't think that that's just always the case and frank so which is a great you know example of you know sometimes money don't always buy happiness all these guys live in big houses are paid well and and you know you don't have to be at the biggest school in the world to really enjoy your job and uh to you know be treated well you get to you know i'm sure these smaller schools don't deal with the boosters the way that the big schools do they don't deal obviously with the media the way the big schools do you get to do the parts you love so much more and you don't have to deal with you know most of the parts that you hate um no he's and uh you know he was just a ball coach man like that's that's what he wanted to do he just wanted to coach ball he didn't worry so much about recruiting and all that like he'd go find him uh you know a three-star quarterback with some upside and he'd develop him up and you know it once every four years they won the mac east and they really had a team and whatnot and that's that's exactly what you're looking for you're looking to develop kids and do something other than uh try and find you know nfl guys and whatever he just wanted to coach ball and he found somewhere that would appreciate him for for just fielding a competent team uh every season and and he did a great job so at nebraska by the way you knew they were oh go ahead yeah joey you knew they were never going to be in the cellar yeah you knew they were never going to be in the tank with frank at the hell exactly they were they were always something at nebraska he was there for six seasons he had three ten win campaigns won a big 12 championship in 1999 and he went 58 and 19 in six seasons man he was the he was constantly i mean it's crazy looking at that compared to what scott frost is doing now is mind-boggling like that it's so different so different when you look back at now the most recent success that they've had the like when you look back god this is even almost 10 years ago however long ago it was both bellini bubolini won nine games a year every year at nebraska oh yeah and they they fired the out of him they ran him out now part of pellini's problem what like solitch was always likable pellini was pelini was crazy man and a lot of people in that office didn't like working with him and and i can understand that but uh no he's he's a very very chippy guy he's a very unlikable person nobody's saying that but they would they would i think they'd take an with nine wins right now over what they got oh you're a hundred percent right about that because they're struggling to make bowl games well that's it that actually brings us up to uh to the next topic so uh one you know congratulations to coach solich on a fantastic career and whatnot um and best of luck in retirement hopefully his health issue you know clears up and he can live many many more wonderful years on this earth getting to enjoy not having to go through the stress of you know recruiting in camp and all that kind of mess so with that said we'll move over to nebraska and trev alberts is the new athletic director now this was hinted at for quite a while after bill moos retired or or was shown the door you know they called it a retirement and instead they paid him three million dollars to go away so you know take for that what you will um but trev alberts you know former all-american linebacker at nebraska he is the former athletic director at new orleans um he is the new guy at nebraska and i think that this if nothing else takes a little bit of the pressure off of scott frost to have to win this season because this is like he's a nebraska dude like this is the the proof that the good old boy network is still alive and well there are still programs out there that feel like they have to hire somebody that has been at that school before that understands what's going on and i think it is a terrible decision but you know i've been proven wrong before uh i don't know that i will this time but i don't know even what to think about this what uh what do you think i think i think nebraska is a long way away from being good i think they're a long way away from being competitive in football and uh and that's the sport that matters yeah so um you know i i don't i don't know that the athletic director is going to help that to bring in another nebraska guy doesn't help you see the problem any differently than everybody else already sees it it tells you i believe that boosters run that program and uh and and you know they're all real proud of their school and they've got great fans it's just amazing to me that they would rather have one of their own than have somebody who can win yeah no you're you're right about that uh by the way let me clear something up i wrote down uno it's not new orleans it's nebraska omaha i knew that i don't know what i was thinking but either way that's that's where he was at before so he's he's always been in nebraska um he has vowed that he is not going to micromanage the football program he said he's going to focus on big picture concerns in the department he said i want to be helpful i will not call a play i don't tell coaches who to recruit etc um you know i i think like he's he's passionate about nebraska obviously he's somebody that wants to come in and do something good uh for that school because you know obviously he's from there that's where he went to school that's his that's his school but the same thing could be said about scott frost so you know constantly hiring from within i don't know i say within somebody that that has been inside the program i think that that really limits your ability to hire the best people i i just don't understand why why colleges continue to do this thing well it's it's not just that it it's you don't get to see the problem from any other perspective than the same perspective that you've been looking at the problem from for a long time okay somebody has to come in there with fresh eyes and see how they've been doing things and then give them honest assessments of this is not working so we need to do things differently but if you bring somebody in who's already married into the way nebraska does things this just tells them we don't want to change anything we do we just want different results yes and that's that is absolutely nonsensical it's insanity to continue to do the same things over and over again it's like well if we just tweak a couple of things if we bring in you know it's i don't understand it you know i i guess no i i mean i can't i can't imagine i can't imagine that because it would be the exact same everywhere right like i would venture to say that you an alabama fan see all of the pros and cons the strengths and weaknesses of alabama that almost every alabama fan sees because you only see it from your perspective i agree and see all of the problems lsu has that most all fans of lsu see because we see it from within our own uh fan base within our own biases you you really need an outsider's perspective badly badly yes very much so uh and yet we're not gonna get one at nebraska for quite some time he is gonna be there for uh for quite a while he was a a broadcaster spent several years at espn back in uh i think it was like the mid 2000s and this was a guy that actually made mark may sound incredibly intelligent uh so you know it's it's not that they're not but uh you know mark may is is not broadcasting anymore he was kind of run out of there uh everybody's made jokes about mark may online forever and trev alberts was the the worst at the broadcasting part of that than uh than the other one so you know i'm i'm curious uh how this is going to go uh you know i part of me can understand a little bit you know they had tom osborne as the 80 for a little bit and then bill moos took over um you know they've had four straight losing seasons they are not used to that there if they want to go back to the way things were that's cool but when things were the way they were they were not in the big ten so we'll see we'll see what happens uh moving on to the big 12. did you see this today about the big 12 officiating cruise cutting down on celebrations and taunting have you have you seen that so i saw the taunting thing is this the horns down it is well it's not just horns down but that's what it's basically that's basically what it's about um so they are they're cracking down we're going to agree that's that's the reason this rule was written right somebody got their feelings hurt yes so that that's what i was actually going to bring up it shocks me how much uh people are surprised at the fact that texas is uh has so many friends in the conference uh i guess the conference office right like that texas is the big 12. like that's all it's always been they always get the favorable spots the favorable uh ever it calls everything that's what texas gets because they have four always and ever run the big 12. they decide who gets in who doesn't all that kind of stuff now they haven't been good enough to be able to stop oklahoma from doing whatever they want but the horns down thing this cracks me up like they're saying that all right so so the quote from greg burks it said it seems every year we talk about unsportsmanlike conduct it's always an area that needs to be addressed and what we're really going to be focusing on this year is taunting an opponent he said we're not ever going to allow players to taunt an opponent we have worked really hard on celebration issues we tell players to find a teammate to celebrate with it's not about you it's about the team i think we're doing a pretty good job in that area but we are not going to allow a player to stand over another player and point in that player's face or humiliate another opponent so they start talking about the horns down thing and he said let me put it this way he said if you do horns down to a texas player as an opponent that's that's probably going to be a penalty if you turn to your crowd and do a horns down you're not taunting an individual or an opponent so it probably won't be a foul he said please no it probably won't be a foul yeah he said please note that i said probably we have to consider intent and we have to consider situation so those judgments i will leave to our individual officials uh this is you're talking hand gestures here you're talking hand gestures and i'm not talking about the middle finger or grabbing your crotch okay yes we're talking about they do a little cutesy thing with their fingers and you do that same cutesy thing you just turn it upside down and and we're gonna get a 15-yard personal foul apparently so that's that's the same as targeting by the way that's the same punishment outside of the kid doesn't get kicked out of the game as targeting but if he does it twice he is kicked out of the game wow it's bananas it is absolutely so thin man they are so thin skinned just the biggest bunch of babies i've ever seen in my life and this is why they can't be good at anything okay has nothing to do with the coaching has nothing to do with talent it is it is the people that run that thing have their priorities so jacked up that that they care about this stuff right here they get their feelings hurt about this stuff right here yes now here's the thing if if your team is really really good you are never going to worry about whether an opponent does horns down because if they do horns down and you're going undefeated they're going to look like idiots like that's all it is so i i don't understand why texas worries so much about this stupid horns down thing like make the other team shut up give them a reason to not do it it's very simple but uh but this surprised me today with the amount of media and and the amount of people online that don't get it gary i hope that when they play when they open up with uh with louisiana and when they play arkansas and they have non big 12 officials officiating that game listen this is not an ncaa rule it's a big 12 rule and i hope those teams every time they do something good i hope they throw the horns down i hope they do it right in their face and i just want to watch them cry and whine about it because this ain't a college rule this is not the rule that everybody in the country is playing behind this is uh your conference is doing this they created a rule especially for you yes yes and it is absolutely ridiculous uh they they talked about a lot of other things uh you know oklahoma state does the um no no not the gun uh the the video board with like yellow lines right behind the field goal posts um okay so they you know how they would do that to kind of i guess confuse the kicker have you have you seen that you know what i'm talking about yeah i know i'm sure yeah okay yeah so uh that is uh is going to be uh an example of unsportsmanlike conduct going forward so they cannot do that anymore so there's there's a bunch of things that actually doesn't that actually doesn't bother me that's something that that i'm not a huge fan of is strategically placing your you know your big screen video board behind your thing and then using that to try to you know just think about if we did that in basketball you know and we're like we're going to be willing to give up a section of the student section to put a video screen there and we're just going to throw like crazy wave designs to where you can't you know shoot a free throw yeah you're actually affecting they're actually affecting somebody in the game and nobody outside of the field of play should be able to do that but turning the horns down or you got this little cutesy hand signal and and you know you turn the horns down for it like come on that's such a this is a baby thing to do when tcu plays place houston you know houston does the shocker to make their little little hu with their fingers yep like like if you were to turn that down we'll teach you get a 15-yard penalty is it the same thing or just just to protect texas i'm i'm going to guess it's just texas i'm just going to go like if you're oklahoma and you do the guns down instead of the guns up at oklahoma state is that gonna second up for you know is that a 15-yarder i highly doubt it i mean i guess if they do it to the oklahoma state player maybe but you know we'll see i have a feeling this has more to do with horns down than it does uh actual taunting or celebration penalties oh yeah and they and i guarantee you all the extra stuff that they put into this is all language that they created on the fly because they couldn't make a rule just for horns down yes yes they literally spent time and energy and and resources on figuring out the right way to write a rule to stop the horns down thing because it hurts texas fans feeling so bad yeah it it annoys me uh to no wind to no wind all right let's move on to the nfl we'll uh we'll start off with something that we don't always like discussing or or ever like discussing but uh it appears that free agent cornerback richard sherman has some issues uh he was drunk and belligerent threatening to kill himself during a confrontation with family members on wednesday morning early wednesday morning in seattle a woman who identified herself as his wife called 911 so so this is i hate when these legal terms don't really explain exactly what was going on so all day on wednesday there was this story that was going around explaining like or saying that richard sherman was arrested on suspicion of burglary domestic violence but typically that's you know beating up your partner or whatever right but this situation was not that uh ashley moss's sherman's wife asked for immediate assistance while her husband was quote being aggressive uh send text messages trying to leave in the house uh he's being aggressive wrestling my uncle threatening to kill himself uh he said he was going to hang himself like all of this kind of stuff and she asked the officers please don't shoot that's what i'm asking for uh it it's just this whole thing apparently he drove his suv into like a closed zone hit some concrete like that ended up being a felony uh i mean no i can't even i don't even know what might have been going through his head because sherman is an incredibly smart guy uh but this is kind of terrifying right like what were your thoughts when you saw the story so once i actually got through what actually happened um yeah i mean it's a sad story it's a very sad story this guy's obviously got demons um you know he's facing stuff we've talked about this in the past um you know players deal with this people deal with this we just we we as humans based on the world we live in today seem to have just far more stress and and pressure put on us than we've ever had throughout history probably and uh you know i can't i can't speak to what he's going through personally but but it's not good and it's not fun and it's scary i'm sure he's afraid i'm sure his family is obviously terrified and when you listen to the 9-1-1 call it man it's rough it's rough that that operator just did not have any compassion didn't seem to care didn't didn't seem to really recognize that this i don't she didn't treat it like a proper emergency i didn't think i thought that was pretty bad um you know i i get the request of i want help we want somebody to come to our house but but understand that he's not an open threat right now to anyone and don't come in guns of blazing please like i'd like my husband to be alive the journalism on this i thought was about as shoddy work as we've ever seen journalism in a long time interesting to all the information that we have yeah it was just it was fast they referred to her as his ex-wife multiple times multiple sources both reports did and and no no i'm he's he's my husband that's my i'm his wife not his ex-wife you know he didn't break in because when you read a story that you know he he's arrested for burglary and domestic you know whatever domestic violence and and domestic violence and you see ex-wife like you're thinking o.j simpson type stuff right like that's where my brain first went like oh man he had a problem with his ex and he went over to kill her and and no no we're not even we're even close to that but but thank god for great journalism we get the shittiest part of the story that gets a ton of clicks and a whole lot of traction and so those guys advertisers are really happy and their bosses are really happy but everybody involved and everybody who read it are not happy and are as misinformed as you could possibly be there has to be punishment for that there has to be answers for that i don't know how to stop that in our world i don't either i think what it like people run with the story as soon because people do follow these uh these police blotters and and see exactly who's getting arrested and what i as soon as they see something they just roll with it and they they don't get the actual facts of the story before they roll with something and that's why sometimes this legal language can be a little bit confusing and it can it can shed a bad light on a story i mean in this situation yeah i guess technically it was burglary domestic violence but this was not at all what what you would think it was and you know i hope that he gets help uh he is still the vice president of the uh the players association right so that's that's going to be um or the the nfl pa executive committee uh yeah he hadn't been there's a really good chance that he'll step down from that um i don't i don't know that he's playing this year i don't know did the 49ers um yeah he's still a free agent right now i thought he was still over in the open market this isn't going to help him get a job and i don't think you can be that player's representative if you're if you're not an active player um so so i think regardless of this situation i think he would be stepping down from that but but he obviously needs to put as little on his plate as possible right now and just take care of himself and get himself back together um you know that's the most important thing yeah we we hope he gets the help that he needs uh you know richard sherman incredibly entertaining guy uh hopefully he can get things straightened out and get back to you know coming out and entertaining uh entertaining the masses you know that's not what he needs to focus on right now but uh but we always love watching them so uh moving on there was a top 10 list that popped out and and you brought this to my attention i had not seen it but when you brought it up to me this morning i went and looked and and i noticed this is the espn uh execs coaches and players top 10 nfl quarterbacks and you know they they go through jeremy fowler goes through and and gets 50 league executives coaches scouts and players to help stack the top 10 players at different divisions or at different positions excuse me uh quarterback this year i feel like there was a massive massive oversight here or they could just be um i i don't i don't know exactly what's going on okay so they they did i pulled it up now uh i'll go ahead and read off the top ten okay uh one is patrick mahomes two aaron rodgers three tom brady four russell wilson five josh allen six matt stafford seven is dak prescott eight lamar jackson nine justin herbert and ten kyler murray now you might have noticed uh and we'll get to the actual rankings here in just a second but you might have noticed uh there was no desean watson on here and i think he easily could have been number two on this list well i was just about to say he's without question in the argument for top four okay that that's un un debatable not not up for discussion in any shape form or fashion and and could be top one two or three like like as as short as one if you want to grade on who's done what with the least amount of help okay yeah so you're um by the way the editor's note 9 they so they released this and they didn't have any mention of desean watson and now uh the editor's note that they have put on here says the original quarterback ballot sent to voters included deshaun watson who finished fourth in last year's poll uh he said watson was removed from the rankings however due to his uncertain status for the 2021 season it says he faces 22 active lawsuits alleging sexual assault uh and inappropriate behavior at least eight of those have spoken to police according to reports in the nfl is investigating the matter so that's why they ended up not uh including him but i feel like you should probably say that on the front end right yes so so when i read that this morning and i told you about it that wasn't on there because that was the that was the glaring enough what i was trying to figure out is this top 10 from last year is this top 10 just this coming year what we only think of this coming year is it top ten for like the next five years because if that's the case all of these things need to be rehashed you can't have aaron rodgers and tom brady behind patrick mahomes if you're using just last year's stuff one guy won the super bowl and the other guy won the mvp um so consider both of those guys should have been higher than patrick if you were just looking at last here's that let me let me explain to you what uh what their objective is it says the objective is to identify the best players right now for 2021. said this is not a five-year projection or an achievement award it's who is the best today pretty simple well i know he's not playing today but watson's the best today like that's so anyway neither here or there so let's take that part out of it what do you think of the list and do you think they got anything glaringly right wrong um what one thing i saw that i thought was interesting this list almost which is strange because i wouldn't think coaches or executives would pay any attention to this but this list mirrors of the like mvp odds for this year almost to a t i very closely i could i could see that i i will tell you this uh i would not have aaron rodgers up at number two um i think that's a little crazy i think like obviously with quarterback you have to take into account what is surrounding them right like if you don't have playmakers like we have seen tom brady when he didn't have anybody around him that was that was the 2019 patriots season but last season very bad you could easily say that tom brady was the best quarterback in the nfl based on the way that he played throughout the season uh patrick or holmes like yes great um i mean i think aaron rodgers had probably dropped down a little bit russell wilson i think having him up there is good but you know after maybe those top four like i don't even know what i think dak above lamar jackson is a little crazy uh justin herbert in the top ten i mean he's had one season i i thought the herbert thing stood out a lot so this is the one guy that stood out the most to me if you do this list and matt stafford is still with the lions he's not he he doesn't sniff this does he no he's never in he's he's not even close to talking here so so getting traded to a new team that we've never seen him play on ever we're just working under an assumption that he's instantly going to be in the conversation with these other guys for like mvp he's immediately going to be there i love stafford and this is not a knock on stafford but this is a knock on rankings and perception and everything else if he was wearing the different shade of blue in detroit he wouldn't be anywhere close to this list correct it it has everything to do with it yes but we traded him in the off season to a team that we trust offensively and an organization the coaching staff that we trust offensively and we're working under assumptions that he's just gonna fit like a hand in the glove apparently so i don't i just thought that was interesting i do think it's a little strange uh you know we've got baker mayfield that that got some votes we got matt ryan uh who is always disrespected we got uh you know i'm not even gonna go as far as like ben roethlisberger and derek carr and all them but you know joe burrow uh i thought i thought he played really well when he wasn't getting blasted last year but this is again a situation where you're wanting to see what he has around him otherwise i thought burrow was was a top 10 quarterback last year so it's just it's so hard he didn't play a full season and he played with one of the worst offenses around him possible so it's he was still putting up crazy numbers on a team that oh no yeah so that's what i'm saying his numbers were video game numbers no he was throwing you know four or five touchdowns a game you know several hundred yards every game it's just stuff but because he plays for a bad organization we got to drop him out of the top ten uh baker mayfield not being there after the way that he played down the stretch last season was a little crazy to me you know kyler murray coming in at 10 uh he didn't look great in the second half of last season and and yes he might have been a little hurt but why are we giving him the benefit of the doubt and not you know baker mayfield like who's been in the league a year long yeah um i don't i don't know we've got some love for for kyler man his mvp odds are are just insane people are picking them to win the super bowl or win the nfc or win that division i think that's insane yes i think tyler is a really good player i think tyler's a lot of fun to watch i i don't think he's close to this good now i might be wrong we're gonna be you know we're gonna see but i just i just thought we've gone too far i think so as well uh and this is i mean these are people that are inside the nfl like dak prescott at seven uh coming off of that ankle injury being ranked ahead of lamar jackson like i i just i can't i can't get there i just don't get it like there's a lot of love now now if if he never got hurt okay and and we just go off of what we saw last year before he got hurt and the year before that then i'm with you i'm with you 100 but that's not what they're doing they're projecting what they think this year is going to look like with these guys and and i can't i can't tell you that's just going to walk into an mvp caliber season no me either me either uh let's close out the show let's go and get out of here uh last topic dwayne haskins uh so you you saw the story right yes sir injured in a domestic violence incident by his wife apparently they were in las vegas his wife has been charged with battery and domestic violence which in this situation unlike the richard sherman one it actually was this it resulted in bodily harm a felony charge stemming from the incident that occurred july 3rd at the cosmopolitan uh his wife's name is calab calabria gandrezik haskins and apparently his wife like punched him in the face they knocked out part of his tooth uh in a hotel room like it said that his injuries are substantial in nature it was a split lip and a missing tooth uh he was taken to a hospital due to facial injuries and it said that he uh like they got married in march and they were there to like i guess renew their vows or or whatever it is uh i just i don't know they were there to be together like to celebrate each other and she punched him right in the face got the cops called on her he had to go to the hospital like this is a disaster like i i kind of not even kind of i feel bad for dwayne haskins man yeah um it's it's an interesting situation so um i've kind of ran the gamut of of reading other stuff like we shouldn't have to say this but we live in a world where if you don't clarify everything then then you're just put in purgatory and you're just wished out into the cornfield um all domestic violence is bad okay it's not good you shouldn't beat up your partner don't hit people okay keep your damn hands to yourself how about we just live like that all right so with that being said um i i'm trying to understand the situation i now this this part does not get lost on me and i think it needs to be said whatever the situation is that caused this or escalated this or however this we got to this point dwayne haskins is a large man and a professional athlete and it i think at some point he showed great restraint in us not having any type of he didn't do anything to her all right yes i'm i'm a large guy i'm not dwayne haskins in shape and i'm not a very strong person of that nature i'm very soft but like i'm i'm i'm saying this with knowing the fact that this is the first podcast that my wife has ever listened to because she sat here right next to me while we're driving to the vet um uh saying it there's there's nothing she could ever do to hurt me if i didn't want her to physically hurt me okay yeah i there's there is no way that she could do something to me like this if i didn't allow it to happen all right i'm i'm that much stronger than her dwayne haskins i'm working under the assumption is that much stronger than his wife to where he chose to take this punishment instead of stopping her because stopping her would mean putting his hands on her okay and that's not a good look and it's a bad thing and we don't want that and i get that so i appreciate that but i also understand i'm seeing it from my perspective gary okay okay something caused this to happen not that he had it coming because if this was just switched around and it was a guy beating up a girl you can't bring up why did he do it all right because there's no justification for it and violence is not the answer and i get all that but you know we live in a world of very gray areas and i need to know what what brought this about because had my wife ever wanted to punch me in the face and knock my teeth out i'm gonna guarantee you this i had it coming right there's there's zero doubt in my mind that she wouldn't have done it if i didn't deserve it okay i agree okay i can only i can only speak for me i can't speak for dwayne and his lovely wife but i i'm just saying i i i it's none of my business but i'd like some details if i could get some details because i you know i'm just curious yeah hey you just got married in march and we're already renewing valve that's probably not a good sign you know this thing's going to last wish him the best of luck but you know there's some red flags here to say this thing might not have the legs to go the distance um it's possible uh it's very possible by the way this is the this is the gimmick of feelings that i have gone through today thinking about the dwayne haskins face that's it so so his wife was actually a michigan state women's basketball player uh her dad was a professional basketball player uh grant gundrezik um this is i mean it ain't like she's you know some dainty little thing man you know she's uh she's an athlete as well but this is uh i mean this is pretty crazy this is this is certainly crazy i i just i i i wish i knew what he could have done to to cause that because what well we just work under this so like that's the world we live in right and i know that we're gonna catch crap for saying that because if it was the other way around and you asked well what did she do to cause him to smack her in the face and knock her teeth out like everyone would see us as monsters yeah but i know guys and i understand relationships between men and women pretty well to think that they think there's more to this story that we're not getting and the part we're not getting i'm gonna bet has some from from being a guy who's been a most of my life we're we're going to be able to laugh at that part because we all understand that right there there was something dumb that happened that that he did there's something dumb that happened that he did but i'm gonna guess that we might be way wrong and he's a complete and utter victim and no matter what he did let's just preface it violence isn't the answer and this is not how you handle it that's fine we're done i'll get that and i'm not just saying that i love how we have to clarify it it's like this is because i don't like violence don't hit people in the face let's just make that a rule that it doesn't matter what they did well enough let's not hit people in the face that again well it seems like it should be common sense but uh alas we live in a world where that is not always common sense so anyway that's the way it goes i want to know all the story i really hope we find out just i need to know what happened the hour before this leading up to it that's what i want i don't need the whole weekend i don't need i don't need all the details just just the the hour before fifth hit mouth yes that's that all all we would need is just a a smidge of information and we could draw conclusions from the rest of it that's what we need that's right maybe not that it makes it okay but uh you know what was it though chris rock story you know not look i'm not saying it's okay but i understand you are correct you are correct all right let me let you go on and get out of here and then i will uh i will wrap up the show so i will i will highlight everybody right that is it for winning cures everything for today you guys have been absolutely fantastic uh there was a lot to discuss today so make sure that you check out winningcureseverything.com sbrpx.com ncaaf that is your one-stop shop for all of your college football gambling information uh and it will be all season long so make sure that you go and check that out uh going to be some changes and whatnot this is going to be the first time that we do a a pre-recorded stream i guess i'm going to put this out on friday and we shall see what ends up happening with it but uh you know we're going to be changing some stuff around trying to get some contests going again our pick em contest we didn't do last year uh but we've got some you know some new sponsors and whatnot that we'll be working with heading into football season so we want to make sure that we've got everybody taken care of again subscribe where you need to subscribe the youtube page uh apple podcast google podcast spotify whatever your podcast app is go and check it out there uh subscribe and share the show out tell your friends about it all that good stuff and i think that's going to do it for today's show so you guys take care of yourself take care of each other and hopefully all of you tickets cash this weekend thanks for checking out winning cures everything if you want to keep up with us hit subscribe on youtube or your favorite podcast app visit the website at winningcures everything.com or you can like us on facebook or follow us at winningcures garywce or at crispygiannini on twitter share out the show leave a nice review and make sure to comment and tweet | Winning Cures Everything | UC4ckuVJmQrZp4cotMWOg6eg | 2021-07-16 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,962 | 40,301 |
90-ebTxmz40 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90-ebTxmz40 | Day 137 | 300 Days Fitness Challenge | welcome back to the channel today's day 137 of this 300 days fitness challenge today's exercise is right on the screen along with our daily checklist and a list of the items we're gonna need until the end of this challenge if you haven't yet make sure you subscribe to the channel and pound the like button let's get to it [Music] all right let's take our first break that was kind of easy that first set was kind of easy uh looks like i definitely rested this morning after work [Music] and i had a decent sized meal too so that probably helped with that first set even though it's not that big of a deal it's not like i'm doing depths on a dip bar uh but it's a good warm up i'll say it is a definitely a very good warm-up good way to start the day what else as you notice on the card at the beginning of the video it's three exercises including the dips after the dips we're gonna do the pulley and then we'll finish the day with kickbacks hopefully by the time we get to the kickbacks my muscles are already being worked actually hopefully by the time i'm done with the dips my triceps start filling the burn [Music] all right and i have my phone all the way back there because it's almost dead i do have my pulley mostly ready just have to hook it there and go for it i did not set up the dumbbells yet but i have plenty of time for that so hopefully the video will be short all right barely over a minute to go on our first break i know these brakes are really long but that's what it's working out for me at least have a little bit of consistency there on the rest time at least now i do feel like i'm getting a little bit stronger not very noticeable but if you work out every day you notice when you can do one more rep or when you feel stronger you can do one more rep or the wraps that you're doing feel a little bit easier all right time is almost up still wearing long slivers and pants because it's cold i'm almost done with this winter time anyway here we go [Music] all right let's take our second break getting warming here at some point i'm going to take this sweatshirt off that it's kind of uncomfortable to work out with it i'm definitely gonna i'm definitely getting warm in here all right time is taking today's day 137 feels like it's going to be a long while until we get make it to day 150 which is halfway through our journey [Music] my body weight's been fluctuating up and down not much like a yo-yo it's more like how the stock market crashes it doesn't just go down comes down goes up a little bit and keep going down then up a little bit and then down just like that it's and i can actually feel i can tell when i'm heavier than the day before still not drinking coffee so i'm running on pure food energy and fat energy not really running on any type of stimulant which is kind of different uh i no longer have the withdrawal headaches from the coffee so that's applause i definitely feel good like i feel i don't know how you say it clear that's what i feel like right now no clouds just feel good in general [Music] all right two more sets of the dips and then we'll go to the pulley just a few more seconds to go and our second break and yes i already have my gloves on because dumbbells are cold and i'm not working out with the dumbbells right now but i know as soon as i grab him i'm gonna be cold and right i have the gloves on now anyway time is up kind of and here we go [Music] ah all right let's take our third break definitely feeling the burn all right let's take this thing off and as i was saying my body weight's been fluctuating going up and down the past few days kind of weeks more so than days but right now right now i'm on the trend down by the way is on the way down and i feel like i finally got to the spot where stubborn fat is going to be taking forever to burn the last couple pounds of fat most likely love handles and abdominal area is where most of the fat is going to take longer to burn [Music] other than that [Music] progress muscle wise and it's okay i can oh i would like to be bigger than this but i only works up i want to work out so much i can't expect miracles i stimulate the muscles barely once a week grinding i do go to failure and i do work out hard ish but can't expect my muscles to just blow up go big from day to night one day to another it's gonna take a little bit hopefully between now and the end of the challenge i have something to show for we'll see all right just a few more seconds we'll do our last set of the dips get rid of the bench and then we'll start with the pulley there's my water all right all right time is up ish [Music] here we go [Music] so um ah that was good definitely feel the burn in the triceps it kind of feels like feeling the soreness from last week like last week's exercise but anyway let's get rid of this bench [Music] there we go now we'll hang this over here hopefully this thing will be quieter today than last time [Music] all right i already have a loaded with 45 pounds which is the one of the 35 pounders plus a 10 pound plate that that should be a good start um i'll do one or two sets with that and then i'll add five pounds i know five pounds is kind of a little bit of weight not enough to brag about it but again we are not eagle lifters here it's more about the results more than the ego so might might not add the five pounders you know last time i put 10 pounds and in one or two of the wraps i start feeling the tendonitis on this forearm which is not fun and i don't want to go through that again not that it hurt after that i don't want to take the chance to hurt myself again all right so just a few more seconds and we'll start pulling this thing [Music] i took the sweatshirt off and now i'm like yeah should i put it back on oh it's hard to [Music] do one thing or the other this cold weather is out of whack anyway time is up and here we go [Music] so [Music] uh [Music] felt real good definitely felt real good thing is annoying let me get the wd-40 i have actually some grease that i can probably put on but i guess i'll do the grease after the video because that will be a little more labor intense [Music] looks like this thing has a little bit of an axis [Music] crack i don't know you here to call it [Music] all right that should do okay see where's the timer still have plenty of time there might have to upgrade the pulley for a more quieter one i just want it to be cheap [Music] there is a pulley at the store hardware store and it is definitely quieter than this and has a capacity probably more than this for the higher capacity is pounds which i will never ever pull with this for two reasons one i'm really weak i'm not that strong and two some of this equipment will not handle 400 pounds so you're always limited limited by your weakest link in this case i believe the weakest link is this hook not the carabiner but the hook on the bar i think it's 250 pounds i think something like that [Music] then everything else is above 250 pounds uh limit but again i look i'm i'm pulling 45 pounds and i'm kind of struggling with it so yeah it's plenty i know i will probably upgrade to which i should should do it now let's put the uh five pounder on right now because i did more than more than 15 reps in the last set anyway time is up and here we go [Music] let's take another break felt real good every single rep let's see what are we here oh we still have like eight more minutes at the end of the next set i'll reset the cam [Music] this is a good exercise [Music] i've i kind of had to have a some sort of love hate relationship with this pulley systems that tend to make the exercise the exercise is easier which kind of is a trade-off for some body parts you don't have to stabilize the the weight is just get in position and do the motion but at the same time you trade in a little bit of strength and some of the other stabilizing muscles get disengaged when you're doing pulley exercises an example of that is lats pull downs uh you can definitely do more weight on the pulley you can actually do pull ups why because on the pull up you engage more muscles and you also spend more more energy pulling yourself up on the pull-up bar than with the pulley just pulling it down now with the pulley you kind of target it more to the lats than with the pull up than with the pull-up but again you just gotta decide what you're looking for looking for strength target the muscle what is it that you're looking for and then pick the machine you can never go wrong if you do both now just don't over train and go crazy just find a sweet spot listen to your body that's the best that's probably the best advice i can give today listen to your body it will tell you when you're doing too much or too little [Music] all right just a few more seconds we're gonna go into our third set of this pulleys which is tricep push-downs and i believe that's the technical name of the exercise anyway time is up and here we go [Music] ah all right let's take another break wow skinny heavy [Music] well i guess it was not recording well i was here talking to myself talking about the camera not about the camera about my abs uh i feel the exercise from yesterday and apparently i did something right and i need to go for a little bike ride today just because i feel like i'm really close to go over my calories so just to be on the safe side i'm gonna burn burn some extra calories this evening and we'll go from there uh i'm not sure for how long i was talking to myself because i want to reset the camera for some reason didn't take the other press the second press so barely under a minute to go on this break so that's it that's all i got ah i definitely felt every rep there this is going to be the third not the third the fourth set of this tricep push downs thereafter we're going to close the day with uh kickbacks all right time is up and here we go [Music] okay [Music] take another break wow definitely felt every wrap all right let's get this thing out of the way wow that was loud [Music] all right take this right over here here's what goes hanging it out of the way let's get put this weight away [Music] so i was pushing down 50 pounds that doesn't have very much that's kind of what i was doing on the extensions now more so like kind of what i was doing with the kickbacks because the dumbbells are loaded with 20 pounds plus the little bars are like five pounds it's kind of 25 pounds on the kickbacks which is next exercise after this i'm gonna go in [Music] inside the house hang out with the girls [Music] [Applause] wow [Music] seems like technology is not on my side in general so here's the dilemma i have either i put up with this camera till the end of this challenge which is over 150 days now i'm gonna leave it there which is over 150 days now because thereafter videos are definitely gonna be shorter i don't think i'll be posting hour long videos after day 300. i don't know we'll see depending on what depending on what's going on but anyway you did that put up with this camera until the end of the challenge or get one a camera that can continuously record [Music] the whole thing i kind of want to get another camera but anyway can't afford investment right now time is up and here we go [Music] let's [Music] let's take a break that's a good set i felt my shoulder there a little bit nothing crazy it's kind of a combination between pain and soreness more so some sort of soreness more than pain not sure what it's about definitely trying to keep the movement straight back not so much outwards well anyway three more sets of this exercise and i'm gonna call it a day yep [Music] when there was tomorrow's exercise i think it's chest day i think and tomorrow's exercise it's gonna be pretty much like today well except for the push-ups i'll do a couple sets of push-ups and then we'll go with the i'll start with the flies again sorry the dumbbell flies and then start pressing i think i'll go flat first and then take some weight off and do incline i think that's the best approach [Music] all right just a few more seconds to go all right i'm getting some definition on my muscles but they're not really growing growing per se we'll see hopefully they'll grow hopefully they'll grow time is up [Music] and here we go uh [Music] [Applause] let's take another break wow feeling every single rep that's a good feeling even and the heart rate's going up a little bit nothing crazy still below 105. i think he made it barely to 100 let's see come on get him away [Music] yeah 97 [Music] now yesterday i was on the bike i was pretty consistent 123 was pretty much the average i made it up to 127 and 130 maybe for like five minutes or less yeah in the 120 this is good it's not crazy it's not crazy high it's not crazy low but kept that general pace for the majority of the cardio or the majority of the bike ride [Music] maybe it's the excessive amount of cardio that is injuring my muscle gains however at this particular point in this journey i'm not too concerned about the muscle gain i definitely want to shred most most of the fat as i possibly can since i am still a beginner i still have a pretty good chance of gaining some muscle even a deficit even on a deficit with cardio in it i'm not planning on slowing down too much the cardio maybe just a little bit and i need to readjust or re-think my calorie limit calorie deficit or recalculate what's my maintenance calories because now i'm getting some muscle i'm pretty sure i consume why burn more calories throughout the day than what i did 137 days ago all right time is up here we go [Music] [Applause] last break let's take the last break definitely filling every set i do i silly at these exercises may seem they definitely target the triceps all of them from the dips to the pulley push downs and the kickbacks and since i eliminated eliminated the extensions well the either overhead extensions or the ones i was doing laying down with the plates i haven't had any elbow pain or discomfort which is always a good thing all right just a few more well over a minute barely under two minutes to go on our last break and i'm glad i started to get back in shape while i still have uh set my young skin so all this extra layers of skin they can naturally retract and go back to where they're supposed to be or where they used to be when i was a skinny guy skinny kid as skinny as a broomstick and monday is coming up for the chiropractor's appointment all right just a few more seconds to go on our very last break we'll get out of here and come back tomorrow for some more all right just a few more seconds let's have a sip [Music] all right time is up here we go [Music] uh [Applause] well that's definitely it for today i'll see you tomorrow adios | DR2PA | UCfaoSukx6rwoYbRQAadM6OQ | 2021-02-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,916 | 14,787 |
dRmAFecS76k | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRmAFecS76k | DMG20S16 - Marine Geosciences Seminar - Chantel Nixon | so we will start uh welcome everybody for the uh for the start of the second semester and we have an exciting seminar series this semester again following with the corona regulations we are hosting people from um timeline new york to timeline china i think well i don't think that we have china this year but this semester but anyway we are hosting several time zones um and today we are hosting chantel nixon dr centen nixon from the norwegian university of science and technology in trondheim norway um chantal earned her phd in the department of earth and atmospheric sciences at the university of alberta in canada over there she reconstructed glacial and relative sea level changes in western canadian high arctic following her phd she moved to the east coast of canada where she was employed as a coastal geologist for the nova scotia geological survey after moving back after moving to trondheim in norway in august 20 2015 she worked for the geological survey of norway in the marine geology group mapping submarine glacial geomorphology sediments and gossips in in the barren sea since 2018 she has been employed as an associate professor at the department of geography and ntnu she is still in the early stages of starting up her research program after transitioning from government geological surveys to academia but her research program so far includes reconstructing paleo environment changing arctic coastal environments and mapping the sources transport pathways and things for microplastics in arctic fjords so today we are hosting chantal and she is going to talk on quantitative quantifying past and future sea level changes in norway so thank you very much everybody and chantel the podium with yours thank you thank you so much for having me and thanks bev for putting my name forward and nicholas for inviting me to speak uh i'm very honored to speak to you today um i guess you did a really good job of introducing me uh because i was gonna say all of that but uh so i'll just start with the the photo on the slide um we're actually looking out at the berent sea here this is in northernmost norway where i visited last summer and this area is also a part of the project that i'm going to describe today i was just there on holidays but i'm standing on a raised beach this beach is from the younger driest period around 12 11 000 years before present and i'm looking down or we're looking down on lower raised beaches down to the modern beach which is right full of plastic i have to say and also driftwood and then there are raised beaches extending back so this talk is really about past sea level change and records of past sea level change in norway and how they can help us with projections we're improving projections for future um mostly relative sea level rise in in norway but i won't actually be talking too much about raised beaches i'm going to talk about other records of sea level and coastal change but um as uh as i was introduced i'm sort of like an old early career researcher so this is my first this talk um i decided to present you something that's in its early stages so i don't have a really nice tidy story to share with you unfortunately but i'd like to share with you this project which was funded last year and our plans and some of the questions and hypotheses we'd like to test and and the the relevance of those questions answering those questions so then this is in partnership with colleagues at the geological survey of norway um a couple of canadian universities and um the university of bergen and i'll get to those partners at the end but i will begin uh okay there we go okay so the presentation this is our logo or quantity logo or quantifying uh past present and future sea level change in norway we got the funding last year it's my first big project funding so i'm excited about it uh it's really fun as an early career researcher to help finally have money to do something so um but the presentation will discuss what we know about past present and future sea level in norway now what are the quantity objectives and a little bit about how far we've come with respect to recent relative sea level change and past transgression events in norway and then actually not so much about the future but maybe the relevance let's say okay so um if you want to talk um about past sea level change in a country like norway you must understand a little bit about the glacial history of norway and when i say past sea level change i'm really only going back to the last glacial maximum which is represented on this map here these uh the white lines are former ice sheet margins dating to the last glacial maximum for these three big coalesc ice sheets the scandinavian ice sheet in the middle which covered norway um the svalbard berenscara ice sheet to the north and the british irish ice sheet to the southwest then you can see greenland uh and iceland's ice sheet margins also extended offshore they're larger than they are today so if we zoom in a little bit more on on norway you can see that the last glacial maximum ice sheet extended right to the continental slope and then um around by around 15 000 years almost everywhere in coastal norway not coastal scandinavia but in coastal norway that ice sheet margin was on shore and what that means is that relative sea we can start recording or we start to see evidence of relative former relative sea level stands once that ice is out of the way we can start creating shorelines and so that's where the story begins here for this for the quanzi project when we're looking to the past um and of course if we're this is important because of something called glacial isostatic adjustment or gia and i really hope i'm not pitching this um you know at the wrong level here i wasn't exactly sure who'd be in the audience but i understand there are students so i'm going to explain some of the the basic concepts and one of those is glacial isostatic adjustment and so what i'm showing here is just a model of a big ice sheet so that's the dashed blue line on the left of the diagram that says t1 and there's going to be some sea level associated at that time but as that ice sheet melts away or sorry when you have that big ice sheet sitting on a landmass it's depressing the earth's crust and displacing some of the upper mantle and so that causes a higher um local relative sea level simply because you've you've lowered the land mass and you allow the sea to to flow in but once you melt away some of that ice sheet we get a crustal rebound or glacial isostatic adjustment which is positive vertical uplift of the crust and so um so then when we're starting to deposit these coastal landforms i've got a schematic below now showing the ice sheet margin uh dumping out all kinds of melt water and sediments uh into a shallow basin um creating these shorelines and eventually as that ice sheet melts away and we get more and more uh glacial isostatic adjustment or crustal uplift we are left behind with things like the beet ridges that i showed you the picture of or these raised marine deltas and many other records of higher relative sea levels and glacial isostatic adjustment is really the main driver of of past sea level change in norway because we we were glaciated fully glaciated 22 000 years ago and so that's not the only impact or driver of relative sea level change but it is the most important but i'll just say very quickly um here um i think you were looking at yeah you were looking at the lower figure in in the the the previous slide um there there's al there are also gravitational effects um that impact sea level so when we have a big ice sheet we have increased gravitational attraction to that ice sheet which raises a sea level locally towards that that big ice mass sitting on the land and when it melts um it has less gravitational attraction to itself and so local sea level um lowers or or um and this can be on um i think up to 10 meter sort of scale so it's it's significant um and then we also have our increased ocean water mass and that is simply related to um melt water entering the oceans or water being taken out of the oceans and locked up in ice sheets and ice caps and glaciers and so these three effects plus a whole bunch of other little ones all add up to relative sea level change over time um but there are a couple of um yeah so there are a couple of other events um after d or during the post glacial period since the since the last glacial maximum that are important for understanding uh relative sea level change in norway and and the first one is the younger driest stadial this was this um sudden switch to um glacial a glacial-like climate again during the overall deglaciation of the big ice sheets like the scandinavian ice sheet and it occurred around twelve thousand seven hundred years before present to eleven thousand uh five hundred years before present and the map um on the right is showing you the the big moraine systems that extend uh from north to south in in norway um and they outline um when the ice sheet sort of uh well it either re-advanced or it or it's uh stopped retreating and it deposited these big marines and it also impacted relative sea level change because that crustal rapid crustal rebound that occurs after deglaciation paused here in some areas it caused a transgression in other areas it caused a still stand and in other areas still it just caused a slowdown in re in the forced regression following deglaciation so so this is an important event also in the sea level uh post-glacial sea level records of norway and then we have one more called the tapas transgression and that occurred between around ten thousand and seven thousand years before present it had a one to two meter to over 20 meter amplitude um and it was probably caused by the changing balance of eustatic um and glacial or gl drivers of relative sea level but we don't really understand it because it's pretty unusual and you'll see that in some of the c-level curves that i'm going to show you but the map on the left is is showing you current rates of gia or vertical um crustal rebound i guess um in millimeters per year so along the coast right now it's it's uplifting between one and five millimeters per year and the dots um indicate all of the sites where relative sea level has been reconstructed and the tapas transgression is um is recorded in that that relative sea level history at that site okay so um those are the big events um in norway that impacted post glacial sea level change and here we've got um a map with um the marine limits so the highest level the highest post glacial shoreline um or d glacial and post glacial shorelines in norway and you can see that under the thickest part of the former scandinavian ice sheet which is around north central sweden and finland marine limits are more than 250 meters above present sea level and they go all the way down to around zero on some parts of the coast but in general i just wanted to show you the different shapes of the relative sealable curves um for norway a lot of them show this this forced rapid forced regression due to this strong gia driver uh of relative sea level change forcing that regression um down right down to to modern sea level but then you can also see in in some of these curves the impact of the younger dryas and the tapas transgression where you see this inflection point in the curve and a transition from falling sea level or low stand to rising sea level so i just want to zoom in on a couple of those and the reason why i want to do this is is just to help you understand our rationale for some of the objectives of the quanzi project so we'll start in trondheim where i'm talking to you from today and this is a relative sea level i've got source there sorry i forgot to put the source in um but i've got a relative sea level curve um for just out a little little more towards the coast from from trondheim itself and you can see around 12 11 000 years before present the impact of the younger dryas event that has not caused a transgression in this part of norway but it has caused a still stand and we have absolutely beautiful younger dry shorelines around 160 meters above sea level here either eroded into bedrock or they're represented by enormous deltas but following the younger dryas we have this very um steep um [Music] rapidly falling relative sea level and then around the time of the tapas transgression that slows down we don't get an actual transgression here because of the rates of rebound at that time countering that transgression but we certainly get a slow down and it just falls all the way to modern but from about two thousand years before present to to present day there's no data constraining this curve and likewise we go a little bit farther south here we've actually got a low standard offshore around 9000 radiocarbon years before present based on a kind of sketchy data and no no c-level index points constraining the curve from from the mid-holocene to present and then another example from farther south and west um a really nice relative sea level curve that has uh recorded both of the transgressions that i discussed the related to the younger dryas geochron and to the tapas transgression but again not um kind of low resolution data constraining this curve and particularly in the last 2000 years um okay yeah and then in the south we've got um a lot of the curves from the south we have this mid-holocene high stand um but again um i just want to highlight the lack of data in in the constraining the curve in general but especially in the last 2000 years or so okay so now i'm just going to say a quick word about how most of these relative sea level curves have been reconstructed in norway we use here and it's a there's a long tradition of using the isolation basin uh relative sea level reconstruction method and it's excellent because we often have these beautiful bedrock sills to get a very precise uh elevation on for for our sea level index point and also our cores are full of organic material that we can radio carbon date so we can we can date we can create fairly precise sea level index points but i'll talk about the pros and cons of this method in a moment i'll just explain quickly how it works in case you don't know so in the panel on the left i have before isolation i've got an isolation basin that's fully submerged so this is when the crust was depressed due to that former ice sheet loading and in that basin marine sediments are accumulating and then as the gia progresses and crustal uplift um occurs uh and as that sill which is the margin of the basin as it reaches the intertidal zone our basin becomes um more brackish and anoxic and we start depositing these so-called isolation sediments or brackish sediments on top of the marine sediments and then finally once we reach full isolation our sill is above the intertidal zone our basin becomes a lake a freshwater lake or a pond and maybe eventually a bog and and those freshwater sediments are deposited and the amazing thing about this method i think is that it's it's so visually obvious um this is a russian core on in the photo on the right you know exactly when you've hit that isolation contact because you can see it so we've got these these bright or light gray marine clays followed by this sort of brownish greenish brackish layer and then often a layered fresh water package of sediments overlying that and it's it's really the same everywhere and like i said there's lots of organic matter in these cores so we can date them really well and as long as the sill is bedrock and not buried by beach sediments or or other overburden then um we we can get a really strong or precise sea level index point from this kind of data but you can usually only get one sea level index point per basin so you need a lot of basins to build a sea level curve with and they all have to be within the same area located roughly on the same isobase and that can be a challenge sometimes and that is one of the reasons why a lot of our relative sea level curves are somewhat poorly constrained but we also we don't just use the visual assessment of course we look at macro fossils and microfossils to differentiate these these intervals okay and then of course during our transgressions we we also have ingression contacts or we sometimes see ingression contacts in our course so and the the core shown in the photo on the left shows the this isolation sequence with the marine clay or silt at the bottom followed by the brackish and freshwater lake sediments and then we we go through that in reverse and come back to the marine silts overlying that so that's our evidence of a transgression which we can date and we can determine the elevation or the yeah the elevation for the sea level index point okay so that was the past sea level in norway let's move on to present day rates of of sila a relative sea level in norway of course we have a tide gauge network and it's been active uh well some tide gauges have been active for 100 years or more and others are more recent um but really just what i want to show you um on the left is what's going on with with sea level currently in norway and i've got two maps showing two different time series 1960 to 2010 and 1984 to 2014. the red arrows show areas where relative sea level is rising according to the tide gauges and the blue area areas show where it's still falling and co-located with or actually co-located but also in a network across norway we have a gps network which is measuring the vertical movement of the crust so that's the gia contribution to relative sea level rise or fall in norway today and that's that's shown in the figure on the right um so this is vertical land motion from our gps measurements the colored dots indicate the millimeters per year and the the black or the grayscale ones show the error on those but you can see that along coastal norway we've we've got um the the land mass is uh still uplifting at rates of between one and five millimeters per year and we also have some new data from insar we've got instar data which is really beautiful and freely available to everyone in norway it's just on a website that's actually shown in this slide so you can go and look at it if you're interested and here we're measuring much more precise um [Music] vertical uh movements of of the earth's crust here the green dot it's mostly green in norway which is a is basically almost no movement or very very little movement which which fits with the ones five millimeters per year measured um with the gps network but you can click on any of these dots and you can get a five year time series so we're only five years now um with this data but as time goes on it it will help us uh or improve um our projections of future sea level change because the nice the fun thing that we can do with with having both the relative sea level data from the tide gauges plus uh the vertical land motion data or the um we'd call this a gia correction is that you can subtract that vertical land motion from the relative sea level rates recorded by the tide gauges and then we can we can take that that part of the c-level equation out and we can say okay so if you look at the red dots in this figure um we've taken away the vertical land motion component of sea level change here and you can see that it's relative sea level or sorry not relative sea level change up and down the coast of norway and cities listed on on the left here it's not the same everywhere and and that's interesting because um then we can ask why why is it not are these changes um you know what are these changes or these differences related to and so i'll just remind you again you know how what goes into relative sea level rise of course at the beginning i said it's mostly jia um related to the former glaciation of this part of the world but there there are a lot more things going on now that become more interesting especially when our vertical land motion or aegea is is much much smaller so we've got our on the right we've got our our change in relative sea level is equal to the change in sea surface height which is a product of all of these these um these different elements shown on the image on the left so we've got melt water from glaciers and it's even more complicated than that because we've got the gravitational effects which i alluded to earlier density changes temperature changes and so on minus our vertical land motion so if we want our modelers to start looking at um scenarios and understanding you know that that sea surface height part of the equation um we need to remove that the gia okay and as far as future relative sea level rise goes in norway well we i just showed you tide gauge evidence that it is already rising in in some places and i've got some photos of what that actually looks like at the coast here um to show you later but um but these are some maps um of projections for the future to uh to to for 2081 to 2100 over um 1986 to 2005 levels um for different um representative concentration pathways so it's i think it's rcp 2.6 in a and 8.5 and c and 4.5 and b um you can see that we we are right now i mean there are some big unknowns with how the ice sheets are going to behave under um projected global warming and so on but right now we're looking at within certainly with the errors where we we're looking at up to a meter in some places okay and as i said there are some unknowns that i don't want to uh speculate on and that's um uh how people are going to behave what representative concentration pathway we're going to follow and then how also how the ice sheets and glaciers are going to respond to warming but then i also want to just quickly discuss for the norway situation how gravitational um related to the the melting of the big ice sheets should are expected to impact the coast of norway and the reason why i want to go over this is because these are some of the questions you can ask or start looking at when you remove the the gia from the sea level equation and so um if greenland were to melt rapidly in the in the future um what how would that impact uh what what effect would that have on on relative sea level rise in norway well because norway is in i guess or most of norway is sort of in the near field of greenland we'll actually experience a fall in relative sea level just related to to melting of greenland because of the loss of gravitational attraction to the greenland ice sheet and norway's close enough that we will we will get a little bit of that attenuation of rise from other factors so green land melting is not and then you know it's not too scary for norway it may be scary for climate reasons but for sea level it's not too scary but antarctica melting we're in the red zone norway's fully in the red zone because we are we are quite far distant from antarctica um and so um that uh loss of gravitational attraction around the antarctic ice sheets due to loss of mass and addition of melt water to the world's oceans that's got to rise somewhere else and that somewhere else is partly norway so that's the one that we have to worry about here um okay and uh these are just a couple of projections showing you how the range of where we can get to for for two places stavanger and bergen these are these are places in norway where we expect the most sea level rise in in the future and these are of course the colors indicate the different rcp projections and then the gold line on the curves are the is the tide gauge data okay so let's get to quanzi the project that i'm excited to start working on the primary objective of quanzi is to improve century scale relative sea level projections for norway one of the tasks for the entire group is to develop a new relative d-level database for norway's where we combine older data plus new data that we are collecting or generating and it's divided into three working groups working group one uh focuses on the recent record and it's in red you can see some of the locations in norway where we plan to work and then the parts of the the these sort of um idealized relative sea level curves for norway um overlaying on the map here the the red squares so we're going to focus on the recent part of the record what's happened in these past 2000 years with falling or rising relative sea level and also where we have offshore low stands um with a transgression following you know what what does that transgression look look like when we when we look at the actual sediments that record it um work group 2 is going to focus on earlier transgressions so the younger driest and the tapas transgressions um to try and elucidate the origin of past relative sea level rise and its impact on the coast and um the reason that we're focused on the transgressions is because transgressions are part of norway's future and we would like to uh get our modelers who form working group three to not only um or not only get our modelers to improve their projections for future sea level rise in norway but also understand the the coastal impacts of relative sea level rise at different rates so we have paleo analogues during at least two different occasions in the past in norway and we'd like to extract more data from these records and compare it to the present day and use that data to anticipate what might happen in the future how our coasts might respond and the modelers are um yeah so they're going to be improving estimates of present day vertical land motion using a new rsl database that we are creating as i mentioned and they're working on new gm models as well and they're really all about quantifying the magnitude and uncertainty of gia to to sea level projections over not just to 2100 but the next few centuries okay so our database we've got over a thousand sea level index points now spanning the entire norwegian coast um a lot of our sea level index points are a radio carbon date with some better some worse um um i guess uh elevation uh or former sea level stand associated with that uh we include uh kurt lambeck um wrote an article or created a database in 1998 for norway so we've got all of that data plus most of the data published in international journals up to last year we're missing still some some gray literature and some some data from masters and phd theses but we're following the policy template which i'm sure some of you know what halsey is it's sort of associated with policy uh holocene sea level database for the whole world for the modelers so we're sort of like a halsey for norway and when you look at the distribution of the ages um from deglaciation to present we have a lot more d glacial ages than for the mid to late holocene but this is in not very surprising since a lot of our um data was collected from ice contact shorelines in order to date um these i former ice sheet margins and and determine um the date of deglaciation and the pattern and the timing of subsequent deglaciation so that that's why the distribution looks that way but i hope to change it uh with this project a little bit uh this is just a a clip grab from the halsey website just in case um you were interested but they do have very similar um goals to our quantity project and and we're working with them and we will contribute our database to their database um by follow they have a very specific um format for the database so we we plan to follow that as well for ours okay so the workflow is a classic um data people modeling people working together so the geologists uh work on the left we're going to collect uh reconstruct more sea level histories and the modelers are going to work on their models and then we're going to they're going to him cast make him cast for a relative sea level in norway and we're going to do data model comparisons but we're going to specifically focus on the transgressions try and really constrain those better than they have been um and then also on the the most recent um period the last 2000 years ago whether sea level is rising in in the location in that location or not but trying to just further constrain that that recent relative sea level history so working group one is what i'm um leading although i'm also working in working group two and our primary objective as i said is to develop high resolution records of relative sea level change from two thousand years for the last two thousand years and we're gonna try and do that by focusing on salt marshes and low elevation basins and that's because of the problem i mentioned with the isolation basins you need a lot of basins and they're not always available to get enough sea level index points to create to get that resolution or that detail that we're after and we hope to integrate the salt marsh relative sea level data with tide gate records to just extend that instrumental record back and more precisely constrain relative sea level changes in that time period and then we're also interested in characterizing recent changes in the biogeochemistry of coastal sediments to compare with earlier holocene transgression records so we're looking for signatures of uh in all kinds of different um uh elements of uh of a coastal sedimentary sequence um yeah um i've got examples coming up so some of the research questions and hypotheses that i want to explore i have a new phd student who's specifically funded by this project and he will be working on these so what we know now is that and i've shown you many examples that all geologically reconstructed relative sea level curves in norway show relative sea level falling to modern uh sea level or mean modern mean sea level but tide gauges indicate that relative sea levels been rising since their installation in some areas so what is the timing of the onset of the modern transgression in these areas where our tide gauges are recording uh transgression or rising relative sea level um and a hypothesis to test is that recent relative sea level rise has altered near shore terrestrial organic carbon fluxes primary productivity benthic ecology and coastal sediment dynamics recent changes in coastal systems are similar to those observed during early transgressions such as the tapas and then a little more experimental but related to this idea of c-level fingerprinting related to gravitational changes um of melting ice sheets and ice caps if we subtract uh our glacial isostatic adjustment from our recent sea level records are there trends in in sea level change that reflect little ice age um growth and retreat of glaciers and ice caps so the little ice age was this as you know i'm sure that's a cold period at least up here i'm not sure if the little ice age was manifest in israel or not but um it occurred between the 16th and 19th centuries and um certainly on svalbard and greenland there was significant growth and retreat of of ice caps and glaciers and it would be very interesting if if we could see that in our our relative sea level curves um over that time period and what i would expect is that since we're in the near field of greenland and svalbard i would expect that rates of regression or falling relative sea level would be augmented by the little ice age um uh particularly the um the retreat of of little ice age glaciers and ice caps because of the loss of gravitational attraction norway being in the near field and i think that would only augment ongoing rates of relative sea level fall so that's something to experiment with to see to work with our modelers on okay the approach for working group one um this is one sea level curve in in norway that is not um that i know of that it has not used the isolation basin method this is up in lefotin and this looked in a salt marsh sedimentary sequence up there and looked at four minifra and testate amoebae and the amps didn't work so well because um they couldn't get a modern analog uh so their transfer functions didn't work and hence the large error bars but the tested and ebay worked really well um you can see those in the close-up on the lower figure with the the boxes they indicate that the vertical error on these sea level index points from the testadam ebay um are on the order of 10 maybe 15 centimeters max so it's it's pretty good and and the red squiggly line on that is on the lower curve is the tide gauge record so there's a fairly uh it's fairly consistent with what was observed or recorded by the the test data ebay so this is the approach that we will take in working group one where possible the salt hence the salt marsh targeting salt marshes but also low really low or even intertidal basins um so i've had one master's student so far working on this project and he he began before this project was funded so it was just like let's see what we can do and how do we have any friends with labs um and he worked at this site in southern norway this is really almost southernmost norway it's um there's a nice real enclosed well it's not a pond sorry a bay but it's quite enclosed but it is is fully marine uh with a fringing salt marsh it's got a bedrock sill at two meters below sea level um a core was taken um just outside of the marsh in the basin and there's clear evidence of the isolation following the younger driest transgression that's the arrow down at the bottom ydh and then we go through that isolation contact into a freshwater pond so this little marine embayment was once um isolated from the sea and and then we get another transgression probably the toughest transgression above that uh and then it rem it remains um connected to the open or to the sea i.e not isolated um until recent and so my master's student though was trying to to find evidence of increasing marine influence just in the last um 100 200 years or so uh because we have tide gauge retro records from this area i think i yeah they're here that indicate that that since the tide gauge records have been installed um relative sea level has been rising in this area so these are the two closest tie gauge records these are i think it's a 30-year moving average shown and these actually go back much farther in time but um for this i think the data beyond 1960 is not necessarily reliable um but uh let me just try and go back here yeah so uh you've got a hillshade model on the right or the left showing the location of the the core and then um people with the russian court taking the the sample um and the the parts of this marsh that are flooded uh regularly by the tides as indicated by the arrow sea and then there's a white line um that shows the margin of the parts of the marsh that are regularly flooded by the tide and those above which only experience the storm tides uh or storm surges okay um so this this was uh we were a little bit unlucky i guess with this study it worked out okay but i think we need more data and now we have this project so we're going to go back but my student oscar he um he mostly focused on the top two meters of core that were collected from this site he looked he wanted to do uh foraminifera but preservation was a real problem here and i think this marsh is quite acidic um but he did find agglutinated foraminifera like millimina fusca and um i think throughout the full two meters so it certainly had some marine to brackish influence over that period of time we looked at xrf or we scan the cores for xrf and magnetic susceptibility and i won't go into too much detail we have some radiocarbon dates he also had some luck with lead we didn't do lead 210 dating but in norway i think most of the lead that you find in sedimentary sequences is atmospherically deposited so based on the pattern of of lead in parts per million he was he made some assumptions about uh what periods of or atmospheric uh sorry pollution fallout of lead so things like um peak leaded gasoline usage or the coal industry peak for example and he combined that with his radio it or sorry it fit with the radio carbon data but this this data needs to be modeled still um or incorporated into a proper age model and we just got some new radio carbon dates back for this for this core he also looked at things like uranium as a proxy for organic matter contents because uranium absorbs readily to peat versus titanium which is um more of a mineragenic um sediment uh proxy uh he looked at accretion rates and he also looked at macro fossils to determine whether we were in a reed swamp um or a salt marsh for example and based on this data um he determined that um that accretion rates began to rise around 160 years before present or 1858 a.d and that's compatible with his titanium and uranium records in xrf data and with his vegetation zone data and so that is his best or our best estimate for the onset of um i guess the relative sea level rise for this for this site in norway um and so um but there were some issues um in the hill shade map that i showed you i didn't point it out but there there's certainly some evidence of anthropogenic activity in this area so things like ditches cut into the marsh to drain it and maybe some harvesting of grasses and maybe there were livestock and so all of these things can affect the mineralogenic sedimentation and so the next step would be to to go to a marsh nearby that perhaps doesn't have as much anthropogenic activity associated with it or maybe a few marshes and compare the records so so that's sort of where we're at with that project i uh last year i went to the same area and i i collected some gravity cores and and russian cores uh from an intertidal basin here called saltocerna it's it's got a really nice intertidal sill um that we were able to measure or survey precisely it's probably at or very close to high tide we've just started analysis on those course oh this is my other phd student surveying the sill in this is what it looks like it's really just bedrock so that's quite nice we don't have to worry or we can we can be very confident of this the sail depth this is what um one of the russian cores looked like not sure what's going on we've certainly got storm layers you can kind of see these shelly layers here and here and i did some i'm using the ct scanner at the earth lab at the university of bergen and this is what one of the storm layers looked like looks like the red um uh the red fragment or the red uh part of this image um represents shell fragments and then we also see this in the uh the xrf data and so on but that's that's a work in progress so i'll quickly go through working group two and then i think i'm i'm basically out of time uh working group two had the primary objectives again of reconstructing these former transgressions um in norway and so they started because uh the working crew most of the working group two people uh or the leader of the project and the leader of working group two are both at the geological survey of norway and so they always have funding to go out and do field work and and they've been working on this um since 2018 um and i'm going to show you some of their work from southern norway they've poured 20 basins and they've identified 35 sea level index points so their approach to overcome the problem with resolution on these relative sea level curves was to just core a heck of a lot of basins and that's what they did um and so they've got some more resolution on them uh ultimately so we'll go to christian sun and that's in almost southern most norway and here they found a lovely cluster of basins that um contained record sedimentary records of a lot of things they were looking for and some things that i'm looking for so they've got the younger driest transgression in nine of them that's the black circled areas they've got the early holocene tapas transgression recorded in the yellow [Music] the yellow within the yellow circle and then the late hall scene they got some they they've got some more sea level index points um in the blue circles so this is one of the relative c level curves that they were able to put together so you can see the post younger driest rapid fall and relative sea level followed by the equally rapid probably rapid rise in uh during the tapas transgression but again we're still struggling with the depth of the low stand and to some degree the timing of the low stance we need to keep working on that followed by regression to modern but here there aren't we don't have good control on the vertical errors on the sill ducts here but there is some evidence that there is a bit of a speed up in the rate of relative sea level fall in the last 2000 years so starting around 1500 1600 years before present suddenly relative sea level is falling a lot faster than than previously and so then where we will hope to take this question to our modelers to ask why can they can they um can they account for this by looking at a little ice age retreat of glaciers in in the near field or maybe in well the near field makes the most sense but we but before we do that we need more control on the sea level index points in in terms of the elevation okay um [Music] then just waiting for my next slide there we go then we can move over to i think lista to the west yeah and here again uh we've got a bit better vertical control on um during the the um the last two thousand years during that regression and maybe maybe we see this this transition but we need more data still in those la the the most recent thousand years to really understand what's what's been happening with sea level but we've got better control over here during the tapas transgression i think especially on the trans the rapidly transgressive part of that record and then finally um over at fedestrand which is east of christian sun we have uh more a little more control on our um tapas transgression and then again in the the late holocene with this change in the rate of of sea level fall and we we're looking at different proxies um in during these these transgressions and this is an example of one where we're looking at the ratio of calcium to iron and sulfur to calcium through this isolation interval so what you're looking at on the core on the bottom is showing the brackish interval and then the to the left is the overlying freshwater interval and what we see we see this clear signal that is reflecting reduced conditions during the brackish phase and and changes in calcium and i think i've got a better yeah brackish fresh and then here in another core we've got the full interval so we've got um again a nice clear signal from the marine where we've got more calcium but also some sulfur um and and then in through the brackish and and ultimately into the fresh water so it's a it's a nice signal and we're going to look for this in our recent records as well and in other transgressive records that we that we collect okay okay so lastly i just want to say if you're wondering i mean we're not the seychelles we're not going underwater anytime soon why on earth would someone worry about sea level rise in norway especially when you think of norway like this these steeply sided fjords uh norway has a lot of coastal infrastructure like the uh the atlantic highway here a lot um there was one study um that calculated or determined that there are 110 000 buildings at one meter above present sea level or lower and to move or or or make changes to these buildings to accommodate future sea level is going to cost 725 million euros and that's just buildings we've also got an enormous aquaculture fishing and oil and gas industries here all of which rely on coastal ports and and infrastructure a lot of tourism or at least we used to bridges tunnels roads and so on the small communities in norway are all very well connected by these bridges and tunnels um to the rest of norway and also as you know sea level rise as i said with the tide gauge data it's ongoing this is stephanie probably during some kind of king tide storm surge event but it's already flooding same thing is happening in even in trondheim where relative sea level is still falling we are not rising this picture was taken in february almost exactly one year ago during a storm surge although it doesn't really look like much of a low pressure system overhead in this photo but um during a bit of a storm surge in combination with the king tide part of the cycle and this is a parking lot down on the fjord that's flooded and uh bergen it's got its own reasons for sea level rise not least that the parts of the city are actually sinking due to um changes to sub-terrain gla drainage but um in any case it's going to be expensive and potentially dangerous and so and can these communities rely on these projections and so that's that's our our main goal with quanzi is to um to improve those projections for the future by by improving our understanding of the past so thank you very much and i'm happy to take any questions thank you very much intel so i opened the podium for questions or from the people since i don't see everybody so just jump in with questions it would be good complex yeah easy hi first of all thank you it was a fascinating talk definitely i'm sorry beautiful beautiful data um beautiful project beautiful scenery nice norway um one question i have is is you never mentioned even by a hint uh historical or archaeological evidence yeah well that's true uh well because i think i was already too long um but there is um certainly some it's not the archaeologists are quite active and they work with um one of the members of our team and we're the leader of working group to quite often on um on see la pasi level uh change and so what i know about um archaeological sites in norway and with respect to sea level changes i know that some sites have been buried by um the tapas transgression so um they're buried by beach gravels and things like that but there's still evidence of occupation of close to the sea during that period of time um but maybe abandonment of sites and moving inland with that transgression and then there um there are also this low stand which is a real problem and it's something that i would like to get into uh myself in my working group um are there are a few sites in norway and i had a slide but i took it out i shouldn't have um where we have mesolithic sites uh up to 10 meters or so below um present sea level and we've got p layers indicating that sea level there was a low stand and then we've also got um i think human remains and artifacts um associated with those layers so we we do have those i think there are some parts of norway not too far from me where there might be some archaeological evidence or archaeological sites that give some indication of a former sea level things like fishing weirs but i'm i'm not not really sure about that and then we have some sights i think in caves and coastal caves in sedimentary sequences where uh the caves have been flooded and um [Music] i think during the mesolithic and and these these cultural layers or or archaeological sites are buried by by the um um by marine sediments in the caves but uh to be i'm not really i mean this is something that should go into the database i would think if but i i really haven't heard much about it a c-level index point based on an archaeological site or or um something related to to archaeology i i don't know of any but definitely worth looking into i have i have a question and this is that really um oh oh no yeah we hear you it's coming and going you sound maybe if you can write the question beverly explain that a little bit because perhaps if you can write it in the chat i don't i don't know if she heard us we'll find out okay um i have a question from the meanwhile again i wanted to say thank you very much i mean it's incredible your talk it's really fantastic um okay there is a question but i will ask mine about your xrf data i wanted to know i have two questions about the xrf data um you are presenting ppm part per million i guess is this um so i guess it's a quantitative do you because usually i i know the data like uh cps like count per second so i don't know if you have to i mean you have transformed the data into uh apartment per million basically right yeah well it was for me yeah but i honest i mean i've worked with xrf data a little bit um i have sort of a love hate relationship with it it's it's a bit like um falling into the into the or falling through the looking glass or something like that i can really get lost in it but it's very complicated and there's always there are so many local factors to explain all the trends and things but um i've always worked with it in in ppm that but i i've never processed it myself i've just been handed the data so i'm not sure i can answer your question but if you i mean i'm interested to hear more about problems with that but yeah no because i am familiar with that and i was surprised a little bit um and another question is about the lead uh actually um actually last week uh i submitted a paper from a lake in norway i hope to be accepted and we had a lot of discussion with the lead issue because um apparently the lead i'm not a lead expert but this is not a question it's more uh suggestion also i you you showed a graph graph with leads right the pigs yeah so our lead person ex expert was um saying that there probably there is a migration of the lead so it could migrate between the sediment and it will um migrate to more coarse particle units if you have already sealed and above not mud and it will get stuck over there so it probably will influence your um suggestion for a chronology okay in case so just take into consideration that it can be very tricky absolutely that's that's really good to know i think we're safe there because we have no coarse sediments in that particular site but i do have um clear storm layers and um coarser grain size layers uh from some of my other core sites but we do now the now that i have funding um we're actually going to do the the lead 210 we're gonna we're gonna analyze our sediments for that not rely on the xrf that was um just sort of what you do when you don't have funding we just worked with it and it seemed to fit but i didn't know about the migration to courses or grain sizes that's very tricky i think that an entire week would spend only for that discussion and argument because it's very very tricky and i'm going to take into consideration about the led to 10 that you're planning to do take into consideration that norway has a huge like really huge amount of led to 10 after the chernobyl so the measurements are going really high yeah yeah more than normal and then that thing also you need to argue somehow to the people that they are expert in that yeah absolutely we're hoping to use different pollution dating markers if we can so copper and lead nickel we'll also look at cesium 137 lead 210 and we're going to look we're going to use the ct scanner and maybe the xrf to see if there's any indication of tephras because there are lots of tephra or crypto tephras in norway so we're gonna try and look for those as well the problem with my working group working in this very recent time period is that it's tough to date so i have to rely we're going to have to rely on a lot of different um methods of age determination and we'll probably work with a woman at anteneux on the bomb curve as well and and do some of the radiocarbon bomb curve dating so cool yeah cool um there is a question from beverly um why is the contact in course at isolation so sharp yeah uh that is such a good question bev except you have to leave for hockey and that's too bad but i support hockey so uh okay i uh i can try and answer that question um why do we get this sudden switch from from the marine silt to the the brackish it's so clear and it's so sharp and actually i'm not really sure um i think once um once you reach some threshold with respect to where that um where that's when that sill is in that intertidal zone somewhere there uh then suddenly um i think the anoxic um conditions really take over and i and i think i think that helps to make it look more sharp um because of the the reduced condition the switch from from um from the open marine to the reduced conditions i think that's why it's not erosional or anything like that um i think it's i think it's the color change and i think it's related to the geochemistry but that's a super question and it made me think of something else and now i've lost it but anyway i hope i hope she heard yeah i think she did she she made another i've got the chat up here so that's good yeah okay okay um so are there more questions obviously i don't see everybody so just pop in um no questions no questions well i guess uh that's it is waving uh he is i'd like to ask another question how sure you that well it sort of touches that same issue you're talking about the contact being uh changing habitat basically of the lake uh how sure are you that it's in chronos across the entire lake uh did you try to investigate it we're not and it shouldn't i wouldn't expect it to be now these basins are quite small most of them they're not large at all um and the we tend to go for uh we use our sub bottom profiler and find where the thickest package of marine or sediments are for coring of course um but we also depending on access to these places will often go in at the margin where you've got your fringing marsh and take the take the core there or if we have ice we like to core through the ice it's an excellent coring platform um then we can go farther out into the basin um or we can do it by raft we've got a coring raft as well so so no that's a really good question those edge effects actually mean a lot but in my working group i'm hoping to do this sort of thing taking a transect across a basin and looking at the changes in the micro flora and fauna and the geochemistry um and then the you know the basic sedimentary physical properties i guess um and getting the whole picture of what's really happening i mean it's that brackish interval to be honest that's that's the most interesting to me because when you look at things like the xrf that i showed very briefly at the end um it's not just a simple suddenly we're brackish and anoxic there there are marine tendencies that are going back and forth more marine to less marine throughout that brackish interval and then suddenly we switch we cross some threshold and we switch to fully isolated fully fresh where the waters are turning over they're no longer anoxic and so on but um but i think that um i would like to explore these brackish intervals in during these past transgressions and look at some of the some of these different elements of the sedimentary sequences in that interval and compare those to the places along the coast where relative sea levels rising because we're sort of in that brackish interval um in in these low elevation coastal basins where we know that sea levels rising so they were at their low stand and now suddenly they're getting more marine influence so i think it'd be i think it could be really interesting to see how the how things fluctuate and what uh during that that period of time this brackish phase and uh yeah how that looks in in different through through different proxies i guess yeah i've looked at the sea of mama and and it looks the same in the sea of mama it's quite amazing the different scale the sea of mama also has this marine this marine deposits and then boof and then there is a a a land deposits on on top of it which means that the the steel was that the seal was cut off that the sea was cut off and that's interesting yeah amazing there are papers from that people investigated at the yeah you might want to look at that it's really interesting oh yeah that is very interesting huge water body but it is the same idea we're also i mean i'm a coastal geomorphologist as well myself i mean that's a lot of my background was in coastal geomorphology and i'm also interested in those threshold resp changes i mean with these raised beaches for example um you know why you know what what do they really represent why are the they why do they form these beautiful staircase patterns i mean i think it's the last major storm before sea level fell to an another level or but it certainly has something to do with the the storm interval and how that's changed over time and it's not a simple case of assuming a linear rate of sea level change you know going from the lowest to the highest raised beach for example so connecting the geomorphology to these coastal basins is um also something we can do especially in northern norway where a lot of that is preserved really nicely so i i think it's also important for understanding what change looks like yes yeah the paleo coast might be that we are going to cross steps along the way yeah yeah absolutely okay okay thank you very much until um i think we need to we need to close yes you will receive a present from us so yeah ready yeah okay so um and if you want to be in uh in our mailing list for future talks if you want yeah yeah that sounds great it sounds like you have a fun series going so if i can join in if i'm not teaching then absolutely you can join in whenever you want and we will have more norwegians by the way oh excellent through your connection maybe yeah okay so thank you very much and secure everybody okay have a good day bye | Marine Geosciences | UCJYhmN5PBsm9VRLWwnEqL5Q | 2021-03-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 10,868 | 57,526 |
HswVRAEnV4o | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HswVRAEnV4o | Deploy Your Web Application with WSO2 Choreo | Community Call #2 | hello everyone today we will be we'll be learning about how to deploy a web application on Courier and I'll start with some of the terminals associated with web Maps then I'll deploy a sample web application in Korea and discuss how to manage configurations and then I'll deploy another next.js application and do the same message so let's move on to the terminal ID uh so when so when it the term web apps refers to how we a user can access some content on web browser by accessing some URL so the content displayed on browser is internally uh internet in the structure called the document object model and the rendering part refers to Via the content is generated so when X says server side rendering it means the server generates the full HTML page uh related to that URL along with the references to CSS and images and then the browser receives the HTML file browser passes that HTML and then constructed the document object model and request Associated resources as well and then display the container uh when we say client-side rendering so the browser is responsible for uh executing the JavaScript displayed added on the HTML file so the HTML file might not have any other stuff and the JavaScript will initialize the JavaScript might fetch the necessary data and alter the Dom to uh modify the Dom to display change the contention on the screen it might also a request additional JavaScript so that it can provide the other kind of interactivity and content and the single so the single page application is an uh like a model where we use the client sign rendering extensively so the HTML file received about HTML file received by the browser is a simple one that will only have the JS and CSS differences then it might have other images something but the content there won't be any content instead the added JavaScript will so contain some other framework something like reactor it could be handed in so that JavaScript will be responsible for altering this element and adding the necessary content detail fits the necessary data it will respond to users interaction and update this content accessory so I'll move on to the single page application deployment before we deploy the application let me give a briefing intro on how and what if this sample application uh so my so the single patient application I'm deploying today's built byte which is a bundler and so I have two main routes that will be the home and to do uh list now and I can add some to do here so it will get added then I can modify some of this data acid so that was an additional route it goes to to slash one is going to save again and for the as as the authentication provider I am using as cardio so we'll discuss how to integrate that test cell so the application function like this this just to do application and I'll definitely describe how the code works so so I have a white config file at the root of the folder so why it is responsible for providing a Dell server I am currently lying here and as well as it can bundle the uh Source content into like it will do the minimization and bundling of the Java JS and CSS so our entry point will be this index HTML file it so it contains reference to our main DSX file and so let's go to the TSS file and here um so I have defined uh old country to be provided to S cardio and so you can see that the configurations comes from the window object so that that is said it in this script file so before any of the the Javascript file loads so this script will be loaded in it so let me open it so the Javascript file basically modifies the window object to contain this configuration it has the both configuration first card yes my backend API URL so one of the advantages of specifying a different config is file is that when we build a when we do a production build uh the build output will emit the other JS files as a bundled and unified JS but this one will be directly available in the public directory so that when you can when you need to provide environment specific configurations you can keep using the same build artifact but replace this file when you deploy it to a specific and and also since this is so this runs before any other JavaScript file we don't need to worry about delaying initialization of the JavaScript candidate so here so we just defined module level variable that directly access the window from the window object so similarly I have used the to-do API URL here in the API client so I am just assigning this to the API URL into the test so that is only possible before because the config.js file runs before any of that other JavaScript files so um so that's it about how like to provide configurations to spa and let's go to the main TSX of it so I have provided the escaria config here and I have also added a react query client to do this API calls and caching and so I'm using the authenticated State here and checking whether if it's authenticated the usage usage has authenticated if not tile uh try uh try to render the sign in page if you say right so navigate to another page I have another route that will redirect the sign in page and when the user is authenticated it will go to this block it has the main routes defined here so this will be the home directory and this one is the to those page and this one was used to display the edit page so I have nested this in another route element which specifies the common layout used in this app so that's let's go into this stage here I have used a custom reactor hook where I get the what kind of extra Miss cardio SDK and pass it to the API call where we get the access token and the attach the attach it as an authorization at the end of the API code so those data will be this displayed using these converts so I think that's about it for this yes yeah I think we can move on to the deploying part uh okay so I have so I'm using a Docker file to build deploy this application so this is a standard multi-stage build where I do an npm install and not JS image and build output and so the white by default uh emits the build output Build That vaccine to this directory so I copy that files into the default after engine exhale serve the content and I have copied the nginx configuration added here so it so so this file uh basically listened to so it's a in its Engineers configuration so it isn't stoned for the adid and it has so the this build output has some version build that effect so we know that there won't be any content so anything we can add custom cache headers and something like that and for that main route I have added the default index HTML so in a single page application there is only one index HTML file so if it doesn't so the users request doesn't matter any match any other URL it will send the index HTML file there let's move on to deploying so I have a yeah it's got the mistake first okay tested so when we build and deploy our application it will be deployed on The Courier data plane uh Let's uh let's build it first before so in order to save time edit so here we have to provide the Branch I'll use this Repository so and I'll be using the main branch since I have a Docker file I'll use the docker file preset if you don't have a Docker file and you simply want to deploy Spa you can use this option as well so when you selected the file option we have to provide the path to that file select here so the docker context path would be where they build runs so the project root and so the port I added on nginx configuration is 8080 so I'll create that and Orange yeah let's deploy this so for now we don't have any configs to add while it deploys uh I feel go to the deployed I can DPS so let's go to the slide okay and so so the my application will be deployed here it will be an nginx server and so when the user request the web page it will the request come through come to the engine itself and it will get the HTML and the JavaScript connected so the browser will execute those and user will be able to authenticate with this cardio and so we can get the token accessed and accessed over so we can use that to uh so I backend apis deployed with public visibility so we can just set the token here and the API gate will pass the request to my backend API along with a token provided by gate it will have the necessary details to identify it which user the steps that request so let's go back to the yeah so so I have deployed this with a public visibility and I will go to the okay so listen it's suspended so this might be also suspended in this case yep so since this is a public kpi we have to and so so I mentioned about the back end so the token provided by gate day so in order to enable that we have to enable this option or security context to backend I have already enabled it and in the life cycle section I have already published this API so it should be available on developer portal it's yeah it's already available so in order to consume that API let's create an application here so you can subscribe to that API and let's click on generated generate places then we can manage permissions for that application since this is a single page application uh we need to enable a public client option and I'll let this and as for the redirect URLs it will be a URL yeah let's save those and direct a traditional use attributes here let profile and email it yeah now we should be able to use this application in order to so right now it don't have the configuration file attached to this deployment let's create done so the domain I occupied the domain and so let's modify the same configuration here sign in url will be the same as the web domain and the client ID we can copy from this card here so the base URL s cardio will be the same one but organization name has to be added here and I need that to do API URL as well so we can get that here so the public URL listed listed here click it yeah I think it should be fine so when we add this configuration our so in our Docker file we copied the rest of the files to this directory and so the nginx configuration also uses that path that's the root so we'll have to mount it there so I'll go to the configuration section here and at the config file so it's not this one is can file choose a config file Mount option and so that content should be fine I think we can mount it to this spot okay slash you can give it some display name ASL okay so now the application should be updated let's see whether if it works okay so I'll have to yeah I'll create a temporary user for this service otherwise it might take some time to sign up and okay so I think you can use these credentials here um and since we ask for additional Scopes it will uh study will ask those from use as well okay seems to be working it says we have no to do items and let's try creating one yeah okay seems to be working so let's move on to the slide says again so yeah so we deployed the web application here and so also we create an Escalade application and subscribe it to our using it subscribe to do rest API so when you send the access token the get accepted it and so the rest area was able to identify which your site belongs so let's move on to the next JS app so I'll do a brief terminal okay and it's similar to the single page application that the UI only the similarity will be the UI but uh so in the case of next.js it doesn't use like it it isn't strictly limited to server side rendering or uh client-side rendering so I'm using the pages router so when I initially load the application uh it will get the full content here in the response in addition it will have the to do array s again is to do items in Json such as well so after that when I click on something else now the application will do other request using Etc so it will get the necessary details and do a client-side rendering here it don't do any other HTML requests so it will keep on updating the UI with client-side rendering so if I go to this edit page so it fetch the data for this item and rendered it but now if I reload the page it would again send the content for that page site rendering and it will also have that content in Json SL that so this is called hydration so the reactor so the server Center HTML file list like so this content is initially displayed to the user but then another react application starts and take over the client-side generate let's go into the code okay so for the next case table I have a script it's next they have reducer and build commands and so in the next JS config I have used Standalone output that means it will instead of using the next next zones right field uh build an output that will that can be just started with simply started it's not JS so if you can if you move to the docker file they can see that in the end it will be just not server node so it will be just starting up the node serverages otherwise we can use the next start command SL but for Docker files they recommend using the standard or not so if you go into the code here so I'm using Pages directory so the route still be defined as will be defined as file file based route so I have a index file for the so index file will be the home page and there is another file to render that to do route and so we had different route here it's to do slash to that so Dynamic shouts like that it passes special syntax so we we represented this a using brackets so inside this I can get the so that I can within the server side groups I can access this ID from the parameters that will be the to-do ID so this side process what you can use to like pass data into the this page so so if we like if you need to like so we can fetch data on the client side as well but if you want to utilize service identity we have to use this so here I have a fetch the necessary data and password that groups to this component and it will render those content and yeah so so for this application as well I'm using sqrds.proid and in order to integrate that with this application I am using next oh it's another Library so here I have added the s-card like configuration 20 grade test card here and I have chosen to maintain the session in JWT that day we don't need to have uh database or anything and we can process the session on the cookie or something and yeah so so when we so when the user authenticates the score that will be sent to the next jsr server and this route will be provided by next dot it will handle the rest of the flow and so as I mentioned that here so the when the web page initially loaded that contained this rendered on the server but it also causes the data necessary to initiate client-side reading as cell so after the initial page load any kind of user interaction will trigger data features to this text server or we can call somewhere else to any second API and it till all the UI updates will be handled through client-side 20. so for this application I have a so so the next is already integrates is s Guardia here so I can get the user ID in in the session Windows templates so I can directly use it to uh call my API which is deployed this project visibility so we don't need to expose it though insert instead the next JS curve can reach it so let's go to the code again so so the next is uh next dots configuration requires some parameters to be passed to uh this or provide a config so that we can pass it as in if configs so I will we have to go through this one is used to generate the Callback QRS in the auto flow and the secret is directly passed to the next auth Library which which is uh which is then used to generate generate it till we used to sign an encrypt session the JWT and so I'll have to create another s cardi application for this using client credentials and yeah this is the other simple configurations so let's deploy the application okay so my API with deployed the project visibility is already running here so I can reach that API using this project value URL so yeah we can use this URL so I'll update the configs here and okay let's deploy it just okay let's select the repository again it's this one and yeah so this one anyway it's not Spa so we already have the docker file option so let's select this that will be this directory and as for the port that will so next is by default runs on Port 3000 you can use that so I'll just deploy this for now and let's until it deploys let's configure application for that tester okay that's the way to name it next test so now we are so the next year set will be directly calling our to-do API internally so it we don't need to doing subscriptions but let's generate the credentials and use it so we'll need to provide these configs into next yes it could copy paste and the domain has to be updated CSL update these configs after we deploy the application so we need to replace it to do API URL as well let's configure this first so I'll use the code Grant and refresh here so this so this won't be a public client and as for the redirect URL I think we'll have to wait till this URL is generated okay foreign I think I have documented this one here yeah so we have to open this path too so this is our callback URL will be implemented so is that this here so we can replace the provider as well here and for the origins you can register the URL and we can save it here so let's request some news attributes as well we only need the email at the moment here only displaying the email but yeah let's oh so the application is deployed but still we need to add the configurations so the Nexus this application expects the variables as in Num variable so I will use this one sorry copy paste this this is its own URL and so let's see at this as secrets we connect the client ID as a config so you need to provide this cardio origin at the base URL so this is just a environment variable used to it it's only a display value I'll let's development and for the to do API URL we can get that I think we already copied it so you can use this client ID here okay I think that's it for the EnV files save this and let's set the sensitive variable secrets so this is just a string generated through the terminal we can use that okay now the configuration should be fine let's see whether it works so this is just a sample sign-in page provided by the next Library I have custom edit yes so let's see with this okay task concept as yeah so now this API will be so if I reload the page you can see that since the entire HTML content and if you go to the tutor out again now it will just fetch the Json data into the client secretary another one yeah so this we send the post request here and then the this does already again fetched only the Json data so if we reload it again then it would fetch this HTML content again yes so I think that's it for the next this deployed the application let's go to the slides again okay so we previously discussed this session so these routes these are the content roster slash this is the home page and this one is to this list page and the API routes so mutations and get 10 points exposed to this API and that next is next dot Library expose the other or 10 points to this sorts all of this browser can access directly and so when the browser sends the request it will be sending the jwd token using HTTP cookie and so the next JS server will be able to extract the user ID from that session and send it to the list tape here okay and reload this page okay there is a session request going in so there should be this I think this is the user ID we can see that it reached our backend API so the US ID is so the next is uh adds the use ID to the path and requesting the data from this API so I think that's it for the this application demo and yeah so yeah I think that's it this is the demand if there's indications we can | WSO2 | UCMnlRiQLlrPn6-Jg7nvfD4w | 2023-09-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,874 | 19,726 |
mXqgUR6wx8o | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXqgUR6wx8o | TOP 10 Most Common and Traditional Food in China | hi [Music] welcome to my channel today we will explore the traditional chinese dishes chinese culture includes cuisine originating from the diverse regions of china because of the chinese diaspora and historical power of the country chinese cuisine has influenced many other cuisines in asia with modifications made to cater to local palettes because of imperial expansion and trading ingredients and cooking techniques from other cultures are integrated into chinese cuisines over time first on our list steamed stuffed bun time of origin three kingdoms period steamed stuffed bun is a flour dough wrapper with stuffing which is a kind of chinese traditional food it is said that it was created as sacrifices to dead soldiers in battles by zuz liang who was an outstanding politician and military strategist in three kingdoms period the stuffing was originally minced beef and mutton later the stuffing became more and more various the name we used today was settled in song dynasty up to now the stuffing can be pork beef pickled chinese cabbage vermicelli mushrooms bin paste eggplant cabbage chinese chives fried eggs and tofu and so on the types are also enriched including small steamed buns soup infilled buns and pan-fried buns second on our list wonton time of origin spring and autumn period wenton is a traditional chinese dish made with wheaton flour and meat filling like the dumplings but the wrapper is much thinner or can be say transparent and it is eaten together with the soup according to the legends won't and might origin from spring and autumn period at the beginning wentin and dumplings shared the same name by tang dynasty these two food had their own names respectively to southern song dynasty the custom of eating wonton on winter solstice sprang up since 1990s quite a few wonton with new sets of fillings appeared like the filling of lotus root fresh pork cured pork chinese yam and fresh meat sweet broad peas and fresh meat egg yolks and chicken pork and shrimps pork and vegetables third on our list moon cake time of origin late shang dynasty and early zoo dynasty moon cake is a traditional chinese food for mid-autumn festival it is round which symbolizes family reunion it is also a sacrificial offering to moon god on mid-autumn festival the chee cake appeared in the late shang dynasty and the early zoo dynasty might be the predecessor of moon cake in tang and song dynasties moon cake was a royal food later it was brought to folk up to ming dynasty eating moon cake on mid-autumn festival had become popular in king dynasty the making skills was improved and moon cake evolved into many different styles there are many types of traditional moon cakes and the most common stuffing includes 5 nuts red bean paste roses lotus seed paste osmonthus dried plum rock sugar ginkgo pork floss black sesame ham egg yolk fourth on our list dumplings time of origin eastern han dynasty dumpling is the most famous traditional chinese food which was invented by medical sage zhang zhong jing more than 1 800 years ago at that time chinese herbal medicine was stuffed in with mutton to prevent cold and cure paneer in winter in three kingdoms dumplings has been a common food in northern and southern dynasties dumplings became popular around china and people filled them in a bowl with the soup to eat them together nowadays dumplings have been a festival food on chinese new year and winter solstice the fillings are various including pork beef lamb fish cabbage carrots leek in the chinese new year's day people eat dumplings to say goodbye to the old year and welcome a new year in addition dumplings have the auspicious meaning of great fortune and family reunion fifth on our list chinese noodles time of origin more than 4 000 years ago noodles is one of the oldest traditional chinese foods chinese people have started to eat noodles about 4 000 years ago the noodles were small dough sheet first and later leak wide noodles in jin dynasty thin noodles like strips appeared in tang dynasty a kind of cold noodles that was cooled in cold water appeared it was also at the time that long noodles was given the wonderful wish of longevity thus people began to eat the longevity noodles on their birthdays in northern song dynasty the name of noodles was fixed and there were not a few kinds of noodles in the earliest commercial streets in the capital city in yuan dynasty fine dried noodles that could be preserved long was invented during the long history the skills of making noodles and its cooking methods had been continuously improved now people in north china take noodles as a staple food while southern people more often eat it as a snack whatever noodles is a vitally important daily food in china its shape thickness and length are various as well as the side ingredients and seasonings sixth on our list zong zai time of origin spring and autumn period zhongtsai is a chinese traditional food of dragon boat festival the glutinous rice is wrapped into red leaves and then steamed zhongzhai appeared in spring and autumn period and was used to worship ancestors and gods at that time starting from warring states period it was used to commemorate the great poet kuan to jin dynasty it was fixed as the festival food of dragon boat festival and chinese medicine meat chestnuts and other things were added as fillings except for glutinous rice in song dynasty preserved fruits were added into fillings of zhongzai later the more and more spices of zhongtsai came out nowadays the common fillings of sweet zonks i are red bean red date rose date paste bin paste etc while those of salty ones are pork ham sausages shrimp seventh on our list rice cake time of origin spring and autumn period rice cake also called new year cake is a traditional chinese food eaten on chinese new year having a propitious wish of a better new year it is the cake steamed with glutinous rice flour there are red yellow and white rice cakes and people often make them into auspicious shapes such as coins treasures and some lucky animals it can be fried boiled deep fried boiled with seasoned soup it is said rice cake was originated from suzu in spring and autumn period and in han dynasty there were several names of rice cake eight on our list spring rolls time of origin eastern gin dynasty spring rolls is popular all over china especially in the south this traditional chinese food is wheaton crust wrapped with fillings and then deep fried to be golden the dish is aromatic with crisp thin crust the fillings can be minced pork beef mutton bean paste or varied vegetables it is a custom to eat spring rolls on the beginning of spring one of the 24 solar terms to welcome spring and make auspicious wishes ninth on our list chinese pancake time of origin more than 5 000 years ago pancake is a traditional chinese staple food especially popular in northern china which originated from shandong province to jin dynasty pancake had specific meanings on some special festivals pancake was used to fumigate and as a symbol of repairing sky in tang dynasty pancake had been popular as it was listed as a royal dish in song dynasty pancake became more welcomed especially on some festivals such as kixi festival at late ming dynasty the cooking method of current pancake had formed tenth on our list glutenous rice balls time of origin song dynasty glutenous rice balls is a traditional chinese food as well as the festival food of lantern festival and winter solstice it is made of glutinous rice flour with fillings and shaped like balls glutinous rice balls originated from ningbo xi jiang province in song dynasty at that time the filling was black sesame's white sugar and lard now the fillings are various like black sesame rose walnut kernel date paste pumpkin fruits pork and chicken etc it is usually boiled and then eaten with the light soup sometimes rice wine and white sugar are added for better flavor thank you for watching please don't forget to like and subscribe have a nice day | Edmund B. | UCrZdcvkZbfiPX1pNpyPyxVQ | 2020-07-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,398 | 8,018 |
TGaca4tN3uQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TGaca4tN3uQ | This is how we trip at school (Re-Upload) | [Music] hey guys what's up we just took a crapload of dxm at school we are floating we are glide racing and we're equalizing the forces between nature and the second mind and this right here this is the brain forest our sacred home for the disciples a warm cloud depot for us to deck satin fuel up before class it's also a good place to go if you don't want to be called [ __ ] all right ben you want to show him around this is the creation case it has the robo habit pills dexa [ __ ] badville and hexafil which is supposed to be able to rewind memories they can't i was actually once reminded to the days of old battles but please be careful with that okay you don't want to end up in an ego prison yeah it can also remind you to bad memories or things you don't want to think about anymore like the time that my mom moved in with greg and this is the learning center this right here it's a flight pattern dome basically just hop on that thing test out new maneuvers new flight travelers whatever it takes yeah funeral for the face so fake and this is trippy maxims oh crap hey let's let the journeys begin hey girl you want to leave some soul slam it would be my darkest pleasure in green day in montube and king day hey oh [ __ ] campers cops oh hey hey what are you weirdos doing over there it's portal time baby [Music] all right so we've made the immersion into the second world here's where we see the brain forest expand all right benny you want to tell them what's happening over there well i'm moving through the nevermoor and breaking through the existential inferno excellent and doing it in your given lifestyle as well very elemental it looks as if garrett might have unlocked the cage of the after now or yes now that the falls and the wicked dissolve it's time that we breathe care what's up with you man you've been acting so weird lately yeah garrett everything cool i don't know my mom's been acting like a major [ __ ] lately and i feel like i'm practically raising the twins myself that's not cool i was just so [ __ ] up that she would push you through that [Music] i mean like thanks for being there for me [Music] of course man we're your boys and what do you say we shed our shields of negativity and embrace the truth monkey's here hi monkey holy [ __ ] get back to class you | Ghost is Black v.1069 | UC5IuFsWZevfBRpgIIuXT27Q | 2021-06-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 441 | 2,362 |
Zp4O0-2wRQc | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zp4O0-2wRQc | 😍 SRING BLONDE! 🔥 MUST SEE* EASY BALAYAGE BOB INSTALL | MEGALOOK | hey guys welcome back to my channel my name is Ashley B dick thank you for tuning in if you are new if you are an OG thank you for coming back and rocking with girl I definitely appreciate you here today I am teaming up with mega look they sent over this beautiful highlight Bob wig I love a good Balayage I love a good Dark Root I love the highlights I think that with this new Foundation that I've been using and I'm going to be doing a makeup a detailed makeup tutorial for you guys soon to give you all the tea but I love how sun kissed my skin is looking even in the winter time and I think the blonde in this one definitely like bounces off the skin I know I'm just being dramatic and extra but I definitely love the way this one looked and how it came out now I did opt for baby hair I did this without any light curling iron you guys know how we do the the pencil um the pencil mini little curling iron um or flat iron I didn't use that at all and I think it came out absolutely beautiful I use foundation for a lace tint and then also it's just kiss so I'm gonna go ahead and jump into the tutorial be warned I'm starting in a bald cap so I might look crazy but without further Ado let's go ahead and jump right into it okay ladies let's jump right into it this is the wig straight out of the box I like to show you guys a visual of the inside construction at the cap so you'll have a visual of how you can part your wig this one also includes an elastic band I like to put that on First and that kind of just like pushes down the braids in the back so they can be a little bit more flat and this is what the wig looks like on she's absolutely gorgeous this is a 13x6 Balayage highlight lace front wig in the texture deep curly and it is 12 inches in length I'm going to jump right into the install process and I'm going to do any customizations I choose as we go ahead and bond her down and you know style her so I'm not going to do the customizations beforehand but you definitely can this is what she looks like as a center part now on the um website it was set as like a side part so that's what we're going to do today and this is a look at the hair from the back the Balayage highlights are absolutely beautiful and they pair well with the curls I love the fact that the curls in this one look like natural curls and not like manufactured curls if that makes any sense so we're going to go ahead and bond her down and I am using that ebin that I love so much in the color red you'll see in my next video I absolutely ran out so right now I have no adhesive I couldn't Bond a wig dot if I wanted to which is SOS in distress someone save me um I do blow dry on a cool setting if you don't want to use a blow dryer you can use like a hand fan and this is that quick pick of what the wig looks like on the sales page which is the inspo of how I styled the wig today none of the wig is bonded down I'm just kind of like pulling the hair forward you guys know that um adhesive sometimes will make the front of the hair kind of stiff so I'm kind of just like combing out all that extra product that got into the hair as I pull the hairline forward now I did not want it to be too full in the front so I did go for baby air like from like eyebrow to eyebrow I didn't do any sideburns at all but you're gonna see how beautiful it's gonna look and right now it looks pretty full but we're gonna finesse it and you're gonna see how just easy it is to customize as you go because sometimes when you like tweeze out the hairline before you Bond it down you really don't have any clue if you are over plucking or not until like later on so I'm gonna do the plucking like while the wig is already installed and styled that way I know exactly what needs to come out here I'm doing the dynamic duo I'm just pairing the wax with the electric hot comb both are from my website feedback.com and now that we've done that you see I'm just going in and tweezing out the hairline opening it up so that it looks a lot more natural and thin in the front now that I have it how I like it this is absolutely gorgeous I was impressed I love love love this color against my complexion and I just wanted to comb it out sometimes I like to comb my curls out and just see how it looks like full and big and natural in this case it looks gorgeous but let's go ahead and continue to work on the lace I went for a side part but I did kind of curve it somewhat and then I continued that dynamic duo along that area this is going to make sure that the lace looks super flat and kind of give the growing out of the scalp Vibe a little bit more I do tons of heat passes you don't have to if you don't want to or you can use like water or mousse which will flatten this area as well opposed to putting like heat if that makes any sense and here I am just um tweezing out that Sideburn because again I'm customizing as I go today so I'm just like seeing what it looks like and just removing and even tomorrow and the next day after I'll continue to tweeze it out until I get it to how I like it so now we're going to go in with liquid products along the lace the lace is pretty much lighter than my complexion so I was deciding if I wanted to go Maybelline or Fenty see the Fenty is a concealer and the Maybelline is a foundation so I figured I'd go with the concealers because it is a thicker um consistency you know it'll conceal a little bit more um and then I went ahead with the Maybelline foundation along the hairline and I liked the way it came out but of course if you don't love it you continue to customize until you have it exactly how you want it and so I ended up going in with a darker foundation and this is the Ruby kisses on top and I think I got The Perfect Blend to match my complexion and I set it with the uh Shapers just like you would set your makeup to make it all look like skin okay and ladies so pit stop I wanted to show you guys what it looked like when you just comb it out now I don't know what I want to do and it's kind of like I feel like I just want to stay here I love the natural look of it I mean I do curly hair deep wave texture all of the textures all of the time so part of me just literally wants to leave you like more of a in more of like a fluffy State as such but I know you guys want to see it curled up so I'm just showing guys how pretty it is like this I'm not sure if I should go with my mousse or my curl cream I don't want to get it super wet I just want to again show you guys the definition in the curls let's just see what happens okay now let's wet the hair down as I said I wanted it to be super big but you know I just wanted to give you guys options and dimension this is a curly wig so I really wanted you to see the curls more than anything in the actual tutorial and of course the Nairobi mousse paired with the denim brush is my favorite combo and I just kind of like do this tandem add a little water add a little mousse brush it if I don't like it add a little bit of more to this a little bit more to that until I get the look that I like of course the pieces that are bleached are going to need a little bit more um product than the pieces that are like virgin or natural and that's just with your hair my hair wig hair any hair is going to have a different effect or take product and water differently if it is chemically processed but I will say that the way this one was bleached the hair still had the curl and everything it needed so it wasn't damaged which is a great thing and I didn't want it to be like wet wet so I kind of like blow dried it a little bit and then this was the look okay babies so we are somewhat done with this look I do want to let the hair dry up a little bit more now I do prefer the hair like extra big and natural even with this beautiful color I think it looks beautiful um nice and just big and just like blown out um but I did want to show you the definition of the curl especially because the hair is um highlight or you know dyed blonde I wanted to make sure I showed you guys that the texture of the hair and the Integrity of the curl is absolutely there now I did just go in and do a thing and kind of just um almost like diffuse it the blow dryers from beauty.com this blush already does come with a diffuser attachment it's I'm staring at the basket that it's in but I know it's at the bottom of the baskets I'm not even gonna try but I just wanted to kind of dry it up because again I do more so want the dry texture with this one and not the wet but I wanted to kind of like wet it and Define it first if that makes any sense and I do love the way that that came out so I do think it's a little bit pale so that's kind of just like warm it up and add some more Brown to it I think that definitely looks better so this one did come from Mega look and you guys know I've been loving their units lately um and this is the packaging it did come with this nice dust bag and they did also include the goodies for us so with this one we got this cute little Pearl clip then this here is a elastic band and it does say mega look on it or not elastic band but you know a melt belt this here is an edge brush and then here is a pair of lashes as well as a tan pack of wig caps which I definitely will rock and I would just add a little bit of my foundation on top to make the match I love how this one looks on my complexion I am going to be doing a um makeup tutorial for you guys because I've been loving my makeup lately it has a little bit more of a glow and I like it it Blends on my complexion really good it's not too bright I don't know I love it but anyways I'm gonna let you guys go be sure to check out Mega look isn't that good direct link to this one is in the description box thank you guys so much for watching and tuning in and sticking around this long in the video go ahead and give me a thumbs up so that I know you lasted this long and as always I'll see you in the next one smooches | Ashley Bedeck | UCBNmpyNc3k_ZFGcLGRX3DtQ | 2023-03-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,092 | 9,979 |
8ZGLZJ3_aTk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZGLZJ3_aTk | New Government Hospital at Vijayawada | Super Speciality Block to Start New Year | BJ buttercup Roberto hospital alota avocado Pelotonia twisting a super speciality block Luthan a sound underwater located on the moody look at South Annapurna Lou Mauro nella low quality was tiny are the Coliseum personnel reindeer and an alpha particle ooh Tommy the apocalypse in simultaneous portrait whare Karenina by disabled under kids here wakaranai VJ Maddaloni know that a prophet to ask for three our nello Ren develop on the how June reading dinner super speciality blog for the looper are my yang he has the logo on the bottle okay well any operating profit election in addition China for the Luke will occur on a new moon day Lucas there you go to nanny Ramon upon a loop to the desk which array corporate honglei though super speciality block group with Lacuna only enemy the operation theatre Lu sensor lighting with a no I had to lift Lu via nikkiviper onion thirstily Calipari Charlemagne a ramp Oh he asked for three party a cattle you either want us to LA no Bakura come here why this yellow on the bottle of dye white Gillis Eugene chair under the collar or a deeper actually Wolcott oh I'm just alone drama he change their party chairs to marry but her anger biochemistry microbiology pathology lab blue CT scan dialysis unity hinder scorpy fluoroscopy ultrasound together x-ray unit low whatever knee what did he understand only on time brother and sister tickets every value buy these tickets every bug value row below are duly rindo Uncas through here pardon chaser urology neuro neurosurgery pediatric surgery neurology the ideologist of Ababu samachar assange catechol unit 20v rindaman thirst alone time JIRA Nicosia viata loo gunday would read it through sister which I could sell you up sir a cardiac a wave Hubbell cattle a Puente Bernie voodoo untested purchase to marry null who I do understood me yeah antibacterial vinyl flooring to 840 ASAP narubu am custom attorney up th it's a convenience unarmed today's homily shame on their own the rental of idiots are a paragon even I either on the slow the enemy the operation theater loser her first operation anesthesia Waterloo zipper the long time Brendan Dillon aa particular to to me the vibha Gallagher said Madonna he is super speciality auspi 3 pootie go on the bottle acoustic neurology four ology cardiothoracic cardiology pediatric surgery went avoid disabled under own life | ETV Andhra Pradesh | UCJi8M0hRKjz8SLPvJKEVTOg | 2019-12-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 403 | 2,363 |
FNj8-JwG_vA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FNj8-JwG_vA | Young Bob Proctor | Get in CONTROL of Your Own THOUGHTS! | #EarlyStarts | our thoughts control our actions oh there's no question about it no our thoughts control our feelings okay our feelings control our actions right and we control our thoughts absolutely we can control our thoughts yes generally though one of our one of our our difficulties one of our problems maybe is that we tend to react to to other people and and we consequently get the negative thoughts and then that affects our feelings and then that affects our behavior that's right that's exactly the way it is we read the newspaper doom and gloom's coming we just accept it doom and gloom doesn't have to be coming do you know there's always been a depression for some people i grew up with the idea that everybody went broke in the 30s they didn't some made millions i thought everybody went out of business they didn't some people went into business there's always a depression for some people there's always good times for others let's ask ourselves when we read something in the paper do i want to get emotionally involved in that idea if it's a negative idea i don't want to get emotionally involved with it i don't read the paper that often i do but not i don't dwell on it you don't get emotionally involved when an idea comes into your mind whether somebody else tells you or whether you read it in the paper we should reason with it ask ourself will that idea help me get to where i want to go if it won't reject the idea if you want another amazing young bob proctor video check it out right there next to me i think you'll love it continue to believe and i'll see you there i'd have a difficult time really explaining attitude right just in a conversation i use a board in the seminar and well i did it at an attitude seminar last night we spent three hours | Starting from the Bottom / Evan Carmichael | UChy9fnS3MWvBq31aVfvJ_1Q | 2021-12-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 330 | 1,763 |
8mGrTwLPQMw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mGrTwLPQMw | YOUR LIBRA 2021 YEAR OVERVIEW | YOUR NERVES ARE SHOT | hello everybody it's michelle patterson here with angel souls and these are our 2021 readings by syme if you would like to get a personal reading with me just go to my website at angelsouls444.com please remember that i do have courses over at gumroad and i always leave all that information in the description box below so what i'm doing here is i even though i'm not an astrologer i'm just using the signs to break down into smaller uh groups of people so that i can read and we will see what is coming up for you in 2021 let's get started hello libra so for 2021 i'm going to start off by just seeing what's coming up here and then we'll get on to the cards for a lot of you the energy i'm feeling here is one of you're not some of you are not adjusting well this year or 2020 again this is a general reading take what works for you leave the rest right but 2020 really shook some of you it really shook you to your course shook most people to their core but for you some of you out there who really need to hear this it's almost um some of you are going to have to go through some trauma healing and spiritual videos are not a replacement for therapy all right so make sure you're reaching out some of you who need that make sure you're reaching out for help but it feels like being betrayed by life almost for some of you and so you're kind of on edge waiting for something else you're always waiting for the other shoe to drop so to speak so this whole year like there's a potential here for balance and harmony and love and you know all these nice things but there's this fear yeah well you know i put my energies into this and then all the stuff started happening in the world and it got taken away from me or you know what i've already worked so hard and now the world is changing again and i feel like something's being taken away from me so watch any feeling of defensiveness or forcing things to be balanced when when they're still teetering a little bit when it's not really ready to be balanced just yet okay some of you are really going to have to work through some emotional stuff and it doesn't mean like some awful things are going to happen it's just some of you there might be some memories coming up that you're working through um but for a lot of you watching this there's there were things that were hooked into 2020 i'm hearing unfinished business so there's a lot of carryover for some of you from 2020 or it was changes set in motion last year and this year you're trying to figure out what that means how do i carry forward there's a life that a lot of you wanted to create so just imagine how you always thought your life would be for some of you you're realizing or thinking that's not possible i just realized excuse me that that's not possible or that i'm not some of you watch your self-esteem issues this year because some of you are like i'm not good enough to do that or what's the point okay some of you like what's the point of trying so hard when everything can just be taken away from you that's not everybody okay that's not everybody but um for even if you're listening to this halfway through 2021 you're like that so didn't happen for me i am having the best year of my life well that could be because you have already come to terms with and healed from the things that you experienced previously not everybody's going to be in that space okay i just keep hearing fear a lot of you are just pulsing with this fear of the unknown and how unexpected life can be what you're realizing like most people this year you're realizing your strength your courage some of you have been shaking in your faith so give yourself a chance to bring all that together again again that's not going to pick up on the mic but as i'm saying that there's a siren going off in the background right that's where i feel like a lot of you are we're like there's just like this emergency siren going off in your head it's like some um fear button or fear lever got pulled which was there to protect you but now the for some of you the danger has passed and you haven't shut that lever off yet okay so let's get you some cards be mindful of that you don't want that getting you down a bad road so let's see what we have here for you there's a card sticking right out a time for healing balsamic moon there's that we were just saying that it's time to heal some of this and to see what you're afraid of so if it's right there in your face it's not going to go anywhere until you look at it right and for some of you this is changing your approach to your healing as well what do we mean by that well again a lot of times people go into spirituality because they're trying to heal and they think that that's a replacement for treating the mental body and it's simply not i mean you have to take a well-rounded approach to your healing and this for a lot of you is going to come with acknowledging i don't know kind of acknowledging something that you have let be hidden from you for a while does that make sense if it doesn't it may make sense as the year goes on okay all right so then we have hold your vision fix mood things are not going to go the way you think okay it is that feeling of i kind of get going and then i there's an obstacle i kind of get going and then there's an obstacle and it's okay because when it's the right time for you it will happen when it is the right time for you it will happen but you gotta come out of this frequency uh some of you it's panic now again i know if you're one of the people who's like super there's that siren again super calm cool collected like i don't know what you're talking about you have something that you're working towards yes um my message is kind of going towards the people who do need to heal their energy quite a bit uh just because that seems to be the first thing we need to address but for the rest of you if you know things are coming about and the world has to land in a certain place before you can bring your vision forward or what have you be patient i know we hate hearing that don't we but that is really being called for because luck is on your side honey yes new moon in sagittarius so hold your vision because good things are coming good things are going to be coming for you if you heed what we were saying in the beginning if you're in fear this isn't going to pertain to you but if you're hearing me say that beginning part of the message and you know exactly what i'm talking about maybe you take a little bit of time in 2021 for self-care and you open your energy you really open things up and you discover there's help when i need it there's a solution when i'm curious about what how to handle something things start to come to a better conclusion a nice resolution because luck is on your side now if you're somebody who's looking at this going ha ha i shall win at all costs this ain't for you okay it ain't for you it's not oh god look at this this happened for another sign too so there is this like arrow and here's the same image again and this one says look at the bigger picture full moon and sagittarius so you're getting because of all your experiences and all the healing that you're going through right now you're going to have what you need things are going to move in the way that they need to but you're going to have to broaden your perspective here and take things as they come so that does not mean that everything just kind of gets handed to you and you don't have to work does not mean that nothing is going to happen in this world of course it is all right i've got the color card right here haha what is yours green revitalize your nervous system numbers 31. so your spiritual team is backing you up on this but remember i said there's like it's a i've got my finger over the card sorry uh but it's time to let some of these fears go and allow yourself to kind of um come back together not ever you don't have to be in constant adrenaline mode emergency mode take some time just settle all this down okay and then you'll find that you do have luck on your side all right so we're gonna leave it there and send you all so much love and take care | Angel Souls | UCzvleCgTB-wNHtmN7he-hqg | 2020-11-22 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,604 | 8,163 |
CkD8YQ_FyVA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CkD8YQ_FyVA | Sentiment Analysis and Topic Modeling- Deploy Model | (upbeat music) - What's the process for deploying sentiment analysis and topic modeling to the entire data set? - So, once we've gone through the activity of validating, both the topic model and the sentiment analysis model, and receiving positive results on both we'd lock in those word matrices, so that we have both the sentiment analysis and the topic model word matrices. And then we apply that to the entire group. Remember through this whole process, we've been working with a sample, a subset, and then we expanded that to the holdout sample to make sure we weren't over fitting. Now what we're doing is saying, "You know, we were doing about 10%, "15% of the total opinion phrases. "Now, we're applying it to the entire group." So, all we do with that is we expand our filter so that we include everything, instead of that randomized subset. And we apply the word matrices and algorithms to be able to get those values. (upbeat music) | EvaluATE | UCHZp6-HSuVnhzs5EXR3gaiA | 2021-07-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 166 | 943 |
oPptOPkyBW8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPptOPkyBW8 | The UN Migration Pact is Collapsing!!! | all right there everyone the United Nations migration pact is absolutely collapsing that's what be talking about on today's video just so you know I will be posting my final update on the midterm elections later on today in the early afternoon and I'm also planning on posting a number of quick update videos throughout election night on Tuesday night to monitor and analyze the returns as they're coming in so make sure you tune in for those but before that I wanted to go over with you the whole UN migration calamity because I think it's just so instructive in terms of where Europe is right now in the current state of things now if you're not familiar with it back in June the United Nations pass what they're calling the Global Compact for safe orderly and regular migration which they see is necessary to protect both immigrants and the countries taking in the immigrants in an age is simply unprecedented and unparalleled immigration rates the stated aim of the pact is to make migration safer and addresses issues such as how to protect migrants and how to integrate them into new countries and also the protocols returning them back to their homelands and the text of the agreement was finalized by UN member states back in July and it's been scheduled to be adopted and implemented a UN conference in Morocco in December however a number of nations have begun to just raise some real red flags regarding the Global Compact and there seem to be two major issues of concern first and foremost the compact is operating along the very multinational lines exemptive of globalist structures protocols and arrangements so in other words the compact seems to superimpose more or less a one-size-fits-all emigration protocol and all nations would just smacks of globalism and therefore is highly suspect among nations who whose populations are really currently rebelling against globalization is just as hungry in Poland Austria here in this states but secondly there's a concern that the Global Compact mixes up the rights of asylum seekers with those of economic migrants which is a huge problem for many nations there are nations such as for example Hungary who are more than willing to offer asylum to say persecuted Christians in the Middle East but they have no intention of letting in people from that same region who are simply just looking for jobs that's the same here in the United States with President Trump and so needless to say there's significant suspicion currently being directed towards this UN compact on immigration but then something happened that seemed to seal the suspicion for many European nations and that of course was the endorsement and indeed the deliberate defence of the compact by none other than German Chancellor Angela Merkel who really just should have kept her mouth shut about all this let's be blunt instead Merkel and her Christian Democratic Union have published a list of questions and answers and seek to refute the objections made by those nations refusing to sign the compact as well as reassure what they call concerned citizens that this compact really is in their best interest and you know that just seems like that's all a number of national leaders needed to hear because now it appears that the entire compact is collapsing more and more nations are coming out and saying you know what we don't want to have anything to do with something that Merkel is promoting as of now the United States Austria Hungary the Czech Republic and most recently Poland and Croatia of all announced they will not be signing this global pact now ironically it's Austria that's delivering some of the strongest rhetoric and denouncing the compact in the name of defending their national sovereignty and Austria is claiming that they know what's really going on here what's really behind the UN's push to pass this compact when all is said and done Austria is challenging the whole notion of what both the und and the EU were up to they recognize that both the UN the EU and the UN they want to make immigration a basic human right that is then enforced by the courts that's what's really behind this measure and again the fact that both the UN and the EU have been so ridiculously unreasonable with their insistence on open borders particularly for European nations but indeed for virtually all Western nations makes just such a suspicion automatically plausible now keep in mind that Austria is currently the holder of the EU rotating presidency so this rhetoric needless to say is absolutely sending shockwaves throughout Brussels because Austria isn't holding back remember immigration was the one issue that brought both the center-right People's Party in the nationalist right the so-called far-right freedom party together to form a 60% right-wing coalition in Austria immigration is uniting the right and Oskar very much like the Supreme Court and judges are uniting the right in the United States and so it's quite predictable that this compact was going to get considerable opposition and as it turns out even from the presidency of the EU so this is becoming somewhat of a crisis for both the EU and the UN and as a further indicator the kind of European leadership that we can expect to see emerge in the course of the next year we talked about this in an earlier video on the EPP of the European People's Party which is the largest transnational political party in the European Union we reported that they are in fact turning to the Nationals populous right in terms of their leadership in terms of their choice for the President of the European Commission and we noted there that this choice was an indicator of what the EPP leadership saw as the emerging makeup of the European Union this move to the political right was a telegraphing of what they see is this mass turn to the Nationals populace right that they're expecting in the upcoming elections in May in 2019 for the European Parliament in a similar manner this rather significant exodus of nations that want nothing to do with the UN immigration compact is just another indicator the changing political order that marks our world today keep in mind all of this is happening while angela merkel's basically collapsing as a political force in europe and at the same time in men while McCaw in france is falling behind marine lepen in their latest round of polling so there's little question here that the whole concern over border security and cultural security is fast becoming the overwhelmingly dominant political issue of our age in Europe with absolutely no signs whatsoever of letting up as much as our global elite particularly in the corporatist media hope for such a reprieve it's just not going to be happening anytime soon and this is largely because of the contradiction that's inherent in globalization few liberal globalists recognize this contradiction but the collapse of the center-left should at least get them to take a moment's notice globalisation proponents like to sell globalism by claiming that it offers individuals more sovereign control over their own life circumstances than at any other time in history we're more in control of our own lives we've ever been and we can choose our careers our spouses where we want to live our religion heck we can choose our sexuality and our gender there's never been a time when we've had more sovereignty over our own life circumstance of today and you can thank globalism and yet more and more populations are recognizing that we certainly have these choices but within a globalist system over which we have no choice more and more people are realizing that we exercise control over our own lives while simultaneously living in a technocratic world over which we have no control we may have lots of choices locally but we're feeling more and more helpless globally and nothing absolutely nothing emblem Isis or symbolizes the sense of global helplessness then unwanted immigration poll after poll of European populations reveals that the vast majority of Europeans no matter what nation you're pulling the vast majority believe that immigration has changed the nation for the worst and they want nothing to do with it and yet their center-left into a certain extent their center-right leaders just won't listen they keep the borders open and the migrants flooding in so we're finding that it's not so much that globalism enables us to control our own lives rather we're finding that our lies are being more and more controlled by globalism and so we're seeing a massive backlash where the nationalist populist right is seen as the only political defense against an increasingly out-of-control globalization that more and more populations want absolutely nothing to do with so all this is to say is that regardless of what ultimately happens to the UN immigration compact if its ultimate goal was to make immigration a human right protected by the UN the EU and other globalist institutions you can rest assured the growing list of nations backing out of signing the agreement all but guarantees that such a goal will disappear along with an ever dwindling and fading globalist future make sure to click on our link below and get your copy of my book President Trump at our post secular future for only 99 cents for a limited time and as always please like comment and subscribe click on that patreon link below become a monthly supporter of this channel and help us to continue to analyze current events in light of conservative trends so that you can personally and professionally flourish god bless | Dr. Steve Turley | UCCsiAKRKcgzA_372WbXNBaw | 2018-11-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,638 | 9,575 |
EysWVJGhpi8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EysWVJGhpi8 | The True Price of Gas: A Judgement Killing: Part One | um now there is a judgment killing scheduled for god this could be a catered affair ah in germany the start of the war marked a change in policy towards the mentally sick and handicapped hitler himself signed the secret order to start putting them to death reinhardt bitsy had heard him give his reasons he said why should we spend money for a fool for a hopeless ill person the decision brought the reality of racial policy home to countless ordinary families with a sick relative in december 1931 my mother had been sent to the clinic for nervous diseases in frankfurt and mine because of depression and anxiety about her husband murray rao's mother was eventually diagnosed as an incurable schizophrenic without her family's knowledge she was brought to the hadamard psychiatric clinic which became a center for killing the mentally disabled they were led to the cellar and killed with carbon monoxide gas up to 60 at a time over ten thousand hadamard alone next door was a crude operating slab where brains and organs were removed for scientific research the rouse were told their mother had died of complications from warts on her lips they only learned the truth years later yes you | David Lange | UCdcPGN19Omgf7DUEUrEJj0Q | 2011-06-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 207 | 1,188 |
JbNmXQXpbXQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JbNmXQXpbXQ | Virgo ♍️ Wow! So Much Love For You In 2024! | [Music] male you've got love unconditional love self-love Oneness passion affection attraction okay Virgo beautiful this is what this is what Virgo needs to see and hear for this new year Virgo 2024 um we're going into the year of the dragon um those who are in the Year of the Dragon this is this obviously will be a year that's favorable to you who are born in the year of the dragon also monkeys pigs and roosters um we'll have the luckiest year ahead everybody else will have secondary luck um dragons will be like run first place monkeys pigs and roosters will um pretty much be like right behind and then uh but not second place like they're they're up there with the dragons and then everybody else is going to have secondary luck okay there's no third runner up here so there's love I love love who loves love give me a thumbs up or like the video if you love love okay and and that unconditional love for yourself gosh Virgo that right there I feel like the message is that's the if you have children okay unconditional love children grandchildren yes um pets yes um and yourself yes I'm not so keen on the unconditional love for everybody else I think everybody else can get support of love you know um but unconditional love for yourself is the number one thing that you have to that means that you accept yourself for who you are in your entirety despite any flaws or mistakes that you made in your life life that means that you love yourself not in an egotistical way but in an accepting way that means that you know you say to yourself Unconditionally Love Myself meaning I'm good enough I'm worthy I'm I'm valuable enough um and being affectionate with yourself being even attracted to yourself which does sound kind of weird to say but um in a way where it's like you can sit in a room by yourself and enoy enjoy your company totally you know what I mean that's a good thing but you also have a beautiful love connection happening for some of you this here we go new love that's Brewing or that's beginning it could be with um somebody that you meet in January maybe you go on like a coffee date or a dinner date or you um connect with a friend and there's a new love start happening with this person um or it could be somebody that you already have a connection with for some of you and and um oh I just see did you kiss someone under the mistletoe Virgo this year or last year possibly or at some point okay could be that person and maybe it was just a fun flirty kiss and nothing serious but looks like something will be Brewing here with that person oh my goodness oh my goodness oh my goodness so you've got here we go the 10 of Cups yet again okay and you have wow the four of cups listen Virgo between you and another person here okay and it's all cup energy so I have to tell you for some of you it's going to be a water sign not all but there is water element here for sure um okay they just told me to say some of you are giving up drinking you you had your New Year's Eve um toast with a drink perhaps and you you made a resolution that you're no you're not doing then I I do feel like for some of you um and this is just a side message that's coming in for some of you you're starting off something new this year you're you have a resolution whatever it might be um and you're avoiding things that that um are are too sweet okay so it could be sweet Foods right for some of you it just could be something that is indulging um whatever that might be for you it doesn't have to be food but you're you're showing some resistance to indulging too much in either a particular activity um or something that just wouldn't have long-term benefits for you do you know what I mean right um so whether that's like excessive drinking or if you're a smoker um you could be quitting these things or coming off the sweets this year part of your resolution um or you know uh switching things up maybe you're going to not do sugar and you're going to do I don't know Splenda or uh any kind of other type of sugar um yeah becoming a bit more apathetic blocking saying no some of you might even be deciding that you're just going to make that connection with this particular person and not accept any other offers from anybody else um because you want to go from the two to the 10 okay um and I do feel like whoever the other person is is also having a similar energy as well okay um not accepting or just really indifferent to love offers by others you and this person because there's a beautiful connection being made here okay yeah all right let's see oh here here's a chariot so we do have cancer there um some there's progress there's going to be progress made in a love relationship Virgo okay um let me see here oh yeah there's the hierophant I mean come on spirit's like let's talk let's have a chat um committed relationship or something formal occurs as well okay this is beautiful so we have Taurus here um you know the hierophant is really like very structured energy I feel it's not it's not a rebellious energy there's progress into something very structured with um a particular person happening um so like I said if you're meeting somebody new in January expect that to actually progress into something long term or something more um you know within the bounds of your beliefs and and your desires as far as relationship goes um you and this person you could be um some of you might be going on like a spiritual Retreat as well in January traveling or going to some kind of spiritual Retreat as well let me see what else is going on oh there's my doggy barking okay oh there you go look at that just what I was saying you could be going on a retreat with someone as well or connecting with someone one and it turns into a very um beautiful spiritual kind of connection with someone as well um yeah there's I I definitely feel like there is some kind of Journey um a love Journey happening here with someone and it it goes like you guys get to your destination whatever the destination is that you both figure out together you guys um it progresses so there's you know and and don't be be fearful with this progression it will not be one linear straight line there's going to be stops and starts three steps back two steps forward two steps back three steps forward that's all the natural progression of anything um so if you feel like you're connecting with someone and then you guys have some stops and starts that's not an indication that the relationship is not going to work that's an indication of okay we reassess we regroup and then we go it's like when you're traveling um in in a vehicle if you're going cross country um just because you stopped for the night to sleep and eat does not mean the destination is abandoned it just means we're going to take a little break and regroup and recharge and we're going to retreat and rest and then get back in the car again however long the next day or two days and then we're going to continue on the journey okay so you might feel like oh okay well this is great and we're having this thing here but now we haven't spoken in 3 days well that doesn't necessarily mean now everybody's situation is different but I don't see that that necessarily means that this thing is done it just because I don't see that I see the journey and I see the progression of of a beautiful love relationship happening here so um I don't know if I I felt like I just needed to tell you that yeah see there's the five of Pentacles so there may be a sense feeling a little bit of like oh we're having a struggle or somebody um who you connect with or you're connecting with might be temporarily unavailable and so there's this feeling of left out in the cold or um somebody could be um very busy with work you could be you could be the other person um or there could be some Financial struggles it doesn't mean it's you know done I just see here that there's this progression and this is is the the the stop before the next start okay with the five of the five of Pentacles okay um where it's that feeling left out in the cold um feeling ill or feeling sick because somebody's away or somebody feeling that way you know when I say somebody I'm talking either you or another person and two people feeling like okay but regardless even in the even in the stop part of the stops and starts they're still together they're still together here you see so it's not it's not a card of just you know Tiny Tim here with his little crutch all by himself walking in the snow um there's hope they're walking outside of this church which represents Faith it's Keeping the Faith Virgo even in the the dark moments and not giving up okay and that's having that positive mindset and and also with this love relationship reminding yourself that um you know you are still worthy of Love even if you feel like there's a difficult uh struggle that might be happening because that's relationships relationships are complex people are complex people like to do different things um people are not always on the same page it doesn't mean you know like I used to tell my children all the time when they were little like I would always say to them I may not like what you did but I never stop loving you right and that is I like I always love you you're not none of us are I mean yeah you're perfect to me my children but everybody makes mistakes right and it doesn't mean that the love is gone it just means that this is a struggle period right now I do feel like whoever your person is if you meet somebody new and there's like okay we started talking and things were going great and now this person I haven't heard from them in like a week um and we had all these plans stay in faith stay in that place of abundance stay in that place of um self-love and keep the faith and stay hopeful because I do feel like things are going to just go forward here what else does Virgo need to know and then I'm going to end your reading okay you got death okay that's so perfect Virgo you're definitely going to be presented with this you've got this new new beginning here the death card doesn't the death card is not singular it doesn't represent an end okay and that's Scorpio energy it doesn't represent an ending without a new beginning nothing just ends there's always something that takes its place there's always a void that has to be filled so so when you feel like something is over because you you might I feel that way um maybe it triggers insecurities or um abandonment issues that might happen in January but you got to remember something like Virgo and I'm just going to keep it straight OG 80 style you're not a groy person Virgo you are the is don't forget who the hell you are okay if you're feeling in uh and I don't mean that in an egotistical way like love yourself value yourself remember don't forget who you are this is the Virgo card this is Virgo in abundance this is Virgo being Virgo you might have things really twisted you might have some insecurities or feelings like well somebody doesn't like you or someone's you're not good enough for someone no Virgo they might just be very intimidated by you or they might just feel awkward around you maybe they want to take a break you know or if they've got some deceitful things going on virgo that's them that's on them that doesn't that doesn't represent who you are people are going to make the choices they're going to make in their life but you got to stand strong within yourself within your core within your power and live your life the way you want to live your life and how you know because even if you even if you end up single which I don't really feel like you will um but even if it comes to that or you just kind of just say okay it's done it's over then power back up and return that love back to yourself that's what that self- Lov is about okay and I don't mean like you know go go to work and ignore everything right no um just the love that you give if it's not accepted it's always returned back to you okay so just keep that in mind I feel like you need to know that and and like I always say I always say like about money I never feel like I run out of money because even at times in my bank Cel I'm just always like to EB and flow you know money always comes and money go money goes and then it comes back again and then it goes and it comes back again it's just the way it's just life and it's the same thing with love it's the same thing with relationships it's the same thing with the seasons it's the same thing like we go through these Cycles right accept the cycles and don't let the dark cycle um keep you in fear and make you lose your hope it's in it's in the dark um you know even the smallest SP can light up the dark you know so keep that spark about you Virgo don't lose your spark no matter what you're going through um if you have a connection with a Virgo Taurus or Capricorn um and if if you feel like you're like CU you have free will so if there's a struggle that happens for you like I showed you there with the five of Pentacles and you feel like no you're just going to end this don't get distruct get back up on the horse cuz there is an opportunity for new love from another like I said I see ev and flow somebody else is going to come in but you have to decide at the end of the day I don't really feel like that's going to happen um and I feel like if you really are like loving yourself and you you meet someone and you love this person whether you meet them or you just whatever the situation is I do feel like um even if it doesn't work out which I don't feel like it won't but you have to be the one to make that decision um you still have love for you still have like the ace of cups with the king of Pentacles masculine or feminine that is still like new even new love for yourself is a beautiful thing right relove yourself again whatever it takes but but and I don't want to blow smoke but I do feel like if you feel like something's come to a start just repower up and start loving yourself again right don't stop that that's the message hey guys thank you so much for are watching my readings if You' like to get a personal Reading Please feel free to click the link in the description box below to go ahead follow that link and book your reading please remember to book subscribe like do all the great things um and I hope that you guys have a fantastic blessed loving and light filled life | House Of Virgo ☯︎ | UCOMOdRmEEjmAfE9MZXoTUYA | 2024-01-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,790 | 14,441 |
avYcDM2CbJM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avYcDM2CbJM | Seven Archangels | Wikipedia audio article | the concept of seven archangels is found in some works of early Jewish literature topic Bible topic the term archangel itself has not found in equivalent in the Hebrew Bible and in the Greek New Testament the term archangel only occurs in 1st Thessalonians chapter 4 verse 16 and the Epistle of Jude chapter 1 verse 9 where it is used of Michael who in Daniel is called one of the chief Prince's and the Great Prince in the Septuagint this is rendered the great angel you topic Tobit topic the idea of seven archangels is most explicitly stated in the deuterocanonical book of Tobit when Raphael reveals himself declaring I am Raphael one of the seven angels who stand in the glorious presence of the Lord ready to serve Him Tobit 12:15 the other two Archangels mentioned by name in the Bible are Michael and Gabriel the four names of the other Archangels come from tradition topic 1 Enoch topic one such tradition of archangels comes from the Old Testament Jewish Apocrypha namely the third century BCE book of the Watchers which at some point was merged with some other books in what is known today as one anak The Book of Enoch and was made part of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church is scriptural canon although by the seventh century it was rejected by Christian leaders from all other denominations as canonical Scripture and despite having been prevalent in Jewish and early Christian Apostolic traditions as well as the early Christian leaders writings the book just fell from academic and religious status in regards to the rest of the canonical Scripture resulting in the text not being found in most parts of the world as it was forbidden from 7th century AD onwards the list of angels survived only as part of oral traditions that differed to one another depending on the geographical area that they were present and thus many different lists of angels turned archangel exist but two different levels of acceptance the Jewish people borrowed the names for angels from the Babylonian culture which under the dualistic influence of Zoroastrianism and as in addition to its own development of early Mesopotamian belief systems had resulted in a folklore and cosmology that centered around the anthropomorphic and zoomorphic representation of stars and planets in which it was later introduced the same concept for star constellations whose characteristics and names were imported by notable Jewish prophets during their forced exile known as the Babylonian captivity starting in 605 BCE first with the prophet Daniel then later with authors such as Ezekiel who styled the Babylonian constellations the abstract forms of the constellations that were held as sons of the gods the four sons of the sky father deity in Babylonia that carried the winged son the throne of the wisdom as angels from the Lord of Israel in fact living animals in the heaven that were referred to as cherubim and with that he repurposed some of the characters found in the Mesopotamian polytheistic belief system as angelic servants of the Lord of Israel thus establishing the prevalence of the God of Israel the two BC book of the parables chapter 40 echos such folkloric representations and gives the name of the four angels with whom the Ancient of Days comes the one standing before the Lord of spirits the voices of those upon the four sides magnifying the Lord of glory as Michael Raphael Gabriel and Phanuel from the book of the Watchers chapter nine a list of group of angels is given in this case the ones who saw the quantity of blood which was shed on earth in account of the transgression of the sons of the gods a group of rogue celestial spirits termed the Watchers that arrived to Earth during the antediluvian times and it is given as a group of five that interceded on behalf of humankind to the Most High Michael Gabriel Raphael and Uriel whereas the most popular tradition was borrowed from chapter 20 in which a list of seven angels who watch is given as Uriel Raphael raggle Michael Cera kill Gabriel and Remmy all topic Christian traditions topic the earliest specific Christian references are in the late 5th to early 6th century pseudo-dionysius gives them as michael gabriel raphael uriel kam IL jovial and Zadkiel pope saint gregory the first lists them as michael gabriel raphael uriel or animal Samia Laura feel and raggle in most Protestant Christian oral traditions only Michael and Gabriel are referred to as Archangels which echoes the most mainstream Muslim view on the subject whereas in the Roman Catholic Christian traditions Raphael is also included resulting in a group of three in uz be religion there are seven Archangels named Jabra ill Myka ill Rafa ill is revealed Dadra ill as rail and shampoo Shem nail and Azazel who are emanations from God and entrusted to care about the created world lists of characters referred to as angels also exist in traditions foreign to the largest religious groups and are usually regarded as a cultist or superstitious a later reference to seven Archangels appeared in an eighth or ninth century talisman attributed to oralist a servant of God in northwestern Spain he issues a prayer to all you patriarchs Michael Gabriel si city L oreal Raphael and Manuel marmo kneel topic archangels in current church traditions topic in the Catholic Church three Archangels are mentioned by name in its Canon of Scripture Michael Gabriel and Raphael Raphael appears in the deuterocanonical book of Tobit where he is described as one of the seven angels who stand ready and enter before the glory of the Lord of spirits a phrase recalled in Revelation chapter 8 verses 2 to 6 some strands of the Eastern Orthodox Church exemplified in the Orthodox Slavonic Bible ostrich bible elizabeth bible and later consequently russian synodal bible recognizes authoritative also 2 Esdras which mentions Uriel the eastern orthodox church in eastern catholic churches of the Byzantine tradition venerate seven Archangels and sometimes an eighth michael gabriel raphael uriel Sellafield salah theol jagaddal jeju-do Borachio and the eighth jeremy jeremy oh the synaxis of the chief of the heavenly hosts archangel michael and the other heavenly body les powers feast day November 8th as well as Uriel the Book of Enoch not regarded as canonical by any of these Christian churches mentions chapter 21 raggle cereal and jeremy'll while other apocryphal sources give instead the names is a kill panel and kept her L in the Coptic Orthodox tradition the seven Archangels are named as Michael Gabriel Raphael surreal Zach Gil Sara Dee Ann Daniel in Anglican and Episcopal tradition there are three or four Archangels in the calendar for September 29th the feast of Saint Michael and all angels also called Michaelmas namely Michael Gabriel and Raphael and often also Uriel topic other ideas topic although in the Book of Enoch Remiel is described as one of the leaders of the 200 grigory the fallen angels the leader is identified as semjaza other names derived from pseudepigrapha and recognized by Eastern Orthodox and oriental Orthodox churches are Sellafield jagged aisle and raggle 7 angels or Archangels are given as related to the seven days of the week Michael Sunday Gabriel Monday Raphael Tuesday Uriel Wednesday sellafield Thursday rhaegal or jagaddal Friday and Borachio Saturday various occult systems associate each Archangel with one of the traditional seven luminaries the seven naked eye moving objects in the sky the seven classical planets the Sun the Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter and Saturn but there is disagreement as to which Archangel corresponds to which body regardless each day of week has a name of a celestial body Monday is moon day Tuesday is Mars Wednesday is mercury Thursday is Jupiter Friday is Venus Saturday is Saturn Sunday is the Sun according to Rudolf Steiner four important Archangels also display periodic spiritual activity over the seasons spring is Raphael summer is Uriel autumn is Michael and winter is Gabriel following this line of reasoning Aries astrologically ruled by Mars represents spring cancer ruled by the moon represents summer Libra ruled by Venus represents autumn and Capricorn ruled by Saturn represents winter therefore by association Raphael is Mars Uriel is the moon Michael is Venus and Gabriel is Saturn Rudolf Steiners northern hemisphere indications regarding the seasons and their placement in the zodiac will be the opposite in the southern hemisphere making Michael the autumn Archangel with Mars in Aries Raphael the spring Archangel with Venus in Libra and in midwinter Gabriel in cancer Uriel presides in Capricorn during midsummer in the south topic notes and references topic | wikipedia tts | UCV5cie6grszX4UTDJzpFOyA | 2018-11-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,455 | 8,688 |
jugpD7XLCmk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jugpD7XLCmk | General Hospital Shocking Spoilers Spencer reveals Trina's identity, protects Trina from The Hook | foreign [Music] spoilers teas at Spencer's probably giving Trina another shock when he's learning the exact facts about juda's identity but it seems that things are taking one of the crazier turns when Trina is falling apart and that's making Trina's connection to Spencer stronger than ever run out of honestly Trina herself is known able to have an accurate view of the crazy new conditions that are coming as Trina and Curtis's own relationship is becoming more and more obvious time out but it's possible that it's Trina who wants to have an assurance that things will not be allowed to get out of control and will Porsche's own confirmation has not yet taken place that is what is causing everyone to panic things are getting more and more explosive it should be remembered that Trina is holding grudges against Curtis when it's the dangerous actions that Curtis has done with Taggart in the past that makes Trina unacceptable but if Spencer is watching the confession video of Nicholas and Eva holding the very Mysteries he's having or expanding more than ever is it true that Spencer is now debating whether or not he should reveal crazy things about Teresa's identity but it seems that Spencer himself is wanting some Purity in his plans and that's expanding further and further the exact conditions that can be played out but keep in mind that it's Spencer who wants to have a beautiful love story with Trina and thus causing him to consider the conditions that can be played out Spencer doesn't want to hurt Trina but that's making things one of the more special things if it is Spencer who will be the one to push Porsha to clean up before disaster strikes Spencer learns that it's Trina who's the target the hook is targeting Curtis's sponsorship is one of the more explosive things in the event that Troon is able to receive it's possible that Trina herself will not accept that it is Curtis who's her father but the care and safety that Curtis is able to provide to Trina is still one of the more certain conditions time out now things are more explosive than ever and that's causing things to be causing new problems Spencer wants treated to be safe and assure that what Spencer is doing in the correct action to create an alliance that can Ensure to safety but things seem to be taking a turn for the worse as Spencer's choices are keeping him stuck in his own thoughts when one round action can lead to another causing Trina to Despair and move away from and embrace the love she had for Spencer [Music] | ROAD TO GH | UCvtRbepYqnTBJXzPIi6YY0A | 2023-02-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 450 | 2,520 |
0zCvKfgdKNA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zCvKfgdKNA | Daniel S. Markey, China’s Western Horizon: Beijing and the New Geopolitics of Eurasia | we are so delighted to welcome Daniel Marquis of Johns Hopkins to be with us today to talk about his new book China's western horizon um I have to say one of the things I was most excited about this book is that it provides both literally and politically a different vantage point a different way of thinking a different lens of thinking about China and its relations with the rest of the world including the u.s. it also provides just very literally a different lens a different part of the world to think about and for all of us sitting wherever we're sitting on our laptops so we're maybe getting a little bored of the views out of our window dance dance writing and Dan blends provides some really welcome changes of scenery so I'm going to invite my colleagues to put up the map and while I introduce Dan I'm going to invite you to to take a moment to really think about what it means if you see the world looking west from China and what that looks like dan is a research professor at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies before that he was a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations where he produced a book on Pakistan with the wonderful title that I think will will perhaps get into later called no exit from Pakistan before that he served on the State Department's policy planning staff under secretaries of State Powell and rice home of many deep and profound thinkers on the issues and before that he was a professor at Princeton University so Dan has had many years and much experience including a deep travel and reporting experience for this book back when we all took that for granted of thinking not so much directly about China but about the countries on China's periphery which gives us a different lens for this and so Dan I'm gonna I'm going to start you off by inviting you to be maybe a bit more travelogue Ethan than we usually are in in this kind of a setting um because usually when we talk about China China's apparitions on the world stage and its attempt to build global power but can can sound quite abstract in an American context are sitting here in Washington DC but your book offers visited specific examples of how China's actions are changing changing communities and changing geopolitics at the regional and national level and some of them might be surprising to those of us who are used to an America centric or even East Asia centric view so I'm gonna pick a few of my favorites and ask you to start by sort of telling stories about them and the first one because it's so deep in your own your own research in your own professional life is the the Pakistani port at Gwadar which I'm not even did I get that right pretty close yeah water like water yeah I'll start there first of all let me just Thank You Heather for moderating this but also to New America and to solid state for making this possible just as an aside now has not been the easiest time to launch a new book in a pandemic and so it's really great to to be able to see you and also to be able to explain the book to your audience so so thanks for that so water yes the book opens with this story of Pakistan's deep-sea port along the Arabian Sea and it's a relatively new port but it has a long history this is part of Pakistan that not too many people outsiders tend to go to in fact a lot of Pakistanis don't go there because it's not all that safe it's been an area of active insurgency and secessionist movements for decades now but this the story of the book opens there because in January of 2000 the then President of Pakistan pervez musharraf who has also had been the army chief military dictator traveled to China and out of the blue at least according to Chinese sources that I've talked to asked if they would build him a port Atwater and their immediate reaction was one of surprise and they even sent some junior that's too kind of skirty back and say you know was he serious about this why would he want this part and the reason they were so surprised is because this location wasn't really connected to anything it didn't have a commercial rationale that seemed like in the middle of nowhere and worse than that actually a kind of a dangerous part of the world but he said no he wanted it and the reason I tell this story and he had his reasons and I can get into those but he had his reasons and the reason I tell this story though is subsequently over the past couple of decades Gwadar has come to be one of the so called part of the string of pearls or locations that outside analyst some Western analysts and Indian analysts have seen as evidence of China's deep strategic plan for the region where it intends to project its power into other places on the map and what I learned in this story was that this was a Pakistani idea this was a port that the Pakistanis came to China and trying to reluctantly took this project on board with some reservations and the reason why I thought that was so relevant is because again and again as we look to China's West in places like Pakistan and well beyond and some of the other countries that I focus on we see evidence that the opportunities available for China's expansion are opportunities that are created defined in some cases limited by the countries themselves and this is a really important message I think especially for us sitting in Washington and especially now as we seem to be engaging evermore in a new kind of cold war with China it isn't enough for us to as we think about that to contemplate what is trying to want or what is trying to up to we have to do that but we also have to ask ourselves what are these other countries want what are they up to because that really shapes outcomes in fundamental ways the port of water wouldn't have been a Chinese project if it wasn't first Pakistani project and I'll conclude with the observation that a couple of years ago a few years ago now I had an opportunity to then interview President Musharraf and ask him about this very thing and to confirm that what the Chinese diplomats who I had spoken to before that said was correct and in fact it was he was very proud of the idea that water was his idea that he had approached the Chinese to help develop it and that he had his own goals strategic goals to push the Indians off to make it clear that the Chinese were backing Pakistan and so on and that he was pursuing those goals by this approach and so now we see this as a potential Bastion or outpost of Chinese power on the Arabian Sea in the future but we have to remember how it got there and what the origins are and perhaps that'll also give us some ideas as to where the limits on the use of water and other places will be to China as we go forward great so I should have said Daniel and I are gonna talk for about half an hour and then we will be taking your questions which you can contribute through the Q&A button at the bottom of the page as we as we go through a whole range of these topics but so um two further questions about gladder first you were not able to go there is that right and you or I or most of us would not be able to go there either which which is quite different from how we usually think of commercial port facilities even those being developed by one country in another country yeah so I have been to Pakistan I've been to Pakistan many times but access to water has been over the past few years and as I was conducting the research for this book relatively limited to internationals there have been a number of journalists who have gotten access on occasion but even that has been somewhat constrained their movements have been limited there are security concerns that clearly would drive part of that I think part of it is that the stories that come out from the port haven't always played to the advantage of the Pakistani government or the Chinese government in ways that make them uncomfortable so some of the reports suggest for instance the severe limits that the port construction has imposed on local populations the frustrations of the Baloch people who live nearby including fishermen and their villages that no longer have access to traditional areas where they would go fishing and the limitations on access to to good drinking water and so on and the political frustration that that engenders that tends to be the focus of a lot of the stories that they get when they allow outsiders Westerners mainly to go there and report and so they've been inclined I think not to let you Westerners go back and that's that's the way it's been over the past few years which brings up another point that you make repeatedly in the book that although it might look to us now that the location was chosen by China for its its maritime security and naval purposes but in fact Musharraf had much more domestic political purposes in mind I mean why would you try to stick a major port facility in the midst of a restive and generally unfriendly province well it's still not clear that that is a good idea or sharp did have a kind of a two-fold gameplan or at least he claims that on one hand really was actually a more of a a broader regional strategic initiative that is if you could open a Chinese back port another one on the Arabian Sea that would be another port for Pakistan as well in the event of a naval conflict with India shutting down Karachi wouldn't be sufficient Pakistan would have multiple options Pakistan could also use the port of water which as you probably saw from a map is close to the Persian Gulf would be able to threaten Indian shipping going in and out of the Gulf so so these were kind of broader strategic aims that military man like Musharraf would think about but they also came and he's cloaked in a sense of the potential for domestic economic development that this would be a place that an engine of growth for the regional economy this would provide opportunities for locals and for other Pakistanis and the interesting story there in a story that I go on too at greater length in a chapter on Pakistan is that you know all of these outside investment efforts by China or in fact by other countries tend to come with mixed outcomes and often there are winners in Pakistan people who stand to gain from these but they're also losers and in an already fairly conflicted country with deep political cleavages ethnic cleavages socio-economic cleavages like Pakistan creating additional areas of competition domestically has as much chance of creating greater on the instability as it does of improving economic outcomes and creating greater stability which is claimed to be the goal of both Musharraf and now increasingly of China itself because of course as this story if we update this story it didn't end there with water we have now got the china-pakistan economic corridor tens of billions of dollars promised at least about 20 billion actually delivered of Chinese outside investments in Pakistan so we're seeing greater Chinese involvement in all of these areas but not necessarily a stabilizing outcome coming up all of us you make that point both with respect to the situation within Pakistan and the other countries you highlight but you also make it with respect respect to regional power relations and you say that there was maybe this hope that China could or China would find itself forced to take on the role of regional peacemaker and that somehow in this part of the world that China would help help defuse conflict between India and Pakistan and both here and in the other regions you look at you you come away instead with it with the conclusion that you think in the long run the Chinese activities are actually going to make regional instability worse rather than better stay a little bit about that with respect to the India Pakistan conflict and then I'm going to pivot you to collect them sure yeah it's not it's not a good news I tell you know there are there are many analysts I've heard a number of them in Washington who will say look this is a messy part of the world and the United States has rarely had success in all of its efforts bringing about greater stability between say countries like India and Pakistan bringing peace between them it seems like a fool's errand but if China wants to get more invested in this part of the world let them and let them suffer with and potentially solve the problems that we've had so much trouble grappling with and unfortunately the the conclusion that I have reached at least tentatively so far is that China has no intention of shouldering those responsibilities or burdens that you can have simultaneously an extension of Chinese influence an economic influence of political influence even extension of Chinese ability to project its military power over land into parts of Pakistan or beyond into Central Asia you can have all of that without having a stabilizing presence that is China's not terribly interested in investing in these societies in ways that at least I think would be more likely to bring about that kind of peace or stability over over time now in the specific India Pakistan example we'd like to hope that say strengthening Pakistan and making Pakistan a more wealthy country with Chinese investment and further Chinese investment into India might make both sides India and Pakistan more inclined to get along to see all of the benefits of peace that would be a hope and it's conceivable but what we've seen in practice is that China's backing of Pakistan maybe as are more likely I think to embolden Pakistan to make Pakistan feel like it has a patron and to believe that it can in fact continue to push its revisionist agenda with India that is a change in boundaries and things changes in the status of Kashmir and so on in ways that if felt weaker it would have to step back from similarly India and I do get into India's perspective in all of this because we look at the Indian point of view India sees China's involvement in Pakistan is not stabilizing but increasingly threatening threatening both because it does encourage Pakistan or Indians perspective bad behavior and also because it suggests that China will be a major player in India's neighborhood which is something that New Delhi has been deeply concerned about would like to see less of not more of and so it's inclining India to be more wary and to arm itself and prepare itself and possibly to contemplate and even participate in more kind of violent exchanges with Pakistan just to convince China that this is not a good idea that its involvement there is not a good idea so this doesn't add up as I say in a stabilizing way it actually adds up in a worrisome way that makes me want to jump ahead a bit to the u.s. strategy part of the conversation because there has been considerable thought in Washington circles in recent years that Washington should should move more and more and this is a bipartisan idea to see India as a key ally in in that both countries are democracies I'll be at both countries are somewhat challenged democracies at the moment with the countries are somehow natural allies to help blunt or contain Beijing in a commercial sense in a sort of spreading of autocratic technology sense but also in a straight-up military sense you you seem to make the argument that in fact that's going to be more complicating and tension accelerating than it is straightforwardly beneficial but I'd love to hear you make your case sure yeah look I think you're right one of the consistent features not just of certainly not just at the Trump administration but of the Obama administration before it and the bush administration before that and even going back to Clinton was a recognition of the potential of India's strategic promise as a counterbalance or a counterweight big Democratic huge populous country in society in part of asia or part of asia that would balance china and i generally support that I mean I think that India has huge potential in that we have every reason to want to explore that the caveat there that the question mark is has to do with the specific ways in which we engage with India and if by our engagement with India and China's engagement with Pakistan we end up in a kind of a two-block South Asia scenario where India and Pakistan are arming themselves to the teeth to engage in an arms race with one another and then we are egging them on and that US resources rather than broadening the base of Indian power and creating as they say a counterweight to China both politically and economically as well as security-wise if we're principally invested in the security side and India is principally seeing those investments tools weapons military platforms that defense platforms and so on as a means to deal with Pakistan then what we're doing is we're just feeding into kind of I think a wasteful dangerous potentially very dangerous arms race dynamic in a region where we've seen this game before this was in a sense in Reverse the game that we played during the Cold War with us more or less on Pakistan side in the Soviet Union frequently more or less on India's side and what we learned from that or what we think we learned from that is it didn't work to anyone's particular advantage it didn't work to the superpowers advantage there's a lot of waste of resources and in the region it fueled a conflict that might not have gone away but might also not have been quite so violent and bloody as it was had it not been for superpower support so that's the kind of thing that I worry about well speaking of them aftermath of the Cold War that seems like a good moment to shift us up to Central Asia and I'm gonna invite my New America colleagues to pop the Mac back up for one second because one of the really fun nuggets of history about this about your book was the idea of that for a significant portion of [Music] history there were major civilizations that located the center of the world in Central Asia and much as for for much of Anglo American history we maybe thought of the center of the world is being London or Greenwich or in the Cold War Washington but there is this history and these residual cultural diplomatic economic links that go that go back to this time which was fascinating and fun to read about and so maybe point to why it shouldn't be as surprising as it as it may be to many Americans to to see the enormous ly large and wealthy country of Kazakhstan as as a balancing in some very astute and interesting ways between Russia and China and and really you you depict an autocratic ruler that at least as long as he's able does the last of the post-soviet rulers in the region who at least as long as he's able to stay in power seems to be able to pick and choose and the the asterism that you quote is that Russia is the gun and China is the purse which is you know you could be and you could find yourself in worse situations and a number of cuz offends the neighbours have so um the you what you described very vividly in the book that what the has a China border economic zone looks like and and maybe you could start from that as a way of talking about what the Kazakh case looks like and and we can put away the map now thank you sure yeah and thanks there's a lot to a lot to play with there and you know the for me the history also learning better history of of continental Eurasia and the interconnections between parts of the world that that I at least and I think many Americans tend to see as fundamentally distinct for instance South Asia is not the same thing as Central Asia and Central Asia's in our mind I think often considered very far from East Asia or China but yet these places do have a kind of a gray quality where one intertwines with the next and historically they've been bound together at times now we're talking about during a Silk Road period so it's been hundreds of years but at times they were culturally intertwined through the communication of major religions Buddhism Islam and so on and economically intertwined with critical resources including warhorses being routinely imported from China sorry from Central Asia to China right China was was really relied on these types of things not to mention the actual silk of the Silk Road or the silk weird so this is an area of cultural interconnection and in particular we see this now in the context of the nature of the identity the ethnic and religious identity of weekers inside of China but you asked about the specific question of the border area between Kazakhstan and China where I had an opportunity to visit and I've read a number of travel logs this I'm not the first or and certainly won't be the last you know Washington based person to go up to ghosts and to actually see the trade and economic zone that's being built on the dry port that being built right on the Kazakhstan China border but it was still fascinating and a little bit sleepy at the time when I went to visit it happened to be a holiday but what you could see was the early stages of in terms of the dry part of a an opportunity for Chinese goods to be kind of reloaded onto trains and then trans shipped across the continent and into and onto Western Europe as an alternative to maritime shipping and in the economic zone which you could see was the birth potentially of what looked like a bi-national new city Kazakhstan China city of potentially in the future hundreds of thousands to millions of people where you could have commercial interchange between the two all of this would have seemed completely unfathomable because we're talking about a part of the world that is kind of in the middle of nowhere I mean it feels that way you've got enormous step sweeps of step going on as far as the eye can see and not much other than horses and mountains in the background and and for hundreds of years there hasn't been a lot going on there and now you see the physical manifestation of China's economic power and potential for regional economic integration in a very new way and this is not the old Silk Road it is something fundamentally new and different and we have to kind of map wrap our minds around how that will change the map in ways that you were you were describing earlier and let me wrap up here with the observation of tie this to the political consequences of all of this Kazakhstan is an unusual country an autocratic regime basically still run although titular responsibility has been handed off now but basically still run by the same man and as a buy of who's been in power since the end of the Soviet Union and came out of that system so he's deeply familiar with that and is I think perhaps uniquely qualified to balance the competing agendas of Moscow and Beijing as they go forward and of course the interests of Kazakhstan itself and to try to weave his way between two major powers one on either other's two giants on either side Kazakhstan itself is relatively weak all the wealthy from from energy or relatively wealthy doesn't have the wherewithal to withstand either side and so has to play them against one another one of the core questions I asked in the book is what happens after nas abideth how does that balance potentially shift possibly dramatically and potentially in ways that would really favor Chinese influence over what has traditionally at least now for hundreds of years been a sphere of Russian influence and a direct Russian control of course during the Soviet period and what would that mean what would that mean for the balance in the relationship between China and Russia with Russia be willing to accept that I have deep concerns about how the tensions or the underlying potential tensions between Russia and China could be exacerbated by that extension of Chinese influence in through Central Asia this doesn't happen overnight and it hasn't happened overnight this is something gradual but it could happen stepwise with China sort of dramatically enhancing its its role in the region at various points and I think we saw one of those at the last financial crisis and I think we could be voiced to see another one of those now with aftermath of the of the pandemic of kovat 19:00 and the economic consequences of that which china seems to be likely to weather better than russia and may put china again into the into a pole position to extend its influence first through economic means and then potentially through political and even security means after that before before we get to the the Kovach part of the conversation I do want to ask you about the week's because as you write the week or the borders in this region like many regions are somewhat artificial and Uighur presence and influence in Kazakhstan is may be stronger than many Westerners understand on the other hand as China's mistreatment of the weekers becomes better and better known that doesn't seem to be having any impact on its engagement either in central asian societies or in muslim societies which make up the majority of the ones you talk about in the book so what does what what in Kazakhstan in particular and more broadly are is China's treatment of the weaker is going to matter well I think that it will matter but it's not a direct consequence in other words you know I think it's a little bit more complicated than simply Muslims around the world will be upset about the way that China has treated Muslims in China including readers I mean worst of all leaders but also other Muslims in China and will respond violently and negatively to China across the board that's clearly not the case and I see that in although all the countries that I really focus on whether it's Pakistan Kazakhstan Iran Saudi Arabia all of them including their clerical establishments but also their political leaders and more or less looked the other way or have kind of tried to just deflect attention from China's treatment of Muslims inside of China and the reasons are I think fairly obvious they have economic interests and in some cases also political interests riding on their relationship with China and they can't sacrifice that by criticizing China openly and so they won't do so however Kazakhstan ease ethnic Kazakhs many I think Iranians many Pakistanis are still I think going to be and increasingly are aware of what China is doing and this makes them deeply upset in the case of Kazakhstan this can be very personal it's gonna be family members who have been swept up in these Chinese camps either by accident or on purpose being the wrong place inside of China meeting with family and so on and in other places it's more of a kind of a solidarity of religion of common faith this will make publics deeply unhappy will get them to see China as a problematic and although their countries tend to have fairly good control over the flow of information I think over time will create new divides between the people in a sense and their leaders again between the losers and a closer place with China and the winners and those kinds of cleavages particularly in these societies which are either authoritarian or autocratic liberal-leaning these kinds of cleavages can be dangerous and they can play into broader kind of potential for social discontent and revolutionary movements in these types of places I don't need to overstate it but I I think it's a it's a cause political tension and danger and it will be replayed in the context of how these publics respond to their own leaders so for instance just one last example in Iran some of the protesters over the past years have been heard to chant death to China when they are protesting against their own regime and they're doing that not because of the leaders this time but they're doing that because they think that China has supported the current regime in Tehran and they reject that and they're deeply frustrated by that so these are the kinds of tensions that could crop up that China is only beginning the early stages of feeling the consequence of that but I think they'll be quite meaningful over time you also on the on the death to China front in Iran you you write about how China is able to take advantage of openings in Iran created by by us Iran policy but that only works so well and that again to make everyday Iranians are not all that happy with with what they get from China as a substitute for what what they get from the US so how did how does the US Iran conflict look from this China looking westward lens well interestingly every time that Iran and its economy have been shut down by US sanctions the Chinese role in Iran has grown that doesn't mean that it's grown necessarily in real dollars or real economic terms it's grown relatively but as China's gotten a bigger piece of the Iranian pie because everybody else has been forced to the exits and we saw that during the earlier period prior to the negotiation jcpoa where china assumed an ever-greater role in Iran's economy but you're right average Iranians often deeply troubled by this because as China came in it didn't come in with the highest quality goods to sell to Iranians it came in with junky second-rate goods and it engaged in barter trade that typically Iranians believed was really benefiting Chinese sellers to the detriment of their own economic interests and quite often access to Iran's market Chinese access to Iran's market irani and businesses out of business so there were a lot of Iranians who have suffered from that now the premise interestingly of the jcpoa part of it was what was so appealing from an Iranian perspective ultimately about the deal the reason that deal was possible at all was because it would open the door to economic and interchange with Western Europe and potentially even in the United States over time and not make them so vulnerable to China so you can tell that even just from that from the logic of the deal that Ryan's in general prefer not being vulnerable to indebted to and completely in bed with the Chinese this is not their preference and yet the consequences of the deal and now the unilateral withdrawal from the deal by the United States and the slapping of sanctions back on to Iran have reopened the door for China to re to continue to deepen its role inside of Iran and have again pushed certainly Western Europeans to the exits in ways that create those opportunities and make Iran fundamentally vulnerable and dependent upon China deeply dependent upon China now the point here is not that China is necessarily doing all of this with strategic intent to take over Iran or to embed itself deeply in Iran but it may seize that opportunity and the opportunity will be a lot cheaper because in part because of the actions that we've taken of course we didn't do those with China in mind but as we move forward and we think about countries like Iran our relationship with countries like Iran we also have to be thinking about what the implications of our decisions on Iran policy will mean for our competition with China so we need to have the complexity build in that additional complexity in ways that decades ago we didn't have to do you predict that China will increasingly supplant Russia as Iran's main main ally which was quite a surprise to me given the historical and geographic closeness of Iran and Russia so maybe unpack that I mean and that's certainly very relevant to the question of the broader question of us-china policies so maybe unpack that a little more absolutely so I mean right now Iran is not just economically but they're deeply dependent upon Russian political patronage but also Russian arms and so right now if you had to point to Iran's probably single most important outside partner it would be Russia but I do think that if we play this out over time two trends tend to suggest the China will supplant Russia or two elements of this relationship the first thing is that Russia is in many ways economically and even politically historically is a competitor with Iran it sells the same goodness it sells hydrocarbons and it has not and so therefore economic complementarity is not there but with China China is a buyer of hydrocarbons Iran is a seller and so there is greater complementarity so I think there's a kind of a inbuilt tension in the relation with Russia that isn't there with China and there's also historical tensions you know if you look back and Runyon's have no love for Russia they have less of a sense that China is dangerous I think then Russia is dangerous strategically there's there's no there's no trust there so I think that creates an opening but the other big point is that Russia is on the decline Russia's economy certainly but also its capacity to be a principal arms dealer in the world and to be still a leading supplier of military technologies is on the decline whereas China's is on China's on the rise and with every passing year Russian technology that has put it at or near the front in many areas seeps into China is either purchased by China and reverse engineered by by Chinese companies and then becomes available from those very Chinese companies and so if we just look into the future as others have we see that China is poised to steal Russia's mantle in all of these areas and then you can imagine a wrong turn into trying to rather than Russia as its principal supplier outside supplier of military technology so we have an audience question about how Iran's nuclear weapons program and the choices that it will have to make around its nuclear weapons program in the coming months how that affect the Iran China relationship well I think at the moment a lot more in terms of Iran's choices on its nuclear program have mainly to do with waiting out the United States to our next election that is seems to be what Tehran's principled strategic logic is they wait and see who wins and then they will decide how to play the game from there China too has also interestingly played a bit more of a waiting game on all of this than I would have expected and I think a number of other analysts thought so too you know if asked how China would have managed the past few years I really would have assumed that they would be somewhat more aggressive in extending their influence in Iran as the United States kind of basically cut off other options stent China has has been reticent and the principal reticence comes from Beijing's recognition that actually in real terms it has much more to lose by upsetting Washington than it has to gain by increasing its its opportunities its investments and it's purchasing from Iran so it's been balancing Beijing has been balancing concerns about upsetting Washington with opportunities of Iran and so far in many instances that has led it to actually scale back its involvement in Iran rather than extended if I can imagine a situation where in the future if us-china relations deteriorate further Beijing may make a different calculation that its relationship with the United States is deteriorated to the point that it can without paying significant greater costs that can extend its influence in Iran and it can be more supportive of Iran and that would be even more likely if the United States and Iran also at the same time don't return to any kind of negotiated settlement and prospect of getting back to some version of a jcpoa which would bring back the Europeans into Iran seems to have disappeared then China will be the only game in town for Iran and China will see less downside risk or harm from enhancing its hand with Iran starts to move us into the question of what US strategy should be given these observations which we we have a number of questions about and I want to start with an observation that you make in the book where you say the region a long time is western horizon should not be America's first priority and I think I just heard you say at least with respect to Iran that this region is not China's first priority either so does that does that open up chances that this policy in this part of the world can unfold in ways that are different from how the us-china challenge unfolds in East Asia in particular or is everything inevitably going to be drawn into sort of one one vat of us-china competition whatever that looks like well I think it's really important that we not begin cold war like to see all of the world purely through the lens of us-china competent that has to be a part of how we see things you have to ask that question I think I will come increasingly naturally to US policymakers to contemplate or consider how this plays into the global competition with China and yet in many instances won't be the first or most important calculation so if we go back as a good example I think is the india-pakistan relationship I still think that a war between India and Pakistan is much more dangerous than seeing China extend its influence into Pakistan and so as we look at that part of the world I think we still have to ask ourselves you know might there be opportunities to work with China to avert the downside risks of an india-pakistan war or to manage that conflict if it goes back into a crisis so we have to be kind of nimble enough to see the individual consequences of regional issues for what they are and then also to flip it upside down and say okay but then how does that play in the short medium and long term into the global competition between the United States and China we have to be able to do both of those things but to come back to your first question you know is this region of greatest significance to the United States and you know having written this book and focus so much of my attention on this region I'd love to be able to say yes this is the single most important region but my conclusion is no actually when it comes to prioritizing parts of the world for the United States in terms of strategic investment I think first of all we have to obviously get our own house in order and that's particularly important at this moment as we're suffering as we are economically and otherwise but after that our traditional Alliance partners in Western Europe and East Asia still are our priority areas that is the core I think of the United States is strength geopolitically in the world with that we continue and those kinds of partnerships and alliances we continue to be a real superpower without that the world looks a whole lot less unipolar or even where the United States is a serious superpower we lose an enormous amount from that after those priorities come having to play through all of these other regions and then the argument of the book is think locally act locally see these issues that is with our competition with China and individual concerns like Iran's nuclear program through local lenses think about how these states themselves are calculating their interests and then focus American priorities accordingly look for opportunities where for instance if we want to partner with Kazakhstan we want to create opportunities for Kazakhstan not only to see it's only option as being China but still keeping the door cracked open for them to work with us say on science and technology or education or other areas the same would be true in other parts of the Middle East make ourselves a potential valuable partner for a lot of these societies even as we are not their principal partner and we are not likely to be quite as important to them going forward as China's role in the region does increase so that gets to another audience question what are the risks or possible negative impacts of the u.s. trying to grow influence with China's Western neighbors I guess if you could imagine a return to the early post Cold War period where there was quite a bit of Washington effort if haphazardly to grow US influence in Central Asia what would that do what would that kind of a policy now do - us-china relations frankly I think it's it's not so much a matter of the risks of doing it it's the implausibility of us having the resources to do it in any way that would be meaningful and if we think about the the apex of American involvement say in Central Asia came to my eyes a kind of a dual consequence of the war in Afghanistan and a sense of potential opportunity for the post-soviet moment of extending more democratic or civilian type of leadership throughout that region and we saw what happened it was frustrating extremely costly and has left I would say relatively little in the way of a sense of success in most Americans Minds and so the I would say the the critical issue is a matter of the resources and our sense that we can do something that would make a significant strategic difference in this part of the world and those are both at a relatively low ebb right now so I'm less worried about us doing too much in a sense and more worried that we may retrench far too much and just to effectively give up the region or we may militarize everything and see everything through kind of through the lens of it's it's all about a us-china competition and forget about what regional interests might be in areas where we might actually do more over the long term I will say you would asked earlier what is trying to get from this region if we play this out over again this is now a longer-term story this is the means that is continental Eurasia is the means by which I think China can build itself into a more continental scaled superpower with resources with capacity to project its military and with political influence throughout a much wider zone of the earth than it currently enjoys and that changes I think the the basic calculation of the us-china competition globally as we go forward in ways that are critically important and so this part of the world it isn't our priority it is as I said we have other priorities but it will be critically important and I think we need to recognize that for what in my offer over time you point to a new jobs out in the book at some more length the challenge or the risk of the u.s. over militarizing its response where Beijing is pursuing this strategy through majority economic and cultural if you will approach or economic and political approach and that brings us to the Belton Road and we've had a couple questions asking you to talk more specifically about the Belton Road how the Belton Road is viewed from the perspective of the countries you write about the book and specifically is or its benefit to China mainly geopolitical or does it in the end actual per actually produce economic benefit for China well great questions I mean the Belton Road has clearly been the seminal and leading foreign policy global policy President Xi Jinping and it has I thank both the commercial elements and the geopolitical elements behind it but crucial parts of it simply don't make sense as purely commercial and there are other parts that don't look all that strategic and so you need both to understand it in Pakistan the case that I that I tend to know better than the others we have seen sort of the the great promise of the china-pakistan economic corridor which is kind of its piece of the Belton Road initiative promise of upwards of 60 billion dollars of Chinese investment over a decade or so and then we've seen some of the already we've seen over the past five years some of the frustration an unmet promise in part because some of the projects that were envisioned had no commercial viability whatsoever and have also been seen as not terribly important strategically for trying to undertake without that commercial benefit so the commercial element does play a role if the project doesn't seem to make any sense whatsoever commercially had better have a good strategic rationale but have also seen broadly somewhat retrenchment in a sense of at least rhetorically of China's goals for the belton Road initiative across the board it is it's had to think for a second time about what it's really up to in part and respond to a global challenge that had to do with questions about the debt that was being incurred by recipients of the road initiative projects the environmental consequences the labor consequences the political and economic and other consequences and there was some initial frustration so trying to send to rethink about some of these efforts scaled some of them back I imagine that the kovat will force an additional retooling of the Bevin road project across the board or projects across the board but it hasn't given them up that road is still at the core of the brand President Xi and I don't think it can be done away with it can't fail even in places where it hasn't been terribly successful it can't be thrown overboard and so it won't be so it'll persist and it will continue to have this twofold element of commercial commercially viable exercises that will over time up the region regional economic integration and more strategic and even military oriented efforts that are purely in Beijing's interests which the opportunities and openings have been created by local realities thank you for brilliantly answering the next question I was going to ask which is is there a strategic and military dimension to this so thank you for anticipating the question and we're coming up on the last five minutes so we will be able to squeeze in one or maybe two more questions although given what the next question is that may end up being the last one reminder to the audience that if like me this conversation has suggested to you that this book might reorient your view of this part of the world and interesting ways you can go to the new America event page where you will find a link to purchase the book and of course Dan you knew you weren't going to get through an hour-long conversation without being asked whether we are in a cold war with China and so are we in a cold war with China how much of that cold war framing the questioner wants to know is due to the current administration and would you describe there being a consensus among foreign policy experts yes we right we're I think the way I like to frame it and I'm just stealing from other seers we're in a new type of cold war with China yes and no I don't think that it's been purely the consequence of decisions made in Washington not not remotely it is the consequence of interchange between us perspectives and frustrations with China and a kind of waking up to the reality of China's power and influence globally combined with increasingly internationally oriented and aggressive Chinese leadership under President Xi Jinping and the combination of the two has been already a big shift and but it's consolidated a shift that was underway I think for in some ways for decades that is China's power didn't rise out of nowhere as wealth didn't come from nowhere and it shouldn't have taken anybody by surprise nor should China's ability to translate as all countries I think throughout history I've tended to do to translate great wealth into political influence and also military power that's not surprising but the shift that I think has caught all of our imaginations and certainly our attention in Washington DC this shift has been exacerbated by the kinds of rhetoric angry rhetoric that are being thrown around by both sides right now and that is unusual and certainly I think that the Trump administration's approach here is not what we would have seen in some other administration just in terms of the its its use of words its Twitter Wars and so on but neither is the Chinese approach something that we've seen from China before we now hear about so-called wolf warrior diplomats who use all kinds of angry language to describe American officials and Americans more generally totally undiplomatic in ways that you know I guess we saw some of that back when and the Maoist era of you know the Chinese early Chinese Revolutionary era but trying to become a more staid diplomatic player over decades and now to see this come out and a playing to Chinese nationalism at home and a kind of a stiff arm to public opinion overseas is new on the Chinese side and so that kind of tension I think maybe kind of momentary and we may be seeing the apex of that hopefully if we're lucky we'll see that kind of resolve but the broader strategic competition I'm afraid is here to stay and we just need to figure out how we're going to grapple with it and that will be up to of course whoever's in office and in January to to figure that out I just have to say that the question that I was recently on a zoom call with about a dozen academics representing a variety of intellectual and ideological tendencies who preview as as much as you can get into a screaming fight on zoom' who got into a screaming fight about this question so no there is no consensus on this subject in Washington DC stands up to wrap this up really quickly um if you were writing this book in the time of kovat what else would you what else would you have to say well I think that most of what I depict in the book it's likely to be accelerated by that is outside potential for Chinese wealth and economic resources to sway its regional neighbors one way or another particularly its neighbors as they say to its West has probably been exacerbated by this moment and not just by Co vid the public health crisis but really the economic crisis and beyond that it's particularly devastating effects for countries that are dependent on energy exports as their principal economic support and a lot of those are to china's west these countries are going to be feeling deep deep pain and china may be the best placed country in the world to make up for their their losses in a way that would permit their leaders to salvage themselves hurt their people but to salvage their own positions and to continue keep the game going at home and so that would extend China's influence otherwise I think that Koba has also hurt the United States so far very deeply and America's global leadership I think if anything has just taken a major hit and that is worrisome because as we think about our ability to to appear to be a useful valuable beneficial partner to any of these countries in China's western horizon or elsewhere they have to see us in those terms we have to present some positive vision of leadership of resources of knowing what we're doing and at the moment I'm afraid even on all those scores were far more diminished than even we were before Sunday new America will give me a happy book to do a book event about but um Dan thank you so much for taking your lunch time to bring your book buy new America at least virtually and thank you to all of our audience members who spent your lunch with us and again you can go to the event page for this conversation on our website new America org and find a link to purchase Dan's book and find more events to come back for Thank You Heather I appreciate it | New America | UCvQQMY6TyUdt5VeHpuHv_Dg | 2020-05-19 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 9,244 | 50,826 |
N-BhIaxEEyA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-BhIaxEEyA | Stories from the South: Youth bargaining collectively | (heavy bass music playing) In my hotel, when we presented the collective bargaining to the management We presented them with 31 demands They only agree to fulfill five demands after that, we go to the Government Office the Labour Ministry When the management came there, they agree to 15 points of our demands. After the strike of five days, they called for a meeting. And there, they agreed to 20 of our demands. That is why this program is very helpful for us, for the collective bargaining. In the workplaces, most of the youth work in factories If they know about the process of bargaining (CBA) they can put their demand letters to the management. We have many problems, that are challenging for us. They don't give us permanent letters or contracts. They put a lot of pressure on us to do work and no basic salary. The tourism sector has a lot of workers to use. And those people are sometimes not paid a good amount by the overseas companies. Because porters do very hard work. Our clients, mostly westerners, use the porters to do the hard work. But the companies, sometimes they don't pay the people who work hard a good salary. The main challenge is usually during the establishment of the union itself. During the time of the establishment, they face a lot of harassment. And a lot of pressure by the management. Once they establish the union, there is another challenge when they submit the chart of demands Then there is another type of harassment, sometimes they are transferred from one place to another. Sometimes the employer will ask the individual workers to come into the boss' room... and they start to threaten. You must return. You must withdraw your signature from the chart of demands The workers are also facing so many problems in the workplace there are many issues to be addressed for that. Due to the lack of awareness, the lack of skill they are still behind due to the lack of their skill, they can't submit their letter of demand to the management. This training is very fruitful for them. How to submit the charter of demand how to write the charter of demands what kind of language they must use what is the kind of language they should use during the time of the negotiations how they compose the bargaining team that is also a most important thing when they are making the bargaining team and at that time, they have to think twice, thrice I am just giving the experience to them and then in lots of the workplaces, they improve. Lastly I am trying to make a simulation method. It means role playing there are three groups we already established one is the Labour Office another is the employer and another is the trade union and now we are planning to do a negotiation amongst themselves By role play method, they ultimately know what the collective bargaining is and what are the negotiation skills what kind of tactics they need to use they need to apply during the time of the collective bargaining how do they make the negotiations I want to make sure all is okay in the tourism industry, that they are paid the right amount, what the government announced And in the future, when they retire they need to make sure there is a bonus or whatever Provide education for families Youth is GEFONT's main agenda, also to make the youth as campaigners of the trade unions in the future If this kind of programs are held here then it is very good for us we are getting lots of knowledge from these programs and I think this program is very supporting for us (music) | WSM Asia | UCPoE89Y4VKleZccBPx8mAuQ | 2014-06-22 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 629 | 3,498 |
KNzKBA5_QBE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNzKBA5_QBE | BAE Systems Develops XM1155 SC Artillery Ammunition Able to Double Fire Range of Standard Rounds | Welcome to our Channel don't forget to subscribe and put likes because your support is important for us and here we go in a groundbreaking advancement in artillery technology BAE Systems has unveiled the XM 11155 SC a Next Generation artillery projectile set to redefine the US Army's long-range Precision fire capabilities this Cutting Edge munition part of the hypervelocity projectile hvp family is poised to revolutionize Modern Warfare with its ability to engage both stationary and mobile Targets in contested environments marking a significant Leap Forward in military capabilities developed under the US Army's extended range artillery projectile erra program the xm1 1155 SC aims to extend the range of 155 mm artillery rounds to unprecedented levels targeting distances Beyond 110 km December 2022 witnessed a landmark achievement as BAE Systems in collaboration with the US Army conducted the first successful test fire of the XM 11155 SC from a 155 mm XM 972 extended range Cannon artillery erca test bed the projectile's impact on a fixed Target at ranges surpassing previous Precision guided projectiles highlighted its efficacy and marked a significant milestone in the program's rapid progress designed to penetrate and neutralize adversary defenses with its enhanced range Advanced guidance lethality and survivability the xm1 1155 SC underscores BAE Systems commitment to meeting the Army's modernization objectives for longrange precision fires its maneuverability low drag profile and precision guidance systems enable it to effectively engage a diverse array of Targets in challenging operational environments collaborating closely with the US Army's combat capabilities development command Armament Center BAE Systems has showcase the XM 11155 se's capabilities by conducting tests at Yuma Proving Ground Ariz firing it to record distances from an M109 Paladin Howitzer these tests demonstrated the projectile accuracy and Effectiveness showcasing its potential to enhance the US Army's artillery formations and Elevate its capabilities in long-range Precision fires a critical area of development in response to evolving Global strategic challenges the XM 11155 sc's introduction Heralds a transformative shift in Battlefield artillery capabilities its ability to engage targets Beyond 110 km provides a strategic Advantage allowing forces to strike deep within enemy territory while remaining outside the range of adversary counterfire this capability is instrumental in shaping the battlefield disrupting enemy Logistics command centers and supporting Maneuvers from a safe distance moreover the Precision guidance system of the XM 11155 SC ensures accurate targeting of both stationary and moving targets minimizing collateral damage and enabling selective engagement of high value assets this this Precision stands in stark contrast to Conventional artillery Munitions which often rely on area effects and may require multiple rounds to achieve desired outcomes the XM 11155 SC embodies a paradigm shift towards Advanced artillery systems equipped with cuttingedge Technologies for extended range accuracy and lethality by integrating Advanced guidance systems propulsion Technologies and versatile Warheads this munition represents a Quantum Leap in artillery capabilities offering unmatched performance on the modern Battlefield in an era where adversaries possess sophisticated defenses and the ability to contest traditional support assets like air power the XM 11155 SC emerges as a formidable solution it empowers ground forces to deliver precise longrange fires in support of joint operations bolstering overall military Effectiveness across diverse conflict scenarios furthermore the xm11 55 SC aligns closely with the US Army's modernization priorities particularly in the realm of long-range Precision fires a critical capability essential for maintaining dominance in multi-domain operations and overmatching potential adversaries in summary the XM 11155 SC represents a pivotal advancement in artillery technology offering unmatched range precision and lethality its introduction signifies a significant evolution in the role of artillery on the modern Battlefield empowering forces to engage adversaries effectively and decisively from extended distances thereby shaping the operational landscape to their advantage that's all for now see you later | Main Battle Tank | UCnZG2SBvPrhCilZuqiMEUYA | 2024-03-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 633 | 4,388 |
OZN4m5YJORI | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZN4m5YJORI | Adaptive Aggregation Networks for Class-Incremental Learning | hello everyone i am yao yao i will talk about our work adapt2 aggregation networks for class incremental learning it is joined to work with one and henry class incremental learning aims to learn new data by incrementally updating a model during the previous data in the first phase between the classifier using data 1 and we evaluate this classifier on the corresponding text site in the second phase due to the memory limitation we can now keep all samples in data one we select the example 1 from data 1 and we get data 2. we update the classifier and conduct the evaluation on all concepts the classifier has learned so far which is the standard setting the same applies to the third phase and so on so forth the main challenge for class incremental linear is stability plasticity dilemma higher stability weakens the model from learning the data of new classes and higher plasticity results in forgetting of the old classes that is catastrophic forgetting how to address the stability plasticity dilemma existing methods try to address this issue in the following two directions regularization based on myself tried to design virtualization terms to consolidate the previous knowledge millennium new data however they don't perform well with long sequences replay based on myself try to select or generate better examiners to record all the knowledge however they make the model over fade the examples our mizer is adaptive aggregation networks that is aa9 we try to design a novel network architecture where we maintain two types of blocks stable blocks and plastic blocks the benefits of our aaa nasa are as follows first our mizer works well on long sequences second our method relieves the overfitting problem third our miter is generic and can be combined with fertilization-based and based on myself our aaa nas consists of the following components first plastic blocks we update all the parameters for the plastic blobs second stable blocks we've raised some parameters of the stable blocks and updated the others third aggregation weights they use these ways to aggregate the facial maps from the plastic and stable blocks the plastic and stable blocks provide the candidates for different network architectures and the aggregation ways are used to balance two architectures between different components of aa9 using different data the plastic and stable blocks learns knowledge from samples so we use all available data to trim them the aggregation weights are used to balance two types of blocks so we train them with a balanced subside we can apply different aggregation ways for different blocks in recognize and guide the adaptive aggregation resinite this table shows the ablation results comparing those three to row 2 we can see the effect means of using two types of blocks comparing raw file to those three we can conclude that metal linear the aggregation base boosts the performance row 5 to row 4 we can observe learning the aggregation rate on balanced subset achieves further improvements in this table we have observed that compared to the state of the art our method improves the diagnosis significantly in this grand camp virtualization we can say that our a net benefit from both plastic and stable blocks and perform well in all faces for more details you can visit the project website we have released the code on github thank you for listening and we are happy to answer any questions | Yaoyao Liu | UCW4gujGSfEMTMavQ3XV-asQ | 2022-08-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 574 | 3,418 |
MKgNf1v0BM8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKgNf1v0BM8 | Ukrainian drones destroy 12% of Russia's oil refining capacity in two days | [Music] drones destroy 12% of Russia's oil refining capacity in 2 days during the last 2 days 12% of Russian oil refining facilities were damaged by Ukrainian uavs this was reported by Bloomberg according to the publication the three facilities attacked by Ukrainian drones in 2 days account for about 12% of Russia's oil refining facilities air strike on March the 13th caused a fire at one of the country's largest oil refineries the ryazan refinery of rosn the refinery had to shut down two primary oil refining units the ryazan refinery about 200 km southeast of Moscow has a capacity of 17.1 million tons a year or about 340,000 barrels a day it is a major supplier of motor fuels to the Russian regions around the capital the small novosak tins refinery in the southern rostov region was also shut down due to a drone attack ATT the latest wave of attacks which began on March the 12th damaged a unit of luk oils nari refinery in NIS Novgorod and an oil Depot in Orel region Ukraine has repeatedly struck Russian oil infrastructure since January in a campaign to hurt the country's economy the latest attacks come ahead of Russia's presidential election this weekend the targets this week are major refineries particularly the rosn facility in ryazan which has a refining capacity of 34 40 barrels per day according to Andy lipo president of lipo oil Associates the campaign of Ukrainian attacks this year has hit refineries representing 25% of Russia's total refining capacity of 6.8 million barrels per day according to lipo about 50% of Russia's refining capacity is within range of a Ukrainian drone attack he said the attacks will curtail Russian diesel exports and turned the country into a gasoline importer he said we're seeing oil prices rise really being led by products on the back of these attacks which have been going on with some regularity since January lipo said the market is pricing in higher and higher probabilities of Supply disruptions especially when you damage refineries for [Music] spe [Applause] spee foreign [Music] for one should [Music] you [Music] to BL what this l fore no [Applause] of | Kanal13 | UC_TneqvSfh-KsIyZMlJjVsQ | 2024-03-16 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 364 | 2,125 |
UXmmGwZbtk4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXmmGwZbtk4 | Fingerstyle Tutorial: Tommy Emmanuel's Over the Rainbow (COMPLETE) | Lesson w/ TAB | [Music] hey there licking rivers and welcome back to yet another awesome arrangement lesson here on lick and riff in which we're going to learn tommy manuel's over the rainbow it's a masterpiece of an arrangement i'm not gonna play for you we're just gonna start learning it because you have tommy's spectacular performance right here on youtube and without further ado we're just gonna learn it together so uh this is a pretty pretty advanced arrangement it's pretty advanced pretty complex but surprisingly the intro with all those harp harmonics um is not one of the more complex parts of this arrangement harp harmonics or waterfall harmonics um or cascading harmonics any way you want to name them if you've watched some of my lessons right here on lincoln ref on waterfall harp cascading harmonics you know that this technique looks and sounds a lot more difficult than it really is and it makes any chord that you play with it sound a lot more resonant and that's part of why the um it's winter she's shedding like crazy uh so um you're gonna see in a second i just want to remind you that for lickin ref's 11th anniversary i'm making you this uh in-depth tommy manual lesson and also i prepared for you a full in-depth thorough guitar workshop on my website lickinref.com it's completely free it's a full video series a full workshop full length and it's designed to break you out of confining guitar habits and break you out of guitar misconceptions so you can break free and really harness your own personal guitar creativity and your personal guitar expression and find your own voice on the instrument and just become a lot more musical a lot more creative and a lot more free to gain a lot more freedom when you play that's uh that's the purpose of the workshop it's a full workshop completely for free lickinrev.com go enroll open it in a new tab lickinrev.com you can enroll and start right now hey completely free instant access so i look forward to see you there now let's start learning tummy manuals over the rainbow now um i divided this into nine different parts okay so part one obviously is the intro the intro with the harmonics the tab might get a little bit confusing because there's no way to simplify this precise an arrangement this this arrangement is so precise you can't really uh you can't summarize it you can't forego notes okay each note here is important so the tab might be [Music] more confusing and dense than usual so um the first part as i said is not that complicated you put seven on the d string and you bar nine on strings one two and three okay this is a major seven chord right and this is basically what he's putting on and then he's taking the bar from nine to eight and turning it into this augmented cord okay okay we're gonna talk about this hand technique in a second okay but this is what's going on here and then it's um um it's it's a variation on this chord okay he's adding 10 on the first string so it becomes a 13 chord okay okay so we're going over the chord so it's nine nine nine seven eight eight eight seven and then he adds ten on the first string and then it's just a bar on 7 with 9 on the first string okay now this depending on how you look at it this uh let's call it a minor seven add nine chord [Music] okay and then you take the bar down to six you leave nine on the first string and you put seven on the third string this believe it or not is a dominant chord it's a it's a dominant chord it's basically a seventh chord [Music] then instead of nine on the first ring he plays seven [Music] this is now a diminished chord [Music] right so it's voice leading it's voice leading it's just textbook perfect voice leading so once again [Music] and then you add 10 then it's 9777 then it's nine seven nine six seven six okay nine six seven six then it's seven six seven six okay so if you play it [Music] doesn't make that much musical but when you start your paging in it if you are patriotic [Music] then it makes more sense but it makes perfect sense when you use harmonics so the technique for um for waterfall harmonics i'm not going to go in depth here but it's it's pretty intuitive as you're gonna see you take whatever note you play and you play a harmonic which is 12 k frets above the notes or if your bar is on seven you're playing the notes [Music] you're playing the notes on 19. okay so if we have nine nine nine and seven we're playing it on 21 okay 9 becomes 21. hey fred 21. he starts okay with strings one and two both of them on 21 [Music] and then comes the waterfall effect the harp harmonic techniques um what you do is you play a harmonic on a lower string and then you play the note on the higher string two strings apart that's the secret here it's always two strings apart so if you play um if you play 19 okay as a harmonic okay on the d spring okay and you play the open uh not the open but the note on the second string you get dina nina and it's the same thing with the harmonic on 21 on the third string and the first string on nine so you get hey can you hear the harmonic okay that's the effect okay so you get because you get high notes all over the place [Music] and that's basically the whole trick that's the whole trick now when you go to 8887 you do exactly the same thing but instead of picking the harmonic on 21 on the third string you you pluck it on 20 and that's it that's the whole technique seriously that's the whole technique and when you add 10 on the first string it doesn't matter because you're still doing the same thing [Music] you're doing the same thing you're not changing anything picking wise you're still picking the first string the note changes but you're still picking it okay you're not changing her harmonic here the harmonic doesn't change it's still uh it's still 20 and 19 because it's eight and seven so it's still 20 and 19. you haven't changed that now when you play 9777 obviously what you're gonna do here is even easier because both the harmonics are now on 19 on strings three and four now the cool thing is that now tommy has the harmonics on seven which are exactly the same if you play them on 19. it's exactly the same thing so he just extends the harp harmonic picking to the rest of the strings [Music] okay so you play strings three and one four and two and then you continue to five and three six and four and then you go back down physically up musically so you go five three four two three one you see i told you this technique is far far easier than it looks or sounds and then um you do the same thing with the next chord so you have this chord but the harmonics are basically the same thing okay okay so this time the harmonic goes from 19 to 18 on the fourth string okay but you continue playing 19 on string six and five okay [Music] okay and then you hammer on the seven on the first ring okay and you do exactly the same thing okay exactly the same thing just [Music] the note changes on the first string that's the only thing that occurs and then you have a little bit of gameplay here um because he's uh having fun with okay with pulling off the seven to six on the first ring and hammering it back on every time he plays the first string okay so this is pretty much freestyle you can do it in any order you choose okay just create your own interpretation of this beautiful line um he also adds the harmonic on 19 on the fifth string somewhere in between and then he plays [Music] the harmonic uh on seven on string six and five and then the harmonics on twelve on strings two and one that's the intro the last chord of the intro is this it's a um a whole note scale okay it's one three five on springs two uh on strings two and three and an e7 chord nine seven nine on strings two three and four yay okay so you can do you can do the one three five with your little finger and then you're right on the spot you can add a harmonic on 12 if you want sometimes he does that on live shows okay tommy emmanuel always always changes his uh his performances because he as he told me during the interview he always seeks to keep it interesting for him he never um he never uh gets bored with his own arrangements that way if you haven't watched our interview do it it's it's a beautiful beautiful interview okay now you have this a just an a chord and then you have this it's d over a so i don't have to explain that right arpeggio strings five to two you can slide into the d okay it's four two three on strings four three two okay it's a part of the c shape bar so okay um what he does here [Music] is add the open e string to the d chord this creates d add nine [Music] okay this creates d at nine [Music] okay so [Music] and then you have d minor over a which is three two three instead of four two three okay he just arpeggiates it from the base up to the high note the e note and then strings two and three and then you have this okay now he takes the d chord four two three down one fret okay just as a motif for what's coming okay slide to a bar on seven on the same strings two three and four and he slides it down to six so it's a slide to seven and then slide to six so [Music] okay and then you have 12 on the first ring okay you have 12 on the first ring you can play the e bass okay and then six seven on springs two three and four back to e okay okay this is now e9 okay okay this is e9 so hey d to d flat okay and this okay you can't name this chord yet because there's no e bass yet so technically it's now b minor seven to b flat minor 7 but it's not the harmony okay and then 12 6 7 and then 12 again you can play the bass in between now um if i had used the parlor guitar uh for this uh this would be much easier but tommy has a parlor guitar as well but you can pull it off you can do it i i don't have large hands and if i can do this stretch you can obviously do it as well so that's part two okay that's part two the intro after the intro you can call part one the exposition and then you have the intro now starts the arrangement part three hammer on to four on the bass and then the a spring okay so you bar for a okay and you have five on the first frame a high a note okay so your page eight you can just play the third string so you have a a and a and then you have a bar on two or your thumb on the bass [Music] because this is now f sharp minor or f sharp minor seven and then you have c sharp minor seven okay it's a bar on four a minor shape without the little finger and you play okay strings one two three and five you hammer on five to seven on the second string and then the four on the first string and then you have a7 okay which is this it's five five six and five okay and you can scrum it you can pick it okay you can pick it without the base okay to emphasize the seven so and then you have d okay a c shaped bar on two just just the d chord and then you hammer on two on the first ring with your little finger okay because you put on this okay remember that diminished chord that we played before it's the same idea it's two one two one on strings one two four so you hammer on and then you arpeggiate the rest of the chord strings four three two and then okay atomic manualism three two zero slide pull off okay so okay you can even slide from three to uh from two to three okay and then you have e [Music] okay you have e and um it's zero two three on the second string now you do it with the second finger okay because you have this you have e minor seven afterwards so it's [Music] you let go of the chord okay you have to let go of the e chord the open strings keep ringing so it's not that noticeable when you let go of the chord so okay zero two two slide to three on the second string and you put on two and four on strings five and four and you are pga the chord and then your pga discord okay this is a7 add 11. you can also just call it a11 so okay it's three on the second string six on the third five on the fourth okay okay keep this chord in your arsenal when you when you want this chord instead of a seventh chord um instead of a dominant chord this is a dominant chord okay but it's a mellow dominant chord you have to put the bass um where the finger on the d string is so just this is the full shape but because this is a you can use the open a string now on the youtube version okay tommy uh palm mutes this chord okay you don't have to it's a beautiful chord and then you have d over f sharp it's d with f sharp on the bass you play strings two three four and six and then you have f six or it's true harmony here this is d minor over f okay okay but if you think about it as f6 it's sometimes psychologically easier to put the chord on it's uh it's f with three on the second string so it's three two three on strings two three and four with f on the bass with one on the bass okay so it's okay this is d minor this is a variation an inversion of d minor and then you have a with two on the second string and then two on the third open second string and then you have f sharp seven okay and you play strings two three four and six then your little finger on three on the second string giving you time to put on c9 okay so you have have this okay it's three three two three on strings two to five okay so it's okay this is by the way this is what's called [Music] a tritone substitution it's a it's a jazzy form of a blues turnaround let's not get into why this works theoretically just know that you can do anything that sounds good to you if it sounds good to you it's gonna sound good to everyone else i'm pretty sure that's what tommy did here and then the open second string so you have [Music] okay so you can leave the chord on and just open the second string and then okay it's b7 so you leave the chord on but you take it down one fret okay it's the same finger ring [Music] okay two one two on strings five four three so [Music] now it makes sense right and then you have okay you have one on springs three and six okay on both of them two on the third string and you have e minor open springs two three and six and then [Music] another tommy emanuelism two three two okay it's a fast slide and you have two on the third string for a and you do this okay it's a bar on two a full bar on two five on the base and a hammer on from two to four on the fifth string and then you play strings four and three this is a g shape okay this is a g a g chord okay up here so [Music] so he can hammer on that major third on the fifth string on the bass uh that's brilliant just a brilliant brilliant ending chord choice it's a but it's an unexpected a with that with that c sharp there so that's part three okay so let's just go over it you have a okay f sharp minor and then c sharp minor a7 d okay the uh flat diminished e [Music] e minor seven a a at 11 a7 and 11 or a11 [Music] d over f sharp [Music] d minor over f [Music] a f sharp seven [Music] c nine b seven and then okay hit f base there and then you have e minor now the f base there is okay it's a bass move okay leading you back to a it's not a direct harmony it's a bass move that's how smart tommy emmanuel is now there's another thing that i wanted to show you but let's finish it first and this beautiful a okay now um [Music] so after he's playing the a chord he has this really interesting uh really interesting again a whole tone experience so okay it's seven five six on strings two three and four seven five and six okay this is an augmented chord um and it just takes it two frets up every time so hey any way you wanna pick it works [Music] okay and then at the end he plays 12 13 13 and 15. okay this is a 13th chord we played this already in the intro okay so now it's on 15 so it's 15 13 13 12. okay so uh he's playing this chord and then 13 on the first rank and the last note is 12 so he plays the harmonic so he has time to go back to the beginning and play a again okay so you have this [Music] okay augmented [Music] 13th harmonic and [Music] this beautiful piano like move you have a just the a base and you have a solo two four two one two on the third string okay hammer on pull off slight slide two four two one two and then five on the first string so you have the uh octave [Music] okay so okay and when you put five you put the bar on the whole second fret you play f sharp minor again and it's exactly the same um up to um basically up to f6 up to d minor with slight changes in the middle okay so you start okay you let the note ring okay while you put the bar on and when you get to a7 [Music] okay when you get to a7 he plays seven five on the first rank okay that's the difference right i told you he variates so okay okay and you continue from d uh to d minor um to d diminished uh to d flat diminished and so on and so forth when you get to the a 11 chord this time he doesn't palm mute okay and then you have the d over f sharp and then you have the d minor over f or f six and then [Music] okay there's another change um another lick zero one zero on the first string hammer on pull off and then three on the second string and then a with two on the uh on the second string [Music] okay so it's okay um and then you continue all the way down to the last a and then you have this [Music] you have e augmented and he plays it in um harmonics he plays it in artificial harmonics so first of all this chord is beautiful for the ending as well okay this is an f shape on the second screen okay on five so you have five five six seven so you can play it in harmonics okay 12 frets above it okay he plays uh the harmonic on 19 on the bass okay so you have 19 19 18 17 17. okay and then you have the chorus part five okay the open e string and then you have two and four on strings two and three then you have the e string and then two and two and then the e string and then two and one and then the e string and then two on the second string and four on the fourth [Music] so what you get basically is the same thing [Music] with this on the low notes it's just a scale it's going down the scale [Music] and then you have this [Music] so you have zero and three okay the open e string and three on the second string [Music] with three four on the fourth zero and one on the third this is also brilliant this is a chromaticism beautiful beautiful chromaticism so three and three okay springs two and four three and four strings two and four and then you have three and zero on two and three and then three and one right and then the open e string and a6 it's two two two on strings one two and three with the open a string and then you have [Music] another beautiful voice leading it's two two and zero this time with one on the a spring and then you have b minor seven just b minor seven and then a slide to seven on strings two three and four with e we did at the beginning okay remember this is e9 and then you have e augmented again this time it's just one and one on strings two and three with the open bass okay with the open e bass and then you just play the open e string so um that's the first round [Music] a6 [Music] b flat half diminished actually it is diminished um but it's but it's a7 it's a7 with a b flat base so it's a b b-flat diminished sevens let's not get into theory too much theory is there to explain the music the music is all that's important e nine sus4 and augmented then you play the first bar again and you go to page two on the tab if you have the tab book you can download the tab book the link is below in the description and the full lick and rift tab book then after you do this you do this okay surprise it's just one chord it's the open e string and then you have g sharp seven it's just g sharp seven and you play strings two three four and six and you have four seven four seven four seven four seven on the first uh on the on the second string okay so it's seven is the last note and then you have c sharp minor seven [Music] and they have this okay this is um [Music] okay um again it's another um voice leading technique that involves chromaticism so he leaves the four on the first crank but he plays c7 so you put c7 on okay three five three five three [Music] with four on the first frame okay so you play the first string and then you arpeggiate the chord so you have [Music] okay so you get this weird chord it's another form of an augmented chord but um [Music] okay there's no better way to explain it this is what's happening here okay then you have a bar on seven so you play the the first string on seven then seven on the bass and then the chord strings two three and four this is b minor seven [Music] and then you have this um it's two three two on the first crank tommy emmanuelism double slide and then you have okay you have the bass you play one and one on strings two and three and you pull off on the first spring okay you pull off to zero so it's okay that's what happens here so it's okay you pull off you don't play the zero you can play the open e string but if you want to be as lavish as mr emmanuel that's what he does and then you have the verse once again you have the verse once again uh starting with a okay okay and you play it up to okay up to d flat diminished now when you play the d flat diminished this time he plays a whole arpeggio of it he plays strings at two to four and then takes the little finger place three on the fifth string and then arpeggiates back up so it's okay it's the little finger it's going to three on the fifth string um you're not supposed to hear the open e string i just wanted to see how it sounds okay it's not that bad so it's if you happen to pull off and play the open e spring don't worry about it it still sounds diminished and then you have 5 4 0 on the first string and then you have a major seven okay and then the e minor seven chord so it's a major seven a with one on the third string and you play the bass and then you play the chord with zero two on the second string and that e minor seven chord okay which looks like b minor seven with the open third string okay so it's [Music] and then you play from [Music] the um the a 11 chord to the end and you play a normal a chord you don't play that g shape okay you play a normal a chord now part seven begins uh by playing a [Music] okay he's playing rhythm just the a bass the a chord then the e bass then the a chord playing twice [Music] and then you have this okay um [Music] okay uh nope it's not d it's a okay so it's now it's the same it's exactly the same melody as before okay um but this time you play it with a so you play a yeah you play a then you play a major seven so it's one on the third string then it's two two and four okay four on the d string okay you have this and then you have a again [Music] and then you have the d chord okay three two four remember from the beginning and then you have three three five okay three three five [Music] so [Music] and then you have three four six okay it's this this is a seventh chord by the way this is just a seventh chord [Music] and then you have three five six okay so it's three four six three five six okay so you have that chromaticism in there [Music] so [Music] open e string and then you have this a6 it's 767 on strengths two three and four with a and then you have this it's seven six five with six on the base okay it goes from a to b flat it's a chromaticism in the bass so it's and then and then it's more chromaticism from b flat to b okay so you just bar seven again for b minor seven springs two three four and six [Music] and then you have this okay it's e augmented again it's two on the fifth one and one on strings two and three so you prepare that okay you just arpeggiate it [Music] okay and tell me manualism two three two double slide pull off to zero on the first crank and then you have that a bar again [Music] and then you have g sharp 7 again then you have a spanish style scale so you have four five four on the first ring hammer on pull off seven five four on the second six five on the third there's the spanish sound and then you have seven six on the uh six five on the third sorry i said on the fourth right six five on the third seven six on the fourth seven six on the fifth [Music] and then four three on the fifth okay so you have [Music] okay so it's [Music] okay and then you put on this you put on um this chord okay it's a it's an f shape so it's it's g sharp again but with c on the base so it's okay this is g sharp just with the third on the base so it's [Music] so you have four five six on strings two three and four [Music] and it's an arpeggio okay so you play the spanish scale [Music] and arpeggiate [Music] then you play g sharp minor seven okay just g sharp minor seven okay you can just bar or you can add uh five on the um oh i mean g sorry it's g sharp [Music] okay you can add six on the fifth string so it's um [Music] okay um then you have the c7 chord with four on the on the first rank and then you have seven on the first string bar again and you play harp harmonics now this is where tommy has a little bit of fun okay you you can you know just go up and down the 19th fret harmonic and he hammers on nine and pulls it off on the first string on the second screen so if you hammer on on the first spring if you pull it off [Music] you can also [Music] okay you can also change harmonics while you do that also on the second string okay you can create all sorts of different variations on it this is the sound that you want to get and then you add 10 on the first string and you just go up and down [Music] okay um you uh sorry uh you add 10 on the fifth string sorry you add 10 on the fifth string so your harmonic now is on 22 okay so [Music] okay so have fun with that and then you bar on uh your bar seven again but this time instead of ten you have nine on the second string and go up and down [Music] okay that indian sound and then the hammer on pull-off thing again with nine of springs one and two and at the very end it's natural harmonics again [Music] okay it's the open e bass then seven okay harmonics on seven all the way to the second string and then on the first ring you play 12. [Music] okay [Music] and then we get the e augmented chord again okay so so it's one one on strings two and three with a pull off from two to zero on the first string and then it's a with five f sharp minor with five c sharp minor five seven on the second string and then you have this e minor seven the same chord on seven with eight and ten okay so it's and then it's seven seven seven on springs one and two and three i'm losing focus here with the open a string this is a6 10 on the second string so okay this is another jazz reharmonization and then you have d major seven which is two two two with five on the fifth ring okay so it's [Music] and then you have this uh sorry this is um this is g9 believe it or not this is g9 it's one zero two with the g base okay now you can do d major seven with the open d string by the way okay so tommy manuel puts five on the fifth string but you can do it with the open uh d string if you want so [Music] another chromatic move from two to one on the first round sorry um then three one zero double pull off on the first string three on the second open first and then you have e and e minor seven to the end of the verse exactly the same as on the first uh on the first verse so that's what you play when you reach this verse okay so it's a f minor [Music] and so on and so forth um then last part part nine you play the first two bars of part five you play the first two bars part five part five was this um part five right [Music] and then you have b minor seven and then you have this [Music] which is e diminished it's okay the the shape you're going for is four three four three okay on springs one two four you start with the e bass and you are page eight up and you hammer on and pull off the four on the first round [Music] and then just go back and forth over the court [Music] okay until you want to finish so you go to five on the first string and you play a okay and then you have [Music] okay a bar on five except for the open fifth spring this is now a minor seven okay so it's and now we go back to the motif the voice leading from the beginning okay so it's five five five five five four four four [Music] five three three three and then it's this cord it's five five four four four and five on the base so okay so it's okay it's another form of um of a turnaround okay so it's and then that final chord it's five five four four four five and of course [Music] okay [Music] um he does the hard harmonics over that one 12 frets above remember um and strums it lightly just to uh finish on a lighter note that's tommy emmanuel's over the rainbow a full and thorough in-depth examination and lesson for this masterpiece of an arrangement download the tab the link is right here in the description the tab is for free remember the workshop the free workshop a full thorough in-depth creative workshop to break you free of confining guitar misconceptions and habits and allow you to bring your full self into your playing creatively musically and expressively thank you so much for watching this is uh as i said this is your uh gift for 11 years of lick and rift thank you for being my lick and riffers thank you so so much um see you the next lesson bye for now have fun | LickNRiff - Free Guitar Education | UC_tejXLLDBrLyZFk2cZrhHw | 2022-02-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,014 | 29,332 |
qHMI-vYctXk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHMI-vYctXk | Age Well - 4/13/2023 | hello everyone my name is Jane catton and I'm the CEO at ageville I'd like to welcome you to our show today called Aging matters I'd also like to thank MVP healthcare for their sponsorship of our program every month as you may know age well is the largest Area Agency on Aging in the state of Vermont and we serve clients who are over the age of 60 or under the age of 60 with a disability on long-term care Medicaid our mission is to make sure we wrap around services to our clients so that they can remain living healthy and independent lives in the setting of their choice we also serve our clients in four counties across the state that's Franklin Grand Isle Chittenden and Addison every month on Aging matters we like to find topics that are really important and help us all to understand how to age well because after all we're all aging this month we have a very interesting topic that we're going to explore with a special guest Derek Souza who is a Specialized Care uh care and service coordinator case manager at agewell Derek is also the co-chair of the hoarding resource and support team in Chittenden County so he has some really special expertise around this topic of hoarding disorder which we're going to explore in more detail right now welcome Derek it's so nice to see you thank you so much for having me today I am very excited to talk about this topic so thank you well we're lucky to have you Derek before we dive into our questions maybe you could tell our viewers a little bit about what a specialized case manager does at age and a little bit about your background sure sure um so I have been a specialized case manager with age well for the past four years we mainly focus on some more complex issues with aging so mainly focus on older Vermont's older adults in states of self-neglect or experiencing hoarding squalor are those that are unhoused um I first got started with Adriel uh back in 2009 as an Americorps and uh I loved the work I was doing and so yeah now I'm a full case manager um and just very happy to be here and happy to the work I do every day so well we're so lucky to have you as one of our specialized case managers because I know the work is incredibly complicated it's very hard every day so thank you for doing what you do um Derek before we get into all of my questions maybe we could set the stage just with this first one and that is can you help to Define what a hoarding disorder is so I thought maybe we could start with the like the technical definition um so this is out of the DSM-5 or like what we call the manual of mental uh disorders so um hoarding is the persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions regardless of their actual value so I think the most important thing that we're going to talk about today with hoarding is that it's the it's it's very difficult to discard of those items and you know the actual process of discarding can be very very traumatic and even though a lot of us can think that it's very easy just to throw out items get rid of items empty our houses those that are experiencing horrid disorder that piece is very complicated and can be very uh problematic and traumatic if it's done very quickly so wow I hope that gives a good overview of what we're talking about today a great definition so that that really helps to frame our conversation because I I have done a little bit of research on this so I was actually shocked when I read some of the literature and some studies that have been done on hoarding disorder and it says it's estimated that hoarding disorders affect as much as six percent of the American population and that is almost 19 million Americans and many of the researchers know that these figures are underestimated and a vast majority of hoarding remains unrecognized and untreated so Derek with those pretty compelling statistics why do you think there's so much under representation from individuals who are impacted by a hoarding disorder so there are a lot of different reasons but I think first um hoarding there's a lot of stigma around hoarding and I think it's a good time to talk about the term hoarder and we really try to not use that word you know it can be it's very negative and can be very negative when you're talking about someone so there's a big stigma around hoarding and people can be feel very ashamed of what their houses look like and so you know the more people collect and and they will isolate more and more and a lot of times people that are hoarding you know will tend to close the blinds and things like that and just isolate themselves more and more but um you know another reason uh that people tend to not report is that you know people want to hold on to their items too right you know they're they're afraid of people coming in and doing deep cleans and removing all their items so you know it's uh it's it's very different than a lot of other maybe mental health disorders where people are seeking treatment hoarding you know those other things they they love their items they love their belongings and so you know there can be a real trust issue for with Outsiders or family members that want to come in and get rid of those items so you see a lot of isolation that way as well oh wow and we also know from one of our other shows that social isolation affects older adults uh for a lot of reasons and now it sounds like the hoarding disorder issue contributes to that as well so that is that's uh really unfortunate Derek can you talk about uh how hoarding is different than collecting clutter or disorganization and I'll I'll just take a little sidebar here you and I talked about this the other day a little bit but for example you could walk into my garage and you would find a tremendous amount of clutter and if you spoke to my husband he might say oh I really want to keep those things and so you know there's there's a line I guess a progression of as you were saying from these different means of collecting creating clutter then disorganization to to hoarding Disorder so can you define a little bit about each of those yeah I think you know as as a case manager I think a lot of people you know we're not in the business to like just say oh you can't have possessions you have to have an empty space you know people are allowed to first off have collections people are allowed to be messy you know we don't have to have extremely tidy houses but where hoarding really steps in is that first off you know the relationship that one might have with something that we consider that doesn't have any value for example like paper cups or paper towel rolls for that they might have a very deep connection and it might be very easy for us to write off us it's just a paper cup throw it out or you know plastic bins um items like that that we would find disposable or useless there is a whole story of connections uh you know with that person um you know other things other types of like Collectibles and things like that they they're okay to have but I think it's that real like you know if I were to come to your house and say maybe we have to get rid of these items you know it would be you'd be okay of saying okay let's go through them but you know it's that I can't get rid of this because that item is actually part of myself and you're kind of worried about where that item is going um and then the other thing you know the main thing that we're always worried about um is the fact that is your collection overtaking other parts of your house or is that clutter overtaking other parts of your house and so you know do you have so many things in your home that you are no able you're not you're not able to cook anymore because you have your stove top cluttered are you starting to store things in your bathtub and so you're not able to shower anymore you know those types of um uses of items uh in your home can be detrimental to one's health and so like you know are your things getting in the way of your life can you no longer invite your family members can your grandkids no longer play in your house anymore and then you know the other thing are their fall risks and fire hazards those are there's a lot of things that we think about uh when we when we're thinking about hoarding and the difference between hoarding and collecting so okay that that helps me to understand so I order I have a collection of uh trophies or I have a collection of you know stamps or coins but you're it's okay to have collections just as long as they're not taking over other parts of your life right right right and creating safety hazards like you said that's the thing we're worried about most safety fire being able to do activities of daily living which is where those things start to change I imagine yes it's very um interesting there's another term out there that we didn't talk about just now so uh the difference then between hoarding disorder or hoarding and squalor perfect um so as a case manager from age well and especially as the specialized case managers we go into homes maybe it's the first time we've seen a home and um it's tough to differentiate if it's something that's hoarding or squalor um just real quick squalor is when there's imagine you stop washing your dishes and kind of you just didn't want to wash them anymore and what would that look like after a week two weeks three weeks a month and you know every time you ate you kind of things just kind of fell on the floor and things like that it looks very messy and that but that person has real doesn't have a real connection with those things you know if we wanted to come in and say hey let's get this cleaned up the person will be okay with cleaning that up hoarding can look similar sometimes to squalor sometimes it doesn't um but the emotional connection with those things whatever it may be newspapers on the floor mail on the floor maybe tissue something like that old newspapers there is a an emotional connection and if I were to come in and say all right I'm bringing all these out to the garbage there could be some kind of break with that person and or a lack of trust or something you know it could be very catastrophic so according doesn't always have to be something messy right it can be piles of boxes that are organized but um squalor is always that kind of very dirty you know you know unsafe unsanitary home and I imagine with all your experience you can go into these different settings and figure out pretty quickly which is which yeah it takes a little bit of testing and we you know we also we're person centered um and so you know it's a lot of motivational interviewing and speaking to our clients and like you know understanding what's happening what's their relationship with their things so we always want to listen first uh and then act second so oh yeah yeah that's a that's a wonderful approach um Derek tell us is hoarding more common among older individuals versus the general population or is it pretty equal across the board yeah tough tough one to say um I think we tend to see more older vermonters um having issues of with hoarding but I do want to break this idea that um you know people are hoarding because there's this Great Depression mentality you know we are we're past that already and people are still having issues with hoarding um and I think hoarding can happen to anybody but I what we see with our population uh the older vermonters is that I think you know decluttering is a very difficult process boxes are very heavy and sometimes they're just not the physical ability to lift boxes take things out of the home so you know sometimes they need an extra hand and another big issue I think we see more with the older population is that um it's you know it's very challenging but when a loved one passes away when their spouse passes away you know a lot of times they'll stay they want to keep those items and it can be really tough to let go of those items because you love that person they've lived with you your whole life and a lot of our you know when children move out to you know that your kids can leave all your items in your home and you want to keep them as well because they might come back at some point or you might be holding on to them so we tend to see that more with the older population right I tend to have some of that furniture from my children too that's in my one of my rooms downstairs um but those again are just really important differentiations and I think I can relate to the stories you're telling certainly about people who may have been living in their homes for a long period of time and it just it's kind of exhausting to think about how you have to declutter and and do the job right so it is a lot of work absolutely Derek can you talk a bit more earlier we were alluding to social isolation as it relates to to hoarding disorder but the impact of social isolation on those individuals who are affected by hoarding disorder what do you see yeah well especially with the pandemic you know there was there was a period of time where we weren't doing home visits and so there was a lot of you know my clients that we weren't able to see and they some of the collections and the Clutter built up and um you know they're they love their possessions but at the same time there's shame involved in all of that and so you know bigger the collections and the Clutter build the more they experience isolation and so you know those weekly visits from their grandkids may not be happening anymore because the house is not safe they don't want them in there there might not be any places to sit anymore um and so they just tend you know there's a terminology we use kind of a we call it a cockpit and you imagine like in a in a jet or a plane where you kind of just create this wall around maybe a recliner or sofa and you know you put everything kind of there and you kind of build these walls around you um and so even in your own home you start to even you know sink in and isolate yourself within the home so um and then you know it's just a lack of not wanting to go out and then you know a lot of embarrassment a lot of people like to call you like a pack rat or a slob or something like that and so you know people are very hesitant to have you come in the the blinds are drawn and so you know and that's exactly the opposite of what I think a lot of people want and you know it's they just need somebody to come in and you know not to shame them and not say oh this place is filthy this place is a dump you know that's the exact opposite we need when when you're you know working with a family member or a friend that's experiencing hoarding right right I always say you know like what I said before first listen and then take action and understand what's happening right so this is probably a great segue into my next question because you just alluded to sort of the world shrinking and and things uh becoming more and more isolated and that hoarding behaviors don't just affect the individual but their loved ones too so I can imagine it's very challenging for the loved ones to understand how to help and so for example would it be harmful for that loved one to go in and and I think you mentioned this demand that they get rid of their things dispose of them without their permission just get it done because they care for their their loved one yeah I know it and it's it can be very frustrating for family members to come in you want to you know you you're worried about that person you don't want them to fall have a fire you know there's so many risks or even if you need to call the EMTs to make sure there's enough space for fire and rescue to get in with a stretcher if need be um so yes we my recommendation always is to start small you know when you go in and you want to just deep clean and get rid of everything it can be really overwhelming and traumatic a lot of times when we see um you know these deep cleans people can tend to relapse and apartments or homes can be filled up in a matter of months again um you know it it really takes the individual to understand what's happening and for them to start right with and they it really takes them to take that small step forward so always small steps always small steps is as our key and and hoarding intervention hoarding intervention is very slow and it can be very monotonous and it can be you know a lot of repetition um the show there's a program out there hoarders maybe some people have seen and you know it's it's it is TV and um you know it's you know there's some you know there's some action and drama to it all the time and so that process of these giant deep cleans are can be very traumatic and so we really want people to take time and patience to work with the individual and have the individual do a lot of work themselves right because it's about learning new things about how to manage their space and their life and I imagine it takes a lot of patience yes a lot of patience oh my goodness so Derek how does age well you you've talked a little bit about your role as a specialized um case manager but how does age well support families individuals and caregivers to address the needs of someone who is affected by hoarding disorder and clutter any of the spectrum if you will so first um you know we are as case managers we're kind of we might be the first ones to to be there to talk with that individual and you know we are there to create some a relationship of trust and to connect our clients or these individuals with um different types of assistance that may be out there so for example you know making referrals to the hoarding resource and support team of Chittenden County to get different strategies we have an example where the woman had a lot of items and we couldn't get to the furnace in the house and the furnace had broken and so you know working with ourselves from age well and cvoeo and other agencies like Champlain Housing Trust or Burlington Housing Authority you know we were able to declutter the home get to the furnace have the furnace replaced and worked you know our goal always is to have seniors age in place and so it takes you know it and that's what we're there for is to make that bridge and make those connections for people and have some great Community Partners to work how we glue it all together it sounds um sounds very challenging but rewarding at the same time and I was going to say real real quick we you know there is um we also do workshops called buried in Treasures which is a um let's say quote unquote self-help group it's peer LED and it's for people it's a it's a great book for people to get over um you know their issues with their belongings and there's homework assignments and you know a lot of reading and material about it so and we will facilitate those at age well from time to time and I've heard that when we have held those at age well there is like a sell-out situation they do they do and the great thing is after the facilitator from age well is done those groups continue to meet uh on their own and so that's a great peer support oh that's fantastic um so as we've talked about what age well can offer the similar resources available throughout Vermont yes we as there are aaa's and uh our great aaa's but also um we are trying to start more and more hoarding resource and support teams uh so there is a task force uh it's bed bugs and hoarding uh in Northeast Kingdom and Washington county is also starting a hoarding and resource and support team so we are hoping that more and more will pop up across the state so if anybody is looking to start any out there please please do because they they really pull in great teams and great Community Partners together and it sounds like you're a great person for them to reach out to as well reach out to me yes fantastic so um Derek one of my last questions for you we always like to think about these interventions and the resources and the supports do you have any success stories you'd like to tell us about I you know I right now with the housing crisis and everything I think anytime we can keep a senior in their home um just it you know that's what I really you know work for every day and there are many times we have been successful and um you know a lot of the clients I work with have done and started to do the work themselves you know there's a lot of help and we're there to help to intervene and do interventions and things like that but you know what really is successful for me is when people understand and they start doing those little things every day and a lot of times with my clients I say if you could do 10 minutes a day and get rid of that just one item that's all we you know that's great and it you know it's it's it's like running a marathon right right you can't just go out and run a marathon tomorrow you can't just deep clean your house you know in one day but if you start little by little and just it may look small but just removing that one item and then growing and growing and growing you know that that's success for me so that's awesome it's uh it's about the the Long Haul and taking baby steps right exactly the baby steps baby steps are the most important Derek I want to thank you your your presentation your information all the resources that you've offered us have been fantastic and I know that our viewers really appreciate what you do as well so to our viewers if you believe that hoarding has affected your life or someone that is close to you or a loved one please know that there are resources out there available to you um our community agencies age well is here to help as are many other services in chittendening county and across all of our service areas so again I I always like to end with just our helpline number because that is a number you can call if you do need to reach out for assistance and that number is 1-800-642 -5119 and anyone who needs help can just pick up the phone dial that number and get to our team at age well and we're here to help so thank you again for joining us on Aging matters next time we'll have another really interesting topic to share with you all I look forward to it take care and thank you | Town Meeting TV | UCJkWMLSqRNKLoyUZQiNoAcQ | 2023-04-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,261 | 22,211 |
d1q58JZXJGo | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1q58JZXJGo | Finger Battle & Holiest of Holies | S4E27 | Ep 120 | CTP | [Music] hello welcome to another episode of the crazy town podcast my name is Jonas I'm your host I'm here with TNT dynamite geeks plus 1 TNT Nana am IG HT Jonas yes sir I still don't have a goddamn hair cut yet it I look like dirty broccoli braids yeah but goddamn it I'm you know [ __ ] you get those get some other stuff I look like a goddamn black troll first thing thank you so much for joining us great sound podcast today whether joining us on our YouTube channel Chris John media or uh Spotify iTunes all that [ __ ] this guy he's on uh yeah this is teens tnt dynamite a human lungphu come on twitch every single day at nine o'clock ten o'clock a.m. central tnt dia no mi ght underscore a crazy town coming alive if you wanna hang out with a black q-tip look ridiculous I wouldn't say that I put a head on the other day and I went out and I was like oh no yeah yeah it looks like it looks like a glance all these [ __ ] pubes on my head Wow cut their barbershops are open - yeah Joe's sure just take a chance go do it man ain't worth it to me honestly I feel you that's what a lot of things are for me I'm like oh do I want to I'm gonna do to my hangout home and they're like don't you want it I'm like does it matter to you why I don't wanna really does it bother you you cannot sleep at night because you want to know why I'm not out in the streets doing stuff oh is that what you tell people you can't fly it with people then no question stay the goddamn house every minute of my life for the rest of my life I have that right I'm a human I'm an American they can stand well what's funny is like I think what why people ask me is because I am a giant social butterfly what before pandemic I was every single night after work I was soon as I would get off because I work from home mmm I'd be out that door and I'd be out doing something every single night Oh miles all right so what about those people that say you're a little [ __ ] they can dude I don't care a little baby girl [ __ ] won't go outside scared sick yes I don't they don't know my health history dude I like I like the way you your defense against that how many moaning bronchitis in my life do you oh look I'm on my period yeah that's how I've always been dude like like I've never been the person the guy who's like oh you're chicken and you're like the [ __ ] yeah I'll go in there and pissing in your store like yeah do it on a big [ __ ] chicken look at my feathers yeah it's funny Joe's at my age it's like I think about stuff like that and like nothing can really piss me off like when's the last time you flicked somebody off like on the road or something or just like somebody just made you I have like flipped off a friendship but joking you know like if somebody was like flick me off like in in public like a person standing in front of me flicked me off it's not gonna make me disbelieve in them I would think it was funny I'd be like oh my god are you literally give you finger in public yeah like they give you that emphatic one like that one would like all rage my [ __ ] you dude should be like what did I do yeah they got the thumb extended means nothing I don't think I've ever liked it giving somebody the finger like I do that hard with that much gusto stuff yeah I don't know if I've ever been flicked off like that before but I've seen it happen oh oh absolutely I okay I get more mad at inanimate objects that I ever have got it people yeah I'm like this computer [ __ ] this video game but like when I'm like oh this person is making me man like I'm just not gonna deal with them anymore yeah in fact I flip off inanimate objects I've flipped off my television screen way more admit that I have stubbed my toe and then [ __ ] you to that table can't flick me off back dude on one yeah I just I don't know man I don't understand getting that mad at a person like hmm I think the fingers lost its power over the years oh yeah it used to mean so much more I think so yeah because I remember like the 90s are even remember like rappers like hand on your balls and like middle finger out and it was like oh now I see it come on was it maybe two why are you why are you flicking me off that means nothing yeah but I just put the finger open don't break it yeah people who react like that like well whether I mean if you wanna flip somebody off or whatever but like if someone flips you off or someone cause you chicken or something like not even [ __ ] cause you a [ __ ] whatever look Oh what weren't you gonna go in there and language I like you should go in there you should go in there and pee in the convenience store and you're like I'm not gonna do that why would you [ __ ] like oh you know what you know what [ __ ] you guys I'm gonna go here who cares dude why they gonna be like oh look at Jonas he wouldn't go piss in the convenience store what up what a jerk oh my god calling somebody a chicken new day and that takes me back to like back to the future oh your chicken he's like nobody calls me a chicken commuting I just I don't know I just don't get how like people I don't know maybe it's cuz look a long time ago I stopped caring about what people think like that maybe that's the problem it happens man like you want you get out of high school yes like you you think you think I'm weak because I don't want to do something that you think I should do then fine I'm weak focused person I'm the weakest man ever fine yeah like since I've been out of high school I don't think I've been flicked off called a [ __ ] and or a chicken lettuce from a friend doing this just being a jerk I don't even think I've had anybody tell me to suck their dick you know like I feel like that one's a little bit more disrespectful but still I'm just gonna be like no thanks for the show of interest I'm glad you chose me I don't I just don't get why people get so like like why that like how it blows my mind like you would rather go do something against your will because you don't want some random person to think that you're a [ __ ] a chicken week yeah yeah like oh man I wanna make I don't want Steve to think I'm a jerk I'm weak so I'm gonna go in there and do something I don't want to do because yeah man stand on your own two don't be concerned yeah if yeah if you want to wear a mask out in public goddammit don't let other people let somebody else control your [ __ ] motions oh yeah that's a great example people like [ __ ] ain't real do I wear that mask you you can why does it hurt you that I'm wearing a mask you upset that I got mask ons and make you up to make you feel weird like yeah but believe me you're a real badass if you don't wear a mask yeah dude that's some [ __ ] cuz you braver than me yeah you going out to the bar with or without me somebody get this man a badass metal and it deserves a plaque that says I'm a badass right I just want to get into an epic [ __ ] middle-finger battle jealousy no stranger and do it I've seen those on reddit so electricity man yeah we like it we use it Oh son I pay for it um there's a lot of you know big big push to take um get rid of the fossil fuels and go towards electric imagine that you know Tesla's blown up there's another company new law they're doing I know nickel was doing a semis yep there's other ones too they have successfully done a first all-electric plane oh really it is a let's see the companies are engine manic magnets and OAD the engine was made by company called magnets magnets em agni axe and an aero tech was the engineering company who developed it republic i don't think so yeah mmm but this is a it's called an e caravan they were able to do a 30-minute flight it was uh it was only like a small prop plane it didn't tell how many people who could sit from from the picture it looks like maybe it could fit six or eight maybe four it was like but it was like one of those like um this like a pride like a but like if you were a rich dude and flew your own plane and just had a plane it look like one of those no so I'm Tyler Perry right and I decided that I want a new plane right yeah and they were able the first time they were with all electric for 30 minutes which is a huge break there's like the basic elect the Wright brothers getting the first plane off the ground you know what I mean they did say there probably 20 years away from it being commercial because I mean because the power of electric to fly that distance that that weight yada-yada into love but any like with small planes you don't go nearly as high in the air you know but even if you could get all these small prop planes out of the air and all these people who have private planes fly electric right that's that's a huge cut in emissions yeah you know I mean grant commercials gonna be what they are I wonder if it's cheaper in the long run for like airlines to go this route because then you don't necessarily have to worry about getting the fuel like the price of electricity versus the price of fossil feel is it's pretty drastic Oh make electricity and and like fossil fuels are a finite resource you know mmm and they pollute the air you know all that sauce I'm just thinking like cost-effectiveness because if it's not cost-effective then nobody's going to adopt it right I mean I'm sure as time goes that spry they say 20 years because right now I'm sure of that plane would be a ridiculous price yeah but in like 15 years that plane won't be so ridiculous but it says here yeah aviation is 12% of all emissions so like if they were able o do that and then like that's why that other company does semis they haven't started like putting them out yet but once like think about all the semis that drive across the country if you make all those [ __ ] electric mmm dude that's so much like less emissions in the air like it's it just takes time to get efficient with those things it's hard yeah I was having a conversation with somebody about about the Hulk carbon footprint uh theory yeah and they say they told me is that it's kind of a lost cause because yes you can change all of these policies in America you can change all of these regulations and in our country right but our country is not even like a quarter of what the planet has yeah I mean we have a big footprint because we are one of the most advanced nations in the country but yes I mean yeah but you still got other countries who put far more pollution out than us nearly the regulations we do exactly so it was like what we would do would be if not minor it would be insignificant you know yeah but I was I told him it was like so what do you do you do nothing and just say [ __ ] it the world is over or do you do something great like any a small change is a change you know I mean like it's uh it's like once like I saw this meme online it was like the difference between doing nothing to doing a little bit every day it's like it's one time zero exponent zero your 1.01 1.0 x exponent of zero is the is one or you know I mean but if you do 1.0 one you know one very little step a day times 365 exponentially you're up to like 37 or something at the you know so it's like a little bit of progress can be a lot of product you you do know push-ups a day you do one pushup a day you're gonna have a difference from one pushup a day sure you know so it's it's like yeah you change one little thing about carbon emissions or you do nothing and there's always the chance that uh that people could see the the difference that taking on these regulations is having for this country if we if we adopt them in more regularity and then they could they could maybe even want to adopt those in their countries because they'll be like wow these electric planes or electric cars or electric semis or these these alternatives are worth adopting you know right I mean I think that's what happened with the legal cannabis industry like those two states were like we're gonna we're gonna bite the bullet and try to do this and then people were like wow you how much money did you make yeah the crime didn't go up wait wait yo you know like all in there like Oh Canada is sitting up here Chile's [ __ ] stupid as hell letting all the people do it illegally right here Segway Kingdom of Judah from the Iron Age I'm sorry what there was a it was the kingdom of Judah in the Iron Age it was it was around juice Allah right around somewhere around Jerusalem yes it was a featured in the Hebrew Bible that's what the artist yes Jonas I know what the Bible is okay I guess not everybody knows okay me I didn't know what the hell this wasn't I found it so there you go right so back in the 60s they had excavated or whatever an old site from this and they had found and they put some of the stuff in museum and there was they had found like residues in it but they obviously didn't know what it was this was Shroud of Turin what I'm not sure it didn't say exactly it was called the holiest of Holies the site I think what's called that or something like violating that area and women so there was a company that decided to take now it they went they got permission from wherever this stuff was stored or music whatever sure to test this residue that was found all right turns out some of it was frankincense Oh true and they would mix the frankincense with animal fat yes they would yeah smell good as like incense and they found out the other [ __ ] myrrh cannabis oh they were smoking read there was there was other residue on the altar well they they say it was it they end up being like hat hashish because it was it wasn't like they were burning like actual weed but like the burning already resin or Betar or whatever yeah and it was mixed with animal feces wait I'm sorry what yeah so it's they seem to think that they would go into these chambers and they would set the they used the feces and the animal fat to burn these things and then they would go in there for like an experience because I gobble II didn't know what at what they were doing but they were getting high I own poop high on well the hash be smoking that good [ __ ] yeah so literally what they're saying you know they they believe that it came from like Yemen and Saudi Arabia because that stuff wasn't a veil like frankincense like wasn't available in Jerusalem yes yeah so there's they're singing that like people were yeah people were using cannabis as far back as that time the Iron Age I don't know when Iron Age was but that's [ __ ] gross though that's what I thought I was like [ __ ] that's the worst pilot like get buy a steak cut the fat off it put it on the table take [ __ ] just roll that [ __ ] up in a Philly [Music] obviously like back even back then they were like using like hash and whatnot that makes sense though honestly I think that the use of narcotics has been around for a long time it's like people didn't really think there are narcotics but people would eat like berries and [ __ ] and be like oh these berries make me trip a little bit eat mushrooms and I didn't get sick yeah Laurens groff cow poop so like I am sure that before people knew what they were someone's like Oh a mushroom let's make it in our student iured family's tripping balls you know it doesn't lead you to things like we didn't like in earliest ages we didn't know what foods or what plants were like good so there's this like it was just test it was just like [ __ ] we go out there and eat something and if it killed us and killed us if it didn't move well it's like it's funny because like and that's why I think tremor and that's why I think Society has evolved to where all of our advances are like things that we've created from thin air like technology because there's only so many things that are finite in this planet for us to find explore test and then you can be like oh well we can now we can build this mechanical thing and see what it you know cuz like there ain't nobody out there finally hey guys I found a brand new fruit like [ __ ] doesn't happen if it does I mean ignite and there's new plans being discovered but is nowhere like when the [ __ ] world was discovered you know everyone's like what the [ __ ] is this thing oh my god in orange you know but it is amazing man I was watching a what do you call that primitive technology and the dude was like yeah you can make cement bricks out of like wood ash and then like I don't know some sort of sandstone or some sort of like clay or something but it was a powdery substance and he put like wood ash in it and then he like wetted and turned it into a cube and then he fire blew it in a kiln and then it was like yeah it's a cement block he sets it in water sumbitch doesn't dissolve he sets it in there for three days doesn't dissolve well son of a [ __ ] you just made out of nothing so we got endless amounts of reagents whether it be plants or rocks or animals all these reagents that if you mix two things together you might just come up with [ __ ] electricity and yet they and yes they deny that homeopathic remedies to illnesses exist no the people people will say that you know that's not even pasta if all this [ __ ] is coming from this planet why isn't there something on this planet that can counter reactive I mean that's a good point you know it's a point because you you can't say that there isn't it's kind of like I guess like my idea with aliens I think they exist a hundred percent because life finds away and I guess with all the resources that we have there has to be something that you know animal fat a carrot and some some wheat roots it don't cure cancer like or something you know something random like that it's like looks like a crafting I'm exactly [ __ ] Tylenol there's basically a plant it came from a plant started with a plant man they were like oh look this plant did stop set eggs and then maybe they were fine it and put it in a pill form so you can have to eat a plant you know exactly so yeah we are doll ready using yeah cuz nobody is making this [ __ ] up this is all [ __ ] we have here right it's right but you just find a better way to market it like like for Tylenol like wood is it more efficient to put it into a pill you can just take a pill or have everyone have to go out find this plant I got a headache so you know it's concentrated but yeah it's crazy man that's crazy because all the pills are basically made from [ __ ] that is on this planet it's not like somebody created viagra for you to get your dick hard no they took a bunch of different things put it together put it in a pill we're already here now your dick gets argh yeah that means some of the stuff is chemically created right leg and arm chemicals are just already here when you look at the periodic table that [ __ ] that's already oh that's true because you can take two chemicals and mix them and then make another chemical so it all comes from a basic like hydrogen like oxygen you know use all those sort of it is honestly it is one of the most amazing things that we went from basically sticks rocks and dirt - sending space shuttles into into the atmosphere or into into space right with those same sticks rocks and dirt we're basically taking know same sticks rocks and dirt but we're taking the one piece that we need to make the steel the pieces that we need to make the fossil fuel to send a rocket up the pieces and then putting it together make the wire to rubber to make the Internet we we took sticks rocks and dirt and made it that we could send information to each other oh it's yeah like it like that's literally what we started with and then we figured out a way to make it so like we make we can we have things that we can watch we can project images from across the world like from rock sticks and dirt essentially from rock sticks and dirt yeah dude it's if like there's literally gold in my cell phone I don't know what the [ __ ] it does and pee but it's in there and people don't think about that people are so like this is what's here but if you like it's it's awe-inspiring you think about what it's not the houses we live in the phones we carry the cars we drive I mean look at the first car ever and look at the cars we drive now and that was what 1920 there's a hundred years telling you man now they're all arrowed and even the cars in the 80s there watch those commercials the other night I'm you to be watching those 80s commercials remember those cars look like a goddamn box and now they're all sleek and aerodynamic you get better gas mileage and but even beyond that if you think about how even in our lifetime how we went from pagers to now we have phones that are basically like computers basically computers as the sum total of the war knowledge my mom used to buy encyclopedias yeah oh I would laugh at a person for buying Encyclopedia right now you know spend $700 on a set of encyclopedias you're so [ __ ] 8's 8 you're good right you don't even need to have it connect to a carrier just have Wi-Fi on it you can like we took rock sticks and dirt and made an essay so you don't have to give this like media so we make condoms with sticks rocks and dirt no dirt on your crotch go yes that's how it works please make sure to LIKE and subscribe if you're already on that every single day at 9 10 o'clock a.m. Central that's T&T di n om IG HT underscore crazy tale come and hang out with you boy love [Music] | Crazy Town Media | UC7iPCrWWdd9jJBJfukKJREA | 2020-06-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,241 | 21,779 |
5zr-f0kU94c | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zr-f0kU94c | 11 Springtime Wild Greens to Forage After Winter | It is springtime for many of us across the world. That means the snow is melting, the plants are coming up, and it is time to get outside and start foraging. My name is Rob Greenfield. Today, I am really excited to introduce you to my friend, Kenton. He is actually up in northern Wisconsin, my homeland. He is going to introduce you to ten, TEN spring edibles that are great for the springtime. Many of them last through the summer. I am really really excited for this because I actually visited Kenton during my year of growing and foraging all my food. And he is in my homeland of northern Wisconsin. He helped me out a lot. I was eating so many different greens after spending time with him. He has a wealth of knowledge. I am really excited to be able to bring that to you. So here he is, up in northern Wisconsin. Hello my name, is Kenton Whitman. I am the founder of ReWild University, a wilderness awareness school in northern Wisconsin. It is spring and I am surrounded by wild edibles. I wanted to share with you a few of these amazing plants, and just take you foraging with me. So let us go see what we can find. [Music] This is dandelion, a plant that almost all of us are familiar with. For most people this is a weed, but for us, it is an incredible, wild, edible plant that is delicious from the root all the way up to the top of the dandelion flower, the head. The leaves of dandelion are sometimes a little bit too bitter for some palates. If you get them in the spring, the bitterness is not very pronounced, but, if you want to put these raw into a salad, you have to enjoy that little bitter tinge. If you do not, these are a cooked green. As we put all these together.... We are going to be talking about making Horta or just adding them as a green goodness to a soup or a stew. Horta is a Greek wild greens, essentially, it means. What we do to make Horta is to gather some wild greens (which is basically what we are going to be covering today). Put them in and steam them, or boil them a little bit, then add some olive oil, some lemon juice, some sea salt. That's all it takes. The amount of nutrition and flavor that is packed into this side dish... If you want to see it that way. It can be a meal as well. ...into this side dish is incredible, gives you so much goodness, so much bounty for your health. [nature sounds] The greens we are going to gather.... Because they have a little bit more of a bitter flavor, they might not be the main element of our Horta, but what they do when they get into boiling water or are steamed, is they lose most of their bitterness. So, do not be afraid of getting a fair amount of dandelion in there. The dandelion flower head is the one part that really does not have any bitterness. Now the stem, that does. So, I am going to pinch that off, and then be eating the flower head. This can be added to a salad, raw. We are going to be gathering them today. And when we take them home, we are going to make a French recipe that translates, essentially, as dandelion butter. It is a dandelion jelly almost that can be spread onto things. It is quite delicious. The dandelion flower is sweet and kind of juicy. It has a flavor all its own. It does not compare to anything else that I can think of. Again, [there is] so much nutrition in all these wild greens because they are often grown on soil that has not been depleted like our monoculture crops, where in conventional farming, everything has been taken out of that soil. These are going to be found often in waste ground. This is a farm that we are on. You probably can hear the cows. But it is an organic farm. All around the fringes of the fields, we are going to find all kinds of goodness. This, my friends, is Virginia waterleaf. This is named because you can see, on the leaves here, there are these little water marks, almost. These water marks are a great way, especially when we go out foraging with kids, for them to ID this, and to know that they have the right plant. Also, we have the older plant. You can see that those water marks, they start to disappear. But, all of these, even when they are older, as long as it breaks off easily, these make a really nice green. The water leaf is not bitter, so this makes a great base for your Horta, or any other greens that you are going to add to your food. Waterleaf... We pick a lot of it. We are going to take it. We are going to just break it up into some little pieces. It is going to go right there in the pot along with the dandelion and all the other ones we are going to cover today. Again, we make that into Horta. Even the little kids love it. Dock is a favorite of our family. There is a lot of different species of Dock. They are not really easy to distinguish. but, [birds chirping] They have a.. hmm.. How would I describe this? There is a sheen and the shininess that you will see. I am not sure if it is going to come through on the camera, but that shininess, once you see that, really distinctive in the sunlight. It looks like there are little sparkles all over it. That is the way that I would say it. With Dock, we are looking for young leaves. Now, these have a slime on them. If you see that slime on there, it is another great way to make sure that you have a positive ID. That slime is all over the young leaves. When they are curled up like this, they are prime, really really nice. So these young leaves are what we are looking for. Dock has a rhubarb-like sourness to it, but that can sometimes be a bitterness, so it is always good, I think, to taste the Dock a little bit. Make sure that it has a pleasant flavor to you. Then you know when you take it, and you put it into your Horta, into your stew, into your soup, it is going to add really good flavor. These are young leaves. This one is still rolled up. That is prime. [sounds of rustling leaves] Thus far, I haven't really moved around a whole lot. I am just in one little edge of a spring in a field here on this organic farm and all of these reeds are just growing abundantly. You probably recognize there is the Virginia waterleaf that we have been eating. Looking around me, I can see dandelion. I can see the nettles. All these plants are right here. There is one that is hiding underneath. It might be a little bit tougher to see. That is violet. Right underneath here is a beautiful plant. Violet is edible both as a flower and a leaf. What makes this really nice is that nothing unpleasant about the violet. It is delicious. It has a slight mucilaginous quality to it. The flower itself is [mmm!] Much like the leaf, but just has a little hint of sweetness because there is some nectar in there. Violet is a great one to add raw, so if you are looking to make a salad and you do not want to be cooking up your greens, This is a wonderful one to add in. Even more hidden is this familiar weed, again, of lawns. This is gill-over-the-ground. [They are] beautiful little flowers. This has a really strong flavor. You can eat it raw and that is how we usually do. We put it into a salad as a flavoring. You can also add it into Horta or any other greens. This is in the mint family. It does not taste minty, but it does have a lot of those oils, so it tastes quite strong. Taste a little bit and see what you think of it and then decide Is this going to be a tea or am I going to add this as a flavoring? As a flavoring it is outstanding because it just adds a little of this unique flavor of gill-over-the ground to whatever you are cooking. Nettle is arguably one of the most nutritious plants in the world. It has a great flavor. Sometimes when we make a broth out of nettles, people will almost think it is a meat broth because of the richness of flavor that is in this plant. But, a lot of people are afraid of it because, of course, nettles have little tiny hypodermics on there that have a poison, essentially, that injects into us and creates a lot of itching. It is advised to wear gloves when you harvest these. Although, you can do it without. If you want to try harvesting these without gloves, the key is to think upwards on the plant. If I let my hand go downwards onto the plant, that is the direction that the needles are facing. My fingers are going to encounter those. I am going to be bitten. But, if I scoop upwards, then I can harvest these without gloves and will not get bitten. Oh my gosh! These are such a delicious, delicious and nutritious plant. [With] those needles, the things that we are so afraid of here, as soon as these hit heat, and a little bit of liquid, they are going to wilt. The little hypodermics, they flop down. The poison is.. first of all, it will not hurt us if we ate it. It is only something that causes an itch. But, it is negated, again. Its disrupted. Its chemical properties are completely disrupted by the heat. So when I take this and I steam it or I boil it, There are no worries. I am not going to be stung by it anymore. It is going to add so much. Again, there is no bitterness. The flavor is something that almost everybody enjoys. This can be the bulk of your Horta or any wild green that you are going add into anything. Unlike the dandelion, it is not going to bitter people out. [birds chirping] I am just taking the tops of these, you might notice. As the nettle gets bigger these lower leaves, they are going to become just more fibrous, and not as pleasant to eat. But these tops, if it snaps off easy, just with your fingers, then you know that you have the meristem. It is going to be very, very tender and delicious. Behind me is watercress. This is an amazing plant. It is in the mustard family. You can eat it raw. It has a very peppery taste that some people love. Some people feel that it is better if it is mild-ed [toned] down a little bit by cooking it. You can make it into watercress soup by pureeing it. We just add it to our Horta, into our wild greens. This plant grows in springs, so it is always aquatic. You are not going to find it growing up in a field or anything. It is actually in the water. Before this was here, this was all an open spring. And it started out with a few plants. Within three years, it turned into this abundant bed of watercress. You cannot keep up with harvesting it. Some people are concerned about a liver fluke. Especially in Europe, this can be more of an issue that can affect you if you eat this raw. That is why it can be a good idea to cook it or to make sure that you are waiting until it grows up. Then you are only harvesting above the waterline. That liver fluke, it needs to live underneath the water and will not be up on any of the higher stuff up here. I recommend a good knife, a long knife, like a fillet knife to harvest this because you can grab and just slice. It is a much easier way to harvest the watercress. I am going to wade out there and get some. [nature sounds] When we look at the watercress leaf, we can see a distinctive mustard family pairing of the leaves as they come up the stem and then an end leaf up there. [It is a] really really beautiful plant and oh so delicious. [crunching, munching] Peppery Again, this one has a unique flavor that is all its own. You can see, in a short amount of time, we can gather a lot of nutrition. Oh my gosh. So much goodness. Alright, let us head off in the woods. We are going to find some more incredible foods to forage. [footsteps] In the woodlands, the bounty can become even more ridiculous. All this green that you are seeing behind me, this is all prime, incredible, wild edibles. Too many to show! But let us hit a few of the really good ones. This is wild leek. This will often grow in huge colonies in the forest. If you learn to recognize this particular color, you can be driving along and you will see carpets of it. In other places, it has trouble really establishing good colonies. We will be talking about a way to harvest this that is really gentle on the plants. Now, underneath, there is an onion-like bulb. Often people will pick that bulb and they just discard the leaves. They are after that little onion bulb. It has a flavor that is, sort of half-onion, half-garlic, but still its own thing. However, for us, we are after the leaves. These leaves have an excellent oniony flavor. You can identify them just by smelling them. Scratch it a little bit and smell it. Taste a little bit if you do not mind raw onion, garlic flavor. When we harvest one leaf from each plant, we leave the bulb and the rest of plant intact, so that it can establish these big, beautiful colonies. There is, what our family calls, leek bacon and what we do is we put a little bit of olive oil in a cast iron pan, and we set these down into it. If the heat is just right, they are going to start to bubble. They will get huge bubbles in them which you can pop with a fork . Try not to get it to brown, but to take on a translucent, deep green quality. So you have to get the heat just right. You are going to fry it on both sides. Take that out, let it sit and crisp up. It should be just crisp tender. The flavor is out of this world. Our daughters love it. We love it. When I am making these, I am taking them off the pan. I can not make them fast enough. They are sweet, oniony, garlicky. Just an incredible, incredible treat right out of the pan. Or you can crumble them and add them on the top of a pasta, or over soup. Just super delicious. So you can get all the flavor of the wild leek just from these leaves. It is a really sustainable way to harvest them. Another special woodland plant is this. The trout lily. The trout lily looks really unique. See that pattern on the leaf? There is nothing else I know of that looks quite like this. The trout lily, we use raw. It is not really good cooked. Some people just do not enjoy the flavor of this leaf or the little tingle that it can sometimes leave in the back of some people's throut. However, for a lot of us, we eat this. It is juicy. It is sweet. It is a really really delicious thing to add in moderation, to your food. There is some evidence that these are not to be eaten during pregnancy. They can cause miscarriages, Stay away from trout lily if you are pregnant. These beautiful plants are cutleaf toothwort. They are, you can see, a very distinctive leaf. Right on the surface of the ground, you can find little rootlets. They look almost like tiny bananas sitting there on the surface. Those have tons of flavor. This is very very flavorful still and I prefer it because those rootlets can be overpowering in the amount of flavoring that they contain. This is very much a horseradish flavored herb. We will add this raw, usually, to sandwiches and into salads. It adds such a delicious flavor when added like that. You can also add it to a horta. You can add it to a soup or a stew and it is going to deepen and enrich the flavor with that... [There is] no other way to describe it than horseradishy. This has such a nice... I won't call it a mild flavor, but a very palatable horseradish flavor that is not going to be too strong for anybody. You get the flavor without the heat of horseradish, when you use these leaves. Mmm, really good. What we have here is spring beauty. This is one of the earliest spring wildflowers Beautiful to behold. These famously have something called a fairy spud, a little teeny bulb way down there in the ground, a root that is quite delicious. The thing is, these are very long lived perennials. Taking those bulbs kills the plant. However, these leaves, these leaves are one of the, if not, in my opinion THE best raw green in the world. These are succulent. They have a beautiful mild flavor to them. You can select one leaf from each plant and that plant will go on to grow. Enough of these, and you will have a base for a salad that you will not soon forget. You might already be a forager or you might be new to it. In either case, there is always more to learn. If you are just getting started, it is easier than ever. There are so many groups. There are online groups and resources. There are some amazing new wild edible authors out there. So many ways to get started. It is such an amazing way to add good, powerful nutrition to your diet. We all know that the conventional food is so degraded. We can hardly call it food. But this is so enriched. The soil out here in the forest is so filled with nutrients and goodness. All that comes up into the plants. It becomes to bioavailable. The tastes, the flavors, things that you just cannot get at a grocery store. We, at our wilderness school, we will have students that will stay out for 4 to 11 months at a time, so they really learn to forage. They will come back sometimes with baskets filled with chanterelles, and wild leeks, and filddlehead ferns. All these amazing foods that are very expensive if you try to go buy them at a specialty market. But it is all out here in nature. Not only do you get these foods, but you get to be outside, in the forest, in the fields, rivers, all these places that you go to harvest these amazing foods and get this experience, this goodness of the outdoors, as well as so much flavor and so much nutrition for your body for your friends, for your family, for your community. I cannot urge you strongly enough to take up foraging, if you are not doing it now, or to expand the range of your foraging, if you are already doing it. It is a marvelous way to connect with people, connect with nature, and connect with your food. Thanks, my friends. Happy foraging! I hope you got a lot out of that time with Kenton. I know that I did. I hope that you now have some confidence to get out there on the land and find the food that is growing freely and abundantly all around us. But make sure that you work with the land and not against it. Practice good ethics. You can go to robgreenfield.org/foraging for more information and to make sure you are working with the land. If you got a lot out of this video, make sure to subscribe to this channel as well as Kenton's channel, ReWild University and make sure to leave a comment below. Kenton can answer it. I might answer it as well. Hit the like button to help spread this across Youtube. I love you all very much and I will see you again soon. Subtitles by the Amara.org community | Robin Greenfield | UCKirXBZV7hE4Fws3VSdYkRQ | 2020-05-15 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,528 | 18,276 |
DHZMQaUDMIs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHZMQaUDMIs | Drinks. Cookbook audiobook, #14/26. Short audiobooks full length | part two drinks of a little cookbook for a little girl this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox librivox.org recording by jill engel a little cookbook for a little girl by caroline french benton part two drinks they usually had tea for luncheon or supper at margaret's house but sometimes they had chocolate instead so these things came next in the cookbook tea one half teaspoon full of black tea for each person one half teaspoon full for the pot boiling water fill the kettle half full of fresh cold water because you cannot make good tea with water which has been once heated when it is very hot fill the china teapot and put it where it will keep warm when the water boils very hard empty out the teapot put in the tea and put on the boiling water do not stand it on the stove as too many people do but send it right to the table it will be ready as soon as it is time to pour it about three minutes if you're making tea for only one person you will need a teaspoonful of tea as you will see by the rule and two small cups of water will be enough if for more put in a half teaspoonful for each person and one cup of water more iced tea put in a deep pitcher one teaspoonful of dry tea for each person and two over pour on a cup of boiling water for each person and cover the pitcher and let it stand five minutes then stir well strain and pour while still hot on large pieces of ice put in a glass pitcher and serve a bowl of cracked ice a lemon sliced thin and a bowl of powdered sugar with it pour it into glasses instead of cups lemonade sometimes in the afternoon margaret's aunts had tea and cakes or wafers and in summer they often had iced tea or lemonade this is the way margaret made lemonade squeeze four lemons and add 10 teaspoonfuls of powdered sugar stir till it dissolves add six glasses of water and strain pour in a glass pitcher and serve with glasses filled half full of cracked ice if you want this very nice put a little shredded pineapple with the lemons sometimes the juice of red raspberries is liked also lemonade with grape juice make the lemonade as before and add half as much bottled grape juice but do not put in any other fruit serve with plenty of ice in small glasses chocolate two cups boiling water 2 cups of boiling milk 4 teaspoonfuls grated chocolate 4 teaspoonfuls of sugar scrape the chocolate off the bar mix it with the boiling water and stir till it dissolves mix the milk and sugar in then and boil for one minute if you wish to have it nicer put a small teaspoonful of vanilla in the chocolate pot and pour the hot chocolate in on it when it is done and have a little bowl of whipped cream to send to the table with it so that one spoonful may be put on top of each cup cocoa six teaspoonfuls of cocoa one and one half cups of boiling water one and one half cups of boiling milk 1 tablespoon full powdered sugar put the cocoa into the boiling water and stir till it dissolves then put in the boiling milk and boil hard 2 minutes stirring it all the time take from the fire and put in the sugar and stir again if you like it quite sweet you may have to use more sugar end of part two drinks | Priceless Audiobooks | UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA | 2018-10-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 631 | 3,235 |
rALPOR-z35k | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rALPOR-z35k | THE MISSIONARY BLUFF - 300+ Prophecies Prove Jesus is the Messiah | one of the greatest missionary Bluffs is their claim and it's made quite frequently that there are over 300 prophecies in the Tanakh in the Jewish Scriptures in the Hebrew Bible that prove Jesus is the Messiah this is a claim that's made by virtually all missionaries and all missionary organizations on many websites they will actually give you a list of these 300 plus prophecies some go up to 365 where you get one for every day of the year some claim there are over 600 so there is this claim it's very common that our Bible the Jewish Bible contains literally hundreds and hundreds of prophecies Messianic prophecies that prove Jesus is the Messiah now I call this a bluff because the number of years ago I did a series of programs on the internet with a friend named John ov and/or he's in Australia and we actually went through each one of the prophecies on a very popular missionary website so it turned out that on this site they were if I believe 312 or 303 and we actually spent many months each evening going through a handful of these passages and we discovered that by and large these passages were like eating cotton candy you ever had the experience of eating cotton candy you know that you bite into it you begin to chew it and then it's not there it doesn't have any real substance and what we discovered was that virtually all of these passages that are cited by Christian missionaries can be literally dismissed in 3 seconds there's really nothing to them they are a bluff in the programs that we did we actually cited we quoted numerous Christian commentaries to the Bible that agreed they agreed with our assessment that these passages are not speaking about the Messiah this is something that's not just our opinion numerous Christian commentaries to the Bible agree that these passages by and large I'm not speaking about the Messiah and they're not speaking about Jesus even most missionaries when they're pressed if they're pressed they will admit that there aren't really anywhere nearly 300 prophecies in the Tanakh in the Jewish Bible predicting Jesus as the Messiah they'll usually reduce the number to somewhere between 15 and 50 a far cry from 365 now why do I call this again a bluff because I believe that just citing this number by making the bold claim that the Hebrew Bible contains over 300 prophecies proving that Jesus is the Messiah I believe that that statement is intended to WoW the audience and to really discourage the listener from pursuing any real kind of investigation after most people will probably say wow there are over 300 prophecies that's incredibly powerful how am I ever going to possibly investigate each and every one of them and if I do investigate them and I can puncture several of those passages well those don't have over 300 left so I believe that's the bluff element that it's designed to basically intimidate the listener overwhelm them and just make the case without having the person investigated because it seems like it'll be an impossible thing to ever go through the truth is that real Messianic prophecies in the Bible real Messianic prophecies in the Bible are very clear they're very clear and we have a way of determining whether something is clear there's a very simple test for clarity the test for clarity is does everyone agree on its interpretation if you have a passage in the Bible where all Jewish readers and all Christian readers agree this passage is speaking about the Messiah then I believe you can feel confident that you are reading a messianic prophecy one example which I would ask you to read when you go home is the 11th chapter in the Book of Isaiah the 11th chapter of the Book of Isaiah speaks about a descendant of King David who will be wise and he'll be righteous and when he is ruling as the king of the Jewish people the entire world will be living in peace and the entire world will come to believe in God but there you have a very clear of the Messiah it speaks about a person who will be a king the word Messiah simply means Anointed Kings were anointed we know that King David was given the promise at all future Kings will descend from him so when the Bible speaks about a passage were in passage actually mentions a descendent of David who will be the king in the future and when he is reigning the whole world's going to be transformed that is clearly a prophecy about the future messianic age and what gives it even more certainty is that it is consistent with other passages that are clearly about the Messiah the prophecies that are cited in these long lists are very far from clear when you go through these lists of 300 plus prophecies they are far from clear as I mentioned even Christian commentaries dispute whether they're actually prophecies about the Messiah they will usually be classified by Christians themselves as types or shadows they themselves downgrade these passages and they're usually not going to say these are absolutely clear and unambiguous they say well they're types and their shadows their hints once you get into the realm of types and shadows and hints you're very far from clarity these are very subjective readings of the Bible with an agenda these are readings of the Bible that approach the Bible with an agenda like the parable of the archer who first shoots his arrow and then draws the target around the arrow so these people begin their reading of the Bible they approach the Bible with a fore gone conclusion they assume from the outset that Jesus is the Messiah and then they mine the Bible for any passages that sound like they may be alluding somehow to Jesus there's something about the passage that sounds like resembles it's got some kind of a correspondence to Jesus for example King David in the Book of Psalms often speaks about being hated and rejected we know that King David was someone that had many enemies and he was pursued and people were trying to kill him and in many of the Psalms he writes about his difficult life of being pursued by those who hate him and his enemies these passages get wrenched out of context and transformed into Messianic prophecies about Jesus who was rejected by his own people the Jewish people didn't accept Jesus as the Messiah so when you have David saying that I was despised and I was rejected so those words are lifted out of the psalm it's ignored that it's really speaking about King David and the missionary says you see here the Bible speaks about the Messiah about himself being rejected and having enemies you can actually play this game and it's an amazing thing to try you can play this game with any text any text go through a novel by Charles Dickens or go through the Huffington Post or any large document a novel a newspaper a magazine and find phrases that maybe sound like or can be applied to Jesus you can by the way do this with your own self you know we all know that horoscopes are written in a way that is so vague that any person anyone could pick up any horoscope for casting any month and you could probably find things in that horoscope for ask that you say oh I can see how that applies to me so when your criteria for reading the Bible is so vague and so subjective it's possible to find in our Bible or in any text in war and peace you'll be able to rip out little soundbites that could apply to you you could apply to your grandfather you could apply to Jesus could apply to anyone I'm sure that Republicans could find hundreds and hundreds of allusions to Donald Trump in war and peace wouldn't be too difficult so we know that these are prophecies these lists of 300 prophecies are built on circular reasoning in the sense that they're built with an agenda it's not built by people that are reading the Bible to try to see what is the Bible actually teaching no they're reading the Bible with an agenda I have my beliefs and now I want to find passages in the Bible that support my beliefs and because they have this agenda that's built upon circular reasoning they often will quote passages out of context transforming passages that have nothing to do with the Messiah but they become morphed into Messianic prophecies because there's some kind of illusion or connection or it sounds like Jesus they have some kind of a superficial connection to Jesus and therefore the Christian missionary says you see here is a messianic prophecy in the Hebrew Bible that's why again this approach leads to basically a cotton-candy kind of reading of the Bible and ultimately a huge bluff by citing these hundreds of passages | Jews for Judaism | UC5qG9wUJNISCbVF8AVp7-xw | 2016-08-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,542 | 8,548 |
QGjYUeRuap4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGjYUeRuap4 | Crazy valved exhaust for my Porsche Boxster S! | wow hello everyone and welcome back to the rose porsche in kent now i brought the car here maybe a few months back for a full suspension refresh however today i'm back for something far far more exciting [Music] hello dean welcome dean back to the channel everyone it's exciting to be back here how are you doing i'm right there so you john yeah very good you've got you might have noticed guys that the two microphones set up there on dean that is because the guys here at the rose are also filming some of their own content today so i'll leave a link on screen and also in the description for you to check that out they're going to be going into more details on some of the stuff that they're doing here at the workshop all the time but also onto my car today and onto my car today what is it we are doing because i'm very excited as you can hear so today we are going to fit spider performances exhaust bypass valves which means we're going to have valves in the system so that you can bypass the exhaust silencer completely in which case it's going to be very very noisy now i know joel's very excited about this we're excited to show him unfortunately it is um our demo model so um so yes it does it's not all nice and shiny but it certainly does what it's meant to do and these things these are brand new aren't they so they're not even available just yet are they they'll be available so there's other suppliers abroad that actually make make the same thing they're very expensive from the other suppliers i'm glad to announce that ours are going to be significantly cheaper at least you know less than half of that sort of price and available in the uk um our stocks coming out in about a month sort of time but yeah let's have a bit of fun let's let's show you what these things can do i'm very excited here at sounds and then we're also a minor thing as well is i'm taking the car on a particular pilgrimage that i like to take my cars and i think most viewers will probably know what i'm talking about but i have brought down some uh new discs and some ebc yellow stuff pads as well yeah to go on the front of the car i think probably be needed for what i'm doing next week so we'll be fitting those yeah well i believe that you've got a bit of break wobble haven't you a little bit of a break but mainly a bit of steering wobble which is the the more annoying issue which i think we're going to also look at a little bit the list goes on sounds like you need a porsche but um as long as it's loud and it puts a smile on my face i don't really care so um yeah let's get started with that fantastic let's get started right so today we're going to be changing the u-bends that connect the cat converter to the exhaust silencer and as you can see everything's really corroded just so we're going to have to do some cutting just like we did the last time though but not to that extent there was a lot of cutting are we going to set the car on fire again no no fires this time can i just ask for um my viewers where so where is this new system going these new bypass valves so if you were to look up here you see this is what we call the u-pipe oh i see right around there yeah you've got the cad converter you've got the exhaust silencer what we're going to be doing is taking this u-pipe out let's see i'm putting another u-pipe in there but the new one is going to have a valve in it and then will it just have an outlet then that just completely misses the yes box absolutely i've actually got it to handle so this is exactly what it looks like i see you've got the outlet there so this is the noise machine this little hole oh yeah controlled by vacuum and that's electronically adjusted is it um so it's controlled yum so a solenoid will send a signal so you'll have a remote control you'll hit the remote and you can open and close it send a signal down to the solenoid electrically and that will open the valve and close enclosed with a vacuum that is awesome so this is the thing as dean just explained that we're fitting today it's basically a u-pipe replacement and there's two of them i didn't realize that obviously there's two u-pipes on either side of the back box that go into the back box and so there's two of these units so two valves essentially and um i'm really really excited obviously the other bonus of this is that it's not going to affect my exhaust tailpipes which i like i like the oem look of those and so we're not touching those at all it will all remain in place essentially my back wash remain in place and also these do come after the catalytic converter so it's no problem for mot testing but because it is a full bypass of the back box with the valve it will basically allow for maximum sound when you want it and then literally oem sound when you don't there's no sort of change to the oem sound or the stock sound should i say it will sound exactly the same right the other massively cool thing about this is the cost right most systems you can sort of buy a full system for the boxes and pay over 1500 quid which i think is pretty crazy given the values of these cars not many people are gonna want to do that or sort of similar things to this might be closer to a grand but just under maybe 800 or something this delivered is around three or four hundred pounds which is i think incredible you could obviously maybe a little bit cheaper have your back box modified you know take some of the baffling out of it or something but the problem with that is you're going to be stuck with the sound all the time i mean for a valved sort of solution i think it's extremely good value for money so um it's really really cool that they're doing this actually because this is exactly the sort of thing i would have wanted on my z4 for example but now we get to try it on this so then once dean's over there with his favorite toy again the hammer i thought i'd come over here and do a new segment on my channel in each video i'm going to be taking the most interesting comment from the previous one and responding to it on my last video when aldi canning said i actually love this video with your dad you say you're a loser at the end dad just laughs nice car and suits him yes that was my last video where my dad and i test drove a audi s4 whilst looking for his next car and i call him a loser you're a loser yes dad and i have actually test drive some more cars since filming that so if you're enjoying that series do stay tuned as those videos will be coming out very soon right so i saw you must be happy because you managed to get your hammer back out [Laughter] and the torque range hopefully yeah yeah exactly just the flamethrower we're waiting for so um this isn't all under the car is it so that you've seen that i've got to remove them and replace the the new pipes but is it a tricky job otherwise no no it's not a tricky job but um what we have to do is we the the valves are controlled by vacuum so we've got to do is run a vacuum line from the valves up to the inlet manifold what we've got is a solenoid that opens and closes and allows a vacuum to control the valve when you hit a button on a remote control so that's what we're going to do we're going to plumb the electrics in plumb the um the vacuum side in and so that you've got you can control it all from yeah the the comfort of your own cabin perfect and where does that all have to go because i've noticed you put the yeah if you have a look if you come around that side what you will see is over here is where we're going to get the power supply okay then we're going to run the negatively to just somewhere and at this point is where we're going to mount the solenoid so then from here is where the vacuum hose will run down to the to the valves and hopefully everything works all fine if not we'll have to investigate it so it's not a huge huge job no no it's not a massive job can be a little bit time consuming it's more if you don't know if you haven't done it before then it can be you know a little bit tricky because you don't know what you're doing but it's one of those things when you when you've done it a few times it's pretty simple fantastic [Music] right so it looks like the exhaust is uh pretty much done right yeah we're not far from uh starting it up and uh i think uh that's gonna be pretty exciting when we do start the car up oh it looks good actually it looks really actually you know what um if i was to look under a car without any prior knowledge i wouldn't even know that that was aftermarket i mean obviously i'd think what's that but yeah it doesn't look like it's not meant to be there tucked away there and i was saying earlier actually to the viewers my favorite thing about this is that it doesn't um affect the original tailpipes yeah because i think some cars even these boxsters just look a bit tacky sometimes with yeah when you start messing with the back box but because this is just a u-piece um you know it doesn't affect that at all so it's just completely oem look yeah i really like actually yeah if you look deep up there you can actually see the oh yeah the blue silicon piping going to the to the vacuum bills okay and that was what we were doing well i say that's what you were doing up in the top earlier rooting it out onto there so everything's up top so we just got one or two more bits to do and then we're ready to start brilliant can't wait i cannot wait so this is what i brought down with me today then ebc yellow stuff pad and two brembo front discs because well i'm going to a certain place that i like to take my cars next week and i think good brakes are in order and i suspected that i had actually indeed walked the front discs on this car already and actually dean has just been doing some measurements on the front discs haven't you yes you have so you've been using some weird tool i've never seen before yeah no it's a dtr gauge what we've done is we've checked the run out the run out allowance is .03 of a mill and yours is running at point two of them also it's actually it's really really seven times out absolutely so that's why you've got brake judder so the discs are warped basically what that means so is that measuring sort of the the way it yeah so it's a run out so it should really be square when you reply the pad running in a straight line what's happening is it's got it's it's warped so the way it's running it's just causing it to charge up okay so investing in some new discs was definitely a good idea then yes but um if you're going to be tracking your car i'll prepare for another set of discs in the not too distant future again i'm going to really try and just somehow preserve these slightly longer engine braking engine braking less i just got to be able to push it 100 basically that's yeah but that's that's that's not [Music] [Applause] okay so the brakes are now fitted got our yellow stuff pads in there on these new discs which almost look titanium actually they look really cool it's kind of funny the red calipers mixed with the yellow pads you don't buy brakes for the looks do you buy them for stopping power which is what i'm going to be needing next week any guesses in the comment below where i'm going i think if you've seen the channel before you'll probably know now quickly just big shout out to larose actually i'm missing two of my wheels and the reason being i came here this morning complaining to them of a wheel wobble issue i had sort of heavy vibrations at around 70 plus miles an hour of course i've never been above 70 miles an hour in the uk um and you know it just feels a bit unsafe now i'd had the wheels balanced a couple of days ago thinking that that could be the issue however under inspection just now it seems like the actual alloy itself is well causing the issue on the both fronts so both front alloys are either cracked or rusty or basically just causing problems so the amazing guys here at the rose have just been and found a spare set that they have of wheels which are exactly the same style as mine and they've said that i can borrow them for my trip next week which is fantastic but what's more they've gone and got a tire company to come and pick them up which they've just done and switch over my pirelli p zeros which have got perfectly good tread on them onto the ones that they're lending me so i'm gonna have matching tyres and hopefully two front alloys that are different but exactly the same and also not causing any problems so massive shout out to the guys here for doing that that's really really awesome of them and it should mean that i can just basically really enjoy the car next week on my big adventure and i can't wait to get it out and hear that exhaust and just drive it home now that's what it's all about you want to be coming away from these big days at the garage thoroughly excited in driving your car home and i really really am wow that loud that's very loud that is pretty nuts isn't it right here we are in the car then for the first drive with new brakes but my exhaust and that this valve's open i'm just gonna back to stock put the roof down first and foremost before we go anywhere and of course i've got brand new brakes on here as well so i'm not gonna absolutely thrash it straight away because i want to make sure that i've run them in or bed them in as best as possible so valve closed valve open let's see how this sounds [Music] that sounds mental and there is conveniently right next to the rose a cheeky little underpass so let's see how it sounds wow that is fantastic well i i'm going to enjoy this sound on my drive home now and i'll pick up with you guys very very soon on the channel but you'll also be seeing where we're taking this car next week and there you're going to hear more of the exhaust and see some track action as well so thank you all so much for watching big shout out again to larose porsche for well just being amazing do go and check them out their links are below and go and have a look at their videos as well because they're trying to grow their youtube channel right now so try and help them out if you can anyway thank you guys so much for watching and i'll see you all very very soon you | It's Joel | UCgTXd9mdtB4IYjzALr9IkbA | 2022-05-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,808 | 14,214 |
A9omPhIX9t4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9omPhIX9t4 | White Trash Compactor - 02 - Drinky McFighty - 2010 Evergreen Album | [Music] oh and hold a fight an Irishman blood on his knuckles in a bottle in his hand not the sharpest tool in the shed story kept told by the scars upon his head Bhairava brawl was unknown his demons were soaked with whiskey one inch in his favorite ring fight ninja gay men fighting shaggy hey fight insurance they was drinking Trisha fighty we made faster know who set a fest the dump is this Co British they did dry and all their best fighters died we laughed at their failure Amy train like a sailor who forever a Nazi is named what retain big bite is quite a tricky position restraining drinking it buddy raise your glasses the dragon [Music] they'd been fighting | Arthur2Sheds | UCfIjU62ExycFvyA1jLY2XGg | 2018-09-23 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 125 | 669 |
GWqeuFO8xDY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWqeuFO8xDY | Theorists Marx, Weber, Cooley, Mead, Dubois, Addams | this is part two of the um famous theorist and historical sociology so the next two theorists marx and weber are very important in understanding the development of sociology and they come at it from two very different angles let's start out with karl marx karl marx argued that society is driven by this constant competition over scarce resources but there's this whole pie out there and everybody wants a piece of the pie but there's not enough pie for everyone to have the pie and so he talked a lot about the bourgeoisie and the proletariat another way to think about is the haves and the have-nots although the technical definition here the bourgeoisie are the owners of the means of production they're the business owners the people who in a capitalist system have the power and the the ownership the proletariat are the workers they work for the bourgeoisie they work for the owners of the means of production um so for marx this idea is that you know there's this constant competition and that leads to inequality and he also felt that it was very important that we challenge that inequality that inequality should not be a big part of our society that that we should all sort of um get a fair fairly even shot at things and he felt that the bourgeoisie were exploiting the proletariat in all of this um and that kind of puts him in contrast with weber it's not weber by the way it's favor so if mark says hey we need to try to change things as sociologists we shouldn't just sit back and observe these inequalities that are bad for society we should do something that was in direct contrast with weber and weber felt that the role of the sociologist was to be value neutral or value-free and that they shouldn't be bringing their values into the discussion they shouldn't be trying to work for change but instead they should be trying to describe just what's going on in completely objective neutral manner so it's very important for weber that the sociologists be unbiased what i find interesting is that this is still a debate in sociology today should we as sociologists and as researchers be activists advocating for change or should we as sociologists and as researchers be unbiased neutral observers we can talk about the advantages and disadvantages of each of those i think that's a very important debate and discussion for us to have with each other naver also talked a lot about the protestant ethic he felt that the protestant ethic is what led to the development of capitalism and he felt that it was this ideology of trying to save things to show your favor with god if you had more money it was a sign that god was smiling upon you your neighbor had one axe but you had five god must be viewing you favorably that's the protestant ethic some of that is even alive today you'll see people buy a house or buy a car or something and people say oh you're so blessed god is blessing you as if these these material signs of wealth are signs of favorability with god that's the protestant ethic and that's where that comes from um weber also disagreed with marx you can see they go back and forth i like to argue with each other um in terms of how you measure class marx felt that there were two classes bourgeoisie the proletariat the owners of the means of production the people who work for them and baber comes along and he says no i think it's more complicated than that i think we really need to look at three things prestige power and property how much respect do you get how much property do you own how much power and influence do you have and in particular he was interested in what he saw as the power of religious leaders of the time so we're going back hundreds of years here if you go back to the late 1700s early to mid-1800s you'll see religious leaders have a lot of power but they're not the bourgeoisie and they're not the proletariat they don't own the businesses that work for the businesses and so this is weber's way of saying hey marx did you consider this other factor you didn't consider people who might not be owners but still have a lot of power he also came up with the idea of bureaucracy bureaucracy is how large-scale groups and organizations businesses this is how they run they have sort of separate divisions of labor different departments a chain of command i'm not going to go through all the seven characteristics of bureaucracy but this is where this idea comes from the last two theorists are different from the others mean and cooley are different in three ways number one they're americans number two they're social psychologists and number three their time frame is a lot later a lot of people don't even talk about them in the first chapter in fact i don't think your book really does either a lot of people talk about them in chapters but usually like three four five these are the chapters that are on social psychology and human development and this is this perspective in sociology starts in the us and again it's the early to mid 1900s where you see mead and cooley becoming more prominent so mead has this idea of the i and me theory the i is the selfish part of the self the unsocialized part of the self the part of the self that wants whatever you want whenever you want it and the me is the more social socialized side of you so for example when you're really young the i is much more dominant right little children two three years old they want whatever they want when they want they can't wait they'll like to wait and they throw a fit and they might be on the floor screaming and having a tantrum because they didn't get their way whereas when you get more socialized and you move towards the me you start to be able to reflect on how your behavior looks to others and how you how others might respond to you if you do certain things and what the social norms are that you might be breaking that's why the me is more socialized hopefully as we get older we all have a more more dominant knee right than the eye that's very important um the preparatory stage the playstation the game stage are stages of development that need came up with in the preparatory stage you're just copying what you see you don't know why you're copying it your mom's brushing your hair and you're going like that too you don't know why you're doing it you're just repeating what you see the people around you doing that's why as a parent you have to be very careful about what you do when your kids are that age you shouldn't be saying the f word because your two-year-old might be out in public and shout out the f word believe me i've been there with that kind of thing in the play stage the child learns their own role but they don't yet understand the role of others so in the play stage what you're doing is you're trying to do what you're supposed to do so mommy says time for dinner a little timmy and he climbs up on his seat and he sits there and he waits for his dinner because he knows that's his role right but in the game stage you know not only your role but the role of other people and in order for you to play a game it kind of helps to do that right so for example me use example of baseball if you want to play a baseball game even if you're the pitcher you still have to know what the first baseman does you still have to know what the catcher does you need to understand your own role as well as the role of others and that is when you enter the game stage hopefully at this point in your life you are all in the game stage you know you come into class when we go back face to face and the students come in and they sit in this in the chairs nobody goes up to the teacher's desk or anything like that because they understand the role of the student as well as the role of the teacher right that's because we've entered the game stage generalize and significant others are terms that are often used totally improperly by the way so people say significant others like their boyfriend or their girlfriend well that's not a totally wrong usage of it but a generalized other is a particular role in this world a mother a teacher a doctor a president those are examples of generalized other roles a significant other is a particular person playing one of those roles so for example the role of a mother is a generalized other but my mom is my significant other that's a particular person known to me in my life playing that role of a mother so is your particular boyfriend or girlfriend your significant other yes they are but guess what i'm also your significant other i'm playing the role of teacher i am your teacher if you're taking my class i am your significant other i'm a particular person in your life fulfilling the role of teacher cooley comes up with this idea idea called the looking glass cell the looking glass self argues that we get our sense of who we are based on others reactions to us and it's not just what those others think but our perception of what they think that matters so if we think that other people think we're ugly or smart or beautiful we will come to think that about ourselves so if you think about this term a looking glass it's just old school term for a mirror so the idea is that people around us are our mirror on our self they teach us who we are they give us a way to think about ourselves and so if we get a lot of compliments we may start to think positive things if we get a lot of negative feedback we may start to think about negative things you should think about examples in your own life where maybe your view of yourself changed based on what we call these reflected appraisals that's the term for that from other people where someone told you something about you and it affected how you saw yourself that's the looking glass self and this is going to come up more than once in this class because we use this to talk about several different things and the last point i want to make and i am contributing partly to this problem myself by not giving it more time is that there are a lot of contributions made by white women and men and women of color that were minimized because at this point in the history and development of sociology there was a lot of racism and sexism people weren't really allowed in the academy if you were a person of color if you were a woman and dubois is important because he's the first african-american to get a phd and he gets a phd in the social sciences and he makes a very important contributions in the early 1900s to the development of sociology but still he was very much marginalized because of his race you see certain women scholars who did a lot of sociological work but they did it outside of the academy and so that's very important for us to understand with people like adams and martino fannie lou hamer those are other examples of women who really i would argue contributed to the development of sociology they just contribute in ways that were outside of the academy because that they were not allowed in those kinds of positions at that time so these two slides or these two videos together should give you a sense of some of the major theorists and the history of development of sociology | Dr. Rachel Sociologist | UCRHtVV9bh3aLNISCd9P0hIA | 2020-09-07 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,090 | 11,153 |
VTnGuvI4C_o | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VTnGuvI4C_o | tenafly viper live pit 12-1-2011.avi | oh bet you didn't know he's chasing a guy on a buffalo look out just watch him go before we do anything at all this performance tonight goes out to the memory of jimmy hartman schmatz's cousin who passed away this week and this whole performance is for him now and if he was here right now he would say put some vocals in skinny's monitor now like i said we are tenta fly viper we are opening act we are your drinking buddies this is what we do this is called put my rock on it where's the big wow is how that's what you want [ __ ] lost out oh [ __ ] all the gas [ __ ] up when i walk through the waters of damnation where's your beer your beer is over there sir i got to be completely honest with you guys we got completely [ __ ] up last night and i'm not talking about the good kind either man it's when you're [ __ ] talking the next day about quitting i ain't even [ __ ] man i'm hurting i know yeah you are i'm not [ __ ] no i want some whiskey son well i want to welcome everybody to the slaughterhouse road show we had a band drop off they were friends but they had to go so we have a band called one eye doll hey hey i know i got some guys in my group they are absolutely in love with that girl she has a way with words i'm not even lying but i want to welcome everybody it's good to see everybody do you know are you have any [ __ ] clue who we are well i'm no i'm waylan we are tinafly viper and this right here is the marlboro man aka keyboard master schmotz on the [ __ ] base and then behind me we got the [ __ ] mastermind skinny on the drums and then we got my good friend tommy baby bump pretty boy he will walk your mama home from church but this next song we're going to play is off our upcoming album which you will be able to get in march am i right skinny march marches you think about aussie blow the whistle it's called the queen the knight and the liars you can decide which one you are because i could give two [ __ ] less and he is [ __ ] up still man this monster scared me bro tough week tough week he has had a tough week man you know i love you don't you i seriously love this dude man these guys it's called rebellion please foreign lose myself again get back i don't wanna lose don't wanna lose myself everybody having a good time tonight can somebody help me out real quick what were the opening bands names what was the opening hacks all the local bands what were their names one at a time people dnr everybody make some [ __ ] noise next yeah that that dnr do not resuscitate is that all y'all the [ __ ] dnr come on man i think y'all played with us last time love you thank you what was that field of cyborgs [ __ ] make some goddamn noise but like i said we're [ __ ] up guys like i'm really hurting bad i did little hair the dog always helps you you actually went to bed yes kenny took a xanax and went to bed but uh we're going to run your mouth and i'll run mine more don't tell me what to do son this fat back mating season don't make me sit the big dog out on you this song goes out to the special ladies in the house tonight where are all these single ladies in the house tonight what there's one are you bullshitting me i demand well okay there's okay hey big mouth what's your girlfriend but this goes out to that special lady it's called street trash take me away trees take me away you know it baby tommy walking home son walking home take me away i'll sweat that place oh thank you thank you thank you very much you like it you guys enjoying it she's busy with the mushrooms again but i want to answer a question real quick i get asked this all the time it's like wayland why are you in not another metal band the fact is i've got one successful metal band why do i need two so i decided to do a band about [ __ ] [ __ ] and doing drugs and drinking whiskey and true life stories everybody knows about i ain't even bullshitting man i'm not doing another metal band i enjoy mushroom head why would i do anything else but right now we're going to do a special song and it's about addiction oh [ __ ] we and this band know all about having an addiction some of you guys are alcoholics some of you guys are drug addicts and i'm not going to forget about you [ __ ] gamers either because that is a [ __ ] addiction too i know for a fact i stay up all night playing that's just like cocaine and then quite possibly the most addictive thing in america today oh that's a close second internet porn you guys know you were watching that [ __ ] before you even came in here today but [ __ ] all that [ __ ] this is about this addiction who knows about this addiction who knows about this seven dollars a goddamn day to die addiction i know i do and i wish i didn't but i do it's called misread oh you can smoke in here that's why no one seems to care this fever our grace this passion for the feelings turned out to never take your place jacksonville's place then your mama's place because it's an awesome place to crash but you get [ __ ] up if you know who we are go the bar and get you a shot of whiskey we're going to reno oh what's up really oh my god get your hands up in the hair if you're in a party tip it back i never know who it will take me where i go wow that is all the time we are given thank you guys so much you've been a great audience if you want a t-shirt you can go out get your tenta fly viper drinking [ __ ] fighting t-shirt or go get you a damn sticker we don't care or just do like this dude and buy me a bunch of [ __ ] shots | Chason Hymen | UC9g1ze055fopXRt9dj_f0DQ | 2011-12-05 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,096 | 5,761 |
lP8UZEs-Qa4 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lP8UZEs-Qa4 | 053022 Bending the Tongue | [Music] good morning it's monday may 30th 2022 i'm russell and this is rocky road devotions a few minutes of help for your journey today our devotion today is entitled bending the tongue in our scriptures jeremiah chapter 9 and also james chapter 3. jeremiah the prophet writes my people bend their tongues like bows to shoot out lies they refuse to stand up for the truth they only go from bad to worse they do not know me says the lord and then the half-brother of our lord jesus christ james the apostle writes and among all the parts of the body the tongue is a flame of fire it's a whole world of wickedness corrupting your entire body it can set your whole life on fire for it is set on fire by hell itself i've got a lawnmower with a very sharp blade actually there are three blades that spin like hosea's whirlwind they cut the grass into clippings then they cut it again and again before spitting them out on the sidewalk if you pick up a handful you'll notice there are many different sizes of these clippings it goes to several factors how many times the grass blade has been cut by the mower blade and how long the grass was growing and the angle at which the mower approached the blade there may be other factors which i have not considered perhaps many but this one thing is certain that sharp blade can cut a lot of grass from any angle the same can be said of the tongue like james's description of a sharp tongue as a wildfire from hell setting your world on fire so the tongue cuts whatever's in front of it mowing down the landscape of humanity god sent jeremiah to warn jerusalem's population of what their lying tongues were accomplishing bending the tongue is my favorite phrase for crooked speech or lying small or large white gray or midnight dark lies are falsehood that cut things mostly people into all sorts of discardable waste there are many different categories to which you can sort lies except one helpful this is because lies separate people from truth and when a crooked tongue bends the truth it immediately sets up an unhelpful barrier between the liar and the one to which the lie is spoken for instance i can say a lie to a friend to get off the hook i had a headache last night that's why i didn't call you sorry the friend not only buys it but feels sorry for me i have bought three seconds of compassion from my friend when i really rather deserved a sharp look for not calling when i promised to do so and i didn't call because i got an opportunity to be with another better friend and at this point i've got to enlist the better friend's help to support my lie by never mentioning it to the friend to which i told the lie then i've got to write myself a memo to remember the lie so i don't get caught talking to him about the good time with the other friend and so on and so on that mower blade just keeps on cutting and relationships will lie like shredded grass on the sidewalk before long as jeremiah put it things go from bad to worse that's the way of all lies for you today tell the truth you don't have to keep track of it worry about it bend your tongue to reach it or ever regret it there isn't that better you chew on that as you hit the rocky road with jesus have a blessed day | Russell Brownworth | UCOlvHNqFnDMYNanuSp3nh3A | 2022-05-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 620 | 3,232 |
GsjkRTb0yVE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GsjkRTb0yVE | The Best Bagel in The World|Bean and Bagel|Breakfast Mukbang|ASMR | [Music] you know that I am it's your boy mr. Grubb back again with another video for you guys and today I am headed to bagel spots that I found in Fort Pierce be eating bagel cafe so I usually usually get my bagels from Dunkin Donuts like most people do you're gonna be all I bought from the store I'm a big fan of the cinnamon raisin bagels so right now I haven't been to the store it's raining really bad out I haven't been to the store to actually get any and you know I'm all about trying new spots right so I looked up a place where I can actually get a good bagel and they popped up so being a bagel the four peers so I'm getting ready to hear - um guys put them to the test cuz you know that's what I do I see you guys there [Music] so they had an amazing selection I went ahead and got the breakfast bagel so you guys and it comes with the bacon egg and cheese cuz like I said that's kind of what I would have got if I to win the Dunkin or anything but I wanna try it out for me I always tell you guys - I like when people do this when they put their food and for cause it keeps it hot man so shout out to bean and bagel for that they always get a little package I'm telling you y'all slip it on the package man the diners and mom-and-pop place will always give you the extra and don't charge or you go to McDonald's right now Mac Donald's gonna charge for extra sauce for chicken burger it's crazy imma let you guys see this real quick as you guys see I got mine cut in half just in case I won't be able to finish at all or whatever cuz you know hi I'm and I try to eat but sometimes I my eyes are bigger than my stomach right so either way we're gonna put this to the test I got the bacon egg and cheese I got over plain bagel God I'm gonna cut it in half [ __ ] me so I'll let you guys see this [Music] this is an amazing bagel is amazing we noticed it all day attack this is amazing [Music] try not to be the bagel for this my bagel is delicious the bacon is fresh the eggs is first the bagel itself is first like you can see I'm not struggling come to having over to on the bagel it's an exceptional place where you guys ever the four-piece area definitely check out beating bagel man oh man this bagel is delicious yeah like I said it's neat go see the grease on my hands nothing bad that's amazing shout out to them being a bagel you guys definitely get a 10 from your boy mr. Grove you guys are hearing it first hear from me if you're in the area definitely check them out guys you will not regret it I promise you the funny part about it I also got some bagels cuz they had like a deal on the bagels I got some extra bagels you know for you know for later they have a rainbow bagel I got it because I've never seen it before that's why I got it you know let old people never seen one before so I know a lot of you guys probably have it either so who gonna be the person to show it to you look at that look at rainbow bagel it's crazy right they're just color okay he doesn't have a technician taste any favorites or anybody believe it rainbow all in the heads-up I'm tell you man check out beating bagels you guys ever in Fort Pierce man you would be surprised the amount of options that they have okay so I'm definitely gonna eat my extra bagels later but I'm gonna finish this now I get back to you guys in a bit it's your boy mr. Grubb si I went ahead and finished my bagel save my little bagels for later man definitely good beating bagel shout-out to you guys man yes you guys are my favorite new cafe for bagel breakfast this man would definitely be back make sure I got my little menu here I'm saying so I always be able to call it here and place more you know even frozen coffee veggie wraps man they do everything so you guys ever in for peace everywhere definitely check out being a baker cafe you will not regret it man go ahead get my day started and I keep back with you guys later man until next time don't forget to Like and subscribe comment below if you guys know place you want me to check out you know your boy definitely put it to the test cuz that's what I just catch you guys next time [ __ ] boy mr. Grove | GRUB LOVE | UCQZBa99iRvzH8ZQEbcZPIpw | 2019-01-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 850 | 4,165 |
Jy_c-_PP_i0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jy_c-_PP_i0 | THANK YOU INDIA (ft. Mr. Jennings, Ms. Donatello, Trumpet 1) | I'm your family friendly all loving lgbtq accepted host Marcelo Diaz number one and I'm your run-of-the-mill Canadian he's not lgbtq accepted no no I hate them guys we have to keep things uh very school appropriate this episode very very uh looks like you're doing school work oh okay I see okay well so we were just yelled we were just approached we were just approached by a leprechaun I feel personally attacked my morals have been I think I need to buy the leprechaun I think I think I need to take a mental day on this one guys whoa okay Leo you do that I'm having a rough time that is Extreme so if you're in our last episode you'd uh you'd have realized that we're supposed to have Mr and by the name of Thomas Acton not Atkin Atkins action so basically that didn't happen and here we are alone in the library I don't know why we're there's no one else the sound effect machine yeah the Wii the background noise that was not a sound effect that's Leo sleeping he's actually sleeping I'm out I'm done I'm sleeping thank you you can't whistle I have to do that oh shout out to libiv corjury I actually saw him yesterday and I wanted to say to him so bad shout out how many classes him I told him I keep telling him that I shot him out on the podcast dude I'm getting confused who the bib is like like to the point where like I like the one and only I forgot no because I thought it was someone else entirely and I'm like wait a minute that's not did you grow up to him and say Halo B and he was like no it wasn't even a him it wasn't her I thought I thought the Z was her and then Marcela and then I was like I was like okay wait so then actually and then that's that's and then it might be in a deeper plane in my head I'm like I'm thinking of all these people like I would count down like okay maybe this is the beep it's like Bangladesh I don't think I'm ever actually Gonna Learn who the Beavers on the podcast one day one day is his name actually yes Mr shoddy okay do we want Jennings on the podcast yes he's right there staring at him if we call them what would he even say hello what's up guys how you doing okay what's up zamfam he's a white jazz musician from the 90s I remember him Marlon Brown I remember he was one of the Blind Mice around you might [Music] so basically basically right we have a podcast okay your podcast and actually we're recording right now oh this is recording so right now you're in the podcast good afternoon everybody so basically we were wondering if potentially you could show up for another full episode I would love to that would be fantastic that'd be wonderful all right we don't have a set date but we were just throwing out the idea to to see if you would reject it or not our usual dates are on Wednesdays usually yeah during activity periods literally yeah interesting interesting in this loud environment I mean we're trying to keep it you know a little low but it's not podcast quality or we like to have like a lively admission okay are your general topics just you guys chatting or do you have like agendas when we have guests we ever said okay all right well well it depends on the guests yeah sure sure we've had um teachers Mr Anne okay all right cool no yeah either way it doesn't matter you're Square you can't get there either way yeah what um now here's the million dollar question the million dollars who's listening who's listening millions millions billions with a B with a B the entire population of India oh nice they're popular overseas okay I like that at least I know how to cater my answers then for the subcontinent of India okay if we ask you any questions about India always make sure they're pro-india understood why would they be anti but right exactly I love them yeah exactly India's fantastic well so the wrong answer I mean the short answer to your long question is I'd be happy to participate that is so fantastic I would also love it if it was you know if it was like he actually had specific things you wanted to know but I'm happy just uh interesting it's like we are getting um Mr Adkins soon okay I think next week right next week next week so we have some questions for him okay it's gonna be on so we want to get a bunch of Faculty members on just just like it I like it yeah all right I'm in we can like what's the name of this podcast so I can maybe look it up YouTube wasn't a Canadian two tubas and a Canadian he's Canadians okay yeah I like it it's a fantastic real question I think debate on all the podcasters which is tuba number two and one oh he's dude I'm some first chair too first chair well well I'm two but one so I'm okay well you can settle that by the next one so okay whatever but Mr bazino's in Treasure Orchestra yeah I mean just saying yeah this this is a debate for me well I'm just saying Mr posino probably doesn't decide who's first chair what are you saying if you play the violin different story we were in four is that right I've never heard that before oh yeah okay it's like you put it right by your neck and you just the tuba yeah thank you that was great he just spoke right from the soul I could really feel his heart just in every word that he said his character was pouring on to me yeah no yes it really was and I you know he's just such a great role model for all the students here at the school I think it really is he really is and he loves India we should have asked him shout out India we love you guys shout out to this 8 billion people in India exactly there's only one billion people in America not anymore they all went to India 800 people three people how are the three of us wait sorry of us it's you you and me we're all New Jersey we are the only residents here in the state of New Jersey yeah we're the only ones actually here everyone else sit down sit down okay what's your name my name is Miss Donatello hello this is real this is so real we are so happy to have this is this is more real than the fake people all around us there's really only three people yeah I've been probed by Nelly oh really yeah you guys think aliens are real uh I really do considering I was probe by one oh yeah um we're very very pro-india uh to your viewers What specifically from Mumbai yeah this is the best podcast it is thanks so much we're not telling her to say this nope we're all happy you're here listening thank you so much thank you so much Evan Cox walk in in just overall yeah he's over there shout out shout out Evan shout out Evan Cox Evan we love you Evan you're awesome yeah yeah let's have a mom oh no no do you want to we could call it more right now we only have faculty on that [ __ ] there's so many friends that Rule's gonna be broken in a few weeks I can tell only faculty from the neighboring towns of Bloomfield New Jersey neighboring towns like Glen Ridge what if we have like a knight of the Round Table of principles so do we know anybody who who could possibly viewers please yeah should I should I subscribe to my YouTube and follow my should I I'm gonna I might put these up on examination this is separate yeah well I'm gonna link to it no this is this is a separate entity you can link to it but you can't you can't they can't we started one episode of kecker cringe on examination and then just we should delete that video no I think we scared of audio quality is bad and it's not funny it's literally just a video of us on FaceTime when your camera doesn't work so bad I think we're uh I think we scared her away with the Mumbai shout out India no are you are you telling me she's anti-india honestly yes wait she might she might be in conflict with hold on she's probably probang [Music] if we just said there's four people that are actually in New Jersey yes I don't think she's one of them Jennings had to go no more and supported in you no so he knows about India what's the thing about it all of the Indian population is fake if we're going off this standard she was questioning no dude she was questioning if the podcast is real because she doesn't want to be known because she hasn't in New Jersey oh she's about to be caught we're about to realize the size of Mumbai please who wants this shout out to the Moonlight please the MPD God's Heroes no wait they're Hindi chakra I don't know wait wait wait wait there's multiple there's most people yeah let's put something up here yeah okay God your friends here Alex don't call him over okay let's let's go to the Wikipedia.org list of Hindu Deeds I'm blocking they're all fake uh whoa okay that's it I thought we were I have to hide pro-india anti-hindus um he's coming he's coming Alex are you here for two minutes Alex we have a third guest podcast welcome Alex he's not real we can't have food can I be like applause and everything yeah so what shirt are you wearing yeah who are you wearing right now I thought I was do you support the Mumbai Destiny right now no you're you're a guest you're a guest you support the Mumbai Police Department whoa whoa you anti-india anti-india podcasts I never said you know so please right now we'll send you back to Mexico what are you showing me I'm very loud vinyl what he's showing me it's just Kanye go back which is bad this is pretty good this is Kanye I wonder who made it what the [ __ ] oh man this is ruined the surprise that's a hurricane extended Hitler yo shout out Kanye West shout out Adolf Hitler yo shout out to the Nazi British go Mr Acton he's like shout out Russian Communist party just shout out every anti-human rights organization yo shout out every single individual in this world who just wakes up in the morning and they just they just want to be a hater like shout out you know because always a good thing that takes so much no no that takes so much effort and so much time to be such a hater such a waste it's respectable it is respectable it's not respectable shout out all the haters out there we love you other people hate listening to our books no so by the way all right so by the way we're literally making tea we have our Indian viewer base all we need to do is start posting music we have to be into your Chromebooks to stay here so at least it looks like you're doing well it could be it could be a notebook it could be a textbook I am we are hard well I was supposed to be out of here okay do you support you didn't answer do you support them here do you support the Mumbai Police Department do you support India what the [ __ ] are you pro-india what do you mean what is that what do you like India yes or no man yeah what did you say he said Nepal better Nepal is a funny name it sounds like you've seen the flag yeah it's just like uh shout out to our it's not even like a real flag right shout out to our uh wait let me Google it right now shout out to our two and a half viewers from Dish booty we love you so when you've had a card here follow follow the podcast instead of just listening to it we Thrive off of your follows he wants us to grow and Thrive my life force my life force doesn't Prosper unless I'm followed by more than six people on Soundcloud prayers go out if you don't follow Owen's gonna die Owen is actually going to die prayers always gonna die and Leo and I are gonna be so this drains me prayers go out to the to the half person in this booty we hope you your recover is Speedy but if you don't subscribe he's done he's getting shoved at the hospital anybody listening to this video you need to follow right now save your save your countrymen the person the half person in this booty that listens is just the top no legs no legs it was a victim of African terrorism anyway if you don't foreign Indian and and uh Danny and Palestinian just that part of the world we love you guys so much we just love you guys anti-bangladesh show thanks everybody so there is one sorry on the beep oh do you support oh yeah do you support the sovereignty of Israel the internet you know how the internet is right now you support the sovereignty of Israel maybe maybe not um no he says I have no jurisdiction he said he's the UN recognized them as a country so I guess therefore he says I guess oh I did not he hates he does not recognize stuff okay we have one yes one neutral and one I can't get political uh you know that that was amazing no we have to have like and I can't get political neutral is I can't get political do you think it would be a good idea to sneak that up on Mr yeah uh speaking of bird calls do you happen to support the sovereignty kicks speaking of your blue eyes we're not alone tune in next week we're live from Mr Acton's office but we promise you next week's episode yeah if he doesn't if he um forgets we'll just make him oh we didn't what we'll force him yeah so you know how the internet you know how the internet is fake right what are you talking about how there's act like to be real there's only 2.5 look what the internet says look at this obnoxious 1.1 million people in this booty what are you talking about the Internet is just I don't think that's how you pronounce it it's Djibouti I gotta look up pronunciation that's actually not funny pronunciation here we go oh oh oh oh oh oh O'Reilly let's just harmonize on that oh it's Djibouti that was good for them let me get the phone here it's Djibouti why would they put the extra crap bleep this evening non-cuss words over the summer because remember yeah no you made that up and I stole your joke of course you did and every someone's salty oh my god wow that's funny that's hilarious that's rather humorous that is that bro well I feel like we've come to a natural conclusion [Music] that's pretty good we had like two really good guests on this yeah two fantastic no shout out to Alex we're not even gonna tag we actually hate uh Alexander bermio on this podcast but not his brother not Dante Dante we love you Dante but we hate you Alex yo that guy sucks that guy sucks I hate him he's like listening to like Playboy party now what's up with that oh yeah shout out Libya cordray for the end of the podcast how many times have we given the beef a shout out on this episode approximately 17 times and a half okay I only got it every time shout out the bib we love it we love you brother we love YouTuber one signing off uh this is also two people one this is the Canadians | Zamn Nation! | UC2bR45TivqNlZ8DSkkpzIug | 2023-07-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,807 | 14,297 |
Fy0_gJSuWYU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fy0_gJSuWYU | NEW TACO BELL CHICKEN WINGS COPYCAT RECIPE EXPERIMENT | okay so in the youtube eating space people have been going buck for these these taco bell chicken wings put them up here picture it cool i've done a lot of video research i've been hopping around watching other people try them and it's a mixed bag of reviews some people like them some people say they're awful anyhow my [ __ ] ass city don't have a taco bell so i'm gonna have to try to recreate them on my own so i've done deep investigatory research by way of watching people eat them seeing the crisp on them thinking about okay how do i achieve that also the color the dusting the flavor all these things well by way of one tb employee channel so taco bell employee channel with 2.91k subscribers they uh they went ahead and put up this box of the chicken wings that they got in at their taco bell restaurant i'll put it up on screen here and in the chicken wings seasoning and the ingredients you'll see we have a bunch of chemical compounds that's cooked up in the laboratory and i don't necessarily have any of that but i'm going to do my best to recreate it so we have whey autolyzed yeast extract i don't know what that is salt cheese milk cultures enzymes buttermilk extractives of paprika citric acid sour cream romano natural flavors jalapeno powder whey protein concentrate blah blah blah blah anyways you see what i mean it's uh you see that it's basically dexter's lab in there i think what i'm going to do is i have some ideas basically all those powders that they're talking about there those are all basically refined flavors via into a powder and i think they make like a seasoning mix they batter it off maybe with some cornstarch and flour type thing get it to stick fry it off and then they also have like a dusting on the side so i'm going to use my creative intuitions here and i've got a few things that i'm going to mix together for this uh dredge and seasoning so let's get to this it's black hoodie i'm back cooking these goodies look at these views from cooking these foods yeah all right let's do some science some powdered test kitchen science so for the whey milk cheesy aspect of these we're just gonna go in with a packet of kd cheese craft inner cheese there you go next for the buttermilk aspect and the sour cream aspect we're coming in with dry hidden valley ranch packet now i don't know ratios so i'm just going to go like a quarter of this because i don't think it's the dominant flavor for the citric acid element lemon pepper i should probably accent a little citric acidy type deal don't you i do so let's go in with that probably not too too much let's try like a teaspoon okay i don't have jalapeno powder so for spice we're definitely gonna go in with some cayenne they said there was paprika in there they said there was salt and they said there was sugar mix this baby and make a seasoning that maybe like what's on these wings and now i'm going to reserve some of this for a post fryer dusting the dusting but most of this is getting mixed with predominantly corn starch a touch of flour not a lot and a very light hit of baking powder and now we whip that all right our seasoned dredge is complete okay fresh washed rinsed wings that need to be pat real real dry we got to get these nice and dry and then we pat gotta get them nice and dry so dry bowl wings nice and pretty dry watered pat it off to get the seasoning to adhere and stick a little bit of oil we're going to toss in just a coat a little bit it seems to me that the batter on these taco bell wings is not thick it's a dusting it's a very crusty crispy light dusting so that's why we're not using like buttermilk or egg and we're going to lightly dust these kind of deal we're not really gonna go crazy on trying to get a thick coat we just want the flavoring [Music] and then to fry and we're gonna dredge these babies up a couple at a time here we're just gonna lightly dust them up just like that they are already taking on a very interesting color okay so today we're opting for a pan fry the deep fryer needs an oil change and i ain't got the time right now quantran method chopstick in if you got bubbles it's time to take a bath we do not have bubbles yet i'll see you when we do we got bubbles and this oil is making noise so i think we're ready to roll pitter patter let's get at her the beautiful sounds of frying oil please don't burn me please don't take me out oh wow i could smell that cheese powder for sure that's dope all right as i flip what i'm learning is i think that sugar is burning so i don't know getting quite the quite the caramelized color here things don't always go to plan that's why we're making an attempt this is just an attempt you know okay i'm gonna pull them over to this rack to let them do their thing where we anoint them with their dusting of flavor but i definitely learned here through this that whatever was in my mixture is definitely uh burning on the outside so that's not ideal not ideal at all and we may very well just chalk this up to a possible fail but we're not gonna let food go to waste so we are obviously gonna eat these and see what it's all about okay while they're still oily hot [Music] that's dusty the oil helps things to stick in theory the concept of these were good in my head in all actuality i'm terrified all right closer inspection i may mark this down as a diy disaster they did not fry how i expected them to fry they definitely had sugary bernie situations but i have no idea what they're going to taste like so we don't really know until then but as you can see i got some sauce homies in the back ranch and bbq i feel like pbq may be good on these but let's dive in all right y'all reporting live from hoodies laboratory cave let's do it moment of truth let's find out what this is really about even though it did not go according to plan they do not look well yeah no they don't really look like like the ones i'm seeing in videos okay first things first let's just try it with just the dusted powder and see how weird this is and then we're going to definitely have to use sauces i feel that okay those are actually much better than i expected like way better it's definitely cheesy definitely a bit spicy definitely get the sour creamy kind of buttermilk richness like from the uh the ranch packet it's actually quite a lot better than what i expected try it with image okay and go with rash the flavor far exceeds the look i could say that definitely let's go what i will say is the uh those wings like when i've been watching these videos they look that the crisp on them looks very similar to a costco style wing and i need to solve that puzzle because the costco wing crisp seems amazing i almost did these in the airfryer to see how that would be but got them that's why uh these like test kitchen like fast food places not have all the sciency [ __ ] because when you read that label it's very like maltodextrin extract and things like that somehow their compounds that they're using like don't burn off in the oil and create like that that darkness you know so food science is crazy but these are actually not bad they have a pretty cool cool flavor to them given the strange ingredients used that kind of work however not something i'd be making on the regular i'm not going to make it in my uh revisit list really and the ranch is better than the barbecue i will definitely say that i thought perhaps the sweetness and the tang would cut nice against that like powdery cheese it works but some other answers work better the reviews seem to be that people either really hate them or really like them from what i can see visually they look good it looks like good wings but i don't know what the flavor profile is like okay i'm not gonna eat these last two because because of like the burning happening i didn't get to cook them to my liking i like a longer cook a crispier cook i like the chicken to be thoroughly cooked and these are a little too moist for me right now i'm not really enjoying the moisture of the chicken right now is too juicy a good idea a nice little adventure an experiment complete and total fail though just to be honest they don't taste bad but they didn't go right in many aspects so don't try these at home don't try this at home and maybe just go to taco bell and get it if you can but yeah it's not it's not the ticket so it's an experiment we tried and we failed miserably okay so you know what to do don't try these at home you could live well stay true because if you try this at home you're not gonna be eating good i'll tell you that if you like this content please like comment and subscribe as well as check out my pinned comment down below to find other ways to support this channel thank you for watching eat good live well and stay true | Hoody's House | UCerXTNUdZQNRi5VARhvpp-w | 2022-01-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,705 | 8,798 |
DM3d78jlJuw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DM3d78jlJuw | still learning | good morning Hank it's Tuesday I'd like to tell you a story today about why I still like learning new things even though I am long out of school and don't like need any new certificates or degrees in order to do my job insofar as I even have a job so I was thinking about the song auld lang syne recently you know the one that goes should auld acquaintance be forgot and never brought to mind etc I started reading up on it and found out that there are parts of the song that are at least 400 years old but the version of auld lang syne we have today comes from the great Scottish poet Robert Burns who claimed he got it from an old man but burns probably wrote at least three of the verses himself originally Burns had a different tune in mind for the song but then auld lang syne got grafted onto a different Scottish folk melody and it became a popular New Year song in Scotland and then Scottish people emigrated to Ireland in the Americas and elsewhere and it became the world's New Years song anyway the first record of the song is written on the back of a letter that Burns wrote in 1788 to a woman named Frances Dunlop side-story burns and Dunlop had a fascinating friendship she was almost 30 years older than him and she once wrote him I have heard Voltaire read all his manuscripts to an old woman and printed nothing but what she would have approved I wish she would name me to her office Byrnes didn't but he did really value mrs. Dunlap's opinions and her friendship in fact he wrote her more letters than he wrote anyone else they also had really big disagreements including about the sexuality in Burns's work she once wrote him indecency is below you their biggest disagreements though were political and in that divisive age as in this one political disagreements were often personal in fact mrs. Dunlop was so angry with Byrnes for his celebration of the American and French Revolutions that she didn't write him for two years and then when Byrnes lay dying at the age of 37 he wrote her one last letter with what a biographer called the last use he made of his pen in that letter he told mrs. Dunlop he was speedily headed for quote that born from whence no traveler returns and he said how much their friendship had meant to him and that quote the remembrance yet adds one pulse more to my poor palpitating heart mrs. Dunlap's kind reply was read aloud to Byrnes just days before he died and so at the end of his life eight years after first writing or at least editing the words to auld lang syne he was still trying not to forget old acquaintances so that was all interesting and fun to learn but that is not the point of the story the point of the story is that I was thinking about Bern auld lang syne and mrs. Dunlop and her disapproval of his sexually explicit poetry and that made me wonder about the Burns poem coming through the Rye which was originally sung to a tune very similar to the one we now associate with auld lang syne these days that song is perhaps most famous for inspiring the title to JD Salinger's novel The Catcher in the Rye in which the main character Holden Caulfield miss here's the lyrics to the song he hears if a body catch a body coming through the Rye when the actual lyrics are if a body meet a body coming through the Rye the actual lyric is very frankly sexual and Holden's misinterpretation of it is really innocent he imagines a bunch of kids in a field of rye who were near a cliff and his job is to catch them to keep them from going over the cliff the cliff of course is the loss of all kinds of innocence and Holden wants to protect these kids in a way that he himself hasn't been protected he doesn't yet get that the poem coming through the Rye is about two adults hooking up with each other because he's not ready to understand that but the social order and arguably one of the adults in his life treat him as if he is reading the actual words that Holden so profoundly misinterprets helped give me a new way into the book and a new way to understand Holden's heartbreak he is a boy who is trying to hold in so much and also to hold off so much and that is why I still like earning even at my extremely advanced age because new learning can reshape old learning and because learning is a way of seeing connection and all the little connections across time and space are reminders to me of how deeply connected we all are even to the fictional even to the dead Hank I'll see you on Friday | vlogbrothers | UCGaVdbSav8xWuFWTadK6loA | 2019-11-12 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 852 | 4,456 |
R-UJj2Eaqvw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-UJj2Eaqvw | Learn Arena: A New Model for Online Learning - Pay Students to Learn with Trey Goff | excited to introduce you all to trey goff and to learn arena traditional educational models are fundamentally broken and the e-learning industry is still nascent while cheaper than traditional education e-learning can still be prohibitively expensive and unengaging and that's where trey comes in and his company learn arena learn arena is pioneering a new model for online education which allows students to get paid to learn marketable skills in a competitive environment and i'm i'll bring trey's bio here in a second most importantly about trey is that trey is one of those people who i personally admire trey i consider you a brother from another mother we have both the same mission to leave this world a lot better often when we arrived and to reduce the suffering we might see around us in a way that is effectively a win-win for everyone involved it's just that you're a heck of a lot smarter than i am so i i am very excited that you're here to share learn arena with us this evening trey is the co-founder and president of this company learn arena a new e-learning platform which enables students to get paid to learn trey's also chief of staff and chief marketing officer officer at honduras prosper inc an economic development platform and charter city developer which is another company that is near and dear to my heart as i have invested into that company i think it's a phenomenal probably one of the greatest prosperity inducing entities in the entire world previously trey led the out of last place institute a non-profit focused on catalyzing economic prosperity in the state of mississippi trey take it away thank you so much chris i appreciate it i uh sincerely and deeply hope i can live up to those kind words i uh you set the bar high for me so i appreciate it all right give me just a moment to share my screen and then we will get started there we go all right as chris mentioned my name is trey goff and i am co-founder and president of learn arena and today briefly what i want to share with you all are observations about how existing options for education are broken and how we are at least attempting to fix those and to provide an alternative solution another tool in the tool belt for parents to be able to unleash the untapped potential of their children to put it uh succinctly we are building the e-learning platform that i wish i would have had access to when i was in high school and in college so first let me start with describing what's wrong with existing uh options for for advanced education uh first and i'm sure many of you who are attending this conference are intensely aware of the myriad issues that our existing universities face especially in the united states they're expensive uh there's over 1.6 trillion dollars of student debt currently outstanding in the united states which is a mind-bogglingly large number they are inefficient the vast majority of those dollars going to american universities are increasingly going toward bloated bureaucracies administrators and facilities and things like that that aren't actually effectively helping students learn marketable skills and life skills that will actually help them make a positive impact on the world and universities are largely just a signaling mechanism uh what universities and what a university degree effectively does and i'm borrowing this from an inspiration of mine who is a one of the co-founders of praxis isaac morehouse who says a college degree is effectively just a signal that you are no worse off than anyone else that has that degree that you're you're effectively generally competent that maybe you have a little subject knowledge expertise in a particular field of study that you majored in in school but what it doesn't tell you for example if you have a degree in computer science uh from a leading university what that doesn't tell an employer is whether or not you can build a front-end web application using the javascript programming language for example so they're largely just a signal and they're not actually efficacious at the one thing they're supposed to do which is educating students now e-learning platforms as a whole are cheaper uh they're more efficient because you can just select the courses that you want to take instead of uh being forced to take courses you may or may not be interested in and therefore as a result of that you can focus on marketable skills however uh even e-learning platforms have an achilles heel as this uh illustration uh shows very directly uh first they are unengaging e-learning platforms uh of all stripes uh some studies show have a class completion rate of less than 20 percent which is mind-bogglingly low because these students are paying for these courses and they're not getting much out of them if they're not completing them of course and then two they're poor signaling mechanisms if you go to an employer with proof that you completed a course in javascript from coursera let's say that is not going to tell the employer hardly anything about whether or not you know anything about javascript because these courses effectively baby the students uh through these platforms and they don't actually help you truly learn the skills because their pedagogical methodology is poor so what we have attempted to do is introduce a fundamentally new paradigm into the e-learning space that will massively increase the incentive for students to learn to complete courses to learn marketable skills and allow them to get paid while they're doing it so we create a financial incentive to learn the way it works is students invest a modest fee to enter a course they compete with other students in the class these courses are about two weeks long and at the end of the course there is something called a skill challenge where all students effectively take a actual exam which will be based upon real world problems that they might be expected to solve using the skills they just learned in this two-week course which last about 10 hours or less and they can earn back anywhere from 10 percent to 6x their initial investment in the course depending on which course they take so they can literally make a profit while learning marketable skills now we haven't just focused on a financial incentive to learn but we've also focused on taking all of the things that make video games uh addictive and turn them towards something that is pro-social like learning rather than anti-social like video games and let me tell you um i personally can attest to this i actually was top one percent in the world in call of duty for a while which has over 100 million active users and it sucked a massive amount of my productive time into call of duty and there was no financial reward like learn arena it was purely the fact that i was socially doing something together with my friends that was enjoyable and it was also the fact that i was able to compete against others from around the world there's this innate competitive drive in all of us uh that video games really just nail and video game designers have spent a couple decades now refining the way video games work to just maximize the dopamine hit the dopamine reward from gaming effectively so what we've done is taken as many of those lessons as possible from other uh traditional video games and ported them into our platform so that all the same buttons and triggers and things that make a video game such a dopamine hit is instead turned toward learning marketable skills to unleash the potential of the students so we have a leaderboard and ranking system that creates a social incentive to learn and we measure progress like a video game not like a report card um we allow students to level up to gain access to advanced courses in much the same way they might level up in a video game to obtain access to uh higher levels in the video game another thing that we have done uh is really focused on making uh the distinctions between the rankings that they might earn meaningful um so you can see here our rankings are inspired not by video games but by kind of classical thinkers because what we are effectively training students to do is we want students to become a polymath which as you probably know a polymath is someone who has a high degree of expertise in a number of seemingly unrelated fields it's someone who is kind of a droid at many many things uh what we want to enable students to do is to learn about a variety of things become experts in a variety of things because if you look at the long arc of human progress in the people who have substantially pushed human progress forward they are polymaths if you look back at ancient thinkers that we still read today like aristotle aristotle wrote about mathematics physics biology zoology uh theology uh metaphysics of wide variety of fields and his contributions to those fields are still studied today so our ranking system is directly designed to kind of incentivize students to become a true renaissance man if you will or renaissance woman depending on the the case um to become the next aristotle so that they can leave a lasting positive impact on the arc of human progress as well the way that our course structure works is we have created multiple tiers that students can gain access to as they advance further and further in the platform so at tier one if a student finishes in the top 15 percent they both unlock access to the higher tiers and the rewards for doing well in the skill competition is uh are much less concentrated and more distributed what i mean by that is every student in a tier one course will get at least 20 percent of their investment back and the top performing students can make up to 2x of their class investment so they can make up to a 100 profit on their uh initial uh class investment tier two if the rewards are more concentrated so students can earn up to 3x on their investment but as a result of that the worst performing students may not get as much back so therefore the level of competition is increased and it's also a higher difficulty subject matter so you can imagine this for instance tier one being like a calc intro introduction to calculus for example tier two might be uh intermediate calculus uh to make an analogy to to collegiate courses and tier three might be differential equations right so applying these skills to something even even higher and more difficult and in tier three the rewards are very concentrated students can earn up to 6x their investment with a top five percent finish and if they finish below that they might not get anything back at all so it's the highest level of competition now importantly these courses only last as i mentioned earlier about two weeks about 10 hours of total course time if you will so uh we made this to be a another tool in the tool belt of students who want to learn more and pursue their curiosities and their passions as an addition to college or as an addition to high school as well as eventually hopefully our long-term goal is to be a supplement to those things now there are a number of ways that students can obtain funding for their participation on the platform they can of course purchase it directly via card or paypal they can share their sign up link with other students and friends to get five dollars of credit for each student that actually signs up and takes a course but importantly parents can also set up a learn allowance for their students what that means is uh it acts effectively like a gift card so what that means is you can put say a hundred dollars into your students or your child's account if you're i have a child who might be interested in this um and that hundred dollars has to be spent on courses only the winnings from the courses can actually be pulled off the platform which prevents them from say taking their learn allowance and spending it on something else they have to spend it on actually learning and importantly from a parent perspective unlike traditional universities for example you can see exactly where that money is going so we provide parents with a transparency portal where you can go check on your students class progress you can see what courses they're purchasing and participating in what courses they've already completed how they did in those courses what their current balance is and you can even get customizable notifications to your phone or email that will notify you when they move into a new course or finish a course so unlike college where you're you're just kind of relying on their word to to track how they're doing you can directly access yourself uh how they are progressing through their their learning journey now we have initially focused the platform on highly valuable kind of business applicable skills things like computer programming data science uh quantitative business skills and applied mathematics and engineering our initial uh course catalog will be things focused in these areas so that students who want to learn more and use that to actually increase their career potential to directly translate into marketable skills is why we're focusing on these initially so you can imagine for example if you have a child who is currently studying computer science and they just started as a freshman in school but maybe they're ahead of the learning curve and or maybe they just want to get ahead because they just are passionate about the subject area well they can come to learn arena and take these courses as a supplement to what they're doing in the traditional university and make money while they're doing it now a key difference we're doing with our uh course catalog that many other e-learning platforms are not doing is focusing heavily on what has been empirically proven to be the most effective pedagogical methodology for helping students actually learn and retain the things that they are learning and this is called the zone of proximal development what many other e-learning platforms do is effectively baby students through the courses you can um take a coding course on code academy for example which i have done and if you click the hint button enough it will effectively fill out the problems for you so you're not actually learning anything because it's too easy on the other hand some courses uh say in universities for example for a professor who already has tenure and just doesn't really care might be too hard they don't provide enough support they don't give you enough information and uh you the tests are just impossible it's far beyond your capabilities what the empirical research shows is that the zone of proximal development is where you want to be it is where the coursework is challenging and therefore is rewarding to master but is not so hard as to be impossible so we're not importantly and this is crucial we are not going to baby students this is going to be challenging but because it's challenging it will be more rewarding and they will actually learn things that they retain and they can deploy later on in life to their advantage now uh as phase two of our project beyond just the e-learning platform we want to use the um the learning that these students are doing to directly help them uh get a leg up in life so for students that opt into the career placement program which is completely voluntary and they have to click a toggle switch effectively to opt into it for these students we will track their performance along a number of analytic metrics from the time it takes to complete a course their average course completion uh skill challenge percentage rank how they do in the course quite literally how many courses they take simultaneously a number of things to help them then get placed with partner companies in internships co-ops entry level jobs or even mid-level jobs and that in turn those companies will give us feedback on the performance of the students that we place in their firms which will only help further refine our development algorithms which will help identify earlier on and more accurately the areas where students seem to excel and the areas and the career paths that might be available to them because this is something that universities in particular really don't do very well a lot of students will just major in something because it's what they've heard their friends are majoring in and they don't actually know what the career opportunities might be from that well we effectively will help solve that for them by algorithmically identifying the things that they would most be attracted to and be good at and help place them in companies to to pursue their dream career and their ideal uh career path as a result again the way we do this is through talent quantification so our eventual goal is to literally quantify human capital in as much as possible everything from the direct skills they're acquiring as a result of the courses they're taking to critical thinking the creativity ambition commitment conscientiousness work ethic we eventually want to develop uh metrics that will be able to perhaps coarsely but at least uh somewhat track these uh character traits and these abilities for the students so that over time we get better and better at identifying those truly talented gifted students and bringing opportunities to them that they might have never otherwise had as a result of that talent quantification when they opt into the career placement program now you may be wondering uh at this point uh this sounds cool and all if you're paying students back but how in the world do you guys make money uh well this is what the financial model for any given course looks like 45 percent of the money students spend on a course for that particular course cohort will be paid back to the students in the form of those payouts depending on the tier they're in as i mentioned earlier um how much those payouts will be and what they look like and then 55 percent uh goes to the platform um and we then reinvest that money into the development of the platform the development of more courses improve the the software uh behind it all so in a way um we are unlike most other e-learning platforms uh which effectively just take 100 of the students money there's never a chance for them to make money back directly from the course we enable them to profit from learning quite literally which is the fundamental paradigm shift behind learn arena so now i'd like to show you a few kind of screen grabs of the actual platform as we're building it right now this is the course exploration page you can see they will be able to at a glance on the course cards see the price of a course uh how long the course takes roughly what tier the course is in and the possible maximum earnings they could get from the course so they can select both based on what they're most interested in as well as the remuneration level that they desire this is what it looks like once they click on a course it'll give them a brief summary of what the course covers as well as the entire payout structure for the course so again students can pick courses not just based on what they're most curious about but perhaps what they might be most likely to to make a profit on and this is what it actually looks like within the course module itself for many of the courses the students will be able to actually run the code that they are uh learning directly in the platform itself which gives them a direct kind of feedback mechanism and they get to experience what it's like to do these things in real time once they complete a course this is what the screen they will see if any of you have played video games before i quite literally tried to model this as closely as possible after the screen you see when you finish a call of duty match or an apex legends match some of the most popular video games there's a huge dopamine hit at the end of those matches because you get to see directly how you're progressing come both compared to your peers and compared to your prior performance so it shows uh how many aptitude points they might gain in a particular field their overall score how that score translates to their placement percentage in the course and therefore how much money they earned back from participating in the course as well as their total skill mastery gains from the course and this will be quite dynamic and and um and visual uh to really help the students uh get that dopamine hit that they might get from a video game that they can instead get from doing something pro-social that's going to help them in life like learning this is their uh the an example of the stats page for any given student so they'll be able to see um how much they have earned over time um what their global rank is overall on the total skill mastery uh dimension what their top skill areas are and what their range score is the range score we're developing an algorithm for now which is kind of a metric of how broad the intellectual range of the student is and that's the score they're really going to want to get up as high as possible to eventually attain that poly math rank which will be incredibly hard to attain on purpose because it creates a much stronger incentive to try to get there if it is truly exclusive and to truly be a polymath without just faking it it is hard you have to learn a lot of things about a lot of different subject matters so that is uh kind of one of the impetuses behind the way that we are structuring the ranking system right to make it um very difficult and exclusive and therefore rewarding to move up the rankings in learn arena and finally this is what the profile page looks like so they'll be able to see what their skill mat overall skill mastery score is as well as their uh total uh skill mastery points earned in specific courses um you can think of this as kind of like a video game that has you know experience rankings for say specific guns or specific characters as well as your overall experience uh growth and your overall ranking and level growth again we modeled this directly after that to take all of the aspects of video games that make them so entertaining and so fun and bring that to learning so that is a brief overview of learn arena of exactly what we're building the problem that we are trying to solve and how we're going about solving it listen we are not in the business of giving your kids a piece of paper that is a permission slip for them to enter the workforce we want to enable them to indulge their curiosities connect with like minds and eventually change the world for the better so i invite you all to scan the qr code here and sign up today to both join the wait list and step into the arena and with that i will open it up for questions that is fantastic trey um i might steal the room actually so um but you know if you've if you've got questions please pop them into the chat and i see one already so lacey's asked how do i sign my kids up you just answered that yep did you just go to learn arena dot com and go ahead and uh and sign them up um and to answer your other question about what ages can participate uh the platform is not age exclusive uh they can start as early as they want or as late as they want um we intend this initially we think our target market is going to be those young uh very driven kind of personal development driven uh men and women um most likely ages of like 16 to 20 21 you know late high school early college age is what we're targeting the initial content for but if you have a 13 year old let's say who uh wants to get ahead as much as they can and start learning programming now um well then they're more than welcome to join the platform as well fantastic and she asks lacey also asks when does it go live excellent so we are building the alpha version of the platform right now um what you're signing up for when you sign up right now is access to the beta that will be probably toward the middle to the end of june uh if we stay on track with our current development goals when we will initially be done with the alpha version of the platform and then start letting students in uh in batches into the beta around july and i want to mention something really quickly chris that i didn't cover in the presentation but we really wanted to make it rewarding and to reward students as you mentioned earlier kind of my life philosophy in a win-win way for joining the beta which as if anyone who works in software knows uh the beta can be buggy sometimes right so we are also helping these students are helping us uh improve the platform so in return for them doing that uh what we have done is make it such that the first 100 students to achieve that polymath rank will not only uh receive a physical trophy as well as an nft of the physical trophy but they will also receive 100 shares in learn arena itself so you will become a true stakeholder in the platform for uh being an early power user for committing to to to progressing and for helping us uh fix improve the platform this is something i'm not aware of any other startup doing but i was like why would you not let your your most prolific beta users share in the upside of what they're helping create it sort of reminds me a bit of how like sort of the people that created bitcoin or like blockchain they were working on this the whole time they knew they were getting an incentive back they didn't know this was going to turn out to be but for those that did it and hung on phenomenal right so i said it first bitcoin learn arena i love it i love it what's funny is most of our executive team are like bitcoin maxies as well so they'll love that oh that's fantastic um please add some more questions if you if you're thinking of it i have a few and so you can kind of take them in in any way i can say them all once and then i can come back to them but one is how the courses were developed what other courses do you anticipate um you know you talked about how students um in phase two can sort of signal right truly signal and get part of internships can you catch somebody mid-stream in in terms of where they are and say this guy's off the charts already let me expose that to people who would want to hire someone before you know before someone else says like i want to get this person early um more for the phase two than the phase one because you know 100 bucks who cares right but how do you avoid sort of a fraud scenario that's probably a harder question and develop one where someone seems to indicate that they're really really sharp but someone else taking the test for them right like the old sat someone in in some country over here has actually taken it and these kids have a you know perfect score all of a sudden and then um if someone is is struggling can you do you level up and down or you send them off to a remedial platform and say hey look go do this and then come back here sure so which where which one do you want me to repeat because you're good i'm going to take them in reverse order until i forget the question and then you have to remind me that's great so i'll take that last question first which is about the kind of remediation if they're not doing too well what we do for students that might be consistently uh not placing very well in the skill challenges is they can retake the same courses okay so for students that place below a certain level and this will be dynamic depending on what tier it is uh they will have the option when they finish the course to sign up to take that exact course again for the next two week time period so that they already have a familiarity with the content and they they're like man i really could do better on this i just didn't have enough time or i was distracted whatever i'm gonna really refocus on it make sure i really get this content and i'm gonna crush the skill challenge next time uh in the skill mastery uh uh uh for the next course so we let those students retake courses basically um and and go back and take courses they've already taken to reinforce the things that they should be learning to then perform better on on the next go around um on your question about fraud our plan right now is to uh fairly intensively kyc our users so you'll have to not only prove that you're an individual and we're still working on exactly how to do this um but at least for college students for example we would have them we'll use a similar system uh chris that actually we built for eprosper over on my other uh my other company which has a financial grade kyc component um where i'm kind of um mirroring a little bit of it from that which is where you effectively though as you sign up the system will take a selfie of you and then match it to say a government issued id for that platform for us will be a little more lacks right if you have a student id or whatever the case may be you'll be able to use that to verify that you are in fact the person that you claim to be and then we also have structured the platform in a way to also reduce the financial incentive to do so so the courses will be hard enough that if you're a skilled programmer let's imagine for a second that you literally have a job at facebook programming doing javascript programming well it's not going to be worth your time literally to come take learn arena courses and come in first place over and over and over again because the payoff's not high enough like if you look at those guys hourly ways right they make hundreds of thousands of dollars a year it's never going to be worth their time to try to do that we'll also be implementing some anti-cheat software that uh there's a lot of this stuff chris that got robustly developed over the last couple of years as kovan led a lot of students to go to remote learning um so we'll we'll have fairly robust solutions for that they're already on the market that will integrate uh that help uh prevent cheating as well so we'll take we'll do everything we can to stop it and then of course a few will get through um and we'll hopefully catch those kind of on a manual review there will be some uh statistical anomalies of course that we'll be able to kind of pick those people out um similar to how anti-cheat works in video games right the way that works is if there's a player that's getting a thousand kills a game when the normal amount of kills a game is 100 they just kind of automatically get banned because it's like you can't physically do that like the pros don't do that um so it would be things like that um i have forgotten the earlier questions i got as far as i could yeah no that's uh that's actually pretty impressive i usually can't make it past the first one um how do you catch somebody that's sort of midstream taking off and you're like this this person already is signaling to the market that um that they should maybe begin to gain some um internship or working with some company already that like right this guy sort of like the theo fellowship a little bit yeah exactly so v1 of the career placement program is effectively just selling access to a database to employers where they will get access to a database that lets them see for example students that might be may say they're looking for a front-end developer which is going to be a lot of javascript html well they'll be able to go see a database of all students um who which will then uh let them see like who's the top performing student in javascript on the platform i'll go pick them out or who's the who what student is just really crushing it at html for example so we'll just give them access to the database and say look here's the top five people maybe but you can go look for yourself and the companies can then use that data to identify those kind of early performers over time what we hope to do chris is develop an internal team that will be tasked with identifying those people and phase three of the company which i didn't even talk about because it's a few years away is effectively a y combinator for these students right so eventually once we are big enough and have uh enough capital on our balance sheet to help them start companies what we'll do is pick those students out mid-stream pull them out into our y combinator like program and our founders will directly mentor them along with other relationships we're building to help them actually bring them together with another potential co-founder and help them start a company or pursue whatever the project might be that they that they're most passionate about because unlike any other venture capitalist in the world right we will have access to direct data of what this student has learned and a bunch of character traits and everything else so over time chris well actually once we do this enough over say 10 15 years and these companies get to grow and we see how they do we'll even be able to identify students early on that exhibit characteristics that the algorithm previously showed was a successful founder so we'll be able to pull them out very early that's absolutely outstanding i love to think about all the paradigms that are that are happening here right you've got the marriage of education you have the natural incentive which is the dopamine hits the competition uh the kind of response um measurable performance the affiliate programs um and then the way i like to to kind of say fantasize about what a real free market would look like is everybody levels up because it's a much better scenario right the average is pulled way up and there's there's still always going to be someone but they're not nearly as far down as everyone else but you have this potential tremendous opportunity to go parabolic for some students who are off the charts and those people will come back and contribute back into all the solutions that develop i think it's just just a beautiful model exactly that is that is exactly the goal we want we want to help even the the moderate student uh obtain higher say uh career earnings maybe they get a better job or they get a promotion as a result of what they learned on learn arena and then you have the outliers who we can help maybe create the next facebook or the next amazon or whatever the case may be i love that and then so the other question edward you know what are the courses do you expect on the platform these seem to me to be like the perfect ones that i'm spot on with you and then how are those how are the existing courses developed you know we have a lot of educational experts who tell you like this is what a real course looks like so those two questions yeah so i'll take that first question first um we have a harvard math and physics grad who's our head of content uh who is developing a lot of these courses for us um he uh he is proficient in a number of programming languages and importantly has intensively studied while he was at harvard actually like the the uh uh empirical literature on what works best for pedagogy like literally what is the best way to learn um so he is not only our uh creating a bunch of content right now but he will also be curating content so the way the model will work is we'll have third-party um educators uh who may have a course on something so for example we have someone developing a course right now who's a nuclear engineer he's a working nuclear engineer at a nuclear company developing some physics courses right because he uses it day to day in his job um and then he'll submit those courses connor who's the the gentleman who who does these things for us will then take that course and make sure it fits our pedagogical model it is up to standard it fits that zone of proximal development and then that is what the the course will eventually turn into so all of the content is highly curated um and edited and improved to fit this pedagogical methodology and for a preview of kind of coming attractions so right now we have some c programming courses our programming courses um uh some front end development courses uh that are being developed right now we also have again that nuclear engineer i mentioned and a number of other subjects kind of some basic to advanced math as well and just straightforward statistical analysis courses and then over time we'll expand that offering to a wide variety of subject areas we're just again focusing uh very narrowly early on on the things that would provide the biggest bang for the buck for those first students yeah yeah that's absolutely brilliant um spot on um well any other questions from from the folks in the room um [Music] the only other thing i wanted to add chris also is they have um any other kind of questions or want to get more involved my email address is t goff at learnarena.com so if any of you want to reach out to me you're interested in participating or supporting the project in any number of ways please reach out to me and i'll be happy to discuss how you might fit into the development of the project um i see one chat one question in the the q a as well uh someone said i love the western civilization imagery can you tell us about that so as you might have noticed we have a fairly unique aesthetic that was very intentional what we are trying to do is take uh the the aesthetic and the culture that developed through the pantheon of kind of classical western civilization that culture of intellectual rigor and curiosity and combine it with a focus on developing the talent and the skills for the 21st century which is very uh digital focused and technology focused and combine those two things into an aesthetic that speaks to both the the uh ideal of becoming a renaissance man of becoming perhaps the next aristotle with focusing on developing 21st century technologies that are maybe sci-fi now but will be reality in the near future so it's a combination of the classical and the ultra modern kind of technologically advanced and that's that's the inspiration behind the design aesthetic that's fantastic that is uh that's absolutely brilliant we actually had a speaker earlier this week who is the first virtual reality charter school and it's actually a classical education with the addition of what what is it like to be you know virtually standing next to elon musk's rocket for example oh that's amazing oh it's so cool and then he places you on the moon and you're walking around the moon oh that's so cool right just it's it's absolutely brilliant i i should connect you too actually yeah i love it absolutely um and and we're getting a couple of nice comments from a lady you might know miss regina thanks mom [Laughter] he crushed it mrs pruitt absolutely crushed it well in case unless there's any other questions here we have absolutely gone over time i think i have exhausted my list of questions i'll always have a million more i love the way this aligns so nicely trey and i just want to thank you for taking the time to present the future of online education for all the folks here and absolutely thank you chris and uh i'm just a huge fan of everything you do as you mentioned earlier you and i are very much kindred spirits i love the idea behind liberation of education um it's uh it's actually funny i i only realized when i was uh prepping for this earlier how involved michael strong is as well who i work with very closely at prospero it's kind of our same group of our cast of characters working toward the same goals i love it and i i had a very very short conversation with mikael thorpe yesterday as he was getting ready to come on so there's lots of different connections here i love it anyway again thank you so much and if folks if you wouldn't mind putting uh some going into the poll and telling us what you thought of this one and otherwise we will see you at the next uh conversation absolutely thank you chris take care trey thanks everyone | Liberation of Education | UC3N9EVn31Ybi3pDcf2_FaTg | 2023-02-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,316 | 39,830 |
UVhsmKflrQk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UVhsmKflrQk | Valley Gives Holidays Charity Event. Promenade Mall Temecula California. Dinner Date Night. | it's really good Tomita mm-hmm the pizza is extra good tell me all about your day that's enough it got dark we were in there so long it's like when you're a kid and you go the movies and you're in the movies all day that was the weirdest feeling as a kid huh yes all right we've made it to the promenade mall nothing hovers pretty good oh sorry [Applause] I bet you those ladies were coming in with those pit bulls to visit Santa [Applause] [Music] all right they're having an event here is why we're here tonight Temecula gives back I've got a cool Christmas tree [Applause] we didn't need to do tonight so I said job you guys so there's rows of booths all the way from here down to Red Robin on the other side so we'll come in and see what's going on tonight Valley gives twenty dollars and they sell it right there so if I want this for a party was it typically cost they do because it's a jinx duo they are about to entertain you so please give them your attention and also please remember that this is the family gifts first annual event we are raising money for each part of our 47 nonprofit organizations that you couldn't do ours cost but it's now dinner time so please check out there is a $5 free quote bouncer that you can choose a meal oh that $5 bouncer go into the food court and see what you want to eat it oughta be in it plus the raffle tickets please go check out the raffle tickets and then put your tickets in one of the books that help a bucket and the booth banana basket on their table so over to you Alan and over to shore hyejeong strode let's hear it and thank you [Music] [Applause] I saw her standing on the corner why is it it's like dog night it is [Applause] hey Santa's helper and give to Temecula charities I bring your dog to see Santa I did I brought my dog to see Santa nice apart [Applause] | billisa | UCXtwudC75ReD_gq3ZGqsj8A | 2017-11-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 361 | 1,827 |
8a8Uud9nOtM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8a8Uud9nOtM | For Honor Player vs AI Gameplay | start and record again let's see play you want to try uh Dominion 4v4 or you want to do the brawl again let's do dominion and see what's yeah see let's see uh players versus AI player versus player you want to do uh player versus player let's do AI first how we get all right how we do we are looking four players I got to start doing some combos now I know which player did you beef up the samurai yeah definitely I figured you would have chosen the samurai well I'm pretty good at counteracting that's what he does oh you can also change the graphic settings too I thought you couldn't do that did you notice that yeah mine's on Ma mine too well it's on Extreme whatever I gotta tell we got to tell Allan good oh we got two more people real hey you guys got mics can you hear me I can't hear you sweet we got a oh my lord it's a child a oh wait what are4 is child now I was joking what's going on okay sorry sorry I'm talking on this oh that's all [Music] right let's get this party started oh wow this look like a freaking story oh wow yeah let's get it oh we got to take over this the uh oh I'm ready oh took him out hey I hit me good we're good no don't run now y'all was all big and bad when y'all came over here I need to get more Health how do you you get health by standing in the place that you started or something I'm not trying oh yeah that makes sense oh no bro you get help by coming back to se you just come standing here and your your health regenerates by itself I'm I'm back at full health now oh let everybody get one you get hit oh Bots trying to take c yeah good stuff all right we got to go take a oh man I get my AO oh oh they took uh what's her name back oh says we lost 100 points yeah we got to get all our points thank you all right it's neutral now we can get it back oh we got it back we got it back between you guys we hit all right I'm going to go refill my health so we got A2 good good stuff good stuff good stuff we got all four on this oh they're coming back coming back the point thing so we hold down the conquest oh I put them in the pit oh they're taking a back no [ __ ] I'm down down on B yo did we just lose three strongholds that fast yeah we need to uh I'm refilling my health Let's go Team oh I'm fighting a samurai I'm going to a yeah [Music] hey oh thanks for the help all right now we just got to kill the heroes and that's it Dy we lost C kill their Heroes here a all right we're we're taking care of this guy at C right now oh my goodness got killed a block on right still hit me on right side all right C is we got we got C back I'm tired all right we're coming we're coming I'm almost there was getting run I'm going see we got a back there we go wooo bro I just leveled up three times bro we won hey bro this game is fun and I was still recording I can't believe it there we go I got a new tattoo | SloppierTech070 | UCjW-ioY_I_NHjgyAPPRNXnQ | 2016-09-16 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 610 | 2,860 |
Kq87zsUggeU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kq87zsUggeU | Apidays LIVE Paris 2020 - Drawing the right lines: DDD, APIs and Microservices By Ronnie Mitra | ronnie mitra joining us uh and again he's going to be talking uh so protik will be placed uh talking about that domain-driven design and uh and looking through domain-driven design apis micro services all the things we love to be talking about in our sessions on api architecture patterns ronnie's working with publicis sapient these days yes that's right am i coming through okay you're coming through okay so let's see your slide deck okay and how are you mark i'm very well thank you it's been crazy yeah doing well where are you based are you back in canada i'm in london yeah i've been in london for a long time okay so as you would expect i push share screen and it wants me to change system preferences so ronnie okay great you're all right yeah all right i'm gonna i'm gonna have to quit and log in again all right so yeah i'll um i'll introduce you and talk a bit about your um contributions to the api sector so ronnie's been involved with writing some of the uh key resources that we use in the api world the continuous api management he was a a key player in that work um he's worked over a number of years helping uh businesses and enterprise develop up their api strategies and their api best practices um through the api academy um and now he's with publicis uh which will be great to hear about as well as the director of technology the um and so part of what we've heard already is there's this trade-off i guess that a lot of you all have to work with which uh and i think uh pooja and archana really describe this well as far as um some of the creativity that you might want to take for uh for api architectures it's counter-intuitive or there are risks involved with that and it must be really hard to balance within your api architecture and developer teams this uh desire to use new concepts like service mesh use new technology tools um think about what services you're exposing so that you're able to share value immediately but um i loved with the part where archanael was describing that when you do that then there's some risks in um if you expose your data models then instantly that's sort of exposing risk and exposing some of the commercial and confidence areas that perhaps you should keep closer so there's this balance in trying to create open ecosystems while also ensuring security um business um commercial and confidence um the opportunities to be able to um uh to be able to sort of lead from a competitive advantage um so yeah so there's all of these sorts of issues and it's really great that we've been hearing some amazing talks in this session already that have really um they've really gotten to that issue of like where how do you and then and i guess this also comes back to some of the things we heard about earlier today in the api and data um talks where it's really about how do you encourage in your teams this level of creativity and outside the box thinking while also having some sort of risk and impact assessment type approaches that maybe make sure that you're also able to um take a step back and not just go all in on creativity and look at it from a business dynamic as well um i'm excited to hear what ronnie's going to talk about with all of this as well uh because it always because one of ronnie one of your strengths is always bringing that creativity in bringing that best practices uh learnings in and then being able to apply that while also understanding you know business has their own uh has their own priorities as well right and i think one of your strengths is uh spinning when you're forced to which i i thank you for so let me dive in and i'll do it i'll do a short version of this i apologize for the uh you're right can you quickly just change it to presentation mode and then i'll jump off am i not in that okay all right hold on people on laptops i can't see it's too small okay let's try this sharing the whole screen is that working that's now working okay great i'm going to jump off thanks a lot all right okay accelerated version of the bio now because i wasted that time i'm randy mitra you heard all about me from mark one of the things that i've done recently is co-authored this book i've co-authored a few before this is microservices up and running across with with o'rockley who's also presenting at the conference uh this is a step-by-step guide to building a microservices system so really starting from nothing and you end up with this kubernetes based aws hosted microservices system very opinionated very prescriptive so that the next ones you build you've already done it before uh you heard i'm i'm an employee of publicist sapient sapien is a digital transformation company so we we help companies and banks transform their businesses through technology and of course one of the big parts of that is apis micro services and you heard a lot about domain-driven design in this channel already you hear about it all the time and that's what i want to dive into a little bit in this session uh particularly from the perspective of what i've been seeing on the ground over the last two years especially in some of these big enterprise organizations just you know at the high level this stuff matters because the microservices world is really the world of building a complex system right like this is a image of a plant leaf and you can see there's structure to it there's boundaries there's cells and inside the cells are smaller pieces what makes all this work the behavior what we perceive the bigger hole it's really based on these things that the boundaries the structure of those parts and the way those parts communicate with each other uh and if you think of this as like an api person that should sound very familiar right because that's really what we're always talking about if we build these parts what size should the parts be how do they communicate together and what should the structure and hierarchies be whether you call them apis or microservices or use them interchangeably i'm not too worried about that but the key thing is that we start to look at the world as a set of modules and these modules have have an inside they have an internal part right so the implementation that we kind of keep inside and there's an outside part and the api lives at the boundary right whether that's an api for a microservice or an api for a domain or an api for an organization because you're offering a product it turns out that figuring out what goes inside and what stays outside is difficult can be a challenge right and that's really where we start getting into this idea of maybe we need domain-driven design maybe we need some better boundary finding abilities what's been interesting too for me is over the last few years as the microservices stuff has taken off when i talk to people who implement this stuff they'll show me a design and i'll say well why why is uh you know fulfillment in that box how did you decide on that and i think like 75 80 of the time i don't get a great answer i don't get this you know very thoughtful well we looked at it and we did this and we applied this methodology and we figured it out that way sometimes i'll get a flippant you know single responsibility principle right or well it matched just what we thought made sense so there's one of two conclusions i can draw from that the first is maybe the boundaries don't matter that much just segmenting anything in any way is good enough and there's probably some truth to that but my experience shows there's probably a second thing that's more true that if we just build the thing without thinking about how it should be structured we miss an opportunity for optimization right it's still going to work but maybe it won't work as well and if i think about microservices to me it's always been about optimization right it's not about anything except how we structure things and how we put things into pieces so it means this stuff matters it's worth putting a bit of work into uh usually people talk about domain driven design if they start talking about boundaries right that's inevitable and for good reason because what what eric evans has done with domain driven design i think is beautiful right it's a it's a simple and elegant way of thinking about complex software and systems so he gives us this idea of a single language we can use to talk about change within some boundary so when my business person talks about changing something that's the way we talk about it in the code and in the architecture and in the testing and even in the field he gives us this idea of model driven development so that there's a model we can change and when we change the model the system can change too and he gives us this whole language and lexicon uh anti-corruption layer bounded context context maps you know all this stuff that makes it easier for us to communicate about this very complex and difficult discipline but it's also really hard to do right and and there's kind of the challenge so conceptually in a powerpoint at a conference i can tell you go do domain driven design but in reality it's not so easy and it turns out to be really really hard and i know some people have had the experience of you know pulling on this threat because what they really want to know is how big the micro services should be and they end up with this enormous thing that starts to feel like you're transforming your entire organization and all you really want to know is what size the microservices should be so i wanted to pass on a few tips from my own experiences the areas i think you really need to focus on to to pull this off in a practical way in a sensible way and in a way that will actually get you some results the first thing is you need to really assess where you are as an organization in terms of design so you know what your limits are and what you can do the second thing is you need to be able to really rapidly create a design a model and then lastly probably most importantly you need to be able to breathe life into the model we'll walk through these three things from a from a situational assessment perspective you really need to be able to gauge the culture of where you are if you already work in the company or in the organization that you're doing this design for you probably have an implicit sense of this already but if you're not you need to establish this really quickly and this probably matters the most of all it's gonna shape your decision making so much for example a a small startup company with 10 people who have a shared goal where engineers come in every day to find out what they might be working on and they're ready to change from team to team to work on different things they understand the system as a whole fundamentally can have looser more flexible boundaries right we know we can make changes in the cost of getting the boundary wrong today or creating a microservice that we need to get rid of later is pretty cheap as you start to get into enterprise size organizations the reversibility of those decisions become harder and harder the other thing you also need to realize is that domain design is about people and that's been one of the things that has been a real a real interesting thing to see over the last two years that you know we've been doing this in practice uh in his parents form if i draw the boxes it can make sense from a tech perspective but those boxes relate to people's work and their lives and you really need to understand the power structures the politics what's driving behavior to know what you can get away with in terms of what you're changing okay the second thing is you need to get a really good idea of the focus of the work so what are the primary optimization goals and i always ask this what is just microservices or domain driven design try and get past the bumper sticker answers you know we know you want to go faster and move at scale but what are you really trying to reduce your head count is this about putting changes out faster because the business doesn't feel like the technology team is able to keep up with the pace of product change that they want right and also you need to figure out what the core business is when eric evans writes ddd he calls out the fact that this is hard work and he even tells us you know find out which part of the business is worth investing in because that's where you'll actually get return and revenue so that means figuring out which parts are core which parts are supporting which parts are generic and which parts can be outsourced and then you can focus on those core parts and drill into them if you're doing a microservice project for something very small that's bounded already you can probably do less of this but it's still good to know what the goal is the overall optimization goal and finally you really need to find out what's already there ddd is pretty old there's a lot of people who've already done this kind of work there's a good chance that a domain model already exists in the organization you're working in look at it right see what the thought process was go to the industry models learn from those i'm not saying your model has to fit in or look like that but it gives you incredible insight into the mental model and it might even start raising the right questions as you develop the boundaries for your own micro services okay then we get into design and the key thing with the design piece is you need to get something out really quickly classic thing with this domain driven design stuff is you start looking at it and it suddenly turns into a six month to 12 month kind of architectural exercise and you want to avoid that right we want our domain model to be alive to breathe and to be relevant so to do that you might need to constrain the scope a little bit maybe keep the focus on the software part even though it's connected to the business even though it's connected to profit and loss and the business structure what can you do from a software perspective maybe focus on one of those core domain pieces if you if you've been given the task of doing the design for the entire organization and you want to get into a test and validate cycle as quickly as possible if you're the type of organization that can spin up an engineering team really quickly then use code and implementation to test if that's harder for you you can still test with paper you can you can compare the model to work packages you can look at what it would take to actually implement this right somehow you need to be reviewing this thing and feeding it with data with input and with testing the second thing is there's a ton of tools and processes out there for this kind of work we're at the point now where if you talk about ddd and someone says how inevitably you're going to hear about event storming right alberto brandolini's method and we talk about it in the microsoft's up and running book as well because it's a good method it works but there's others you can do something like event modeling matt mclarty's microservice canvas is great i'm a fan of that eric evans context mapping is a key tool to use and also some of the just bread and butter things interview and analysis and things from outside of the ddd world like if you've got service design expertise people who know how to look at the world from a front stage and backstage and what's happening perspective all of that is useful but the number one thing is the tools won't design it for you uh and i think that's been a learning for a lot of people that look just because i use event storming it doesn't mean i get good boundaries in fact if you actually look at event storming you could probably describe it in three paragraphs right it's some stickies get people together plan out the system but the magic really is in how alberto brendolini runs a workshop and if you look at the materials he provides on event storming a lot of it is how do you take a group of people and get the best out of them and pull the design out and find out where to draw the lines and that's actually the magic so getting the right people involved who can push this forward turns out to be key and that means more than a workshop post we're not just talking about someone who can keep time and get people on an agenda right you need strong design leaders who can pull out the right information uh get people talking gain consensus and continue to design iteratively and rapidly and a lot of those people out there you just need to find them and pull them in now the theme of the happy days this year was i think about covid right so i just wanted to touch on what does this look like in a coveted world because if you think about event storming it's always yeah let's all get in a big room and an endless sheet of paper we're going to put stickies up so having gone through this now a little bit i just want to share it's a lot harder a lot harder you should use collaboration tools you can use mural and mirror and all that but the truth is those have limits in terms of scale of people once you get too many people on you're going to lose 50 of your your group they're going to be off looking at email or you end up with them working off on some other corner of the page and they're not looking at what's happening here which is a lot harder to corral virtually than it is physically what i've learned kind of the hard way is you need to supplement those collaborative sessions with individual kind of pre-work so do individual interviews find ways to augment big collaborative work with small dedicated sessions you can even give people homework and then you bring it back in because people get fatigued by the virtual sessions and those have to be smaller and no matter what you do just realize it's going to take longer right it's harder to work like this so we have to accommodate that one of the biggest anti-patterns with the domain-driven design i think is when the design becomes its own objectives and i've seen this in a few places where a team creates a domain model through a rigorous analysis right and what they produce is is a domain model on paper that ultimately exists just for itself and this happens again and again and that can be useful in a way right a domain model can give me a map of my organization so maybe as an architecture team that's useful because i know kind of roughly what the pieces of the organization are but it's not useful in the way that we want it to be for example finding the right boundaries for a microservice and that's because that kind of domain model is dead it's not a living thing it's not tied to any of the other parts that we work on so it's really key that as you start to do a domain design exercise that you're able to express the model in the architecture in the software in the code and also adhering to you know mr conway's law you're able to express it in the delivery model and in the organizational structure that means that if you start pulling on this thread of the domain model you're going to end up in the world of architecture and organization and this is where things get maybe a bit challenging because suddenly you're at risk of doing big design up front so what have i i found is a good way to approach this is to really focus on principles and identify and plan how the models that you create translate into architecture and organization establish those important rules so for example i might say that if we create something called a domain like customer that's going to translate to a set of apis and here's what you're allowed to do from a architectural perspective with that and from an organizational perspective we expect to have a team dedicated to domains or maybe more than one team and they have this kind of autonomy within there it's also really helpful to start identifying the relationships architecturally with things like context mapping but also organizationally with things like team topologies or whatever you tool you want to use to see how coordination works both from a system and a human perspective and then probably lastly the the most important thing is the model has to be designed for change right if you want the thing to be living you've got to build that in from the beginning right uh we have a tendency with the domain driven design stuff to write it in almost like documents that we can publish uh and i wish we had more ability to just do it in code because i think in large organizations code is the one place where things are still alive where you expect it to change and you know you can do commits and merges and right often what happens is we create a domain model and it's either in powerpoint or word doc or some vizio diagram and that's where it kind of dives so you need to actively from the very beginning put those change elements in so that it feels more alive not just expressed but designed for change so for example what are the kpis and measures you're going to use to decide when a domain should be split up or merged and that should be tied to the optimization goals right what is the the facility from an architecture and organization perspective for splitting or merging the domain what does that look like and what kind of standards you have to put in place to facilitate that kind of change so do i have to tell my teams when you build microservices i want you to conform to these boundaries i'm defining and i want you to build your code in a way that it fits into this boundary so i can lift and shift a boundary as needed and i want you to use this kind of a specification and i want you to bound your team to that microservice so i can even move the team if i need it you need to kind of figure that out at least initially and then finally figure out what belongs inside what belongs outside right because that will help you as more work comes in does it go in this domain or does it go in that other domain ronnie i know we've got um some i know we started late and well it's a shame to sort of have to ask you to wind up early i see you've got your speaker deck here where people can get the full access to the to the talk that's right i'll put i'll put the top link into the chat i think we just about hit the end it was going to be a wrap-up slide so you got the whole story definitely yeah no we definitely did i love how i love you how you were also talking i mean that last slide the last um component was really also about future proofing you know and like this so the that and you and you touched on that throughout where you talked about the um you know wreath rethinking things in the covert era and how it does take more time and that sort of stuff but there's also that um uh that work around um making sure that what we're introducing we're not setting it in stone so it's just another new um unmovable uh way of viewing the world you know and i think you know i think you talk the principles and the approaches you talked about help build that sort of future-proofing flexibility while also giving certainty it's a tricky balance i think that's the real challenge for people everyone is kind of sold on the idea of ddd no one's going to throw you out of the room for saying we want to do ddd but actually making it happen in reality means you need to figure those parts out or it's going to be a wasted you know three months or six months you produced a nice document and everyone moved on and did something else that's the hard part yeah okay fantastic thanks and some really practical um tips there thanks ronnie i'll invite you to leave the stage | apidays | UCYWOO5aXLBMjCjR_UR4tPWg | 2021-02-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,434 | 23,573 |
lEr8kcfuzag | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEr8kcfuzag | Michaela Boehm - Being A Compelling Man Is About Being Free | what do you say to the to the man who is just kind of confused on like like what does it mean to be a man today and you know there's it's like I don't want to I don't want to be you know like just gender roles and a woman don't want me to be too strong and you know there's a lot of like talking and a lot of like battle of the sexes stuff what what would you say to that guy who's like like like I don't I don't know how to show up cuz like I feel like anything I do is just gonna like piss women off and so there's well you said something very good there that that's important to say the battle of the sexes is really the the root of all evil right I mean the men do this women do this them you're not masculine enough you know feminine enough it's a whole other level of suppression that's happening now where you know Dogma once again it's just different Dogma has taken off basically you're taking away the basic humanity of people cooperating and loving each other and being with each other in ways that's good for all humans so to speak and so when a man is confused about his role as a man the more the most important thing is to consider that anything he does he does for a woman or in order to be loved or in order to be approved off he is holding him hostage it's slavery and so anything he does so that she's off his back or she loves him where he gets some or whatever is enslaving him and hence he's not free and when he's not free he's never going to be the man he wants to be so what I would say to any man who comes to me and the man you know I teach men's groups not how to become a better man but how to be a man with a woman right because I'm not a man so I can talk about how to become a better man but I can talk a lot about how do you become the man that's compelling to a woman and the first and foremost thing is become free right you have to get to a point where you no longer give a [ __ ] if your actions are going to bring you the love and the fame and the fortune and the desired outcome that you desire because as long as your desire driven or outcome driven you are a [ __ ] to somebody your boss the world money your woman as long as you somebody's [ __ ] you're never going to be free and so freedom that kind of freedom of no longer needing to be pleasing mommy which is what it comes down to we can talk about that a little bit more later not wanting to not having to please mommy is the thing that makes you able to do anything you want to do with great clarity because you don't have to do it you might as well you might still do amazing things for your woman but you do them because they're a right thing to do in that particular moment for that particular occasion not because if you don't there's hell to pay | Individuation Portal | UCNLz5Hn-vl22JkDdHL00UfQ | 2018-07-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 567 | 2,779 |
DLZM_Uk8qlE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLZM_Uk8qlE | eBay Item Demo - Leapster | and this is a demonstration video for a leapfrog Leapster that is going up for sale on eBay the cartridge being demonstrated is not going to be a part of the listing that's my testing cartridge so it's not for sale if you see your name touch it with the pan to get started touch one of the pictures on the screen I love exploring sing along with the song would you like to sing along with me would you like to sing along with it follow along with the words and touch around with your pen to see what happens I don't see how a world that makes such a wonderful thing my collection complete everything treasures untold how many wonders can one cavern hold gadgets and gizmos aplenty I got who you want thingamabob I got twenty no big Oh | Star Watcher, the Little Pony | UC6Hw9eh6Z4Cee2y2yBn16Cg | 2012-03-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 142 | 734 |
3t_SY86ja7I | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3t_SY86ja7I | EAST COAST RUN | My Trucking Life | Vlog #2883 | morning everybody especially you right there we're in Vinton Virginia just delivered my first of four drops my last drop is going to be all the way up in Maine so we're going right up the East Eastern Seaboard here in the U.S there's only two skids two skids coming this all the way to Virginia for two skits now I've got another how many is going on this next one one skid I got one skit that's going to Woburn Massachusetts I gotta go there today deliver tomorrow it's gonna be a full day drive getting there it's uh about 1100 kilometers 620 650 miles something like that it'll be a full day uh deliver that and then after that I've got another two or three skids that are going to they're big skits they're big they're not just like right these next ones are big uh or pardon me no no sorry I got four big skits that are gonna be ending off in Biddeford Maine the next day but first we have to go to Beverly so it's a little confusing okay so let's just do one at a time we got Vinton Virginia done now we're going to Woburn Massachusetts it's just worry about one thing at a time let's worry about today tomorrow can worry about itself let's get out there [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] get a truck wash there's a Petra up ahead there's a petrol Stopping Center up ahead about an hour down the road it's got a streaking Beacon I think that's where I'm gonna stop I'm Gonna Roll through the Eastern Seaboard here or up the East Coast I want to do it I want to do it in a clean truck foreign so I went through the the corner of West Virginia yesterday and it was at night it's kind of disappointed but I could just imagine the scenery must have been beautiful I always loved driving through West Virginia it's amazing how they build these cities they're right on like right into the Hills makes me nervous in these older towns sort of like our house they have the electric wires above ground new developments they have all the electrical wires underground right at least that's how they do it around where we live but but these older developments they have wires hanging over it always makes you nervous when they make a hang over the road like this and sometimes it looks like they're a little bit too low by law they have to be above 13 foot six trucks can get underneath them look so low I know I'm on a truck route right and I'm not hitting any of them trees look low Linton Roofing looks like their neighbor here could use their services wonder if they get a discount because they're right next door probably not [Music] belong [Music] our records are saying this is a pilot but saying it's a one nine a one nine truck stop [Music] this is very tight in here [Music] I saw online someone was talking about these one nine truck stops being part of the Pilot Flying J network and again my GPS here it says that this is a pilot that's why I pulled in here I wanted to get a coffee I saw this on the map and I thought of maybe parking here last night because it's right close by where I delivered but as you can see in front of me here you don't want to park here that's the whole lot I mean I guess if you don't mind you could either come in the exit and risk blocking everybody in if someone's trying to get out uh and then back in like this guy did that's probably what I would want to do or you can come in the entrance come around the back where I came in and then nose into a spot and then have to back out I mean that might that might work too I mean obviously it's working for all these guys we're on the East Coast that means parking is limited and the truck stops that are available are usually very small in my opinion but yeah one nine like oh any like the the letters felt out one and then the number nine is that Flying J now did they buy it out or what happened so yeah this is my pilot card worked here for the coffee uh it says one nine on it but everything in there is still pilot look at the coffee even says pilot on it so what happened people somebody learned me what happened did Pilot Flying J buy one nine or did one nine five five pile bind J who bought who what happened what's going on here if they're changing from Pilot to one nine you'd think that they bought pilot the Pilot Flying J is huge that would be a massive purchase I thought I would have heard about that in the news or something that's huge [Music] and no extra space in here Interstate 81 is just right over there in front of us just gotta get over there a lot of people a lot of people everywhere [Music] that's where I go White's Travel Center it's a petrol Stopping Center there's a Blue Beacon here and I want a truck wash turn right and then approaching destination on the left side and 60 meters oh I see it I see it how do I get over the Blue Beacon oh I see it's over there okay so I want to go this way this is a huge truck stop but wait till we see the other side the arrows point I can't go that way I'm gonna go through the pumps I think I should go around I don't need fuel from here the truck wash where how do I get to the Bridge but both ways for NASCAR drivers see the sign over there says how do I get there this whole truck wash this place is huge nice this is like a little mini Iowa 80. this is exit 205 on interstate 81. Virginia all this parking back here oh this is the entrance I think this is the entrance this is a little bit confusing the way they set this all up yeah this is the entrance okay Truck Wash enter here thank you no sign you up a little old blue gonna be a good day today I want to look good rolling up the East Coast there'll be a lot of people looking at you tons of people out here you don't want to be that dirty truck on the road oh I guess we could come in entrance but but maybe this is a way to get out if the lineup's too long and you sort of want to give up you can go tight Corner oh my God okay so we got a wide oh lots of lots of room beautiful until someone comes up behind me I'm gonna wait back here to see which one goes in first and I'll get behind that one unless if somebody comes up behind me then I'll just move forward and pick one the town name here is rafting Virginia all right r-a-p-h-i-n-e [Music] rafin or a theme or theme 2440 rafine Road the big place big place lots of parking I bet you it fills right up when I pass by the highways right up here beside me and I pass by here there was no one in line by the time I figured out how to get in here there's two people in line in front of me well there's just one on each side I don't know which one's gonna be faster yet now we got ourselves all cleaned up looking good smelling good I'm good then we're gonna hammer down the rest of the day okay we're out to check their work I washed the trailer too it's not my trailer but I paid to wash it because I want to drive to drive the rest of this week with a clean one behind me so we'll see how well they've done always wash their equipment but sometimes sometimes when I'm feeling generous why not okay here we go you guys ready not bad not bad it looks a lot better the wheels and tanks and steps definitely needs to still be repolished right now that's on the agenda for next spring but maybe throughout the winter I might try my hand on it if I can get the right tools I need to get a power buffer see if I can figure out how to do it myself but that's only if I have the time and when I'm at home be honest with you I don't really want to spend the time polishing my truck though I do want it to be polished I want to be at home more than I want my truck polished so the truck can be polished later the moments at home once they're they're gone you can't have them again it's looking nice looking nice box underneath here is nice and shiny now that's good it's good feel a lot better rolling down the road in a clean rig I just I'm not happy and I don't feel comfortable when the truck's not clean I mean I didn't go all out on the trailer since it's not mine I'm just wanted it washed off because nobody ever washes our trailers nobody ever takes the initiative going to watch the trailer so we'll end up looking like these could be polished Wheels that'd be great right but then someone's got to polish them but you know if we pay to polish the wheels these trailers change hands so often that uh they would just look like this right away again oh and they blew off one of my like Basils here oh I'm gonna have to go back there and ask them oh boy this is still dirty let's be wiped down okay well it's better than it was but I'm gonna have to go ask him where this went because these just come off right I think I have some spares with me but kind of defeats the purpose of having a nice clean rig if you're missing one of these Basils all the Rings and look at this it still needs to be wiped down crying out loud never get it all okay well I've gotta walk back over there and uh see if I can find that ring look at this oh it's all Stained on me and this here that's not stained on oh come on Blue Beacon look at this God if you want something done right you gotta do it yourself found it it's a little beat up already you need to replace them not too expensive but see this it just hooks in there right fixing around that rubber place there Center it and there you go yeah they definitely need to be replaced already it's not real Chrome right not real aluminum it's just it's plastic it's like a a fake Chrome layer over it so it needs to be I used to have a close look at all this stuff here yet man ish I'm gonna get some bull snot out right now and work on that that can't that can't leave it like that I can't leave it like that don't worry old blue we'll uh shine up your rear end there again gotta have a nice looking rear end going down the highway everyone's looking at it right [Music] I don't know about you guys but when the truck is dirty I just I don't enjoy the day as much it almost gets my anxiety up just having the dirt washed off makes me feel so much better turn left in 30 meters I'm in a parking lot Karen calm down trying to follow the arrows to the exit both arrows point this way those arrows point that way I think it's this way and 200 meters [Music] look at this can't work here turn left on Commerce Park Drive and then turn right into 110 meters look at that nice oh it's for sale there's a for sale sign in the window can I buy it okay be down towards the exit this is not the exit why are the arrows pointing me this way all right okay we're gonna turn around we had it right the first time apparently we can take a second look at this truck 100 meters turn right on Commerce Park Drive and then turn left in 216 meters quiet Karen I'm dreaming interrupting my dreams yeah yeah I know I know I took a wrong turn you told me to go that way 200 meters right in 100 meters says no truck exit here how do we get out of here no truck exit that way okay I don't think I've ever been to this truck stop before so you can tell turn right I know I know yes this way okay for first timers this is a very confusing truck stop I'm just gonna let you know very confusing like they could have made it straightforward like here here's how you get in straight shot into the parking lot there's how you get out straight shot out but oh it's like weaseling in and out of here go around here turn left here turn right there you get lost well good luck check Google Maps I bet it's real nice inside I just don't have time to go in there right now I got to get moving this was my break for the day I'll still have to stop for my half hour sometime probably have a shower then if I can find a good shower along the way oh one more break there's turn left on right behind Road and then take the end drugs to the right at 120 meters okay there's a bus going out of 200 meters turn left on radheim road and then take the entrance to the riding 130 meters and one way you can tell the truck is from the U.S when you're in Canada is that they have a nice clean painted frame believe me you drive in Canadian winter and Canadian weather conditions your frame isn't going to look that good for that long I need to redo mine but it's like these old trucks here everybody's got like a perfectly clean frame because they they never leave the pavement right none of these trucks leave the pavement ever come deliver a load up in Manitoba once I'll show you some real Backwoods Trucking it's hard to keep a truck looking nice we're gonna turn left here nobody is using their signals around here I have two more vehicles coming from our right all right three more four more I'm going for it I'm going for it coming on in Halo I thought this road for 238 kilometers we're in Pennsylvania Dutch Country I think or is all of Pennsylvania Dutch Country I think there's a vehicle parked on the shoulder up here there's been a lot of trucks parked on the shoulder yeah there he is I knew it I saw you a lot of trucks just parked on the shoulder I don't know what the laws are exactly but I think it's illegal illegal unless it's an emergency right auto correct me if I'm wrong in my comment section there I'm okay with that but even if it was legal highly recommend everybody watching this video if you need to stop for a quick bathroom break find an off-ramp and park on the shoulder on the off ramp or the on-ramp coming back onto the freeway parking on the shoulders just ask whacked oh here's another car another one it's like every couple of Miles all the way since like Virginia already it's been a weird day weird day lots of cars on the shoulder lots of trucks too I never feel safe parking on the shoulder I would never do that myself you see there's an exit coming up here exit 57 still on I-81 here so here I would go into the exit cross the road and onto the on-ramp on the other side because I've gone back on I-81 right and park on the shoulder other side of the crossroad right of the interchange that's where I park if I have to make it making him stop because my bladder is about to explore I feel safer there because traffic is moving slower and I'm off of the freeway you never know if someone blows a steer or isn't paying attention half the people out here are on their phones you know they'll wander onto the shoulder just bitten Wham and someone's gotta do up your obituary and everything and that's no fun you'll see right after this bridge see I would have gone up there on the right Through The Interchange there and parked on the shoulder of the on-ramp to our right over here off the highway then I have this whole on-ramp to gain speed so that by the time I hit the highway I'm doing as close to highway speed as possible that's the way I do it parking on the shoulder just to hang out and nice cruising through here though I haven't been here in a while we're gonna take the I-84 like I said I want to avoid the big cities as much as possible foreign [Music] foreign [Music] you can't see much I'm going to try pulling into a rest area now and see that the parking situation hours away from my destination without a parking spot tonight might have to park on uh ramp here with all these guys okay it looks like we can park here it's pretty good if this is if this is going to work then uh it's good I'm getting a little nervous riding late into the night in this region because everything fills up really quickly all right I'd like to get closer tonight but if I can find parking here I'm just gonna stay here do my 10 hours and we'll be on the road tomorrow I should still be about an hour early so I have about an hour to play with we have four hours of driving there's no big traffic jams we're here in uh New York State I believe trying to see where we're at here nope not quite we're in Pennsylvania still I think this is where I might lay down my head tonight we'll see so I'll take a look up ahead on my trucker path app see what parking is like I'd like to go further but I don't want to be left without a parking spot I know my GoPro doesn't have nearly as good low light capabilities I know it's gonna quickly walk up here to see if there's any better spots I don't want to come all the way up here with the truck we're not going to have any parking up here we'll walk up here give it a look printed a bunch of spots open but once you're up here if there's no parking up here and you just have to keep on going so right now at least we have a parking spot right all these lights here are blue doesn't that mean they're defective I'm pretty sure looking pretty full pretty full or is that an open spot right there that might be a handicap spot open okay well if no one else comes in by the time I get down to my truck pull up here just gonna go make sure it's not a handicapped spot it's really humid out really hot and humid so I was able to roll up and Park in the parking lot up here actually so I think we'll be okay here I wouldn't mind parking on the ramp on the way up there too it's a nice big wide shoulder guaranteed no neighbors but you do have trucks passing you all the time and I was just thinking like where would I feel safest well if anything happened on the highway say someone fell asleep lost control I was driving drunk or whatever veered off the highway fell asleep I'm right there right up the ramp I could slam right into the back of me and while I'm sleeping and I'm off to meet Jesus not ready to go there today yet so I figure the best safe safest place for me would be to park up here in the parking lot if there's space there was that one space available parked up here now I just have to worry about my neighbor dragging his trailer into me in the morning but I think we'll be okay here let me show you I'll grab my other camera so we can see the low light a little better all right Sony work your magic okay see all these lights are blue here where is it way better low light right way better so this is my neighbor right there [Music] he needs to be able to get out this way in the morning I think I left them plenty of space I left my nose a little bit further back the curve is right here right how much space the same things that the guy beside him could easily get out we go around to the back here there's still plenty of space around the back for people to get by and get around me if they need to plenty of space so that's that decision's been made we're parking right here we're joining to hang out with me today I really do appreciate you if you don't mind go down below the video make sure you're subscribed and make sure you're still subscribed leave me a comment down below let me know what you're thinking tomorrow we head through New York State into Connecticut and then into Massachusetts we're gonna get to Woburn afternoon sometime the appointments for 2 P.M I'm planning to be there for 1pm it's one of those places that if I'm early it's good it's not bad I'm gonna be careful some places up there you show up early they get mad at you show up late they get mad show up early they get mad sometimes you show up on time they get mad they want you in that five minute window before your appointment five ten minutes before so that they can start unloading at your appointment time so if your appointment time's at three o'clock they want the forks under the first pallet at 3 P.M did I say three right at your appointment time oh it'll be it'll be pretty straightforward we'll go deliver that it's just one skit all the way to Massachusetts here for one skin and then I got another four skids I believe that are going to Beverly or is it well it's a whole front piece Contraption in front of my trailer going to Beverly that's at 8am the following morning so I'm gonna have a little bit of time tomorrow and just uh go find a good place to park go have a shower and probably work on some videos and then after we deliver that 8 A.M then we'll Rush up to Biddeford in Maine get that unloaded Thursday afternoon and then we'll be emptying see what life has in store for us after that to call him to load gods and tell them start working I'm gonna need a load remember everybody to be safe out there stay safe drive safe see you tomorrow [Music] oh [Music] | Trucker Josh VLOGS | UCrkahiSmFd6w0fmdZ95K_wA | 2023-09-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,026 | 20,121 |
Ek-fh65sP5E | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ek-fh65sP5E | WILL NU PROJECTS SPONSOR A FOOTBALL CLUB? - Nu projects 20 | hi my name is nick jeffries and you're watching new weekly episode 20. callum best has asked me if i would be interested in sponsoring the ladies team i'm back around chesnan road in kensington we're meeting the architect stroke interior design around here 1 000 square feet and it is in fulham and the resale value is 1 000 pounds a square foot that's gonna add one million pounds to the resale value they have got to be taken out very carefully along with the shutters they need to be sent off to a specialist to get restored and refurbished that takes time and a lot of money so i'm in montpelier street this morning visiting the new project which should be coming newswire next week [Music] so this afternoon i am at dorking wanderers with my mate callum best who's the chairman of the ladies team and they are going to be playing uh at home today i think brentwood possibly uh he's currently over there pre-warm-up with the team and uh oh here he is he's coming over here now there he is the gang just been over it uh let's have a chat [Music] ah so it's tuesday morning and i'm just on the way to pick up bradley to head over to garrett lane which is the joint venture opportunity we're working on and um it should take me about five minutes to get there but i didn't post anything yesterday on monday because i worked from home and i had probably 300 emails to get through so i apologize for that zoltan was in the office but he was just going over some social media posts and uh you know working with claudia on sort of 15 second 30 second and one minute videos for uh instagram facebook and linkedin but um at the weekend sunday i went over to dorking to watch dorking wanderers ladies football team play because callum best has asked me if i would be interested in sponsoring the ladies team well i've never watched ladies football and i've never been to dorking wanderers football club so i headed over there and it was a pretty cold and windy afternoon but the grounds were amazing astroturf you've got two stadiums you've got the clubhouse where you can sit down and have glasses of wine beer keys coffee snacks so the whole afternoon was really pleasant and they won 5-2 in the end again brentford and um so it looks pretty promising i am super interested we're just going over the finer details crossing the t's and dotting the eyes on the um on the finance side of things but um it'll be good coverage and the reason why i'm interested is because bbc are filming seven episodes of the progress of the team throughout the season now because of callum's social media presence and it's celebrity it puts a lot of eyeballs on the club so this is why new are interested in investing hard cash into the club because we will be involved in the episodes when i went on sunday there was a camera crew there and they did a bit of filming with me talking about the opportunity how do i know calum have i ever been to a ladies football club what what why am i interested in uh putting you know money into the club um so they've already done a bit of filming and um they should be coming into the office this week sometime to do a bit of shooting uh in the office but uh i spoke to callum this morning and uh obviously they're super keen to get a deal done if a deal can't be done this week then they'll probably go to another company to talk to but um the money's for [Music] investing into bringing new talent to the club so i understand the pressure's on and i said look give me a few days and um hopefully i have some good news so yeah just um where are we now hurlingham club is just here bradley just lives somewhere along here so we're going to pick him up and i'm going to head over i will take some vid when i'm there so i'm on garrett lane with bradley and the agent so we're going to pop inside to take a look at the commercial and the three units above [Music] so [Music] it's um picking up with wind again and then blustery [Music] what is your name yeah i'm uh [Music] i'm an animal lover so uh any dogs welcome in my car excuse me what are you doing that's how i roll we got our first dog we had the first sports uh bmw sports cooper and um of course it's two-door isn't it so we moved out there and so when those grand cherokees first came out yeah they were the best selling they were even before they the word suv came out yeah they were the best-selling motors right it was that and the x5 when they first come out yeah would you ever like an overland or something uh and everything yeah it's like oh ordeal it was it wasn't the top but they had living on them didn't they yeah you'd have to pay for anything extra no i didn't have your fuel well because it was it's it's a common diesel um common rail diesel engine isn't it yeah and you know what i did i bought one brand new it was on a 53 plate and i thought i thought i was clever all right so i put some red diesel in there no god no god please no no and you know what happened because the red diesel had a high amount of water content i put it in the motor it was like two days old and the engine just stopped i think i got to very tell the uh garage what i'm gonna do with me just went like that i did it you're here and i'm glad i tell ya can you imagine if we're winning eighty percent of the jobs would be well you'll be in dire straits because you wouldn't get a a handle and and and get all the subbies to do the work that feels like one of those good problems to have a magnificent i'm not i would never sort of turn away you know if we can schedule five six seven hundred thousand pound projects you know starting one every two weeks or something so just at chisholm road for the first day of stripping out so that's gonna have a little wander around [Music] baby [Music] morning everyone it is wednesday and i'm back around chesna road in kensington uh we're meeting the architect stroke interior design around here now the property's stripped out we can have a good look at where the problems are and what extras we can see already because there's lots of damp coming through the walls which when the client had all his pictures on the walls you couldn't see the issue so we're going to walk around we're going to put some post-it notes on the areas and then we can put a price to the extras um which we put forward to decline but as you see this is the kitchen all going to be fair i think the units are staying and we're going to be putting new doors on the on the units but um that may change as things usually do um but yeah so this is uh chisholm road as you see it's already got the mansard at the top so is that one that one hasn't and that one hasn't so um as you see people have already started to add the extensions apparently these houses are going for 1.4 million per property what do you think so up there you've got north end road that goes down to fulham that one goes up to earl's core so one of the questions what keeps popping up is why build a basement under your house in london well here's three reasons why people choose to build a basement under their house in london [Music] it adds massive amounts of value to your property because don't forget every pound per square foot you're gonna add is increasing the value so if a basement is 1 000 square feet and it is in fulham and the resale value is 1 000 pounds a square foot that's going to add 1 million pounds to the resale value it's not rocket science is it you know so the more square footage you add underground the better it is for the resale value again it goes back to square footage you may be interested in adding a basement for living area games room swimming pool that's if it's a big property utility room bedrooms whatever your requirements are a basement is the ultimate way to add square footage to your property what kind of rooms do you add in your basement well i've briefly gone over it you know depending on where you live you may live in a terraced house in fulham where you don't want to move but you want to increase the square footage because you need an extra bedroom with an ensuite maybe a basement just under the front part of the house so it's a half basement would be enough for you and your family maybe you live in south kensington and the house is a little bit bigger and you want a basement because you want a cinema room or a gym or a sauna well a basement is a fantastic way to increase the square footage for those items or maybe you live in holland park and you can go down under the garden and have a basement under the footprint and then with the garden to have a swim ball a spa a gym a games room all the luxuries some people even have garages so you can drive the car onto the sort of movable plate and the plate takes the car down to the lower ground floor and then it stacks it in the basement so those are three reasons why people have basements under their house and all depends the budget as well basements don't really work outside of london because the resale values of properties for instance in portsmouth where i come from you know a terrorist house in portsmouth is 250k 300k well a basement is going to cost you 300 grand to do so it just doesn't stack up but if you're doing a basement under a london property where the pound per square foot is eight hundred pounds a square foot a thousand twelve hundred two thousand three thousand pound a square foot it makes sense doesn't it because every square foot you're gonna add to your property is gonna increase the square footage and the value [Music] foreign [Applause] so it's thursday morning we've just come out of the meeting with the client from the knightsbridge project and it is looking really promising we've got to iron out a few numbers because on some items we're higher than what he wants to pay i.e internal doors and um what else was there windows as well we've got a quite a high price in there for renovating the existing windows because they are massive floor to ceiling sash windows we can't replace because it's a grade two listed building so they have got to be taken out very carefully along with the shutters they need to be sent off to a specialist to get restored and refurbished that takes time and a lot of money so um the budget for the windows i think they were about 50k there's not many windows but it's gonna take at least one man two or three weeks to do one window so it is what it is if the guy wants to get maximum resale value on the property which is looking to go on the market in around october november for seven million quid it has got to be done properly that means no corners cut at all uh and that is why he's come to new because he knows we are number one in west london for doing projects like this um so yeah that's a positive start to the day um we've just got the numbers back for the site in chigwell off the estimator again that's coming in a little bit higher than what we expected but guess what again it's 10 000 square feet of new build house it's gonna be expensive the client has exchanged so now it's a question of managing expectations because i think they thought the price was going to be a little bit lower and it's coming in around about well i won't actually say at the moment until we won it but it's quite a bit of money um so i'm just heading back to the office now so let's have a catch up maybe when i get back [Music] [Applause] so [Music] wow [Music] so [Music] so uh [Music] so i'm in montpellier street this morning visiting the new project which should be coming newswire next week we're going to do a little site visit and um going to be meeting one of the subcontractors down there we've got will on site and we've got gat guy on site as well so let's go in and have a little look at this fantastic property [Music] big [Music] do [Music] can you see the spreadsheet got yeah i've got the spreadsheet yet right i've been rejigging um bradley's numbers uh because obviously we're supposed to exchange today and i just thought let me just cross off all the teas and everything else and make sure that this whole thing works and i'm not getting it so this is a difficult phone call we had from the investor and basically we were due to exchange contracts today on garrett lane which is the two commercial with three units above each property um unfortunately the comparables which we got together from the estate agents didn't stack up the estate agents were used over inflated the numbers which meant it looked good on the spreadsheet but in reality the numbers just didn't work because the pound per square foot ended up being less than 700 pounds a square foot so the return on the investment just wasn't there um i said to the client let's move on not worth sort of trying to make this one work going back to the owners we could put a cheeky low offer in but the offer would have to be at least 150 000 pounds or less per property so let's move on and find something else so now you see we actually do joint ventures like in garrett lane which has probably gone a bit pear-shaped at the moment because of the resale values we are looking for off-market opportunities so if you know someone or you have a opportunity in and around london maybe it's on market maybe it's off market maybe it's got planning approval maybe it doesn't have planning approval we are interested whether it be for a single unit a house an apartment someone thinks somewhere we can add value through maybe adding a basement loft conversion side return or pod room or maybe it could be a new build opportunity where we can demolish the existing property and build a new build house two new houses 10 flats 20 flats it doesn't really matter we can take care of the planning approval we can take care of all the administration side of things we can even take care of all the finance and everything like that so if you have got anything get in contact with us oh two oh seven seven three one six eight four one or email info at any projects dot co i can't believe we've hit our 20th episode on youtube if you do like the content please hit the subscribe button like and share we'll see you all next week [Music] it's [Music] | #NU PROJECTS | UCeZ7-_R7SYL8xY4k7OUj6Jg | 2022-02-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,730 | 14,140 |
cum4uDgWAbA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cum4uDgWAbA | Hegemony | Wikipedia audio article | hegemony uk-us pronunciation or is the political economic or military predominance or control of one state over others in ancient Greece eighth century BC 6th century AD hegemony denoted the political military dominance of a city-state over other city-states the dominant state is known as the hegemony in the 19th century hegemony came to denote the social or cultural predominance or ascendancy predominance by one group within a society or meal you later it could be used to mean a group or regime which exerts undue influence within a society also it could be used for the geopolitical in the cultural predominance of one country over others from which was derived hegemony z'm as in the idea that the great powers meant to establish European hegemony over Asia and Africa in international relations theory hegemony denotes a situation of a great material asymmetry in favour of one state who has e enough military power to systematically defeat any potential contest ER in the system he controls the access to raw materials natural resources capital and markets IV has competitive advantages in the production of value-added goods v generates an accepted ideology reflecting this status quo and v is functionally differentiated from other states in the system being expected to provide certain public goods such as security or commercial and financial stability the Marxist theory of cultural hegemony associated particularly with Antonio Gramsci is the idea that the ruling class can manipulate the value system and mores of a society so that their view becomes the worldview Weltanschauung in Terry Eagleton's words Gramsci normally uses the word hegemony to mean the ways in which a governing power wins consent to its rule from those it subjugates in contrast to authoritarian rule cultural hegemony is hegemonic only if those affected by it also consent to and struggle over its common sense in cultural imperialism the leader state dictates the internal politics and the societal character of the subordinate states that constitute the hegemonic sphere of influence either by an internal sponsor government or by an external installed government topic etymology from the post classical latin word hegemony ax from 1513 or earlier from the Greek word hegemony Ahuja media meaning authority rule political supremacy related to the word hegemony hegemon leader you topic historical examples topic 8 - 1 stone centuries BC in the greco-roman world of 5th century BC European classical antiquity the city-state of Sparta was the hegemony of the Peloponnesian League 6 to 4th centuries BC in king philip ii of macedon was the hegemony of the League of Corinth in 337 BC a kingship he willed to his son Alexander the Great likewise the role of Athens within the short-lived Delian League 478 to 404 BC was that of a hegemony ancient historians such as Xenophon and a first were the first who used the term in its modern sense in ancient East Asia Chinese hegemony existed during the spring and autumn period see 772 480 BC when the weakened rule of the Eastern Joe dynasty led to the relative autonomy of the five hegemons bi and Chinese they were appointed by feudal lord conferences and thus were nominally obliged to uphold the Imperium of the Jo dynasty over the subordinate state topic 1st 14th centuries ad first in 2nd century Europe was dominated by the hegemonic peace of the Pax Romana it was instituted by the Emperor Augustus and was accompanied by a series of brutal military campaigns from the 7th century to the 12th century the Umayyad Caliphate and later Abbasid Caliphate dominated the vast territories they governed with other states like the Byzantine Empire paying tribute in 7th century India harsha ruler of a large empire in northern india from ad 606 to 647 brought most of the north under his hegemony he preferred not to rule as a central government but left conquered Kings on their thrones and contenting himself with tribute and homage from the late 9th to the early 11th century the Empire developed by Charlemagne achieved hegemony in Europe with dominance over France Italy and burgundy during the 14th century the crown of Aragon became the hegemony in the Mediterranean Sea pick 15 19th centuries in the politics of international political economy giant the Jamin rights if we consider the Western dominated global system from as early as the 15th century there have been several hegemonic powers and contenders that have attempted to create the World Order in their own images he lists several contenders for historical hegemony Portugal 14942 1580 end of Italian Wars two Spanish Habsburg assimilation of Portugal based on Portugal's dominance in navigation Spain 1516 to 1659 Ascension of Charles the first of Spain to Treaty of the Pyrenees based on the Spanish dominance of the European battlefields and the global exploration and colonization of the new world the Netherlands 1580 to 1688 1579 Treaty of Utrecht marks the foundation of the Dutch Republic - the Glorious Revolution william of oranges arrival in England based on Dutch control of credit and money Britain 1688 to 1792 Glorious Revolution - Napoleonic Wars based on British textiles in command of the high seas Britain 1815 to 1914 Congress of Vienna - World War one based on British industrial supremacy and railroads Philip IV tried to restore the Habsburg dominance but by the middle of the 17th century Spain's pretensions to hegemony in Europe had definitely an irremediably failed in late 16th and 17th century Holland the Dutch Republic's mercantilist Dominion was an early instance of commercial hegemony made feasible with the development of wind power for the efficient production and delivery of goods and services this in turn made possible the Amsterdam Stock Market and concomitant dominance of world trade in France king louis xiv 1638 - 1715 an emperor napoleon the first 1799 - 1815 attempted French true hegemony via economic cultural and military domination of most of continental Europe however Jeremy black writes that because of Britain France was unable to enjoy the benefits of this hegemony after defeat an exile of Napoleon hegemony largely passed to the British Empire which became the largest empire in history with Queen Victoria 1837 to 1901 ruling over 1/4 of the world's land and population at its zenith like the Dutch the British Empire was primarily Seaborn many British possessions were located around the rim of the Indian Ocean as well as numerous islands in the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea Britain also controlled the Indian subcontinent and large portions of Africa in Europe Germany rather than Britain may have been the strongest power after 1871 that Samuel Newland writes Bismarck defined the road ahead as no expansion no push for hegemony in Europe Germany was to be the strongest power in Europe that without being a hegemony dot-dot-dot his basic axioms were first no conflict among major powers in Central Europe and second German security without German hegemony topic 20th century the early 20th century like the late 19th century was characterized by multiple great powers but no global hegemony World War one weakened the strongest of the imperial powers Great Britain but also strengthened the United States and to a lesser extent Japan both of these states governments pursued policies to expand their regional spheres of influence the u.s. in Latin America and Japan in East Asia France the UK Italy the Soviet Union and later Nazi Germany 1933 to 1945 all either maintained imperialist policies based on spheres of influence or attempted to conquer territory but none achieved the status of a global hegemonic power after the Second World War the United Nations was established and the five strongest global powers China France the UK the US and the USSR were given permanent seats on the UN Security Council the organization's most powerful decision-making body following the war the US and the USSR were the two strongest global powers and this created a bipolar power dynamic and international affairs commonly referred to as the Cold War the hegemonic conflict was ideological between communism and capitalism as well as geopolitical between the Warsaw Pact countries 1955 to 1991 and NATO Sedo Gento countries 1949 present during the Cold War both hegemons competed against each other directly during the arms race and indirectly via proxy wars the result was that many countries no matter how remote were drawn into the conflict when it was suspected that their governments policies might destabilize the balance of power Reinhard Hildebrand calls this a period of dual hegemony where two dominant states have been stabilizing their European spheres of influence against and alongside each other proxy wars became battlegrounds between forces supported either directly or indirectly by the hegemonic powers and included the Korean War the Laotian Civil War the arab-israeli conflict the Vietnam War the Afghan war the Angolan Civil War and the Central American Civil Wars following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 the United States was the world's sole hegemonic power topic 21st century various perspectives on whether the u.s. whizzer continues to be a hegemony have been presented since the end of the Cold War the American political scientists John Mearsheimer and Joseph Nye have argued that the u.s. is not a true hegemony cuz it has neither the financial nor the military resources to impose a proper formal global hegemony on the other hand and a Cornelia Bear in her book about counterterrorism argues that global governance is a product of American leadership and describes it as hegemonic governance the French socialist politician hubert veteran in 1999 described the u.s. as a hegemonic hyper power because of its unilateral military actions worldwide pentagon strategist Edward let walk in the grand strategy of the Roman Empire outlined three stages with hegemonic being the first followed by Imperial in his view the transformation proved to be fatal and eventually led to the fall of the Roman Empire his book gives implicit advice to Washington to continue the present hegemonic strategy and refrain from establishing an empire in 2006 authors ooji-kun claimed that China is already on the way to becoming the world hegemony and that the focus should be on how a peaceful transfer of power can be achieved between the US and China though others have disagreed topic political science in the historical writing of the 19th century the denotation of hegemony extended to describe the predominance of one country upon other countries and by extension hegemony is emitted the great power politics see 1880s 1914 for establishing hegemony in direct Imperial rule that then leads to a definition of imperialism direct foreign rule in the early 20th century in the field of international relations the Italian Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci developed the theory of cultural domination an analysis of economic class to include social class hence the philosophic and sociologic theory of cultural hegemony analyzed the social norms that established the social structures social and economic classes with which the ruling class established and exert cultural dominance to impose their Weltanschauung worldview justifying the social political and economic status quo as natural inevitable and beneficial to every social class rather than as artificial social constructs beneficial solely to the ruling class from the Gramsci analysis derived the political science denotation of hegemony as leadership thus the historical example of Prussia as the militarily and culturally predominant province of the German Empire 2nd Reich 1871 to 1918 and the personal and intellectual predominance of napoleon bonaparte upon the french consulate 1799 to 1804 contemporarily in hegemony and socialist strategy 1985 ernesto lac lau and chantal moof defined hegemony as a political relationship of power we're in a subordinate society collectivity perform social tasks that are culturally unnatural and not beneficial to them but that are an exclusive benefit to the imperial interests of the hegemony the superior ordinate power the Gemini as a military political and economic relationship that occurs as an articulation within political discourse they are analyzed the contemporary hegemony of the United States at the example of the global war on terrorism and presented the mechanisms and processes of American exercise of power and hegemonic governance topic sociology academics have argued that in the Praxis of hegemony Imperial dominance is established by means of cultural imperialism whereby the leader state pijama dictates the internal politics and the societal character of the subordinate states that constitute the hegemonic sphere of influence either by an internal sponsored government or by an external installed government the imposition of the hegemons way of life an imperial lingua franca and bureaucracies social economic educational governing transforms the concrete imperialism of direct military domination into the abstract power of the status quo indirect imperial domination critics have said that this view as deeply condescending and treats people as blank slates on which global capitalism's moving finger writes its message leaving behind another cultural automaton as it moves on suggested examples of cultural imperialism include the latter stage Spanish and British Empire's the 19th and 20th century Reich's of unified Germany 1871 to 1945 and by the end of the 20th century the United States culturally hegemony also is established by means of language specifically the imposed lingua franca of the hegemony leader state which then is the official source of information for the people of the Society of the subordinate state writing on language and power Andrea Meyer says as a practice of power hegemony operates largely through language in contemporary society an example of the use of language in this way as in the way Western countries set up educational systems in African countries mediated by Western languages another example of this is found in the way language helped diminish the traditions of African Americans in the US topic see also topic references topic further reading bayar Anna Cornelia 2010 counterterrorism and international power relations the EU as Ian and hegemonic global governance London abhor ease Du Bois TD 2005 hegemony imperialism and the construction of religion in East in Southeast Asia history and theory 44 for 113 231 doy 10 point 1 1 1 1 J point one four six eight to two thousand three hundred three point two zero zero five point zero zero three four five X hopper P 2007 understanding cultural globalization first ed Malden MA polity press ISBN nine seven eight oh seven four five six three five five seven six Towson Richard Eadie 2008 hegemony studies in consensus and coercion psychology press ISBN 978 oh four one five nine five five four four seven retrieved the 24th of February 2016 Joseph Jonathan 2002 hegemony a realist analysis route Lidge is bno 4 1 5 2 6 8 3 6 2 slack jennifer Daryl 1996 the theory and method of articulation in cultural studies in Morley David Chen Kwon Sang Stewart Hall critical dialogues in cultural studies route llege PP 112 227 topic external links hegemony Encyclopedia Britannica 13:11 edy 1911 P 208 hegemony is Imagi money at curly Mike door sure PhD hegemony online the quiet convergence of power culture and computers the Gemini and the hidden persuaders the power of uncommon sense Parag Khanna waving goodbye to hegemony | wikipedia tts | UCGoNozP_2TZV5hVciGW1y6Q | 2018-11-26 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,537 | 15,636 |
LI0HNZtDM78 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LI0HNZtDM78 | REAL WORLD OF SALES: Author Mary Camarillo on Selling Books Today | e hey welcome back everybody it's time for another edition of the real world of sales the one show the only show that talks to real people really interesting people really unusual things they're doing in their lives and how they sell those things cuz if they could sell that heck we can sell anything right Ashley exactly Paul so you bring the most eclectic group of people in Orange County people I I don't know how you find them I don't know where they come from but every one of them we consistently get a huge audience people want to find out yeah what the heck are people really doing in this County and how are they doing it and today is no different so bring us in yes definitely Paul that's right we have um an awesome show and um you know there's just a lot people can um you know learn and enjoy here and today we have another awesome guest we have Mary Camaro she's an amazing author from Orange County welcome to the show Mary thank you it's a pleasure to be here and I'm gonna have her move I foolishly moved her blue uh water jug let's put it to the right of her there back on the side there okay because we don't want to block her books because she's an author we got her books up here give us tell us the two books that you brought with you and and we're going to talk about those books and and your journey to being an author well I have uh two novels the first novel was published in 2021 and it's called the lockheart women it's set in Huntington Beach California which is where I live and it's set in the summer of uh starts in the summer of 1994 Ashley you're too young to remember this but that it starts on the night of the OJ Simpson chase through Orange k California you surprised I do remember that and it's not about OJ Simpson it's about a woman whose life is falling apart um she's getting a divorce she needs to find a job instead she sits down and gets hooked on watching the OJ trial okay I know some people that were like that actually that was the social media of the time you know we didn't have Google and Facebook and all the distractions we had now we had television so right but before Ashley and you go down this rabbit hole and start talking about your books and your journey I just want to know what did you do beforehand how long have you been an author what' you do beforehand how'd you get there give us that quick journey of going from what you did to what you're doing now okay well I I'll start way back when I was a child I was a voracious reader um in high school I wrote poetry edited the literary magazine thought about being a journalist um unfortunately let a sour teacher dissuade me from that idea that happens to people my my son-in-law is a great artist and he had a horrible art teacher and he he threw it all away he just said the guy told him you have no talent and that was it yeah that's it's a regret but um yeah I got out of high school and I went to Europe for a few months by myself with a rail pass and I came home and it was the 70s the economy was you know not so great then um a friend was applying for a job at the post office so I app not thinking I was going to make a career out of it but I started working at the post office in 1974 and worked my way up from sorting mail to working in the accounting office to becoming an accounting supervisor went back to school got my degree in Business um transferred over to the office of Inspector General I don't hear author in there well I was I was I was editing and um writing a lot of audit reports and that strangely gave me the idea that I should write fiction and I I think a real auditor would um cringe at that because they'd say audit reports are supposed to be true yeah not fiction they're fact but they also tell stories um if you want anybody to read it it's got to be interesting and there are certain requirements for audit reports you have to say what the condition is like what's the bad thing that happen so so you're like analyzing things so you're kind of like do you like analyze people around you and you're like oh that'd be a cool book do you know like these so why did this why did this bad thing happen and what's the reason and who the heck cares that's to me that's that's what makes a good story right yeah for sure like I was telling you before I read different books like I like um the Danielle Steel and nor Roberts books and your books remind me of those you know it's really interesting do you have like a lot of women readers or guys too well my first novel um the Leer women is definitely women's fiction and I think women are women read more books than men do especially fiction yeah mhm um my second book is got a little more diverse cast it's got three men people behind us those people behind us came out in October of last year okay awesome it's also set in a fictional coastal town called Wellington Beach California but it's definitely based on my neighborhood in headington Beach California oh okay it was kind of my pandemic project um during the pandemic um my husband and I um the gyms were closed so we walked our neighborhood and we started making up stor stories about people in our neighborhood you started making up story well that lady that's always Watering your lawn I think she's really uh serial killer serial killer yeah she's hiding something there was I mean there was all kinds of interesting flags flying in our neighborhood and we're thinking what what what does that mean um there was somebody playing drums pretty religiously and we thought who is that um there's neighbors that left their windows and garage door and doors to their house open been pretty much 247 we you can't hear what's going on what the heck is going there you know so so i' I just uh started making up stories it's like those those TV shows you know like Desperate Housewives and stuff like that yeah there's some desperate housewife quality to it okay do your neighbors know that they like inspired you and write your book some of them do yeah not all of them you just give them to them then so is this your are you still with the post office did you retire no no I retired 12 years ago and that's when I started writing fiction full-time yeah so this is the next ACT career this is my next ACT yeah and all right before we go too deep in because I know a little bit about this we did a book publishing show for a number of years here with a Indie book publisher the world of book publishing has changed dramatically since I was around in the 70s and going to college and once upon a time there were real Publishers who bought books and they would give you an advance small or large and and then they would give you a royalty off of whatever they sold that seemed to be the traditional model that model still exists but mostly has gone away and replaced with self-publishing or some kind of hybrid thing where they help you Market it and do other things with it or real Publishers but you got to come up with the ca of printing the books and you got to uh go out and hustle them and Market them we'll get them in some chains or on a site for you but you got to do a lot of the effort here the idea of just writing and then delivering it and somebody else does something with it and you seems to be gone yeah right like the original traditional method was first you found an agent and then the agent would go and find you a publisher and then they'd give you a bunch of money and you'd sit back and go well you are going to do all the marketing and all the publicity and I'll just show up on Oprah show you know and then I'll get a movie deal and I and I'll get a movie deal and I'll get a check periodically from you yeah well I dreamed about that path um I actually did try to get agents I queried about a hundred of them and I got really good sponsors of my work um you know good story but they said we just don't think we can sell it I don't think they know how to sell anything no um yeah well I I mean I'm an older author I don't have a big platform my first there like requirements in order for them to to help people sell their book and stuff you you got to have a big social media they want to know not just it's a good book but you got a following that's going to buy this book because of your there's you're an influencer you got a 10,000 people on that stuff is so ridiculous all that influencer stuff you know it's like people I mean you don't even know who is really there you know on the um influencer list and stuff you know and it's like people can buy followers and stuff but I'm telling you the Publishers today don't just look at the quality of the work they look at the size of your market and there's only five of the big Publishers left now they they've all been merging so and it's a business they want to make money so they don't necessarily want to take a risk on someone if they don't know they can sell the book so so there's you know there's a self publishing option which my first book that seemed like a lot of worked a lot of learning curve to figure out how to do that so I started investigating hybrid Publishers and I went with she writes press which is a feminist press um out to them where are they at they're um look well the publisher lives up in it's not online it's up in the cloud you know in the cloud who knows who they are but they do what they help you design the book cover and you get the ISDN number and they help you and the great thing about a hybrid is like with a traditional publisher you don't always even get to pick your the title of your book you don't get to pick your cover the point with the hybrid you get a lot of input um I worked with the the designer for both my covers and I'm I think they're both really beautiful yes they are they're right here your books are right here they they did the design for me um the big thing is they have traditional distribution which means that my book can be in any bookstore it could be at Target you can order it from Barnes & Noble it's it's available everywhere the book is in the stores and online I'm not saying it's in every bookstore it could be they they the store could order it for you yeah I see somebody went into Target and said I want looking for this book maybe not Target wouldn't but some other retailer would they' say okay then we'll get we'll get that g were getting enough requests for that we should and that's not always the case with uh self-publishing yeah because bookstores bookstores are kind of a interesting dilemma too for get in there too because bookstores can order 50 copies of your book MH and then the next day they can send them all back yes exactly so you think a yeah I've sold I sold 50 books but then no they're all going back and now you have to pay for the return oh my gosh yeah how do you sell your books then Mary like what kind of sellies are you using well the first thing I did is I made friends with a lot of the local Orange County book store owners and that has been extraordinarily helpful to me um there's Libra mobile and Santa Ana there's u b Kanto books in Long Beach there's the Bookman in Orange and there's arvita books in Tustin and just by you know going to bookstores and buying books from them and getting a relationship with the owner and then going to their events you start getting a little Network so when my my books launched um I the book man and orange host hosted my first book event you did a book signing typ did a book signing had a talk with with a friend and yeah mm so that's great that's that's one way um I also do some ad Amazon advertisement I'm I'm really very good at am Amazon you can pay for the ads there you can pay for it yeah you have to figure out the market and it's complicated I have more luck with Facebook ads so I do Facebook ads nice um I have a newsletter that I send out every two or three weeks weeks um I do a lot of giveaways in that newsletter you have a website I have a website okay yeah the website it's uh Mary camaro.com super easy to find and let's spell it it's like the city so spell Camaro c a m a r i l l o Mary camaro.com so has it been everything you hoped it would be you've got two so you it must have been good enough the first time to do it again yeah I mean it's been it's been more than I thought it would be um I was super naive with my first book I really didn't know I was going to have to go out and talk about themes and yeah you know promote myself and you got to hustle that's what I hear over and over it it used to be you could be anonymous I sat in a room I wrote this I delivered they did the marketing they did the push and once in a while maybe if it became successful I went an Oprah show or something but most of the time it was them now it's mostly on your shoulders I think right and people you know expect you to be able to talk about it and do an elevator pitch and you know it's I think it's just like so competitive now though you know there's just so many books and everybody want to be an author they think it's fun and they they want to write their own book they can put on Amazon you know do it themselves so it's like real saturated now yeah well I've done a little research on this um in 2022 for example there were 4 million books published in the United States wow wow oh my gosh the average book sale is 300 C copies over the lifetime of the book oh my goodness four if if you start adding in um ebooks and audio books and foreign sales then a book usually sells less than a thousand copies over the lifetime so again the dream that you're going to sustain yourself you're going to be a a working author and this is your full-time gig this is going to support you for most people is an illusion no you're you're correct it's it's I I'm super fortunate I have a wonderful pension yeah can't live off of I'm not trying to make money on this I'm only doing it because I love it and that's great and it gives me a life that I think that's another big bonus that I didn't realize I mean I I have so many author friends I can support other people people ask me to write blurbs for their books now I'm always happy to like show up Au the readings you know it's it's a whole community so I'm I feel really lucky that I have this yeah definitely I mean it is fun writing a book and um I have my sales book and U froa sell skills which um we're working on different ways people can buy it from you know the internet whatever but a business book seems to have a different purpose so Ashley has a business book and we have lot of people we're mostly a business channel for many of it's a marketing tool it may not be a monetary tool it may not be a way to make money it's a way to show what you know and tell your story and your point of view and then that leads to the talk that leads to the Consulting gig that leads to clients that leads to something thing but it's a it's a but here when you're doing fiction you're you have to Market yourself but you're not selling them anything else but you right and the story right yeah I think with a business book you probably would have better luck with Amazon ads and Facebook ads because you have a platform behind that I have to try that I haven't tried that yet but I have to try that but I think but it's different type of marketing you know mine is for like business um salese so it's little bit kind of more um you know like kind of like less um like Market pool you know there's less people and stuff but I think for yours it's like you can have anybody read it you know guys can buy it for their wives or sisters or you know kids whatever their nieces so yours I think it's like at least you have that different type of like a target market but can I push back on that a little bit because that's the idea of books for in general everybody like a 12-y old girl will buy this a 96 year old grandma will buy this anybody will buy this is there a Target Market do you have to be more focused on who you're selling to and know audience one thing I've learned um is that it's important to ask people if they read fiction before you start giving them a whole spiel about your because a lot of people don't read fiction a lot of people prefer to read non-fiction they want to know what's going on in our world they have specific interests they're doing research on so first I like to find out if someone likes to read fiction and I confess I do not like to read fiction I like to encourage people to read fiction I do not especially in this day though because I think I do though I think fiction allows us more more empathy because it puts us in the world of people we don't necessarily know and understand and I think it it helps us understand people we don't know I think that even like your books you know I was reading um you know about your books and things Mary and it's like it's kind of like a um therapy in a way for people you know it's like relatable you're like you're going through like you know a divorce or you know losing your job or some drama and the characters go through the same thing and you see like how they go through it and process it and they end up you know like doing better after words you know it's kind of like you can relate to them and I think that's what people like about the characters and it's kind of like that's why people like like enjoy reading fiction books like I like reading fiction books like they're like you know um you know these romance novels and stuff like that and um it's just like it's fine it's interesting you can forget about things and you feel like you know it's just like you're a different place you know it's like these characters are just so interesting and like you can relate in ways and things so I think that's neat about you know your kind your books that you wrote you know it's like you know women everywhere can relate to them I mean even reading about the characters like you have domestic abuse issues in one book and family problems in the other book you have like neighbors have problems and then like everybody comes together and just different things happening yeah those people behind us the new book is definitely about neighbors and people trying to come together that don't understand each other it's it's said in the summer of 2017 and the neighborhood's increasingly divided by politics and protest and escalating housing prices so there's sounds like Huntington Beach to me yes yes there's a lot of material in my city and I'm very grateful for all the stories that I'm able to capture but yeah these these these neighbors though they don't all agree they all they're flying different flags they have different opinions but they are neighbors and at the end they realize that they have more in common than they expect and that's like what's happening now you know in the in the US and the whole world and things with politics did that kind of like encourage you to write your books too well especially the second book I mean during the pandemic you know you're stuck at home watching CNN and thinking the world's going to end and yeah it was really nice to get out of the house and walk and then you kind of disturbed by what you see outside the house sometimes too yeah yeah so yeah making think the beach has had more controversy than most cities here in orang County we do especially lately yeah shout out we did have Tony Strickland in here the mayor of Huntington Beach he certainly represents group there that been very vocal and very active and pushing back on a lot of the things that they don't like happening whether it's high density housing or other things here yeah and they you know they went an election fair and square and you know a lot of the decisions they're making I don't agree with I would I really wish they would listen more to the residents and come and talk to them but you know do we listen at all to each other or we just that's why I'm going back to this idea of niches you know are there are books that are just sold over Christian authors that come in here or other sorts of things and and and I'm not trying to say anything about any category except they're trying to reach the converted already you're trying to reach people that are already yeah in your Echo chamber that are already listening to that believe what you believe and so here's another support of that or sounds like your book you're trying to get people to to realize their commonality and to get outside of their their isolated bubbles here yeah I think I did a pretty decent job of letting my characters Express themselves even though I don't agree with some of them but yeah you're right um yeah like NE books even need trigger warnings now like there's there's some contest you can enter that you have to say no there's some sex in this book so I have to warn you that that might turn the reader off and maybe you shouldn't enter it you know or it's just for you know their books just everybody seems to be SOC their books just for uh gay and lesbians or just books for uh conservative Christians they're just books for I don't know I I'm those are broad categories I'm assuming there's really tiny little niche categories people that only like I don't know I'm not even going to come up with something obscure but something really narrowly focused genres is is it becoming more atomized like that more broken down little there's definitely so many categories I mean because I've entered my book in a lot of contests I have to figure out like which yeah well my my category is either general fiction or literary fiction women's fiction for for the lockart women cuz it was definitely a woman's story yeah I could see like you know moms reading your books like those girls that don't work you know and they just walk in a group and stuff like that you know I feel you should join those groups walk in a group those moms those mobs yeah they're probably and my books are both they're both available in audio books in case people you know don't read um paper books and how did you make the Audi book did you record it yourself or did did they did your hybrid publisher provide a voice and um no I had to I had to figure that out myself I did not record it myself I it's that's a lot of work I don't think my voice is really strong enough we've done a couple AUD books in our parallel Studio that's why I asked they came to us and wow it was a lot more hours and effort than I thought it was going to be I also have a habit of moving around when I talk and I know you have to sit still when you're doing we told you that here yeah yeah now I had um I I went with find a way um for my second book found a n narrator um through them and then with my first book um they actually bought the rights for it and um they found a great narrator for the lockart women so oh that's awesome so what's the future for your books Mary like is there any characters that you're going to write more books about or any new novels going to happen everyone wants a sequel to the lockart women um the mother Brenda lockart is quite the character and everyone wants to know what she's going to do next I'm not I I hav I don't have a definite plan to work on that right now I am working on a third book book I can't tell you too much more about it except that it's about some people that have some problems it's my favorite kind of character but that seems to be another popular thing once you find a character then it becomes a series of books all with that character that detective or that yeah lead character or whatever I actually really Envy authors that can do that you kind of have to know where your story is going from the beginning right if you're going to write five or seven or 12 you know issues of of a story I think I I admire that I I don't really know where my characters are going until I'm almost I mean we live in Orange County here and there's a couple huge those Mega authors like Dean Coons Dean that lives somewhere over in the harbor area and has some huge house and has now an as I understand it I've never talked to him an army of people that write in that style he he may have an overall direction to it but his books they crank them out so often he couldn't physically write them anymore so he has people who write like him under whatever guidance and and Direction he gives them here well good for him you know yeah and he's turned it into a franchise franchise yeah yeah or or the Chicken Soup for the Soul that wasn't a franchise it wasn't a fiction book but James Patterson I mean you I go to my Huntington Beach Central Library there's a whole wing of James Patterson books exactly that's incredible I I admire that my first book took me six years to write my second book took three does that mean I'm getting faster I don't know but yeah to crank the because it's a formula they've got characters and a formula and then it they just follow that over and over they just have to come up put them in a different situation yeah I don't Rite like that I'm I'm more character driven I have to figure out the people and then they start telling me what they're going to do which I know sounds a little mystical but it's true they talk to you they talk to me they say you know you think I was gonna run off with that man but no he's not my type do you kind of like think of like what the the readers who want to have happen no maybe maybe that would be a good marketing strategy but no I don't think about so you're not writing for a result gee this is what they want to hear so I'm going to write this no I'm I'm writing for a story that is going to surprise people and still be believable that's to surprise them it has to surprise you I have to surprise myself yeah did you ever like take any um you know class or anything to learn how to write a book or you just did it no I've took I've taken a lot of classes there's a lot of really good resources in Orange County um I highly recommend Irvine Valley College they have a great creative writing program there Lisa Alvarez is the professor there and she's amazing um Chapman University Richard Bosch is a wonderful short story writer and novelist and he offers a free community Forum every year that's incredibly generous takes about 15 to 20 people and it's it's free and you get to work with this wonderful novelist and other people there trying to do the same thing you're doing yeah that's amazing that's that's really great you know they have that that help out there for people like you and that's I mean you have amazing books I think there's going to be um you know a lot more sales going on and your new book is going to be exciting and what's your website again Mary people can buy your books where can they find them online uh you can find them wherever you like to buy books Amazon Barnes & Noble um my website is Mary camaro.com CA m a r i l l o there's also bookshop.org which if you buy books from bookshop.org um part of the sales goes to support independent bookstores that's a great cause cuz they're under attack I I you rattled off a couple of them I only knew one or two of them there aren't many left yeah and they're they're wonderful I mean they they do great things for the community and it's they're supportive to authors and it's it's a treasure yeah yeah that's absolutely great and what kind of um you know advice do you have for anybody that wants to be an author Mary well I think you have to be persistent um I think it's really important to hook up with other writers and start sharing your work and getting feedback and then you have to come to the point where you have to trust your own voice and say yeah I can't write this book by a committee I have to listen to what I think is right I think it's really important to have a community of other authors and support them write reviews go and listen to them read bu their books because other authors are incredibly supportive I've had so many authors that have written blurbs for me and shown up to my events and gotten me um into the Orange County register and you know it's it's a wonderful community so you really have to kind of start finding yourself apart in it that's great yeah it's definitely to have a good Community you know and positive people around you that can really help you you know succeed in your book and um you know help you write it and inspire you and things so that's great Mary so um you know definitely everybody make sure you buy Mary's book you go on Amazon you look up her book The lockart the lockart women and those people behind us you can go to Mary's website Mary camaro.com and U make sure you um you know buy her book order her book buy it for your friends and um yeah it's awesome and we have to explain that we forgot to change the graphic on the screen to the new show so we're still touting our last show that we just did the let's talk real estate so everybody's going to say why is that graphic uper oh my goodness actually it's appropriate because you know the second book especially there's a real in the book there you go we knew that we were trying to tie that in and it's about real people in our real County here and which is all about the real world we live in a real estate it's it seems to be kind of specific to a a region yeah you're talking about people in in your hometown yeah I am yeah but make sure you guys watch Real World of sales with Ashley not um that you can watch all these shows together well so on the next on let's talk real estate we'll put Ashley's graphic up there and we'll cross promote shows here my book on the next one there you go all right thanks for joining us and Ashley how do they find your book you have a book that you rarely talk about yeah it's been in the um a working process we're going to do some book signing soon so we're going to have an event here soon guys make sure you stay tuned for that we're going to do book signing and then um I'm going to have some other um sites it's going to be on where everybody can order it and my book is called fous sell skills um you can uh find it on Barnes & Noble and then um you know you guys just listen to the show stay tuned because we're going to have more updates about it for sure all right thanks thanks for coming on guys thank [Music] you well there you have it another reason to tune in each and every time to the real world of sales as we talk to real people doing really unusual things and how they support that market that and sell that and bring their voices to the marketplace right here in Orange County's only Community radio station c talk radio streaming live from our studios here at the University of California irvines be app Innovation [Music] Center | OC Talk Radio | UCqyHDyXj1wsoxh5-xov2M2Q | 2024-04-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,021 | 30,688 |
_q3xo7O9kCg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_q3xo7O9kCg | Wubbzy Flushes Roku Kun the Vyonder Down the Toilet | man today is Roku Khanna V yonder's 17th birthday and I hate his videos because they're so violent and disturbing what should I do I know I will flush Roku kind of the Yonder down the toilet so he will be in the sewers moku Khan how dare you make disturbing videos out of Caillou Dora Little Bill Clyde Stephanie and satari that's it I'm flushing you down the toilet but first I'll shrink you now come with me to the bathroom Wubbzy you put me downright this instant I strongly beg of you set up child abuse and cannibalism supporter you're going to the sewers and that's final Wubbzy don't you dare put me in the toilet be seeing you Yonder ah Boku Khan what you did was child abuse and cannibalism I'm about to get the bubbles going no not the lever no I can't swim bon voyage you child abuser and cannibalism lover remember to hold your nose you can't do this let's see how you like it [Music] oh ah ah uh where m i going uh foreign I don't deserve to be flushed by wubsy oh no another waterfall and it's taking me into the sewers no please don't send me to the sewers please no no no no no foreign I can't swim I can't swim I can't swim I'm in the sewer no wubsy we heard you flashed Roku kind of he under down the toilet for his birthday for this we will celebrate | Alex Wurmser | UCMX-FT_22dWmq2NcWELb1_Q | 2023-02-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 251 | 1,269 |
I2GOKh10924 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2GOKh10924 | ELN - The Daily Market Report - 27th April | good morning my name is Sam Hill I'm a client portfolio manager on empowers optimization desk here have today's market update for Wednesday the 27th of April Su this morning gas prices are trading lower the last night's close um this is despite the gains we see in the oil markets uh the main driver today is an oversupply gas system and uh some sort of strength movements in the pound however with oil pushing up we may see further movement later today for more information please get in contact via email or please continue to listen okay demand figures are higher today than uh seasonal normals this as we see temperatures looking colder into the weekend uh the UK gas system is forecasted to be around 4 MCM long today despite the uh the increased demand flows from Norwegian langered are around 37 MCM today which is up on yesterday as is Dutch BBL uh which is just below 20 MCM uh there is an outage at Rough uh the rough storage facility which is nominating however is currently flowing at zero um we also see some cuts to rough which have been extended to the 28th of this month suic LG send out is comfortable at around 48 MCM uh with a 10 back tanker du to dock there later today Peak power margins for the UK today are looking tighter around 9 and2 GW uh this is as we see wind dropping off to around 2 gws and it's also predicted to to fall uh for the duration of the day um this is adding uh further pressure onto gas fired power generation um which is adding to the increase in gas supply uh demand to gas supply uh currently generating at around 20 GW and making up 53% of the generation stack um both the French and Dutch's connectors are on import mode however the French is importing around half of its capacity with the Dutch uh just underneath its full capacity we've seen all pickup today uh it's now just over trading just over $46 per barrel uh this is head of us infantry data which is out latest day which is predicted to see stock piles Rising um this will uh probably see further movements to to gas and power prices during the day also s the pound remains reasonably range bound um some positive European data has provided some uh downside however some UK GDB data out later today may see some further movements the pound is currently trading at €1 289 and $14.57 respectively thank you very much for listening and we'll catch you same time [Music] tomorrow [Music] yeah | ELN - The Daily Market Report | UCHccoAnI1Gs696gD0Fd9_sg | 2016-04-27 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 448 | 2,398 |
X65njxKuhxY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X65njxKuhxY | The Somnambulists By Jack London | the somnambulists from revolution and other essays by jack london read by brian ness this is a librivox recording all librivox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org his only fools speak evil of the clay the very stars are made of clay like mine the mightiest and absurdest sleepwalker on the planet chained in circle of his own imaginings man is only too keen to forget his origin and to shame that flesh of his that bleeds like all flesh and that is good to eat civilization which is part of the circle of his imaginings has spread a veneer over the surface of the soft-shelled animal known as man it is a very thin veneer but so wonderfully as man constituted that he squirms on his bit of achievement and believes he has garbed an armor plate yet man today is the same man that drank from his enemy's skull in the dark german forests that sacked cities and stole his women from neighboring plans like any howling aborigine the flesh and blood body of man has not changed in the last several thousand years nor has his mind changed there is no faculty of the mind of man today that did not exist in the minds of the men of long ago man has today no concept that is too wide and deep and abstract for the mind of plato or aristotle to grasp give to plato or aristotle the same fund of knowledge that man today has access to and plato and aristotle would reason as profoundly as the man of today and would achieve very similar conclusions it is the same old animal man smeared over it is true with the veneer thin and magical that makes him dream drunken dreams of self-exaltation and to sneer at the flesh and the blood of him beneath the smear the raw animal crouching within him is like the earthquake monster pinned in the crust of the earth as he persuades himself against the latter till it arouses and shakes down a city so does he persuade himself against the former until it shakes him out of his dreaming and he stands undisguised a brute like any other brute starving let him miss six meals and see gape through the veneer the hungry maw of the animal beneath get between him and the female of his kind upon whom his mating instinct is bent and see his eyes blaze like an angry cats hear at his throat the scream of wild stallions and watch his fists clench like an orangutans maybe he will even beat his chest touch his silly vanity which he exalts into high sounding pride call him a liar and behold the red animal in him that makes a hand clutching that is quick like the tensing of a tiger's claw or an eagle's talon incarnate with desire to rip and tear it is not necessary to call him a liar to touch his vanity tell a plane's indian that he has failed to steal horses from the neighboring tribe or tell a man living in bourgeois society that he has failed to pay his bills at the neighboring grocers and the results are the same each plane's indian and bourgeois is smeared with a slightly different veneer that is all requires a slightly different stick to scrape it off the raw animals beneath are identical but intrude not violently upon man leave him alone in his somnambulism and he kicks out from under his feet the ladder of life up which he has climbed constitutes himself the center of the universe dreams sortedly about his own particular god and monitors metaphysically about his own blessed immortality true he lives in a real world breathes real air eats real food and sleeps under real blankets in order to keep real cold away and there's the rub he has to effect adjustments with the real world and at the same time maintain the sublimity of his dream the result of this admixture of the real and the unreal is confusion thrice confounded the man that walks the real world in his sleep becomes such a tangled mass of contradictions paradoxes and lies that he has to lie to himself in order to stay asleep in passing it may be noted that some men are remarkably constituted in this matter of self-deception they excel at deceiving themselves they believe and they help others to believe it becomes their function in society and some of them are paid large salaries for helping their fellow men to believe for instance that they are not as other animals for helping the king to believe and his parasites and dredges as well that he is god's own manager over so many square miles of earthquest for helping the merchant and banking classes to believe that society rests on their shoulders and that civilization would go to smash if they got out from under and ceased from their exploitations and petty culprits prize fighting is terrible this is the dictum of the man who walks in his sleep he prays about it and writes to the papers about it and worries the legislators about it there is nothing of the brood about him he is a sublimated soul that treads the heights and breathes refined ether in self-comparison with the prize fighter the man who walks in his sleep ignores the flesh and all its wonderful play of muscle joint and nerve he feels that there is something god-like in the mysterious deeps of his being denies his relationship with the brute and proceeds to go forth into the world and express my deeds that's something god like within him he sits at a desk and chases dollars through the weeks and months and years of his life to him the life godlike resolves into a problem something like this since the great mass of men toil at producing wealth how best can he get between the great mass of men and the wealth they produce and get a slice for himself with tremendous exercise of craft deceit and guile he devotes his life godlike to this purpose as he succeeds his somnambulism grows profound he bribes legislatures buys judges controls primaries and then goes and hires other men to tell him that it is all glorious and right and the funniest thing about it is that this archdeceiver believes all that they tell him he reads only the newspapers and magazines that tell him what he wants to be told listens only to the biologists who tell him that he is the finest product of the struggle for existence and herds only with his own kind where like the monkey folk they teeter up and down and tell one another how great they are in the course of his life godlike he ignores the flesh until he gets to the table he raises his hands in horror at the thought of the brutish prize fighter and then sits down and gorges himself on roast beef rare and red running blood from under every sawing thrust of the implement called a knife he has a piece of cloth which he calls a napkin with which he wipes from his lips and from the hair on his lips the greasy juices of the meat he is fastidiously nauseated with the thought of two prize fighters bruising each other with their fists and at the same time because it will cost him some money he will refuse to protect the machines in his factory though he is aware that the lack of such protection every year mangles batters and destroys out of all humanness thousands of working men women and children he will chatter about things refined and spiritual and godlike like himself and he and the men who heard with him will calmly adulterate the commodities they put upon the market and which annually kill tens of thousands of babies and young children he will recoil at the suggestion of the foreign spectacle of two men confronting each other with gloved hands in the roped arena and at the same time he will clamor for larger armies and larger navies for more destructive war machines which with a single discharge will disrupt and rip to pieces more human beings than have died in the whole history of prizefighters he will bribe a city council for a franchise or a state legislature for a commercial privilege but he has never been known in all his sleepwalking history to bribe any legislative body in order to achieve any moral end such as for instance abolition prize fighting child labor laws pure food bills or old age pensions ah but we do not stand for the commercial life reject the refined scholarly and professional men they are also sleepwalkers they do not stand for the commercial life but neither do they stand against it with all their strength they submit to it to the brutality and carnage of it they develop classical economists who announce that the only possible way for men and women to get food and shelter is by the existing method they produce university professors men who claim the role of teachers and who at the same time claim that the austere ideal of learning is passionless pursuit of passionless intelligence they serve the men who lead the commercial life give to their sons somnambulistic educations preach that sleepwalking is the only way to walk and that the persons who walk otherwise are atovisms or anarchists they paint pictures for the commercial men write books for them sing songs for them act plays for them and dose them with various drugs when their bodies have grown gross or dyspeptic from overeating and lack of exercise then there are the good kind somnambulists who don't prize fight who don't play the commercial game who don't teach and preach somnambulism who don't do anything except live on the dividends that are coined out of the one white fluid that runs in the veins of little children out of mother's tears the blood of strong men and the groans and size of the old the receiver is as bad as the thief i and the thief is finer than the receiver he at least has the courage to run the risk but the good kind people who don't do anything won't believe this and the assertion will make them angry for a moment they possess several magic phrases which are like the incantations of a voodoo doctor driving devils away the phrases that the good kind people repeat to themselves and to one another sound like abstinence temperance thrift virtue sometimes they say them backward when they sound like criticality drunkenness wastefulness and immorality they do not really know the meaning of these phrases but they think they do and that is all that is necessary for some nebulous the calm repetition of such phrases invariably drives away the waking devils and lulls to slumber our statesmen sell themselves and their country for gold our municipal servants and state legislators commit countless treasons the world of graft the world of betrayal the world of somnambulism whose exalted and sensitive citizens are outraged by the knockouts of the prize ring and who annually not merely knock out but kill thousands of babies and children by means of child labor and adulterated food far better to have the front of one's face pushed in by the fist of an honest prize fighter than to have the lining of one's stomach corroded by the embalmed beef of a dishonest manufacturer in a prize fight men are classed in lightweight fights with a lightweight he never fights with a heavyweight and foul blows are not allowed yet in the world of the sun ambulance where sore the sublimated spirits there are no classes and foul blows are continually struck and never disallowed only they are not called foul blows the world of claw and fang and fist and club is passed away so say the summon ambulance a rebate is not an elongated claw a wall street raid is not a fang slash dummy boards of directors and fake accountings are not foul blows of the fist under the belt a present of a coal stock by a mine operator to a railroad official is not a claw rip to the bowels of a rival mine operator the hundred million dollars with which a combination beats down to his knees a man with a million dollars is not a club the man who walks in his sleep says it is not a club so say all of his kind with which he heard they gather together and solemnly bloatingly make and repeat certain noises that sound like discretion acumen initiative enterprise these noises are especially gratifying when they are made backward they mean the same thing but they sound different and in either case forward or backward the spirit of the dream is not disturbed when a man strikes a foul blow in the prize ring the fight is immediately stopped he is declared the loser and he is hissed by the audience as he leaves the ring but when a man who walks in his sleep strikes a foul blow he is immediately declared the victor and awarded the prize and amid acclamations he forthwith turns his prize into a seat in the united states senate into a grotesque palace on fifth avenue and into endowed churches universities and libraries to say nothing of subsidized newspapers to proclaim his greatness the red animal in the san nabulist will out he decries the carnal combat of the prize ring and compels the red animal to spiritual combat the poisoned lie the nasty gossiping tongue the brutality of the unkind epigram the business and social nastiness and treachery of today these are the thrusts and scratches of the red animal when the somnambulist is in charge they are not the uppercuts and short arm jabs and jolts and slugging blows of the spirit they are the foul blows of the spirit that have never been disbarred as the foul blows of the prize ring have been despised would it not be preferable for a man to strike one full on the mouth with his fist than for him to tell a lie about one or malign those who are nearest and dearest but these are the crimes of the spirit and alas they are so much more frequent than blows on the mouth and whoever exalts the spirit over the flesh by his own creed averse that a crime of the spirit is vastly more terrible than a crime of the flesh thus stand the somnambulists convicted by their own creed only they are not real men alive and awake and they proceed to mutter magic phrases that dispel all doubt as to their undiminished and eternal gloriousness it is well enough to let the ape and tiger die but it is hardly fair to kill off the natural and courageous apes and tigers and allow the spawn of cowardly apes and tigers to live the prize fighting apes and tigers will die all in good time in the course of natural evolution but they will not die so long as the cowardly somnambulistic apes and tigers club and scratch and slash this is not a brief surprise fighter it is a blow of the fist between the eyes of the somnambulists teetering up and down muttering magic phrases and thanking god they are not as other animals glennell in california june 1900 end of the somnambulists from revolution and other essays by jack london | Audiobook Gaming | UC91dsp6w6HFlkqHEE2QRLvA | 2021-05-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,642 | 14,443 |
1JQMo0iRcjY | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1JQMo0iRcjY | Smoke Stack Dampers 1-1 | by this prank smoker builder calm today's tip is a just a little fabrication kind of a tip some a way to get smokestack dampers installed across two smokestacks and make sure they're lined up and things like that what I've got here this is a teardrop damper we'll have these available on the website soon on BBQ smoker supply.com there's other sizes on there right now but this is a four inch for four inch pipe and so this thing is going to give you 3/8 of an inch of a lip that hangs around all the way around the top of a four inch piece of schedule 40 pipe anyway what we got here is I've got this set up with with two smokestacks on top of this grill that's the same one we put the hinges on yesterday and you can see that I've got my smoke stacks already on there already welded in place and what I'm doing here is I'm trying to find the center point of both smoke stacks so that whenever I put my damper on there that that bottom tab down there where my pinkies at that'll be lined up on both sides opposing each other and so this is a little bit heavy so bear with me but so I've got this level on here and you can see I've already went to the trouble of getting this trailer all leveled up and everything and my smoke stacks are the same height and what I'm doing is I'm taking this level kind of hard to see that but I'm taking this level and I'm putting it dead center down the middle of both of these smokestacks and lining it up is what I'm doing here so you can see here I'll rotate this around a little bit I've already got one tab tacked in place as with the tack it helps you get this level which that's got to go up just a little bit still and it helps you get your tab that the tab is where the damper is going to be screwed to and it helps you get your tab lined up this way on your smoke stacks so on this this is the as you're facing the front of the grill this is the right hand smokestack so I've got this blade set up to where it'll look like this on the smokestack now here on the other side I'm gonna set this smokestack damper the opposite direction so that the guy can go around one side or the other of the dam of the cooker and he can grab one damper that's closer there'll probably be two guys cooking on this cooker at the same time so I'm gonna weld my other tab on here like so and that'll help me get that lined up and help me get it flush and everything to where all I got to do is just tack it in place and we're good to go anyway I hope you're finding these tips useful we plan on doing doing these frequently and you know get help you be a better fabricator things like that so check out our forums at smoker builder comm forums and join up become a member and participate in the forums thanks a lot and I hope you have a good day | SmokerBuilder | UCfx_bnkuHaJeQMgchdNvQDw | 2014-07-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 565 | 2,770 |
blDV8L_gSM0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=blDV8L_gSM0 | Wartales Guide to Legendary Weapons - What is the Strongest Weapon? | [Applause] hello and welcome back to another War Tales guide my name is hien and today we're going to take a look at the Legendary Weapons within the game the arguably strongest weapons I will go through each of the weapon categories and give you my thoughts on which weapon is best in slot for what particular build so without further Ado let's jump right into the guide as with most of the guides that I'm doing I'm trying to be as concise precise quick and on point as possible to save you time to give you more information so the first category that we're going to look at is swords and boy oh boy there are a lot of Swords legendary uh swords in particular so by far the class with the most legendary weapons is The Swordsman if you are running larger parties with multiple characters consider maybe taking multiples of them to maximize the impact of it there are so many swords within the game that you can't wield all of them there are 1 2 3 four five one-handed swords and one two-handed sword so generally speaking about each of the weapons and I'll not repeat that for the other categories U it very much depends on what your build is going to look like to determine what the best in class weapon is for the uh swordsman I prefer defensive builds really build them as the tank because they make excellent tanks which means inherently I'm more drawn to oneand swords however there is nothing wrong with a swords Master good medium armor um and then full aggro build that definitely works as well good in terms of one-handed swords let's take a look we do have Mi Copus which is a sword that you're getting relatively late in the normal game which has the special ability to deal uh two or to regain two ve points upon defeating an enemy uh the important part of that sword is it does have an 80 to 100% strength damage um ratio you can see the damage of this character is 120 and the sword deals around um 100 to 120 points of damage that is going to be very important because the way that a lot of the tanks work is they hyperfocus on uh the defensive repost and sometimes even if you want to go extra aggressive to Counterattack and essentially engage disengage engage disengage if you do have a low base damage weapon then that strategy those extra attacks will be a little bit wasted um the Fatal blow ability of Mi Copus is absolutely fantastic and for me it would be the best inclass weapon weon or best in slot Weapon rivaled by a couple of new weapons from the DLC grak is a beautiful weapon that deals equally strong damage but instead of gaining veiler points it knocks the enemy back 3 m now it's completely up to you if you want to use that for the new DLC uh to basically help pushing enemies overboard it's a fantastic weapon for that Gro is available relatively late in uh the game um when you're almost done with all of the boarding but it's never too late to push someone over um The Edge mom is an equally interesting weapon uh this weapon um will attack uh for a little bit lower damage but applies bleeding then deals uh the damage again to the Target and knocks them back by four M so very similar to um grak but distinctly a little bit different because the bleeding part some enemies will be immune and for attacks of opportunity it won't be as good so an okay weapon but not as good as grow or met scopus uh cling sword is the hidden weapon that you can get uh from the drbu region essentially if you don't know where to get it uh you need to go all the way up here into the Forgotten cave and uh use a couple of blanch bombs in order to destroy a couple of stones there to get the weapon nice nice weapon you can definitely work with it attacks three times is ultra fast but the problem with that is also it has ultra low damage so for any form of attack of opportunity not useful but if you do have a build that wants to stack for instance poison Stacks then this weapon is definitely good next up Glory which is a good one-handed sword that deals around 60 to 80% % of the damage if already engaged in combat you gain protection in theory a good weapon and I've used it for a while the problem with that weapon in particular is that uh there are abilities like uh bull walk every time this unit engages in combat they get deflection automatically and there are other oils such as the defensive oil which emulate protection so the add-on to of this weapon that it um offers isn't as great as the appeal might be so it is definitely a fine tank weapon and for Pure tanking purposes it's absolutely okay but if you want to maximize a little bit more damage later in the game um I would only put it into BT rating so in terms of just quality of the weapons I would go methis copis over groak Maelstrom glory and click sword finally two-handed weapon Prosperity very strong uh weapon which deals a lot of damage to all units in the area also knocking them back two meters so that weapon in itself is good for any form of boarding and just generally any uh damage unit set could not be knocked back there are a couple of immovable units for instance will take 150% extra damage alternatively if you have already engaged the unit on one end and you're trying to knock them back into your own people that wouldn't work either so with a little bit lever positioning you can do a lot of damage with prosperity I would give it an allaround solid rating but I already mentioned personally uh Swordsmen are a little bit more defensive from my perspective moving on to the brood uh which is the second defensive character I like to play my brute as a tank potentially or arguably the strongest tank in the game simply because it does have uh the protection ability compared uh or combined with deflection repost and just overall incredible defensive strength so the character is a massive massive bull walk and if you look at the other Alternatives besides Destroyer really brawler and uh Smasher in my perspective aren't uh good enough to justify moving away from a tank build and let's not get started on Vanguard that's really not my favorite spec to begin with so I would always build them as a tank however the game offers you a couple of Alternatives in terms of just pure maze weapons there is one one-handed weapon which is arines maze uh a legendary maze that you get from defeating aranes uh which is the best in slot weapon for that class upgraded love it it is fantastic deals around UH 60 to 80% damage but if this unit has more strengths than the target the damage de is doubled and it guarantees a critical hit so many of the opposing tanks won't have as much strengths as you do specifically if you regularly upgrade these weapons which means you have per definition 100% crit rate which is fantastic U critting with every single strike is very very strong that means you can uh reduce the crit chance itself because uh erush is just taking care of it there are two two-handed weapons that I want to draw your attention to one is dagon's Hammer potentially first legendary weapon that you will find INR area and then the B Thunder both of them have their own um place or their own um position in the game if you're going for a brawler build or if you're going for a Smasher build then of course these weapons can work dagens hammer in particular is interesting uh deals around 50% damage to all units in the area if one or more unit takes damage it strikes two more times so it is a multi-attack weapon per definition and to a degree emulates the Executioner skill uh that uh the X wielder has or the Executioner has so I will give it credit for that it can deal a lot of damage in its own right however it is pale in comparison to the Executioner for multiple uh reasons the class just doesn't lend at so well to multi-attack damage uh the fun weapon is the B Thunder which you can get in the swamp BLS uh the weapon itself deals okay points of damage so kind of the same 30 to 50% damage ratio but if you hit the mosquito the damage is increased by 1,000% so for whatever reason if you feel like you want to use second weapon and swap it during mid combat uh so that you always do have that second weapon available by all means knock yourself out uh the few times that you are going to fight mosquitoes this is going to be the best character in the game and for that Niche it gets a kind of seat here Ultra good in one regard not so good in in the other situations moving on to axes and this game does have a couple of them two one-handed axes and two two-handed axes to be precise depending on um the type of character that you want to play typically X wielding characters are either Berserkers or executioners Berserkers for single Target DPS executioners arguably the best multitarget DPS in the game with challenging shout that pulls everything together and then you just rotate and spin around until everything is dead now let's talk about the two different builds if you want uh to build a Burker you're looking for the maximum damage that you can deal and you do have two options available one is devotion and one is nap's ax both have very different ideas in mind so devotion itself deals around uh 80 to 100% damage but Stacks rage so that is the classical full Target single Target damage Niche great for any F boss fight that you're having great for arena fights that you're having great for any fight that has uh re enforcements the end fights and drumu absolutely massive weapon because you build up rage and I have had situations where characters have up to 20 points of rage and boy oh boy it's just going to uh be nutty at that point so it's a good weapon in this regard my criticism to it is in real game terms that doesn't happen all too often more often than not the fights are over after two rounds so you want to make sure that those two rounds count which is where neptis x uh comes in handy neptis X deals flat 80% damage so a little bit less than that but the enemy loses um two corrosion so that's 30% of their Maximum Armor and get poison stacks on top of it so if you just hit often enough uh that means um the EXE the B Berserker can really be a tank killer so if you do have any form of multi poison build that you're using for instance your uh assassin respectively poison uh poisoner so your Ranger is running a poison based build where you can uh double poison if you're on top of that putting poison oil on top of the weapon this can actually be quite strong because all of a sudden with multi attacks you're ending up uh dishing out a lot of damage and uh the specifically High hit point targets polar bears bears in general the wild Hunt and so on and so forth are you losing a lot of uh hit points just by being poisoned there's a slight warning though uh any form of infected creature uh will heal from Poison so the weapon clearly isn't as good as uh against those creatures but overall it does have its place I would say I prefer devotion over npt XX um but only with a slight preference which brings us to the two-hand axes where andel's great axx which is a an ax that you will find in the new DLC Pirates of valaran or splitter which is literally the second weapon that you are finding um in the vuse area uh both of them are good weapons in their own regards and when you look at the two-handed build what you want to do primarily is you want challenging shout to apply fragility to everybody and then you want to use cutting Maelstrom in the first round hitting as many as possible and since any good build bu would have recklessness where the first attack also deals an additional 150 points of damage that means the first um cutting mestrom actually deals 250% damage so instead of 66 points of damage we're looking more into the 50 points of Base damage that doesn't include crit mind you so what that means is that we want to have a high hit point or high damage dealing weapon and if you compare both of them there are pros and cons I would actually say they both come in equally good so for the vast majority of the time I was using Splitter Splitter basically has 100% uh damage uh ratio uh so that is very good in itself 166 points of damage in this case well it's not 100% it's 80 90% flat damage ratio but it does have an additional on hit trigger which is called Bloodshed so uh Bloodshed will will deal the same amount of damage in the enemy's turn so there is kind of a stacked delayed extra damage mind you that happens directly to hit points so if you're running a build uh where you for instance uh put the oil on that directly deals hit point damage you can completely ignore guard to a degree because you're directly going for hit point damage with both of it now there is a bit of a problem with it that I found out whilst playing the game uh whilst the extra bleeding damage is not the enemy still gets a turn so that always irked me a little bit and that's where enel's great X tries to fill a little bit uh more of that spot towards the end game when you have a higher crit rating mind you currently we have zero suspicion I'm typically running around with five suspicion which brings the crit chance to 100% for every single hit that you're doing you're getting an extra uh fervor which increases the damage by 10% so although the first iteration of damage with fervor will only be 130 instead of 160 the Second Spin already will include a nice 10% bonus and from the third spin onwards we are at exactly the60 points of damage so all you need to do is in the first round hit three enemies with your spin if you kill them and there are extra spins all power to you because you will get more critical strikes and that will generate more F fervor I have seen as much as five six stacks of fervor in the first round absolutely phenomenal weapon so the way that I would categorize this a splitter over the period of leveling a little bit better because more upfront damage and then later you transition into end great X because there you really do have the advantage of fully leveraging 100% crit rate which nicely brings us to the spear class in this case I'm running a heler there are two general builds for the spear class or for the spear wielder one is the harpan here where you're trying to just maximize the on hit um effects that are happening through multiple enemies and the second one is the hel deer which is an executioner with higher maximum damage but lower average damage because you don't have a positioning skill so with that in mind Choose Your Weapon carefully we do have three weapons actually we only do have two weapons in the current state of the game uh the one weapon would be harun's partisan which is um the arena reward from beating the team harun um and uh no no it's a tomb um reward what am I saying um together with harun's bow it is a combination and basically what it does is it deals um a solid 80 to 90% damage and puts the the mark of narcis on um uh puts the mark of harun on uh the mark of harun means the moment that someone hits it with a bow they generate two veiler um if uh the mark of narsis is uh running there's an extra attack of opportunity happening so that's kind of uh the given uh give and take combo if you ever had like World bosses with ultra high hit points that would be a nice combo the reality is it doesn't happen too often unless you're a harpier and just um trying to um hit one target then hit the other three four targets with your Harpoon apply a lot of damage and then hope your um your Archer just Snipes the target so the combo here in uh that two weapon set isn't working as well however that doesn't mean that the weapon itself isn't really really good 80 to 90% strength damage is absolutely solid and even though the Mark only happens every so often it's still a good weapon however I think Liberator is a little bit better Liberator comes in at a solid uh at the a solid 90% Mark uh full stop but it does have a couple of extra options uh it resets uh the attack skill when you are already engaged so what is going to happen there is if you find yourself in an engagement you can hit with the Liberator it liberates you and on top of it it resets the skill if you nicely put that together with sweet spot where you destabilize the enemy and repost uh where you get counterattacks as well as put oils on it like hardening oil where you are in position uh after the first round you can put up your guard very much into a nice little tanking location so what happens is enemy will uh engage you you immediately Strike Back you take very little damage on top of it then next round comes along and Liberator can be used in order to push the enemy away you get an extra attack on top of it because uh the skill of Liberator really resets itself you can partially abuse it with uh going in with another taunt and then uh continuing to use the combination um I'm not sure if they are going to patch it so don't quote me on that Liberator definitely a little bit better weapon than harun's partisan honorable mention for bararan spear which is a legendary weapon that you get in the Bam's quest line unfortunately currently it doesn't have the tech upgradeable therefore not really that good however um if it was upgradeable it applies destabilization to everything in uh one round um I would need to do testing I've not done that because the weapon at the moment is not competitive but I would need to do testing if that works together with harpen ear or if that's just a normal stunning assault if it's just a normal stunning assault then it's a pure replica of of The Sweet Spot and therefore completely obsolete uh if it works with harer you could do something with that hitting multiple tanks but in the current um quote unquote meta this weapon just deal does nothing so I would suggest use Liberator if you have a second Spearman use harun's partisan that's it moving on to the pugilist who does have currently two Legendary Weapons one is Ripper and one is called seur Qatar Ripper is is the arena reward cocar is a unique reward from a quest so both of them definitely have their individual place and interesting Dynamics uh to say the least for starters let's start with the pros and cons so Ripper itself comes in with a very very nice 40% uh damage ratio which for fist weapons is great because keep in mind you're always attacking two to three times so it's really really good to have such a high base damage and it does have an interesting mechanic in itself which is called delium and I would say that's the strongest mechanic if the games go long if the fights go long that I've so far seen essentially if you continue attacking in defensive stance you build up delium that's a permanent buff that will last until the end of the fight and if you then switch to attack stance at some point you will get a number of extra attacks for every application of delium allowing you to hit 10 12 12 times if the fight is long enough so that in itself is a great mechanic in reality it plays out a little bit uh more shallow than that I've had many fights where we started with um defensive stuns a lot of um attacks with um in the first round and then just getting like these two extra attacks in the second round it's nice it's not um completely over powerered but the weapon itself is good where it starts becoming very very strong is from level 12 onwards when you do have the thrashing because thrashing kind of seem to be balanced around um lower damage weapons and Ripper really is a very high DPS weapon and from what I've tested I even have a YouTube shorts on that one you can deal up to 5,000 damage completely unbuffed just with uh threshing so you delete one enemy period he just gone um on top of it uh if you uh do it in defensive stance you can even heal yourself quite substantially with every attack so uh the weapon Ripper definitely s tier at the moment cocar I would say kind of solid B tier uh the um inbu features here is if you do have a lot of debuffs on the target you attack one more time per debuff so that kind of then asks what's the kind what's the setup that you are playing I could see a setup where let's say the U Ranger is responsible for just putting up a lot of debuffs kind kind of a poison build with a alchemistic offand um throwing in uh poison then throwing in burning um effect to everyone um and putting an AOE bleed on uh on top of it so that there are already three debuffs if you add uh legendary um items to that like the new trinket that you're getting in the DLC where you basically uh do have a free debuff on top of everything here it is C serpent scale uh which is called irritation then I can see that that weapon becomes good because all of a sudden you do have four debuffs on a pretty sizable amount of enemies um and if you stack for whatever reason even more debuff slow and and so on and so forth or have a couple of weapon effects trigger then you would uh you would start with eight attacks um from the get-go so then the brutal bra bravato still becomes very very good um if you stack additional um debuffs on top of it put um poison um and bleeding for instance on your weapon and just continue to hit hit hit hit hit and stack more debuffs uh that wouldn't be uh too bad so I can uh see a world where that weapon is good but it requires very specific builds moving on to the daggers pointy pointy things we do have three daggers and two offense to review for the ranger for starters I would assume that most of the car uh people that play either use the Assassin spec or the poisonous spec the other two are sort of me you can use them in specific context but the poisoner is basically multi application of poison and other debuffs whilst the Assassin is so Target DPS with a strong affiliation towards bleeding and depending on what you want to play I would say the weapon is specifically ties out to that so um the uh weapon that I would favor most highly is kup AXS uh which is a great digger that you're getting in dornbach very late in the game it comes in with 80 to 100% uh damage and it applies one poison as well as a Slowdown and low reflexes so massive massive uh debuff the point being is so late in the game typically The assessin Kills an enemy instead of debuffing them so it's funny that this weapon has so much debuff potential on top of such a high base DPS if you uh put then abilities like sharpening oil and putrid on the weapon then it just deals even more damage so very very strong Contender for one of the strongest weapons in the game uh BS Chris uh and a nice weapon as well comes in with Just Around 50 to 60% of damage um in the damage increased by 100% if no none of the target targets allies are within 4 meters so that's a perfect weapon if you want to specialize in attacking the backline and if you do have a lot of abilities that yourself or others to position enemies um pushing uh push back shots um switch arounds uh just generally positioning abilities work wonders with B is Chris my logic always was yes the up uh upside of an isolated enemy can be higher because all of a sudden you have 60% of damage times two but the reality is specifically with denser Maps you will see a lot of enemies that are clustered up so more often than not you will find yourself more at 60% of damage instead of a 120% of damage which is why I would put it into B tier uh situational but if you can make it work then that is fantastic Viper as a dagger would also range in B to C tier I've never really made it work so here's the thing Viper comes in with the 50% damage ratio instead of that solid 80 to 100% snacky ratio that we have seen from coper XX uh the Viper dger however has a couple of special uh features um most particular is all poison Stacks that are applied to the Target increase the damage by 25% per application which means if you run with four poison Stacks that's already 100% uh damage to the blade now the point that uh I don't like with the toxic blade is it consumes all of the poison sticks and that is where I think the weapon Falls a little bit short I do understand a bit of the design logic they don't didn't want to kind of double dip on that but you really need to have a lot of poison sticks and think about it that way in order to make that work uh to even break even on the damage to cropx you already need four um you already need four poison sticks in order to have a little bit more damage than kopex you need kind of eight poison Stacks so how are you going to get that realistically you would need to be a poisoner for four Stacks right and then you would need to have explosive gas to double the poison sticks on all units on top of that you would need to find ways of either running two assessence one that is just poisoning and the other one that is then cleaning up but if you do have eight poison sticks on the enemy that's already 40% of their hit points in damage next round so I'm not 100% sure if Viper really is such a good deal yes you could kill the enemy before it's their turn but the the consuming of all poison sticks and the kind of um prolifically low base damage doesn't really Inspire like ultra high crits in in a regular fashion typically you're going to see really solid damage but it requires you to use poisoning in some shape or form however that being said I actually think that the poisoner build still is incredibly good and if you are willing to put in the extra time to grind a couple of um alchemical uh re against then you can have off hands that throw very very well and apply additional um debuffs just killing massive uh tanks from the enemy in one go because if you do have two uh two poisoners in the team and you do have um you do have the ability to always double poison staks believe me that Stacks up very very fast and 20 poison staks is an instakill so um that has nothing to do with the weapon itself but more with the build coming to the off hands we do have faceless in progress so I talked about how poisoners tend to want to use alchemical weapons assassins on the other hand want to use high damage offhand weapons and that is really where faceless um and progress come in those weapons can't be upgraded I think it's a bit of an oversight they should allow that faithless is a non- depletable legendary weapon progress equally both of them fantastic in their own regards both of them offer an extra throw and if you combine it with instinctive thrower you get two throws out of it uh you might have seen it in my other videos they crit in the end game for 120 pops so that means just as a rider effect on every single skill mind you the skill doesn't need to deal damage you get 240 points of damage worth of damage um just from that off hand so that it is crazy even uh skills like uh the song of the Ancients that you can use via your trinket will trigger that skill even picking up a flower triggers that skill uh searching for an exit a door swinging um on a boarding ship all of that triggers the skill um it's wonderful faces is a s tier item in itself crit damage plus 10 critical uh hit chance plus uh uh plus 10 um and I would even put progress just because it is so good in s minus here the only reason why it's s minus is because faithless ex exists and has double the stats but there's no reason not to use both if you do have two assassins anyways moving on to the last class which would be the hunter or the Archer rather um there are three bows in the game uh two which are currently carried by my archers and one that we are having as a reserve let's look at them in in order there's the indomitable one which is a solid kind of 70% damage AOE uh sorry 50% uh damage AOE weapon then we do have nars's bow which is a 60 to 100% um damage bow which is the um counter item to the spear that we were discussing earlier and then finally we do have S uh which again is a relatively moderate uh weapon but it works together with ene uh with Animal Companions bow for a long period of time also had War bows as one of their strong contenders they are not an legendary weapon but they are a rare upgradeable weapon that you could uh get the Liberator is one of uh these bows and essentially the first hit on a noninjured um enemy always crits and will allow a second hit that is good however it very much diminishes later in the game where you can One-Shot enemies where all of the sudden that ability isn't that good so whilst the bow is incredibly strong during leveling the legendary bows actually become stronger towards the end game indomitable one would be in my perspective the strongest bow mainly because although it is only uh 60% damage uh it offers the ability to hit multiple targets and on crit uh it puts enemies on their uh toe back foot pushes them back and they lose 10% of their maximum health well with 100% crit uh chance that means they always will be pushed back you always will let them lose extra health and you always hit at least two enemies which is a fantastic uptime in damage if you um use extra items just like the trophy of Legends that you can get from the arena of Legends you can even shoot twice with the piercing arrows dealing an enormous amount of damage for hunters in particular The Recoil shot uh doesn't uh necessarily require your weapon to be high damage and since you're not using attacks of opportunity you don't need a high damage weapon per se so The Recoil shot deals just as much damage with that weapon as the piercing arrows wood so indominable one definitely an S tier weapon shortly followed after that is the Nar nars's bow where uh the weapon itself deals 60 to 100% damage and has that nice interaction uh with the spear where you can generate extra veiler by killing enemies or hitting enemies that do have the mark of her run on them the weapon itself is super um solid and the reason why why I would put it into a TI is because it deals a lot of damage you can uh very much upgrade the weapon it's always going to be a very competent um weapon to uh to fight with and on top of it it has that um nice Mark of heroon Mark of NSS um interaction which I just see as a bonus at this point which then brings us to uh sloth which kind of is in C tier mainly because I'm not the biggest fan of Animal Companions Animal Companions uh overproportional increase the size of the enemy parties therefore dragging out uh fights and they on themselves are not particularly impressive so although um Animal Companions can be fun they unfortunately increase enemies uh sizes and therefore are not particularly good the weapon deals 40 to 60 70% of damage and all Allied enemies next to the Target execute an attack of opportunity well in theory that is great because you can put uh put in the Bears to the front line um in a way that you still can shoot through them or you put uh the Archer right behind the Bears you shoot a Target bears attack and um with the attacks of opportunity the target is just being splattered so far the theory the pra uh the practical application um didn't show that result really very seldomly did that combination work and therefore in my perspective the this is at best a niche application if I was to redesign the bow I would give it a 80 to 100% damage just make it as strong as other bows and the Beast steel shot in itself is at best kind of a niche gimmick or alternatively if no Beast is around apply vulnerability something along those lines to really make it a decent legendary but that already goes into how do I fix weapon territory which is not what that video is about I I hope you liked the overview about all of the Legendary Weapons had a bit of an understanding of why to use which legendary and um you might want to let me know if I was wrong in one of the evaluations what are your thoughts any weapon that you particularly like that I've overseen any weapon that surprised you any thoughts around the builds of how you would approach it let me know in the comments down below and see you in the next guide take care bye-bye | Syken Plays | UCFDN6mKHHiOtGPxyaz9Mk0A | 2023-12-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,161 | 31,981 |
En8ryQHoKrw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=En8ryQHoKrw | LET'S TALK AMAZON SEAMLESS SCRUNCH LEGGINGS UNDER $30 | YEOREO AMAZON ACTIVEWEAR FASHION #amazon | what's up guys welcome back to the channel we are here with yet another affordable Amazon scrunch legging haul we're taking a look at three unique sets we have shorts and leggings all scrunch bombs they are from the brand yurio every piece in today's video is 30 or under but we're also here to test them out see how they hold up at the gym and whether or not they are actually worth the money all of my true size small measurements will be right over here for you as well as in the description box you can also find each item in today's video linked down below as well thank you so much to yorio for sponsoring today's video and sending these pieces out for my review I noticed that they do a lot of trendy activewear Styles and Designs we've all seen they actually make it known I believe on their Instagram I saw that they specialize in keeping up with the trends so if something super popular you can probably eventually see it on there but for a much more affordable price now I'm sure we've all seen this style on social media I don't know what it is about this tie dye but I can't not see it this is is their high rise booty scrunch seamless professional tie dye leggings in blue they're 29.99 they have a ton of colors we are looking at a high-rise massive scrunch bum there's a ton of booty grabbing going on here you have the under glute Contour mesh so it's breathable very boxy waistband ribbed this is a seamless legging but you do have a pretty Heavy D seam at the lower waistband the scrunch is absolutely massive on here it goes from the bottom of the band to the gusset it has that exaggerative butt scrunch you know almost like a cat hole but I do feel like the tie-dye really helps distract that down the side you have really heavy ribbed Contour paneling overall the feel it's pretty textured it's very thick very dense somewhat stretchy in this direction but not this direction so much so it's not a total four-way stretch when wearing this to the gym my first gut reaction was okay when I'm squatting I feel it the lack of stretch especially when in a low squat is where it can feel this scrunch I did notice when squatting because of the stiff scrunch I did feel like it was pulling on the lower band so with that being said I started to feel like it was dipping a little bit I also didn't feel any real compression in the waistband I think that has to do with why I felt a little bit of slipping the overall leg compression is double the compression of the band so even though there's really no compression in the band it's all in the legging I do think this material is very thick not totally breathable I do think given its density and the quality of the material this would be a really good gym legging great for lifting power lifting it's got that rugged quality to it this is not the type of legging you have to worry about seeing through there was no sheerness none on the back none around the quads but I would really love to see this legging with a little bit more stretch in it the length was pretty good though and I can't get over this design fine I do really love that tie-dye look especially in this blue this was super sweat proof too so if you're a heavy sweater I think you'll be just fine in this it didn't show sweat and it Wicked it very well my true size small I would stick with it but if you're in between sizes then I would suggest sizing up they give fewer to size down it'd get a little hairy right around the quad area I do think it gets a little too stiff and then you're just really going to struggle with the stretch so overall thoughts on this legging I think if you're somebody where glute aesthetic is very important you don't mind having a lower compression waistband maybe you prefer that and you need a little more support in the leg area then yeah I think this gym legging would be great for you I paired these leggings with the v-neck strappy crisscross Sports Bella bra this rolls in at 24.99 I did notice that for what I do at the gym doing a lot of bending is when I started to notice the crazy side boob in this bra a lot now it never ever slipped on out there was no nip slip syndrome here but I did feel like okay wow I gotta just rearrange for a second hold up this particular cut is sexy there's no denying that but I don't think it's totally functional for the gym I I think this is more of a show bra so especially if you're bigger chested than me I mean I there's really no support in this sports bra you do have removable bra pads and a nice mesh lining so it is very lightweight you have a very thick band down here so there's like a minimal support but where it lacks is right around here so no support here decent support underneath so if you lift your arms up you're not going to fall out under the bra but if you move any other way it might shift out this way especially if you have a ton of side boob like me I don't know where where I get that from but all my boob is right here there's no adjustments but my favorite part is the back I've always been a fan of really dainty crisscross ballerina style straps I think it gives such an elegant classy feminine look it just it's so yoga even the front here it's double strapped but stitched together in little segments it just adds a really pretty look I do believe this is very true to size ultimately if I was in between I would probably end up going down rather than up next up we have the high-rise pattern seamless camo leggings in the color blue these are 29.99 as you can see it's very reminiscent of a gym shark legging they had years ago their camo the traditional camo legging like Circa 2019 right here even down to the scrunch now obviously gymshark doesn't have anything quite like this so if you missed out on their old camo style especially if you like this color in the camo design check them out they also have other colors as well but they fit entirely different straight up if you're thinking this is a complete and utter replica you're wrong so we have the squared off waistband definitely more compressive of a legging than the tie-dye you just saw like way more compressive if you're in between you gotta size up with this one the scrunch bomb just like we're used to it doesn't do a whole lot but it is a little something this is definitely more of a subtle route with the scrunch bomb than the previous tie dye these leggings were one 100 squat proof on me I haven't seen anything in yorio that's sheer it doesn't have that crazy softness to it so if you're trying to relate it to gymshark and you're like wondering like well how similar is it it doesn't have that polyamide that really soft buoyancy to it this has more of a rugged a little bit more stiffer of material very similar to the tie-dye in terms of stiffness there is no logo no branding whatsoever not at the ankle not on the band nothing not even on the inside I paired those camo leggings with the pro classical Bando Sports Katie bra in white you know I love a nice bandeau when I first pulled it out of the package it looked big I was like oh crap there might be extra material might look saggy on me but when I put it on I was like oh thank goodness there's enough room nothing was spilling over nothing was uncomfortable actually there's a decent amount of coverage especially for being a bandeau Style again so Bando you have this straight neckline removable bra pads I felt the support right away I guess it's because I was wearing the other one way too long then when I put this one on I moved around in this and there was no shifting no side boob no anything my chest felt very secure in this even though the other bra had much more of an aesthetic backing it wasn't adjustable this one is and the cups are actually sewn separately so you never have to worry about them overlapping so if I'm on the hunt for a cute gym friendly sports bra this is the one I would go for last but not least we have the seamless scrunch workout shorts high-waisted booty lifting gym yoga shorts in Black these are only 22.99 now I wanted to go with black because I'm gonna I'm gonna be super honest with you in case they didn't quite work for me my body type I wanted the option to wear them underneath dresses and things like that so that's why I went with the staple black so it'll go with anything let's start with the waistband we actually have a crossover V waistband this is a very thick ribbed band super thick no front seam like the rest of them none of these have front seams thank goodness look how short these are though I don't have to pretend here it's not that I don't like them I do like short shorts but not on me I feel like my comfortable length around six to eight inches this looks like it's about three inches maybe four probably around three inches on the back side you have the same exact scrunch as the first tie-dye legging you already know what that means it is a stiff scrunch you do feel it when you squat but it doesn't really pull as much because you don't have all the rest of the material I actually think this is a very comfortable short overall but just like the rest of the leggings these are super squat proof if I could just get this in a little bit of a lengthier short maybe more biker Style then I'd be all over it you don't have any under glute Contour there's an Ever So slight Contour on the sides of the glutes but not underneath the thigh cinch is there it's not terrible really isn't terrible I've had way worse I actually really love the way my glutes looked in these they were spot the frig on now I did notice when squatting in these there was a bit of a roll-up I'm not surprised because they're so short that they would eventually just like make their way up I do know that it's a style for a lot of you in fact a lot of you actually go out of your way to make them roll up and you rock it and you pull them off I think these are overall true to size but if your image between just like the rest of them size up so I think if you're looking for a good pair of booty pop and short shorts these could definitely be it there's no doubt they're flattering and you don't see any cat hole scrunch because of the dark color to pair with those shorts I grabbed the same exact sports bra but in Black the first one you saw I do want to make note that the material we have in the v-cut sports bras and the material we have in the bandeau is very different this material has more of a brushed fabric not super good at wicking sweat the bandeau is which is why I really suggest it for the gym this fabric is very wicking got that slippery to the touch feel so I think if you sweat a lot this is the bra you want to go with regardless alright guys that concludes today's video what are our thoughts have you tried this brand thank you guys so much for being here I love you and I will catch you in my next video he's a videotaping me I'm videotaping him hey oh yeah foreign [Music] | Ashley Gaita | UCUyIrmuaBdJVpGzdQfvlXHQ | 2023-03-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,122 | 10,924 |
F7ADs738f24 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7ADs738f24 | Barnes Takeout: Landscape -- Factories by William Glackens | hi everybody and welcome to today's barnes takeout my name is amy gillette today we're going to be talking about this painting created by william glatkins about the year 1914 it's called landscape factories so what we're seeing is um an american town or city we've got a river starting in the left-hand corner going out to the right of the canvas we have pretty much right in the center this little brown colored bluff with this tree growing out of it with its um branches kind of covered lightly in these fluffy like reddish purple leaves over here we've got um apparently a steam a steam-powered factory building shaped like a basilica that means it's got a higher uh central vessel lit by these windows and then the sides are a little bit lower maybe some warehouses along the river a couple of um chimney smoke stacks over here on this hill it looks actually very cozy to me we've got a number of what seemed to be white timber framed houses um kind of fading into the distance with this purple hill over here and then up on this hill we've got more brick buildings with um with their chimneys and a water tower in this sky that's blue at the top with what three puffy white clouds and then these um very these sweeping kind of lilac colored stroke suggesting that maybe it's um it's moving toward twilight and let's look quickly at where it is it's um here in room uh above the door in room number 22. um we can see it up here between a couple of keyhole discussions it's a room that's very interesting um it has this wonderful iron um steeplecock from france a lot of sculpture from west africa kind of centered around this um carving of a wife and her husband um by the dogon people in what's um the the modern nation of mali paintings by paul clay by jordan akirako kirico by the italian painter afro and his brother mirko and then further um further sculptures from new mexico paintings by r matisse more sculpture from west africa and so it's a room that has a lot in it and toward the end of this talk we'll look at some ways where we might be able to interpret these works together but moving on to the artist william glatkins let's look over here um here he is on the right hand side of our screen sitting on a big log with his very good friend albert barnes um he's over here with his um cap looking ahead very intently these two were friends when they were at central high school in philadelphia together in the late 1800s and they'd lost touch a bit as barnes went into pharmaceuticals glackins pursued painting here in philadelphia at the pennsylvania academy of fine arts and later from 1896 in new york city where he was um one of the group of the american avant-garde artists called the eight but the two friends reconnected um around 1910 after both had established themselves in their respective careers and one of the things that changed the course of both of their lives really is when glatkins had painted this painting right here between 1907 1910 entitled the race track and um it's installed in room number 12 here at the barnes um next to glacking slightly or earlier self-portrait which was more typical in its palette this kind of um these brown tones realist tones of um of what american painting had been but um glackins painted this one the racetrack on the tales of having gone with his wife um over to paris and really delving in to the art of um ari matisse who was in his fourth period of um the great colorist renoir and applied those lessons and traditions now to american paintings and um when barnes saw this picture he was fascinated he didn't understand it because um what glackins is showing here and in paintings like our factory is not necessarily physical reality as light bounces off objects and hits our retinas but um colors of perception and barnes said that glackins um taught him to see as the artist sees like barnes even wrote in a letter around 1915 so again as glackins is painting the factory that the two of them had been looking at water and he barnes himself saw maybe basically bluish grayish green and um glackins he said saw the entire spectrum of the rainbow and so it was glackins that inspired barnes to start collecting modern art and what the effect was there let's go back now to look at um 22 was barnes ended up thinking that he wanted he wanted to create a school where he collected modern art and he had modern modern and old art to teach people to see how an artist sees and he thought they were two really important ingredients to that first was the way that an artist would be able to leverage the traditions of the past whether that was say the western medieval renaissance past the recent french past past traditions from other cultures such as africa or islamic arts or um arts from east asia but also for the artist to be able to put his own her or her own um experiences into whatever work of painting or architecture or sculpture or design work that they may be creating and so um you know i think if we look at this work of um of glackins we actually i i see that it's discoursing it shows architecture and it's discoursing with um things that would have come from architecture like these hinges like the steeplecock um it even relates to an extent with churches i think in as much as um here we mentioned that the factory over here the factory building is shaped like a basilica and um the steeplecock probably would have rested atop a similarly perched building maybe we can have kind of a discourse between um like hand design and industrial craft as we may be seeing produced in factories so thinking about the filters that glackins himself would be bringing to his work i think it's in the spectrum of colors we see bringing to the sky with its blues its whites its pinks its lilacs um even if we look a little bit closer into the brushwork of um of this hills almost rainbow of color i think the the tilt where everything looks a little bit windswept is coming from his personal experience of the nature of the site but there are a couple other things too that i'm a little bit curious about in this painting where we looked at the beginning of the talk at these trees how their wispy kind of burnt red leaves look like it might be maybe late fall or the beginning of spring but then i'm um i'm looking at these behind the factories they seem to be trees that are fully leafed out and likewise if you look at these buildings over here they do seem to be what would look like steam or water powered factories but perched on top of a hilltop which i don't believe happens and so maybe a decent amount of the scene is coming from glackin's perception and i think in spite of that because of that it's something that dr barnes would applaud and so if you're interested in this painting um and other paintings within the american landscape tradition um i'd encourage you to check out a painting that's online at the barns dedicated to the subject that'll happen in july and regardless thank you so much for watching today and um it's always a pleasure that's it for today's primes takeout i'm tom collins new bauer family executive director of the barnes foundation i hope you enjoyed barnes takeout subscribe and make sure your post notifications are on to get daily servings of art thanks for watching and for your support of the barnes foundation | Barnes Foundation | UC9tFqUGUVVcXkvj77vxANmQ | 2021-06-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,359 | 7,335 |
gxZoKpOH75Y | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxZoKpOH75Y | Valieva's entourage under investigation by anti-doping agency | The Rutendo | the entourage of teenage russian olympic figure skater camilla valeeva could be on thin ice they are set to be investigated by the world anti-doping agency as the 15 year old awaits a verdict on her future at the beijing games volleyever tested positive for a banned heart drug at her national championships last december but it took more than six weeks for the result to be made public a court of arbitration for sports hearing is taking place on sunday after the ioc the international skating union and wada appealed against the lifting of the 15 year old's provisional suspension by the russian anti-doping agency her future at the beijing games and a gold for the russian olympic committee in the team event that she dominated last monday now hangs in the balance ioc spokesman mark adams says the results will be announced quickly warning i can't say too much about this but obviously yes we want this to be expedited as quickly as possible we made that very clear and this is why it is going to the ad hoc court of arbitration this evening and why we'll have a result tomorrow many have questioned the role of adults around the teenage skater and the continuing scourge of russian doping in international sports valeeva's coach ate tutbariza said she was certain the teen was clean and innocent in an interview the russian state tv on saturday valevo will be notified of cas's ruling on monday one day before she is due to take to the ice for the women's single event you | The Rutendo News | UCvqh1sD3tK_iylaNIZ4tuyA | 2022-02-14 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 264 | 1,477 |
4uRLCYSEP34 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uRLCYSEP34 | [VPL S7 W2] ZEBSTRIKA HITS A NEW LOW Scandinavian Stoutlands VS Three Murkows | hmm what's up guys its edibles welcome back to the valley Pokemon League week 2 versus Hana and heard free buck roads yeah going about it just really gonna do a small team preview I'm still in the workings of actually making better team previews as of this is absolutely not what I'm going for though that is to have the sides here with the teams to himself and then the middle be the screen after poke when I'm bringing in assets it is so as it's right now it's not ideal but who's still gonna go over it and the six in the middle are the course of Pokemon bringing clearly some other photons seeing here hannah has tocqueville Oh hawlucha which is one of those really really annoying combo to deal with there Nidoqueen Salomon sister in sinner all four gong to Jellison through jhana subscriber and megan de yong he as overall this is a team that I would say is while having some fast assets it still is a Premier Li slow team her best defensive proton are very slow hence walk breaking it's ideal here so first and foremost but first we're going to play for this matchup was Mamoswine we're gonna bring a choice banded jolie Mamoswine able tell speeds him it Nidoqueen and choice man of course ensures that most of the things here too is kill with not wanna killed and the only things out speeding me are Pokemon that naturally knocks me out dinner plates abstract ing hawlucha in theory and of course elements however but all of the content that come in versus memos final course I shot is a big thing here as he cannot get hawlucha will get out of Salomon's effortlessly and did you a big chunk on land she and the choice but it's also make sure the program to is not as effective as it possibly can be earthquake will do around was not fifty percent here and still we want those damage outputs that is very hot was that and of course my why just negates out as functionally at all and second one on bringing here is Tech kukuku tellmewhy is a program that does well versus this team but it's not necessarily having ideal set the combination early signs of brain was timid variant able to help speed natural hawlucha and did before of course potentially grass seed or FEC kicks in and to utilize the funderbolt in the par eyes call mine and roost and the merit toku has here is that it can set up with a lot of things and it's naturally doesn't it's right now besides middle queen the result that many perkiness force it out offensively porygon jealous and subscriber and to an extent that you'd say porygon our pokémons i can set up and roost against with coal mines as usual especially offensive so tepco coop works here and our program eat watch out for cost Nidoqueen can carry likes of dr. berry but also roll an assault facility makes sense hence is not ideal and of course in cetera camping a sulfus and that's not net worth meter different pokeman is a source or who's gonna say this or aura but no sword and fight him Seaver in this time around with nastyplot nineties and slash pump and i straightforward is supposed to be the purpose are slower than it and are really that many but the thing is here her defensive pokemon don't deal well with i saw her you know we're gonna discuss ourselves as cocoa and because i fine as my favor i'm using i was the dictator choice a choice cough set but within sin or and whatnot I really just want to be to think sake and nurse check it and fight UFC just takes me a long way here so it's gonna be very usable for Pokemon is to experts and it's an adamant version after one grinds were able to outspeed coming an EMG and I do believe we creep in and Tim in a new queen no reason to go really faster than that adamant should be just about enough and Howard Josh over here because her best way of attacking me would be with ice P from Oregon - jealous and and of course I've different new queen and there are potentially cellphone fingers here I could in theory sweep this team once porygon to is our way dragons is just that good the only thing that can take this program now would be to have a bolo but since our combination here is dragon for posting jab and earthquake it will has nothing to showcase here hence it's gonna do really well I'm sure 5th Pokemon steelix it makes sense here stuff rocks earthquake and heavy snow together with too toxic was dictate if I wanted to have the roar fire but na na it's right that we need toxic report on to a program to alone but overall this book makes things that are very good versus me it checks hawlucha to the extent it checks on as an extent it's become a standstill averted porygon and it walls obstructive which is a very stronger response to cyber Coco's overall this makes sense because it's annoying to take out and Tentacruel is your average tentacles it's let's see its timid it without speed up cement nidoqueen which is very much is it really bulky timid technical with scald 8 and acid spray rapid spin and what's that sucks to spice and tough spike move very good here anyway and definitely do some good chicken how about her pokemons but also so you don't wanna come in and spoken unless million G's have been involved I don't necessarily have to worry about setting up Texas boxer I'm fine here her ideal team I would say would be the lie so taboo Lulu Tony the Queen sis or poor gong to and potentially I should say jealous and which would does really well here but really with all that said let's go to the team preview so from the team preview here just gonna say it there are a lot of pokemons here I didn't expect and you know I feel of course dumb for it through a lot of things here I really want to see that did it make it and yeah I hope so Poconos that doesn't make sense this matchup to do it for example so art is not necessarily the viable Mamoswine wall effective it's not as good as I want to be here and yeah just a row this is not a team effort for well little Queen while here in hawlucha and subscriber and jealous that's extent it still as one of those fixed like hawlucha come in here without bolo it means they're gonna be alert you've seen variant which means how you really need to reserve myself how use Coco I don't really get situation where and I get reverse sweep due to that everybody MC overall which was a Pokemon didn't expect coming here is also tremendous pristine fury towards me are really don't turn off their switch into a self well I have a special defensive steelix II will not do that well versus that earth power will still be very tough so need to keep stiring attack which means no rocks in the field which means have to cruel has the rapid spin a lot and we just overall this is not looking that the Hercule really um I need to get dragon eyes up with actors I think that's gonna be one of my wing counts already felt that from the get-go and besides that just basically be reserved with cocoa means that we're gonna have a passive game from my side where I place in I look for an opening with hackers so that said yeah we're not start off with Mamoswine mmm-hmm actually I would say makes a lot of sense this mashup since her bestie would be needed Queen or Diane she so what that's it let's go into the match so from the get-go here we will get a really strong lead as well start off with the ex-wife of course denounced wine my opponents here gonna lead off with new queen which well we do our speedy tones it's it's carved and scarf won't kill me so Hannah definitely felt that this this is a fret for her she needs to get out she's gonna bring the scissor and well workshop expanded so clearly we are an area where we can to it kill this work month it's not a fully defensive sister which means it's dead by default now here is what I do a bit of a Miss play knowing that hawlucha was clearly the switch in here I should not have said and try to go over to kill her sister I really shouldn't while it's still in the early game and a duty work over the kill I don't have a fair switch into was a lucha and a poorly could get a potential freeze all stance so needs watch out to bring in clip so luckily in panel goes for higher kick she misses that which is unfortunate and not though not really super decipher at least but it is unfortunate so fishing comes in which asus is troika I'll take this chance to go over the toxic spikes since I'm a man already good amount of health I felt really really frisky here trying of that and I don't know what subtract I wanna do a really face one I know it can be physical with barrels that's about it as I'll switch in steelix Grimlock should be able to lock this pokemon down and so we do it could carry Oh reached I know that but that's about it were special offensives we shouldn't need to worry as I go actually directly for self rocks so that means we get our hazards on the field with the Pokemon that potentially has magic pounds and I've got really cocky doing the way I did here though it is a very passive way of saying it at this point at least I still feel really good about ourselves are actually caught stacking or engage with multiple hazards on the field versus a team that could definitely wall that out now I'll send in calypso I just wanted to really see what my opponents here decided to do as she goes for will oh that's fine I don't do to mine well special defense of being naturally with a bulky fear yell isn't that an aspect as while I talk to the means of attacking some sort of acid for I can still kind of be in this area while the poison is shipping her down the my opponents were so go directly from mercury in the Nidoqueen and well unfortunately she just could have talked to spice our way which no it is to be expected with a stationary poison side but of course acid sprays not doing anything shouldn't do for the base forward come on it's it's not a thing um however what this means is that well she'll get her rocks and field now and that's not gonna be great and very long ones standing at her power as a switch in the ex-wife that's what I avoid I said already I naturally do a Swedish Pokemon but she'll switch out go to vision the SIP striker and yeah you guys can see something really good subscribe to learn slow kick and it turns out life of variants of subscribe I can one-hit ko a man wine that's I never seen anything like it and I got a quart of back foot here and know my natural response to falling behind is we should start sweeping something so we're sending in x-rays here as she'll go for a pulse which is fine she actually sensing jealous since here and I was debating whether or not I work over second dragon dance or not but I should be in range in theory it is will about Dragon Claw should be definitely an area where it should ko from here at least so I think and I think we just be dumb girlfriend Ryan adds in case he goes a will whisper so in essence of trying to avoiding me getting burden I'm going to attack this problem directly buzzer guys see HP isn't that isn't that impressive diana adamant variant delivered max defense jealous and it has a chance to survive so yeah let that sink in as she kind of course recover with will-o-wisp and yeah all of a sudden my opening got shut down and well Haxorus is still a threat it still is nice pickle phrases I wanted to and here is where it's still dictating where and all this was the right play play I go right here for another dragon flaw and I thought mold breaking negated curse spotted stuff like that it doesn't of course it doesn't why would it and damn as now I can't use for an authorial and out like I said I was debating whether or not she got on my grind ass reason be that are a lot of Pokemon here that can take a few hits and Jim scissor is one of them unfortunately she just think over a bullet punch here I never got responsible why she didn't do that but we do get sister away which is really great most certainly and her natural response now as I should bring it near the Queen which you do to me being burn I can't care for this range the only married to have a insert is that I haven't Yasha where we should save me but that's fun it like I'm waiting for dragons or get active at this point I really really don't wanna long cylinder quit because of the hawlucha yes we've barely post guess that ko which having that said hey I got another I thought this could have been different because yasha wall resisted or reduced here still does a lot of damage much rotating scholars shadow ball actually thinking about it and uh granted you know sheer force it's tough to take on as I keep going earthquake I knew eventually something like this was gonna happen it is unfortunate but it's super expected to happen and you know the poison keeps breaking me down as eventually I'm not talking to or not Curtis party than the more like it was reporting you up here thinking about it you're probably gonna grant law but it with a fair safe play here since her team is incredibly will allow but all of a sudden I won't you say that this tax raise while doing the mints amount of damage to us this team did not do what I wanted to do I wanted that boy to sweep and that did not happen it was still in account bad part where Hector's is out which was a main mean of attacking and while she's her infopreneur hawlucha subtract ending she those free are actually quite effective here so I'm gonna bring in Mysore Ark of course disguised as cocoa cut out Kara we're seeing Coco comment without to lecture star like it's a dead giveaway that of course this is a Sarah aura it's it feels so dumb as my opponent occurs record from false which will do with really good track of damage and I'm gonna brightly focus blast like in my means basically I knock out anything that comes in the only thing that can take it will be the end she because it has admin of all but even at that and it will still do a respectable chunk of damage I'll say this though Sora Ark wasn't was said a pokemen import of this game due to team matchup it would have been doing a lot more or healthier if I had the means here but I don't it simply is wasted but I'm really glad I at least get stopping out Kanna felt that you know I should have had Sucker Punch here because and the interest surviving such a small amount of HP that it would just made sense he probably knocked it out from here because of his sad combination but we don't get to find it now they know it's fine I put myself in this situation where I basically have to hope that type of cuckoo can come out on top here so then she goes for Dartmouth so absolutely knockouts her arc I don't think anybody surprised by that not not not even me ask them yeah I'm like a few place I hit or a player head here but yeah Coco is my only response now and quite frankly it's the only Pokemon that can serve this game or win this game I really appropriate on out have no means of actually our playing the air or and when I say stop hawlucha if it is what poison jab is gonna do a lot of damage to us me I know that as vision comes in my response here was going for a coal mine like my only idea here was that in theory I can call my roost and just getting like your search out of way so I don't activate Lucas unburn ability and part a fault of speed it but you know thinking about it you know it wasn't for sit down play huh fortunately though the vaults which do reduce time to call - to us a lot however and rock art comes in course is gonna pop that very but it is put out so science it's not like I expect it to a person job to kill me and stuff like that but it still is like till this point I'm I'm pretty darn nervous but she goes acrobatics so I don't find out which was her last act like I said poison jab is something that would have done a lot of damage is clearly an event hawlucha so yeah that was a scary thing to see and we do of course as you guys probably already notice win this game free Oh which was good consider how our Lasky wins versus Carl wasn't wasn't necessarily my strongest game here and I choked quite well so I'm really glad we got a win out of this inversion that I'd ever struggle with Hannah's a tough opponent and we wouldn't in every curse were not lucky and since here so yeah first and foremost of course want to say um well played to Hannah are people's a tough game for her not I'm a type of bulu kinda made my team that more effective it says it was a really good overall response and it kind of nerve to earthquakes from Mamoswine a little something I was really worried about so to not be in that situation and have a mammoth really spammer quick was really good I did though knotek's expect that subscriber to do what it did that it was marvelous definitely was super impressed by that as it threw me off I were two actors at him and Hatcher of course failed I guess we saved sweeping it really needed a lot more damage output versus Jellison that's my fault the way wasn't pretty that absolutely wasn't pretty and the curse bar did not make that easier so - Hannah I really just wanna say thank you the game definitely enjoyed it hope you guys watched enjoy us too and I hope you enjoyed my new cannot lay out I'm still working on it - the song finesses that I might want to tweak and whatnot but this is this where it goes for now so ever that said is always thanks for watching and take care and I'll see you next week next battle till then take care [Music] | Chris The Skyrander | UCWI-HDgi7GEWxkE60MBlUgA | 2019-05-08 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 3,385 | 17,353 |
xwj7ASZfpZE | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwj7ASZfpZE | Situation in Arabia - Otto Scott | this evening otto scott and i are going to discuss the situation in arabia the invasion of kuwait by iraq and the presence of our troops in saudi arabia it is possible that by the time you get this tape there will be a major conflict or there will be a back down on the part of iraq or someone else perhaps us i have no way of knowing what the future holds in this respect and our uh intent tonight is not to deal with the details of what may be forthcoming although we may be touching on that but mainly the right and wrong of this do we have any business there was this even in the best interests of the united states does it promote anything with regard to world order or is it all together a reckless adventure on the part of both saddam hussein and george bush thus our perspective is going to be from a position of uh basic premises a basic perspective of faith of morals of the welfare and interest of our country with that general introduction otto would you like to comment generally and then we'll get into the specifics of this situation yes thank you rush this is an event in the business of sending so many troops over there so abruptly which is part of our time in previous eras there was a longer build up an appeal to congress and appealed to the people and in this instance action was taken by the executive branch very rapidly with barely any notice either to the american people or to kuwait and we are now in the midst of one of the most unstable and dangerous areas of the world the morality of the matter is not simply discussed it's not a simple situation although as usual i think the media and impatient types try to make it very simple i think it would be a very good thing to discuss the religious situation in the middle east which nobody seems to be talking about yes they're all talking in terms of power politics and i've been shocked by the bloodthirstiness of some of the comments that i've heard from some of my very old associates well before we get into uh an analysis of the moral implications one minor aspect of the moral implications which is still a very important one is the matter of hostages one of the things that we did was to rush into the situation with what was the kind of declaration of war against iraq now normally given the situation kuwait was already occupied there was no haste that was necessary what is normally done before a country declares war is to give its civilians who are in the enemy country or the occupied country an opportunity to leave we did not issue a warning to the americans in iraq and kuwait that they were to leave within 48 hours or 24 hours before we did anything in other words we handed iraq a large number of american hostages almost as if to say we want a provocative situation that will inflame the american people i believe that was morally very wrong or at the least you could say it was a hasty impetuous and unwise act well certainly it was impetuous and it's interesting to note that at about the same time we were sending uh naval vessels to ethiopia to pick up a very much smaller number of american citizens because of the civil war underway there yes well now we can agree i think that uh the invasion of kuwait was wrong however the situation in kuwait was not of a country that had any thing like democracy or republican form of government any more than saudi arabia has or iraq has or any of those countries [Music] moreover if we are full of moral indignation why did we do nothing about lithuania and other areas within the soviet empire where there were people striving to be free and we did nothing now at the same time all this has been happening i being on a number of mailing lists received the august 1990 cashmere report and i'll read just one item now that none of this appears in our newspapers the article is indians adopt rape as a weapon to suppress movement a ten-year-old girl was gang-raped by the indian occupation forces on august 15 at soy bao ten miles west of srinagar there were several other incidents of gang rape where the father brother and or the husband were forced to witness the orgy at gunpoint a soybot girl jumped to her death on august 13 in an attempt to escape the indian army rapists the increased incidence of gang rapes indicates that the indian colonial governor saxena has adopted it as a weapon of terror over twenty thousand people staged a protest rally and uh baramulla assuring our locality on august 18 against such gang rapes well another article in this same report four pages indians burn alive kashmiris shoot to kill others youth gives eyewitness of cashmere torture and so on and on now here is a situation where a people have been oppressed for years and nothing is set in our press this was happening at the same time as what happened in kuwait but did we hear anything about it not a word well i think there is very slight attention being paid [Applause] to the fact that india and pakistan both nuclear powers are on the verge of war as we speak tonight but of course it's like the murder of a million tibetans it's a far away event which doesn't impinge upon the american position in the direct sense the middle east is another story and the middle east has got the oil now apparently there has been some misinformation given by the american government both to the american people and to congress pardon me two days before hussein invaded kuwait he spoke to our american ambassador and of course our embargo we sent a woman over there which was a very smart thing to do in a country which does not believe in having women in public life or in political positions we seem to go out of our way to do this sort of thing to other cultures to insult them tacitly so to speak by walking headlong with hobble shoes over their sensitivities the ambassador to kuwait the american ambassador to kuwait assured sudam hussein that the united states is not interested in boundary disputes between arab nations and at about the same time a representative from the state department speaking to a committee of congressman at a hearing of a subcommittee assured congress that we have no defense treaty with kuwait and that therefore we are not obligated to come to the aid of kuwait no matter what and this was of course at a time when sudan hussain was already making threats about kuwait and when the kuwaitis and the iraqis were in conference they were having a negotiation about this dispute in the course of the negotiation the kuwaitis representatives walked out of the room and ended the talks and it was after that that hussein attacked now from the behavior from the reaction of our executive branch it would seem that we had in fact if not on paper a defense treaty with both kuwait and saudi arabia because we immediately came to the defense of both countries without going through any other avenue of discussion congress or anyone else and i cannot recall even bujo wilson didn't move as precipitately as president bush's move yes like not even president roosevelt president roosevelt did a great many things that cut corners so to speak but he was very careful in many political ways before he did anything he would call in the congressional leaders and have private talk with him he always prepared the public and congress for what he was going to do he had lots of allies in this instance everyone seems to be rushing to catch up with president bush yes well the interesting thing too is that iraq had every reason to feel they had been betrayed because next to the soviet union their greatest source of help has been the united states we were helping them financially against iran we were arming them right along and we did not object to their use of poison gas we soft peddled that as a result iraq had every reason to feel that we would be on their side well we told them that we would not intervene yes on a question of poison gas the first person to use poison gas in the middle east was master of egypt the egyptians used poison gas years ago against the rebellion in the sudan poison gas was also supplied to the cambodians by the soviet union and the wall street journal ran a whole series of articles about it do you remember yellow rain yes that was poison gas and we were told believe it or not that it was not that it was beef feces you really have to have an imagination to come up with something like that but there were photographs of the victims there was all kinds of cumulative intelligence evidence the wall street journal struggled on and off for many months to arouse the attention of the world to that particular set of atrocities to no avail um as for that matter massacres have been an ongoing part of the middle east ever since they succeeded in throwing off the turkish rule and it's interesting to reflect that when turkey ruled that whole area it ruled through the ruling families of all those countries with the exception of saudi arabia because the saudi family took over arabia after the turks had departed in the interregnum between world wars 1 and 2. but the sabah family in kuwait was a puppet ruler under the turks [Music] and so for that matter was the king of king hussein's family his father his uncle his grandfather and so forth ruled under the turks the people of the middle east have been under these individuals or under these dynasties i should call it for many centuries they're not popular yeah now kuwait has a parliament which the emir shut down because it began to talk about reform and he immediately dispensed with it and said we don't need any parliament at all so we have there a rather curious thing and i think we tend to use the word democracy too much too loosely too often there's nothing sacred by the way about a democracy a democracy our founding fathers warned us yes is the form of government most likely to lead to a dictatorship well in [Music] the fall 1990 newsletter mission to the persecuted by christian solidarity international we are told of the persecution and torture in egypt of christians egypt is a country long occupied by arabs the real egyptians or cops are christian and they are being brutally uh persecuted and tortured and even killed but nothing is said about that at the u.n or in congress in fact while all this is going on and in spite of the pleas of christians we have made egypt our number two source of aid and grants after israel that's right and israel of course is in the west bank and uh persecuting the uh palestinians there the same issue of mission to the persecuted has an article on brutal killings in turkey which are aimed as they point out and a deliberate attempt to purge christianity at the same time the postal regulations for the united states issued with regard to our servicemen over there uh require that uh well let me read e2 any matter containing religious materials contrary to islamic faith or non-authorized political materials are prohibited this means that a bible cannot be sent to a service man chapel services uh incidentally is not permitted a great deal more is banned and yet we are supposedly defending freedom and it's in the name of freedom that we've gone there according to president bush but what we are actually doing is denying freedom to our own people well the argument that the united states is not a christian country is a technical argument based upon the fact that we didn't make that particular statement in our constitution i've written about that recently and you'll get it in a few days and i said in regard to that respect that although there this is technically accurate the fact is this country was not founded and put together constructed created and advanced by muhammadans or by buddhists or by confucianists or by the believers of any other faith except the christian anyone who denies that is denying a fact of history and anyone who implies that that isn't true is denying is is lying in an oblique way but the government of the united states does not feel responsible to the christian community of the country it sees no reason at all why it should defend the rights of christians american christians anywhere it does not recognize religious rights as part of the political order the political order is over religion yes well joseph story who was a unitarian and one of the great justices of the u.s supreme court probably the greatest certainly the outstanding scholar said that uh christianity was the faith which undergirded the laws of the united states obviously true yes and uh attorney shelby sharp has told me that uh we hear nothing about the trinity case in which the supreme court spelled out the fact in very specific language that this is a christian nation well that's true the supreme court has made that statement and every so often you see a reference to it but today of course the reference only comes from christian scholars because the others have agreed to bury the matter under a whole weight of detritus but going back to the the whole question here is that all the muhammadan countries have very strict rules against christians now there is a law passed by our congress several years back that forbids american companies to to obey the arab boycott against israeli goods or investors or whatever but there is no law by the american congress to protect christian interests in those countries yes which is a remarkable distinction well how unpopular this war is we are not being told but the fact that the army admits that the awol reservists will be 9 of the army reserves by the end of this year tells you something about the unpopularity of the whole war well of course it's not a war yet it's a field exercise it's a very large one the it's an interesting one because it's the first time i guess in the history of the united states that we've had to ask other people to help pay for the expenses of a field exercise it's also interesting because we have been in the forefront of an embargo against iraq and yet we fought two wars one in 1812 and one in 1917 against the idea that any belligerent could declare and maintain an embargo against a neutral ship carrying goods food or anything else yet that was the argument that we went to war with great britain over and it was also the argument for freedom of the seas that we went to war against germany now suddenly that part of our history has been totally abandoned without a word we have actually told other countries that they have no right to ship food into there or any other goods on or else they will encounter our war vessels we are doing what the english did to us and what the germans did to us in which we protested against as an offense against humanity well one of the most horrible steps taken in modern history was taken in world war ii when roosevelt and churchill decided that the war had to be waged against the civilians and so this was the main target of the bombings of germany to hurt the civilians that was true and that was the advice of dr lindemann to churchill dr linderman argued that if we bombed the civilian areas it would disrupt the german war machinery it would destroy the infrastructure upon which the german military machine relied and therefore it would end the war in the event it turned out that that was not true german war industry believe it or not despite the bombing of dresden and other areas at the end of the war the german war industry was turning out more goods than it was when the war started at no time during the course of the war did germany even draft women into the workforce it was amazing it was absolutely amazing japan was still able to fight when we dropped the a-bomb we never had the terrible experience of going up against the full japanese army and i'm glad we didn't because first of all to go into the harbor of yokohama was like entering the very thin neck of a bottle we would have spent a million lives so in that event dropping the bomb seemed worthwhile to drop it a second time is something i question i also question the fact that it was dropped not on the military installation but on civilian targets again and that it was dropped on the two most christian cities in japan which seems to me a very strange sort of a decision made somewhere in washington now the thing that surprised me rush when i went east recently as you know and talked to a lot of my old friends was they're already talking about dropping nuclear bombs onto iraq and i said there's an awful lot of women and children there and i've i've he's fella said something about uh patriotism i said well i've i've risked my life i've been in a war i've had a war i'm not too anxious to see a war i don't think anyone who has had any experience with war is ever anxious to see another and i certainly wouldn't go to such extremes in this instance we're talking about a nation of 17 million people we're a much larger power we're much better armed and so forth uh it doesn't seem to me necessary that we should engage in wholesale massacres yes well one of the results of centuries of effort beginning with the truths of god by the medieval church requiring that periodically they abstain from fighting requiring that merchants churchmen women and children be given safe conduct through war efforts areas uh we see the culmination of that in a poem that when you and i went to school was very popular it was based on an incident which probably was not historical uh the barber fridgey poem do you remember that certainly of course we had to memorize it very darn right bear this shoot not a hair yes if i had time i could remember snatches of it but the whole episode had to do with ostensibly stonewall jackson's cavalry going through this town and this one woman barbara fritchey waving and flaunting the american flag from an upper window shooting over the hair of this gray head yes and uh ostensibly according to the form which was written by a northerner stonewall jackson [Music] did not permit any of his men to do anything and saluted the woman and wrote on right now that represented a standard that has since disappeared well john grigg writing an encounter magazine several months ago drew that same comparison between world wars 1 and world wars 2. he said world war one has retroactively been described as an immoral war uh launched and carried on by imperial powers for territorial expansion and therefore an immoral war and world war ii has been described as a moral war because it was against the monstrous regime of nazi germany but he said in world war one there was no bombing of civilians the men of world war one would have been horrified at the suggestion and he said in world war ii there were no bounds yes to what was done there were many atrocities as you and i both know that have never been reported by the allies although there's been lots reported by the germans and very little reported about the russians yes well the point that john grigg made in an encounter is a very valid point what horrifies me is that we're beginning where world war ii left office and i can't imagine well i can imagine of course i do think that one of the problems we have is because younger people than us have been totally calloused by the sadism of the movies and the television and the literature and the theater of the day and it has hardened their heart and they now don't think anything about the human elements yes the casualness of killing on the streets of our big cities yes is evidence of that human life means nothing less than ever yes since the days of the pagans the western world has never been this way before yeah well i was interested in the september 21 browning newsletter put out by ivan dr ivan browning and his daughter evelyn browning garris and the first five pages deal with the violence around the world [Applause] and the americas including the caribbean the sub saharan africa uh africa europe and the middle east and north africa south asia southeast asia oceania and so on describing a widespread rioting of violence terrorism uh the number of deaths taking place none of which gets into our daily newspapers it's so commonplace well it isn't that it's commonplace it's that the editors really are only interested in the few spots in the world yes now it's interesting to note this is october the first that we're talking that suddenly gorbachev is no longer on the front pages or even the first 10 pages he's somewhere back in the pages today i read the wall street journal and way in the back of the paper there is an article about the fact that although gorbachev has received extraordinary powers that he is issuing decrees that are no longer obeyed and that armed men are beginning to appear paratroopers in moscow and there are imminent rumors of a military coup now just a few weeks back that would have been on the front page today was on page 10 or 11. so suddenly it's as though we can only cover one story at a time so nothing now but the middle east but on the middle east everything that has been is being said is being said over and over again people keep saying they hope for a diplomatic solution when we have laid down an ultimatum that makes a diplomatic solution impossible another aspect of this whole adventure that we don't hear about is this in the modern age every military engagement has meant a decrease in freedom and an increase of the power of the central state what was once called the happy republic came to an end was lincoln and the civil war truth wilson with world war one vastly increased the powers of washington which was once uh sleepy little town yes where she grazed on the white house property and were the tats not too long before wilson in fact just before wilson had a family cow tethered out in on the grounds of the lawns or what we now have is lawns and world war ii created the power center that washington has since become korea increased it and vietnam vastly increased it and now we're already seeing more powers concentrated in washington well we are fortunate in the fact that the president has not asked congress for a declaration of war if he asked for a declaration of war in congress past it which is of course the law immediately a whole series of controls would swing automatically into effect uh censorship stamps short rations you name it and of course the draft now if we do get into a shooting war here undeclared shooting war under the aegis of the u.n mr bush now has to hope that the u.n will allow a shooting war to take place if the u.n doesn't vote for a shooting war he doesn't have a rationale to go in yes because he's now claiming that he's doing this on behalf of the un and the un's six resolutions but if we do go into a shooting war the next thing we could anticipate would be a draft now i wouldn't like to see a return to lyndon johnson's idea of a draft which exempts everybody that had enough money to go to college i thought that was one of the most unjust things that ever happened and people like gary hart and others afraid to come out of college while the war was still on went on to divinity school into graduate school and i don't know what all in order to keep from being drafted they called the men who were drafted grunts it was a wonderful period well one newspaper story recently stated that the democrats are watching the public reaction and when they see the war is sufficiently unpopular if it becomes a war they will demand a declaration of war which would immediately make the administration unpopular with everybody well they'll do what they did in vietnam first the democrats put us in there yeah mr johnson president johnson was the one that put 450 000 troops in vietnam and when he when his successor was defeated at the polls the democratic party had the nerve to turn itself into a peace party yes and the press let it get away with it there are men still there in congress who defeated who under under uh just subverted the results of the vietnam effort by refusing to allow any further assistance to be sent to south vietnam when it was actually invaded uh those congressmen who really in a better society should have been put up for treason are some of them still there yes in the 98 incumbency congress that we have do you realize that senator nunn and a bunch of others are going to run unopposed this year takes too much money to fight them and uh the incumbent has everything in his favor well meanwhile we are seeing increasingly a news block out jean-marc bertoux has said the purpose of the press the world over has become not to inform but to form the public very true very well put very well true it's it's almost as though the media considers itself an educational vehicle uh there's an alliance between the media and big government yes and uh whatever the government wants the media is in favor of the media is in favor of the government regulating everything except the media yes they don't think the first amendment has anything to do with the rest of us it certainly has nothing to do with religion well meanwhile we are seeing a progressive move against the freedom of the church and the freedom of the christian school and especially the freedom of the home school and i think under the disguise of military necessities it will make it easier for them to push such things into law well of course the voucher plan is a very sinister one yes because it means that all the private schools will be immediately flooded and then the government will follow the children with its curriculum so in effect it'll wipe out private schools yes that was how the fabian socialist society destroyed the christian schools of britain at the beginning of this century with vouchers with state aid state aid yes whatever form it makes no difference and when one of the uh governing council of the fabian society resigned in protest at the uh fact that the fabians had come out in favor of state aid to christian schools it was george bernard shaw himself who wrote to the man and told him he was a fool that the simplest way of destroying the christians in their schools was not to fight them but to buy them he was a very mischievous man yes well let's go back to the middle east let's assume that the army uh our forces get large enough and and other other countries come along and a shooting war starts and probably start with artillery from the air and from the sea now i was at the invasion of saipan and i recall that island was bombed and strafed every day in uh for 40 days by our air force and shelled every night by the battle wagons for 40 days and 40 nights we we had total air and sea control there was no way that the japanese get any reinforcements they were limited to what they had and so forth we left with 700 wounded and ambulatory insane when we got to san francisco weeks later the fight was still going on it went on for quite a while to dig out 40 000 japanese troops that's what artillery means it really doesn't mean that much uh in the battle of the psalm in world war one i read where the artillery was so heavy that they thought the germans would be totally wiped out and yet the first day they sent them in over the trenches out they lost 39 000 people so we're not going to have a push-button war if it's a war now i would assume that saddam hussein will not attack he will try not to create an incident he will insist that if anybody fights that the fight is brought to him that's about that's what nasa did and if you remember we told britain france and israel to get out when they did it remember the indignation oh yes the indignation over the suez incident the more the moral indignation of the united states the praise of president eisenhower for forcing our wartime allies out of the middle east you mentioned that the various rulers of the middle east are in the main of the ruling families of the turkish era i think it is important to note that not only are they holdovers but even more the law of all those countries including israel is turkish law that's true and uh there's not much you can say in favor of turkish law turkish law israel has never yet produced a constitution now it's operating under an amalgam of turkish law and english wartime emergencies and of course as you know christian marriages and deaths and births are illegal in israel so we have in effect the continuation of tyranny under ostensible independence and the people have no more freedom now than they did under the turks none whatever the whole they were cheated out of the whole all the wartime efforts yes of world war one and world war ii they retreated as though they didn't exist yes i mean the uh the allies and the germans fought across territories as though there was no inhabitants there at all in saudi arabia the officials of the saudi government feel they can walk into our embassy and take what they please they have defrauded any number of businessmen who went over there believing that a contract with a saudi arabia and government was a valid one we have been the greatest beneficiaries and i think it's worthy of note that while everybody is damning at this present point the oil companies the oil companies in arabia changed that whole area because not only did they pay money that they never would have had otherwise and good wages they created hospitals not only for their health but for all the peoples of the countries the result has been a revolution in the life of that area all the advances that have been made in those countries have not been due to the regimes as much as to the oil companies which have eliminated a great many diseases that plagued every arab it's interesting that the oil companies are always selected for abuse when there's a crisis the government of the united states at one time at one time favored uh the major oil companies and did its best to advance their fortunes in various parts of the world on the theory that what promotes american business promotes america that pretty much ended by the 60s and today the oil companies have the pleasure of paying lobbies a lot of money and giving politicians a lot of money and getting the back of the hand now we see some very strange things i don't know what they teach in schools now there was an oil crisis and the price of gasoline went up and immediately the man in the street was encouraged to say why should the price go up after all they're selling us gasoline that they manufactured some time ago it hasn't had time to hit their refineries yet but the fact is that if you sell something at five dollars and it's gonna cost you ten dollars to replace it you can't afford to sell it for the old price of five dollars you have to sell it for the ten dollars that you need to replace it with so when the price goes up in the marketplace it has to go up in the product otherwise you won't be able to replace the product now i knew that much when i was a kid scrambling selling newspapers what's going on in this country this is supposed to be a commercial country and tell me that poor john brown who's down there filling your tank at the filling station is a war profiteer well when we went to school we were taught geography which has disappeared in virtually every country of the world the only two were and my brother is a professor of geography the only two where there is any reasonable teaching of geography are canada and the soviet union everywhere else there is a total ignorance of the subject on the part of most youth and one aspect of our geography was to learn what the products of each country were how they were shipped abroad we learned a great deal of what we now call economics in our geography courses and we had at least i did all kinds of tests on the main uh produced and uh mineral resources and whatnot of the various countries and where they went and so on don't you remember that we were taught on apples and oranges and eggs and railroad schedules yes our arithmetic was all that way all all the arithmetic was tied into the marketplace yes yes i i'm glad you brought that point out because uh arithmetic books now are totally abstract just the numbers just the numbers not the product those that i've seen i perhaps have not seen all it's interesting because some of these kooky ideas come from university level people yes they can't understand the mechanics of the market now they can't understand why gasoline should go up when the price of oil goes up well if you don't know that what do you know yes i think i told you the incident of the man who when we entered into this kuwait adventure was at a gas station self-serve and the man ahead of him he knew and the man was grumbling to him about these profiteering oil companies raising the price of oil immediately annoying the man he said uh hurry up and fill your tank i want to rush to get to your coin shop to buy coins before the price goes up and the man shot up immediately and muttered something about people not understanding economics yes yes yes the other guy always makes too much money yes well let's assume that the shooting war began in say another three weeks or months and people are a lot of damage will be done but the iraqis will be eventually overcome baghdad three 000 year old city will be bombed and strafed and uh shelled and so forth tens of thousands will die we remember the bombing of beirut we've never found out how many thousands died and we don't know what good that was what good that accomplished but that's something we're no longer concerned with uh that's part of the past let's assume that saddam hussein is driven out of kuwait and out of office and and killed or they're talking about putting putting him on trial as a war criminal you know that's apparently going to be part of the new world order that anyone who loses a war will go on trial as a war criminal provided he's not russian in any event uh what then i understand that from reading the press of course that the next step will be to strip iraq of all its military potential that will leave only syria and israel as having any military potential so we could assume that syria would be next in line to be reduced in order that the middle east could be stabilized end quote now president bush said today in his addressed to the un that the united states would not maintain a permanent presence in the middle east that they would pull out we would pull out as soon as saudi arabia wants us to but what will we leave behind us i think a pyrrhic victory yes and consider this if we eliminate saddam hussein what reason have we to believe that any successor will be any different who would we put in yes uh when idi amin in africa became so unpopular with the media because he was so flagrant in his acts mainly in his rhetoric yes he was replaced but christians there say the present regime makes idiom look good by comparison but we hear nothing of that well as you mentioned earlier there are festering areas of inhumanity all around the world we we cannot ally ourselves with syria for instance and claim to be in a moral position anymore we abandoned moral position in world war ii when we made the soviet union an ally we could have let the soviet union fight germany on its own and we could afford it on its own but we wanted to do it on the cheap so to speak there are lots of people in the united states that want to fight a war on the cheap they want to fight a push-button war they want to fight a war from the air they want to fight it from the sea where we have all the advantage they don't want to think about actual putting men in there in a dirty bloody struggle but a war is much easier to start than to finish and before the war is finished if americans are fighting arabs we are not going to ever have an arabian friend again in the middle east in our time i will be surprised if it results in military action if it is a short war i wouldn't expect it to be short we haven't seen the short war in 70 years yes i mean we've seen small wars that go on for years like angola like the philippines like central america there doesn't seem to be any short wars anymore and in just a few years from now every country with any claim to being a nation or power of any sort accepting of course in darkest africa they all have the a bomb they'll all have biological weapons and what sort of a new world order are we setting up to handle that kind of world yes well it's an ugly situation [Music] and if christians line up on any side they're wrong what they have to say is a plague on both your houses we have nothing in this we have to stand apart from it and work for the restoration of christian freedom and we have to recognize that bush is as wrong as saddam hussein now i would prefer to live next to bush than to saddam hussein by far but that doesn't mean in this situation that bush is any more on the right than saddam hussein this is a power play yes and power plays are not moral no to try to put a moral enamel onto a power play is really demeaning our intelligence and bush having treated the president of lithuania with such disrespect cannot claim a moral stance here well what about china yes incidentally china is a big unknown card in this event china and iran have become very close iraq no iran iran no china and iran are very close and iran is delighted that the idea of the iraqis fighting the americans they're going to do everything they can to keep that going as long as possible and china may veto a un force against iraq which would leave us high under eye which would leave us without our great uh rationale which is the u.n yes well our time is over thank you all for listening this is a matter that should be a great concern to you the future does not look grim on the uh look anything but grim on the short term but god is still on the throne and we have to work for his order authorized by the calcium foundation archived by the mount olive tape library digitized by christ rules.com | Explorers Are Us | UCOzAF_SV-C4fpyRbgJbKStg | 2020-06-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,055 | 37,893 |
BKSQSlqz-gk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKSQSlqz-gk | Hydrogen and Water [Skype Online Tution] | yes so here the new topic that is your hydrogen and water beta so actually hydrogen is the first element in the periodic table okay having atomic number one okay how can all the us understand that only one electron there will be in the outermost shell okay hydrogen if I would like to tell you one thing that a hydrogen is independent of periodic table you know why because that periodic table is totally based either with respect to those elements which would like to donate electrons okay or lose electrons or either the elements which would like to accept electrons okay but with respect to hydrogen okay if it would like to donate one electron so it would be identical okay otherwise it would like to accept one electron okay in order to get the stable electronic configuration to its nearest noble gas here okay for a kind information each and every element in the periodic table that have the that have the characteristic or that have the type of tendency to attain the stable electronic configuration to their nearest noble gas I understand okay I understand wait let me take my charger give me one yeah I'm back so that means here but I in this topic that we will study about hydrogen Alam and water as usual that previous classes also explain to you the common factor that means when hydrogen and oxygen will combine together that is also element okay I also understand that they both are gaseous okay so fundamental thing is that hydrogen and water so that is hydrogen is element oxygen is element so when these two elements would like to combine then they form water okay okay so and hydrogen of having one electron in the outermost cell that's why that it would like to be placed in first group okay as usual I explained the few just before that it is independent of periodic table but of having one electron in the outermost shell it would like to have the property of electro positive okay because it can it can lose one electron and also that it have the property of electronegativity that means it can accept one electron okay but most most probably that it would like to lose electron okay so as it would like to combine with other element to form covalent compound covalent compound it is forming so that means there will be covalent bond also okay okay I understand yeah okay great so let's come down let's see that what is given downwards let me scroll so fundamentally you have to understand that metals react with acid at different rates okay depending on how reactive the metals are okay hydrogen can be produced from when they react witness matter okay so you can understand this one thing that they are explaining here wait just see on a screen so here one fundamental thing they are saying that hydrogen can be produced from the a seed when metal react with it is it okay so here you can see that metal yeah I think that it is not too visible give me one second yep so that means metal metal plus a seed that will give you means yes in that way that is sometimes that it would like to give like salt salt plus hydrogen okay you can understand that reaction suppose that metal like sodium na+ acid that is s CL okay and when they will react it so clearly you can understand over here that here is any that is electro positive okay hydrogen that is also electro positive chlorine that is electronegative and I explain that to you that electro positive and electro negative that will combined clear so that means any and cl will combine to form NaCl okay and also that I explained that to you in your previous classes that NaCl that is your salt okay our common salt plus hydrogen will be there that is s2 do you understand it yeah great so now come to downwards yep same thing that you are seeing over here so that means a metal it is important over here metal plus acid that will give you salt plus hydrogen yeah you can see that I learned the proper that why that without seeing that that's why that without seeing that I was able to explain that to you so that means here metal procession that will give you salt and hydrogen it is the good way to remember that means there is a sword that is mash okay M plus a gives us plus h that means I am for metal frac that will give me as for assault and as for hydrogen yeah yeah so the key word that which you can see here that is your this one yes it's a key word to learn that suppose that if you are not able to understand are not able to learn the whole reaction okay so in that condition you can learn mass so it's the fundamental property of metal when metal will react with easy to form salt and hydrogen okay the name of the salt that depends on the name of a sheep okay name of acid suppose that magnesium plus hydrochloric acid okay so Magnuson that is your mg hydrochloric acid that is s CL so here you can see that mg right here you can see that empty that is electro positive plus h actor positive and CL electro negative so positive and negative will combine together okay and then they will form mgcl2 how they are forming mgcl2 just see here mg and cl mg having valency plus two having two electron in the outermost cell chlorine having seven electron in the outermost cell so it cannot lose any electron why because it is not possible to lose seven electrons okay in spite of losing seven electron it always except a one electron so as it is accepting electron so there will be well as C minus one okay now most important thing as I explained in your previous classes that means crisscross this and this so mg ones are mg and cl2 CL - okay so it is your magnesium chloride okay so that's why here will be mg that's why you asking that mgcl2 and plus the remaining there is two h plus so that's why that here will be hydrogen so it is the best way to understand that when metal will react when metal will react with is it to give a salt and hydrogen clear so other reaction also you are seeing that in the same way in the same because whatever I will explain you it is not possible that it will fail in any book content or any topic regarding to chemical reaction why because my teacher explained me fundamental concept what Zenon that is metal electro positive will be okay hydrogen is also electro positive sulfate it is iron electronegative okay so plus and minus will combine again you just have to understand that how they are getting is gentleness of all so Zarin you can write here sulfate and that will be also here Zedan valency plus two having two electron in the outermost cell okay one more important thing that you have to learn well and see specifically okay okay yes so and if you want to learn valency so I can tell you a trick you just have if you would like to learn that in which order or period they are okay suppose that you can see that a zinc that is in second group element which the second group elements so second group element that is having two electrons outer muscle third group period having three electron in the outermost shell fourth group element having four electron in the outermost shell fifth group element okay having five six group six seventh group seven here's a group comp Excel okay I understand that was from one to three okay if any element having one two three electron in the outermost cell then it will lose electron okay okay lose so if it will lose electron so it will form electro positive on okay Lu's positive ion okay yeah yeah and also from and further the element having four electrons in the outermost shell it can neither lose neither gain okay it can neither neither Kings nor gain okay yeah and then after them beta next is your five six seven eight so here will be five here's six here's seven okay so you can see that these three miss elements having one two three electron in the outermost shell they would like to lose electrons and four will not Druze electron or not except oh yeah fourth that will neither knows nor again or accept but elements having five electrons six electrons seven electrons they will receive okay so when they will receive so that's why they will form negative ion okay the ATO has understand yeah yeah so that means here you are seeing that is an N plus a so for so here baton with respect to Z n plus two sulfate valency is minus two okay so again the same process that you have to apply over here that means Z n crisscross okay so here you can see that plus 2 and minus 2 they will cancel each other and the your formula will be z NSO four okay do you understand that great and in more reactive the metal the faster will be the reaction yes we can take an example of sodium okay means it means what they are explaining is how much will be the element will be reactive okay regarding to that it's a reactivity that will be greater so that it's a reaction will also be greater okay so that means it will take less time to react yeah yeah understand yeah no I'm here I'm here I'm thinking yes and also however aluminum has a protective oxide layer so it reacts slowly with acid to begin with okay okay do you understand yeah great I'm sorry fishing that yep and now change the pH do you understand better what I had explained in your first page yeah very good now next is combustion of hydrogen combustion of hydrogen that means the hydrogen burns in oxygen to form water okay hydrogen burns in oxygen to form water so that is what we have to understand or indirectly you can understand that hydrogen plus water oxygen that will give you water clear yeah all you can also understand to h2 plus O 2 is to h2o always remember that your previous on that was a high rosin plus oxygen that gives you water okay and it is your word word equation of thing and when you would like to write your chemical equation with respect to symbols then that will be your chemical equation it is okay the flame of the flame that was almost colorless mixture of hydrogen and oxygen okay that can be explosive okay when the two gases are present in a particular ratio okay so that that's why that because it may be explosive that's why that maximum require we have to take precaution and also in precaution that we just have to handle hydros and very carefully okay that's why that here I think I think that you had here that few fluid is before that North Korea they develop hydrogen bomb okay yes and yes and which is hundred times more effective than nuclear bomb you know oh yes that's why each and every country that is horrified horrible of that one because you know that you've one medium-sized a hydrogen bomb that would like to explode in Mexico then almost North America will be finished yes there will be a type of disaster that will came the arrow and within yeah within few seconds not in second within few minutes or within one or two are the whole America that will be means lonely please there'll be nothing no civilization that will be fine there only civilization it may be possible that or whatever submarine or whatever whatever type of equipment or whatever people's that will be inside water above up to Mesa are up to our Fermi's of 400 meter or 500 meter was the bomb mix and then stood like because exact war between America and North Korea so would be like what it's more what happened to the music it is not possible to defuse bomb you know it is not possible even not possible for America America and most many technology Mike I know many technology to defuse bombs but actually hydrogen bomb and it's a technology that is totally different of nuclear bomb okay so America have a capacity are to defuse nuclear bomb but they don't know about how to defuse hydrogen bomb have they noticed about me no no they didn't launch that but the president of North Korea always used to miss gives us type of a statement just to horrify America and a Mesa president yeah so I think that almost that it will not happen but suppose that why why he generally why the president of North Korea they generally used to he generally used to give trouble in their statement okay isn't the president I think it's the king of North Korea king of not clear I think that means I am not remembering at this time named OMA Kim Jong yeah Kim Jong so that you know that there is a ruling in North America so in North Korea that no one people person they can give their offspring name as Kim Jong you know no no here in here in India suppose that president's name is miss Prime Minister name is Miss Narendra Modi okay so that means everyone anyone that they can anyone can name their child as okay what the whole name that is Nair in ramadi they have we did not you know how to watch like a micro so you can make go to Americans to Florida know and also that in in in North Korea it is not possible to have Mesa and name just like as Kim Jong if you will if you will if you miss her name your child on the name of means president so it may be possible that you will kept in jail for till life I think you get simply Valenti Constitution council de nada I think so me sir I'm not sure about that one but fundamental thing is that and also that each and every person each and every person is advised to keep their hairstyle just like as Kim Jong means these type of activities are totally discussed he means that and there is it there is nothing like democracy in North or South America specifically in North America the following day following what here in Germany in World War 1 the following hit enough hidden hidden used to do that vote this is this area he also used to do the same type of from his conditions and same type of me what it's called democracy democracy that me see you will be you are free to say anything so he was a dictator yes so that means whatever he is thinking about the peoples of his country so he generally used to give command regarding to that one so no one no one will be able to think about their welfare no elements unlike using the nuclear bomb yes and most important thing is that around the word almost now the scientists they know that words are the main composition of that one and how to make that how do they make that in spite of him yeah because that er what I perform is materially in every country scientists know that but how they are composing that which and in which way in which ratio each and every product that is combining so that it would like to create a such type of destructive energy oh okay yes that's why that every person with respect to all the scientists around the world they are they do not know about how to defuse that otherwise they're suppose that if you would like to be able to understand that how much energy it would like to produce so 100% that you will get such type of idea okay so that how you can defuse that just like a nuclear bomb yes yes means nuclear bomb there is one thing that a nuclear bomb is not so destructive suppose that a medium-sized nuclear bomb would like to explode in Mexico so almost that one third of America that will one third of America that will they start okay but suppose that hydrogen one oh my god almost 98% ninety-five percent whole America that will yes so they like a bomb that like destroy the whole will not a whole what a miss I'm talking about America so that is a whole North America that will be ninety five percent finished five percent I am talking about because that all those creatures all those persons all those peoples who would like to be his side means down in the water okay or in submarine or a ship a cargo ship or whatever there will be okay so that means the impact of that bomb that would not like to reach up to that level that's why that they will remain there because that is related to chemistry there so I that I was explain to that number now come to the topic so the flame that is almost colorless mixture of hydrogen and oxygen can be explosive when the two gases are present particular ratio so hydrogen must be handled carefully because that is totally explosive and totally miss I mean is it it's the type of component of having a large amount of energy need many people believe that because no carbon dioxide is released when it burns yes each and every type of component mr. scientist also believes they are somewhere that I also hear die and I also read out there that every type of component if it would like to burn in air so 100% it would like to raise a little bit amount of carbon dioxide over there it should make me some temple gust yeah that's right and also one more important thing that I can tell me that how do you like to consider that either your produce gases carbon dioxide or not if you see a smoke or something oh my god you betta always each and every class you just have to see your videos okay in each and every video I generally used to explain that was our the main thing which you have to remember with respect to each and every concept here but uh if any gas is given okay are you finding gas is producing so how you consider that your gas is carbon dioxide the main thing is that if you would like to pass that gas through lime water so you would like to turn lime water milky now you remember I explained that mean yeah yes that's why I'm saying that bit of pee is just how are you how would you get the gas of one crazy good what gas carbon dioxide like how would you like put it in one inline hot rod yes pour it in so I think that there are many ha I don't know about the pH number but here that there are many chapters in any of the chapter okay actually a lime water okay lime water that means just like as Miss I think lime water you know that when I become CI it becomes transparent okay so when you would like to produce carbon dioxide gas then there will be then you can see clearly bubbles inside that lime water okay and then after some times okay it would like to it would like to change its colour from transparent to milky okay yes now that is the way that by which you will be able to understand that whatever gas that you are releasing that is a common dioxide okay yes one more important thing that I think that you remember that in your previous class also explained that to you that suppose that carbon and oxygen will combine for Emily you know that carbon and oxygen that will combine to give what carbon dioxide okay here but also I am saying that carbon and oxygen will combine to give carbon mono oxide oh yeah yeah hey tell me that what will be the situation many it will produce carbon monoxide by just when there will be okay just think about that when there will be limited amount of oxygen okay yeah when there will be limited amount of oxygen wait you can understand that in this way I'm writing that's equation to see on your screen so here basically you have to understand that when carbon react with oxygen o2 and it will produce this see Oh carbon monoxide the side that a c plus O 2 that will produce co2 ok what is the difference between these two equations so the difference is that carbon monoxide has one oxygen no it's a limited ok when there will be limited supply of oxygen okay that will react with carbon so it will produce carbon monoxide okay it has two oxygens carbon mono oxide yeah yeah oxide and when there'll be excess amount of okay yeah its excess the amount of oxygen then it will produce carbon dioxide okay yeah Mr Dan yeah and also here hi drew yes it burns many people believe that because no carbon dioxide is released or when it burns give me one second please I don't want me doing this about to lose the phone here yeah give me one second I just you know I guess you know let me kiss much more than you say well yeah I'm here I'm yeah thank you so I'm here I'm here I'm here I'm here okay yeah so next year do you understand this one yesterday yes so that means that a hydrogen could be a clean fuel to use in future yeah so that means to replace fossil fuels that are the cause that are causing global warming okay actually global warming that means different type of human activity okay global warming that means different type of human activity that would like to increase the temperature of atmosphere you know and when the temperature of atmosphere different type of activity that means basically that means that a rocket propulsion and mean so when rocket would like to propose it in the running to that one that there becomes a big hole that would like to create in ozone layer as usual you know that ozone layer that is a particular layer with respect to UV okay miss ultraviolet rays Sun does he like the climate change supernova yes yes yes you know that Sun here in India it is approximately 10 or 11 of October but there isn't not a single single means day when we feel a little bit cold here okay two or three years both before then in octave but there becomes miss a highway code that starts here in yeah but it is the change in weather and also global warming that's why that now we are waiting for colder so that one cold will come then you'll enjoy that yeah yes we don't dry that is because that in that condition that we don't have to operate means fans ACS and all that yeah but basically that you can see that here now ace is running yes in October so it's possible to like when when you have burned coal coal and oil yes miss suppose that means when you would like to do such type of activity which would like to increase the temperature of atmosphere so where that energy would like to go it needs energy that would like to absorb by different matter okay some energy or the as you know that the Sun is the main source of energy so that was what will happen so that means energy that would like to when it's energy would like to come on earth so as usual that before coming on earth it would like to pass through that of ozone holes okay so that means from that reason okay from that yeah me suppose that from holes okay yeah you can see that suppose that there it is it is your earth okay and over there there is a little bit means ozone layer just above okay yeah around it okay so when there'll be a type of hole okay that would like to create after human activities okay just like a snot rocket propulsion in different type of so suppose that there'll be a little bit a hole over there like this okay and as usually you know that our Sun is just outside so here like big wide very very big one okay so when it's a light would like to pass through those holes okay it's like this yep so all the all size here so here you can see that what you are like would like to pass through these holes okay and what area that would lie that will be affected with this so here with respect to this reason there will be maximum misses on other side that you can see that it would like to reflect okay UV rays okay yeah in that way but here you can see that are creating such type of hole so here you can see that there will be maximum impact of that energy or this reason okay you're like people that live near the equator would they temperature be hot or cold now well this is country people that live near the equator equator equator there is cold oh no no no wait wait wait equator I think that there will be cold because there will be there is a there becomes eyes okay there is ice and that days would like to be six six months for day and six months for night wouldn't they like need the equator because isn't that like hot I thought that couldn't freeze around but in the hanukkah no my brother because like in the Sun and it's like in the cold I think I think that in your previous class that when I was explaining about atmosphere and surrounding then I explained that to you that is the changing of father is totally different on the on the tilt of fences of Earth yes okay earth tilt yeah tilt on axis yes because that also that you remember that type of me suppose that in in between there becomes means Sun and our earth would like to rotate like here okay so it is your axis of symmetry okay so when it would like to be here so I think that you remember that such type of a means a figure that I think a little bit you can remember when you like to be here so you can see that it's a axis that would like to be close to Sun or not shall be summer okay and when when this earth would like to be around half turn and it like to be over here so now you can see that it's access that would like to be a little bit away from the Sun or not cool so that's why here will be winter okay oh yeah so yes it is cuz I explained that when there was a chapter like Mesa Art and its surrounding so basically what I mean to explain you that different activities that would like to let increase the temperature of atmosphere and when all the all the components surrounding to us like lake water here okay they would like to absorb all the light that is all the energy that is coming from the Sun okay and then it would like to increase the temperature okay whatever light that at most means whatever like me suppose that when the light would like when the sun's light that would like to come on Arthur so whatever light that whatever light or energy that would like to absorb by sea or ocean okay then due to high tides low tides okay as usual that you know that in 24 hours okay one time there will be high tide one time there will be low tide okay so in this 24 hour occasion okay a large amount of energy that and then I also that when a sun's energy that would like to come on earth and it would like to be in ocean so the ocean water that would like to heat or not and when if you would like to heat its temperature would like to increase and then in the whole 24 hours okay specially at day time okay then the water would like to evaporate or not so our simple factor is that when it would like to evaporate then also that energy would like to come into atmosphere and it will increase the it will increase the temperature of atmosphere so 100 percent that is known as global warming okay and global warming is a type of cause which would like to prevent the natural occurrence okay yes it is just like as condition suppose that if your water you know that you were born of water 100 degree centigrade okay but suppose that if you would like to mix a little bit amount of sugar in that one so what will happen what okay okay no problem mrs. suppose that ah yeah to condition then I'm telling you in first condition that I am telling you that yeah you know that the boiling point of water that is hundred degree centigrade okay if you would like to mix sugar in water so what will happen so while mixing sugar in water it will increase the boiling point of sugar water you know oh yes because because sugar is it just like as impurity with respect to water okay and always remember that if there is any substance okay if there is any substance and other substance you are mixing in that substance so 100% that other substance that will be just like as impurity and it would like to increase the boiling point or melting point of first substance clear yeah I understand yeah you can also understand this event in this way suppose that your mom is in kitchen okay she's she tends miss away and then instantly that your father came okay today your father came a little bit before okay from their office okay so in that condition your mom would like to welcome him and then she would like to say that okay just take rest I am going to prepare tea okay and then she would like to go to kitchen and then she will take a bus she will take a pan and amount of water and she would like to put that on gas okay and then let their ass shall leave the gas and after a few times after two or three met our format that okay firstly there is only water okay then water starts to boil okay ooh then she would like to she would like to miss add a little bit amount of his sugar okay and tea leaves okay sugar tea leaves okay in that one so as soon as she will add a little bit amount of tea leaves our sugar in that boiling water 100 percent boiling of water will stop okay yes water will be hot okay but then it is a temperature would like to decrease why because that if there is a water and water is boiling and if you are adding sugar tea leaves and other component in that one so it would like to increase the boiling point okay so that is so that means after adding sugar or tea if it's a temperature would like to decrease so that means now we suppose that before it is taking three minute to boil now after adding sugar tea leaves okay it would like to take five minute to boil again okay okay relax suppose that now again that your water is boiling okay your water means the water on gas mixture of water tea leaves and sugar okay now again it is boiling a little bit then a little bit ginger suppose that you will add in that one then again a little boiling of mixture that will stop for a few seconds okay why because ginger will also be a type of impurity with respect to that mixture okay at the last at the last and when that him and and when again that will boil okay then what you have to do that the main component are forty that is your okay so again suppose that your mixture is boiling and if you will add amount of milk a little bit amount of milk in your mixture so what will happen then the boiling of that black tea that will stop fundamental fact is that because of change in temperature okay suppose that change in temperature okay or otherwise the other reason is also there because with respect to mixture milk is a type of impurity which would like to increase my lling point okay so that means again it would like to take a little bit time to reach up to hundred degree centigrade for that mixture means that means you here I want to explain you one thing suppose that in starting that you had taken a Miss pure water okay yeah our drinking water that's temperature that's boiling point that is 100 degree centigrade okay but when you when your tea is boiling if you would like to see that then it's the temperature would like to be little bit more yeah yes so suppose that it's a missive water's boiling point that is a 100 degree centigrade then your tea is boiling point that will be off 105 degree centigrade or 100 times any decent again yes okay great now I'm going to hold on I'm going to refresh diverter so that the third and last is that we can do that yep and yes yes but our each and everything that you have to revise after your class without okay that's why for all of your facility that I used to upload classes on my channel baton okay yes and I'm here and then here next is like copper sulphate test for water so here but a testing in this things that they are flaming copper sulfate copper ii sulfate that visit is also known as cuprous sulfate okay III you can also you can also say that it is a anhydrous copper sulfate okay why it is known as in hydras because there will be no molecule of water in that one each and everything which was seen surrounding to you everything that contains a little bit amount of water in that one either it may be that a micro quantity okay but there will be hundred okay if you are seing that any any object that is dry looking okay but it doesn't mean that is totally dry no there will be a little bit amount of water either in micro stage or moon micro quantities but there will be okay so that is what so anhydrous that means there will be no okay will be absence of water when water is present in a same sample of carbon to sulfate it turns blue yeah I see so that we know that in many of in many times that I explained that you copper sulphate that becomes blue in color okay it is still a dry solid okay because the individual water molecules are trapped within the Hynek lactic okay surrounding to the copper two oils solutions of carbon copper sulfate are also blue okay yes because we may see a little bitty amount of water that you are adding in that one so that means a reactant that is blue in color and water is colorless so it may be possible that the intense color of copper sulphate that will be a little bit less blue then it's a reactant but after all means final product that will be red in color okay that's why that after reaction you can see that when what I mean when anhydrous copper sulfate will react with water then hydrated copper sulphate that you will get there why I am seeing that hydrated copper sulphate because there will be a little bit amount of water in that one of course that you are mixing water in that so there will be in number of molecules of water in there or not yeah great so it's a equation whatever you are seeing over here it's a very very very important bit okay yep sorry yeah this one it is very important very important it can come in your test okay and also cobalt 2 chloride cocl2 test so water can also be detected to use in blue and hydras cobalt chloride and hydrogen at the same meaning over here also okay thus this turn pink in the presence of water okay to understand that so I think that there are 10 questions witta I hope you understand these these three pages so I'll let me just try to solve them okay and let's see that what's your performance so come to here your first mission is here yes what gas is produced when a metal react with acid why don't you just great what salt is produced when zinc react with nitric acid zinc and nitric acid you are saying yes your answer is perfectly right because chloride will be when chlorine react with sulphur that when sulphate will react so here zinc nitrate why does aluminium react quite slowly with dilute hydrochloric acid it is not very reactive yes it is a weak acid or an ammonium is coated with a protective oxide layer okay that's great what is produced when hydros and reactive attacks or oxygen yes water okay when using anhydrous copper sulfate to test for water what color change is seen they are seeing that when using anhydrous copper sulphate test for water so that means on one side there is a anhydrous copper sulfate and other side water so they are seeing that what color change is seen due to white or white to blue why great why because that solute means your solely solvent that is your water water is white our water is transparent and when copper sulphate will add to it then its color is blue so it will change into blue okay next is which of these souls the correct balance symbol equation for the combustion of hydrogen combustion that means when hydrogen will react with oxygen then it will form water so which reaction is your perfect yeah fantastic that's right which of the following is a potential source of hydrogen to use as a fuel electrolyzing water what is the product of the of this reaction what will be the product of this reaction mg plus 2 s CL that will give you what that is metal plus a cereal Oh until his mgcl2 plus h2 fantastic but our currency is right why he said his metal plus acid that will give you salt and hydrogen yeah you know yes and also beta M G is positive CL is negative mgcl2 and actually be there so it will be as to which array what reactant would you use to produce calcium sulfate and hydrogen in reaction this thank you outside this great so what we attend to would you use to produce mg and o3 whole twice and hydrogen so it is it is salt and hydrogen so that means your reactant should be metal and easier [Music] it up why you always remember that when they'll be carburetor okay how's the attend so them yeah mg plus n-2 much no.3 that will be let's check your score [Music] and let's see that how many questions Wow great eight questions that you get right over there and why does an aluminium react quite slowly with dilute hydrochloric acid beta okay yes so it is very reactive element beta yes and also the other one that is wrong yes here attack calcium plus sulfuric is it will be you know because that when you are getting as a product the salt and hydrogen so that means the reactant will be metal and a seeder understand so thanks for today meter have a great time i will upload this class within few hours okay and you just have to revise this one and try to learn that one thanks for today have a great time bye bye thank you | Skype Online Tuition | UCwe0hnHXD1r0Rf1-uMyy4kw | 2017-10-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 6,935 | 35,991 |
HbznnZAukPs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HbznnZAukPs | Worms W.M.D - Torn Grove Broadcasts | It's been a long time since I've made a video for public consumption hasn't it? Let's discuss Worms W.M.D. or more specifically what's wrong with it. I don't want to bury the lead on this. Some background on my... relationship with Worms. My first was Armageddon on the Dreamcast I liked it so much I bought the Worms Triple Pack for PC and I didn't even have a PC. I'd just take it to a friend's house and play there. I had some fun with World Party since it was just more Armageddon, though the HD remaster wasn't well received. I enjoyed the 3d variants despite some minor complaints like not having first-person view while moving. Revolution and Clan Wars I liked. Reloaded was... So here we are 2020, Team17 teasing some new worms thing this year, with another design change for our familiar invertebrates and not much else to show. I recently sat down and played a bunch of W.M.D. which I just hadn't gotten around to yet. Before I begin to complain I have been enjoying it. The in game mechanics, physics, and controls feel very solid. It feels like Armageddon and frankly that's the 2d Worms gold standard. Despite what I'm about to say the people behind the worms did manage to get the most important part right. Golf claps all around. Over time the series has added some simple creature comforts like gamepad support and changing the zoom level but let's talk about what's new for W.M.D. Buildings to hide in, and vehicles like the drill boats to accidentally strand yourself on the water under the map... and crafting. It's another thing to remember to consider every turn and you can feel punished for forgetting to. You can do it between turns which can lead to a feeling of never getting a break, but on the other hand it adds variety since there are essentially three versions of most weapons, but on the first hand that variety is often just a way of repackaging things that existed in previous Worms games as their own items. Outside of gameplay, the UI can be... clunky. It's hard to show, but it generally just feels bad to use. Good news though! I can type in two text fields at once. At least it will only recognize the last selected field as final and this does take mixing mouse and gamepad input but I discovered this accidentally. Also, games love unskippable logos these days. Now that's all minor. Alone not a big deal. The real problems stem from the online implementation. At launch there were differences between the PC version and the PC version. Only recently was a Steam player able to play with GOG players. This wouldn't have been a problem if we had options for direct IP connection like Armageddon had. Relying on external servers means eventually the online play will break and you'll just have to hope someone fixes it. If you want to make user-generated content, finding the editor isn't obvious, and finding documentation isn't easier. As an example the help link in the editor links to a 404 error. Having to find important information for making maps buried in a comment on a Steam discussion is not a good look. How big is the worm sprite? What's its hitbox. Thanks to snow cone guy for this valuable information and screenshot I dug up. Just to test it out, I made this tiny building. Welcome to Cuppa' Sunshine: A sad one table cafe monument to my inability to use Inkscape. It is through creating and testing this simple item that I am now able to tell you how they botched up the custom content process. Want to make content? You'll be forced to rely entirely on the Steam Workshop infrastructure. Wanna open the editor while not logged into Steam? Nope. Want to be able to save and test your content offline. Nah. You need to sync with the workshop every time you start up the game if you want to test your work. This is all... nasty engorged trash. Almost enough to make me forget that on custom maps this is the thing that happens sometimes. Mysterious quantum gap. But is it really there? Gap aside, if it's all reliant on the Steam Workshop, how do you use user-generated content with the GOG version. You don't. A major part of the game they just don't get. All in all, it's a shame that a good game comes in a... less than great wrapper. Maybe it's fixable, but it's four years later, so I'm not holding my breath. I can't hate it, but I can't pretend some of these decisions are excusable either. Team17 has never managed to usurp their own Armageddon game even after a couple decades of trying, but they came very close on this one, so pour one out for Boggy B. and I'll look forward to not making another video for you to not watch in the future. [...] [what?] Thanks for watching my little pilot experiment. I intend to make more, so subscribe if you're into that. If you liked it, like it. If you really liked it I have a Sponsus crowdfunding link in the description. I hope to see you soon, or someone soon. Anyone, really. B-bye now. | Haven Splendor | UCt1hvaQBJmnXVIM2gQ5AK5g | 2020-05-24 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 888 | 4,895 |
968wum_lWSc | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=968wum_lWSc | Modern movie previews are TERRIBLE | hey you know what modern movie previews suck they suck they make every movie look like an action movie a high action movie they even did new previews to Close Encounters of the Third Kind I'll leave a link to that in the description bar and you go ahead and look at it and you tell me whether that's a movie you'd want to see now if you've never seen it before well you know tell me if that's a movie you'd want to see and if it was a movie you've seen before yeah tell me if you would have wanted to have seen that movie based on the preview do you know what made the new Ghostbusters movie suck so much it was the preview terrible preview terrible and it seems that companies are being I don't know how this works exactly but it seems it seems like they're hiring companies to do these previews and they don't even have to use the original music from the movie they're often using this terrible over-the-top he put it in tin tin tin did it and an you know whatever it is some and then put put the oh it's the epic soundtrack right and they use that as the music - previews to all sorts of movies movies that those soundtracks are completely completely wrong for completely inappropriate for it but they use them anyway why cuz they think that if they will make the movie look like it's going to put you at the edge of your seat that it's gonna be something that that you're gonna want to watch okay not every movie is something that's gonna put you at the edge of your seat some movies are more nuanced some movies have a lot more character building but they want to turn almost every movie into the same sort of crap I just saw a preview for Justice League and at 114 all I could think of is Bastion please save us I will I will do what I've dreamed it's just it the person who is on the screen at one minute 14 seconds in looks like they're trying to look like the Empress in neverending story so but it just it's it's so ridiculous these previews are terrible they're just god-awful why are these studios hiring these companies to do this you just it'd be neat if they allowed the directors of the movies to do the previews that'd be nice wouldn't that be nice that would be really nice yeah that'd be nice | Kizzume | UCPJJsmyvEFizmsVKznk_pjw | 2017-10-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 430 | 2,211 |
hXY5BDIg_kQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hXY5BDIg_kQ | Lecture 7: International importance of groundwater and India Part- 2 | [Music] welcome to groundwater hydrology and management nptel course this is week two lecture two in this week we are looking at the importance of groundwater both at the international stage and all also at the national stage in the last class we looked at the volumes of extraction per country and also we looked at globally where the groundwater resources are maximum we looked at the major aquifers of major hydrology groundwater units and also some complex units where they are and what is the recharge rate we will continue [Music] why and how these groundwater volumes differ by country this is very important to understand so that we get a sense of what management activities are needed for groundwater management and conservation so as we saw in the last class uh we will pick up from the graph made by process shah in 2014 looking at the groundwater extraction rates decadent that is every 10 years so we did notice that india has the most extracted volume with around 260 kilometer cube per year and the second rank goes to u.s around 110 and china comes third with around 90 95 kilometer cube per year respectively and we also saw a very important note that india extracts more if not less than the combination of the next two countries in line which is combined groundwater use of u.s and china we also notice that the asian countries are ever increasing in groundwater use in china and all the major agricultural economies in groundwater use is keeping on increasing with the most steepest increase noted in india this curve is exponential whereas others are almost really growing but every year it is increasing whereas the western countries are more or less stabilizing us europe etc this clearly shows a shift from the groundwater use and or where they are using most of the work it is very imperative to understand where the groundwater is mostly used now have an idea which countries are using it and by a fair understanding of what the chief economy is driven by in each of these countries where the groundwater is being used let's have a deeper look at it so the major use as we saw is in the asian countries and those asian countries are also noted as the chief food exporters in the world [Music] let's take some data so of the world irrigated area which is around 300 000 000 so you can see the units here you do have uh almost uh of the area irrigated with brown water is around 37 to 40 percent so all the total agricultural irrigated land it could be by surface irrigation it could be by tube well buying water etc etc damn water almost 37.5 is from the groundwater which is a big number okay so moving on let's see how the major continents are using water for iteration so africa uses around 18.5 percent of groundwater total uh area irrigated only 18.5 percent is under groundwater irrigation and when you compare it to the world it's very small 2.3 percent okay so if you remember i did show you that uh big big aquifers with big recharge and good volume are available in africa however it's economically very expensive to take the water out therefore they don't use much of groundwater they are limited with energy resources pumping mechanical resources to actually access this water so it is called economically stress situation then we go to the americas which is north and south america you see above the world average of 37.5 we have 44 of the total irrigated area under groundwater irrigation this shows that most of these regions where irrigation is happening they are almost 50 percent nearly nearing fifty percent is tapped from groundwater if you look at what they grow in these countries it is mostly uh nuts horticulture which is fruits orchards etc and lot of exports a lot of water is also used for grass to feed the meat market livestock and other things and then they export the meat so a lot of their water is used for that when you compare to the world it's almost 20 percent of the groundwater irrigated area let's move on to asia where as i said most of the agriculture is happening so now we are going to understand that groundwater is a big user in the world in asian countries so and that is why you see a lot of volume being extracted so if you look at the area under irrigation irrigation is the application of water for crops so it is not rain fed it is the rugby season that we call in india so it's the non-monsoon season or season where you apply water and as i said most of the water is applied by surface water groundwater or combination of both so in asia almost 38 to 40 which is almost near the world average is taken from groundwater so almost uh the average uh sinks in where it is a bigger bigger chunk is when you look at the area so of the total area irrigated in the world with groundwater 70 percent happens in asia and that is why you see india's groundwater extraction high china bangladesh sri lanka all these asian countries pumping a lot of groundwater so even though your percentage of total area is small because these are agrarian nations which means a lot of agricultural activity is happening and because of that most of the water is supplied by surface water structures whereas the rugby season and the non-monsoon season is supplied by groundwater so 38 of the total however of the groundwater use area in the world 70 to 71 percent is from asia so asian regions are combinedly the most extracting regions for groundwater in the world then when you go to europe um the irrigation is very small look at the area size uh it's almost that of africa's which means not much uh irrigation happens very less agricultural productivity and of that even lesser is for groundwater irrigation so only thirty two point four percent uh much uh lower than the world average uh and uh of the world area only six to seven percent uh is underground irrigation in europe so the bombs and all the technologies they use may not be applicable uh for asian countries so please understand this yes there are a lot of technologies available in europe and western countries but the system here is totally different the volumes we extract are totally different much much higher so we need better engineering and natural solutions to manage groundwater when you come to oceania where it's very very negligible so if you just look at the major continents uh as i said asia has been the chief producer of agricultural products and especially your more water intensive products like sugarcane rice vegetables fruits etc and they are exported so you export these products out for a very low amount of money so this data clearly shows where the food is mostly produced and how it is also shifted to these other countries for a very less price and so you are exporting your groundwater for a very very less price so most importantly without the price concept if you look at it it is very important to understand that most of the groundwater irrigation happens in asia and also on top of that so above and beyond that around 62 percent of the irrigation is by surface water so please do not disconnect surface water and ground water because surface water leads to groundwater so that we'll discuss in the physical hydrology section so moving on we'll take a look at the groundwater social apologies in agriculture which means now we know that where the irrigation is happening where how much groundwater resources are being used let's see what they use it for i was giving examples like by sugarcane based on my reading and experiences these countries but it is also important to see what data shows so the yellow region is the area agrarian system which is very less water and based on that there are some ugly aryan systems example some some vegetables fruits dates spawn all those things so you see middle eastern countries are occupying that then the groundwater where it is used for industrial agriculture so industrial agriculture includes mass farming like acres and acres of land uh managed by one well or a big massive web and then also industrial agriculture includes livestock varying at an industrial scale so there's a lot of these countries if you look at that europe and your u.s and australia come under the industrial agricultural category and they are mostly the well developed countries so they are very developed nations and they use the water very wisely thereby conserving water and using it for more industrial and profit so industrial activities and profit okay so you can see south africa comes into that and all these european nations and australia us come under that um then we go to the small land holder intensive agriculture so this is where the chunk of australia comes i'm sorry asia cups if you look at most of asian countries are aggressive agrarian in nature are dependent on agriculture and their small land holding sites china's data is not available to compare that very clearly however if you look at india you have the average land holding size approximately at one hectare so these are very small land polling units and lot of agriculture activity intensive architecture so here is where groundwater is being extracted at unsustainable rates across asian countries okay so uh and also the northern part of africa and mexico so these are the places where groundwater management is needed and or there is no collecting use there's no options for collective use because they are isolated as small lamp holders and there are more and more management needed then we get into the extensive aggro pastoralism so this is the face or this is the vertical where you see more agriculture is for varying livestock and those kind of activities as i said meat industry um and then poultry industries you can feed all those things so there is agriculture happening and there is groundwater use for that agriculture but the product is not mostly for human consumption but for livestock cattle uh other types of meat industries like chicken and other things where it is converted to one from to the other and that meat is being exported to uh countries uh as a product so you always see meat coming from brazil and other things so here is where extensive agro-pasteurism habits and the groundwater use is that so roughly you get an idea where most of the groundwater activities are which are the red zones and it is intensive agriculture for food so rice cane props etc whereas your agro-pasteurism is for grass for example which may not consume as much as water as sugar cane and rice so and then we get into the industrial phase so we do have now a good spread of countries and fortunately unfortunately if you draw a line between the red and the orange countries you see that the red countries are mostly the underdeveloped developing four nations like nepal is there for lower economies pakistan afghanistan iran all those countries are there and india is there as a developing nation along with china as a developed nation so all these nations are cornered in the small intensive agriculture for groundwater whereas the developed nations including australia us and european countries use it for industrial agriculture so there's a big difference in what we see moving on we can also see countries where groundwater use is not significant including russia canada and all those cold countries finland etc so here groundwater use is negligible for agriculture and that is very clearly understood uh with what they do so groundwater in canada is is very less maybe for industrial it is not for industrial agriculture so where does the food come from these countries it comes from most of the asian countries so here's where most of the virtual water flow print and also the water export happens so now we have a good uh idea of which are the countries that are using more groundwater and what are they using it for they are using it for agriculture and are they using it for high cost agriculture or industrial very smart agriculture these things have been discussed in these chapters so the quick question is if we continue like this then the developed nations will always be developed and rich whereas the poor nations will be using more water for a very low profit and they will they will never make good profit and or become developed nations in terms of agriculture it's very difficult uh because the groundwater resources coming down so that is what the port of this course is we are aiming to uh management water properly so that it is more sustainably used in the future so given that groundwater has become a very very important aspect of the asian countries it's important to see uh the structure of groundwater economies and so uh here's where you see uh the annual groundwater use by different data data from different resources you see china using 105 kilometer cube per year per year annual groundwater extraction or use the good part of this table is it shows you how many wells are they using for extracting that much of volume of water okay and abstraction per well so if you have one well uh how much water on average do they extract and what is the proportion of population using the groundwater so if you look at china 4.5 million wells uh there will be more now and the abstraction is 23 000 cubic meters per year per web okay so what does this tell you is uh the number of wells spread across the country and also what are the techniques technologies that they use and the size of the land that they irrigate from one web so look at 23 000 cubic meters per year uh that's a good fair amount of land that can be irrigated we jump down to india uh where india is a major use of groundwater 230 kilometer cube per year uh these numbers would differ varying on the reports that you see or the studies you see uh so for the actual values you i i recommend you to look at the central ground motorboat data where it parks it around 265 to 60 kilometer cube per year so here in india the second row you see 20 million wealths more than five times the wealth in china look at the size of china look at the size of india and 11 500 cubic meter per year per well so that also gives you an idea of what is the land size that is used for one well so is it economical look at the energy that they put in a well how much extraction goes how much wastage goes all these things so it is clear that most of the population is consuming groundwater look at 55 to 60 percent and most importantly they individually use it it's not like collective use 20 million wells compared to 4.5 million wells in china and the amount of water that is extracted per well clearly shows that it's more localized use of groundwater rather than sharing or mass farming mass use of groundwater so this causes multiple multiple wells to be installed just think about it you have a land and your your uh neighbor has a lamp instead of having one well for both the lamps just adjacent to each other two lines are together instead of having one well in between for both uh you will have one farmer having one well the other one are having another one so this is how wells multiply in india and uh the cost is expensive because well one well is almost the same uh depending on the location uh so instead of drilling one well with a particular depth now you're drilling two wells and that is expensive the water is also being used very inefficiently energy is lost in pumping those kind of things as compared to other lower user countries like iran mexico and pakistan you have almost 0.5 million wells and 0.09 million dollars in mexico and if you look at mexico's groundwater extraction per well it's humongous 414 000 meters per year which means they have bigger wells and bigger abstraction wells and that is used for industrial scale because uh you take it and or give it to the consumption units like cities uh domestic views units so it is good to understand from this table that um countries use groundwater but most importantly are they isolating it by different partners and are there too many wells those kind of things energy laws what is the population using it come to pakistan's part of punjab uh and you could see uh around 45 cubic meters kilogram kilometer cube of water is used with 0.5 million wells 90 000 meter cube per year which is uh much much higher than india uh in terms of per well abstraction uh and 60 to 65 so more percentage of people are dependent on this around water so a lot of uh water is being extracted by very very less amount of uh wells okay so this these also uh looks at maybe sharing of groundwater or central agency which is pumping the water and distributing to other regions okay come down to u.s which is uh 198 kilometer cube per year according to this report but the number of wells they have is very very small if you know most of the groundwater wells in u.s have to be permitted by the government you have to declare and they monitor it every every well is almost monitored so you do have good data and those are massive massive wells if you look at the pumps those are industrial pumps uh which uh pump a lot of volume of water uh and cater to large pieces of land not one hectare so it's big big lands and mass farming happens so you don't need that many wells and you have an industrial agricultural system as we saw in this image so mostly it is used for industrial the population which is dependent or using it is only less uh than two percent so uh this gives a clear idea this um image gives a clear idea of how the water is used where the water is used and the number of wells spread across the countries and a well abstraction it gives you a a very short experience on if the well is shared or used individually and other countries how they use it compared to india so the specific crops a very very uh important slide which is done by study by darling at all in 2017 mapping the major groundwater uses in the world so all these countries that you see so not all the countries are and the size of your pie chart uh gives you the size of the water extractor so if it is above 30 km per year so you know that india pakistan china us are all above 30 kilometer cube so they have a bigger circle um and also they map the key crops that they drop so i've been telling you where the water is used how many wells they use and uh how many wells per million are used in the country and purple extraction rate now let's see what crops they grow most of the crops using groundwater so you see that the chief or the wiki highly ranked india in general views uh you see more of wheat and rice being used by groundwater irrigation so wheat and rice are used more followed by sugar cane all these are highly water intensive crops and then you have cotton another with water intensive crop followed by other which is very diverse it depends on where you are in india it could be millets it could be turmeric chiles horticulture anything you you could name it because it's very diverse okay so you have a lot of other agencies here but when you go to your [Music] china uh you see that more of the groundwater use for rice and because there are rice eating nation when compared to wheat india has almost half and half rice wheat so china has a lot of rice plus maize so maize is used a lot and groundwater is being shared for it's gotten very less come to comparatively less if you come to us which is the next ranked uh groundwater extractor you could see a total change now more pink color is there for fodder fodder is the grass that the cows and livestock eat as i said they are industrial groundwater uses they use it for meat industry rather than crops and then rice and those kind of things so rice is very less so after fodder it goes to other which is including multicultural nuts like almonds and stuff that you get from the us even in indian market uh and then you have a mace uh some ace corn they use a lot for sugar and also ethanol uh then you have uh australia is very less compared to other parts of uh the world uh mexico has a lot of other problems so it gives you a very clear understanding of where the groundwater is used what are the key crops that they grow to to sustain this groundwater use and activity and are they diversifying their crops so if you look at china in india there's not much diversification more rice means more groundwater use same as wheat so wheat and rice also are having equal proportions in india when it comes to consumption so north india it has a lot of wheat whereas they have a lot of rice okay so these are typical crops that are grown using groundwater now we have an idea of can you do something can you do something for changing this behavior if you take a step back and answer this question is it that easy to change a dietary preference by these nations let's take china can you change their rice eating habits it's really going to be very difficult same as india so if you go to india south you cannot quickly change them to another diet and or the north from wheat to something else less water intensive crops for example maize or millets so this is where the groundwater demand and supply scenarios have to be discussed and this study clearly shows you where these major economies are in using groundwater and how much do they use in terms of groundwater volume is it by a range above the 30 kilometer to less than one kilometer cube and what are the key specific crops that we brought the other question to answer in these key countries in extracting warm water is do they need that much do they need that much productivity because at the most of the time you start exporting uh but is the export water also added into it okay so you're exporting rice from india to the western countries or from china to western countries how much are you calculating the groundwater is the question because it is an unseeable quantity you cannot put a value for groundwater and that is the problem for grammar management whereas the other countries the western and europe countries they have clearly understood the value of groundwater and using it for a high profit so one kilogram of meat is much more expensive than one kilogram of rice if you look at the comparisons um same goes to maize and other things that they grow so uh it has to be used to communicate some important decisions to the policy makers and farmers in india how do you conserve groundwater and what can be done to change the attitude of groundwater use in india we'll see more of this in the next lecture because such use of groundwater is very unsustainable i've been using this for a long time but what water are you using is a question are you using the annual rechargeable water not exactly are you using water from 10 years 100 years ago yes that is what we will discuss in the principles of water and occurrences of groundwater etcetera okay so if this habit goes on where you use groundwater for mostly highly water intensive crops it is very unsustainable ah and more likely the groundwater system is going to be under tremendous stress and the agricultural system may collapse so it is very important to understand from water use in these countries with this i just will introduce the water stress which we'll be discussing more in detail in the next class just if you look at the previous image and uh where the major groundwater use and what and uh the study by wri on the stress uh indicators and countries where water stress and groundwater are going to be it almost matches for example india the highest non-water extractor is also showing a high water stress index compared to china and other countries similarly wherever the groundwater is extracted you are going to see a lot of water stress even in the u.s in some regions where groundwater is highly extracted is going to be under tremendous stress so we'll discuss this in detail in the next class [Music] you | IIT Bombay July 2018 | UCLI5I1QwKqQn0Cf4nzdGKeQ | 2022-01-28 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,359 | 23,796 |
1uHVMYNVeJ8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uHVMYNVeJ8 | Hayley Davies' 🐱 is Powered by Advil! #shorts | my was getting so painful that in the mornings before my shoots I would take like two Tylenol two edil and then during the day I would be like popping them in between shoots it's just about like mentally just being like okay I can get through this you didn't think like maybe I should give my body a break I would try like to take like a couple of days it would recover a tiny bit but I'm just like I could not make myself take more than that off because I'm just I was blowing up and I just I'm so like all these opportunities were presenting yeah I'm so like data driven number driven and I was just like doing so great and like being congratulated by so many people so I was just like I just want to see how far I can go come on girl you can get through this I mean now I definitely don't do that extreme I try to do two shoots Max a day now it's just two yeah oh only two I don't think you got lazy | Holly Randall Unfiltered | UCXjkPQN193ToX487P6Bcc0A | 2024-03-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 188 | 902 |
GzbEK4u_Su8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GzbEK4u_Su8 | Mental Health & Transplant Webinar | [Music] hey everyone we are back with another webinar as part of our 2023 ckf webinar Series this webinar will focus on mental health and transplant in honor of Mental Health Awareness Month my name is Anna Morgan Pallotti I am the programming communications director for the Chris clerk foundation and I will be introducing today's panelists and moderating this session uh I would first like to thank our generous sponsors the hearts for rest Foundation who helped make this series possible thank you to all of those who have submitted questions before today's sessions if you have a further question for today's panelists please send them to info at chrisclubfoundation.org and we will get them out to the panelists um if you're interested in any other topics we'll be just discussing in this year's uh series head to chrisclude foundation.org dkf webinar series now I would like to introduce our panelists uh first up we have Randy Stafford Randy is a two-time kidney transfer recipient based in Mill Valley California Randy is a ckf patient Ambassador and works to spread awareness for organizing tissue donation through our programs next we have Patrick Brett Patrick is a hot and liver transplant recipient from Louisville Pennsylvania Patrick is the newest member of our ckf patient Ambassador team joining in November of 2022. um next we have Sharon drost Sharon is a double lung transplant recipient from Los Altos California as a physician Sharon has experience on both sides of the stethoscope and finally we have Nicole Jefferson Nicole is a kidney transplant recipient from Dallas Texas who I had the wonderful opportunity to meet in transplant games in San Diego and I'm excited to hear her thoughts on this topic and thank you all for joining us today it is great to see so many new faces part of the ckf team and I'd like to get started with some questions so first up I'm going to start with Randy I'm learning you're in need of a transplant is extremely life-altering it's a complete you know 180. um can you talk a minute about how this affected your mental health What feelings and emotions you experienced during your journey yeah thanks for the question you know in my case the diagnosis of kidney disease which particularly abrupt I had gone through 23 years of life and had just gotten out of graduate school and started a new job and as part of the pre-employment physical I was found to have very severe kidney failure and eventually this was discovered to be congenital that I was born only with one very small kidney and that this kidney had essentially failed over the the 23 years that I had been alive and uh basically went from feeling completely healthy maybe with a few signs in the background that something could be wrong but I was very athletic through my childhood and teenage years and active in college sports and then to suddenly be told that I would be on dialysis within a few months was really disheartening and there was a real sense that my body had had let me down that it it somehow had failed me very suddenly even though this had been a problem that it had been identified as going back very early I didn't know anything about this growing up so you know my feelings at that time were disappointment and isolation I think the other notable thing was that there was a tendency to try to blame myself there was kind of as I was going through the diagnosis process it took a long time and during that time of uncertainty I became prone to sort of look for things in my past that could have potentially caused my my kidney failure although in the end it turned out that there was nothing that I could have done and anyone could have done to sort of prevent this from happening so that sense of depression and not feeling well feeling down quite a few days was very unrelenting during that period and in some ways I happened upon two strategies to kind of fight that one was exercise I really stuck with this idea that I'd been very active previously and even with kidney failure I was going to remain active even if the physicians at the time really thought that that was crazy that they told me to take it easy and not stress my body but that didn't feel right to me and in some ways I purposely ignored the the advice of my nephrologist and then frankly the other thing that really helped is that I had this full-time job and I was really committed to sticking with it because it was the culmination of a lot of uh training and my graduate school education and I so much wanted to hold on to that even knowing once I got on dialysis that it was rare for dialysis patients to keep working so for me it was a very abrupt change one that really completely shattered my Illusions about who I was and what I was doing and put me into a whole mindset that particularly you know was was not very helpful and and quite quite on the on the depressed side yeah does anyone have anything to add to Randy's comments maybe a Jenny that you went through I was just gonna say I understand what Randy is saying about you feeling like your body laid you down um also it you go through and say what did I do what can I what can I do now what could I have done um you know was did my parents have any you know issues with this because maybe I wasn't checked out when I should have been but ultimately there is no it's no Point's fault it's your you know just something that happens um even with the birth defects and things like that these are things that they don't necessarily go and test for unless they already know about them so that's a whole you know that's one of the hurdles that you have to go through on this journey I was just going to add that I agree for me my diagnosis was a complete um surprise I was very healthy athletic I'd finished medical school all of my training I had a a lovely four-year-old daughter and my particular situation as I had uh an autoimmune disease it was called the Scleroderma and um never had any other manifestations of it until one day I just couldn't push her stroller very loaded up stroller by the way up a hill in at the San Diego Zoo and I thought oh boy this is this is something serious and so uh as a physician reached out to some of my physician friends and pretty much quickly had the diagnosis and I did feel I did feel that as a physician I should have seen science earlier um and then my Scleroderma did essentially uh destroy my lungs pretty rapidly so I needed the transplant relatively quickly within about a year from diagnosis I think yeah I think hindsight's a great thing in every part of the world um you know of your life and I definitely hear a lot more than I ever thought getting into this world a lot of people say well I was perfectly healthy it came out of nowhere and I'm always so surprised you know how that occurs but it so happens to so many people um you know you living life you're going about it and suddenly 180 your world's changed um I'm gonna move on to Sharon um Sharon often we took with transplant recipients who experience survivors skill is this something that you personally have experienced um how do you learn to cope with um you know survive his guilt or something you know that like that that's a great question so survivor's guilt is a very individual experience and I've taken a poll of patients and especially I have a group of uh doctor friends who are also transplant recipients and um having the opinion of that group I value greatly because uh they're in a similar situation to me where we all feel like we should have been able to diagnose our own problems earlier um and then to be a Survivor means that you live whereas someone else had made the largest sacrifice in the world and another part about survivor's guilt is early on it seems to be the worst because here you are laying in the hospital able to fully breathe no oxygen no anything needed at all and in my case uh two doors down uh the lady who received my donor's heart also was was there and so I had the opportunity to speak with her to speak with her family very grateful family and it's something that seeing and talking to the family members and knowing the stories behind how much the families appreciate that the organs were used and they've gone to good people and they they get a chance to even just see you you don't have to keep in contact with them for very long periods of time if you don't want to or they don't want to it's their choice but it is a sense of closure and it's healing for I think both sides for the recipient and the families so I think survivor's guilt is very personal it really seems to affect people early on and Fades as you just go on and I've had friends who they've gotten married they've had twin children they have you know gone on in their training and and some are transplant Physicians themselves and it really points out that Beyond that early phase of guilt you realize that you're honoring your donor by living your life to the fullest you truly are doing what they intended for you and it makes both you and the family I believe feel best anyone want to add on to to Sharon's comment there yes I will personally I didn't have any survivor's guilt um the first time um I mean I knew this was just the circle of life and things happen um I believe my sister had more guilt about the person who passed away with my first transplant my guilt came in when I lost that transplant and I had to have another transplant um and that's where I actually went through mourning for for her and it was more it was a warning for I felt like I let her down I felt like she was dying again and that's where my guilt came in and my guilt um and I still have some guilt although I I have the other transplant but originally no it was when I felt I let her down um by having to have another transplant Randy did you want to add to that yeah I I was gonna say that I felt the survival's survivor's guilt very acutely um in the sense that I had grown very close to uh another uh a guy who was about my age in the chair next to me in the dialysis center and I was on dialysis for almost a year before getting my my kidney transplant from my younger brother um you know I thought that my friend my uh my co-dialysis mate was going to follow the same kind of path that I was and he received his kidney transplant about three months after I did and initially did really well but then things kind of fell apart the kidney wasn't working and all of the strategies they were trying to use to get the his immune system to to calm down weren't working and unfortunately he eventually took his own life and it was very abrupt and traumatic for me and of course just that situation was traumatic in itself but I was left with this tremendous sense of guilt of kind of just wondering why it was that somehow I did so well and my friend who was you know equally resourced and had had the skills to navigate this it just didn't work out for him and I still I still feel some sense of of guilt around that time in my life even though we're now talking uh you know more than 35 years ago yeah I think guilt is something you know it's it's a very hard thing to work through um and everybody around you can kind of see truly what is going on whereas you get sort of bogged down with that that feeling um I want to touch back to what Sharon said though it is you know truly it's a gift of life and for those who are on the donor side it can be a great way to still feel connected to your loved one and for them to live on um my mother-in-law lost his son through suicide and her other son is now on the transplant waitlist and to see her sort of see both sides like that she's like well the gift he gave is helping um his brother and a 10 year old five years later it's it's crazy how how it lives on on so Patrick we often see that the transplant process can cause recipients to become anxious and stress during everyday life push transplant um especially during the covet pandemic um as the world was sort of put on pause but also recipients were at that high risk um level did you experience anxiety in your everyday life how did you overcome this Johnny that's a great question and it's uh interesting timing as I just had my oh my gosh um almost I guess a year and a half almost two year follow-up with um transplant Psychiatry so Hospital you worked in Pennsylvania where I had my transplant every transplant patient these transplant Psychiatry on a on a right post-transplant a couple times they pop in of conversations um if they need to prescribe medication and to anxiety medications they would do such and then um you know you follow up as needed and I just got my follow-up yesterday and just kind of going through what transpired immediately post transplant and then now after a couple months I have two years to close transplant so right after transplant was just a very interesting time for me you know I live in the hospital extremely cautious during the pandemic my wife was able to work from home until she was well I was fully vaccinated for the teaching you guys see me I saw my kids three times in person it's like four times in person place in the hospital they snuck them in the hospital that actually helped me out with that during drinking so a lot of emotions after transplant coming home and also trying to even get home um I put a lot of pressure on myself post transplant to get better as quick as possible and I blame myself for not being able to do so I I talked to myself and said you sat in the hospital for six months and didn't mentally prepare yourself to prepare yourself to be able to come out of this and and be as recover as quickly as possible as I had in previous years with open heart surgeries for icdm plans now granted they were years prior and I as I got older I was 35 when I had my transplant um but what it turned out to be was that it was medication changes that was causing me to not progress in my recovery so having to understand that using transplants like hi if you understand a very helpful they ended up putting me on a medication called Sparrow which is anti-anxiety um I'm still on that today which is very helpful um but as far as the pandemic goes and being high risk um those first couple weeks and months back here at home were regarding anxiety who could come visit if they can visit if they came to visit they had to wear a mask you know my parents my sister her kids where were they hired to come visiting me and all that kind of stuff luckily with the summer so no one would really endorsed everyone's outside but there was definitely some some anxiety and then my wife went back to work um out of high school at the biggest high school in the state of Pennsylvania we have 3 000 students for three grades um so her going to work my kids going back to school everyone was still mastered the time but it was definitely had some some uh oh here we go are they going to bring something home that's going to put me back into the hospital for work um and as I got healthy and I went to cardiac rehab there was always the all right there's only a couple people here but who knows where they've been um we didn't go out to dinner we didn't go out to a restaurant or anywhere for months and months on end um and that first time we finally did it was you know it I I was my wife had to like calm me down and say relax if you're okay you know you can take your mask off the heat you'll be fine and then I finally went back to work in January of 2022 and everyone was still Master the time but now they're not so my anxiety of that is definitely gone significantly down but there's still that I still have the plexiglass up around my desk I still wear a master work every single day and students high school students and any kind of technical students and even colleges are very uh germ build so I do my best to make sure that I protect myself to every degree possible um to make sure that my anxiety for that is not as high as it could be yeah I can't imagine how hot it would be you know being in a high school yeah they're definitely bringing in all the gems and having two two kids at home you know for them seeing you go through it but also probably there's an element of you feeling you know you want to get outside you want the kids to experience the world but also containing your own risk at the same time so the next one I'm gonna go to Nicole um a transplant leads to significant both physical and mental changes that can be positive and negative um do you feel there is a process to learning you're learning to love your post-transplant self again and sort of what did that Journey look like for you sure so I will say that my first transplant experience was not a very good one I crashed into dialysis I had no idea anything was wrong with me I went through the to the emergency room and I was on dialysis the next day um so with that I didn't have much information I wasn't prepared as soon as I found out I needed a transplant that was my goal get a transplant I didn't care in between that time about dialysis I didn't care about anything else really besides getting a transplant um so after I received that transplant I thought everything was going to go back to normal I was going to go back to the way I was it was I thought okay I'm getting a transplant I'm cured it's over I didn't realize that no I was not cured the transplant is just another form of treatment it's you know as I explained to people the transplant is just like dialysis without going to the clinic um every every three days a week or as I did it peritoneal dialysis every night that's the only difference um so I actually struggled with that first one and with that first one because I didn't do well I felt worse with the transplant initially um and so I started thinking should I go back on dialysis what should I do because I don't like this feeling however I was working I had a child to raise so I continued to do that and so I knew I had to keep going keep going and so it was a few years after that that um I moved to a different state I moved to Iowa and once I moved to Iowa all of a sudden I was in I felt like something came awakened me and it was just a new feeling and so that's when I started feeling good but also that was the time in which I started advocating and once I started advocating I realized I was not the only person who went through this and it was good having friends who I could explain things to and they completely understood where I was coming from not that um you know my friends that I have and my family they want to you know they they listen they can empathize but they don't understand and so once that World opened things got better for me um and so I did use the my transplant friends as a coping mechanism and also uh um you know for my mental health when I lost when I started losing that transplant I had a lot of um that's where the mental thing started again number one I've always had to advocate for myself because my doctor didn't believe that my transplant was failing in well he said that the numbers were in line with what they needed to be so I begged him for a biopsy and he refused and so finally I told him well I'll you know go back to Texas they'll do a biopsy for me I've already called them because there's something going on I know the paper says one thing but this is not really what's going on and um I remember I was it was 2016. I was on my way to the transplant games of America in 2016. and uh my doctor called and he said you know your body don't you I said yes I do what what is it and he said yeah that kidney is 90 scarred and I said wow so again my paperwork didn't show that my number showed that it was okay it was in line my creatine was at a two something so with that I was able to start being listed and so because I had been an advocate for so long I had a just a wide knowledge of information um because I you know volunteered with you know NIH and idek I have um their privileges on speed dial so I was able to navigate this transplant uh thing a little bit better uh at that time I under by then I knew and I found out things that I didn't know the first time I knew I could get on any list I wanted to be on pretty much so I went and got on several lists around the country um but that again in itself it's emotional because I was on I was being uh evaluated at five to five different centers so the rules were different at five different centers one of the centers in particular had um they did not want to put me on the transplant list because my egfr was not low enough and we all know that egfr and the black people uh stories so that was upsetting very upsetting um because you know my God would go back and forth and say list me as a white person and my egfr would be low enough for you to list me and they said we can't do that and I asked them well how do you know I'm black are you basing that on visual you don't you don't know and of course you know I was telling them like that's an Antiquated number that's information that you got from slavery times when muscles were stronger I don't have muscles I can trust me I don't so you can't times my number by 1.5 so that started an entirely um although other other centers were listing me this is a very large Medical Center in the United States that everyone thinks is the best center in the world and they look up to so that was extremely hard heartbreaking that they told me no so while I'm getting yes from all these other centers it was that one note that was just very upsetting and it that made me feel as though you're taking my race and you're saying no based on my race um instead of just saying nobody because I haven't done everything I've done everything that you've asked with the exception of having that correct egfr um so again uh while this was going on my kidney was continuing to decline and of course still producing good numbers but I could feel it and that's how I knew I was in the decline in any way I could just feel it it was like like she was telling me she was tired and ready to go so um during this time I ended up moving back to Texas you know to be closer to family and you know the the emotions there the Saving Grace with this is um the transplant friends that I had who told me keep it going you got it and also me having to fight the doctors with um not going on dialysis you because when I moved to Dallas they pretty much demanded that I started dialysis and I told them I wouldn't start dialysis um because it wasn't time I would know when it's time for me to start dialysis at this point of course they're looking at numbers um because the numbers were going up and I told them I will not go on dialysis this was in 2018 when I moved back to Dallas and they kept demanding and so finally my doctor got upset sent another doctor in to work with me um because I was just adamant I wasn't going and so in March of 2020 when covet started I told him I said okay I feel this time but I have a lot of things coming up I had a lot of advocacy events to attend in DC so I said I'll start dialysis in July I I promise you I'll start dialysis in July um but again I had put it all from 2016 to 2020. and so that was in March when I was getting my letter about coven about you know not having to go into the office and then in April April 23rd I got the call from Des Moines saying hey we think we have a kidney for you you want to come and get it so I was like sure I'll come and get it so um of course I flew up there picked up the kidney but again everything is tied into um emotional it was April 2020 so we all know where we were as a country uh covet no one knew how to react no one knew no one knew how to react no one knew how to respond they didn't know if anyone could fly up there with me they didn't know how uh everything was gonna go on because it was new for everyone especially someone coming from out of town so I was able to you know to get the kidney and I did you know fairly well and stayed there for a while and it my original kidney I could still felt like it was still working she was still chugging along a little bit but I you know I went through the morning as I said before I started mourning like oh my gosh she's been with me for 12 years I can't believe this no I can't let her go and I was just you know at night sometimes I would probably just tell her I'm sorry I'm so so sorry that um that you're dying again I I hope you don't think I fell with you um I tried I tried and you know I got the sense of relief and so the new kidney was coming in and you know having some issues so I would you know I felt like she was just staying long enough to teach him the ropes I said hey please teach him the ropes and teach him about me so um you can you can rest like I like I know you want to rest and people think it's crazy but I I felt when the handoff took place I could feel spiritually mentally when she handed it off to him completely and said you got it from here um which was difficult because again this is something that had been with me although she's still in there but you know she had been working with me for that long and so that was that was extremely emotional that was so powerful and I definitely agree with you there's nothing more you know having your friends and family is so important but having that transplant connection to recipients to those going through it those who've been through it um there's nothing more powerful than that I wanted to Sharon Randall do you have anything to sort of add there I so much agree with Nicole and uh particularly with that that sense that you're suddenly you're suddenly controlled by these rules that are restricting you and some of the rules kind of make sense but some of them are are kind of like just tradition and Physicians can be very dogmatic about what they think is correct for you and uh you know a lot of the research I do as a professor is on this idea of trying to get patients to advocate for themselves and I think that's absolutely critical for transplant recipients because there are so many rules and restrictions and it is so complicated that we should be at the front line trying to do the most we can to work ourselves into the conversation about what happens to us and unfortunately I I found through my you know almost 40 Years of of dealing with kidney disease that um that happens less often than we really would like and I I truly think that there are times when we have to essentially be non-adherent to to say I appreciate your advice but I'm going to do something a little bit different because that's what I feel is what needs to happen with me and unfortunately I think that comes about because clinicians don't necessarily have the flexibility to kind of fine-tune things around individual needs and uh and also many patients are completely intimidated by the the Health Care system and you know I have a kind of Interest story because you know I was in public health prior to my first transplant and then decided to go back to medical school and as a clinician got my second transplant and it was such a different experience because I I so much knew what was going on and I knew uh how to manage the the Health Care System the nurses and the clinicians so that it was really centered on me um and yet I still find that there are instances where clinicians don't quite get it and one interesting antidote for my my recent experiences that I was in the hospital and being interviewed by the transplant nephrologists they were absolutely astounded that I was still working they truly expected to be be on disability and it seems to me that one of the issues out there is that we need to have a Health Care system that is asking patients to have aspirations and sometimes that that simply doesn't happen and I so much enjoy Nicole's story about how her advocacy really put her in this position of being able to have some say in her her health care thank you and Randy one of the things that um I just wanted to say uh in regards to one of your comments I've recently found that only about 30 percent of transplant recipients continue to work uh you are correct they expect us to to not you know to to be disabled and go on disability uh while that just doesn't work for some people it doesn't work for me I have to work I have to work also as a well as a physician um and a neurologist at that I advocate for people to keep mentally active it helps to ward off dementia Etc things of that nature and also physically active and I can't underscore um how important it is to be your own Advocate because Nicole you know your body Randall we all we know what's happening inside um and it's really important I think clinicians do have the best of intentions it is a very demanding job in terms of um you know they oftentimes in the transplant medicine field in particular they have a responsibility and and a obligation to the patients but also to the donors and to make sure that they uh distribute the or the organs to the best candidates um but that said again I just want everybody out there to listen carefully you have to be your own Advocate and as a physician I love when patients tell me listen something's wrong and then from there I can run run with it but must speak up you must keep a close eye on yourself even you know enlist the your friends are you starting to look puffier are you just anything anything and everything because you are a team with your transplant center physicians Etc so really advocate for yourselves well done Nicole and I think this kind of fits into the discussion of mental health because I think most transplant recipients are very intimidated by that Health Care system out there and um that just adds to the sense of burden in the sense that um you know I'm I'm not doing well and that I'm not being heard and in my mind it's really important to sort of be open to what the Health Care system can give you but also be actively managing your own care and I think around mental health issues there's an an additional barrier which is often kind of the social stigma attached to mental health but there I think that there's a lot that patients can do to both engage with care and as you were suggesting uh Sharon to you know eat a good diet be physically active get in enough sleep those things which we actually know help with depression you know although we tend to think about talk therapy and antidepressant medications there still is a lot that patients can do to help their Mental Health I agree and Randy just just to really uh emphasize that point about sleep and mental health and exercise I I really can't it's so it's so tied together you get a little serotonin bump you feel better when you exercise for me I call it exercising my lungs because I'm a double lung transplant recipient so I take my lungs on walks I exercise all the time mostly and it's not for looks it's not for weight it's to keep the lungs working functioning optimally um it also I always feel great after I exercise and sleep it's challenging especially sometimes for people who are on Prednisone which is one of the immunosuppressant medications but I have found ways and I'm interested also in Nicole and Randy and Patrick ways that you guys have found to help with insomnia uh and for me I use um The Calm c-a-l-m app and it has meditation but also sleep stories just like bedtime stories your your mom dad would tell you at night and you just fall right asleep uh there's head space that also has mental health meditations and sleep stories and another one called Better Health and I really recommend that pre-transplant patients start now just become familiar with the meditation practices the Sleep practices sleep hygiene is so important and that will set you up for uh reduced anxiety I think and at least for me I felt like I could control somewhat my anxiety when my pre-transplant when my breathing was really labored I had ways to visualize breath coming in and out and it really helped and it also helped post transplant the acute like day after transplant just to be able to feel like I could control that renewed sense of being able to breathe freely it was so it was like having a sports car set of lungs and needing to know how to use them again and so I really recommend in advance just start becoming familiar and having those resources available to you join a gym if you need to have a walking buddy whatever it takes I think um when we look at the mental health aspect and counseling one of the things especially when we're looking at the kidney Community a lot of people um a lot of black people are on dialysis because you know we're the main ones and it's uh taboo a lot of times to go to what they call you know the old people in our culture called a talking doctor um and they would say you're crazy if you're going and always say it keeps you from going crazy is what it does right but um one of the things I think is you know we have to get past that and we have to understand that we need someone who can talk to who's actually in the field not necessarily going to these pastors uh who don't have the Train the the education behind their counseling or things of that nature and basing it on you know their beliefs you have to go to someone on the outside but we do you need that that help you need that type of you know to be able to talk to through things like Sharon has discussed the exercise the sleeping well um and all of those things like she said I use uh when the app that she does as well but I use it mainly just to kind of track my sleep habits and I do the unconventional and I go to sleep with uh podcasts that are not like murder podcasts so um that you have to know how you can go to sleep right and so uh that's that's how I I go to sleep but you're right you have to find ways that you can go to sleep so you can get the sleep that you need in order to to keep going in order for your body to keep going and I don't think a lot of people understand how much sleep is important sleep is is important to your health we all understand about how how important it is to eat but there's so many people who don't understand sleeping they don't understand uh Dental Care you know for your health and there are a lot of things that come together um in order to make sure that your health is together all around there's definitely so many aspects that go go into it um I did want to sort of touch that we are doing going back to Randy's point of um you know not understanding what your doctor's telling you learning those things we had an interesting conversation a few web and I was back where someone said I broke it up with my support group I said you're in charge of researching this and you're going to research this and we're going to go in there and we're going to know what that doctor's talking about and if you are feeling that you don't understand what's going on or you need a little bit of help becoming your own Advocate we are doing uh understanding the medical talk webinar session um a few down the road so tune into that one as well um but everything you all just said Health Sleep activity um and I really enjoyed that uh car uh sort of not there Sharon so many people say it's like a new engine going in it's it's I felt completely I've heard that one so many times um I'm like I've got to get on this car thing everybody's on it okay um this is sort of for everybody now um feel free to jump in relationships with those around you alter during um and after your transplant can you elaborate how your relationships with your loved one changed and how someone can maintain a healthy and positive relationship through the process and afterwards and I think that's a really difficult question because there's no doubt that all of the changes both physically and emotionally that one goes through with the transplant are going to alter your relationships and uh that was that was really true for me because leading up to being on dialysis and while I was on dialysis it was really difficult to keep things going in a relationship and I felt like my energy had to focus on keeping myself healthy I was working so that was an additional you know kind of Burden so there was a period of time when I I kind of said well I just need to take care of myself and uh you know I think things in the end worked out but it was an additional stress on me to sort of have that that pressure and um and not really know what to do because I didn't necessarily have people in who had gone through transplant who uh were there to advise me and I think things are maybe a little bit different now but I think there's still a lot of stigma around kind of caring for our mental health or even you know getting couples counseling to care for you know the relationship so part of the pre-transplant process is there is a um there is a a psychiatric evaluation um that is looking for a number of different things and I am now 10 years post double lung transplant okay and uh all is well and I've had a really uh very uneventful course again the Sleep the exercise staying mentally active and healthy and as happy as can be um has definitely contributed to that but as Randy was saying there are times that you basically when you're especially in the first three months post-transplant at least for me because the lung transplant is it's a huge capacity in your thorax um very large um you know incision and then across uh you become a burden to your family and so my transplant center part of my contract it was a contract um with my transplant center is to have two non-paid 24 7 dedicated caregivers at home that did not include my spouse so I had my parents um fly over from New York to California and stay and it was wonderful and I also remembered to honor them and give them days and weekends and whatever date nights Etc to keep their mental health going and we all came through it well but it took a lot of planning in advance so if you do have the opportunity if you're a pre-transplant patient really reach out and and figure out ways to to surround yourself with a bubble of people who are not queasy who who you know will be there for you rain or shine and um it's it's when you have ups and downs they can be there for you and likewise you can be there for them and I think it makes a really beautiful partnership but I think planning ahead helps and um uh undoubtedly you will have you know ups and downs post-transplant but having that bubble of Love around will really really help and Sharon um I think you know everything you're saying is correct I just wasn't aware of that with my first transplant and I think honestly I was upset it was disheartening because after my first transplant my family my family thought everything was back to normal they didn't understand that there was all of these other things were going to still go on I was gonna still be sick I still couldn't do certain things uh some some in some instances things got worse so that was very um that was hard to deal with because at that point the beginning of that I really didn't have anyone is just to talk to um because I didn't get into advocacy too much later but of course with this second one um I was fine relationships didn't change uh I don't I've learned to stop expecting things from people who don't understand and it's of no fault of their own it's just this is nothing they've never been through this so while I know they love me I know they care about me there's no way they can understand what I'm going through so this second time around was you know it's very helpful that I have so many transplant friends that I could talk to I could tell them how I felt and they could really understand not just say oh I'm sorry you're going through that but they could say oh wow we'll try this or when I had my transplant this happened or that happened so uh I don't uh with me I don't think any relationships changed I think it's it's so different for everybody and it just depends on your support network and and who's around you and how you know familiar they are with the transplant process what you're going through um and yeah I can't read it reiterate Nicole's Point find those in the transplant Community um if you're happening to watch this ckf can help donor Alliance uh Donate Life America your local opio there's lots of opportunities out there for us to connect you with somebody who necessarily isn't going through exactly the same thing but has gone through a transplant and has those similarities to talk to you about um okay we're moving on to our final question uh what support systems can transplant recipients and their families put in place to ensure a healthy physical recovery but also a healthy mental recovery um other specific tools that each of you use to help you through that process I know we touched on it a little bit but just want to put some focus on it well I'm also a big advocate of the of using the meditation or Story Time apps because I think that it's a it's very much a a different way of approaching your life and I think really helpful as I said before I really think that there's a whole range of of things that people can do to keep themselves healthy mentally and physically um but it's also important to recognize just how common mental health issues are and uh you know maybe they are more common in the transplant recipient Community but these are common throughout you know Society I would say that among my patients certainly 25 or 30 percent have some level of mental health issues around anxiety or depression or adjustment to events in their lives so this is something that that all of us share in some ways with lots of other people and kind of this sense that we're in it together I think is very helpful to remember and takes away from this idea that this is something that we should keep hidden and no one should know about and that you know I think we need to get over that that stigma that is still out there I think diminishing thankfully but still out there I really agree Randy and again my transplant center there was a pre um psychiatric evaluation but 10 years ago there was no absolutely no post psychiatric support and I did advocate for myself and thought well no I'm I'm a physician I can take I have to handle so many things you know um but I did find that I didn't want to burden my spouse I didn't want to burden the people closest to me um and I needed someone external to the family to speak with someone with training someone with understanding about transplant physiology and mental health and support and so I advocated for that um and found uh someone who I I talked to regularly and it's it's it's really just refreshing uh to have someone knowledgeable who can when for instance a I'm having a rougher time with insomnia which happens to just be my main issue post-transplant um you know she comes up with these great suggestions and things that I've never thought of and other patients have you know brought to her attention and it's a partnership it really really helps and again Randy Randy as you were mentioning you know generalized anxiety disorder is is pervasive throughout Society um not just the transplant community and it's something that again I I would love for people to prepare themselves um uh to be ready to have resources um basically on your telephone it's as simple as that nobody you can use it any time of the day but also if you can find establish a caring relationship with a um a psychologist or a psychiatrist who is knowledgeable in transplant issues that would be so helpful oh and also also as Nicole mentioned having the transplant groups other patients who have gone through this it's invaluable because you'll you'll learn little tiny tips like for instance I'll share one um I really set up my my home my bedroom my pillows my everything so that if I needed to lay on the whichever way I needed I had a pillow for it and it sounds it sounds weird but just little things like that um really really helped um to make the transition from hospital to home and then the recovery really really helpful yeah I just want to uh they've said it all Randy and Sharon have said it all you know one of the things that I want to reiterate is making sure that you have someone you can speak with speak to who's not a family member someone who's who has been trained in counseling and therapy someone who's going to give you that outside opinion without pulling any type of uh spiritual lessons into it based on what they believe that's that's really important in my opinion my counselor has been you know phenomenal you know all along the way and as he stated he's learned so much because he was with me before the second transplant and then going through the second transplant with me he learned a lot about kidneys he learned a lot about dialysis he learned a lot about transplant and it's just um it's been amazing having him along uh and again like I said before I listened to podcasts Christina Randall and Elise people like that to help calm me believe it or not but um you know one of the things you want to do is make sure that you're you're calm make sure that you're not stressed that's one of the things that we sometimes forget about and we let ourselves get stressed especially you know when it doesn't directly affect us anyway and it took me a long it took me 50 years to finally stop doing that um but finding something to do that's another thing um right uh sorry so finding something to do that's another thing um last year when I turned 50 I realized okay what next I'm about to go into the last chapter the last chapters of my life so I decided to go back to school and get a master's I decided to learn sign language learning so I started learning sign language um now that I'm about to graduate I'm like I'm asking people what next what do I want to do next I think I'm going to do uh I think we're gonna go learn how to dance or something like that because I've never been able to dance in my life um but I I'm enjoying life now um it's just it's really good it's really good thank thanks thanks to transplant thanks to this donor and um thanks to everything that that comes along with it hmm I love that pushing yourself outside of that comfort zone it's so important and and to do different things but also I do want to sort of add on to that on each of your Journeys is your own and while we're all sitting here and saying you know this is very much what worked for every person on here and just remember that always your journey may not look quite the same you may have a different goal in mind um doesn't make it any less important and you know we have a lot of people with Chris you know being an Olympic athlete who go well I got out and I tried to do with Chris and get back on a stationary bike and back on a snowboard and I put my stitches right open and I'm like just because Chris did that does not mean that that is your journey uh make sure that you are striving for your sort of gold medal or whatever that looks like for you um so that is it for today's session so I want to thank everybody here all of our panelists for sharing your journey and thank you all for tuning in to today's session and we hope you found it inspiring informative again if you have any questions for today's panel or want to learn more about this year's webinar head to chriscludefoundation.org ckf webinar series we hope you have a great yes rest of your day uh stay safe stay healthy and live life give life foreign [Music] | chrisklugfoundation | UCx0ZOuccKaHQdaadisTSRzg | 2023-05-23 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 9,188 | 47,622 |
TojA-z3TSI8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TojA-z3TSI8 | CP/M 2.2 Commands: Internal and Transient | in this episode I'm going to talk about uh CPM commands I already have a simulation started with CPM version 2.2 this is a simulation using an uh Intel 880 CPU and uh we'll take a look now at the commands available by default in uh this operating system first uh CPM has a number of uh internal commands uh sometimes these are called resident commands so I will start with uh these ones the First Command allows us to change the disk for example if I type a uh followed by two dots column sign uh I change the drive letter to a uh however this was already selected I can for example B however I don't have a dis in the B drive so it just shows this error if I uh type enter a couple of times uh it uh changes the drive to B but if I try to run any other command uh on this drive it will again show the error I will move back to the a drive uh the second command uh uh the second internal command uh is uh deer this uh allows us to see the contents of uh the disk in the currently selected Drive uh we can also specify uh dis for example deer a uh colum uh and we can also use uh some patterns for example if I only want to see uh executable files are files sending with uh com extension I can uh type dear.com uh on the other hand maybe I want to see uh files that have three letters and the com extension so I can use uh question mark for any letter or star for uh any group of letters uh the next command is uh type uh which allows us to see uh the contents of uh file uh it should be uh text file I already created here uh test.txt file so if I uh write the command type and this file name I get to see the contents of this file the next command is uh eror this is the short for arrays so I can uh erase uh for example this test. uh txt file uh please notice that uh the error command doesn't prompt me if I'm sure I want to delete it so um please be careful with uh this command it's also possible uh to erase uh for example all uh txt files okay so now we I type Deer uh there is no txt file available uh and uh again the command uh did not prompt if uh I really want to do this it's also possible to delete all the files on the disk however in this case uh it prompts and asks if I really want to do this so I will type no uh also uh you should note that by default uh there is no un eras or undelete commands so uh you should really be careful with uh this eras command now the next command is uh ran which allows us to rename a file so for example I want to rename uh BOS do ASM and I want to I want it to be called uh bios. old uh equals uh bios. ASM so in this case I'm uh entering the command Ren followed by the new name equals the old name so if I run deer again I see the file was renamed uh now I will rename it back uh B bios. ASM equals bios. old so it's back to how it was originally called uh the next internal command is uh save uh however I can't really demonstrate this uh it's used to save a number of uh pages from uh memory uh to a file on dis so this is useful if you uh enter a program in uh memory or maybe you want to save something from the memory I can for example say save uh let's say one pages of memory uh to a file called uh test. saav so if I type Deer uh I see uh the first case I just entered save so it created a file with an empty name so this is quite weird actually and then in the second case uh I got this uh test SCV uh file uh the next internal command and the final internal command is user uh which allows selecting a user area by default we are in user area zero and we can switch to a new user area for for example user one and uh here we see uh there are no files I previously created a video about user areas uh there are quite a lot of things to say about this user area so if you are interested please uh watch uh that video after this one I will not go into details now I'm going back to user area zero and now I can see again the five FES so this completed the internal commands or resident commands these are always available to the user and uh CPM comes with a number of uh transient commands these are actually just executable files uh you can see them here if I type dear.com uh so these are the executable files uh on this particular uh system dis I have 11 transing commands uh on uh different diss you may have a different number of transi commands and this is because uh computer manufacturers that licens CPM uh they usually include additional uh commands that are specific to the computer architecture so these are just the default commands uh that were released by digital research uh with the CPM uh operating system so the most important command is peep uh this is uh similar to a copy command from uh other operating systems uh as you can see there is no actual uh command uh named copy but instead there is this uh peep the for format for uh pep is uh destination equals source so it's similar to the rename command so if I want uh to copy uh bios. ASM to something like bios dob from backup uh I would just say uh people bios. back equals uh bios. Asm and uh I have it uh copied uh I can see it here uh also one thing to note uh the rename command uh only acts on a single drive so you cannot rename a file from one drive to the other similar to moving it uh however peep uh acts uh either on a single drive as you saw here or uh uh on multiple drives so you can copy from one drive to another also with uh PE you can do uh quite a lot of things uh for example I can uh create a file uh let's call it test.txt equals uh con uh colum so in this case uh what happens is that uh people will copy uh to uh test.txt uh from the console device in this case from this uh terminal simulation so I can enter here uh some text like this is uh test.txt and I can finish the input with control z uh and this is the end of file so now if I take a look I see here test dxt uh I can type it type test.txt and I see uh the input but uh instead of type I can also use peep con colon equals uh test.txt so in this case uh the file test.txt gets copied to the console device and this is uh similar to the type command and you can do lots of things with uh people but uh I will move on now and uh maybe in the future I will create a video dedicated to the peip command uh next we have a series of commands um move CPM and CJ uh these are usually used uh together uh maybe you remember in the beginning you saw uh that this is CPM 20K version so it's a CPM that runs in 20 kiloby of memory but usually uh you will have more memory available uh this simulation has 64 kiloby of memory available however some of the memory is reserved to Rome uh so if we're on move CPM uh it will detect how much RAM memory is available and uh actually it does this by testing uh different memory addresses until uh it notices that it cannot write to a particular memory address uh and actually in the console here or here you see that it try to write at memory address F800 in hexad decimal and this actually corresponds to home so now it detected it cannot access it so uh it found out that we have 62 kiloby of RAM available so it relocated uh CPM components uh so that uh now we can use uh up to 62 kiloby of memory uh and uh with CIS gen um it's possible to generate a new uh uh system dis uh that uh boots with uh this size of memory uh however I will not generate one now but I can demonstrate how the S gen Works uh so it requests a source Drive name or return to skip return in this case uh means that it will uh use an operating system left in memory by move CPN and the destination Drive uh which can be a or b or some drive that's available to the simulation uh but in this case I will simply Place return which will exit uh sgen again this is something that uh probably needs uh dedicated video uh to understand how to properly generate uh system so let's move on uh the next uh extremely important command is uh start so this command uh has a number of parameters in its default form uh simply displays uh the space available on uh the different uh diss that are available in the simulation uh we can also find out more information about a particular uh disk so we see here the drive characteristics of a drive uh and uh we see uh it has the standard 128 B records and so on we see drive capacity directory entries so uh but it's also possible to see information about files so now we get a list of files uh and we see how many records are used by file and how many bites and also uh these files are redri and they are uh regular files with start we can also change uh and for example Set uh test txt uh to be uh read only so this is the format for setting your file to print only okay uh now if we run Deer uh we see test uh txt here there is no change however if uh again we run start uh we see test.txt is the only uh read only file so in this case we cannot uh delete it so it says there is an error and the file is and the erase command uh cannot delete it but uh in addition we can also set start uh uh again on test.txt uh uh we can set a system attribute uh this is doar sign CIS okay so now if we type Deer uh we see uh the that test. t is no longer available here in the deer output because now it is Set uh to be a system file and basically this is the main thing that happens uh it's no longer shown in the deer listing we see it here in start uh it's placed between parentheses uh but even though it's not visible in there uh we can still uh access it for example type and yeah the file is there the content is there and now with start we can uh set it back test. uh with the attribute dollar uh dollar sign deer and now it's again available in the deer output now the next uh command is uh load uh this uh sometimes uh work uh Works in tandem with uh save or with uh dump for example uh load uh allows uh loading uh hex file in memory uh starting at address uh 100 so this is uh useful for uh transforming a hex file into a com file and load will actually uh produce uh com file with uh dump for example we can um uh generate uh file from a com file uh I have uh several videos about working with hex files so I will not go into details at this moment but please uh check them out if you are interested in working with hex F uh the next command is DDT uh this is uh the debug buer again uh I'm not going to show how to debug uh program but it allows loading uh com file an executable file into memory and then you can uh debug it or even change it with uh proper instructions for the CP uh then uh we have uh ASM this is assembler so if you have uh as assembly source files you can assemble them using as uh again I will not go into detail uh you need to know Assembly Language uh then uh we have Ed uh this is uh the default editor I will uh start it with Ed uh let's say test 2. dxt however it's not like uh any editor that you are probably used to it uh it starts in this mode uh here it expects a command uh I'll just show a couple of commands for example I uh stands for insert uh and now we can write uh the lines uh associated with this file let's say this is test two uh this is line two line three uh and then we can and the file with control Z and now we are back to the editor interface uh we can type something like one to 100t this means display lines from one to 100 obviously we don't have 100 lines now we can see the text there are commands for pending for removing lines incepting lines and so on and I will just type Q uh which will quit uh the editor and uh we see our uh text file there if I type doesn't anything why because we do not uh save the file so the editor will not save it automatically uh you need to enter a proper command uh to save it and finally uh the last two commands are submit and xub uh submit is uh useful for command batching similar to bat files uh from m as do uh so these are just files that combine uh multiple commands uh xub is uh useful inside uh such a batch file uh it allows uh redirecting uh the input uh instead of uh console it is redirected and input is actually read from within uh the batch file this is useful for sending commands to something like uh Ed or DD or some other utilities uh again this is something that I will not uh demonstrate at this moment as it probably requires its own video to properly understand the batching in CPM and uh this concludes the command that are by default available in this version of CPM however uh as you can see any uh executable file uh can become a command uh and you don't need uh to enter the file extension so in this case uh I can either say start.com or just start uh to actually I have omit the uh extension in order to have it run as you can see here so uh from this point of view there is uh no obvious difference uh between an internal command and an external command uh the only difference is that uh external commands or Transit commands uh cannot be executed if uh they are not present on the currently selected uh drive I can however prepend the drive but in any case uh the disk containing the command uh needs to be uh inserted into one of the uh computer drives otherwise uh it's not possible to execute it however if we change uh the dis and insert the dis with different files then uh these executable files also uh can be F of as comma however the default commands are those that we covered uh today okay so um thank you for watching uh don't forget to like And subscribe and see you next time with more interesting videos bye | Computing Mongoose | UCFi5l8ixOeW0C6xLVwAX6gg | 2023-11-09 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 2,783 | 13,411 |
I3vv7egJyqw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3vv7egJyqw | Digital Design (120 10b3) Sequential Circuit Design: Stoplight | Marhabban. We have seen already how ... the sequential circuit design process can be applied to a ... couple different situations. In this video, we will add one more: a stoplight controller. Our task is to design a controller for a stoplight that ... operates on a timer and also responds to emergency ... vehicles. Some more details: it will have three different lights (red, yellow, and green). When the emergency signal is sensed (such as when an ... ambulance siren is near), then the light should jump ... straight to red. Also, we will assume that there is ... hardware already in place for a timer, which will send a High signal at the right times to indicate ... the lights should change. Note that in this simple ... design, we are only looking at one ... direction of lights (and not four lights interacting at a ... four-way intersection). Based on this description, try your hand at drawing the state diagram. Pause the video while you do. Here is my state diagram. There are three nodes, one each for green, yellow, and red. I have chosen these 2-bit ... codes for the state memory. There are two input signals ... for each of the arrows. The emergency input is ... indicated before the comma, and the timer input after, with 1 representing an active signal. In the case where neither input is active, the arrows loop back on the current state: green stays at green, yellow stays at yellow, red stays at red. These would be the most ... commonly used arrows, right? A stoplight would make a quick change to green and ... then wait there for several seconds (which might be ... several thousand clock cycles, depending on the clock frequency). Any time that the emergency input is activated, the light should change to red. This is why the 1, 0 arrows all point to red. Any time that the timer signal is activated, the light should move to the next light in the sequence ... (green to yellow, yellow to red, and red back to green). There is one input combination I haven't drawn: 1, 1. This would be the case when both the timer and the ... emergency inputs occur simultaneously. We certainly could explicitly design for that case, and would probably do so by sending the state straight to red. However, I am choosing to consider ... those as don't care conditions, for two reasons. First, it is very unlikely that those two inputs would occur ... simultaneously. Secondly, even if they did and my design had a strange blip like ... jumping from yellow to green, that blip would only last for ... one more clock cycle (so, maybe 1/1000th of a second). On the following clock cycle, the emergency input would ... still be active and the light would turn red. With the real design work done in the state diagram, we move on to the procedure. This time, I chose to use T flip-flops. At this point, try to make the next-state table on your own. Pause the video while you do. Here is my completed next-state table. Note that each state appears in three rows: three greens, three yellows, three reds. This is because there are ... three input possibilities: active timer, active emergency, or neither. The state diagram tells us exactly what each next state ... should be. For example, yellow turns to red when the timer signal is activated. And, lastly, the T columns are determined by the changes in ... the corresponding flip-flop. In this row, Q1 toggles from 0 to 1. Therefore, T1 must be High. Take note of a nice feature of this table. There are 4 inputs, which means there will be 16 ... squares on the Karnaugh maps. But there are only 9 rows of the table. This means there will be 7 don't care conditions on every ... Karnaugh map. Take advantage of this as ... you try to derive the Boolean equations for T1 and T0. Here are my K-maps. I list the present state inputs ... at the top. Then, I fill in any don't care conditions. The state code 1, 1 never occurs (since there's ... not a fourth light). Therefore, this whole row is X's. And that appears on the T0 table as well. Now I can fill in all the 1's from the T1 column. This leads to the equation down here. The same process is repeated for the cases where ... T0 equals 1. And that leads us to this equation. But wait... didn't I say there should be 7 ... don't care conditions? Yes, this is an intentional mistake in the slides. Well, "mistake" is too strong of a word. My equations are still correct, but are overly specific. They could be simplified ... further. I should have also placed X's ... in the 1, 1 column because of my ... assumption that timer and emergency signal will not ... occur simultaneously. There's still an important thing I've yet to consider in ... this design: the ouput logic. In our previous examples, there was just one output (to ... deposit the gumball, or to say that a sequence has ... been achieved). But here there are three ... outputs. Each of the three lights ... needs to know exactly when to be on and--just as ... important--when to be off. There is a simple way to do this: decode from the state codes. This means that when the ... state code reads 00, then the green light should ... be on. Therefore, the equation for green light is Q1'Q0'. Similarly, when the state code reads ... 01, the yellow light should be on. Therefore, its equation is just Q1'Q0. Likewise, the final equation is ZR = Q1Q0'. Here we see the final circuit implemented. Note the output logic just discussed as And gates on ... the right side. Also note that this next-state ... logic at the bottom uses the less simplified equations ... because of my don't care "mistake". The fun thing about this design is that it is visually ... satisfying. We can see how the light ... turns from green to yellow when the timer is activated. And then again from yellow to red. And then again from red to green. We can also see how it jumps straight to red when ... the emergency signal is activated. But, most of the time, neither of these inputs will be activated, and the light remains at its current state. Would you consider this a Mealy or a Moore machine? To answer that, focus on the outputs. None of the the output logic gates have an input of XE or ... XT. They are purely a function of ... the state memory, which makes this a Moore machine. Another thing to note is that there is no strobed D flip-flop ... before the outputs. It is unnecessary in this case. Since this is not a Mealy machine, we don't have to worry about changes in the input signals ... directly changing the outputs. Also, for this stoplight application, there is no good reason to ... delay the output (i.e. make it wait an extra half clock cycle). That concludes this design example. We have covered three categories of sequential ... circuit designs: vending machine, sequence detector, stoplight. But there is no limit to the application of sequential ... circuits. You can dream up almost ... any function you want and follow the given design ... algorithm to achieve it. Keep in mind, however, that these examples were purposefully simple, only requiring a couple flip-flops for memory. The more complicated your design, the more flip-flops are needed, and the lengthier your next-state logic might ... become. Also, there are other design wrinkles like choosing a ... different sequence of state codes and the issue of input ... signals not aligning nicely with the clock. We'll explore these more in the next lessons. | Cody Anderson | UCHXpRVNKin39Ss0HW0FqSyg | 2021-09-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,338 | 7,387 |
VnltM5dgJVs | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnltM5dgJVs | Stringing! Say hi and ask some questions! | for are we on can you hear me is it working I'm trying to figure that out tennis there we are I think we're working we got somebody on there just double checking on my other uh device to see if we can see if this is working and has good sound and all the other stuff oh look at that it sounds great perfect what's up guys hope you guys are doing H good today thought I would bring you on just like old times we used to do a lot of lives back in the day when MP tennis was a little younger you could say um yeah and I just have some free time today this afternoon and I'm going to string a racket and just a good opportunity to say hi to folks and I'm sure some people would love to ask some questions Etc so I have a a little bit of time here so do a live for you guys just taking uh taking the string out of my RO can't or the old string you could say yeah welcome hope everybody's doing great today is um Wednesday April the 3 so we're getting into Springtime folks but it ain't Springtime here in New Hampshire I can tell you that um we're supposed to get like 20 cm of snow over the next uh 24 to 48 hours so that's pretty depressing we've been playing outside we've already had our spring break trip been playing outside you now and now looks like we're we're going to take a step backwards so a little bit upsetting but not much you can do about it that's what happens with when you live on the east coast so yeah hello from Brazil hello Deno what are your favorite strateg strategies to play with great question and it's probably going to be our next video so I'm actually not going to answer that question um because I don't want to don't want to spoil the video um so be sure to look out for that because that's actually going to be our next video uh hello man let me ask you does Super Toro PA well in a lower tension such as 46 with radical planning to do that I would say that it's worth a try I personally think Super Toro is I mean t strings are relatively soft um so lower tensions I mean they could work but like for example I put it in my blade when I did the review and I think the blade would play better with a more stiff string at a higher tension um but I probably wouldn't go any lower on my radical personally just because I think 50 is a good a good point to start with so yeah that's just kind of my take but I would say you can definitely try it out I me one Str job right people are rolling in here that's nice to see just going to get started here I know some people are coming in here hello everyone hello people are saying hi hope you all are doing great we put out a video yesterday about serving harder and faster and improving your serve so if you guys have not seen that video you should check it out um it was a good one seems like people are enjoying it I also apologize we may have some some minor interruptions at some point uh because I am in the locker room some of the boys might be coming in at some point I know one of our guys is in the gym which is literally uh about a 50 foot walk from our locker room so he might be coming to say hi briefly after when he's done his workouts I know probably some people are already asking some questions so just bear with me I'm just going to start the racket here all right um I'm trying the older 360 erotica Pro now after I tried the exetic orotic pro doesn't feel much difference I think I strung exetic one too high and it's kind of St yeah I can't really comment on that one really too much because I didn't use the old radical uh I only have the new auxetic one hello happy streaming uh would you do a stretch and warmup video for a practice or a match we do have some warmup videos on the channel um so you can check those out but maybe we can kind of do an updated version if you would like uh Hing it on Link's tour I think it's a good offering from head do I think it's the best polyester tring out there probably not but some people will probably really really enjoy it um I used to use it in my extreme tours few years back it plays pretty well uh but like I said it's nothing nothing that's going to blow your mind at least from my my experience um I shrink fairly thin strings m hea twist 1.15 the thinnest version in the main in Proline to 1.15 round string AC cross 34 lower than me trying to find a rack with more power I've been trying some of them which do you recommend that's a good question so Pro stop is kind of like Wilson's more controlled line as you probably know I would recommend if you would like to stay with in Wilson you could try the blade although I think the blade now and the Pro Staff actually play quite similar I feel like 10 years ago those Rockets were very different but now for some reason I feel like they start like uh they're close um so then all of a sudden I'm not a big fan of Wilson stuff right now I feel like they're rackets are a little all over the place because after the blade and the pro you go to like the the Ultra or like a clash and like that would probably be too too much power for you I'm guessing it would be too much of a jump so I'd recommend something like uh a radical could be good a head speed could be good you could maybe try an eone 98 that might be a little bit more power for you you could try like an extreme core you could try like something from the Dunlop CX line um Pure Strike if can try Pure Strike that's just kind of the ones I'm thinking at the top of my head but with Wilson it's kind of you could also try the proa x that ain't my favorite braacket but it could work I know my dad is like that the slinko white outs aren't a bad aren't a bad try um hi K love your Channel thanks buddy uh quick question I'm playing and in love with the blade 9619 your view of the radicals are making want to try them out which one of them do you suggest well I'm quite biased um I love my radical uh I just kind of went on a feeli of how I'm not really in love with the new Wilson stuff that just goes across the board I mean I was saying this now on the contr the other side of things uh there's not really a bad racket anymore uh because some people sometimes give like content creators hate uh because they're saying everything's good and that's just not true uh or like like it's not true and it's not fair to give us hate because it's very difficult to say that something is bad when technology has gotten so good um and it's just kind of it just kind of sucks because people give give us basically um because we're not docking a racket but like for example the Wilson Blade isn't really my kind of Racket I'm not looking to switch to racket but for a lot of people they're going to love the Wilson Blade um but to your point I would recommend the radical that's because I like it so it's kind of not fair to say that I personally think it's difficult to get spin with the new blades I think you need to put a really stiff Str in there like I put my super tour in the blade and like it's so tough to get spin um that's one thing I should have highlighted more in my review um recently and I just didn't give it like if I played with it if I played with some different strings in there I would have been able to figure that out sooner uh like for example I did restring sync like the review of that recently and I think that would play a lot better in the blade than my super Toro I don't think I would like the blade still though just because it's just I'm not a big blade guy um do all your teammates stream your own rackets good question um no um my first year and second year I did a lot of stringing not for just myself but I also did a lot of the girls rackets as well my first and second year um I'm trying to think most of the guy string like got to break it down like I think probably like 80% of them do and then the guys that don't they just give the rackets to um a couple of like guys or whatever uh the girls there's not many I think there might be actually I don't think any of the girls spring their rackets um so my first second year I was springing a lot of the girls rackets um which was a little time consuming at times but it is what it is I'm happy to help I don't love doing like six rackets a day though um but yeah most of the guys do not many of the girls do though thanks I tried the blade and they actually are pretty similar they give some control and also it was stringed to a high tension and it felt to generate power oh interesting um that's probably it could have been because of the high tension uh it depends what a high tension is for you though like a high tension for me is like anywhere 55 and like that's considered a high tension for me um so if you lower the tension you'll get more power um I feel like it's tough to get spin with blades well at least the new ones the last couple years feel like I'm going really fast got to slow down normally I'm taking my time here with you guys um thanks do you have any thoughts on Pure Strike 1620 100 compared to Ral lineup um I've never played with the 1620 or the 100 version of the of the pure strik I've hit with um I've hit with the regular one before um the Pure Strike like that's going to give you more power for sure especially if it's 100 square in you'll be able to get some good spin off of that for sure uh and good power um the radical is going to feel more controlled for sure um and for someone who plays with rackets from 305 to 310 G never played with 315 UNR which radical would you recommend a customized MP or stock Pro I would say go with the the MP for sure because like the stock Pro is 315 100% And you'll and especially if you're beginner intermediate like the MP is going to give you some more power right so I think that would be a better a better choice um you settled on the radical Pro but are you still trying other rackets to see if there's something else out there each racket is compromis each racket is a compromise um I love my my radicals right now actually um I'm pretty honest about that um but of course like I get rackets to review so if there's a rack that I feel like is really good I would be stupid not to to continue to use it if I really liked it um so for example I tried that blade um like I don't know when we put that video out but the video might be like a week and a bit old or like 10 days old and I tried it like two weeks ago now um I didn't like it enough to switch to it so then I won't I won't use uh but like if I do come across a rocket that I do really like um then I will and that's what happened actually I was that's what happen sometimes like in the past when I've demoed rackets it's just like I started demoing one I'm like oh like I like this racket and then it's like H is it time to switch to a different racket like how do I feel you got to like reevaluate like for me like switching rackets is a really big deal because like you get so used to playing with certain rockets and your game like adapts and and develops with a racket that's an issue that I'm actually having some of you might have a hard time understanding this but it's a problem I'm having with shoes right now um these aren't being made anymore and it pisses me off and I played with those that they VAP X's then like those were the 9.5 the X's um The Vapor Pros for a long time now and all of a sudden Nike decides not to make their bestselling shoes of all time I don't know don't don't you don't have to fact check me on that one but like they definitely sold a lot of those shoes and a lot of that Vapor Pro Line so it really ticks me off um but yeah to your point like rackets if I get a good racket the demo and I really like it then I'll definitely take a look and also I only have three of my radicals right now so I've been replacing the grommets and stuff but they'll I'll move through these rackets faster than I did with my extreme Tor CU I had five of them uh I took a long break from tennis so I pretty much went from kblade 98 to Blade V8 and I hated the V8 yeah K blades that's when they made good blades uh I feel like the blade stopped like in my opinion and what I've heard from a lot of Blade lovers after like 2015 the blade kind of went for um that's what I heard I know some people that have there was this guy that I actually know pretty well I think he played with like I think it was either the 2014 or 2015 and he replaced the grommets on his blade I think he still has those same blades like he just likes them so much and he does not want to use the new blades because he doesn't like them so I've heard the same thing from some other people as well um best tennis string besides Tor line oh my God there's there's so many good tennis strings out there guys like that's also what I was saying like people don't make bad products anymore ring has good stuff uh grapple snake is really underrated as well I mean luxon is great as well but it's very expensive um just SEC um yeah Lux makes good stuff like really like somebody asked me about uh head lengths like it's a good string like bot makes good strings um there's not really like a there's some things that are better than others like I really do like super Tor right now so I would recommend that for people to try uh sinko makes streight scams as well I used confidential for years um I'm very confident in my polyester um knowledge or like the poly setups when it comes to malti and sin gut stuff I'm not as confident when recommending just because I have never used them or have not used them in a long time so I know some some good basics of recommending and stuff but like I don't really know what they play like just because I don't use a hybrid uh with your T line set up roughly what percentage of its usage do you s to notice the tension drop great question um I resing my racket really frequently so even if I feel like I'm just thinking here I'm thinking about our practices uh and we practice at least two hours a day so like how long would it last I don't know if you guys heard that but the toilet just automatically flushed that was weird um I would say I get a really good like eight hours out of it and that's like me being honest like I would not ring under eight hours like honestly um when I play a match and I bring a new Fresh stick out it makes it will last a full like four sets that's including like the doubles point and then my match if I play three sets like the only time I would switch throughout a match is if we get a new can of balls in the third or like if we play D1 teams we'll get a new new can every set so maybe I'll switch and start with new strings in a second set or something but like honestly like I'm just thinking like sometimes I leave it in longer because I'm lazy and I don't want to come to the Stringer but when it comes to breakage I'm actually like I I'm not somebody that like breaks string super easily either uh I don't know why I never have been never had that issue um so like I don't I however don't leave my I don't leave my string in my racket Until It Breaks either so like let's say I just strung this racket today I use it for four hours total it's in my my my racket for for two days or something overnight but then we play the next day well I'm going to restring it you know what I mean um so that's it's tough for me to answer kind of but I haven't really had big tension loss issues how do you find balancing college tennis in the normal College workload great question some people suck at it I'll tell you that I know people that suck at it uh but I've always been pretty good with my time management um I've had to be good at it ever since I was uh younger uh because I traveled when I was younger a bit as well and I always had to be on top of it so that kind of set me up for college I also feel like high school for me in Canada was very difficult compared to college uh like and that's really saying something like I had classes in high school that I hated and they were so hard and now I'm at school and like I mean I think it's super chill like I wake up I might have an 8: a.m. class or whatever but then like hey I get three hours off and I get to go to the gym and like then I have our practice and then I have another class like it's I think there's so much time now throughout the day compared to high school like you're not in school from a uh you know 8: a.m. to 3 p.m. sort of thing like you have you have time to do what you want to do and that's where the time management comes in and I think I do a really good job with that but it can be really tough like I said some guys are really really bad at it and they let days just slide uh opinion on techn T fight ISO I played with the tf40 I don't know if that's the iso one I'm trying to remember I'm a little rusty on the techn knowledge here um but their other like their T fight line I don't know I don't know I don't know if I played with the regular one before what was the best and the worst part of playing your first pro tournament hopefully we'll get some more questions about that because that was a very exciting experience the best part was being there and being able to experience the level um being around some of the guys that are like in the top you know a lot of guys are in the top 500 that were there but like being around Brendan H being around I can't pronounce his name he's from Taiwan but I think he's like inside the top 200 now like watching these guys of course I met Felix I met Karu like meeting these guys being around them it was a really cool experience um and like the best part was the experience the worst part was the travel and you guys might be like well a travel what do you mean you were just in California well it was a little bit more complicated than that this is also looking complicated right here what the heck um just second the travel was by far the least enjoyable part because we were on our spring break trip in Florida and my flights got cancelled to LAX so I had to find a new flight um and then I was on a red eye I flew through the night got to LAX I had to Uber like two and a half two hours or whatever I arrived at my hotel by myself that's right cuz I did it all by myself um and I just had to like sit in the hotel for like five four hours just by myself before I could get into my room so like the worst part was the travel and doing it alone alone and a lot of people really don't understand how tough it is to be doing this every weekend because I remember like calling my dad when I got to the hotel like I was jet legged I was tired I played a three set match literally the day before and a double so I played tennis for like a good almost probably three and a half four hours the day before and I remember calling him like what am I doing here why am I here here like I was so out of it um and I think that you get that sense of loneliness and it's so tough like mad respect to what like Karu is doing right now like he's really grinding um like it's really nice to see uh and also Felix as well but like Felix is also doing it with his dad so he's really lucky like when I was hitting with him we had a couple warm hits or like I watched his match and stuff like his dad was with him there the whole time and that's also really easy for him to make content like that's why I didn't have a lot of footage for that video because I'm just out there kind of like freeballing it's my first time out there I got to make sure I'm fed I got to make sure I'm warmed up I got to make sure I I'm sleeping you know what I mean I got to get to the courts I got to get to my hotel I got to catch a flight like it's there's a lot of things on your mind when it's your first time and if you don't if like since I was the only one flying by myself and doing everything by myself it was tough to create content but the best part was the experience the worst part was the travel like adjusting and like the loneliness part I got to catch up here guys sorry um have you tried the Blade Pro I've actually hit with it for probably 5 minutes so I haven't hit enough with it to make a video though um are there down siiz you're stringing your racket too early before you play oh my God absolutely uh like if you string a racket but it's not oh yeah if you string a racket if I String this racket today and I don't use it for a month might as well like throw the racket in the trash can uh for me at least because like the the Racket and the string is going to lose tension right away as soon as you take it off the Stringer it's going to lose lose tension that's just the way it is a lot of people don't know that I String at 50 lbs 5 minutes after I take it off the Stringer it's not going to be 50 lbs anymore that's just the way it is and then you hit with it it'll lose tension it sits in your room overnight it loses tension if you live in a hot climate and you let your string and your rocket sit in the sun that's really bad for it it will lose tension if and also the complete opposite if you live in a very cold climate and you leave your rockets in the car car in like the winter it's bad for your rackets and you will lose tension as well um so yeah make sure you're stringing your rackets like especially especially when you have like a malti or a sin or a natural gut if you don't take care of your Racket and your strings it's going to really not be good uh so I always string the night before a match so if I play at noon the next day I will strain the day of or the night before and I will normally string three rackets that's why you guys are never I'm never doing lives um that's why I'm never doing lives at those times because I'd be on the live for like six hours because I would want to talk but it only would take me probably an hour and I have to really do three rackets but I'm normally I have two fresh ones for every match um I'm streaming three normally if we're going on a trip or something um basically is there concept of like string freshness yes I just kind of went over that uh top G nice to see you o linkx tour M8 tour I think M8 you mean like the grapple snake M8 every day of the week uh I just think it's better damn eight hours and you hit so hard that's impressive first rank yes and I don't want you to think I'm promoting T line in that sense uh because for me like confidential was like that as well uh like I said before I'm tired of getting um like I'm not a big string breaker um so like I could play with this Tour line Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday and it wouldn't break and we could practice for two hours every day um I think it must be the way I hit the ball to be honest because like I grew up with juniors and my friends that were breaking strings all the time like all the time every day they were just breaking and I never really understood and I think it's actually the way I play I'm kind of more of like um I I have a big serve um I kind of can be crafty I'm also a little bit of a counter puncher like I like to use pace of guys so like that's always kind of how I've played I've come to the I'm not somebody that's taking like huge cuts and I'm not playing on Clay all the time either if I was playing on Clay I would probably be breaking more strings uh do some of you I've been using Hawk power and loving it that's awesome I've heard that's a good string as well or I've actually played with it is a good string uh do some guys you know use the eone 98 in what Str do they use I'm thinking about rude yeah uh some guys do use the EO 98 I got a guy on the team right now that's using the eone 98 tour I think any of those those strings that you said would work really well in it um uh but yeah honestly any stiffer poly in a racket like that I think would play really really good I mean you could try some Tour line stuff in there as well but might might be too powerful for you if you're like a a more advanced player but yeah it's funny back to the strings I'm stringing this racket now uh we have an off day today uh because we got a a snowstorm coming um like I mentioned in the beginning tomorrow we might not be able to get on court as well because of the snowstorm so then I will use this rocket on Friday for me it's still good enough to use Novak jokovic would he want a fresh bed for Friday yes so he would probably string it on Friday morning or he would have somebody string he's not string his Rockets but for me I'm stringing it now because I might not be able to get here uh another time to the locker room before fr so this is also the time management as well like I know that I might not be able to get here so I stream my racket on Wednesday so I do have at least a fresh string in there for that day and a fresh bed that sits in your racket for 36 to 48 hours is better than a dead bed that you've been using that will sit in your racket for w so you have to away the pros and cons there um uh what is the average length of your tennis sessions and what is the maximum length you would go for our practices are two hours long every day the college practices are always two hours long I think that's what it is for most people at schools um but honestly like sometimes we'll play for an hour and a half and I know some people are going to be like wow like you don't practice more well guys like I'm not practicing for 4 hours a day because we're we're all like college students we have class we go to the gym we need to sleep some of us work jobs um I think a lot of people have this misconception of like you want to go pro the best Juniors the best college boys you need to practice 5 hours a day I'm sorry but you're an idiot if you practice like 4 hours a day and you go go to the gym and you're in college you won't make it to the season man you won't make it to the the Conference playoffs man you'll be destroyed um you need to like you need to take care of your body because like the two hours that we're on court like we're also doing stuff the whole time so it's like a good like it's it's nonstop we do a lot of hitting we do a lot of points college tennis practices are not like your typical like basket feed hand feed um a lot of drills I think a lot we do a ton of hitting and a ton of like hitting drills and like a lot of the time live ball uh hand feed feeding stuff that happens like in our off Seasons when we go back home to like our countries or whatever um fix's Dad also manages his brain Partnerships I'm sure he does um he probably do did you ever try rering and did and if you did what did you think I just did a review on rering sync great screen um I think it will work well in some more power frames to tone them down a bit it plays like Alo power ring zero is coming soon I have it in my room I just have not had a chance to do the review on it um I just reviews right now are really difficult for me to really put out a lot because like I'm going to play a conference match and then I'm going to like string up a racket with a different string or string up my racket with a new string like it's kind of stupid in a way um like in the end like I'm trying to win as well like I really have to focus on my tennis as well so like if I start playing with a different string or a different racket like a day before a match like that's that's really stupid um but like I'll get I'll get i'll review it of course just when I have some time in between matches um if you string a hybrid how long should the mains and Crosses be so like Mains X met y uh good question like I think you mean like when you string like how much do you pull like for the string like that like how long you can do it two ways the way I've done it the last like 6 months is like if you have a reel or like the set for the mains you can go like from should or like like a like this uh what do you call like like wingspan length so you can do four wingspan lengths for the mains and then you can do four and a half for the cross so like one two three four and then I would pull to here so that this is for the cross um um and then for the main you would just do four full ones because the crosses are more um the other thing you can do is you can like do it like this so like if you have a 19 cross I don't know if you guys can see me but I would go one two three so on and so for all the way to like 19 or 20 always do a little bit more because like you need room for the knots I think that's what you meant but if not I'm sorry uh don't worry I'm searching for a string that's right for me in tabi looks like it's going to be it love it yeah Wasabi is is seems to be a big a big hit right now and like to be completely honest that's another example like Wasabi is doing really well because it works for a lot of people and if I were to like I guess I reviewed it in the kpr and KP but like a full met Wasabi for me would not work well it just wouldn't work for my game and I probably wouldn't like the feeling it's going to play probably stiffer than my super Toro it's going to give me way more spin it's going to bite really hard it's going to have a really high launch angle and like I don't want that but for some people they will love it so like I said it's not a bad string it just maybe not as for for me um keeping in my mind what you talked about t string tension PR replacing breaks how would you recommend ways around the financial challenges with that um well if you're breaking strings quite often you really need to think about like okay where's my level out like am I a college player am I a pro player or am I a club player weekend warrior kind of thing where I play twice a week if you're playing twice a week you can really look at yourself in the mirror and be like do I need to really be playing with Alo power or natural gut probably not uh you could probably go pick something up on like Amazon even and like if you want to have a fresh bed of string all the time like for example like torup makes like reals a string and they're so cheap on Amazon I think I actually think Amazon makes a string now I think that would be really really bad so don't buy that but like you could buy that and you could restring three times a week if you want to you always have a fresh bed of string in there also Tour line is reasonably priced as well so you could check them out as well so I think that's what you mean by like you don't want to break the bank but like you really got to look at yourself and be like hey how much do I play how good am I what's my goal with tennis and like then you can kind of see like if you're playing college or you want to play pro or you're like you're grinding and string will make a difference for you then I would say you can pay more for string you can invest more into it um but if you're somebody that's you know not then you don't need to replace your string as much you don't need to invest in such an expensive string like for example I think luxon is a joke okay and I'm not saying that because I use cor line or a used use sinko or whatever I think luxon makes great product but it's way too overpriced and the difference between their strings and uh you know a baot string or head string or t line or seleno is barely any really like yes Al power is good but honestly ring syn is just as good and it's going to last a lot longer so like I think that luxon has something good with their element string and their 4G there's not really any other strings I think they can compete with that or their natural gut is good but how many people are really using that I don't know not many people I know hey I used the radical ug MP my question is Slingo hyper G1 125 your opinion on the string and which play style fits Slingo hyperg well a lot of college players used to use it a lot I feel like not as many do now hyper is a poly that's like in the grand scheme of things a little bit softer than some so like for example it's softer than Aly um you're going to get it's like it's a shape string too so you're going to be able to get some good spin you're going to get a nice little launch angle you'll get a little bit of power out of it um I would say if you're somebody that likes to play back at the Baseline you'll like it if you're somebody that's like serving and voling all the time maybe I wouldn't suggest it but like who am I to say that as well like some people will make videos and be like best strings for sering bers or whatever and I'm just making that up but like it's kind of their opinion in a way you know what I mean like I could use a baseball bat for serving and balling and say it works well for me you know what I mean like I think you like at the end of the day it's a lot of a and like you have to demo so like for example a lot of these questions I'm getting I'm giving you guys my opinion and like I think my opinion is is good and I feel like a lot of other guys would say the same that know a lot about string rackets or whatever but like you guys got to test it that's the thing like that's I'm being upfront like somebody's going to ask me about I don't know a pure arrow is a pure Arrow better than a Pure Drive well personally I like the pure your arrow better but like doesn't mean it's the better frame for you you know what I mean so my little Spiel on that a lot of the times people will leave comments on videos and I'll just say demo it because like there's only so much I can say in a comment I can give a little bit like of information about things but like if somebody's asking what racket is better so to say because it's so opinion and personal like base uh with the sun do you use a cap and if yes do you wear your cap backwards or forwards against the sun that's a funny question um all throughout my junior year my junior year my junior years I always wore my hat forward like this all the time never ever ever wore backwards and part of it was because of the sun part of it was just because I just grew up wearing hats forward I guess you could say um and then like my last year Junior and when I got to school like I started wearing it back backwards for whatever reason I don't know um and honestly now I wear hats backwards more than I do forwards um so it kind of defeats the purpose of wearing a hat um if it's really sunny I will flip it around but um honestly I'm using the hat backwards to keep the my hair out of my face or a headband I used to wear headbands more um but yeah that's kind of a funny question do tennis rackets go bad the time absolutely um I've been playing tennis with my father's jacket for a whole life they are 20 years old or more I am now starting college and I'm not sure if it's holding me back oh absolutely get a new racket um of course it depends on your level and stuff but like I Absolut like if you just want to get a new racket you could definitely get a new racket you get like one from last year like an older head racket as in like 2 years old um because what happens is rackets when they get older they get really soft so they lose a lot of their um what's the word I'm looking for they lose a lot of their they lose a lot of their punch they they don't have the oomph behind them anymore because they I mean think think about somebody's knee when they got to get a knee replacement like if they were an athlete when they were younger the constant pound on your knees right over and over and over it's the same thing with a racket that's why sometimes rackets in front F this is like one of our guys rockets on the team like that's why sometimes like rackets will just break when they get older like in weird places like right here or up at the top or even like I've seen guys play and it breaks down in the grip because the Rockets they just constantly take the the pound um and I think you would notice a difference because 20 years of Technology can go a long way um especially if you're wanting to try like a different type racket like I'm sure that Wilson racket is either like if it was a legit racket from 20 years ago it's probably like a really old Pro stuff or something or it's like a racket that it's not great it's like a Wilson hammer or whatever they used to call it you could def definitely benefit from a new rocket I think especially if you're just getting one uh what's the worst string and why what's the worst dring and why is it hyperg uh I don't think hyperg is the worst string like this is kind of bringing up what I was talking about earlier again there's no there's no such thing as a bad product now like that's the thing like it's really opinion based to a degree like I can make a video and be like guys the Wilson Blade it sucks and if you have a V6 V7 V8 don't upgrade because it's not a big difference or for whatever reason probably for like 85 80% of you guys that's going to be like okay like I'm not going to do it but like for some people is going to be like oh my God I love the new Wilson Blade and I'm just using the Wilson Blade as an example but like the worst tennis string if you want my honest opinion is probably like that one that Amazon sell I think they sell like that's the truth like the worst major string brand like if I throw it a name right now guaranteed somebody that's watching this would be like oh I use their string and it's great so like a string that comes to mind is like gamma like I don't really care for their strength I don't think they're great so like I will use gamma as an example now guaranteed there's like 30 some of you guys out here that use a gamma string there's got to be one or there was somebody on there earlier so to my point it's kind of opinion based but as a creator we can give feedback and options and tell you guys what we think about them to a degree and it will help don't get me wrong it will help a lot like that's why we make the videos it's to help um but also we also want you guys to try it for yourself because we don't also want to be like I didn't like this video or I didn't like this racket so you won't like it like for example Karu or Novak jokovic using a pure Arrow are is that racket really going to be the best fit for them probably not but for an intermediate that's getting their very first racket to get like a pure Arrow light it's going to be one of the probably best rackets they could buy um so it's just kind of like you know what I mean uh at last I finally made one of your lives happening welcome happy you're here what are your future plans after college like the pro tour after the ITF experience oh man I'm going for it uh we'll go for as long as we can um hopefully I can maybe get in one or two over the summer in a perfect world but I will play tennis for as long as I can and you guys will be on the journey with me um what tension is recommended for an aggressive baseliner or grinder using radical that's a loaded question tension like tension once again that's a feeling thing so I'm scared to really say that I think you got to play around with it try 55 try 50 try 48 it also depends on your surface and the climate you're in um streaming right now as well sir tell Nate talking coach go I say hello I will miles thanks for stopping by uh that's funny oh wow you nailed it it's a pro mck so that's an old rord because I don't even know what a mck is actually so definitely get on the horn there and maybe trying to find another racket demo some Pro stop and code 98 18 by8 damn yeah that's a that is an old one do you know if it's bad to have Maines at a thinner gauge than crosses if I had Mains at a thinner gauge I'm sure some people do it I've heard people do when they go for the thinner string they put it on the cross and honestly that's where my knowledge for Strings and tensions and all that racket technician stuff starts to kind of go away um when it comes to the products and how they play I'm really good with that but I'm not like I couldn't tell you how that would play because I've never done it before actually I I haven't done tons of hybrids or tons of poly hybrids or that kind of thing in my life um yeah so I honestly don't know I don't know I actually took way too much crosses thinner than Mains allow Mains to slide more freely allowing more spin that sounds pretty right and that's what I've heard in the past as well but I didn't want to give you that information um any plans on trying the new speeds you know what great question one of the girls on our girls team her brother was visiting and we hit with him the other day cuz he joined in on our practice and he had the new Speed Pro and like I have not really like the Speed Pro like ever but that thing felt really solid in my hand actually so like that's an example of where like I try racket I like it well maybe I'm switching to it so like if I love the Speed Pro you know what I mean like I would switch to it but yeah just kind of interesting it felt really good I don't have maybe I'll probably play test some rackets in the summer just to you know make some videos get some reviews for you guys a l people like them but right now I don't have them on me or anything or like head or tennis on send them to review but I'm sure I'll get them in the future the goal of MP tennis down the line is like not necessarily a review Channel we're always going to do reviews and stuff but like that's not like the goal of the channel at the end of the day like I love doing them and we'll always do them like I said but I want to be able to do some collabs play against people uh show you guys my experience playing college tennis and pro tennis and maybe German Club Tennis things like that speaking of which might have a a good collab on its way not going to say who it's with because it's not finalized yet but that it would be very awesome would be very awesome if it could happen or if it will happen um p98 or b98 something with yanx brackets I I can't get to like them sorry that's too hard yanx makes good brackets but the isometric had I never really felt at home with that the only one I ever actually felt that was like not bad was the vorn 95 and the the VOR 95 and the new percept I want to try the percept 100 actually that's a rord that I want to try but like I've never been a big easil guy so for that I would probably go with the pure Arrow um do you agree with t Line's own string stiffness ranking I got to be honest with you I haven't even seen it um I've played with a ton of their strings it must be a new thing cuz I'm play testing or I've play tested a ton of their strings I'm sure it's pretty accurate like I would probably stand behind it as well because I would probably say very similar things about it but the only thing I will say is like coralin strings are mostly like most of them are on the softer side in the grand scheme so like you compare Wasabi like Wasabi is not like super stiff but it's stiff for T line like in my opinion where like if you look at like absolute that's really soft oh look we have to yeah you can come in is the towel what is there the towel no towel okay um sorry that was Athletics they were checking to see if we had any of our clothes that need to be washed um I feel like you last question because I'm going to wrap up here actually um I feel like you almost have to buy a bunch of Racket of demo instead of demoing them from tennis War us because you have no control over the strings of detentions that the demos come with that's a good point actually I hate to stand by that but I do agree to some point one thing that I do and it's only if you guys string and you're confident in your stringing is you take out the strings that they send you this is so bad that I'm saying this but like and then you can string the racket yourself and then cut it out when you're done I've done that in the past shh um You didn't hear that from me um but like it is tough because they send you such strings and it's like a hybrid in a pure Arrow 100 like I'm never going to like that you know what I mean nobody's ever going to like that like I I understand what you're saying but you got to have a lot of money to just buy rackets off the off the shelf like that oh I love this question that's coming up uh no worries have you ever tried super tour in any hybrid setups super tour and a hybrid setup I'm going to start trying it torine actually wants me to test some things out um with a hybrid they've made me actually a custom blend and I didn't love it as much as the full better super Toro they also have a prototype string that I'm supposed to test but I just have not had any time and it looks like super Toro so I don't know um we'll see uh but they're really trying to make some some good stuff here and like I would love to try and get my own blend and I think they were trying um actually it might still be in here um yeah so they did like theas omasi or whatever and I didn't make a video about it but super Toro and Enzo Pro is what was in it and I didn't really love it compared to my full bed but then they meant made a prototype and they sent it to me so I don't know other people that are getting super Tour line got this prototype but I got two different prototypes so I don't know if they're for me or whatever but I got to test them um what Pro Tour player fits your play style the best and what parts of your game do you want to add or improve also related to what you have seen in the Pro Choice SC I'll name a girl and a guy uh just a sec let me pull out a chair cuz I'm getting tired of standing um and then I do have to wrap up because I have I have to go to work um Andy Murray by far on the guy's side 100% if you gave Andy Murray some better voles although the guy is was number one in the world the guy had good Vol if you gave him some good voles or some better volleys and a better serve that's me as a college player 100% I counter punch really well I defense offense really well my back hand's really solid I can put some variety in there I counter punch yeah Andy rer I I love Andy he's my favorite player as well uh and if I was compare her to a girl I would probably say Coco go uh her her backhand is a little I would say her backand is a little bit better than her forehand she serves really well she's super athletic doesn't well she does she's played well in doubles I was going to say she doesn't have great B but Coco golf Andy marray that's what I would say can you ram the demos with your own string you you can but they tell you not to uh I want to change my speed 2024 what is your opinion on see that's that's what I'm saying you got to demo those percept 100 e on 100 or strike 100 you got to demo those like that would be my opinion um I'm eyeing the p98 but I've heard quality control is horrible with swing weight and balance is completely off between rackets oh we got some more visitors is that Melvin yeah you can come in I'm I'm just finishing some questions I was going to wa you're going to wa I was going to wait say hi to the camera if you want I told them you guys might be coming in are you live yeah you can you can say are you live yeah I am i s you video all right no no I'm just doing live uh this is Melvin and naughty everyone uh there ones on the girl team ones on the guys team obviously why why would they be in here if they were um I'm I'm up to see you I'm I'm up eyeing up the F 98 but I've heard qu and's horrible I I couldn't comment on that because I don't I haven't had a bulk of pure 98s so it's tough for me to say um but quality control is an issue with a lot of Brands see you uh what do you think about manarino string set up the guy is crazy man um it's too bad Melvin just left Melvin from France um I'm sure he would love to comment about manarino uh but hey man showing people that you can play with a lower attention if possible uh what would you what would be your perfect player for both men and women Roger oh probably like a Roger forehand Novak backhand Andy Murray grind and fitness Rafa mental Roger slice Roger b's no back return something like that um for girls for serve Serena back in slice uh Ash part maybe like eish beon groundstrokes I'm just thinking really quick here in return a serve maybe E I don't know I'm just thinking really quick right now um what are the most common rcks to see around the college circuit these days um I actually made a video about that I think it might be a year old it has changed a little bit somebody wanted me to make a new video about it so I can do that as well um but yeah I did a shoe video I did a scam video and I did a racket video with most used rackets in college tennis but but all of them have changed a bit um so yeah you can check you can check those videos out but I might update them as well make some new ones hello visitors hello hello where do I work uh I'm at Aron campus which stands for a resident assistant I take care of all the the residents and people in the dorms and students um I actually work on like the international floor so like it fits well because I'm Canadian and yeah resident assistants deal with a lot of things you build community you you know put on events for people we have duty so like we we do rounds in the building and stuff and sometimes it's tough uh you see some things sometimes that you know you don't want to see um because if something poor happens in your building or on campus and you're the first person to see it I like we're the first person so like that can be uh there's been some like Crisis situations that I've had to deal with so yeah good and good and bad experience but I get free housing so it's really nice um hey are you number two in your team now um I play number three singles and I play one doubles hope you're doing good Rich I'll see you soon for sure couple months probably what number single are you on your team like first second we think you should be first next year I might play two um but yeah I mean I played two the other day cuz I number one was her but yeah I play three in one one dou um hey ker are you still doing demos for Rockets I have a couple I'd love to hear your thoughts of uh yes and no right now is a little bit of a dead period for racket demos just because I'm in my season now but I'll I will I will get back to them um is CER ELR the new Fidel probably yeah there's a really high chance of that actually uh what is the difference between extra Duty ball and normalized pressure test ball regular Duty and extra Duty extra Duty has more felt on it and I'm I'm like 95% sure on this but regular Duty balls like the US Open ones are the ones that the girls use at the US Open The X ones are the ones that the guys do the reason for that is guys play they do they hit more spin so that the more the more felt on the ball uh reacts better um um to the spin where girls hit more flat and it's different like it's different style test basically um you so winner yes I'm not sure what you mean but thank you for leaving a comment uh sending love from Texas thank you for stopping in I'm in New Hampshire so yes very far away I really liked your last video were you saying that you should have your palm facing outwards in Trophy position up until racket drops I got a couple comments on that I got I got to do some comments her reply I've been really slow I actually have the flu right now that's why I've been kind of out um WRA it the Palm can be like facing like this so like this okay um you can have it more like this if it's more natural but ideally in a perfect world it should be pointing like down North the ground you don't want to have it like this this is where you want to stay away from it's like this how having a rocket out like this when you serve um people call it like pancake GP or waiter serve you lose a lot of power with that and it's very uh inconsistent all right guys last couple uh question here I don't I'm not in a relationship right now um Love from the Netherlands bro thank you cheers got two guys actually on our team I think I I think I actually said that to you before I have two guys on te that are from the another one Power Shot for extra power or you always sew power I think that means like controller power I say both because I like to counter punch so but I also have a big surf so I like to create power on the serve but I also love to turn like defense into offense when I switch to the solution speed probably not um I demoed them I love them when I when I tested them but I didn't end up liking them long term if that makes any sense I missed my vapor 9.5 if anybody on this live has connection to Nike and you really want to like help me out and um get me these for like the rest of my life greatly appreciated because I love those shoes so much but they're not going to make them anymore why you know like proa 97 I never said I didn't like the proa 97 I just prefer other rets um Pro Staff doesn't really I mean I like the radicals more I think the pro staffs will work better for other players or they they work for certain players but yeah anyway thanks for stopping by and keeping me company and being Great Subs if you're not subscribed you definitely should like And subscribe uh we got lots of stuff um on the channel uh what shoe was that that was a vapor 9.5 uh tried playing with suass tried playing with sunglasses against the sun yeah no I would never play with sunglasses on a tennis court no chance I just wear a hat and hope for the best um but anyway that's that I got to get ready for work and take a shower here and get out of here so thank you for stopping by like And subscribe if you're not subscribed guys come on thank you and we'll see you guys later | MPTennis | UCFxH4IPA7ItHuiIsChplWLQ | 2024-04-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 11,028 | 53,488 |
ZPdRQEFIzeQ | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZPdRQEFIzeQ | J2theBSquared's 15-16 Upper Deck Ice 8 Box Hockey Case Break | here we go g to the B squared eight box case 15 16 upper deck ice so good luck buddy just something makes David I mean incredible timing oh yeah you know what I mean okay we start with a global impact of Noah hannifin and a world junior championship to 1299 nik richie ice premieres rookie to 1999 Tyler Randall Tyler Randall ice for his rookie to 999 Lena's all mark Nina so much of 999 ice premieres rookie to 999 Shay theater we've got an exquisite base card number 24 99 Phil Esposito ice premieres rookie to 1499 Victor arvidsson rookie relic Jumbo's number to 299 jared mccann and we've got a redemption for an ice premieres autograph number 2 199 Robby Fabbri ice premieres autograph turret of 199 Robbie every box we've got a witch row ice premieres number 2 799 Garret sparks exquisite rookie autograph number 2 3 99 Emile Poirier global impact Jake Virtanen ice 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high box for all right we've got a global impact Nikolai gold omen gödel retro ice premiers number 2 799 Stannis lab DeLeon world junior championship number 2 12 99 orani fabry retro ice premiers number 2 799 Robby Fabbri Christ I hope you like Robby Fabbri I'm building up to you a pc of him oh nice we've got a rook an exquisite rookie auto spectrum number 29 of 35 matthias yen mark 29 of 35 machias yen mark frozen fabrics Tyler Seguin ice premiers rookie to 1499 Brett Pesci ringside signings Andre Burakovsky Andre perfect and an ice for me as rookie numbered in 1999 Duncan siemens but that picture though more like drunken siemens alright i'll leave now well head box five all right ice premiers rookie number two 1499 Sergei Monica frozen fabric Steven Stamkos damn coast god I love these cards we've got a superb script numbered 17 a 49 Jake Virtanen superb script 17 of 49 Jake Virtanen those might be in my opinion the nicest autographs are just access is done up there at least ice premiers rookie number 2 90 99 Chris Weidman ice cream ears rookie number 24 99 Malcolm suman exquisite rookie in him in at 399 no I anything global impact status lab galleon at a world junior championship number 2 12 99 Jake Virtanen and a nice for me as rookie to 1999 yonas combining and on shoe box 6 global impact Oscar Limburger and frozen fabrics Taylor Hall Hey look and we live in Taylor retro ice premieres number 2 799 you see Saros exquisite rookie autograph number 2 3 99 Schindler's Stevenson world junior championship number 2 12 99 hunter shinkaruk ice premieres rookie to nineteen ninety nine Derek for more excuse me my son is also named divorce oh we got three color fresh threads patch gold numbered 80 10 max domi fresh threads patch 8 of 10 max domi ice premiers autograph number 24 99 and thanh slippery chef ice premieres rookie number two 1499 Anthony Stolarz couple Oilers now maybe we're building up to something with the Oilers possibly hopefully all right global impact Connor McDavid well I mean ice premieres rookie number 240 99 Brendan Gaunce ice premieres rookie number two 1999 keygen low ice premieres rookie number 2 999 matt murray ice premieres rookie out of 999 matt murray we've got an exquisite rookie number 2 2 99 dylan lurking good box Dylan lurking ice cream ears rookie number 2 1499 Brady shame is premieres rookie a number two 1999 joel Fuhrman frozen fabric Sidney Crosby and a nice premieres autograph number 24 99 Sergei plotnikov and Fox Kate global impact Daniel sprung and a nice premieres rookie number 240 99 Carter Britney electro ice premieres number 2 799 jared mccann world junior championship number 2 12 99 Shay theatre ice premieres rookie to 1999 dilling dimelo ice premieres autographed number 2 199 Nikolai gold open this app still at the point where i can put meek in her bassinet upstairs run downstairs for a snack and still be slightly paranoid ice premieres rookie number 249 29 Chandler Stevenson like I mean I do it because I'm probably right we've got an exquisite rookie number 2 2 99 Connor McDavid Connor McDavid exquisite rookie out of 299 and a rookie relic Jumbo's number 2 2 99 Emile Poirier so there we go buddy couple make Jeezy stores the end so that worked out | CloutsnChara Sports Cards | UCM1CnVA0viwqwoK3lAJ7clA | 2016-06-17 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 918 | 5,114 |
3mVkvI3rS6s | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mVkvI3rS6s | Reassessing the Cold War: Fascist Legacies & Origins of the Liberal International Order after 1945 | thanks for having me having me here today really excited to present my work so as i think he mentioned this is very much a working draft okay this is a working project it's a co-authored work with my uh co-author is richard saul from queen mary uh queen mary university of london and though it's uh just a work in in progress i do hope that the kind of general outline i'm giving today will spark your interest and also i very much would appreciate your comments so any you know or anything you have to say afterwards i'd love to hear it now we have a pretty small group here today so i don't usually do this but if if i'm speaking and you have just a question they really need to ask me i'm happy to take some questions in the middle of the lecture if there's anything you're not you're not following or anything like that any concept you're not following or just want to throw something out there please just raise your hand also please do let me know if i'm speaking too fast so i get this in my lectures my students i speak really fast sometimes and i just tell them just raise your hand or just tell me slow down you know just just let me know all right okay so uh as the title of the two lectures indicate the book uh rick and i are writing is trying to rethink the role of the far right and race in the making of what a number of scholars have called the us-led liberal international order okay this u.s led liberal international order that was established after 1945. so the aim of the book is to provide a radically different perspective on this cold war geopolitical order and particularly the politics and the geopolitics are going on within the so-called western alliance so today this lecture is going to be focusing on development within the western european states and then tomorrow we're going to be looking at the u.s context okay so so why study the far right right why study the far right and its relationship in particular to this liberal international world why do it today well a number of things all right obviously there's been some recent political events that are somewhat tremendous studying the far right okay we can talk about the uh recent election of donald trump the presidency of the united states on a very xenophobic hyper nationalist platform we can point to uh the brexit the british referendum to leave the the european union both of these events along the kind of broader kind of rise of the far right across western europe and much of the world in fact uh have been seen as the clearest challenge to some of the core foundations of this liberal international order established in 1945 right and these these events have really led to an outpouring of scholarly and journalistic commentary on these events some even pointing to the possibility of a kind of imminent decline of u.s hegemony in the liberal international area as we know it however i think that for the most part these responses to this current conjunction both within the scholarly literature and kind of more op-ed type pieces you might read in the washington post have really overlooked the importance of the far right in the longer term for this order okay it really overlooked central contribution to the far right in the making of this liberal international order in the first place and this extends to the dominant theorizations within my own home discipline of international relations all right and just to let you know the acronym for international relations is ir okay so ir approaches have tended to emphasize this international order's post-fascist dimensions that really reflect the liberal and democratic characteristics of the states involved in creating these this order okay and in this lecture i'd like to at least probe and possibly challenge this depiction of the international order and i want to do so in particular by not only highlighting the continual presence of the far right in western european polities after 1945 but also by looking at their distinct contribution to the development of this order all right and i do so by drawing attention to the construction and maintenance of a number of distinct domestic anti-communist political orders that extended across a number of the major states involved in making this uh in the making of this international liberal order okay so the emphasis here is going to be on these mutual interconnections between domestic and international order building that not only underscore some neglected aspects of cold war history but also problematizes uh and gives a different view on the specific ideological and political properties of this geopolitical order okay so the first part of the lecture i'm going to briefly discuss some prominent ir approaches and i'm going to focus in particular on the work of g john eichenberg for reasons i will be discussing in a moment now i'm also going to be looking in particular about how ir defines orders right geopolitical orders and how they connect it to the specific uh social and institutional arrangements of the states making up those orders right so what i'm gonna be showing is that most ir approaches work with what what they call the discipline a domestic analogy okay they work from looking at and examining at some specific arrangement within states and they extrapolate that to looking at how that order is built at the geopolitical level okay so then after this i'm going to identify some of the limitations of these existing approaches while examining the connections the structural connections between the far right and liberal orders more generally over a kind of long derivative perspective all right so here i'll be sketching out uh the alternative framework theoretical framework that we're drawing on which uh includes the concept of uneven combined development and antonio gramsci's particular conceptualization of hegemony in his term passive revolution and then finally i'm going to provide a broad brush kind of empirical overview of some of the key trends and the key uh developments in regards to uh the strategic place of the far right in the making of this order and i say broad and i'm not going to really be focusing too much on the history here simply because if you're interested in that it's in the paper upon which this is based on this lecture is based on and that will be read on thursday so if you're interested in what i have to say here you want to know more besides asking questions after lecture come to thursday and email patrick for the paper okay so let's get right into it then so the study of international order within irf forms obviously voluminous literature right there's there's a ton of work there's a lot of literature there there's not as much on the geopolitical order of the post-war 1945 period there's a bit but with specific reference to this cold war geopolitical order really the work that's been the most influential and at least within what we might call mainstream or traditional ir approaches the work that's been most influential and the most extensive is john g john eichenberg okay he's a liberal ir scholar he works in the united states he's had positions within various administration from the bush one administration to the obama administration and he works at princeton he's a chair professor for princeton so his work's been very influential and for this reason alone i think merit some scrutiny okay so central to eikenberry analysis is on the liberal democratic constitution of the western power involved in making of this international order okay so for ikenberry what's specifically important is these democratic character of those states right party to such an order that gives the order such highly positive effects so what does he mean by positive what he means by positive is that it was so durable right that it could last various crises and different conjunctures and they could last past the cold war itself right the fact that this cult this essential architecture nato european union right uh wto all these other things this essential architecture that was put together after the second world war continues to this very day and so this was a highly stable right uh order capable of lasting up to the present day and the reasons one of the key reasons that he argues this is true is that because of the liberal democratic characteristics of the institutions involved and in particular the way in which these institutions could bind power they were strategically restraining the most dominant power of that time which was the united states right so as eichenberry puts it european and american leaders argued quite explicitly that their willingness to establish binding ties with each other hinged on their shared democratic institution democracy was both an end and a means so as we can see here and as i indicated before the lecture eikenberry is working with what we call a domestic analogy very explicitly so so that is to say that the internal constitution of the parties the states that are involved in making the order is what you need to know about what you need to know to assess the character of that order it reflects these internal properties and what's also particularly significant for eikenberry is the politically open and reciprocal nature of the american state and this politically open and reciprocal nature is what gave the u.s exercise of gemini after the 1945 its distinctly liberal caste okay so the exercise of u.s power was articulated through a historically singular form of what eikenberry calls liberal hegemonic leadership liberal hegemonic leadership so u.s agenda was much less coercive than it's often assumed within both marxist and ir literatures and often less successful in imposing its own will all right this was very much according to very least a bargain and negotiated order right where other allies right other states could put had input into this order and in some regards he's corrected that okay so eikenberry's conception us again also shares some broad and i say broad stress in the broad affinities with other critical approaches to ir particularly we see uh neo-marxists that view the post-war order as being achieved through the formation of what they call a new trans-national historical block okay this transnational historical bloc is kind of social political alliance so it's more than that we can talk about that in the next lecture you can ask me in the uh the question and answer right it's a kind of social political alliance that brought together these centrist elements these liberal forces right within the state apparatus within the major parties in the in the major mainstream parties in different states right they brought them together to consciously aim to create this transatlantic political community a transatlantic political community community that was liberal they were creating a geopolitical order in the image of themselves all right they're creating a geopolitical order in the image of themselves and while giving analytical primacy to capitalist political economy and class agency they therefore share in certain respects and eikenberry's emphasis on civil society as the terrain or space where hegemony is constructed and consolidated moreover both accounts also share this focus on these internal properties of the states making this order to then assess what type of order is being made but i would also say that both with eikenberry and other liberal ir accounts and these more critical neo-marxist accounts there's very little discussion of the central strategic place of non-liberal far-right social forces in the making disorder and even when there is some empirical discussion i'll give you an example christ vanderpiles work for example does take into account they're all the far right but even there there's no there's no attempt to kind of fit this empirical account this recognition of these forces with a more substantive theoretical conception of their relationship to the building of this world right so it's there it's empirically present but it's not theorized right and i would argue that this weakens in some regards their respective analyses and in the case of eikenberry and other liberal approaches really misconstrues the nature and evolution of the cold war order [Applause] okay so before turning the cold war era i think it's important to identify how our argument again this is a co-authored piece for those who are walking late how our argument relates to wider conceptions wider arguments about liberal orders okay so viewed from this kind of broader historical perspective we can identify not only the connections between the far right and the contemporary liberal order but also tease out some of these structural continuities that define the ontology of liberalism as a distinct political order okay liberal orders from the 19th century present have maintained and retained an ambivalent relationship with the far right and such ambivalence of ambivalences which at times have turned into open embraces we argued are derived from a few particular structural properties of liberal orders in general the first of these is this recurrent phenomenon produced by the destabilizing consequences of the uneven and combined character of capitalist development and thus the periodic crises that have punctuated its history all right i'm i've kind of put up here very briefly what i mean by unemployment development here i don't want to go over that too much now we can go over the question and answer if you like but specifically what i'm looking at here is the fusion of what trotsky called this is trotsky's concept of the archaic and the modern how this is central to the understanding of the persistence of the far right and its relationship and reproduction within these liberal international orders for this process of uneven combined development the changes in unleashes and the reconfiguration of social orders that have resulted in its wake provide these so the structural context from which the far right first emerged and from which it is reproduced right so i'm talking about these geopolitically driven uh intensified forms of development that cause various disruptions and dislocations of social order okay that's what i'm talking about uneven combined development and so what generally speaking we can see is that the far right deploys archaic reactionary ideological elements to mobilize a popular base in reaction to these rapid social and cultural disruptions wrought by this process right indeed the very possibilities of the politics of the far right come from the fundamental ways in which political political subjectivities are framed and conditioned by these dislocations produced by capitalist development in its international dimensions all right so we can think about here concrete examples a kind of political economy of inter inter imperialist rivalry during the interwar periods right this is key to the success of far-right mobilizations and their actual ability to maintain or to come to power that is right so the key here is these geopolitics too the geopolitics driving these developments so in short the history of capitalist development have provided the socio-economic topography upon which far-right ideological imaginaries thrive and it's these imaginative imaginaries that have been central to reconstituting the meaning and terrain of the political and in particular the ways in which they construct individual identities as connected to a racially or ethnically defined people right so the far-right provides a kind of organist conception of the nation-state which is defined by a racially homogeneous people all right and this is the way it copes with these this is a kind of response the way it copes with these crises produced by this uneven capitalist development obviously that's not the only reason that explains that this is just one aspect i don't want to sound too reductionist there okay so what we see then is that the far right has offered an important if in many ways illusory ideological exit strategy from the organic stabilities and crises of capitalist modernity right it constitutes a form of politics that's defined by a mythical presentation of the past idealized in racial or ethnic terms right so this provides a kind of reproduction of the past and the present what trotsky called this contradictory amalgam of archaic and contemporary force this is at the heart of what a combined development is about okay this contradictory fusion of what is supposed to be present and what is supposed to be passed so secondly the political bases upon which liberal orders have come to rest have in certain conjunctions come to rely on far more far-right mobilization to secure them right so at moments of crisis the far right has come to provide an important ideological anchor to compensate for the intense dislocations and sense of anatomy that have characterized such conjunctions so we see here that the structural dynamics of capitalism generates what we might call a kind of the far right as a form of coercive reserve army that politicians and ruling classes can take advantage of in times of crisis now to be clear what we're not suggesting is that the far right should be viewed as a type of uh prawn of ruling class interests parroting the kind of stalinist thesis on fascism right we're not saying that it's just simply an articulation of the interests of monopoly capital we're also not claiming that the far right is necessarily functional to the reproduction of capitalist orders as the interwar period and the second world war proves so dramatically it can be very dysfunctional right and in fact in the contemporary order we might see just how dysfunctional that might be i mean think about the type of xenophobic immigration policies that that that the far right in the united states are pushing for this is dysfunctional to big capital in many ways all right so that is not what we're arguing rather what we're trying to to show what we're trying to argue for is the need to recognize the political role of far right forces in helping to fort revolutionary impulses challenges to liberal capitalist orders and then the way in which the far right can then offer an alternative source of ideological limitation legitimation excuse me limitation legitimation of these capitalist orders that aren't necessarily antithetical to them right and then we have to see how this links up or can link up to conceptions of international order as well okay so here the question of hegemony uh really becomes central so we follow antonio gramsci the great italian marxist that was jailed by mussolini in the 1920s and 1930s we follow gramsci by looking and understanding a hegemony is the dialectical fusion of three elements consense consensus and coercion uh leadership and domination and legitimacy and corruption all right and the point that we really try to stress is that you have to ensure that you're always keeping these two dimensions of this dialectical equation in play right at least within international relations you see the dominant uh theorizations really only looking at hegemony as consensus or leadership or on the other hand it's completely domination right and the reason why becomes so important is because it's the historical conditions giving rise to strong far-right movements are those in which the hegemony of the ruling class order comes underdogs and of course this is precisely the situation that gramsci found himself in the interwar years with the rise of nazi and fascist movements into power where the far right was viewed by many ruling classes as both a challenge to the order and also a possible solution to reconsolidate reconsolidating capitals together and this was actually explicitly recognized by some circles within these ruling classes within germany on the eve of the nazi takeover so i'm going to give you just a quick illustration here there was a very influential bi-weekly private newsletter called the deutsche fion brief it was run by a business association by that time i think was mostly dominated by heavy industrial interests but it had all the different kind of factions of capital involved in it agricultural interest uh ig farbin all of them and they published this newsletter and it circulated to the leading echelons of the german ruling class it even went to the most immediate circle right around hindenburg right before the nazi takeover including all the major military officials uh in germany and very tellingly in september 1932 uh article of this new newspaper they argued for the necessity of including the nazis in any future government that was to be established to ensure its popular legitimacy the the article was called the social reconsolidation of german capitalism and in it it argues quote the problem of consolidating a bourgeoisie and regime in post-war germany is in general determined by the fact that the leading group namely the bourgeoisie operating the economy has become too narrow to account for its own rule for this hegemony it needs to bind itself to a layer that are not part of it socially but which provide the essential service of anchoring its agility within the people etcetera etcetera and then become the final support the final anchor of this again so right out of the horse's mouth right recognizing in moments of crisis in moments of of desperation right we see that the political the principal political representatives of bourgeoisie couldn't find a solution out of this crisis of gemini that faced them and in this moment of desperation at least some of them right were willing right to to think beyond the box right to think that maybe we need to rely on someone else outside of our kind of our our own our own social layers uh to anchor our hegemony right so they turn to the far right they turn to the far right and doing so and once in power these nazis and fascist regimes facilitated what gramsci termed a passive revolution that is a form of revolution from above that involves a molecular process of transformation this is the process that progressively modified the pre-existing composition of forces that is social forces in the ruling classes gradual but continuous absorption of sub-altern class demands right so what this means is that the ruling classes built in order that simultaneously incorporates some demands of the underclasses of the working class of the proletariat and peasants while dramatically limiting and de-radicalizing them and reproducing and restructuring the political rule of capital right so it's almost you know you incorporate some of these you absorb some of these demands but you behead right the social forces behind them and we can see that the emergence of these passive revolutions were also organically connected to what nicholas short calls the praxological challenge of an even development that is to say a political and ideological strategy that was aimed at coping with these destabilizing pressures wrought by the geopolitically conditioned character of capitalist development so in this way we make an argument a book that we have to see these concepts of passive revolution and uneven combined development as organically intertwined okay so you're going to tell me that okay this is all well and good but this is the anti-war period what the hell does this have to do with the post-war period or what does it have to do with the contemporary period right because obviously the entire argument of eikenberry's other is that there's something unique about this post-war period right these fascists have been have been uh it's a post-fascist settlement these fascist uh uh forces have been exposed uh exposed from the west european scene right and that's what makes this settlement so democratic so liberal and thus so unique right however as we show in the manuscript far from terminating this crisis this organic crisis that spans the interior year period the immediate post-war period saw a recurrent state of punctuated and acute crises of gemini across western europe and further it was the particular ways in which these crises were resolved and the involvement of far-right forces in their resolution that significantly determined the precise political character of the of the order that took thereafter okay of the liberal international order right and indeed what we see is that the reconstitution of western state society relations involves both the molecular absorption and thus limiting of non-communist leftist social forces and democr democratic demands into new state society relations and secondly that there's to balance this there's a reappropriation and incorporation of far-right forces and ideological currents into these same structures [Applause] so in these ways you have this transformation of western european state society relations that undergoes its own unique type of passive revolution right this reconstruction and reconsolidating reconsolidation of the political rule of capital and in so doing it combines liberal and regressive forces into a single hegemonic process project excuse me a project that coheres together around a shared common sense of vitriolic anti-communism right that's the defining ideological ethos of this order it's defining political orientation the quilting point the ideological quintal point bringing and coalescing these different and disparate social forces most importantly it's in times of hegemonic crisis that is that the far right elements of this of this hegemonic project are called up right or brought to emerge as the subterranean anchor of liberal capitalist orders so what our analysis highlights then is that there's a strong long-standing structural weakness weaknesses within liberalism both as an ideology and as an institutional institutionalization of politics more so than many traditional accounts within international relations have taken in account all right so this broad overview provides us an important historical backdrop for which we can situate the cold war order it is noted prevailing conceptualizations of the post-war international order point to a number of mutually reinforcing domestic and international transformations right these these transformations these changes developed out of what uh jeff ely the michigan historian calls the high point of the wrath of the radical democratic impulse that accompanied the liberation of europe from fascist forces between about 1942 to 1947. right and here he argues that the forces of the left he among others captured the radical democratic possibilities bequeathed by the liberation and that for this brief moment the left was momentarily hegemonic at least an ideological and political times right so this these changes not only reflected the temporary weakness and disorientation of dominant classes but also the momentary banishment of the far right from mainstream politics right so for dominant accounts of the emergence of the post-war geopolitical order it's exactly these changes that are are provided as evidence of the democratic dimensions of the transformations at the geopolitical level right the point to these same very processes without of course not naming that it's the communist parties in italy and it's the communist parties in france they're actually doing this that are the ones that are hegemonic right so the democratic transformation herald by the defeat of fascist is then quite explicitly recognized as directly connected to the broader forces right of the left even if they're not naming it right they're recognizing that it's there right and the consolidation and deepening of these democratic possibilities after the war were to be determined by the continuing strength of the left so what this suggests then is that at the war's end there exists a possibility for the emergence of a very different form of liberal democratic order with very big implications for the type of geopolitical order from which you emerge right and all of the scholars looking at this liberal international order being built point to the very same processes that i'm looking at here so what happens then why doesn't this emerge right what we see in the period after 1945 or really in 1947 is a number of developments come to produce a kind of reinforcing uh dynamic right playing out of the again at the domestic and international levels right and this creates this international order that uh liberal scholars and others like eikenberry are trying to account for and celebrate so at the international level this dynamic is driven by the responses to the perceived aggressions of the soviet union perceived and real i should say right which reinvigorates the forces of the right across western europe and also brings the united states right further into the security military relations of the west european states and also intervening in governing these uh intra-state european relations okay so it's bringing the u.s more into it making them become more involved than they would have had this not happened say at the domestic level the key developments include the rapid rehabilitation of the fascist right and the creation of new national hegemonic projects these are projects that then uh included former fascist and were premised on this virulent anti-communism an anti-communism that extends beyond the communist left right it's not just about stopping the communists but stopping any of them okay so what we see then is that within the space of about three to four years the possibility of a so-called democratic springtime had given way to a narrowly conceived far-right tainted liberal order at both the domestic and liberal and excuse me liberal domestic and international levels right and these transformations that we see occurring across western europe are highly uneven right after the initial wave of anti-fascist purges we see the return of former fascists in power in germany in france or no in germany and italy and then the collaborators are quote fellow travelers being put back in power in france and greece and these are the four main case studies that we look at in the book for this period and i'm just going to focus very briefly on one of these case studies western germany okay so after the initial purge of the nazis the war crime tribunals within two years most of the nazis were allowed back into the post most of those nazis have been in state power before the war are allowed back in their post out of the 53 53 000 state functionaries originally dismissed by the western allies due to their nazi connection only a thousand were permanently banned okay only a thousand are permanent excluded and in the case of the judiciary almost every single former nazi is brought back into power so the entire legal system of the new republic the new west german republic is in the hands of former nazis right leading echelons of this judiciary and as the allies move to reinstate nazis into power they're also moving to repress the left and this comes to a kind of boiling point ahead with the outlawing of the german communist party in august 1956 right so the ideological creed of the new west german state is marked by this hyper uh visceral anti-communism and arguably this is the defining political orientation of all the post-war intellectual leads political elites and economic elites it comes close to replicating the kind of hyper hysterical paranoia of the german ruling cast during the bible republic with the significant kafir that during the violent republic the german communist party was actually allowed to operate unlike in the wet in the post-war period all right further what we see with this repopulation of the state with former nazis or what i don't call it called fellow travelers it helps to determine the specific character of the liberal international order that emerged so the possibility of remaking the west german state and with it the wider european order is radically limited by this defining anti-communist ethos and this in particular serves to reinforce both the division of cold war europe and also germany itself right so it's essentially this anti-communist drive that is creating a divided germany there were however as we look in the book very real political alternatives to this type of geopolitical order type of liberal order that were effectively blocked by american and german elites right these alternatives were as hostile to the cold war division of europe and soviet maneuvering in central eastern europe as they were to the type of tainted political compromise that defined the german republic in the early post-war period and this political alternative is probably best exemplified by the social democrat under the leader of kurt schumacher all right while ambivalent if not entirely hostile to west german communists the spd was more seriously committed to denotification and it also held a very different geopolitical orientation based on a demilitarized and neutral but unified german right think about that a demilitarized and neutral but unified germany this outcome would have seriously undermine the type of liberal order that the united states and the german allies were trying to achieve after the war it would have been liberal but also democratic right and it would have rested uh on and it would not have rested on the form of anti-communism that i can eikenberry seeks to account for so this alternative order would have also resulted in a very different political security relationship with the united states for germany's entrance in nato the placing of nato troops on german soil and german rearmament as well as the uh entire the nature of the european integration process all of these fundamentally rested on the active ostrichization marginalization of the left right it's this australization of the left that's critically facilitated by the reincorporation of significant elements of the state and the nazis data apparatus into the administration and leadership of the new state and we see that even before the breakdown of the wartime alliance the western allies had already preemptively moved to marginalized left right and this forecloses the possibilities of not only fulfilling the comprehensive uh denotification program but also an extensive democratization of state and society and in particular they reign in the scope dramatically reign in the scope of the 4d program so by 1948 three of the ds denotification decartalization and democratization were heavily diluted and with west germany's uh entry to nato in 1955 the final one demilitarization is effectively abandoned now there are number of factors inhibiting us policymakers from really following through with this program but of all of these as carolyn eisenberg puts it in her meticulously researched book the most overriding was the affinity of american business to germany's old economic elites right the affinity of american business to germany's old economic elite and their unshakeable conviction that only the experienced private owners and managers of capital were capable of restoring the country's productive apparatus not surprisingly the other main factor is virulent anti-communism quoting and it's important not to dismiss the significance of this term of events in western germany for the consolidation of the eye of the social and ideological basis of this liberal international group for we find a very similar pattern occurring in a number of other states of the western alliance such as france italy and greece but the latter two actually uh necessitating u.s interventions through covert and overt means and forcibly making sure that the communists don't come to power had these communists come to power in those states we've had a very different order and they do so again by reincorporating elements of fascists former fascists collaborators etc right so we see here the active agency of these former fascists of these former nazis of these collaborative collaborators shaping the form of the international order that's being built now of course the fact that former nazi officials are operating within a different political context doesn't mean that the german state after the war is fascist right we're not arguing that we are arguing that what we are arguing is that there is evidence to indicate that the liberal democratic character of the new west german state was heavily heavily circumscribed by this constituent hostility to the left and that this ensured that reactionary and far-right impulses remained at the heart of the way in which the state viewed and responded to the left in general and not just the communists so another kind of example you look at the book among many many others is one of the key anti-subversive laws in the german states that specifically targets the left is actually drafted by former nazi lawyers right and this becomes key to the one of the major laws being implemented right this leads to the trial of thousands of leftists in effect using the law to silence any of those willing to challenge the post for anti-communist consensus right so it's not just about punishing communists but basically punishing anyone who is trying to question this anti-communist ideological orientation and we compare this to the treatment of former fascists within these states that are essentially allowed to reorganize themselves and oppose fascist parties and allowed to participate in the process the republic's anti-communist pathology right essential to its liberal democratic shortcomings okay i was going to look a little bit or talk about a little bit of far-right inspired terrorist violence and crew plotting particularly we look at the strategy of tension within italy i don't know if you're familiar that between the mid 1960s and late 1970s and the ways in which we saw a former fascist being implicated in that and their relationship with the state i'm not going to talk about that because i'm running out of time but put that kind of a side note and i can come back to it later we also talked about in the book the fundamental role of nato in securing and helping maintain far-right authoritarian dictatorships such as those in greece portugal and spain we look in particular at the colonial's coup in greece in 1967 and the instrumental role the u.s plate there nato plate there but i'm not going to talk about that too much here right but what i want to just highlight is what what these what these interventions reveal with these type of interventions right the use the strategic deployment of far-right forces to fight off any potential subversion to the orders what they revealed is that the u.s global leadership that was much more common in the post-colonial world so-called third world the global south also uh played out in some regions of western europe over the first few decades of the cold war and what our our account then uh tries to do is privatizes this prevailing assumption that the u.s led cold war operated across two fundamentally distinct geopolitical zones right the kind of metropolitan democratic heartland and the western alliance and the so-called third world for the role of the far right in the organization operations of some western european states responses to radical social change is a much is suggestive of a much more mediated uneven and sometimes shifting separation between these two different zones right which in key moments right in the key moments of hegemonic crisis see the logic of u.s foreign policy that plays out across the global south also playing out in parts of the liberal heartland what our argument also suggests that we need to reconceptualize again in a way that's much more open to the differentiated social basis of its legitimation and of those social sources and social forces involved in it right so we need to go beyond the kind of rather narrowly framed understanding of liberal orders articulated by eikenberry as well as others right because what we see is that the composition of social forces constitutive of the postwar order is persistently incorporating these far right elements right these far right agents and ideological currents that are even at times antithetical to liberal democracy but at the same time they're integral to its maintenance at least in certain moments of crisis right so i think it makes sense then to reconceptualize what gramsci's concept of the historical block for kind of just broadly social political alliances the it's it makes sense to reconceptualize this the historical bloc spearheading the u.s legal international border as representing a broader social number of forces including the far right that orbit around a hardcore liberal social forces progress i'm going to give more details of that in tomorrow's lecture i'm going to be talking and demonstrating how white supremacist far right elements of the southern united states were actually integral to the making of the new deal coalition that then spearheaded the liberal international order and the designs and roosevelt and truman's administration so we're going to talk about that tomorrow so with respect to neil gromschen accounts the crucial point is that always and everywhere this relationship between coercion and consent is conjunctional condition in times of crisis or even in times of perceived crisis the course of aspects come to the fore right and throughout much of the cold war state-sponsored violence and terrorism by far-right agents remained uh fundamental in consolidating and reproducing these liberal democratic regimes okay so far from representing and opening up a domestic democratic possibilities as eikenberry and others suggests we argue that u.s agenda was founded upon the active and persistent limiting of acceptable democratic options and did so in ways that actively utilize far-right forces right so we see the exclusion of more radical and more democratic alternative conceptions from the outset thus capitalism should be conceived as structuring the field of legitimate political options it both limits the range of legitimate political strategies and therefore also the depth of acceptable democratic change and in this respect at least the us cold war order shares some uh similarities to the authoritarian liberalism of the ordo liberals the interwar german period those who are kind of influenced by schmidt's work and we see that in moments of crisis it relies upon authoritarian social forces and means and sustaining and defending the rule of law and private property against radical democratic alternatives so the pluralism of this post-war order was therefore always a bounded pluralism at the same time of course we also have to recognize the scope within liberalism for extending the reach of what is acceptable for expanding the reach of other democratic possibilities but here that of course is a question of political agency okay i'm going to leave with that thank you [Applause] | Havens Wright Center for Social Justice | UCVctRO6fWplTUlKe-1iv5tw | 2022-09-25 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 7,146 | 42,963 |
5Aw49RfTpxM | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Aw49RfTpxM | What Is TRANSVERSE COLON? TRANSVERSE COLON Definition & Meaning | transverse colon the transverse colon is the longest and most movable part of the colon it crosses the abdomen from fee of sending colon at the hepatic or right Collard flexor with a downward convexity to the descending colon where it curves sharply on itself beneath the lower end of the spleen forming the splenic or left Collard flexure in its course it describes an arch the concavity of which is directed backward and a little upward toward its splenic and there is often an abrupt u-shaped curve which may descend lower than the main curve it is almost completely invested by perineum and is connected to the inferior border of the pantheous by a large and white duplicate of that membrane the transverse mezzo colon it is in relation by its upper surface with the liver and gallbladder the greater curvature of the stomach and the lower end of the spleen by its under surface with the small intestine by its anterior surface with the posterior layer of the greater omentum and the abdominal wall its posterior surface is in relation from right to left with the descending portion of the duodenum the head of the pancreas and some of the convolutions of the JYP's unum and ileum the transverse colon absorbs water and salts | Audiopedia | UCi_aXVqbIwDwfQsB5Ow9Ivw | 2018-11-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 216 | 1,229 |
SpS71xjr7xk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpS71xjr7xk | Histamine 101 | hello so I'm going to talk about histamine and histamine intolerance first things first histamine Is Not a Bad Thing histamine is actually a neurotransmitter it is necessary we run into problems when we get histamine intolerance and this happens when there is a buildup of histamine in the body typically it happens in the tissues or in the digestive tract there are histamine in proteins and so that's why when a lot of people go carnivore or go even animal based and they start eating more meat than they've ever eaten before they run into histamine intolerance because there's a buildup what we need to break down histamine is the Dao enzyme this Dao enzyme is what most people are talking about you can find it in kidney you can find it in sweet breads and that's awesome but there are also precursors to this Dao enzyme in the body so we need vitamin C vitamin B6 copper we need those to manufacture this Dao enzyme and so copper deficiency I think is something that people run into sometimes on a carnivore diet vitamin C deficiency can happen on a carnivore diet I think it's more likely to be copper than vitamin C that's just my personal take because our needs for Vitamin C go down when we stop consuming dietary glucose vitamin C and glucose compete for the same pathway and so when you stop eating glucose that pathway is clear for vitamin C and your needs actually go down same with T3 okay your thyroid hormone you don't need as much because your thyroid actually becomes more efficient so some people will say okay okay I tested my thyroid my numbers are lower but I feel fine what's going on that's what's happening now if you feel sluggish if you're having symptoms then it's definitely something to consider and look into but there are situations where your numbers will look different and if you're feeling good there's nothing to worry about okay and so copper is something that if you are deficient if you did a hair mineral analysis test and you're definitely deficient in Copper I personally if if that were me I would take a copper supplement some type of bi-glycinate copper supplement like Thorn pure encapsulations is a good brand that's what I would do you can get lots of minerals from Seafood but copper is one of those things that I think a lot of people are not getting enough of okay something else to keep in mind is that iron and zinc negate copper and so if you're eating a bunch of oysters with your copper supplement you might be negating the effects of that supplement so you want to be aware of when you're taking it and these are just these are the intricacies of of the situation for someone who has been at a plateau for a while and so I want to finish up this short video by sharing my experience with histamine intolerance when I switched to a carnivore diet that was the first histamine symptom I actually identified that was 2019 and that's when the word was actually you know histamine intolerance was actually like becoming popular I will say and I was making myself broth with pig ears or chicken feet and my nose would start running as soon as I would eat it my nose would just start running like a faucet but I didn't have heart palpitations I didn't get any rash I didn't feel anxious so I kept eating the broth and that was just an executive decision and I always encourage people if your body is telling you that it's craving something but you're having some kind of a reaction you have to be the judge of whether or not it's right for you I decided to continue taking the bone broth I don't regret it I think it played a large role in healing my gut and and a lot of other things in my body but you don't need brown broth to heal and you could just eat meat with the collagen in it so if you're having symptoms like a bad rash or you're having flare-ups you know with anything or anxiety or heart palpitations I wouldn't keep doing it that would be me I mean if I had heart palpitations when I ate something I wouldn't eat the thing and I used to deal with that back in the day but I don't know if it was histamine intolerance or just a psychosomatic response I also went through a season in my life where it had these huge hives like the size of a grapefruit like this big on the front of my thigh and it would be either one and this is when I was working at Whole Foods and it was just so crazy they would come up out of nowhere I don't know if that was histamine intolerance you know I can't really look back and remember it happening like right after I got off my lunch break or something not to mention I was mostly eating like coconut milk ice cream which I doubt would cause a histamine reaction in 2019 this is the first situation where I was like that is 100 histamine but I continued taking the bone broth so if you're having some little symptom that does not bother you maybe it's okay again histamine intolerance occurs when there is a buildup of histamine in the tissues or the digestive tract so in my head I realized okay I need to reduce the amount of histamine that I'm eating and then I met Billy dough Meats Billy dough Meats is a a meat company family owned out of Hoffman Estates Illinois I found them by going onto eatwild.com and typing in my ZIP code I was just looking for local butchers and Farmers to connect with and that's how I found them and it turns out they do not use Aging for anything it's just not a process that they use so even their beef is non-aged now you'll do better with like lamb go or veal because they're smaller animals it takes less time to process a lamb or a goat or a small baby cow versus a 1500 pound cow and so that in itself is going to be less histamine but the fact that all of it is non-aged is such a breakthrough for so many of my clients for so many people that I know that I've not even worked with but I recommended them it's been just a breakthrough another great meat company that I'm affiliated with is North Star bison they have a whole low histamine tab on their website and you can check that out they have awesome Cuts bison elk they have lamb they have goat and then they have pork and stuff like that salmon and so that's all I had to do to resolve my histamine intolerance it took time for that symptom to go away but that's all I had to do and I have struggled with Mast Cell Activation Syndrome in my past but in this season of Life all I had to do was just switch to non-aged meat and it resolved itself and so when I work with people for histamine intolerance or Mast Cell Activation Syndrome Billy domits is the first recommendation and then we can see are there deficiencies do you need to supplement with kidney or sweet breads things like that so I hope that this provides some direction and guidance and reassurance for anyone who has been struggling with histamine intolerance I know that it's honestly a pretty common thing here so you just want to figure out if you have any deficiencies if you've been stuck in a plateau if you've already tried the non-aged meat that would be my personal recommendation hope it helps [Music] | Rebekah Heishman - Tailored Keto Health | UCmQLIK2WPYW8q7kr5XGHw6g | 2023-06-13 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,334 | 7,069 |
Kig7-DKEYxw | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kig7-DKEYxw | Borscht Belt challenge answered by Albreda | I Court to lowborn Peasant folk this is a tale of Youth in a village it could be any Village really by the Sea three apprentices took their half holiday together old friends from childhood and as youngsters will in order to magnify just how adult they are they began to complain about the artor of their work one the blacksmith's Apprentice said to his two fellows as they drank their small beer sitting on a log outside you know the The Village Green my master the blacksmith all know his work for without his work who would have tools for their own work ax blades he makes and hammers hor shoes and nails and therein lies my undoing nail after nail after nail after nail do I get to touch a sword or a knife blade no not even a hinge or a door latch no it's nails from dawn to dust and Dawn again I must have made 5,000 nails and still he comes to me and says put that back in the fire and do it again it's not straight enough make me another 10 dozen Nails I've become small Apprentice that I am the master of the nail the Brad the spike I am the master of the nail and his friends waged their still sparse chins and misery and his next friend said yeah you all know my my master the carpenter he does beautiful fine work in the evenings all beautifully chased with relief work and everybody from miles around he's even done commission for the baron he makes furniture for people's houses smooth tables and rocking chairs and he even does framing work and and he says next year I'll be on the roof with him but for now he has me making shingles just slicing shingle after shingle after I feel like I have shingles after shingle after shingle can I hang out my shingle yet I oh I do nothing but shingles all day until I see them in my sleep the only break I have from shingles are splinters and his two friends commer and they offer him a little bit more small beer and then the third boy perhaps a bit slow says y I know what you're talking about my master the fisherman we've been mending Nets and winding through y um the fishing line but the most thing when we go out in the boat after all the time I've spent scraping Barnacles and everything when we go out in the boat what does he have me doing baiting hooks baiting hooks baiting hooks until I'm sleeping and dreaming bating hooks I've become the master and at that his two friends pushed him off the log | ShavaSue | UCyLJMZOd_Kf2k30-sbzSjRg | 2013-12-01 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 459 | 2,364 |
9l5ZbXOGMMg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9l5ZbXOGMMg | Kyle McMartin - Porting the Linux Kernel | wow I've never used a microphone before this is actually kind of terrifying this is also the biggest audience I've ever had so I'm going to talk about linux portability originally I was gonna talk about Colonel portability but I decided to make it a bit more generic to make it more broad for people so about me I've been working on Linux portability and ports of Linux for pretty much pardon me Oh like 15 years now I started got started with debian porting it to hppa when pieris was a big thing back in like the early 2000s with some friends some of whom were here right now that I got involved with ubuntu and that got me a job at Red Hat and I started working on fedora and most recently I've started working on arm and a art 64 for red hat and dealing with a lot of bring up issues there because adding a new platform to use a space especially one that's kind of cutting edge and hasn't existed before in upstream is an interesting challenge I have done work on the colonel and the toolchain and GMC and all sorts of things like that I kind of touch a lot of things I don't know I like to have fun and not limit myself to one one project so let X portability I'm gonna start with like just anecdotes and jokes and funny funny things and pitfalls that befall people porting applications between architectures the first one want to talk first about linux linux positionally 386 only it was mostly used a lot of hardware support for task switching and things like that the x86 provided i was pretty non-portable for the first couple years of its existence then lead us got an alpha from deck and the alpha is interesting architecture is one of the first 64-bit it was a 64-bit only architecture so it had no legacy support like a spark in power pc and other architectures have there was little endian like x86 so it's kind of simple in that respect but it was you know the first port that Lina's did himself mostly to another architecture then then they had a spark which is really weird it's a it's big endian unlike x86 has something called registered no which means that some of the registers get pushed to the stack every time you do a function call and things like that which is kind of weird it needed it had certain spark CPUs required you to do things in different ways so that's a ready-to-run time patch the colonel at runtime or at boot time to not call instructions that were invalid on that arc of that certain CPU and it had a more complicated caching system x86 is really kind of everything to do with the virtual address space caching is taken care of in Hardware on spark a lot of that had to be done manually and that added some complication to the colonel in order to make sure that you know things worked out properly then we have the added MIPS and arm and guy risk & i64 and all sorts of things and I think Linux is now easily the most portable architecture or a post most part of a portable colonel in the world net bsd probably still claims to be but they count their ports in a different way and they're liars incendiary comment to the first thing i want to talk about one of the issues i see a lot when porting software or when building software for arm recently is dealing with char sinus so it ends up being kind of hilarious because you can set a char c equals negative 1 and then compare it against 0 but unfortunately the sinus of char isn't defined by see like the sinus of int is so on some architectures like PPC arm I are 64 s390 char is actually unsigned by default so this a comparison against 0 is always going to be true because it's never actually got to be negative 1 and on x86 and everything's saying it's signed you can comparison wise if you grep across GCC source you can see which ports use which and sign kind of wins by about 10 or 11 in this case one of those is actually like PowerPC on on Linux and AIX is signed or unsigned rather but on OSX they decide to make it signed for some reason it match everything else because I guess they want to make their lives easy so it ends up being a compiler warning not a runtime error because you're now taking conditions that you didn't think would be true to be true so this is one of the benefits of building your software with W error because the build will break and you can go and fix this or add sometimes it's not easy to fix because you have to now change the data types of all sorts of things all across your source tree you can add F sine carrot at cflags to make GCC actually generate signed care signed char make it has make it to sign chart data type implicitly and that'll work around it but not everybody wants to do that ok the next thing I want to talk about his endianness byte order why do we care about this 41411 case byte order is the way we lay out multibuy our multibyte data types like int which would be a 32-bit 48 48 bit bytes packed in some way in memory and it could either be most significant byte first in which case the or at least statement by first depending on which order the highest bit in ends up being in memory we care about this for a bunch of reasons one of the witches when you read it what you want to move say a USB stick from device to device the file system is going to be written in one certain way when you read back say the super block every field is either you know a you 16 or a 32-bit data type when you read that back you're trying to interpret in 10 in one way and if it was written in an opposite way you're going to read an invalid value so most file systems have some magic 32-bit value in their super block that when you read it and will tell you which what's your reading it one way or the other this is nice because it means we can have a bite swap everything on ok and this also means that if you're on the architecture on another architecture that has uses a different endianness to the one the fasten was written with you now have two might swap every bite or every multi-byte read you do that knob so this is a interesting tangent or whatever ext2 and such on linux all define the file system to be a little endian and so on a big endian machine you'd bite swap everything before you write it to disk some are some lessons decide not to do this on bsd for instance you can't actually move of an ffs file system between multiple machines if they're on different endianness we also care for networking reasons when you send a packet across the network if you're talking to a big-endian host you're gonna have two bytes long as you're a little onion host fortunately tcp/ip and network protocols are basically defined to be big endian for some historical reason that I'm not actually sure of and yeah so lift but if you're well if you're on a little endian machine like an x86 you the bites off everything before you transmit it across the network for instance for another case PCI is little endian so if you're writing a device driver on run on Linux you have to you have to care about whether when you read a doing a memory mapped i/o access a read or write you have to care about the endianness it used to bite swap in your driver which is usually handled by a wrapper function but because because PCI is defined be a little endian on it that's it yes sorry what does a question I lost the place anyway anyway I ended front of things they know the native x over is easily right thing on your bus another another interesting issue of for portability is alignment alignment basically means that certain data types have to be read or write from addresses which are congruent with the with the data type what that means is that a 4 byte int must be aligned on a 4-byte so it couldn't be accessed at address three it would have to be actuated after zero or four are wonderful it's sorry from zero you know there's three ways that I processor handles this first one is like x86 and PowerPC do they fix it up in hardware to be by by issuing a bunch of one byte reads or something else to emulate if it was aligned this is great for a programmer because it's really easy but it also means that it ends up slowing your code down because you're accessing things unaligned the second option is to take a trap which is what a bunch of other architectures do like spark and park spark and nips and other things it'll take a trap and you'll go into the kernel when have to date I don't want exception handler which will do what the CPU would have done on x86 and read multi read single byte reads and then present the register as if it hadn't trapped at all so that's okay but that's even slower than doing it in hardware and your third options do it arm did before arm v6 and just return bad data which is really not helpful this ends up this is one of the biggest problems I had when I started working on arm for the Debian for the net winder in like 2002 or something like that was a lot of software just crash in certain really random ways and that ended up being because they were accessing unaligned yep wow it's fast but your software won't do it do what you want anyway then to fixing that in arm v7 arm v7 will now trap and allow you to fix it up like other architectures do so what are the implications of alignment on x86 and exit is 664 the one of the interesting cases is that if you're defining a struct the alignment of a 64-bit element in a struct it differs between the x86 64 and X have 3 to 6 eb is so if you're trying to share something between the two you have implicitly add padding because a 64-bit variable in a struct will only be the interline 32 bit of line on 32-bit x86 and so you have to deal with this in add padding to make sure that these struck looks properly it looks proper between the two of them that can affect the layout of structs this is one thing that perf does really well a perf passes a lot of strikes between user space and the colonel and they paid a lot of attention to how the structs ended up being laid out for both both the ABI is because if you're doing a if you're implementing syscalls where you can have compatibility mode between safe you know you want to run a 32-bit application on your 64-bit CPU like we do with the multi arch you want your perf binary to not have to be you want your your sis calls to not have to have massively complicated fix-ups to ensure that the you can call the 64-bit I octos or whatever and and so you want to you want to have a common code path and so to be able to do that you have to make sure that the the code looks or the the data looks the same on both to both the 32-bit use of space and the 64-bit kernel since I said as you have to guarantee the proper alignment another interesting hilarious thing is calling conventions this is mostly to do with the RISC architectures but register usage is really interesting on a lot of architectures sit for some for some syscalls you have to save you you'll get a maximum five arguments for most syscalls and that means for x86 you may have you know five 32-bit registers on i386 but you get 5 64 bit on x64 and the on other architectures the the way you pass 64-bit variables such as a like offset which would be 64 bit on basically everything now ends up being split up into multiple registers obviously you can't fit 64-bit variable into a 32-bit register but it also has also the restrictions on which registers they use so they'll split bit of pairs so you might end up padding and having nothing nothing set in a register and running out of those five slots and ended up having to spill to the stack and copy things so the reasons uses the number of arguments available it also makes things complicated up to wrap things in G lipsy and the colonel to handle all this another interesting thing page size so for peak 4k pages basically what linux is written to expect most things if they want if they aren't written by people that understand or have run things on powerpc or a spark or whatever can could use for cape will use 4k pages but as an assumption it could be a que it's 16k on i-64 and things like that in 64 k on ppc64 and some other new architectures like a are 64 interesting 64k doesn't fit in the u16 you end up with you know 0 being written to a 16-bit variable because here Mira you know one off your your needs the 17 bits to express that but lots of hardware is designed with 16 bit length registers so what happens you end up meet writing 0 as your size for a DMA or something like that and your hardware doesn't work well the funny thing about that is there it's a hardware register that's set like this you can't actually fix that you have to go buy a new card if you want to do if it's a scuzzy card or something like that but has this limitation either have to set your page size to be lowered or split up you're right and that's even more complicated it makes the driver really difficult stuff like that other hilarious problems so the colonel has built free-standing that means that it doesn't you know link it get sent a user space code but it relies on GCC to provide certain functionality that it doesn't that it needs especially integer division now on 32-bit architecture is like x86 the when you use pae you end up with a 64-bit DMA a dirty data type this is great but people do funny things with it well do divides against it when it's really supposed be you know why in the size and the result of this is you end up with a GCC call out and you end up with a build failure because you know GCC's doesn't fast path this it ends up calling a helper function to do division because it can't do it all in hardware easily on this on x86 around 32 bit x86 we also have cogeneration issues lots of tools due to jet code this is one of the most common ways things fail they they're written and they they're written by people that you know the the end you end up you a you write the software for x86 somebody comes along ports it's a PPC or hips somebody comes along reports it to spark but when you add a new architecture nobody's done it for that yet and they put the problem with this is that one subplots up piece of software gets really popular it ends up being a bill dependency for a massive amount of your distribution and because of that to be able to bootstrap your your port of say fedora or whatever to the new architecture you have to provide these bill dependencies in some way and in order to do that you have to port the gin that's you know that's a not an insignificant amount of work for certain things like so it had been they've been the old days everybody wrote their own and now everybody bundles lvm which is great because you want to port one thing unfortunately lvm is really complicated and the other problem is some of it some software bundles llvm which means that they they may ship a separate version that they've supported with their code it isn't the version that say a distro would want to ship so that causes a lot of issues there's all sorts about of stuff so I want to tell some war stories now this is just like the last week of bugs I've had to deal with on air 64 it should be entertaining I hope so i was i was told of a python test suite failure okay that's weird why would the python test we'd fail well it was the GDB test it was failing okay so gdb was emitting a message that python pythons test gtb wasn't expecting and it already parses and filters a lot of messages that it bet that it gets from gdb to make sure that you know it's testing very basic functionality okay well what's this weird message well gdb was failing to load a shared object from memory I was failing why okay well what first what's the shared object well it turned out to be the the video so the video so is something that Colonel implicitly links into every user space process that provides certain functionality like a fast path to get the time of day which is like you know something that's called really frequently so we wanted to be really fast well why is it faintly okay so I debug g 2 b's gtb has a special mode to read the video so because the video says in memory it's not actually on disk anywhere so gdp has all his code that creates say what they call BFD a binary file descriptor from the memory of the processor debugging and makes it look like it was actually like an on disk alpha object okay well it's failing doing this strange so it's it's reading the elf headers out of memory the elf headers if you know I think about elf elf defines two things segments and sections segments are you know code which just says code and the sections map into that code and so segments are really big blobs of memory that it wants to set up they said you know you set an address you want the segment at and an alignment for it okay so I debug that well that's weird the alignments set to 64k hmm okay so 64 kappa through the maximum page size on a or 64 and the elf when you generate an elf object it's gonna because it doesn't know what the host page size is when it's going to what you're building the binary it expects everything to be worst-case to line okay that's fine so gtb is actually respecting this and masking off the address is trying to load at that's a problem so what it's doing here is truncating the the lower 16 bits of the address so with the Colonel kernels built with 4k pages it's only mapping your video so at 4k alignment ok gdb chops off that 16 those 16 bits and starts reading from them well guess what there's nothing map there so gdb sig volts boom so we got to fix the colonel the Colonel's got to get fixed go to map the video so a 64k alignment what turns out that works and we fix the pipe on test suite now succeeds send an upstream sad was a batch is projected because we could just would you just drop the alignment requirement from the elf header and the battle worked fine because it's always going to be page size align and it's it's loaded that way but whatever fix the bug happy days next next day Ruby test suite failure this one's an interesting one kind of weird so ruby was right as a test that was trying to test the maximum size of an argument it can pass to a a program I don't know why it's doing this it's probably something that you just assume the operating systems capable of doing but this is what it was doing ruby was expecting to receive each you big back from passing a to big argument to exec but it was getting an e no ma'am that's pretty strange haven't seen this on any other architecture what the hell's going on when you actually looked at what looked at what was happening the colonel is actually concatenated two of the arguments together so i was missing the the null byte that would terminate the strings well that's pretty strange haven't seen that anywhere before you dig dig into the exact code in the colonel there's only really one place where it could have been wrong where we're trying to find the length of the string and because the colonel isn't you know user space code you don't have the c library you've got a bunch of functions that kind of look like the c library but are provided by the colonel this one in particular look on a suspect called strip belts sternal end user okay well should look like Stern and lenin user space right well guess what it does this is an architecture optional helper if you can like define it in your architecture headers and write in an assembly code if you want but there's a generic one that also does the same job the problem is it doesn't have the same API as the user space one RAB little it certainly these are also uh they'll take a fault if you access a bad user space address and things like that to make sure the colonel doesn't you know have security problems it'll have a fix up for practice with that data anyway here's what here's what's turning Len does you know it referred if them if there's no null byte in the first max and in up to max in the string you return the max I was stirred inland user expects you to get max plus one back okay that's a really weird difference for some arbitrary reason but the air 64 assembly version of this wasn't actually handling this rizzoli doing it was only matching Sternin lang not the user version and obviously it was the only architectures had this problem that's why the Ruby test kit East was failing so we need to add a plus one so one line patch wrapped the assembler with a you know an ad verify to fix the reveal send it upstream well turns out up streams already fixed the bug they didn't know it a bit in no but at the time but they dropped it and moved to the rhetoric one because there's no real point fast pathing something that's only used in one place in the colonel but it needs a backboard for stable anyways that's one another another one down next bug GCC precompiled headers so it's been a long standing issue with precompiled headers that nobody really told us about until recently that when they turned on heap and m map randomization which means em maps being loaded at random addresses in process address space or occurring at random addresses and the heap being you know where melica happens breaks precompiled headers so a couple years ago people started adding adding basically it but GCC does is it tries to em map a big big swath of data at address zero and to get you know a space to put the precompile header in and they started noticing when you added enabled address space randomization this failed so they started adding special cases for x86 for mips for PPC for alpha for everything which basically turned the the M map which rooms when you met em up at zero it'll fail because we're not allowed to you're not allowed to end up at zero for security reasons and it would end up you know at a random address well this broke please I started making it basically turn into a map fixed which base but picks an address and decide to end up from there they pick a hint address it's unlikely to have anything mapped at it so it ends up being a mouth fixed this fixes GCC not to ice and also to other architectures but when you're not covered by this massive giant if and f this architecture do this if this architected that well he started 0 and you fail and this is a long-standing buggin GC the nobody's blog to fix because they just work around it like this well nobody told us Eric 64 wasn't covered by this and so for weeks we've had we had openjdk and another another wxwidgets for gtk failing to build because they would try to use precompiled headers and then just fail if address based randomization was turned on you could just write to proc and fix that but that's really not a great solution for production use you really kind of want address space randomization turned on so go through GCC find the bug add an address pick it pick an address any address write it back ten to patch boom Bob's your uncle done so that was in the last two weeks of interesting error 64 bugs might be happy to answer any questions if anybody has them yes that's a tough one because a lot of the a lot of it got fixed by powerpc when we started building fedora for powerpc back in the day so it hasn't been quite as bad for arm there's still quite a few cases where there's still quite a few cases where software has a big you know if def this architecture this architecture this architect chain and their headers somewhere and you have to fix that up because you end up hitting the fallback path that assumes that char will be signed and that's kind of a problem but it's probably I think more if marcin's here anywhere he could probably answer better he's done a lot of the package building to most of it actually for a or 64 right now and I'd say his problem it's probably been like five to 10 packages but uniquely failed that way on our air 64 right now anybody else yeah so it was every oh it was randomly when you used GCC to build with buca paul harris you were randomly getting the oh no it was it was just just because the way GCC uses the m map it ended up being a sort of a sporadic failure while you're building the software so you could do you run make and it would you know fail once you run it again it would succeed and eventually it would fail again and so it was really hard to in we use a bill Stovall if you don't read at we use a bill says book called codes your brew that'll just fail to build if anything fails you can't retry it so to actually get things building within that randomization turned on we had to fix the GCC bug no no no this is a GCC doesn't really weird things with the a map it creates it sort of like makes it then takes it away and assumes it can get it back again and because if you have address space randomization turned on you might end up with another nmap there and it can't get that back and it goes all wonky I Beatrice didn't talk about those yeah we we've only just switched back to 64k pages were kind of we've been trying to bring up they are 64 with UEFI and you if I didn't I didn't actually specify that that was they weren't passing things with 64k alignment so he couldn't actually use it so we've been building with 4k pages on Eric 64 for a while now we've only just finally gone back I think in like the last week so probably find new bugs that way anybody else sure I'm actually really happy there at 64 it it's the least weird architecture I've done recently it it no it fixes all the problems that arm had arm was pretty weird and the air 64 is nice and sane and when they drop compat mode for the old arm from the chip it'll be even saner it's quite nice actually looks a lot like could be 64 really i mean not come on man yeah give you you do it I 64 did and have both anybody tip of auto tools so I mean auto tools is the best worst solution right i mean it's it's awful but everything else sucks worse Wow the problem with auto tools is that you have to actually go an update when you add a new architecture like this you have to go and update your config guests and all that sort of stuff and that's been one of the big problems we had on n64 bring up as you did with all this software that didn't have it had out a date to fig guests files we had to copy in new ones for before he could actually get a build that would succeed because you'd go and you know tell it's a are sixty four legs canoe and it would just be like what the hell is that and fail so that's been really wow I guess I talk really quickly anybody else yep sorry nice to meet you men that's nice isn't it I don't think we'll be able to fix your lv 2 issues though yeah it kind of gives you a very humbling appreciation for how difficult it must be to port proprietary software to another architecture because they don't have the many eyes scrutiny that you know we kind of do the hobbyist porting you know debian in their basement to m68k or whatever the hell is that turns out to be really valuable because you end up fixing things for the next guy down the road that has to use the same assumptions it's been very it's a very interesting thing to deal with yes yeah yeah no it's been a I don't know I've somehow I got pigeon-holed or whatever into doing this for so many years and it's been a very interesting career I've had so far it's a lot of random bugs oh god I don't know I haven't done a lot of work with clang yet but I've done a lot of LOV em stuff for arm recently and that's involved doing some fixes to LOV m's backend for clang it's a I don't envy people that have g CC is basically the de facto standard for linux and unix open unix for the last you know what 15 20 years and llvm now has to play catch-up in all the bizarre functionality that we assume exists from the compiler that you know won't be provided especially according the colonel to clang has been a really hilarious flaw thing to watch because we abuse GCC in new and interesting ways every new kernel version and you know the clang people need to provide support for that and I I I don't know how much apples ownership of that now affects that but i guess because freebsd is now using clang i think is their default compiler that they might fix a lot of things for us now I don't I don't I don't like I like GCC it's fine if it's a well-understood problem thanks anybody else yes no it's just a I think it's armed 64 defines 33 page sizes 4k 16k i think but the 16k is optional and then 64k and because our options are only six maybe 16 k + 64 k we've decided that you know 4 k's not really enough with the size of data getting you know at applications yeah right yeah oh but yeah right yeah yeah the the number of approaching tell the story if you build a colonel with a certain Enterprise operating systems config for ppc64 with 64 K pages and look at the number of compiler warnings you get for things not fitting in New 16s you might be a pleasant pleasantly a hilariously surprised like we might claim to support some drivers that just never will work ready any other questions please we good thank you very much for coming you | RedHatCzech | UCIHsqY_4eWeInVQnxZ7WSjg | 2014-02-20 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 5,610 | 28,886 |
vNZl9Jn5IUk | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNZl9Jn5IUk | The DEATH and RESURRECTION of JESUS CHRIST | as they led him away they seized Simon of Cyrene who was coming in from the country they placed the cross on his back and made him carry it behind Jesus a great number of the people followed him among them women who were mourning and wailing for him but Jesus turned to them and said daughters of Jerusalem do not weep for me but weep for yourselves and for your children for this is certainly the days are coming when they will say blessed are the barren the wombs that never bore children and the breasts that never nursed two other criminals were also led away to be executed with him they came to a place called Golgotha which means place of the skull and offered Jesus wine mixed with gall to drink but after tasting it he would not drink they crucified Him there along with the criminals one on his right and one on his left but jesus said Father forgive them for they don't know what they are doing now when the soldiers crucified Jesus they took his clothes and made four shares one for each soldier and the tunic remained now the tunic was seamless woven from top to bottom as a single piece so the soldiers said to one another let's not tear it but throw dice to see who will get it this took place to fulfill the scripture that says they divided my garments among them and for my clothing they threw dice so the soldiers did these things it was nine o'clock in the morning when they crucified Him Pilate also had a notice written and fastened to the cross which read Jesus the Nazarene the King of the Jews thus many of the Jewish residents of Jerusalem read this notice because the place where Jesus was crucified was near the city and the notice was written in Aramaic Latin and Greek then the chief priests of the Jews said to Pilate do not write the king of the Jews but rather this man said I am The King of the Jews Pilate answered what I have written I have written those who passed by defamed him shaking their heads and saying AHA you who can destroy the temple and rebuild it in three days save yourself and come down from the cross in the same way even the chief priests together with the experts in the law were mocking him among themselves he saved others but he cannot save himself let the Christ the King of Israel come down from the cross now that we may see and believe those who were crucified with him also spoke abusively to him one of the criminals who was hanging there railed at him saying aren't you the Christ save yourself and us but the other rebuked him saying don't you fear God since you were under the same sentence of condemnation and we rightly so for we are getting what we deserve for what we did but this man has done nothing wrong then he said Jesus remember me when you come in your kingdom and Jesus said to him I tell you the truth today you will be with me in paradise now standing beside Jesus cross were his mother his mother's sister Mary the wife of Clopas and Mary Magdalene so when Jesus saw his mother and the disciple whom he loved standing there he said to his mother woman look here is your son then he said to his disciple look here is your mother from that very time the disciple took her into his own home after this Jesus realizing that by this time everything was completed said in order to fulfill the scripture I am thirsty a jar full of sour wine was there so they put a sponge soaked in sour wine on a branch of hyssop and lifted it to his mouth now when it was noon darkness came over the whole land until 3:00 around three o'clock Jesus cried out with a loud voice LOI LOI none of the seblak than I which means my God my God why have you forsaken me when some of the bystanders heard it they said listen he is calling for Elijah then Jesus calling out with a loud voice said father into your hands I commit my spirit and after he said this he breathed his last just then the temple curtain was torn in two from top to bottom the earth shook and the rocks were split apart the tombs were opened and the bodies of many saints who had died were raised and they came out of the tombs after his resurrection and went into the holy city and appeared to many people now when the Centurion who stood in front of him saw how he died he said truly this man was God's Son there were also women watching from a distance among them were Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of James the younger of Joseph and Salome when he was in Galilee they had followed him and given him support many other women who had come up with him to Jerusalem were there too then because it was the day of preparation so that the bodies should not stay on the crosses on the Sabbath for that Sabbath was an especially important one the Jewish leaders asked Pilate to have the victims legs broken and the bodies taken down so the soldiers came and broke the legs of the two men who had been crucified with Jesus first the one and then the other but when they came to Jesus and saw that he was already dead they did not break his legs but one of the soldiers pierced his side with a spear and blood and water flowed out immediately for these things happen so that the scripture would be fulfilled not a bone of his will be broken and again another scripture says they will look on the one whom they have pierced now when evening had already come since it was the day of preparation that is the day before the Sabbath Joseph of Arimathea a highly regarded member of the Council who was himself looking forward to the kingdom of God went boldly to Pilate and asked for the body of Jesus Pilate was surprised that he was already dead he called the Centurion and asked him if he had been dead for some time when Pilate was informed by the Centurion he gave the body to Joseph Nicodemus the man who had previously come to Jesus at night accompanied Joseph carrying a mixture of myrrh and aloes weighing about seventy-five pounds and they took Jesus body and wrapped it with the aromatic spices in strips of linen cloth according to Jewish burial customs now at the place where Jesus was crucified there was a garden and in the garden was a new tomb where no one had yet been buried and so because it was the Jewish day of preparation and the tomb was nearby they placed Jesus body there Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of Joseph saw where the body was placed the women who had accompanied Jesus from Galilee followed and they saw the tomb and how his body was laid in it then they returned and prepared aromatic spices and perfumes on the Sabbath they rested according to the commandment the next day which is after the day of preparation the chief priests and the Pharisees assembled before Pilate and said sir we remember that while that deceiver was still alive he said after three days I will rise again so give orders to secure the tomb until the third day otherwise his disciples may come and steal his body and say to the people he has been raised from the dead and the last deception will be worse than the first Pilate said to them take a guard of soldiers go and make it as secure as you can so they went with the soldiers of the guard and made the tomb secure by sealing the stone suddenly there was a severe earthquake for an angel of the Lord descending from heaven came and rolled away the stone and sat on it his appearance was like lightning and his clothes were white as snow the guards were shaken and became like dead men because they were so afraid of him when the Sabbath was over Mary Magdalene Mary the mother of James and Salome bought aromatic spices so they might go and anoint him but when they looked up they saw that the stone which was very large had been rolled back then as they went into the tomb they saw a young man dressed in a white robe sitting on the right side and they were alarmed but he said to them do not be alarmed you are looking for Jesus the Nazarene who was crucified he has been raised he is not here look there's the place where they laid him but go tell his disciples even Peter that he is going ahead of you into Galilee you will see him there just as he told you and when they returned from the tomb they told all these things to the eleven and to all the rest now it was Mary Magdalene Joanna Mary the mother of James and the other women with them who told these things to the apostles but these words seemed like pure nonsense to them and they did not believe them then Peter and the other disciple set out to go to the tomb the two were running together but the other disciple ran faster than Peter and reached the tomb first he bent down saw the strips of linen cloth lying there but he did not go in then Simon Peter who had been following him arrived and went right into the tomb he saw the strips of linen cloth lying there and the face cloth which had been around Jesus head not lying with strips of linen cloth but rolled up in a place by itself then the other disciple who had reached the tomb first came in and he saw and believed for they did not yet understand the scripture that Jesus must rise from the dead so the disciples went back to their homes | God Is Love | UCORFU5QjzwPYnOnA5QgoM3A | 2018-03-11 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,743 | 9,051 |
RbUBG1_Er7g | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RbUBG1_Er7g | Colon Cleansing | what's the good and the bad about colon cleansing well not a lot of good a lot of bad people feel better when they get their colon cleanse now there's two ways of doing it you can take stuff orly that pushes stuff through and out or you can do stuff from below like animus and things like that well most people feel better just because they're lighter on their feet there's less stool in their bodies so they feel you know several pounds lighter oh that feels good they think and are told that you're getting rid of the toxins however that really doesn't pan out scientifically the intestinal tract is great at walling off the toxins in the colon and that stuff doesn't get in now school is full of toxins but it's okay being in your body and getting it out all at once is not going to really detoxify you for anything or for any reason if it makes you feel better I guess it's okay to go ahead and do but all things in moderation now you can get to the point where you're overusing it and you kind of depend upon it so I would say in general don't mess with it and if you do do it in moderation and rarely | Best Docs Network | UCrt0FPcxjmnBQdTdn8bncfA | 2016-05-13 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 218 | 1,106 |
HyxwOQjsEDU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HyxwOQjsEDU | New Inter-Ministerial Committee to Review and Strengthen Anti-Money Laundering Controls: Indranee | an interministerial committee will be set up to review Singapore's Financial system and strengthen its anti-money laundering regime second Minister for finance indran Roger said criminals are increasingly sophisticated and will constantly find new ways to circumvent our laws and regulations thus we must continue to strengthen our information gathering and Intel sharing capabilities to better detect illicit activities conducted by Companies Incorporated in Singapore she said Miss indran was responding to questions raised in Parliament on Tuesday in relation to one of Singapore's biggest money laundering cases involving more than $2.8 billion in assets including properties luxury cars and cash the interministerial committee will be ched by Miss indr and comprise off his holders from the monetary authority of Singapore Ministry of Home Affairs Ministry of law Ministry of Manpower and Ministry of trade and Industry it will focus on four areas first how to prevent corporate structures from being abused by moneya launderers second how financial institutions can enhance their controls and collaborate more effectively to gut against and flag suspicious transactions third how other players in the system such as corporate service providers real estate agents and precious stones and metals dealers can help to gut against money laundering risks finally how to centralize and strengthen capabilities across government agencies to better detect suspicious activity Miss indran also highlighted some of the existing measures put in place by the accounting and corporate regulatory Authority Acra to deter the the misuse of companies for money laundering all companies are required to have at least one director resident in Singapore to ensure that someone can be held accountable for any breaches committed by the company in Singapore non-resident foreigners looking to set up companies in Singapore will therefore need to either appoint a resident business partner as a director or appoint a nominee director to act on their behalf in line with International benchmarks there are current No Limits to the number of companies that a director can be involved in however 99% of directors here hold fewer than 10 director ships Miss indran said still restrictions on directorships to ensure that nomy directors are fit and proper to take up the role and whether it would be useful to limit the number of nominee directorships that one can hold are being studied these proposals will be tabled in Parliament in early 2024 Miss indr said posting Corporation Acra looks for size of inactivity such as failure to file annual returns and will strike off companies that remain inactive after a period of time or are flagged via intelligence by other agencies about 177,000 such companies have been struck off over the last 5 years Miss indran said she added that the companies associated with the money laundering case have been filing returns with Acra and have thus remained on the register Acra currently imposes additional requirements on foreign known or foreign control companies for example non-residents who are looking to set up companies in Singapore must engage AC authorized corporate service providers also known as register filing agents rfas to incorporate a company rfas are legally required to conduct customer due diligence by identifying and verifying the identities of the customer and the beneficial owners of the intended Incorporated company they must ensure that a customer's identity is established through additional documents or information if the customer is not present and inquire about the purpose and legitimacy of the use of a company structure rfas must also not proceed with the incorporation of the company and should file a suspicious transaction report if a customer feels due diligence checks miss indran said that between 2021 and 2023 Acra imposed 24 sanctions against rfas including eight cases where the rfa's registration was cancelled or suspended she also noted the AC is investigating the role played by the rfas involved in the money laundering case and will take enforcement action is necessary additional measures including enhancing the penalties on erand service providers to strengthen the effectiveness of Singapore's anti-money laundering regime have been planned these proposals will be tabled in Parliament in early 2024 Miss INR say Singapore is determined to preserve our hard reputation as a clean and trusted business Hub we will continue to hold our Zero Tolerance approach towards money laundering and do our best to ensure a strong and robust regulatory regime she said | 🎤 Today News | UCeLcVZ61HRRSMiQTpffyukA | 2023-10-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 728 | 4,631 |
jkS4RhUGB98 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jkS4RhUGB98 | Middlemarch | George Eliot | Published 1800 -1900 | Talking Book | English | 14/19 | chapter 58 of middlemarch this is a librivox recording all librox recordings are in the public domain for more information or to volunteer please visit librivox.org recording by simon evers middle march by george eliot chapter 58 for there can live no hatred in thine eye therefore in that i cannot know thy change in many looks the false hearts history is written moods and frowns and wrinkles strange but heaven in thy creation did decree that in thy face sweet love should ever dwell whatever thy thoughts or thy hearts workings be thy looks should nothing thence but sweetness tell shakespeare sonnet at the time when mr vincy uttered that presentement about rosamund she herself had never had the idea that she should be driven to make the sort of appeal which he foresaw she had not yet had any anxiety about ways and means although her domestic life had been expensive as well as eventful her baby had been born prematurely and all the embroidered robes and caps had to be laid by in darkness this misfortune was attributed entirely to her having persisted in going out on horseback one day when her husband had desired her not to do so but it must not be supposed that she'd shown temper on the occasion or road rudely told him that she would do as she liked what led her particularly to desire horse exercise was a visit from captain lidgate the baronet's third son who i am sorry to say was detested by artists of that name as a vapid fop parting his hair from brought a nape in a despicable fashion not followed by tertius himself and showing an ignorant security that he knew the proper thing to say on every topic lidgate inwardly cursed his own folly that he had drawn down this visit by consenting to go to his uncles on the wedding tour and he made himself rather disagreeable to rosamund by saying so in private for rosmund this visit was a source of unprecedented but gracefully concealed exhortation she was so intensely conscious of having a cousin who was a baronet's son staying in the house that she imagined the knowledge of what was implied by his presence to be diffused through all other minds and when she introduced captain lidgate to her guests she had a placid sense that his rank penetrated them as if it had been an odor the satisfaction was enough for the time to melt away some disappointment in the conditions of marriage with a medical man even of good birth it seemed now that her marriage was visibly as well as ideally floating her above the middle march level and the future looked bright with letters and visits to and from collingham and vague advancements in consequence for tertius especially as probably at the captain's suggestion his married sister mrs mengen had come with her maid and stayed two nights on her way from town hence it was clearly worthwhile for rosamund to take pains with her music and the careful selection of her lace as to captain lydgate himself his low brow his aqualine nose bent on one side and his rather heavy utterance might have been disadvantageous in any young gentleman who had not a military bearing a moustache to give him what is doted on by some flower-like blonde heads as style he had moreover that sort of high breeding which consists in being free from the petty solicitudes of middle-class gentility and he was a great critic of feminine charms rosamund delighted in his admiration now even more than she had done at collingum and he found it easy to spend several hours of the day in flirting with her the visit altogether was one of the pleasantest larks he had ever had not the less so perhaps because he suspected that his queer cousin tertius wished him away the lid gate who would rather hyperbolically speaking have died than have failed in polite hospitality suppressed his dislike and then he pretended generally not to hear what the gallant officer said consigning the task of answering him to rosamund for he was not at all a jealous husband and preferred leaving a feather-headed young gentleman alone with his wife to bearing him company i wish she would talk more to the captain at dinner tertius said rosamund one evening when the important guest was gone to lomford to see some brother officers stationed there you really look so absent sometimes you seem to be seeing through his head into something behind it instead of looking at him my dear rosie you don't expect me to talk much to such a conceited ass as that i hope said the gate broskley if he got his head broken i might look at it with interest not before i cannot conceive why you should speak if your cousin said contemptuously said rosamund her fingers moving at her work while she spoke with a mild gravity which had a touch of disdain in it asked lady's law if he doesn't think your captain the greatest boy he ever met with that his law has almost forsaken the house since he came rosamond thought she knew perfectly well why mr ladies lord disliked the captain he was jealous and she liked his being jealous it is impossible to say what will suit eccentric persons she answered but in my opinion captain lydgate is a thorough gentleman and i think he ought not out of respect to sir godwin to treat him with neglect no dear but we have had dinners for him and he comes and goes out as he likes he doesn't want me still when he is in the room you might show him more attention he may not be a phoenix of cleverness in your sense his profession is different but it will be all the better for you to talk a little on his subjects i think his conversation is quite agreeable and he's anything but an unprincipled man the fact is you would wish me to be a little more like him rosie said lydgate in a sort of resigned murmur with a smile which was not exactly tender and certainly not merry ozone was silent and did not smile again but the lovely curves of her haste look good tempered enough without smiling those words of lit gates were like a sad milestone marking how far he had travelled from his old dreamland in which rosamund vincey appeared to be that perfect piece of womanhood who would reverence her husband's mind after the fashion of an accomplished mermaid using her comb and looking glass and singing her song for the relaxation of his adored wisdom alone he began to distinguish between that imagined adoration and the attraction towards a man's talent because he gives him prestige and is like an order in his buttonhole or honorable before his name it might have been supposed that rosamund had traveled too since she had found the pointless conversation of mr ned plimdale perfectly whereism but to most mortals there is a stupidity which is unendurable and a stupidity which is altogether acceptable else indeed what would become as social bonds captain lydgate's stupidity was delicately scented carrying itself with style talked with a good accent and was closely related to sir godwin rosamond found it quite agreeable and caught many of its phrases therefore since rosamund as we know was fond of horseback there were plenty of reasons why she should be tempted to resume her riding when captain nidgate who had ordered his man with two horses to follow him and put up at the green dragon begged her to go out on the grey which he wanted to be gentle and trained to carry a lady indeed he bought it for his sister and was taking it to calling him rosamund went out the first time without telling her husband and came back before his return but the ride had been so thorough a success and she declared herself so much the better in consequence that he was informed of it with full reliance on his consent that she should go riding again on the contrary lidgate was more than hurt he was utterly confounded that she had risked herself on a strange horse without referring the matter to his wish after the first almost thundering exclamations of astonishment which sufficiently warned rosamund of oppa's coming he was silent for some moments however you have come back safely he said at last in a decisive tone you will not go out again rosie that is understood if it were the quietest most familiar horse in the world there would always be the chance of accident and you know very well that i wished you to give up riding the roan on that account but there is a chance of accident indoors tertius my darling don't talk nonsense said lydgate in an imploring tone surely i am the person to judge for you i think it is enough that i say you are not to go again rosamund was arranging her hair before dinner and the reflection of her head in the glass showed no change in its loveliness except a little turning aside of the long neck lit gate to be moving about with his hands in his pockets and now paused near her as if he awaited some reassurance i wish you would fasten up my plats dear said rosamund letting her arms fall with a little sigh so as to make her husband ashamed of standing there like a brute lidgated often fastened the flat plats before being among the deftests of men with his large finely formed fingers he swept up the soft festoons of platts and fastened in the tall comb to such uses do men come and what could he do then but kiss the exquisite nape which is shown in all its delicate curves but when we do what we have done before it is often with a difference this gabe was still angry and had not forgotten his point i shall tell the captain that he ought to have known better than offer you his horse he said as he moved away i beg you will not do anything of the kind tertius said rosamund looking at him with something more marked than usual in her speech it will be treating me as if i were a child promise that you will leave the subject to me there did seemed to be some truth in her objection litigate said very well with the surly obedience and thus the discussion ended with his promising rosamund and not with her promising him in fact she had been determined not to promise rosamund had that victorious obstinacy which never wastes its energy in impetuous resistance what she liked to do was to her the right thing and all her cleverness was directed to getting the means of doing it she meant to go out riding again on the grey and she did go on the next opportunity of her husband's absence not intending that he should know until it was late enough not to signify to her the temptation was certainly great she was very fond of the exercise and the gratification of riding on a fine horse with captain lidgate sir goblin son on another fine horse by her side and of being met in this position by anyone but her husband was something as good as her dreams before marriage moreover she was riveting the connection with the family at qualium which must be a wise thing to do but the gentle grey unprepared for the crash of a tree that was being felled on the edge of wholesale wood took fright and caused a worse fright to rosamund leading finally to the loss of her baby lidge could not show his anger towards her but he was rather bearish to the captain whose visit naturally soon came to an end in all future conversations on the subject rosamund was mildly certain that the riot had made no difference and that if she had stayed at home the same symptoms would have come on and would have ended in the same way because she had felt something like them before litigate could only say poor poor darling but he secretly wondered over the terrible tenacity of this mild creature there was gathering with him in him an amazed sense of his powerlessness over rosamund his superior knowledge a mental force instead of being as he'd imagined a shrine to consult on all occasions was simply set aside on every practical question he regarded rosamond's cleverness as precisely the receptive kind which became a woman he was now beginning to find out what the cleverness was what was the shape into which he had run as into a close network aloof an independent no one quicker than rosamund to see causes and effects which lay within the track of her own tastes and interests she had clearly seen the gates preeminence in middle march society and could go on imaginatively tracing still more agreeable social effects when his talent should have advanced him but for her his professional and scientific ambition had no other relation to these desirable effects than if they had been the fortunate discovery of an ill-smelling oil and that all apart with which she had nothing to do of course she believed in her own opinion more than she did in his lit gate was a stand defined in numberless trifling matters as well as in this last serious case of the writing that affection did not make her compliant he had no doubt that the affection was there and had no presentment that he'd done anything to repel it for his own part he said to himself that he loved her as tenderly as ever and can make up his mind to her negations but well negate was much worried and conscious of new elements in his life as noxious to him as an inlet of mud to a creature that has been used to breathe and bathe and dart after its illuminated prey in the clearest of waters rosamund was soon looking lovelier than ever at her work table enjoying drives in her father's faten and thinking it likely that she might be invited to calling him she knew that she was a much more exquisite ornament to the dining room there than any daughter of the family and in reflecting that the gentleman were aware of that did not perhaps sufficiently consider whether the ladies would be eager to see themselves surpassed lydgate relieved from anxiety about her relapsed into what she immediately called his moodiness a name which to her covered his thoughtful preoccupation with other subjects than herself as well as that uneasy look of the brow and distaste for all ordinary things as if they were mixed with bitter herbs which really made a sort of weathered last to his vexation and foreboding these latter states of mind had one cause amongst others which he had generously but mistakenly avoided mentioning to rosamund unless it should affect her health and spirits between him and her indeed there was that total missing of each other's mental track which is too evidently possible even between persons who are continually thinking of each other to negate it seemed that he'd been spending month after month in sacrificing more than half of his best intent and the best power to his tenderness for rosamund bearing her little claims and interruptions without impatience and above all bearing without betrayal of bitterness to look through less and less of interfering illusion at the blank unreflecting surface her mind presented to his ardha for the more impersonal ends of his profession and his scientific study an order which he had fancied that the ideal wife must somehow worship as sublime they're not in the least knowing why but his endurance was mingled with a self-discontent which we know how to be candid we shall confess to make more than half our bitterness under grievances wife or husband included it always remains true that if we had been greater circumstance would have been less strong against us nidgate was aware that his concessions to rosamund were often little more than the lapse of slackening resolution the creeping paralysis apt to seize an enthusiasm which is out of adjustment to a constant portion of our lives and only gates enthusiasm was constantly pressing not a simple weight of sorrow but the biting presence of a petty degrading care such as casts the blight of irony over all higher effort this was the care which he had hitherto abstained from mentioning to rosamund and he believed with some wonder that it had never entered her mind though certainly no difficulty could be less mysterious it was an inference with a conspicuous handle to it and had been easily drawn by indifferent observers the lid gate was in debt and he could not succeed in keeping out of his mind for long together that he was every day getting deeper into that swamp which tempts men towards it with such a pretty covering of flowers and virgin it is wonderful how soon a man gets up to his chin there in a condition in which spite of himself he's forced to think chiefly of release that he had a scheme of the universe in his soul eighteen months ago lydgate was poor but had never known the eager want of small sums and felt rather a burning contempt for anyone who descended a step in order to gain them he was now experiencing something worse than a simple deficit he was assailed by the vulgar hateful trials of a man who has bought and used a great many things which might have been done without and which he is unable to pay for that the demand for payment has become pressing how this came about may be easily seen without much arithmetic or knowledge of prices when a man in setting up a house and preparing for marriage finds that his furniture and other initial expenses come to between four and five hundred pounds more than he has capital to pay for when at the end of the year it appears that his household expenses horses and etc amount to nearly a thousand while the proceeds of the practice reckoned from the old books to be worth 800 per annum have sunk like a summer pond and make hardly 500 chiefly and unpaid entries the plain inference is that whether he minds it or not he's in debt those were less expensive times than our own and provincial life was comparatively modest but the ease with which a medical man who had lately bought a practice who thought that he was obliged to keep two horses whose table was supplied without stint and who paid an insurance on his life and a high rent for house and garden might find his expenses doubling his receipts can be conceived by anyone who does not think these details beneath his consideration rosamund accustomed from her to an extravagant household thought that good housekeeping consisted simply in ordering the best of everything nothing else answered and ligate supposed that if things were done at all they must be done properly he did not see how they were to live otherwise if each head of household expenditure had been mentioned to him beforehand he would probably have observed that he could hardly come to much and if anyone has suggested a saving on a particular article for example the substitution of cheap fish for deer it would have appeared to him simply a pennywise mean notion rosamund even without such an occasion as captain lydgate's visit was fond of giving invitations and did gate they often thought the guests tarsum did not interfere this sociability seemed a necessary part of professional prudence and the entertainment must be suitable it is true lydgate was constantly visiting the homes of the poor and adjusting his prescriptions of dart to their small means but dear me has it not by this time ceased to be remarkable is it not rather that be expecting men that they should have numerous strands of experience lying side by side and never compare them with each other expenditure like ugliness and errors becomes a totally new thing when we attach our own personality to it and measure it by that wide difference which is manifest in our own sensations between ourselves and others nick gabe believed himself to be careless about his dress and he despised a man who calculated the effect of his costume it seemed to him only a matter of course that he had abundance of fresh garments such things were naturally ordered in sheaves it must be remembered that he had never hitherto felt the check of importunate debt and he walked by habit not by self-criticism but the cheque had come its novelty made it the more irritating he was amazed disgusted that conditions so foreign to all his purposes so hatefully disconnected with the objects he cared to occupy himself with should have lain in ambush and clutched him when he was unaware and there was not only the actual debt there was the certainty that in his present position he must go on deepening it two furnishing tradesmen at brassingh whose bills have been occurred before his marriage and whom uncalculated current expenses had ever since prevented him from paying had repeatedly sent him unpleasant letters which had forced themselves on his attention this could hardly be more galling to any disposition than to lid gates with his intense pride his dislike of asking a favor or being under an obligation to anyone he had scorned even to form conjectures about mr vince's intentions on money matters and nothing but extremity could have induced him to apply to his father-in-law even he had not been made aware in his various indirect ways since his marriage the mr vince's own affairs were not flourishing and the expectation of help from him would be resented some men easily trust in the readiness of friends it had never been the former part of his life occurred to lydgate that he should need to do so he never thought what borrowing would be to him but now that the idea had entered his mind he felt that he would rather incur any other hardship in the meantime he had no money or prospects of money and his practice was not getting more lucrative no wonder that ligate had been unable to suppress all signs of inward trouble during the last few months and now that rosamund was regaining brilliant health he meditated taking her entirely into confidence on his difficulties new conversants with tradesmen's bills had forced his reasoning into a new channel of comparison had begun to consider from a new point of view what was necessary and unnecessary in goods ordered to see that there must be some change of habits how could such a change be made without rosamond's concurrence the immediate occasion of opening the disagreeable fact to her was forced upon him having no money and having privately sought advice as to what security could possibly be given by a man in his position lidgate had offered the one good security in his power to the less peremptory creditor who was a silversmith and jeweler and who consented to take on himself the upholsterers credit also accepting interest for a given term the security necessary was a bill of sale on the furniture of his house which might make a creditor easy for a reasonable time about a debt amounting to less than 400 pounds and the silversmith mr dover was willing to reduce it by taking back a portion of the plate and in any other article which was as good as new any other article was a phrase dedicatedly implying jewelry and more particularly some purple amethysts costing 30 pounds which ligator brought as a bridal present opinions may be divided as to his wisdom in making this present some may think that it was a graceful attention to be expected from a man i did gate and that the fault of any troublesome consequences lay in the pinched narrowness of provincial life at that time which offered no conveniences for professional people whose fortune was not proportioned to their taste also indigates ridiculous fastidiousness about asking his friends for money however it has seemed a question of no moment to him on that fine morning when he went to give a final order for plate in the presence of other jewels enormously expensive and as an addition in order which the amount had not been exactly calculated thirty pounds for ornaments exquisitely suited to rosamund's neck and arms could hardly appear excessive when there was no ready cash for it to exceed but at this crisis nick gates imagination could not help dwelling on the possibility of letting the amethysts take their place again among mr dover's stock that he shrank from the idea of proposing this to rosamund having been aroused to discern consequences which he had never been in the habit of tracing he was preparing to act on this discernment with some of the rigor by no means all that he would have applied in pursuing experiment he was nerving himself to this rigor as he rode from brassing and meditated on the representations he must make to rosamund it was evening when he got home he was intensely miserable this strong man of nine and twenty and of many gifts he was not saying angrily within himself that he made a profound mistake but the mistake was at work in him like a recognized chronic disease mingling its uneasy importunities with every prospect and enfeebling every thought as he went on the passage to the drawing room he heard the piano and singing of course that is law was there it was some weeks since will had parted from dorothea and he was still at the old post in middle march nickgate had no objection in general to led his laws coming but just now he was annoyed that he could not find his heart free when he opened the door the two singers went on towards the keynote raising their eyes and looking at him indeed but not regarding his entrance as an interruption to a man gold with his harness as poor nitkate was it is not soothing to see two people warbling at him as he comes in with the sense that the painful day has still pains in the store his face already paler than usual took on a skull as he walked across the room and flung himself into a chair the singers feeding themselves excused by the fact that they had only three bars to sing now turn round how are you lid gate said will coming forward to shake hands linday took his hand but did not think it necessary to speak have you died tertius i expected you much earlier said rosamund who'd already seen that her husband was in a horrible humor she seated herself in her usual place as she spoke i have died i should like some tea please said gate curtly still scowling and looking markedly at his legs stretched out before him will was too quick to need more i should be off he said reaching his hat tea is coming said rosman please don't go yes lydgate is bored said will who had more comprehension of lydgate than rosamund had and was not offended by his manner easily imagining outdoor causes of annoyance there is the more need for you to stay said rosamund playfully and in her lightest accent he will not speak to me all the evening yes rosamond i shall said lydgate in his strong baritone i have some serious business to speak to you about no introduction of the business could have been less like that which lidgate had intended but are in different manner have been too provoking there you see said will i'm going to the meeting about the mechanics institute goodbye and he went quickly out of the room rosamund did not look at her husband but presently rose and took her place before the tea tray she was thinking that she had never seen him so disagreeable big gate turned his dark eyes on her and watched her as she delicately handled the tea service with her tapered fingers and looked at the objects immediately before her with no curve in her face disturbed and yet with an ineffable protest in her air against all people with unpleasant manners for the moment he lost the sense of his wound in a sudden speculation about this new form of feminine impossibility revealing itself in the self-like frame which he once interpreted as a sign of already intelligent sensitivities his mind glancing back to law while he looked at war rosalind he said emily would she kill me because i weighed her and then it is the way with all women but this power of generalizing which gives men so much the superiority and mistake over the dumb animals was immediately thoughted by ligate's memory of wandering impressions from the behavior of another woman from dorothea's looks and tones of emotion about her husband when lydia began to attend him from her passionate cry to be taught what would best comfort that man for whose sake it seemed as if she must quell every impulse in her except the yearnings of faithfulness and compassion these revived impressions succeeded each other quickly and dreamily in riddled gates mind while the tea was being brewed he'd shut his eyes in the last instance of rivalry while he heard dorothea saying advise me think what i can do he's been all his life laboring and looking forward he bites about nothing else and i mind about nothing else that voice of deep-souled womanhood had remained within him as the unkindling conceptions of dead and sceptered genius had remained within him is there not a genius for feeling nobly which also reigns over human spirits and their conclusions the tones were a music from which he was falling away he'd really fallen into a momentary dose when rosalind said in her silvery neutral way here is your tea tertius sit here on the small table by his side and then move back to her place without looking at him lydgate was too hasty and attributing insensibility to her after her own fashion she was sensitive enough and took lasting impressions her impression now was one of offense and repulsion but then rosamund had no skulls and had never raised her voice she was quite sure that no one could justly find fault with her perhaps little gate and she had never felt so far off each other before but there were strong reasons for not deferring his revelation even if he had not already begun it by that abrupt announcement indeed some of the angry desire to rouse her into more sensibility on his account which had prompted him to speak prematurely still mingled with his pain in the prospect of her pain but he waited till the tray was gone the candles were lit and the evening quiet might be counted on the interval had left time for repelled tentatives to return into the old course he spoke kindly dear rosie lay down your work and come to sit by me he said gently pushing away the table and stretching out his arm to draw a chair near his own rosamond obeyed as she came towards him in her drapery of transparent faintly tinted muslin her slim yet round figure never looked more graceful as she sat down by him and laid one hand on the elbow of his chair at last looking at him and meeting his eyes her delicate neck and cheek and purely cut lips never had more of that untarnished beauty which touches it in springtime and infancy and all sweet freshness it touched lidgate now a mingled the early moments of his love for her with all the other memories which were stirred in this crisis of deep trouble he laid his ample hand softly on hers saying dear with the lingering utterance which affection gives to the word rosamund ii was still under the power of that same past and her husband was still in part the lid gate whose approval had stirred delight she put his hair lightly away from his forehead then laid her other hand on his and was conscious of forgiving him i'm obliged to tell you what will hurt you rosie but there are things which husband and wife must think of together i dare say it has occurred to you already that i am short of money paused but rosamund turned her neck and looked at the vars on the mantelpiece i was not able to pay for all the things we had to get before we were married and there have been expenses since which i have been obliged to meet the consequences there is a large debt at brassing 380 pounds which has been pressing on me a good while in fact we are getting deeper every day for people don't pay me the faster because others want the money i took pains to keep it from you while you were not well but now we must think together about it and you must help me what can i do tertius said rosamund turning our eyes on him again that little speech of four words like so many others in all languages is capable by varied vocal reflections of expressing all states of mind from helpless dimness to exhaustive argumentative perception from the completed to self-devoting fellowship to the most neutral a newtonis rosamond's thin utterance threw into the words what can i do as much neutrality as they could hold they fell like a mortal chill on the gates rise to tenderness he did not storm in indignation he felt too sad as sinking of the heart and when he spoke again it was more on the turn of a man who forces himself to fulfill a task it is necessary of you to know because i have to give security for a time and a man must come to make an inventory of the furniture rosman colored deeply have you not asked papa for money she said as soon as she could speak no then i must ask him she said releasing her hands from the gates and rising to stand at least two yards distance from him no rosie said the gate decisively it is too late to do that the inventory will be begun tomorrow remember it is a mere security it will make no difference it is a temporary affair i insist upon it that your father shall not know unless i choose to tell him i did lit gate with a more peremptory emphasis this certainly was unkind but rosamund had thrown him back on evil expectation as to what she would do in the way of quiet steady disobedience the unkindness seemed impartiable to her she was not given to weeping and disliked it but now her chin and lips began to tremble and the tears welled up preppy was not possible for lid gates under the double stress of outward material difficulty and if his own proud resistance to humiliating consequences to imagine fully what this sudden trial was to a young creature who had known nothing but indulgence and whose dreams had all been of new endorgence more exactly to her tastes but he did wish to spare her as much as he could and her tears cut him to the heart he could not speak again immediately but rosamund did not go on sobbing she tried to conquer her agitation and wiped away her tears continuing to look before her the mantle piece try not to grieve darling said the gate turning his eyes up towards her that she had chosen to move away from him in this moment of her trouble made everything harder to say but he must absolutely go on we must brace ourselves to do what is necessary it is i who have been in fault i ought to have seen that i could not afford to live in this way but many things have told against me in my practice and it really just now has ebbed to a low point i may recover it but in the meantime we must pull up we must change our way of living but we we shall weather it when i have given this security i shall have time to look about me and you are so clever that if you turn your mind to managing you will school me into carefulness i've been a thoughtless rascal about squaring prices but come dear sit down and forgive me nidgate was bowing his neck under the yoke like a creature who had talons but who had reasoned too which often reduces us to meekness when he had spoken the last words in an imploring tone rosamund returned to the chair by his side his self-blame gave her some hope that he would tend to her opinion and she said why can you not put off having the inventory made you could send the men away tomorrow when they come i shall not send them away said the gate the perimeter in this rising again was it of any use to explain if we left middle march there would of course be a sale and that would do as well but we are not going to leave middlemarch i'm sure tertius it would be much better to do so why can't we not go to london or near durham where your family is known we can go nowhere without money rosamund your friends would not wish you to be without money and surely these odious tradesmen must be made to understand that and to wait if you would make proper representations to them this is idol rosamund said gate angrily you must learn to take my judgment on questions you don't understand i have made necessary arrangements and they must be carried out as to friends i have no expectations whatever from them and shall not ask them for anything rosamund sat perfectly still the thought in her mind was that if she had known how did gate would behave she would never have married him we have no time to waste now on our necessary words dear said the gate trying to be gentle again there are some details that i want to consider with you dover says he will take a good deal of the plate back again and any of the jewelry we like he really behaves very well are we to go without spoons and forks then said rosamund whose very lips seem to get thinner with the thinness of her utterance she was determined to make no further resistance or suggestions oh no dear it's a little gate but look here he continued drawing a paper from his pocket and opening it here is davis account see i've marked a number of articles which we return them will reduce the amount by 30 pounds and more i have not marked any of the jewelry nick gate already felt this point of the jewelry very bitter to himself but he had overcome the feeling by severe argument he could not propose to rosamund that she should return in a particular present of his but he had told himself that he was bound to put dover's offer before her and her inward prompting might make the affair easy it is useless for me to look tertius said rosamund calmly you will return what you please she would not turn her eyes on the paper and ligate flushing up to the roots of his hair drew it back and let it fall on his knee meanwhile rosamund quietly went out of the room leaving the gate helpless i'm wondering was she not coming back it seemed that she had no more identified herself with him than if they had been creatures of different species and opposing interests he tossed his head and thrust his hands deep into his pockets with a sort of vengeance there was still science there were still good objects to work for he must give a tug still all the stronger because other satisfactions were going but the door opened and rosamond re-entered she carried the leather box containing the amethysts and a tiny ornamental basket which contained other boxes and laying them on the chair where she'd been sitting she said with perfect propriety in her hair this is all the jewelry you ever gave me you can return what you like out of it and of the plate also you will not of course expect me to stay at home tomorrow i shall get to papa's to many women the look lidgate casata would be more terrible than one of anger it had in it a despairing acceptance of the distance she was placing between them and when shall you come back again he said with a bitter edge on his accent oh in the evening of course i shall not mention the subject to mama rosamond was convinced that no woman could behave more inappropriately than she was behaving and she went to sit down at her work table negates had meditating a minute or two and the result was that he said with some of the old emotion in his tone now we've been united rosie you should not leave me to myself in the first trouble that has come certainly not said rosamund i shall do everything it becomes me to do it is not right that the thing should be left to servants or that i should have to speak to them about it and i shall be obliged to go out i don't know how early i understand you're shrinking from the humiliation of these money affairs but my dear rosamund as a question of pride which i feel just as much as you can it is surely better to manage the thing ourselves and let the servants see as little as if it is possible and since you are my wife there is no hindering your sharing my disgraces if there were disgraces rosamund did not answer immediately but at last she said very well i will stay at home i shall not touch these jewels rosie take them away again but i will write out a list of plates that we may return and that can be packed up and sent at once the servants will know that said rosamund with the slightest touch of sarcasm well we must beat some disagreeables as necessities where is the ink i wonder said dig gate rising and throwing the account on the larger table where he meant to write rosamund went to reach the ink stand and after setting it on the table was going to turn away when lydgate who was standing close by put his arm around her and drew her towards him saying come darling let us make the best of things it would only be for a time i hope that we should have to be stingy in particular kiss me his native warm heartedness took a great deal of quenching and it is a part of manniners for a husband to feel keenly the fact that an inexperienced girl has got into trouble by marrying him she received his kiss and returned it faintly and in this way an appearance of a cord was recovered for the time but did gate could not help looking forward with dread to the inevitable future discussions about expenditure and the necessity for a complete change in their way of living end of chapter 58 recording by simon evers chapter 59 of middle march 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 red abras middle march by george eliot chapter 59 they said of old the soul had human shape but smaller subtler than the fleshy self so wandered forth for airing when it pleased and see beside her cherub face their floats a pale lipped form ariel whispering its promptings in that little shell her ear news is often dispersed as thoughtlessly and effectively as that pollen which the bees carry off having no idea how powdery they are when they are buzzing in search of their particular nectar this fine comparison has reference to fred vincy who on that evening at lauric parsonage heard a lively discussion among the ladies on the news which their old servant had got from tantrip concerning mr kasaman's strange mention of mr ladislaw in a cordisall to his will made not long before his death miss vinifred was astounded to find that her brother had known the fact before and observed that camden was the most wonderful man for knowing things and not telling them whereupon mary garth said that the cordisal had perhaps got mixed up with the habits of spiders which miss winifred never would listen to mrs fairbrother considered that the news had something to do with their having only once seen mr ladislaw at lauvik and miss noble made many small compassionate mewings fred knew little and cared less about ladislaw and the courseobonds and his mind never record to that discussion till one day calling on rosamund at his mother's request to deliver a message as he passed he happened to see ladislaw going away fred and rosamund had little to say to each other now that marriage had removed her from collision with the unpleasantness of brothers and especially now that he had taken what she held the stupid and even reprehensible step of giving up the church to take to such a business as mr gods hence fred talked by preference of what he considered indifferent news and a propose of that young ladies law mentioned what he had heard at lauric parsonage now lit kate like mr fair brother knew a great deal more than he told and when he had once been set thinking about the relation between will and dorothya his conjectures had gone beyond the fact he imagined that there was a passionate attachment on both sides and this struck him as much too serious to gossip about he remembered will's irritability when he had mentioned mrs casabon and was the most circumspect on the whole his surmises in addition to what he knew of the fact increased his friendliness and tolerance towards ladies law and made him understand the vacillation which kept him at middle march after he had said that he should go away it was significant of the separateness between lydgate's mind and rosamunds that he had no impulse to speak to her on the subject indeed he did not quite trust her reticence towards will and he was right there though he had no vision of the way in which her mind would act in urging her to speak when she repeated fred's news to lit kate he said take care you don't drop the faintest hint to ladislaw rosie he is likely to fly out as if you insulted him of course it is a painful affair rosamund turned her neck and patted her hair looking the image of placid indifference but the next time will came when lydgate was away she spoke harshly about his not going to london as he had threatened i know all about it i have a confidential little bird said she showing very pretty ears of her head over the bit of work held high between her active fingers there is a powerful magnet in this neighborhood to be sure there is nobody knows that better than you said will with light gallantry but inwardly prepared to be angry it is really the most charming romance mr kosovan jealous and foreseeing that there was no one else whom mrs cosby would so much like to marry and no one who would so much like to marry her as a certain gentleman and then laying a plan to spoil all by making her forfeit her property if she did marry that gentleman and then and then oh i have no doubt the end will be thoroughly romantic great god what do you mean said will flushing over face and ears his features seeming to change as if he had had a violent shake don't joke tell me what you mean you don't really know said rosamund no longer playful and desiring nothing better than to tell in order that she might evoke effects no he returned impatiently don't know that mr casaban has left it in his will that if mrs cosupon marries you she is to forfeit all her property how do you know that it is true said will eagerly my brother fred heard it from the fair brothers will started up from his chair and reached his hat i dare say she likes you better than the property said rosamund looking at him from a distance pray don't say any more about it said will in a hoarse undertone extremely unlike his usual light voice it is a foul insult to her and to me then he sat down absently looking before him but saying nothing now you are angry with me said rosamund it is too bad to bear me malice you are to be obliged to me for telling you so i am said will abruptly speaking with that kind of double soul which belongs to dreamers who answer questions i expect to hear of the marriage said rosamund playfully never you will never hear of the marriage with those words uttered impetuously will rose put out his hand to rosamund still with the air of assam noble list and went away when he was gone rosamund left her chair and walked to the other end of the room leaning when she got there against a chiffonade and looking out of the window verily she was oppressed by nui and by that dissatisfaction which in women's minds is continually turning into a trivial jealousy referring to no real claims springing from no deeper passion than the vague exactingness of egoism and yet capable of impelling action as well as speech there really is nothing to care for much said poor roseman inwardly thinking of the family at qualingham who did not write to her and that perhaps dirtiest when he came home would tease her about expenses she had already secretly disobeyed him by asking her father to help them and he had ended decisively by saying i am more likely to want help myself end of chapter 59 recording by red abras august 2008 chapter 60 of middle march 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 red abras middle march by george eliot chapter 60. good phrases are surely and everywhere very commendable justice shallow a few days afterwards it was already the end of august there was an occasion which caused some excitement in middle march the public if it chose was to have the advantage of buying under the distinguished auspices of mr barthrop trumbull the furniture books and pictures which anybody might see by the handballs to be the best in every kind belonging to edwin larcher esquire this was not one of the sales indicating the depression of trade on the contrary it was due to mr larcher's great success in the caring business which warranted his purchase of a mansion near riverstone already furnished in high style by an illustrious spa physician furnished indeed with such large frame fulls of expensive flesh painting in the dining room that mrs larcher was nervous until reassured by finding the subjects to be scriptural hence the fine opportunity to purchasers which was well pointed out in the handles of mr barthrop trumbull whose acquaintance with the history of art enabled him to state that the hall furniture to be sold without reserve comprised a piece of carving by a contemporary of gibbons at middle march in those times a large sail was regarded as a kind of festival there was a table spread with the best cold eatables as at a superior funeral and facilities were offered for that generous drinking of cheerful glasses which might lead to generous and cheerful bidding for undesirable articles mr larcher's sail was the more attractive in the fine weather because the house stood just at the end of the town with a garden and stables attached in that pleasant issue from middle march called the london road which was also the road to the new hospital and to mr bullstrode's retired residents known as the shrubs in short the auction was as good as a fair and drew all classes with leisure at command to some who risked making beds in order simply to raise prices it was almost equal to betting at the races the second day when the best furniture was to be sold everybody was there even mr thief siger the rector at saint peter's had looked in for a short time wishing to buy the carved table and had rubbed elbows with mr bambridge and mr horok there was a wrath of middle march ladies accommodated with seats around the large table in the dining room where mr barthrop trumbull was mounted with desk and hammer but the rows chiefly of masculine faces behind were often varied by incomings and outgoings both from the door and the large bow window opening onto the lawn everybody that day did not include mr bulls road whose health could not well endure crowds and roths but mrs bullshoad had particularly wished to have a certain picture a supper at moss attributed in the catalogue to guido and at the last moment before the day of the sale mr bullshoad had called at the office of the pioneer of which he was now one of the proprietors to beg of mr ladies law as a great fable that he would obligingly use his remarkable knowledge of pictures on behalf of mrs bill store and judge of the value of this particular painting if added the scrupulously polite banker attendance at the sale would not interfere with the arrangements for your departure which i know is imminent this proviso might have sounded rather satirical in will's ear if he had been in a mood to care about such satire it referred to an understanding entered into many weeks before with the proprietors of the paper that he should be at liberty any day he pleased to hand over the management to the sub-editor whom he had been training since he wished finally to quit middle march but indefinite visions of ambition are weak against the ease of doing what is habitual or big willingly agreeable and we all know the difficulty of carrying out a resolve when we secretly long that it may turn out to be unnecessary in such states of mind the most incredulous person has a private leaning towards miracle impossible to conceive how our wish could be fulfilled still very wonderful things have happened will did not confess this weakness to himself but he lingered what was the use of going to london at that time of the year the rugby men who would remember him were not there and so far as political writing was concerned he would rather for a few weeks go on with the pioneer at the present moment however when mr bill strode was speaking to him he had both a strengthened resolve to go and an equally strong resolve not to go till he had once more seen dorothya hence he replied that he had reasons for deferring his departure a little and would be happy to go to the sale will was in a defiant mood his consciousness being deeply stung with the thought that the people who looked at him probably knew a fact tantamount to an accusation against him as a fellow with low designs which were to be frustrated by a disposal of property like most people who assert their freedom with regard to conventional distinction he was prepared to be sudden and quick at quarrel with anyone who might hint that he had personal reasons for that assertion that there was anything in his blood his bearing or his character to which he gave the mask of an opinion when he was under an irritating impression of this kind he would go about for days with a different look the color changing in his transparent skin as if he were on the cui vive watching for something which he had to dart upon this expression was peculiarly noticeable in him at the sale and those who had only seen him in his moods of gentle oddity or of bright enjoyment would have been struck with a contrast he was not sorry to have this occasion for appearing in public before the middle march tribes of taller hackbutt and the rest who looked down on him as an adventurer and were in a state of brutal ignorance about dante who sneered at his polished blood and wear themselves of a breed very much in need of crossing he stood in a conspicuous place not far from the auctioneer with the forefinger in each side pocket and his head thrown backward not caring to speak to anybody though he had been cordially welcomed as a connoisseur by mr trumbull who was enjoying the utmost activity of his great faculties and surely among all men whose vocation requires them to exhibit their powers of speech the happiest is a prosperous provincial auctioneer keenly alive to his own jokes and sensible of his encyclopedic knowledge some saturnine sar-blooded persons might object to be constantly insisting on the merits of all articles from boot jacks to bergheims but mr barthope trumbull had a kindly liquid in his veins he was an admirer by nature and would have liked to have the universe under his hammer feeling that it would go at a higher figure for his recommendation meanwhile mrs larcher's drawing room furniture was enough for him when will ladislaw had come in a second fender said to have been forgotten in its right place suddenly claimed the auctioneer's enthusiasm which he distributed on the equitable principle of praising those things most which were most in need of praise the fender was of polished steel with much lancet shaped open work and a sharp edge now ladies said he i shall appeal to you here is a fender which at any other sale would hardly be offered without reserve being as i may say for quality of steel and quaintness of design a kind of thing here mr trumbull dropped his voice and became slightly nasal trimming his outlines with his left finger that might not fall in with ordinary tastes allow me to tell you that by and by this style of workmanship will be the only one in vogue half a crown you said thank you going at half a crown this characteristic fender and i have particular information that the antic style is very much sought after in high quarters three sillings three and six pence hold it well up joseph look ladies at the chastity of the design i have no doubt myself that it was turned out in the last century four sillings mr mumsay for shillings it's not a thing i would put in my drawing room said mrs mom say audibly for the warning of the rash husband i wander at miss slutcher every blessed child's head that fell against it would be cut in two the edge is like a knife quite true rejoined mr trumbull quickly and most uncommonly useful to have a fender at hand that will cut if you have a leather shoe tie or a bit of string that wants cutting and no knife at hand many a man has been left hanging because there was no knife to cut him down gentlemen here's a fender that if you had the misfortune to hang yourselves would cut you down in no time with astonishing celerity four and six pence five five and six pence an appropriate thing for a spare bedroom where there was a four poster and a guest a little out of his mind six siblings thank you mr clint up going at six shillings going gone the auctioneer's glance which had been searching around him with a pretern natural susceptibility to all signs of pitting here dropped on the paper before him and his voice too dropped into a tone of indifferent dispatch as he said mr clinton be handy joseph it was worth six sillings to have offender you could always tell that jokon said mr clintup laughing low and apologetically to his next neighbor he was a different though distinguished nursery man and feared that the audience might regard his bid as a foolish one meanwhile joseph had brought a tray full of small articles now ladies said mr trumbull taking up one of the articles this tray contains a very rashy lot a collection of trifles for the drawing room table and trifles make the sum of human things nothing more important than trifles yes mr ladislaw yes bye and bye but pass the tree round joseph those bugs must be examined ladies this i have in my hand is an ingenious contravance a sort of practical rippers i may call it here you see it looks like an elegant heart-shaped box portable for the pocket there again it becomes like a splendid double flower an ornament for the table and now mr trumbull allowed the flower to fall alarmingly into strings of heart-shaped leaves a book of riddles known less than 500 printed in a beautiful red gentlemen if i had less of a conscience i should not wish you to bid high for the slot i have a longing for it myself what can promote innocent mirth and i may say virtue more than a good riddle it hinders profane language and attaches a man to the society of refined females this ingenious article itself without the elegant domino box card basket and and c are alone to have a high price to the lot carried in the pocket it might make an individual welcome in any society for shilling sir four shillings for this remarkable collection of riddles with the etc here is sample how must you spell honey to make it catch lady birds answer money you hear lady birds honey money this is an amusement to sharpen the intellect it has a sting it has what we call stare and wit without indecency four and sixpence five shillings the bidding ran on with warming rivalry mr bower was a bidder and this was too exasperating bowier could not afford it and only wanted to hinder every other man from making a figure the current carried even mr horok with it but this commental of himself to an opinion fell from him with so little sacrifice of his neutral expression that the bid might not have been detected as his but for the friendly oaths of mr bambridge who wanted to know what horuk would do with blasted stuff only fit for haberdashers given over to that state of tradition which the horse dealer so cordially recognized in the majority of earthly existence the lot was finally knocked down at a guinea to mr spilkins a young slender of the neighborhood who was reckless with his bucket money and felt his want of memory for riddles come trumbull this is too bad you have been putting some old maids rubbish into the sale murmured mr taller getting close to the auctioneer i want to see how the prints go and i must be off soon immediately mr taller it was only an act of benevolence which your noble heart would approve joseph quick with the prince lot 2 35 now gentlemen you who are connoisseurs you are going to have a treat here is an engraving of the duke of wellington surrounded by his staff on the field of waterloo and not withstanding recent events which have as it were enveloped our great hero in a cloud i'll be bold to say for a man in my line must not be blown about by political winds that a finer subject of the modern order belonging to our own time in a park the understanding of man could hardly conceive angel smite perhaps but not mensers not men who painted it said mr powdered much impressed it is a proof before the letter mr powderell the painter is not known answered trumbull with a certain gasping-ness in his last words after which he pursed up his lips and stared round him i'll bid a pound said mr powder in a tone of resolved emotion as of a man ready to put himself in the breach whether from awe or pity nobody raised the price on him next came two dutch prince which mr taller had been eager for and after he had secured them he went away other prints and afterwards some paintings were sold to leading middle marchers who had come with a special desire for them and there was a more active movement of the audience in and out some who had bought what they wanted going away others coming in either quite newly or from a temporary visit to the refreshments which were spread under the marquee on the lawn it was this marquee that mr bambridge was bent on buying and he appeared to like looking inside it frequently as a foretaste of its possession on the last occasion of his return from it he was observed to bring with him a new companion a stranger to mr trumbull and everyone else whose appearance however led to the supposition that he might be a relative of the horse dealers also given to indulgence his large viscous imposing swagger and swing of the leg made him a striking figure but his suit of black rather shabby at the edges caused the prejudicial inference that he was not able to afford himself as much indulgence as he liked who is it you have picked up pam said mr harak aside ask him yourself returned mr bambridge he said he had just turned in from the road mr horak eyed the stranger who was leaning back against his stick with one hand using his toothpick with the other and looking about him with a certain restlessness apparently under the silence imposed on him by circumstances at length the supper at amounts was brought forward to will's immense relief for he was getting so tired of the proceedings that he had drawn back a little and leaned his shoulders against the wall just behind the auctioneer he now came forward again and his eye caught the conspicuous stranger who rather to his surprise was staring at him markedly but will was immediately appealed to by mr trumbull yes mr ladislaw yes this interests you as a connoisseur i think it is some pleasure the auctioneer went on with a rising fervor to have a picture like this to show to a company of ladies and gentlemen a picture worth any sum to an individual whose means were on a level with his judgment it is a painting of the italian school by the celebrated kudo the greatest painter in the world the chief of the old masters as they are called i take it because they were up to a thing or two beyond most of us in possession of secrets now lost to the bulk of the mankind let me tell you gentlemen i have seen a great many pictures by the old masters and they are not all up to this mark some of them are darker than you might like and not family subjects but here is a gudo the frame alone is worth pounds which any lady might be proud to hang up a suitable thing for what we call a refectory in a charitable institution if any gentleman of the corporation wish to show his munificence turn it a little sir yes joseph turn it a little towards mr ladislaw mr ladislaw having been abroad understands the merit of these things you observe all eyes were for a moment turned towards will who said coolly five pounds the auctioneer burst out in a deep reminiscence ah mr laddis the frame alone is worth that ladies and gentlemen for the credit of the town suppose it should be discovered hereafter that a gem of art has been amongst us in this town and nobody in middle march awake to it five kidneys five seven six five ten still ladies still it is a gem and full many a gem as the poet says has been allowed to go at a nominal price because the public knew no better because it was offered in circles where there was i was going to say a low feeling but no six pounds six skinny's a guido of the first order going at six skinnies it's an insult to religion ladies it touches us all as christians gentlemen that a subject like this should go at such a low figure six months ten seven the bidding was brisk and will continued to share in it remembering that mrs bill strode had a strong wish for the picture and thinking that he might stretch the price to 12 pounds but it was knocked down to him at 10 guineas whereupon he pushed his way towards the bow window and went out he chose to go under the marquee to get a glass of water being hot and thirsty it was empty of other visitors and he asked the woman in attendance to fetch him some fresh water but before she was well gone he was annoyed to see entering the florida stranger who had stared at him it shocked will at this moment that the man might be one of those political parasitic insects of the bloated kind who had once or twice claimed acquaintance with him as having heard him speak on the reform question and who might think of getting a shilling by news in this light his person already rather heating to behold on a summer's day appeared the more disagreeable and will half seated on the elbow of a garden chair turned his eyes carefully away from the commerce but this signified little to our acquaintance mr raffles who never hesitated to thrust himself on unwilling observation if it suited his purpose to do so he moved a step or two till he was in front of will and said with full mouthed haste excuse me mr ladislaw was your mother's name sarah dunkirk will starting to his feet moved backward a step frowning and saying with some fierceness yes sir it was and what is that to you it was in will's nature that the first spark it threw out was a direct answer of the question and a challenge of the consequences to have said what is that to you in the first instance would have seemed like shuffling as if he minded who knew anything about his origin raffles on his side had not the same eagerness for a collision which was implied in ladislaw's threatening air the slim young fellow with his girl's complexion looked like a tiger cat ready to spring on him under such circumstances mr raphael's pleasure in annoying his company was kept in abundance no offense my good sir no offence i only remember your mother knew her when she was a girl but it is your father that you feature sir i had the pleasure of seeing your father too parents alive mr ladislaw thundered will in the same attitude as before should be glad to do you a service mr ladislaw by jove i should hope to meet again hereupon raffles who had lifted his hat with the last words turned himself round with a swing of his leg and walked away will looked after him a moment and could see that he did not re-enter the auction room but appeared to be walking towards the road for an instant he thought that he had been foolish not to let the man go on talking but no on the whole he preferred doing without knowledge from that source later in the evening however raffles overtook him in the street and appearing either to have forgotten the roughness of his former reception or to intend avenging it by a forgiving familiarity greeted him jovially and walked by his side remarking at first on the pleasantness of the town and neighborhood will suspected that the man had been drinking and was considering how to shake him off when raffles said i have been abroad myself mr ladislaw i have seen the world used to parley was a little it was at bologna i saw your father a most uncommon likeness you are of him by jove mouth nose eyes hair turned off your brow just like his a little in the foreign style john bull doesn't do much of that but your father was very ill when i saw him lord lord hans you might see through you were a small youngster then did he get well no said will curtly ah well i have often wondered what became of your mother she ran away from her friends when she was a young lass a proud spirited lass and pretty by jove i knew the reason why she ran away said raffles winking slowly as he looked sideways at will you know nothing dishonorable of her sir said will turning on him rather savagely but mr raphis just now was not sensitive to shades of manner not bad said he tossing his head decisively she was a little too honorable to like her friends that was it your raffles again winked slowly lord bless you i knew all about them a little in what you may call the respectable thieving line the high style of receiving house none of your holes and corners first rate slap app shop high profits and no mistake but lord sarah would have known nothing about it a dashing young lady she was fine boarding school fit for lord's wife only archie duncan threw it at her out of spite because she would have nothing to do with him and so she ran away from the whole concern i traveled for them sir in a gentlemanly way at a high salary they didn't mind her running away at first godly folks served very godly and she was for the stage the son was alive then and the daughter was at a discount hello here we are at the blue bird what do you say mr larislaw shall we turn in and have a glass no i must say good evening said will dashing up a passage which led into law with kate and almost running to get out of raffle's reach he walked a long while on the lauric road away from the town glad of the starlit darkness when it came he felt as if he had had dirt cast on him amidst shouts of scorn there was this to confirm the fellow statement that his mother never would tell him the reason why she had run away from her family well what was he will ladisla the worse supposing the truth about the family to be the ugliest his mother had braved hardships in order to separate herself from it but if dorothea's friend had known this story if the chathams had known it they would have had a fine color to give their suspicions a welcome ground for thinking him unfit to come near her however let them suspect what they pleased they would find themselves in the wrong they would find out that the blood in his veins was as free from the taint of meanness as theirs end of chapter 60 recording by red abras august 2008 chapter 61 of middlemarch 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 sheila morton middlemarch by george eliot chapter 61. inconsistencies answered in lack cannot both be right but imputed to man they may both be true racialists the same night when mr bulstrod returned from a journey to brassing on business his good wife met him in the entrance hall and drew him into his private sitting room nicholas she said fixing her honest eyes upon him anxiously there has been such a disagreeable man here asking for you it has made me quite uncomfortable what kind of man my dear said mr bulstrode dreadfully certain of the answer a red-faced man with large whiskers and most impudent in his manner he declared he was an old friend of yours and said you would be sorry not to see him he wanted to wait for you here but i told him he could see you at the bank tomorrow morning most impudent he was stared at me and said his friend nick had luck in wives i don't believe he would have gone away if blitzer had not happened to break his chain and come running round on the gravel for i was in the garden so i said you'd better go away the dog is very fierce and i can't hold him do you really know anything of such a man i believe i know who he is my dear said mr bulstrode in his usual subdued voice an unfortunate dissolute wretch whom i helped too much in days gone by however i presume you will not be troubled by him again he will probably come to the bank to beg doubtless no more was said on the subject until the next day when mr bulstrode had returned from the town and was dressing for dinner his wife not sure that he was come home looked into his dressing room and saw him with his coat and cravat off leaning one arm on a chest of drawers and staring absently at the ground he started nervously and looked up as she entered you look very ill nicholas is there anything the matter i have a good deal of pain in my head said mr bulstrode who was so frequently ailing that his wife was always ready to believe in this cause of depression sit down and let me sponge it with vinegar physically mr bulstrod did not want the vinegar but morally the affectionate attention soothed him though always polite it was his habit to receive such services with marital coolness as his wife's duty but today while she was bending over him he said you are very good harriet in a tone which had something new in it to her ear she did not know exactly what the novelty was but her woman's solicitude shaped itself into a darting thought that he might be going to have an illness has anything worried you she said did that man come to you at the bank yes it was as i had supposed he is a man who at one time might have done better but he has sunk into a drunken debauched creature is he quite gone away said mrs bulstrode anxiously but for certain reasons she refrained from adding it was very disagreeable to hear him calling himself a friend of yours at that moment she would not have liked to say anything which implied her habitual consciousness that her husband's earlier connections were not quite on a level with her own not that she knew much about them that her husband had at first been employed in a bank that he had afterwards entered into what he called city business and gained a fortune before he was 3 and 30 that he had married a widow who was much older than himself a dissenter and in other ways probably of that disadvantageous quality usually perceptible in a first wife if inquired into with the dispassionate judgment of a second was almost as much as she had cared to learn beyond the glimpses which mr bullstrode's narrative occasionally gave of his early bent towards religion his inclination to be a preacher and his association with missionary and philanthropic efforts she believed in him as an excellent man whose piety carried a peculiar eminence in belonging to a layman whose influence had turned her own mind towards seriousness and whose share of perishable good had been the means of raising her own position but she also liked to think that it was well in every sense for mr bullstro to have won the hand of harriet vincy whose family was undeniable in a middle march light a better light surely than any thrown in london through affairs or dissenting chapel yards the unreformed provincial mind distrusted london and while true religion was everywhere saving honest mrs bulstrode was convinced that to be saved in the church was more respectable she so much wished to ignore towards others that her husband had ever been a london dissenter that she liked to keep it out of sight even in talking to him he was quite aware of this indeed in some respects he was rather afraid of this ingenuous wife whose imitative piety and native worldliness were equally sincere who had nothing to be ashamed of and whom he had married out of a thorough inclination still subsisting but his fears were such as belong to a man who cares to maintain his recognized supremacy the loss of high consideration from his wife as from everyone else who did not clearly hate him out of enmity to the truth would be as the beginning of death to him when she said is he quite gone away oh i trust so he answered with an effort to throw as much sober unconcern into his tone as possible but in truth mr bolstrode was very far from a state of quiet trust in the interview at the bank raffles had made it evident that his eagerness to torment was almost as strong in him as any other greed he had frankly said that he had turned out of the way to come to middlemarch just to look about him and see whether the neighborhood would suit him to live in he had certainly had a few debts to pay more than he expected but the 200 pounds were not yet gone a cool 5 and 20 would suffice him to go away with for the present what he had wanted chiefly was to see his friend nick and family and know all about the prosperity of a man to whom he was so much attached by and by he might come back for a longer stay this time raffles declined to be seen off the premises as he expressed it declined to quit middlemarch under bullstrode's eyes he meant to go by coach the next day if he chose bolstrode felt himself helpless neither threats nor coaxing could avail he could not count on any persistent fear nor on any promise on the contrary he felt a cold certainty at his heart that raffles unless providence sent death to hinder him would come back to middlemarch before long and that certainty was a terror it was not that he was in danger of legal punishment or of beggary he was in danger only of seeing disclosed to the judgment of his neighbors and the mournful perception of his wife certain facts of his past life which would render him an object of scorn and an approbrium of the religion to which he had diligently associated himself the terror of being judged sharpens the memory it sends an inevitable glare over that long unvisited past which has been habitually recalled only in general phrases even without memory the life is bonded into one by a zone of dependence in growth and decay but intense memory forces a man to own his blameworthy past with memory set smarting like a reopened wound a man's past is not simply a dead history an outworn preparation of the present it is not a repented error shaken loose from the life it is a still quivering part of himself bringing shutters and bitter flavors and the tinglings of a merited shame into this second life bulstrode's past had now risen only the pleasures of it seeming to have lost their quality night and day without interruption save of brief sleep which only wove retrospect and fear into a fantastic present he felt the scenes of his earlier life coming between him and everything else as obstinately as when we look through the window from a lighted room the objects we turn our backs on are still before us instead of the grass and the trees the successive events inward and outward were there in one view though each might be dwelt on in turn the rest still kept their hold in the consciousness once more he saw himself the young bankers clerk with an agreeable person as clever in figures as he was fluent in speech and fond of theological definition an eminent though young member of a calvinistic dissenting church at highbury having had striking experience and conviction of sin and sense of pardon again he heard himself called for as brother bullstrode in prayer meetings speaking on religious platforms preaching in private houses again he felt himself thinking of the ministry as possibly his vocation and inclined towards missionary labor that was the happiest time of his life that was the spot he would have chosen now to awaken and find the rest a dream the people among whom brother bullstrode was distinguished were very few but they were very near to him and stirred his satisfaction the more his power stretched through a narrow space but he felt its effect the more intensely he believed without effort in the peculiar work of grace within him and in the signs that god intended him for special instrumentality then came the moment of transition it was with the sense of promotion he had when he an orphan educated at a commercial charity school was invited to a fine villa belonging to mr dunkirk the richest man in the congregation soon he became an intimate there honored for his piety by the wife marked out for his ability by the husband whose wealth was due to a flourishing city and west end trade that was the setting in of a new current for his ambition directing his prospects of instrumentality towards the uniting of distinguished religious gifts with successful business by and by came a decided external leading a confidential subordinate partner died and nobody seemed to the principle so well fitted to fill the severely felt vacancy as his young friend bulstrode if he would become confidential accountant the offer was accepted the business was upon brokers of the most magnificent sort both in extent and profits and on a short acquaintance with it bulstrode became aware that one source of magnificent profit was the easy reception of any goods offered without strict inquiry as to where they came from but there was a branch house at the west end and no pettiness or dinginess to give suggestions of shame he remembered his first moments of shrinking they were private and were filled with arguments some of these taking the form of prayer the business was established and had old routes is it not one thing to set up a new jinn palace and another to accept an investment in an old one the prophets made out of lost souls where can the line be drawn at which they begin in human transactions was it not even god's way of saving his chosen thou knowest the young bullstrode had said then as the older bullstrode was saying now thou knowest how loose my soul sits from these things how i view them all as implements for killing thy guard and rescued here and there from the wilderness metaphors and precedences were not wanting peculiar spiritual experiences were not wanting which at last made the retention of his position seem a service demanded of him the vista of a fortune had already opened itself and bolstered shrinking remained private mr dunkirk had never expected that there would be any shrinking at all he had never conceived that trade had anything to do with the scheme of salvation and it was true that bullstrode found himself carrying on two distinct lives his religious activity could not be incompatible with his business as soon as he had argued himself into not feeling it incompatible mentally surrounded with that past again bullstrode had the same pleas indeed the years have been perpetually spinning them into intricate thickness like masses of spider web padding the moral sensibility nay as age made egoism more eager but less enjoying his soul had become more saturated with the belief that he did everything for god's sake being indifferent to it for his own and yet if he could be back in that far off spot with his youthful poverty why then he would choose to be a missionary but the train of causes in which he had locked himself went on there was trouble in the fine villa at highbury years before the only daughter had run away defied her parents and gone on the stage and now the only boy died and after a short time mr dunkirk died also the wife a simple pious woman left with all the wealth in and out of the magnificent trade of which she never knew the precise nature had come to believe in bolstered and innocently adore him as women often adore their priest or man-made minister it was natural that after a time marriage should have been thought of between them but mrs dunkirk had qualms and yearnings about her daughter who had long been regarded as lost both to god and her parents it was known that the daughter had married but she was utterly gone out of sight the mother having lost her boy imagined a grandson and wished in a double sense to reclaim her daughter if she were found there could be a channel for property perhaps a wide one in the provision for several grandchildren efforts to find her must be made before mrs dunkirk would marry again bullstrode concurred but after advertisement as well as other modes of inquiry had been tried the mother believed that her daughter was not to be found and consented to mary without reservation of property the daughter had been found but only one man besides bullstrode knew it and he was paid for keeping silence and carrying himself away that was the bare fact which bolstered was now forced to see in the rigid outline with which acts present themselves onlookers but for himself at that distant time and even now in burning memory the fact was broken into little sequences each justified as it came by reasonings which seemed to prove it righteous bolstered's course up to that time had he thought been sanctioned by remarkable providences appearing to point the way for him to be the agent in making the best use of a large property and withdrawing it from perversion death and other striking dispositions such as feminine trustfulness had come and bolstered would have adopted cromwell's words do you call these bear events the lord pity you the events were comparatively small but the essential condition was there namely that they were in favor of his own ends it was easy for him to settle what was due from him to others by inquiring what were god's intentions with regards to himself could it be for god's service that this fortune should in any considerable proportion go to a young woman and her husband who were given up to the lightest pursuits and might scatter it abroad in triviality people who seem to lie outside the path of remarkable providences bolstered had never said to himself beforehand the daughter shall not be found nevertheless when the moment came he kept her existence hidden and when other moments followed he sued the mother with consolation in the probability that the unhappy young woman might be no more there were hours in which bulstrod felt that his action was unrighteous but how could he go back he had mental exercises called himself not laid hold on redemption and went on in his course of instrumentality and after five years death again came to widen his path by taking away his wife he did gradually withdraw his capital that he did not make the sacrifices requisite to put an end to the business which was carried on for 13 years afterwards before it finally collapsed meanwhile nicholas bullstrode had used his hundred thousand discreetly and was become provincially solidly important a banker a churchman a public benefactor also a sleeping partner in trading concerns in which his ability was directed to economy in the raw material as in the case of the dyes which rotted mr vinci's silk and now when this respectability had lasted undisturbed for nearly 30 years when all that preceded it had long lain been numbed in the consciousness that past had risen and immersed his thought as if with a terrible eruption of a new sense overburdening the feeble being meanwhile in his conversation with raffles he had learned something momentous something which entered actively into the struggle of his longings and terrors there he thought lay an opening towards spiritual perhaps toward material rescue the spiritual kind of rescue was a genuine need with him there may be coarse hypocrites who consciously affect beliefs and emotions for the sake of goaling the world but bolstered was not one of them he was simply a man whose desires had been stronger than his theoretic beliefs and who had gradually explained the gratification of his desires into satisfactory agreement with those beliefs if this be hypocrisy it is a process which shows itself occasionally in us all to whatever confession we belong and whether we believe in the future perfection of our race or in the nearest date fixed for the end of the world whether we regard the earth as a putrifying nidus for a saved remnant including ourselves or have a passionate belief in the solidarity of mankind the service he could do to the cause of religion had been through life the ground he alleged to himself for his choice of action it had been the motive which he had poured out in his prayers who would use money and position better than he meant to use them who could surpass him in self-abhorrence and exaltation of god's cause and to mr bullstrode god's cause was something distinct from his own rectitude of conduct it enforced a discrimination of god's enemies who were to be used merely as instruments and whom it would be as well if possible to keep out of money and consequent influence also profitable investments in trades where the power of the prince of this world showed its most active devices became sanctified by a right application of the prophets in the hands of god's servant this implicit reasoning is essentially no more peculiar to evangelical belief then the use of wide phrases for narrow motives is peculiar to englishmen there is no general doctrine which is not capable of eating out our morality if unchecked by the deep seated habit of direct fellow feeling with individual fellow men but a man who believes in something else than his own greed has necessarily a conscience or standard to which he more or less adapts himself bullstrode standard had been his serviceableness to god's cause i am sinful and not a vessel to be consecrated by youth but use me had been the mold into which he had constrained his immense need of being something important and predominating and now had come a moment in which that mold seemed in danger of being broken and utterly cast away what if the acts he had reconciled himself to because they made him a stronger instrument of the divine glory were to become the pretext of the scoffer and a darkening of that glory if this were to be the ruling of providence he was cast out from the temple as one who had brought unclean offerings he had long poured out utterances of repentance but today a repentance had come which was of a bitter flavor and a threatening providence urged him to a kind of propitiation which was not simply a doctrinal transaction the divine tribunal had changed its aspect for him self-prostration was no longer enough and he must bring restitution in his hand it was really before his god that bulstrode was about to attempt such restitution as seemed possible a great dread had seized his susceptible frame and the scorching approach of shame wrought in him a new spiritual need night and day while the resurgent threatening past was making a conscience within him he was thinking by what means he could recover peace and trust by what sacrifice he could stay the rod his belief in these moments of dread was that if he spontaneously did something right god would save him from the consequences of wrongdoing for religion can only change when the emotions which fill it are changed and the religion of personal fear remains nearly at the level of the savage he had seen raffles actually going away on the brassing coach and this was a temporary relief it removed the pressure of an immediate dread but did not put an end to the spiritual conflict and the need to win protection at last he came to a difficult resolve and wrote a letter to will latisla begging him to be at the shrubs that evening for a private interview at nine o'clock will had felt no particular surprise at the request and connected it with some new notions about the pioneer but when he was shown into mr bulstrod's private room he was struck with painfully worn look on the banker's face and was going to say are you ill when checking himself in that abruptness he only inquired after mrs bolstrode and her satisfaction with the picture bought for her thank you she is quite satisfied she has gone out with her daughters this evening i begged you to come mr ladislaw because i have a communication of a very private indeed i will say of a sacredly confidential nature which i desire to make to you nothing i dare say has been farther from your thoughts than that there had been important ties in the past which could connect your history with mine will felt something like an electric shock he was already in a state of keen sensitiveness and hardly allayed agitation on the subject of ties in the past and his presentments were not agreeable it seemed like the fluctuations of a dream as if the action begun by that loud bloated stranger were being carried on by this pale eyed sickly looking piece of respectability whose subdued tone and glib formality of speech were at this moment almost as repulsive to him as their remembered contrast he answered with a marked change of color no indeed nothing you see before you mr la isla a man who is deeply stricken but for the urgency of conscience and the knowledge that i am before the bar of one who sees not as man seeth i should be under no compulsion to make the disclosure which has been my object in asking you to come here tonight so far as human laws go you have no claim on me whatever will was even more uncomfortable than wondering mr bullstrode had paused leaning his head on his hand and looking at the floor but he now fixed his examining glance on will and said i am told that your mother's name was sarah dunkirk and that she ran away from her friends to go on the stage also that your father was at one time much emaciated by illness may i ask if you can confirm these statements yes they are all true said will struck with the order in which an inquiry had come that might have been expected to be preliminary to the banker's previous hints but mr bullstrode had tonight followed the order of his emotions he entertained no doubt that the opportunity for restitution had come and he had an overpowering impulse towards the penitential expression by which he was deprecating chastisement do you know any particulars of your mother's family he continued no she never liked to speak of them she was a very generous honorable woman said will almost angrily i do not wish to allege anything against her did she never mention her mother to you at all i have heard her say that she thought her mother did not know the reason of her running away she said poor mother in a pitying tone that mother became my wife said bolstrode and then paused momo before he added you have a claim on me mr ladislaw as i said before not a legal claim but one which my conscience recognizes i was enriched by that marriage a result which would probably not have taken place certainly not to the same extent if your grandmother could have discovered her daughter that daughter i gather is no longer living no said will feeling suspicion and repugnance rising so strongly within him that without quite knowing what he did he took his hat from the floor and stood up the impulse within him was to reject the disclosed connection pray be seated mr ledezla said bulstrode anxiously doubtless you are startled by the suddenness of this discovery but i entreat your patience with one who is already bowed down by inward trial will receded himself feeling some pity which was half contempt for this voluntary self-abasement of an elderly man it is my wish mr lettuce law to make amends for the deprivation which befell your mother i know that you are without fortune and i wish to supply you adequately from a store which would have probably already been yours had your grandmother been certain of your mother's existence and been able to find her mr bullstrode paused he felt that he was performing a striking piece of scrupulosity in the judgment of his auditor and a penitential act in the eyes of god he had no clue to the state of will led as la's mind smarting as it was from the clear hints of raffles and with its natural quickness and construction stimulated by the expectation of discoveries which he would have been glad to conjure back into darkness will made no answer for several moments till mr bullstrode who at the end of his speech had cast his eyes on the floor now raised them with an examining glance which will met fully saying i suppose you did know of my mother's existence and knew where she might have been found bullstrode shrank there was a visible quivering in his face and hands he was totally unprepared to have his advances met in this way or to find himself urged into more revelation than he had beforehand set down as needful but at that moment he dared not tell a lie and he felt suddenly uncertain of his ground which he had trodden with some confidence before i will not deny that you conjecture rightly he answered with a faltering in his tone and i wish to make atonement to you as the one still remaining who has suffered a loss through me you enter i trust into my purpose mr lettuce law which has a reference to higher than merely human claims and as i have already said is entirely independent of any legal compulsion i am ready to narrow my own resources and the prospects of my family by binding myself to allow you 500 pounds yearly during my life and to leave you a proportional capital at my death nay to do still more if more should be definitely necessary to any laudable project on your part mr bulstrode had gone on to particulars in the expectation that these would work strongly on ladders law and merge other feelings in grateful acceptance but will was looking as stubborn as possible with his lips pouting in his fingers in his side pockets he was not in the least touched and said firmly before i make you any reply to your proposition mr bolstrode i must beg you to answer a question or two were you connected with the business by which that fortune you speak of was originally made mr bulstrod's thought was raffles has told him how could he refuse to answer when he had volunteered what drew forth the question he answered yes and was that business or was it not a thoroughly dishonorable one nay won that if its nature had been made public might have ranked those concerned in it with thieves and convicts will's tone had a cutting bitterness he was moved to put his question as nakedly as he could bullstrode reddened with irrepressible anger he had been prepared for a scene of self-abasement but his intense pride and his habit of supremacy overpowered penitence and even dread when this young man whom he had meant to benefit turned on him with the heir of a judge the business was established before i became connected with it sir nor is it for you to institute an inquiry of that kind he answered not raising his voice but speaking with quick defiantness yes it is said will starting up again with his hat in his hand it is eminently mine to ask such questions when i have to decide whether i will have transactions with you and accept your money my unblemished honor is important to me it is important to me to have no stain on my birth and connections and now i find there is a stain which i can't help my mother felt it and tried to keep as clear of it as she could and so will i you shall keep your ill-gotten money if i had any fortune of my own i would willingly pay it to anyone who could disprove what you have told me what i have to thank you for is that you kept the money till now when i can refuse it it ought to lie with a man's self that he is a gentleman good night sir bulstrode was going to speak but will with determined quickness was out of the room in an instant and in another the hall door had closed behind him he was too strongly possessed with passionate rebellion against this inherited blot which had been thrust on his knowledge to reflect at present whether he had not been too hard on bullstrode too arrogantly merciless towards a man of 60 who was making efforts at retrieval when time had rendered them vain no third person listening could have thoroughly understood the impetuosity of will's repulse or the bitterness of his words no one but himself then knew how everything connected with the sentiment of his own dignity had an immediate bearing for him on his relation to dorothea and to mr casaband's treatment of him and in the rush of impulses by which he flung back that offer of bulls rhodes there was mingled the sense that it would have been impossible for him ever to tell dorothea that he had accepted it as for bulstrode when will was gone he suffered a violent reaction and wept like a woman it was the first time he had encountered an open expression of scorn from any man higher than raffles and with that scorn hurrying like venom through his system there was no sensibility left to consolations but the relief of weeping had to be checked his wife and daughter soon came home from hearing the address of an oriental missionary and were full of regret that papa had not heard in the first instance the interesting things which they tried to repeat to him perhaps through all other hidden thoughts the one that breathed most comfort was that will lada's law at least was not likely to publish what had taken place that evening end of chapter 61. | Priceless Audiobooks | UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA | 2020-05-21 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 18,400 | 100,114 |
PwnUbcZOjBU | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwnUbcZOjBU | Ciao Italia Classics La Festa dei Ceri | ten years ago i was standing right here in piazza grande in the center of gubeo for the festa de chatty that is the most happening event in this town on may 15th and it looks pretty serene right now if you look around there around too many people around but on may 15 you were like a sardine in a can because everybody was here in the center waiting for the race of the three saints the first thing you need to know about la feste de cherry is that there's nothing like it in america and i mean nothing except maybe new year's eve and times square but even that doesn't hold a candle to what happens in the medieval town of gubio every may 15th in new york city americans celebrate the future in gubio the eu gubini celebrate the past with a race not between people but between saints santo baldo antonio and giorgio it all starts the day before right here in the basement of il palazzo de consoli the town's historic municipal building to prepare for the race gubio's townspeople volunteered to cook a meatless feast for la vigilia the vigil here they're preparing baccala arosta roasted cod fish and adding hunks of crescent cheese bread they'll sell it to the public for a mere three dollars and while the work is going on here in the kitchen another feast is being prepared for the privileged thousand or so guests who along with town officials will eat together upstairs in the palazzo de console just before la corsa de cherry the clock is ticking and the crowd is growing in the piazza tens of thousands of people from all across italy have traveled here today to cheer on their favorite saint if they're rooting for santo baldo they're wearing red and gold if it's son giorgio they're dressed in blue and sand antonio's colors are black me i'm counting on santo baldo to cross the finish line first but then that's the best part of la corsa de cherry santo baldo always wins in fact he's been winning since the 13th century when the church christianized what was up to then a pagan fertility rite why may 15th that's the feast of guvio's beloved bishop and patron saint ubaldo and what better competitors to race against him son giorgio saint george the defender of the faith and sant antonio gentle saint anthony patron saint of the working class you don't have to be an au gabino or even from umbria to enjoy this special day but if you are then this small town acts like a magnet and pulls you back year after year to gather in the piazza grande shoulder to shoulder elbow to elbow and sometimes body to body but all breathing stops when the palazzo de console doors open and sant du baldo races out that's not a wooden coffin the racers are carrying it's called uncharo or candle and it weighs a thousand pounds and that tiny little statue on top that looks like a friendly santa claus that's santo baldo himself next out races san giorgio then finally san dantonio now it's time to bless each saint with holy water now hold on to your hat here comes the best part before the race begins the various teams parade the cherry up and down the narrow streets so that the citizens of gubio can pin money to their clothes touch them with reverence give them a pat on the back and encourage them to do their best the cherry are so heavy that the teams have to change runners every few minutes and while that's happening outside the feasting begins inside the palazzo de consoli the sumptuous menu includes a cold seafood salad of shrimp calamari and mussels seafood risotto boiled salmon with caper sauce roast pork with rosemary frittata filled with seafood mixed green salad and a sponge cake filled with pastry cream in the shape of the chatty needless to say excellent umbrian wines flow in abundance too hear that singing it's coming from downstairs where even more excitement is going on the race team needs their energy too now it's time to get plenty of it the moment has arrived at last a good thing too because there practically is no oxygen left for me to breathe once they finished here the racers will run up and down the twisting eye of the needle streets of gubio then climb the narrow road leading up mount ingino where they'll finally come to a rest at the summit at the church of santo baldo what a privilege for us to be in the midst of this reverent frenzy and to see what la corsa de charity means to the people of gubio all too soon the saints will once again be returned to their resting places but the singing and dancing and joy for this day continues long into the night while plans are being made for next year's race and the anticipation of who will win la corsa de cherry will build once again in the souls and hearts of the eu gubini | Mary Ann Esposito | UCDbnEurCb23yV7qj2Z5BHpg | 2011-11-02 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 866 | 4,668 |
JC_4_aUg8us | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JC_4_aUg8us | Enrique's Story | at age six and wreak a Ramirez was like a lot of other first graders I think my mom was real proud of me and I was proud I was gonna do something I'm a boy scout learn how to tie their knots and do the right things one thing I never did read that book that they gave us we have 31 kids in here and not just to the ones that could read one two three four five six seven eight eight of them where the smite was in the class all of us had region writing problems nobody knew guess that's where it started all the millions of children who start school each year two out of ten did not learn to read or write I started hanging around some other guys we start getting into a lot of things start getting into trouble we started breaking into our schools we started a lot of fights and riots up at our school teachers went on strike we trash the school three out of ten students drop out before finishing high school ninth grade I thought that was it for me try to hang myself in the basement I couldn't do it it just broke and snapped I felt that's where I thought my life was gonna be I was gonna end up in the street something happened and I slipped through the system other students who do finish high school one out of four still lacks basic literacy skills it's scary when you can't go shopping no it's your doctor says I want you to go to x-rays go down the hall you'll see the science you go down the hall and just take the elevator go home you're missing something and it's scary it's estimated that as much as half of America's workforce has reading and writing problems I work in the airline industry and I was what we call a cargo handler they offered me a job at management I was ready to quit because I was scared I have to do more paperwork I have to read I have to write I got to do more things I can't do that but to tell them that I can't reading Ted Wright I'd get fired when parents can't read and write their children are twice as likely to lack literacy what brought me to learn how to read and write it was actually it was my son now I see my son coming up to me asking me to read him a bedtime story and I'm pushing him away any other parent who couldn't read and write with that is no problem but my problem was I couldn't do this little simple thing I mean if your son was to come up to you and ask you to pour a glass of milk and you don't have the hands to do it then you would understand cuz that's what it's like you're helpless and what do you have anger and I was tired of anger I was tired of having my self-esteem down and I didn't want to pass out on at 28 and Ricky found out about a nearby library literacy program so I was laying in bed one night and I seen this advertisement on TV I see a guy who did not read and write and he's going through a reading program and it's one o'clock in the morning and I write the number down and I call one o'clock morning I'm ready to learn I want to learn to read now so I call him up and they asked me you know to come on down they give me the address so what down there and I was nervous parked my truck realize it was a library library I thought people just went to a library to read you know libraries do other things they hooked me up with the tutor we going me and she asked me what do you want to do all I want to do is read a bedtime story that's all I want to do yeah and I tell you that was the hardest book in my life but it was the most beautiful book I ever read in my life this is probably the only book I ever read in my life my tutor I think has a lot of patience because I'm pretty tough you know I just I can't get I get frustrated I'll put my pencil down I don't get it but she doesn't get mad she doesn't get a ruler out and spank my hand and she doesn't sit me in the corner I don't need that you know I'm a grown man I have a problem she understands it every year library literacy programs changed the lives of thousands of people it's given me the ability to go from state to state knowing where I'm going besides recognizing a tree or a building has given me the ability to go see my son when he was born because I knew where it said newborn it's given me the ability to read a book it's given me the ability to go get the right medicine for my children or for my wife it's given me a second chance of life I first started working at United and they're utilized and it's scary because I had no idea to use a computer and I remember his friend of mine knew at a problem and he showed me step by step by step how to use the keys he taught me and I do it now I go to it boom I didn't do dumb Bank God hate this thing it ain't nothing I'm proud I I'll buy me ten thousand computers I run them all I feel good now I always wanted to write something to my father I wanted to tell him how I miss him I wanted to tell him how I really really felt about him because we were never close and by putting it on paper man meant a lot to me I messed up on the spelling I messed up on punctuation I messed up on everything but again the words meant something to me after a few years in the program and Rico passed his GED test I never graduated from high school I don't know what it's like I wanted I'd love to walk off stage and a cap and gown but I don't think I'll ever see that this is what happened I slipped I'm one of thousands of people my son is not going to be a part of that cycle my daughter's not to be a part of that cycle my child is going to know how to read and I'm not gonna let my son have the same problems that I have it's time for him to be better than I am we're together learning together let's get picture like that one you | California Library Literacy Services | UCEG1hkMB_FzyPJKsOBUkqGg | 2011-09-06 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,172 | 5,623 |
2B-ssnZ8gZ8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2B-ssnZ8gZ8 | INTERPOL Project Watchmaker | improvised explosive devices are the most widespread and destructive form of explosive used in the world they have become the favored weapon of terrorists to indiscriminately kill and injure thousands of people each year in 2015 project watch maker was created in order to identify and upload profiles of known and suspected individuals involved in the manufacture of improvised explosive devices to a dedicated database we could see that there was a gap in the law enforcement community at collating information any intelligence on persons acquired skills to make and provides explosive devices so we formulated the idea to produce a database with this intention to collect information on individuals with this kill set over 40 countries every year are affected by improvised explosive devices so it was essential that we set out the what's make a database as soon as possible the Interpol notice system serves as a platform where tactical and technical information on IEDs may be shared updated and modified by member countries intelligence information is only good if you actively do something with it we decided the best way was to operationalize the data to run operation in member countries to cross-reference of data Eldar know what's making a database with individuals traveling across international borders over the course of 19 days the first-ever operation watchmaker took place in three countries across Southeast Asia as part of coordinated efforts to exchange watch lists of suspected bomb makers so we have now the local officers were working with the list of those suspected and wanted bomb makers the list that was provided by the Interpol member countries during the southeast asia working group meetings and we are doing this beforehand the arrival of the passengers in SantaCon in malaysia in order to have the advance information on those individuals who were travelling here over 35,000 passengers and 270,000 luggage cargo and vehicles were checked in addition more than 6,500 fingerprints and facial images of travelers were collected during the operation for further checks against all other Interpol databases as far as Anakin pot is concerned we are very concerned about the passengers coming in to snack on using these ferries likewise also going out net big to the Philippines some of these people may come in without proper documents so it is my role here as debt was nagging poor to ensure that all these undocumented are checked through the our CI Q because security this should be no compromise five individuals were arrested at sandakan Airport in Malaysia after more than 100 kilograms of methamphetamine were seized as a direct result of the operation due to the use of x-ray machines which were not systematically used prior to the operation Interpol's I 247 secured police communication system was connected at the Zamboanga Seaport in the Philippines just weeks before the operation I 247 allows for instant access to interval databases and law enforcement officials generated their first hit during the operation on a suspect traveling with a stolen Passport an operational coordination unit at the Interpol global complex for innovation in Singapore acted as a central point of contact during the operation bringing together representatives from the three participating countries with the goal to support the overt and covert detection of bomb makers thereby alerting countries to take appropriate legal action [Music] | INTERPOL | UCzY3w-5muWAUWIdCJ1EYuLw | 2018-05-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 556 | 3,459 |
FWUaihYe9uA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWUaihYe9uA | विणकाम shopping | foreign [Music] foreign so swing books Fabrics at the end wow just see oh see the colors the threads you can see the people actually cutting and demonstrating there oh yeah this is a kids craft section oh fabulous this is on sale I already have too much fat okay this is Notions no no excuse me something good thanks as well crochet hooks all these are babies from super fine fine foreign [Music] or not baby knitting is knitting is a different section coating is a different but everything comes under needle Arts foreign so my favorite brand is a lion brand of course so this is a lion product very fashionable Yarns you get it's really shanky the patterns are also there thick in Homespun oh this is from the Karen Karen's one pound money that I have this one pound yarn Canon simply soft hit red hat red Yarns red hat is also very nice bread quite Dark Shades in the red hat right look at this a little bit soft now this one is this is 100 percent acrylic worsted weight is rainbow classic oh listens feel it got China here the answer is 100 acrylic um this is also 100 person academic section Winner's Choice [Music] um oh this is the Bernardino 's choices are dark colors now this is number four that is medium weight yeah hey number one two three four yeah wow this is something Martha Stewart and jackets artist words yeah separate craft section and iron burn Martha Steward Craft section if you can see land branch website videos foreign it's a luxury pole Essence luxury Texas this is from four lessons this is Sensations beautiful delightful shot for this this is 51 percent nylon and 49 acrylic and you can see this mix and matches okay this one is a cello Sensations stylish eyelash yarn foreign products now this one is a cotton yarn [Music] sugar and cream sugaring creams fine brand now look at this this is woolies where we have um 80 percent acrylic in 20 percent rule so this is a thicker yarn up a little label the sale six so it's a super bulky this is Burnet rubbing this is five this is bulky so this one is a bulkyoti he's super bulky and this is bulky number five yarn any this is 80 acrylic 20 percent hold again this is a burnout section as a fish it's from Diana inspiration 70 acrylic and thirty percent hold so Applause foreign [Music] | Vinkam-GYAN | UC76duIrf4DLBjsYyoSWMURg | 2015-03-13 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 425 | 2,265 |
x1DfxRe0dWg | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1DfxRe0dWg | Wiki Workshop 2021 Keynote | meeting is being recorded um so next we have our keynote um for this year uh which will be given by yolanda gill who is senior director for strategic ai and data science initiatives at the information science institute isi of the university of southern california in los angeles she's also a research professor in computer science and spatial sciences she's a director of data of data science programs and of the usc center for knowledge powered interdisciplinary data sciences she's a fellow of acm triple a s i triple e and triple a i a lot of triples and a lot of fellows and she's in fact the past president of a triple of the triple ai which is a very prominent role in the world of computer science yolanda's research is on intelligent interfaces for knowledge capture and discovery most related to the topics of this weekly workshop she is a leading researcher on semantic weeklies she's done important research around making the data from semantic wikis readily available for researchers and also on understanding how the community that creates semantic wikis co-organizes and so on so i'm very excited about her talk uh today which will be on crowdsourcing to synthesize scientific knowledge welcome yolanda the screen is yours thanks for being thank you thank you bob very nice to have me here i really appreciate any opportunity to interact with the wikimedia community and the larger wiki community i'm going to talk today about crowdsourcing we we used to call it knowledge collection from volunteers and when we started to work on this from the point of view of ai knowledge capture and knowledge collection but i'm going to talk about crowdsourcing to synthesize scientific knowledge so i'm interested in how crowdsourcing enables us to capture new forms of scientific knowledge and i'll give you some examples of what we've been able to accomplish so far why am i interested in science because i think the the questions and the problems that science is tackling these days are very close to my heart so health understanding intelligence anything that has to do with questions about human health and well-being are important to me as well as the health of our planet sustainability the environment i think that these are um big questions that will be key to to help humanity i think that working in these areas makes a huge difference long term for humanity and if i think about these problems they are getting more and more complex and so how can we bring ai into the picture that's my personal interest so when i see what's happening in science i see that collaborations and showing up knowledge from people that have different backgrounds and different expertise is more and more important this is a figure from barabasi who studies scientific collaborations and he's showing co-author networks over the years so i think you recognize some of the pictures on the left watson and creek starting to collaborate at the beginning of the 20th century you could see some pairwise and and small groups of collaborations the next picture is is the human genome project so um starting to see large networks of co-authors the one on the very right is from the atlas collaboration that led to the discovery of the higgs boson and the the main paper had about 4 000 authors and i've seen their collaboration networks and they're quite incredible artifacts and i think it's a testament to these hero findings in science we want to help make them more ubiquitous that's something that i would like to see so one of the ambitions that i have is that we should be able to combine combine human abilities with other human abilities but can we insert ai abilities in the middle so i want to share with you this quote from gary kasparov about freestyle chess it's a new kind of competition that he designed um after being defeated by deep blue so so gary kasparov had never been defeated before in the chess game and he knew that this was coming i've heard him say that he was honored to be the human that was first defeated by or the the first grand master to be defeated by a computer and so when he created freestyle chess he said a player can be any number of humans any number of computers no matter how many grand masters or supercomputers you use and what they found in this competition is that even if the humans were not grandmasters and even if the machines were not super computers or the best chess playing programs what really made a difference is that they had very good roles in the game that they had identified and that each member of that player team had strengths in so i'm very intrigued by this idea of how do we insert machines and help people collaborate in a way that results in teams that are better than otherwise and and this diversity of talents and skills that that is important to bring in so that's overall uh my interests and what what drives my thinking and i'll come to this slide because eventually what i would like to see is that ai systems understand enough about science to to really gather knowledge and be able to to write papers and make contributions to science and in order to do that we have to go beyond what we have today which is a description of a protein a description of the rain fall and the weather conditions in a location to having much richer and interpretations of what scientific knowledge is and how people work together and so on so i'll be giving you examples of this throughout the talk i'm going to start talking about crowdsourcing non-scientific knowledge that's something that we started to do earlier and just sharing some of our our lessons learned and our findings there and now we want to talk about crowdsourcing two types of things one is collaboration tasks um and and collaboration networks uh and then i'll talk about crowdsourcing vocabularies and standardizing vocabularies in science through pseudo crowdsourcing and then i'll reflect a bit on what have been our successes and what remain to be challenges so let me start with crowdsourcing non-scientific knowledge um quite some time ago and as i mentioned we call this knowledge collection from volunteers we we had a pretty sizable project on collecting common sense knowledge or common knowledge about the world this is a this has been a bottleneck in ai we were working on helping people with their to-do lists so if you jot your to-do's could an ai system help you organize them prioritize them give you a warning if you're running out of time to prepare for something and in order to do that the the ai system had to really have quite a bit of knowledge about the world so we went off to collect it so we were collecting knowledge about objects in the world like a copy machine but also about tasks so if you're going to give a talk if you do a video conference what do you need and so on and you can tell this is quite dated because i'm talking about lcd projectors which is quite something and a very useful kind of knowledge is is if something fails how do you repair it so we were collecting all flavors of of common knowledge about how how the world works in an office environment and and through this we had many kind of techniques that worked better so for example we wanted to be proactive in the prompts that we gave the user so that we would broaden the coverage so if we say a bicycle has these parts that we know about then that makes people think oh it's definitely me missing a certain other part we were validating across volunteers so very early on we noticed that if three volunteers definitely four volunteers coincided in a certain assertion we could trust it um we were also organizing the collection and the the frames that we were presenting to the user by types of knowledge that our system could understand and relate to each other so we collected quite a large uh knowledge base and and it was actually one of the largest on the on the semantic web early on uh with this kind of common sense knowledge and the system was called learner and then learner too but this this taught us many lessons among other things we learned that volunteers loved to teach this system new things and they really came back and enjoyed it especially we were raffling t-shirts for some reason so so lots of lessons learned and we have some papers about this but we really were you know we could experiment online and and we could really design what worked better and uh what kind of uh designs of these forums uh gave us a better contribution so um so this was a very uh um interesting way to come to this another project that we did early on is um when when semantic wikis were beginning to be used more broadly and in fact semantic media wiki had hundreds of sites we we built on something called wiki apiary which collected data from individual wikis to create what we call the provenance be wiki that really looked at where all of the content of the wikis was coming from and how it was created and you can see on the front page that the content was going up and up and up over time as as these wikis were being more and more used but we also learned quite a bit of things um and and just to flash something at you here um it was very interesting to see that creating classes and categories was not important to these communities i think we were looking at almost 600 wikis classes were not very important properties were used very very broadly the composition of the group was kind of also interesting there were just a few people that edited properties everybody else provided assertions based on those properties and so on so um lots of interesting things about how how communities and crowds use semantics to to capture knowledge uh so i've always been interested in in these topics um jenny randick uh was uh at uh in my institute for some time and i remember discussing this idea that he had that he conceived about um having a wiki with assertions about entities that was a little bit more structured than than wikipedia and i remember having long discussions about you know what would be a fact versus what might be controversial and and the importance of capturing provenance and and then of course this all um eventually transformed into the wikidata project um which we use very extensively we have a large project on using wikidata to do integration of data sources for science and so this is also another example of some a page in wikidata that we visit quite frequently and we're always looking for more information to be captured there so so um we've been working on understanding how to crowdsource and capture non-scientific knowledge this common sense knowledge for ai um let me let me talk about scientific knowledge itself and i'll talk about collaboration tasks and then i'll talk about crowdsourcing vocabularies i'm very intrigued by crowdsourcing collaboration tasks because as you saw in those images collaboration is so pervasive in science and we don't understand it very well so i do a lot of cognitive task analysis when i see groups of scientists collaborate which is every day and um it's very dynamic very ad hoc um very much of an emerging collaboration it's seldom the case that they come into a meeting or a collaboration and they know exactly what each of them is going to do and they kind of have a plan everything kind of evolves as they understand each other so it's kind of the blind guiding the blind on collaborations and it's it's really a necessity any scientist that has data or that is looking at a problem is really reaching out to collaborate with others that have more expertise in certain types of data or understand some other type of model or some other type of physics or chemistry so so this is something that you know is only going to to increase as we have more scientific data available so um we we worked on a framework that we built on top of semantic media wiki for collaboration so we were interested in task-oriented collaboration so looking at how scientists formulate tasks how they form groups to accomplish those tasks how the group that works in a task relates to the group that works in a different task how those tasks are related together and very importantly something that you all will resonate with we were very interested not in the traditional ai frameworks for teamwork where you know you're flying a group of planes it's clear who is the lead pilot it's clear who has to run the helicopter in this kind of pattern so people play certain roles and if someone leaves a team someone else comes in and takes on that role so this kind of prescribed teamwork was not our interest our interest was to enable anyone to come in and based on their expertise their interests and the goals of a collaboration to find their way to tasks that they could contribute to and to creating on their own new tasks that they were interested in so one of the major difficulties i i could talk about this for a long time but just looking at successful collaboration online we really saw that it's very important to enable newcomers to really absorb what has been done before they came into the collaboration and what what was the status of tasks what were people working on without placing a tremendous overhead on the existing collaborators otherwise it's kind of unmanageable so so so we we really want to understand how the collaboration process is formed and to make it very um evolving and so we call this organic and organic data science as data science really captures this this interest that scientists have in analyzing data together so so what is the what are the tasks that they're working on who's working on each tasks when do they work on them how are the tasks accomplished all kinds of informations about tasks and i've worked for a long time on on planning and and task representations and workflows so i was really interested to see what we could capture from these um so you can recognize here kind of the look and feel of a wiki and so we were representing uh on the left we had a special area where we could see tasks and their subtasks and in the circles you can see the degree of completion of those tasks and i think the more reddish that they look it means that they're a bit late over the schedule but for each of the tasks you could see in the you can see in the middle we had subtasks we had an indication of how much of each of them had been accomplished and then we had some basic metadata about who were the participants what was the dates when it was supposed to be done who owned the task and was responsible for it and then um what kind of expertise and focus it had this is very important to connect people with the right places and then the rest of the the task page was devoted to how exactly it was going to be and so if the task used a certain software library or model then that would have its own page on this wiki and the collaborators could actually see a lot of detail about them so so every task had a unique page a unique url and was connected with other tasks through this structure so what was challenging for us is to build on the wiki architecture um i show this slide not because i can answer detailed questions about how we design the architecture of this platform but just to show you that we had uh many functions that we built on the semantic media wiki platform at the time wiki-based did not exist quite yet but we were developing these apis that allowed us to assert new facts to query about facts to compare the content of different pages and then we added this idea of handling different types of categories so if we were displaying a task then the page looked a certain way and the metadata looked a certain way and if we were talking about a piece of software or a data set then it would look completely different and a very important piece for us was the tracking the provenance so who had contributed this so for example the software library can have authors who contributed but then in the wiki environment who was the editor that had provided a certain fact about a task or something else and all of that was built as extensions of media wiki at the time so our universe had these crucial types of scientific objects um in the in the framework and so the users could instantiate these types of pages so so this really facilitated task coordination you know i show you a page that has a lot of green tasks a lot of pages have a lot of red tasks a lot of things that scientists endeavor to accomplish are too hard or you know they get distracted by doing something else that seems much more interesting or important and i think most of all you can see you know this was my own page but the places where i paid more attention or i contributed more or i had more contributions we had lots of ways to reflect that on individuals and i think that you can see here that there's a legacy of you know how was this task accomplished and so we had tasks about organizing a workshop we had tasks about how to write a paper about something so in a lot of ways this is knowledge about the tasks that we as as researchers do every day that are really not captured in many places it's kind of a giant group wide set of to-do's and ongoing to-do's and so on and so forth so very interesting so users were truly collaborating a lot of people were viewing other tasks or you know many tasks most tasks uh 72 percent of tasks had several people signed up um but i think what's very interesting is that we started to detect what we were calling social task networks so what you see here is the users being the nodes and the connections of this network being um the the number of tasks that two users had in common so they were both signed up for the same task and so what you can see is that there's there's already you can see some groups of users that are very connected they probably have similar specialty or quite complimenting uh complementary specialties and then you see others sometimes even if you see a user that's not well connected with thick lines to the rest of the collaboration they might be really crucial in that they're bringing a very unique kind of expertise so so very interesting kind of network and and we could see them evolve so this is an example of a group that started really large and then split into two subgroups that were quite distinct uh over time so over a period of several months so really interesting to see that you know there's sub groups and sub collaborations and this can give father to those of you many of you that that work on social network analysis uh very focused on collaboration tasks so so it's very intriguing to me to study how humans collaborate and how they accomplish things together and how they connect based on different expertise and i think that those kinds of social network tasks are greatly understudy and understudied and and it would be very valuable to to understand them better um i want to spend time talking about crowdsourcing um vocabularies and an approach that we call control crowdsourcing and uh the success we've had there um so far so so in you know i talked early on about environmental research and and environmental sciences and one of the challenges here is that it's very very different from biology or perhaps chemistry and other sciences where the communities seem more inclined to standardization so the situation that you see here and these are pictures from a colleague of mine tom harmon from the university of california at merced uh his group sets up these little robots that you see floating in the river they collect data about the river water quality etc etc they store it in their own database and they publish papers about the the the water quality levels of of these rivers that they have instrumented they go on canoes when the sensors break um you know in the rain or in the heat i mean they really work very hard to collect all this data and um when when other people ask him you know well would you share this data so that we can see the trends in water quality across this region or the whole state uh you know he'll say yeah sure it's all here you know i'll open up a port and you can download it but people don't typically want that they want him to deposit his data in a repository they want him to annotate it and he's just not very excited not just because it's a lot of work but i hope that you you sympathize and you'll understand that sometimes you go to a shared repository and they start to ask you for you know well what are the synchronicity periods like i don't know what synchronicity period is they they start to ask you for things that you may not exactly fit and you may not know how you fit and so they have this this very diverse strongly diverse data collection situations and so environmental science if you ask about global trends it's very hard to to use global data so so this is our our focus uh you see on the top right the famous hockey stick diagram for climate and so you see that uh temperatures are raising uh this is um paleoclimate it's a community that has been studying the climate for the last thousand the last many thousand years and every time that they do one of these hockey stick diagrams it takes them years and the reason is that the data is collected by individual researchers and it's really it really takes a long time to pull all this data together and it's not very easy for them to describe the data in a way that it can be easily aggregated and analyzed so this has been our target and to do these hockey stick diagrams to really understand the climate dynamics they take samples from all over the world they take data from samples all over the world and so that involves many many many researchers so the authors of these papers are consortia as you see in other sciences as well and so we we started a project called linked earth and we told them that through wiki crowdsourcing we were convinced that they could converge on a good way to describe data uniformly without any meetings and they could just do that from the comfort of their own desk without talking to anybody and so you could see the the two three hundred people jumping up and down and saying okay let's hear about this right so this was a big a big you know hypothesis that we could do this and and it was not clear and and the people in the room you know they'll go on on cruise ships they'll set up drills like you see in the picture to get you know samples of coral that have been deposited over you know a thousand years and see in every ring of the core that this cylinder core that they extract every ring is a different time frame you know it's there's no absolute so they're all proxies for the climate right so if the coral looks a little bit more sad then it was too hot for that species of coral what is too hot for that particular species of coral so these are things that they'll work on while you have another contingent that works on ice cores so here they're looking at what's trapped in the ice they're looking at you know the size of the bubbles other people look at lakes so we had one single workshop at the beginning of this effort where they actually got in a room discussed the process agreed to the process the the main thing was to say yes let's do this let's try this out and the champions for this are listed in red they really you know rallied the community and the community trusted them as as paleoclimate scientists to to try this new approach because taking uh years to do each of their global analysis is not very viable so um i'll go quickly over this there's some papers on this that you can read but but linked earth really tried to say you know as you are using your data set um uh and you wanted to describe something unique about it go to the wiki create a description for it and if there's weird properties of a data set that you don't like don't use them but if there's a property that you would like to highlight then add it on and that way we would crowdsource how they would each like to describe their data and then we created a very analogous process to what you've seen in wikipedia of having editors that will oversee certain areas and and what would be accepted from these crowdsource properties and the result of all this process and i'll show you some some um a little bit of detail about it it's a new standard for paleoclimate um that resulted from just one meeting so at least we have one piece of evidence for that hypothesis that we could do this fully online and it's being widely used today and increasingly broader adoption for paleoclimate data so i'm excited to tell you that this kind of weekly crowdsourcing is helping science in new ways and helping them synthesize new kinds of scientific knowledge which are these agreements to the properties so this is the paper that they all wrote um about the the standard uh that actually was uh selected for a centennial collection by the largest geoscience society we're very excited about it and this is um how our weekly starts welcoming you as is tradition and um this is a very old picture but i think i didn't have time to make a fresher one but the idea is that if you're doing um lake sediments and if you're doing coral course the properties may be very different and you may want to add your own properties as you are editing this uh the data set that you're describing is really your ground truth right you need this property because it's important for describing this data set so it's very much bottom up it's no one is just sitting on their desk and thinking oh wouldn't it be nice to have blah it's more you know i'm working with this data set and gosh i cannot find this metadata and if it's the same as this other data set so let me add that as i go so pay as i go kind of semantics and so and so every data set was downloadable um they had uh properties some of them were provided others you know the contributors did not provide them we run into a lot of issues because some properties required separate pages to really provide all of the information so that made each data set have a network of pages that that made it very awkward so if we had to redesign this we would do that very differently we would allow them to define new what we call crowd property so so after a few weeks you would have a bunch of new crowd properties that were not in the core which is the first gray rectangle that you see so so as they were adding a new property we would offer completions as you can imagine this would encourage them to adopt what was already there they could see the descriptions of those properties and they did not always adopt others and so a lot of the things that we did was how do we get the community engaged so we we were trying to attract them to community discussions to looking at maps so that they could see the number of data sets described grow we would have ways to give authors credit and you know the usual kinds of things that you see but a very crucial thing is that we would ask for their opinion and so we had all these polls to decide whether or not a certain property was more popular than the group of people that had used it and so we did a lot of polling to the community so one of the successes that we had one of the things that we did well is to start out with a very clean initial ontology so this took quite a bit of convincing because from their perspective they had a clean initial core ontology there had been a researcher called bob evans who had created this core set of standard terms and all they are lived by this but of course when you bring you know mathematical logic to the picture and you start to say well if this is really not measuring temperature and you're really if you're really measuring the health of the coral which is correlated with temperature that's not really a measurement that's not really observable that's really something else oh okay well let's call that a proxy okay is it a but it's an observation okay let's call it a proxy observation as opposed to a real temperature observation from from i can't come up with the word the real measurement of temperature um thermometer that's what i was trying to find so so we completely turned their clean standards over their head because for every term that they were talking about we could find a community ontology so we would use folk to talk about researchers and their papers and their collaborators we would use prof we would use geosparkle we use schema.org i think that we were one of the first possibly one of the first science ontologies to build on schema.org for data and and really help them think through it uh ssn the the semantic sensor network was extremely helpful um so that guided how we modularized and how we created that core set and then we just threw them in and then they would um you know add new terms and periodically the editors would then um merge the new terms into the core terms and the s these editors were the ones making these decisions uh if the upgrade was simply to you know a monotonic change where we would just add a term and that was fine then we could automatically upgrade all the data set descriptions that they had been working on so far but sometimes it required semi-automatic processes so so the papers describe this pretty sophisticated way to let the contributors you know annotate data sets suggest properties and then these editors that you see on the left uh having different functions in updating and upgrading the ontologies all together it's surprising to me that this kind of approach is not more common uh and and for us updating an ontology while people are using it i know that the genotology uh has done that from the beginning but uh we're always surprised that that this is not more present in a lot of projects so so we once the new version was approved we included it we annotated where the terms came from we never removed any term things that now are increasingly common to do so the report are these kind of sub categories of annotations some of them are particular to tree cores others are particular to coral and marine sediment so so you can see that they they actually form these sub communities in these sub vocabularies some of them were applicable to all of the all of the data sets and then there was something called chronologies that had a temporal hypothesis so this ring belongs to this period and they have these very flexible ways depending on the uncertainty that they had to to describe the dating of certain parts of the course so that led to its own also common vocabulary so very interesting kind of work i mentioned how important it was to take votes so we thought that if someone doesn't use a property it doesn't mean that they don't find it useful they're just not using it for their data sets at the moment so we decided to do these polls that um they they could really answer um it was hard to do them often enough through the wiki because not everybody was on the wiki every day but we tried to keep the community engaged so we would tweet polls and and that was getting a lot more um kind of continuous engagements and so on and uh and so uh you know they would get face to face uh every now and then uh just to comment on the process and so on but no one got together to discuss whether this term or that term or any anything like that more about the overall process so uh as as they got together for other reasons or other meetings so so they they were able to engage 135 researchers worldwide as you see in the map voting on more than 600 properties and i think part of what they wanted to get is whether property should be really really required if they were really important or if they were optional and nice to have because that reflects on the lift that they have to do to annotate new data sets or to annotate legacy data sets and so um so this is just to give you an idea and impre you know for for each of the different aspects of the of the standard this is one of the older data sets and so the metadata that is really available is lacking in many areas so for example you can see the uncertainty aspects that the community considered as required and essential are really not present in the data set and so they would have to contact the authors of this data set and and kind of dig all of that out so they wanted to be careful about what to require so so today they are moving along they're using this standard to decide how to include new data sets in the wiki and in their repositories some of the repositories are run by noaa they also work very closely with pangaea that i i believe is out of germany and and they also are using the ontology and the standards to guide the creation of notebooks and analysis tools a lot of their software so you know you just mentioned a property of data sets that you want to analyze and so all the data sets have that property and they can be pulled together so their ability to do aggregate analysis is is really amazing these days so so i'm keeping my fingers crossed that i can tell you soon that the next hockey stick diagram maybe will be done in five minutes so so that's it that's a big success story and and something that's um uh really making a huge change for for this uh community uh we're working now with a neuroscience community it's a worldwide effort i think there's about 50 countries involved hundreds of institutions thousands of researchers they self-organize into groups they share they don't share their data they share the knowledge that they have data about something so they'll say we have a study on schizophrenia on people from 16 to 34 oh we have a different kind of population we have schizophrenia in their adults and so they they kind of share this metadata not so much um the data sets themselves so but it's all self-organizing and if you're studying schizophrenia you might have data about smoking and how that you know changes things with aging so they might have another group looking at smoking and aging and they'll reuse this data so again this very organic idea of collaboration so i apologize these are very old screenshots but we describe data sets we describe the machines the mri machines that they use that makes a huge difference when you integrate the data sets we describe the cohorts that come from each of the data sets and it's a way to help them also create um broad studies with very different kinds of populations so so the the crowdsourcing of vocabularies is kind of an ongoing process you know we really have to find the right way to engage this is a much more fragmented and diverse community but but very exciting so i'm going to wrap up and leave time for your questions which i'm very interested in uh and i i want to kind of highlight for you what i think have been successes and what are our challenges ahead which are very very many um and and i hope that you appreciate that we're coming to wiki's from a completely different perspective and and with certain objectives and really benefiting from um all the communities work on on making these platforms um available and usable uh for for the rest of us um so this has really enabled a lot of uh research for us so so i think you know as a summary of what i've talked to you about i i think you can take away this message that through crowdsourcing we are really creating added value and synthesizing new forms of scientific knowledge so you often see for example that you know there's a description of proteins and there's a database about proteins and there's many databases about proteins and you see wikidata helping identify that you know there are several ideas that refer to the same protein and can we create a single place where we can really describe this particular entity so the description of scientific entities is super important describing papers describing data all kinds of uh entities we are kind of synthesizing new forms of scientific knowledge so one is these tasks and and what are the tasks subtasks and what are the workflows that the scientists are following as they do the science so these are not prescribed workflows that they'll say oh yes this is how hydrologists and agricultural modelers work together and then they just download that workflow and follow it but they're really creating a new one from scratch every time and we're trying to capture that that new form of collaboration that they are creating um i talked about the social task networks right what how do people relate to one another uh through through the work that they do and the tasks that they pursue in science and then i've also showed you that through crowdsourcing we can actually catalyze consensus vocabularies that did not exist before and i think there's many many other possibilities um in science to capture new forms of scientific knowledge um as we do this work so so in in the case of the consensus vocabularies which is um something that i think might be of broader interest to all of you i think we we did a careful seating of the core initial terms that's really really important that was the same approach that mike ashburner took in the gene ontology and something that i would recommend for anyone and then you can grow that core outward and that was a key to to making everything work for us also if you're involving key experts if you're a paleoclimate researcher why would you be inclined to spend time really you know squeezing your brain to contribute to this effort so we need to give them immediate benefit and in our case it was this immediate description of their data set and this immediate ability to query the data sets with these new properties so this this property of semantic week is to be able to exercise queries immediately with new properties was very important for them and then really make it part of their workflow and their ecosystem so they they care about writing software to then access the data sets and analyze them so that integration has to be there so um so all of these aspects really contributed it's still very challenging for us to support this continuous evolution of vocabularies if you've annotated 500 data sets and now someone convinces the community that it was all wrong to do this that instead it should be done some other way it's really necessary to make that change but it's really painful and and it's um there's there's an entire process to doing that that that we need to really facilitate and make more agile i think these areas of task center collaboration and how we help people work together in ad hoc organic ways is also something that we need to study better and then finally we're finding at least in the neuroscience world they need to do selective sharing so in wikis we normally open all the content to everyone maybe some cannot edit but everybody can view and here they're really pushing for selective sharing so they they may not want to expose a lot of details about their data only to the close collaborators until the paper is out so we say that selective sharing is better than none and hopefully it's something that is counter to the way wikis are designed but maybe something that we can support for them and we've been working towards that i showed you this slide at the beginning but you know longer term this is really the vision how can we capture a lot more scientific knowledge that has to do with processes and synthesizing ideas and expertise and eventually have ai be part of the scientific ecosystem and and and have humans and people um uh not just play freestyle chess but really collaborate to solve the hard science problems um in the future and i'll conclude here and take questions um leela and bob thank you thanks so much uh yolanda the q a will be managed actually by christina anticiano who have been collecting questions hi christina so um we have some question um how much time do we have because we have a ismail with four questions so maybe we can uh ask the first and then uh leave the other if we have time um maybe ismail if you want to ask directly the question otherwise i can read it from the chat let you know okay do you hear me yes okay okay hi yolanda i i have read some uh something about your your works because i'm making my final project for my master classes uh regarding data papers so um when looking for ontologies regarding that i found your link data link ontology but i found a previous one which to me is really really similar the ecological market language why do you prefer it to to start a new one from scratch instead of reducing this other one um so we we did uh reuse some of the community ontologies as i pointed out the the trickiest part for us was to distinguish the many many different kinds of observations and indirect observations called proxies that was really really tricky um there's lots of ontologies there's one called envo that is used a lot in the by life sciences there's another one called sweet that was put forward by nasa those have you know maybe a dozen terms that we can really connect to but our our challenge was really representing observation so so in fact in the ontology paper we mapped the ontology to envo um for you know uh it seemed like a good idea to do that to publish the ontology but uh but that was our main challenge that the observations were not properly fleshed out in the other ontologies and they you know that was what we were focusing on thank you for your question and thank you for clarifying we also had another question from adam i think very relevant so the question was um how do you handle this uh potentially sensitive data about patients so do you store the data or just the metadata and just in general when collecting neuroscience data sets how you ensure the production of personal information yes so so the our our wiki only this is about the enigma project the neuroscience project the the wiki only stores metadata so we'll say you know the hospital in post them [Music] has patients that are 18 to 35 in age range that are non-smokers they have data from mris from egs from this from that so we describe the content of the data set we never see the data set in fact when when the the neuroscientists analyze uh diverse data sets from separate hospitals and universities they actually send out the workflows and the instructions to run the analysis and the analysis are done locally and then the results are sent to a central place here at usc and then they are kind of aggregated they do what they call a meta-analysis so so the data never leaves the organization that collected the data and and what i'm trying to point out is that the data of course is sensitive and has its own reasons not to not to be shared broadly but the metadata also so they often are worried about publicizing their data uh very broadly because then everybody will ask for it or then everybody will tell them you know oh can you take from your cohort this or that or the other so sometimes they just don't want a lot of publicity about their particular data set sometimes you know they'll say this data was collected with this instrument so if you have a certain kind of instrument then a lot of people will want to talk to you about how you collect your data and your processes and so on so in in some sense and i think it's pervasive in science the more that you expose the more attention you get in some cases and if your data is valuable that's the case so they're very private about their metadata even so that was something that i was very surprised about i assumed that metadata was was something freely shared but they have many reasons not to okay there is another question from bob uh about the limit of crowdsourcing basically how far can we push crowdsourcing and what are limits that can be achieved by crowd in terms of science thank you titiano so you know um we we call it crowdsourcing because you know it's it's over a hundred people that's a crowd and in the case of enigma there's there's thousands so that's a crowd but it's a very peculiar kind of crowd when we were collecting common sense knowledge it was just you know we call them netizens or or web volunteers it was just anyone out there who could answer questions about you know how you go to a meeting or how long is a lunch break and things like that here these are you know modified experts they really have a lot of expertise in their field so they're not just anyone off the street or any kind of volunteer they they have a serious job they want to do science and so um it's a very different kind of crowd and a different kind of crowd sourcing so um it's kind of its own niche crowdsourcing um if you if you if that makes any sense um so what are the limits i think um not everybody has a community outward looking view of science that's not the case with everybody so that's one of our challenges even though the benefits are clear and the needs are very clear but not everyone has that the good news is that i believe that there's more people with a community-oriented view today than there were 10 years ago in terms of science and science researchers so i think things are shifting in a good vector and i also think that because the experts are you know busy and scarce and so on uh finding ways to route to them the most controversial or or you know um delicate questions while getting uh the rest of us involved in science in in more uh you know common way so uh our initial concept for linked earth uh and and that's where the name came from is that it didn't need to be the paleo climate scientists annotating every climate data set that existed thousands and thousands of datasets that they've collected over decades but that we could actually get regular citizens to annotate them um and it it proved that there's just not enough context and information to have regular citizens do it uh so they ended up being just the the expert crowd but just finding uh pockets of science where citizens can contribute i think is one of the challenges for scientists because there's just too many hard questions and too much data and too many problems that opening science to other collaborators i think is very important that that's a challenge that we have you you asked a very broad question and i'm sure yeah you know there's many more answers but i'll stop there yeah but just to connect to that i think um very related if um just just in in two sentences because we are running out of time there was a quick question about um broadly the barriers that hinder this type of research what are your thoughts what are the major challenges you know this type of research is really a labor of love so we could be doing what 99 of the community does which is to download data from reddit or from wikipedia or from wherever and study the data that's already available there i think we're doing a labor of love because it takes a long time to create these environments where we can collect proper new kinds of data and use them and you know doing that just takes a very long time so it takes years to forge these collaborations to establish the trust and to to explore it so link data was not born in a day and and they were not convinced in a day so i took maybe two or three years of convincing and really going into the experiment so i think that's the the biggest one what a nice way to put it very inspiring and to end on that note um so i think we are now scheduled for the break um yeah i'll go ahead i think uh yes yolanda thank you so much this was an amazing keynote thank you for um for spending some time with us yes let's clap it it was it was great uh thank you you are welcome to stay with us until the end of the work | Wikimedia Foundation | UCK_cUZLMpibyRiIdp0uF-lQ | 2022-01-04 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 8,845 | 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kn9Jvtw5NE0 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kn9Jvtw5NE0 | Serial Cleaners #5 | foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign today along with fearsome first make Drake here at your service and I should really I should do something about that the game just flashing black for its moment there that's actually because it's changing from One Source through another one I should probably just duplicate all of the game capture ones over to the priest scene so that won't happen anymore but uh yeah welcome back to serial cleaners the fifth stream of this um yeah we've been we've been pushing this one a bit hard it isn't that we want it to be over uh we have shared our complaints about it but we still really freaking enjoy it so ill let's continue on I've failed heists and we need to clean up an art gallery now yeah the cleaners already just throws in the present time because someone's spreading tales that there's a Trader in their midst which well I'm guessing that's actually someone else for now though are you we can skip this since we already saw it yeah as it is I like the game so for on so much but there is I do feel slightly disappointed they made big jumps and they they landed most of it but they have stumbled a little bit on the story we'd say it could just be that we're both too dense to really get the the complexities of the story is either that or they were very sloppy with it I didn't see that there's a camera there let's sneak down quickly and grab this key Square key you can also just be immediate I don't know I hate to say this made this story accidentally generic um is the first game have a certain little spark in charm this Facebook it's kind of missing here and it's still interesting that I think one problem that might be is that uh yeah the first one was very uh it was very different from a lot of getting other games so it's a bit of a sequelitis thing that the sequel of something will never feel as uh special as the first one will that's one of those videos I usually don't care about I don't really believe that too much for I usually don't yacht like that game is apparently under usually this location will do it if I feel like that's a reason for it but usually not like I feel like they have upgraded a lot of things just there's something with the story I don't know if they maybe a bit of more than they could see you I think it might be it with the the big leap in other things also why are there two bags of just cash like like I know they tried to Rob this place but I'm pretty sure her art galleries aren't supposed to hold that much cash here with the big jump from 2D to 3D uh voice acting as well added in multiple characters to write for it could be that they just stretched themselves a little bit too thin on everything but still overall very good yeah just um maybe they needed a extra year to oh no it was obviously worked on during the pandemic wasn't it and it came out in September of 22 and we don't know how long they worked on it and yeah foreign year then that would explain the story problem I wouldn't exactly call it a problem or like a shortcoming and find the hidden stats yeah so I noticed that many games they came out during the pandemic had a bit of a quality issue so to speak let me actually do a quick little look as to when the first game came out again in the meantime let's see okay it's on the it's on the second ground floor probably would be more accurate I think that's [Music] hmm no I actually don't know if that is more of an American thing or not to have the what we would call the ground floor or what the the floor that meets with the streets to have that be called ground floor or first floor I don't know exactly carrying like that yeah that that's what we think like some people understand when I say first floor but there's some people will get snap to say no that's the ground floor even in Swedish [Music] so that's one of those weird things that it's really not as badly bad like a lot argument they just uh no that's just called that that uh doesn't really need to disagree movement but I heard from other countries it has actually developed into a heated debate with that simple topic okay then again I I don't understand like many of us reads and understanding areas that's fine no we tend to not really like to argue or argue with something ridiculous for that annoys us so if you were to bring up try to argue over someone ordering pineapple pizza I can swear to you there's a likelihood that there is we at least it's a Sweden understand I mean look at the old world oh here we go again another child and I think that elevator just jams that's bad for us maybe we should have waited for this until we were done with everything else because we just made everything a lot more difficult for us I'm not surprised but yeah understanding it feels like panado pizza videos you do you that's it new arguments okay we just found a lot of cash that explains why well there was all those those bags of cash and the first TV cleaner came out in 2017. so yeah they could have had plenty of time to work on this but I didn't see if they have I've yet to see if they did anything other let's see the developer was draw distance let's have a little look if they have anything else on Steam as well yeah poor that means if it ever started work on it could have been working during the pandemic and yeah let's agree that many games never worked in the pandemic including movies Meriden had a bit of a quality issue for the drawbacks so I did say doing epidemic that Abby give some developers at some slack there now that work into a pandemic is hard let me see uh let me actually paused for a moment here so I can get a good look uh let's see what is oh he gets clawing out the door so that gives me an excuse to step away for a moment and I actually looks like we won't have romp okay no she just jumps in straight into her cardboard box that I use for paper trash and she goes and sits uh let's see it seems that draw distance has wait okay they have two vampire games here you can see I'm using the steam uh I'm using the Steam app for this so that might not be the best let's see a game called ritual but where did did they not make the sequel let me see uh cereal then cleaners okay yes yes stupid H thing you know how freaking old I am just stop asking that let's see yep okay still still made by draw distance even though it didn't really show up on that page but then again it's an app so it can be rather Limited use it you okay straight with the gun out oh yeah I'm I'm just I'm more tempted to chalk it up a bit do a bit of over stretching of their capabilities or something like that yeah I could see that for again I'm impressed by the game do I feel like they could done themselves a service to [Music] reduce the main characters the it depends how long it has been developed and again if they were already working on this during the pandemic that would make a lot of things harder yeah especially when it comes to us but okay that depends on voice actor but some voice actors have their own personal Studios but not everyone does nothing doesn't fully blocks last Sunday are they supposed to be functional cars or just sculptures in the safer cars because this this one seems a bit with odd with the roof like that the roof is low and I think those are just painted sports cars can't actually read the things there so well if we actually if we fail we'll get reset back to when the the elevator is already busted okay one more body and two pieces of evidence and what the heck are you up doing okay she's just twisting and turning into her box let's see do we have any more stiffs up here we have big evidence and yeah we were somewhat uh one thing we were not really complaining about but that we both noticed damn it is that there it doesn't seem to be as much uh enemy variety so to speak but they are popping up now so I'm getting part of me is feeling like we are approaching like the ending but it feels like we have another half to go where they go look like who the hell is trying to set us all up and such yeah dude he did see earlier Final Chapter not true and I suppose it is this is not our final word before we say our final verdict to till after we finish the game like stay on join the game but also complaining it's not our final value that's what we feel so far yeah you still have a chance to uh at least be impact on the store Department everything else the graphics music and just upgrades from the first one that is all well that's all golden I'd say the only small thing I would say is a lack of lip syncing but lip syncing is a can be quite a frustrating thing to do in a game yeah because you can either animate that by hand or use motion capture and you know the first takes a little time and the other is expensive yeah look he I don't really did any lip syncing with these animations which I guess Works since if you you use this bonus using now that those use any animation that dial say just works yeah the fact that they didn't use it at all is better than trying to piecemeal it I'd say yeah it's another [ __ ] bag of money all right but so far my biggest issue about probably is why I said it and I feel a bit disappointed is the world who's the traitor thing but it's one of those tropes I mean very tired of especially on ever suspects everyone yeah if they are a smart one so I think they will figure out we are being played by another party here and it's more of an in the moment thing and while they have been drinking already as well so that also isn't helping yeah then also there's the us if we are naive enough to think that no one of them is a the traitor it's only just to be do you want to say traitor is the one that is the least likely to do it this guy's being annoying one small thing I would add in where I would ask to be added in is to have this have it featured to have the time progress normally and not just slow down like you hold the trigger and then press something to well have it not be slowed down oh but it that is a small thing and we haven't really used as much as either distract him long enough [Music] you are aware when you wrote into rights yeah pool of blood well water is well but that's still a little blood food that pool shower pool to be like that it's more like the water gets this it gets diluted so much uh that it turns red but um yeah to happen but that looked the British fake no not thick enough to actually stick but then again also a gameplay thing and grab more Graphics thing okay quickly yeah but it is a raising of concern over what the heck happened here um [Music] I need to do a bit of a calculation of how how much blood there is in a human body to be lost to the amount of volume of water in such a small thing as to how much that would actually thin things out showers I'm guessing maybe three people minimum definitely not one I've come on okay at least we got a safe with the drop off okay we haven't used our ability to tag in a bit so we might want to do that sometime soon sneak around this guy let's not jump up in front of this one oh no oh yes I just remember a few scps from this yeah another thing about the Red Lake I'm not thinking about that one damn it a video of uh oh I forgot it forgot this number a name but the sea monster that gives you the phobia you have just version it to all water and if it wants you can drag you through a glass of water to its domain I I'm pretty sure I've read of that I think the vulgar did a video on that one as well many have done that episode even done animations as well what yeah there's one SCP Channel called SCP Illustrated and I'm pretty sure I haven't seen anything by of I haven't watched anything of them in quite a while so there's many now like the rubber and the improve Graphics Graphics version which they actually get good detective void that there's many animated ones that explains the story as such now got it doesn't it yeah there's even one dog called Dr Bob I know Dr Bob is it your doctor uh he claims to be though I give him about as much credibility as Dr said because but yeah the specific sap is there's so many numbers that is how to keep track on many of them yeah I've had an idea or two for an SCP as well who I'm not sure if I have the riding jobs to actually make the store to actually write for one and not just an odd object research but with more of a interesting story and sets yeah I also had a few many probably I forgot to buy now but they nowadays they do will do quality shakes yeah so it's not guaranteed you get posted or not but then also the whole thing that you probably should also try and have some mystery behind them and all that you here we go we still need to clean up some of the blood but then we are done I'm gonna wait for this guy to move because it will totally shoot us in the back if we try to run from him [Music] oh dear I also saw something upstairs oh because I know that people want one of us at least to joke about funny if we should show you if you get upstairs again okay first let's get rid of this though still need to go around and clean up a bunch of Bloods probably best outside since there's the most of it just stick our vacuum cleaner in the pool and let it suck everything up it probably would explode from that yeah all right to the odds exhibit further down the hall on the other side of the building I try not to get caught the room passed the blood I wasn't sure if you said blood or blonde but yeah past the blood the on and off switch inserts all right banana yeah you're going totally bananas I hope no one just threw away the appeal on the ground for eign this is a jump point though just barely dodged that dude you could shoot over that wait but why are you going in there hey hold on at least what no yeah these are the swords ones I believe and I think we're just going to have to run for it for a bit there's we need to clean some more Bloods but let's be a bit more careful with how we get through here this time [Music] let's see okay apparently I'm very fast at the moment I almost shook the entire gloss okay come on [Music] this oops a bit too close there there we go now we GTFO and I'm guessing all of this money is how uh she got her our career started or noticed at least so summarizing what just happened my whole life trying to impress people who only see words like mine as an element of a complicated money laundering plan let the paper trail that seems connected to some shady agencies dictators and Military Investments hangman I hope you're roasting me from up above and down below right now oh boss hangman so yeah [ __ ] the art world [ __ ] art and [ __ ] every single one of you got it got it but can we please not provoke each other while at gunpoint oh how cute this is your first time at the wrong end of a gun Mr big shot fixer wow could it be that a stuck up artist has more experience with staring down the barrel latte you've seen some deep [ __ ] got used to the smell and made it your own I trust you answering Y2K is the queen of [ __ ] G thanks does the title come with crown immunity so a classic Mafia game strategy you say I accuse the last failed accuser hmm yeah I say we end this on Bob since he might have the most Insight on everything yes God excrements that's my life what else is out there how about love kiss heart love heart kiss you were all aware of the girl yes that you live together yes that your loyalties might be split um no room for um Samantha severe bipolar disorder a bit [ __ ] wants a baby and a clean husband I'm sorry if I sound mean it's because I really really hate not getting invited to weddings just so [ __ ] sad I really thought we like each other more than that agreed so could you remove this tool from my throw towel I don't think I'd be comfortable doing it Bob I'm not convinced I'll be comfortable with your uh expressive storytelling style and disposition yeah he's in the Splash Zone I don't think I'm some sort of God damn animal crawl himself don't you okay then here's a tail or rather testimony of a professional he might not be respected by his peers but he follows a code and does his job well let's see 99 East River donrina hires a professional crew to break slowly withering big job bataglia out of prison these guys bought the getaway and got into a shootout run in the middle of a pile up on Brooklyn bed the Brooklyn Bridge Big Joe's life hangs in the balance but to walk out of to walk out the heat with no blisters he needs to trust a Man on Fire okay yeah that that is a thing [Music] okay [Music] I'm always sent into the biggest messes nope or a mask long range pigs Big Joe in the middle of this big God damn hog house Hawk house [Music] okay so do we just need to get him out then hmm as bodies it will likely have to clean up but let's get to win first this will be another wounded VIP around it seems it's not just a single time [Music] oh come on can't you just get over that psycho hell she seems to be he's he's going less and less psycho with everything [Music] this is this is just a massacre at this rate which way are you going yeah there's no way for them to clean this up not the car is at the very least or I was going to have a lot is going to need to get a lot bigger pocket tailored onto his trench coat [Music] yeah I was expecting to be just gonna grab the VIP here for this level it is clearly not designed to be cleaned and high bodies okay that's what the mask is for eign how do a goddamn Bowen work now are you gonna do me in the way you did my son Pauline coming anyway it doesn't hurt okay I very much get the feeling that we'll still have to try and clean the place out or at least some of it remember okay so now we gotta get him to the this is going too easy like this the second guy just doesn't notice at all as his body shoots over his shoulder I was suspected if you just want to have one level a bit that is a bit extra different could be let's see and it says it'd be all inclusive finale then yeah that is only have one level with a VIP on you know how many is this going to bring in Brooklyn Bridge see nope it also brought in more policing scenes there's more Gunners coming yo okay was going to ask is either of them going to drop over with that over there they have they had them two on one and they still lost and again they were facing someone with the machine gun who wasn't really using well not more an assault rifle okay Mexican standoff just opens all right um let's just grab any evidence while we're going since we are likely to have to well clean some of this up okay Gunners are winning so far it seems there's only two left here and the other two are being held up by One Cop hey did you two actually see him or not [Music] where you go really okay he gets shot at but just doesn't notice at all [Music] Brooklyn Bridge now okay I was being a bit too tasty with that one okay ready oh okay they split up here that's what happens okay I'm gonna grab the mask guy and go [Music] okay this time we turn into a trade that mobster uh I don't want to walk in between these just in case that will get us killed this is starting to turn and turn it okay I have two Targets I was about to say this this is turning into a Lethal Weapon shootout one of the actors in that was OJ's freaking Simpson never knew that actually wait what they're not I'm not entirely sure on that since well I'm absolutely horrible with people's names especially even more so a lot of actors and such but apparently one of them was it oh we have to get into the we don't have to get into our car we need to get into that car so I recall hearing about the OA Simpson but I knew way too late to provide any comments here on it and I mostly just stay away from it considering when I seen how people reacted to the topic yeah what kind of van is that or is it never mind these idiots splitting up and any basic tabletop RPG player knows you never split the party where is that car who yeah okay it seems that it's a bit random whether they win or lose okay where are you going not sure if we can freaking clean this what's let's give him a bit of a hand oh wait okay he was still alive they they don't shoot them when they're down okay well at least we didn't get friendly fired yeah I I thought we could clean this but I'll be surprised if we were to clean this I get cleaning out most of the areas to go listen to your factory okay let's clear out the other side or at least help the gangsters clear that side out give us a more safe passageway let's first let's get him over here actually hey okay are we doing this again okay um I can think of one way to help with this this and and let's see can I get a bank [Music] okay I can't hit them from here can I just throw it down yes I can there we go and let's hope this doesn't hit one of our guys in the back of the head [Music] probably will yeah it's probably not gonna do that yeah that's that'll hit one of them we don't want that uh boom guess it's this way after all one mobster gun there's the other one yeah because it is considering how many bodies there are I don't think we are gonna clean this up foreign [Music] public Bridge so yeah another gate there but it's blocked we need to get past this one here let's move back a little bit drivers just seeing a guy go by it's carrying someone over their shoulder end up giving a damn oh okay we just need to clean up the mobsters and the evidence okay two you know only the mobsters and the other two I'm are still alive I'm presuming at least we got a save points somehow he sees the door but not the guy with Madness [Music] at this point that voice line is getting more hilarious than anything else like you're really going to shout stop to the guy with the mask and the trench coat hilarious oh Jayden yeah that evidence over there we picked up multiple times but didn't do this time okay is the evidence in between and then there's the mobster here and okay where is our drop off do we need to drop dumpster in the car as well or do we make them not recognizable as monsters anymore by cutting them up actually your normal cop I should be able to knock you over stuff you were weighing damn it okay getting here grab this best of some sort can say if it's explosive or not where is the other piece of evidence that we need to gather is it mobster there is the other one I see the evidence at the end there but where is the last oh there's big evidence let's see how do we get to that is there okay there's a ladder attached to a car is that probably it technically speaking since we are on a bridge we should just be able to chuck stuff over the edge okay we can't cut them up I'm guessing Big Joe once his men and his stuff back he has disposal even we didn't get marks really let's not try getting in between these two really [Music] he's already coming this way anyways since he spotted the doors he should be coming this way here he goes [Music] what is this thing then it's another vest and we really can't just throw that out [Music] it's coming over so we go hide let's go there they're very alert all the time anyways okay actually can I knock oh these two are alerted at all times by the gangsters is that going to make you two move yes it is now you would then before I have to carry your asses back as well today was YouTube get out the way right they count they count as unconscious policemen for some reason oh okay thank you you said that now oh that that was one of the cops this way and someone got themselves no the cop got killed I thought it was the mobster where's the other oh he's over there okay this open got this down and then we go grab the last of them and you are coming back okay but it will go this way then this place is now safe this is the cringy people bring your own freaking bulletproof vest or both resistance vests okay with you or back with you from this oh dear okay let's bring death Joe back to the Gang okay definitely a different kind of mission unless they are actually going to send us back and try and clean this up I very much doubt and hope against [Music] nope okay get out you have my tanks Hal but don't think for a second that you've earned yourself clemency there's no forgiving what you did to Bali idiot that he was he was still my blood skip this town I better not see you again uh hell what's with the the tutu corrects were empty how empty yet okay what do you mean with that did he get himself killed after that so questions accusations inquiries into private relationships complaints about bodily harm no foul play detected I'm in your corner buddy always have been none yeah lion requires being fly and Hal is not that put together as a person I mean that lovingly thanks no thanks moving on elephant in a room allow me to address everyone made a good case for themselves the bar is in your court boring Mafia players often stay quiet while setting others and each other's throats are you playing games with us let's see what Bob has to say for all of this also I can't tell if how accepted that as if he actually meant Franks no thanks or if he change his mind there or something yeah I was a bit confused here we go tell us about your job last month Bob a tale of a bleeding ass raw uncut X-rated okay Midtown Midtown pledging to stay away from Criminal ways is one thing but Mark clemency can only go so far e Palmieri yeah I have no idea how to say that the Italian x-con is being hunted by everyone and their mother for many different reasons given his knowledge he might prove useful to someone as resourceful as Don Rayna so they sent one more Thug to finish the job eh deal just get on with it you oh that's so very dramatic pal but you got it all wrong we're here to get you out of this mess we many of you enough to pull it off but put a sock in it Christ almighty drilling blood all over the place you're making my work harder than it needs to be okay I just called me tell Mary I'm just going to say in the phone room can only drag you [Music] okay that's closed probably open with this switchboard over here with levers over here not bringing you through that [Music] we need to slip through here I might as well grab this here ticket probably to get out the Dodge pistol with which he was shocks [Music] let's see body [Music] we can use [Music] hey Bob isn't this agile so he can't jump over that where are you going probably up [Music] spotted here [Music] no we just got whacked in the face okay oh dear [Music] let's drop you out of sight here [Music] through that into our pockets and that one slides in after and there we go I'm guessing he had a shootout with them or two hit squads met up and started gunning for each other I would not be surprised [Music] squeeze you through that but not unless you would lose a lot more blood [Music] liking the tune of this one [Music] is this one likely hopefully okay perfect you close this and uh hide your way okay my name convenience is on the way out none I couldn't handle go bite them little serpent that's what free game on all right let's see unlock access points okay are we going to deal I think we might bring up everyone here okay bring this up or at least multiple of them maybe not hell it might not be the best time to bring him out um let's see I mean I knew the station works on a couple of wired calculators but F me that setup is literally antediluvian I don't actually know what that word means guessing something similar to antiquated [Music] recognize that right can't wait okay we can only hide in that from one side thank you very much saying it's extremely outdated [Music] escalator fixed [Music] okay we can't go up the wrong way save [Music] okay this this place went down big triangle King hmm yeah in case it is less of a cleanup a more of a Rescue Mission so this is way too big to be cleaned up by us yeah it's mostly going to be getting out didn't even need to rtfm [Music] clue on that yeah and no clue either again I am rodent bad with acronyms see this [Music] a bag of sorts might as well dump it since we're here [Music] triangle key for adapter but we can sneak out through here but not excused ruler soda [Music] I also I saw Lipsy somewhere as a very obvious Pepsi XP that did not mean to go with Pepsi XP lip stick oh that's a horrible [Music] this horrible Pottery name for Pepsi for someone something else yeah like leper soda or something yeah foreign just slip out that door just doesn't open at all okay you're done she's ruining it old man I did the thingies over and out rig reference okay oh okay so we are going to need to clean might as well started here and then [ __ ] it just drag you in or clean will deal with the blood later we can't no we need to wrap you up all the same are they going to follow okay we just can't dispose here at all okay I thought it was actually to follow that that would have been a nice little uh AI thing if they were to follow blood New Blood trails oh they're well let's just try and deal with whatever blood we can get our hands on or our vacuum over another pistol pretty heavy duty [Music] okay so we don't have to go drag this guy all over the place here [Music] are you going to mess with that or going are you going to leave it open [Music] hmm secondly speaking we could lock him in but he's kind of in there with the guy that we need [Music] very old to go to the bodies as well somehow [Music] okay that didn't amount too much also what the heck is going on in the other room this one you mean or yeah what what are those alien plants or something yeah their plans it looks like yeah but why Audi [Music] I know Florence move in the wind but there shouldn't be really rimmed in in there I'm guessing they just made the wiggle to not be as boring boring they they just made it move frequently especially it looks like they are glowing [Music] damn it I just press one time too much [Music] okay just scoot your ass over the concrete [Music] in here [Music] and there's no place for us to squeeze through that okay It's gotta wait for this guy to turn back [Music] see just slip on by there we go imagine underport another save station here okay you are coming this way [Music] it would have been a lot easier if we had this key here see can we actually there it is let's just let's go grab that we could have grabbed his Viper but oh well we also need it anyways for there okay oh or not file [Music] oh that's a lot store okay yeah okay just gets shoved by the door let's see them can we Chuck you over this no that he probably would not have appreciated that Indie slightest I doubt he will be happy okay he's not going to get happy about being ragged over there okay quickly and there you go and now we go clean up what the heck are we supposed to do with the bodies that don't wait oh okay so those are one-time use that's going to make things a little bit more difficult okay [Music] damn it there we go oh okay they can't actually get in here okay slip out over here [Music] getting some of this before he turns around there [Music] and dump some bodies in there three let's see [Music] not the way I was expecting him to go oh well [Music] thank you somewhere you can't reach [Music] so bye bye [Music] no no time for exercise Bob [Music] you go [Music] something that we got stuck on there for a second nope Bailey is still out with his Club it's another latch door [Music] three more bodies not seeing any over here sort of probably downstairs it's like this [Music] okay at least there are plenty of disposable spots all over the place now that we have exactly enough to deal with the Corpses how's this guy down here [Music] okay I'm feeling 50 50 to be able to finish this this game today or not so far the acts have been four stories each mostly and we are probably on the finale then I'm thinking probably one more oh oh there is exactly enough disposal spots okay now I retract my previous statement yeah I suspected fully and final one after this yeah I did say it was the Final Chapter so Punk [Music] one more of these scenes I would say likely for not really out that it's a the game ends here for I'm not gonna rule that art it's unlikely but I will not be surprised unless it's like a really long cut scene where uh The Mastermind comes forward or something yeah so if they do that without for the level that that will just be disappointing [Music] okay but mother I thought he was going into the area there maybe that one is going foreign would be slightly surprised a bit surprised and disappointed but there is no level after this one that is not that they ain't the final one if this is in there for videos after this episode here again I will be or it's a bit surprised but also very disappointed is he locked in there now I think so at least he's delayed we will need to get in there to get rid of two of the bodies then we just need to learn to somewhere else but now let's stop dragging these bodies around and start wrapping them up since we can carry them a lot faster than we can drag them he's not here damn thing foreign not okay then we just go deal with this body here [Music] junior is gone thinking those fire extinguishers are also one time use let's be careful with them [Music] don't mind me so I have to say that the uh crime scene and public space thing has oh okay apparently he was hunting on the other side that hasn't been used as much as I thought it would be that we could be in an area and not be considered suspicious that hasn't come up as much as I thought it might be yeah that's kind of odd actually or we just missed most of the time it's hanging around in the crime scenes constantly order depends on the difficulty for but it wasn't very difficulty uh yeah we are on medium I believe [Music] still a lot of blood that we're going to need to clean [Music] and there's Viper probably should have been cleaning as we went but oh well well not always easy when you're trying to avoid the cup [Music] you didn't expect it to turn around like that oops [Music] and he's out of breath but he's leading us right to this one swinging a miss are they going to lose me in this for only a second oh we lost one of them at least okay please come into my office and stay in there please try the other one and okay oh that opens this area up or this side up entirely hello don't mind me just doing my job doing criminal stuff foreign [Music] and goodbye it's off to me let's dump this one away further since we still have that spot over there let's see Blondie over here doesn't turn around it goes in circle [Music] and there we go probably would have been better if we dropped one of the corpse from up here in there but oh well [Music] that's one's last from the inside so it's only really a hiding spot from outs oh dear a lot of blood that we need to clean probably charge the ball is a bit literally yeah but let's see okay the grass in those things are not moving but the flowers are there we go I mean they made a little mistake that by making the flowers glow and move maybe it's not too much of a thing [Music] that's the first time I hear you see that oh the cop downstairs heard that can you actually go up the escalator though that's the question [Music] save before we do anything stupid he's distracted so we can go this way and let's see where is the last stiff he's still locked in there [Music] let's see since we're doing F since we're dealing with the thing with bodies now anyways there's a show that was on I think Discovery for a bit or one of their subsidiaries uh called Dr G medical examiner which isn't the same as like a coroner like isn't it but it was pretty interesting and it also with informative as to how small things can get you killed if you are not paying attention to your health and such there we go just enough I think and where is the last one okay there's a lot of small things that can really break a person's like what are they called I think I think they're called Angel snails or Angel slugs oh there they are like someone on a video was holding one of those pretty things without realizing that he was looking at the damn thing did not sting him or bite him but that thing will basically kill the person who held it [Music] what was it like within two minutes or something I know there's a tiny uh just a really tiny jellyfish that is extremely venomous poisonous I think I constantly forget what is the difference uh but yeah that is not to be messed with yeah there we go but I meant more small medical things on Insta not medic small creatures or such oh yeah there's a lot of diseases and whatnot that can you may not you may overlook or just heart problems [Music] five to midnight five to two thousand I think that is there some Applause for spinning a compelling tail with two guns in my face a tail a fabrication a lie easy Bud Bob could have easily sold Palmieri out to the cups but he didn't I trust him please what do I always tell you no way out of this life I do hate my own lessons yeah it was a shockingly coherent and down-to-earth story of doing the impossible you might not be as senile as I thought see you Broad witness protection what midnight is coming remember pot kettle black yeah don't act like you've been any better you are either making [ __ ] up or a complete idiot yes it just happens that I'm an idiot an idiot with a very itchy trigger finger see ah screw it this is against the rules of a Mexican standoff is there protocol for something like this what the hell are you doing what an adult in the room should do do I have proof no but you want to know what I think I think we all talked one way or another now your gal bless her heart gave you a book about federal witness protection program the sexmus did it ever cross your mind not to keep it in the car where I can see it pal it was nothing you're reaching 1996 an encyclopedia of whistleblowers 1997 a book of famous mob informants 1998 Hagel and can't she got you reading critique of pure reason and you're still wetter buddy you love this girl you're torn well you will try to get out of this life just take her and run as a watanejo or whatever Aaron it's a wild shot but are you that Cali Yuga serpent Priestess Geo City Zoo whatever online person a bullseye huh yeah old farts can use the Alta Vista search too honey and we do have a lot of time I wasn't sure but hey if there's one person in this room I could suspect to talk in the will of the universe probably this is not me but an online Persona invented to cope it's kind of like the art of wrestling work I'm not a specialist but it sure sounds like that universe or whatever is your conscience speaking if it's telling you to spill your beans go off but cover your ass first and ours if you'd be so kind please don't it's it's okay Lottie you think I'd ever talk to the police or the government you really don't know anything if I had the hazard I guess you'd contact Hangman's old crew to help you disappear forever after finishing the work you wanted to start as a whistleblower all right you wanted to be a good man it was a huge help daddy ever managed to tell you and me I'm an old survivor [ __ ] I play for all the teams at all times maybe I've overplayed my hand somehow maybe it led to those pager messages we got how have I know it's all a [ __ ] tragedy anyway or a comedy if there's any difference at all what no yeah what now is the mob coming is the police out to get us ah we got like a minute of the 1990s left might as well see what the 2000s bring none lasts forever everything rots all the time you're right too be ready for it now I'm already rotten to the Bone it's just that sometimes you don't see the wriggling worms you know feel the sickeningly sweet stench but sometimes I think that sweet smell before the rot reaches your nostrils that's the most intoxicating 2000 is almost here wanna count down yeah sure five foreign [Music] be there in a minute okay I'm starting to think that this Mitchells really did have a dead man's switch with dirt on them or something or at least a Deadman switched to try where's the [ __ ] I called it and I hope that never had to break the glass hmm I don't ever wait we'll see it could be that they've got a bit of the body already they got rid of all the the body is missing or the developers forgot the body I don't think that this is it should have seen so come on my long face I had to come to an end better this way than another it was good while it lasted enough with the Chisel no I'm not tearing up you're gonna be all right folks I know everything around us gets weirder by the day yeah so what you gotta do now oh you know what everyone does in such circumstances shake things up a little uh turn over a new Leaf moved Arizona get a shift in perspective hope that this time something somehow will actually change for the better it won't it never does but what else is there foreign all the stories okay I'll have to look up on TV Tropes that I think we are missing something hmm unless that's one of those we need to do a perfect score to get another story or something yeah without planning a DLC perhaps and not sure it's it's still early enough you know too early to actually say if they are going to put out DLC or anything it was the deal what's the DLC for the first there was the extra levels don't really recover if there was DLC or not hmm motion capture specialist okay okay so they did have motion capture I'm guessing then the no the no lip movement Mouse movements was more of a artistic design thing yeah because I don't mind let's see I don't want this Escape over okay an L with a bit of a thing through it see could that be no it's death that is not just an artistic thing with the letters themselves because there's nowhere else as well okay [Music] Music In soundtrack I think it had a jazz quartet chamber or orchestra okay recording studio S4 of Polish radio [Music] all right yeah hello things wrote it polish yeah I was about to say it's nice that all the names are alphabetical but then this one has to break it because j-o and then back to D Production Services [Music] hmm brands creative services marketing and PR Iowa [Music] gives me did on The Stomping someday maybe let me take a look at the Steam app here again at the time yes freaking I think that something with steam is that they aren't allowed to save your birthday or something but yet still it still remembers the freaking year every time so go with the freaking year that I was that I've said I was born dumbass and leave the rest out that should be enough to tell if old enough or not let's see it's uh [Music] wait what oh okay well this is a bit curious because I scroll down a bit and one of their award-winning titles actually I think let me double check 505 are the [Music] publisher okay yeah they've over so published control that's why I recognized it and let's see anything else oh dear an upcoming game called nevales that's trending directors cuts some racing games turtle tank generals uh let's see nothing I recognize in that Puzzle Quest there rescue party grow some of the evertree red Solstice 2. yeah since they are published it's going to be very varied of course Rogue Spirits can't say I know of that Journey to the Savage Planet that was a pretty nice game from what I recall of hits from our life ghost Runner memories of Mars indivisible indivisible I think I got that game recently oh Horus that was a nice little game and ink woke up oh Blood Stained Rich love the night as well and yeah just a long list of good games or plenty of good games in there I don't know if all of those are [Music] going to be is there going to be anything behind the scenes yeah that's what I'm curious about nope voice actors Alex Brown as Don Rina the echo killer the ex on the boss and Big Joe Andres Williams as Rico celona David Cherry a some dude hangman Warden and liaison Eliza Gabriela mother and civilians Emily Ward Samantha Horatio Bakersfield additional voices Gina Robinson as Lati Canada Fountain as with the universe neighbor and police Mark Dotson is Bob Michael Freeland a psycho and Tessa Medina as Viper and the original cleaner team okay [Music] hmm the original or it could be people that left or people who made the first game and didn't work on this one maybe or maybe they did work on both of them it's always nice to have people from the old team help with something yeah look that's good a lot though hmm depending how many were not of the original team that were not on this one that could explain the weird feeling we had about this game maybe I think it's just a bit of a just they made a big leap and they stumped they stumbled a little bit on the landing but they still stuck it for the most part and we have the company babies oh [Music] sister and now I have no idea if there was a male or neat and female names Kalina sounds female Roland Leonard Nikolai Vienna bianovisky and Tobias weitman okay and Company pets okay but yeah I'm guessing those were probably Twins then [Music] company rabbits okay I'm guessing these weren't all kept at the company just uh pets of the people who work at the company also Corsair yeah I I kept forgetting this and mostly probably because I was using the controller but this game or Corsair keyboards as like I have uh do react to this game as in in the main menu it makes it seem like the keyboard is being is rainy it's always nice when a game has a special little something or RGB keyboards that will probably freaked me out if I did not expect it it has caught me off guard a few times I know Terraria also does it though not sure how many other games and okay no after thing unlock any outfits anywhere in time [Music] okay we from levels Wise Guy glass trap okay Bob's broken hearts duck crawler okay looking a bit like Max Payne from the third game again ducked crawler thank you now if there is a reference I'm completely missing [Music] just spit it out yay oh yeah okay now I get it yeah that dog crawling isn't that rare of a thing in movies and yeah here's the here's the outfit that Lottie started with uh for points okay April Latisha uh this is likely a reference to something that I'm not getting and then just think bucketed for the last skin okay I like that the the Skins are related more really really so not bad I like that they're unlocked through gameplay not having to look around for random stuff and such soap seller great gum shoe uh I thought it was I'm pretty sure there was just supposed to be some level geometry that he accidentally warped into but okay and this one looks a bit more coherent than the others with the street art yeah [Music] okay I don't love it like I Again part of it that I impressed by but no I do if it's lightly disappointed with the story like there was a lot of things they could have done well but it could also just be that we missed a lot of the hints or such [Music] 100 clear okay 100 cleared and 100 clear is that with hmm we have to clean up a certain amount of the blood as well with that probably I will not be surprised if you get a special ending for perfect score on everything no I still doubt that yeah I doubtful but I would not be surprised oh yeah still overall a very good game or at least a at the very least a good game I would say it's you know it would rate in a great game Almost sure it is just a very good game it is I didn't expect like AAA stuff research and like I said in the first one it really freaking surprised me with how big of a jump they made and maybe the story a bit lacking not on the characters but more in uh yeah more overarching thing perhaps would have been more liked or we just we just missed all the pieces wouldn't be the first time probably yeah and the ending was wrote like um I don't know something I don't hate it but I don't love it either I think I put a neutral to this one it is good but I will not call it fantastic it does feel like there are some pieces missing but that is something that you get when you jump around time so much between different people jump to run so still I enjoyed my time with this and oh you didn't go as short as I feared we might we still have about half an hour to go um I'm thinking we should just leave it at this otherwise we would just have a half hour episode of the next game that will be starting as the side project which is headlander yeah which I should be hmm if you stream this evening this I hope it means after it says you slept a bit better today yeah you might have a better chance we could go for Tomb Raider slime Rancher or headlander yeah I'm personally thinking we continue with Tomb Raider we have already made very good progress in that game we are not it's we are not in the end of it but we are in the latter half of it I'd say or I think from my poor memory and yeah we have put you know a few more streams of the side project than we typically do but oh well yeah and I think I misheard you hmm you usually had a four gig memory no a poor memory oh okay okay but uh yeah we'll see what happens tonight probably Tomb Raider uh perhaps without uh ROM present but if he is present then we could probably do our thirds binary domain stream which has been a while since we've done that yeah I prioritized that as well when he's available yeah before was three in that we would have been having a little butternut in the meantime of late did you almost say Bayonetta for some reason I don't know what I was to say there tell me short actually either way a bit shorter of a stream but not bad I have a stream so yeah let's go look for someone to raids let's see twitch and of course change the screen share over to the browser there we go and let's see who is on who are online we have sour wolves who is streaming the Dragon Ball Z Kakarot again we have pegasico who is back to Disney dream light Valley I think they streamed that before we have WB pl-76 with magic the Gathering okay let me take a peek all right so the game or are they just playing the tape the card game yeah they are just playing the card game uh I'm a flanker is doing a sign or they're doing a PC Building stream uh tirino's Yoko is once more streaming Doom 2. and then we have horatius the dwarf who is trimming Wild Horse which came out either like today or yesterday or something I know very little about it except that it's a sort of spiritual sequel to Bioshock I think that's just gonna curious like Bioshock but werewolves or something no it's uh from what I know it's set more in an alternate history where the Soviet Union discovered some um almost magical material similar to Singularity but not without the time travel Shenanigans and it actually spread worldwide instead of just nuking one Island and no that's not to say that it's a post-apocalypse or something it's not Metro okay yeah any of those sound interesting or should we look for someone else I say let's raid raid shooted wolf let's give support to the dwarf okay and it's a race years not Horatio small correction yeah I really should go find someone to greatest oh they wait they changed it did I just completely misread it or did they change the game because now it says wild hearts you said the blind hearts oh okay I'm I'm showing off my poor memory or apparently uh oh okay I I get it now I was mixing up Atomic hearts and wild hearts since they came out recently this game is more of a uh it is very Monster Hunter like though I don't know what makes it different or really uh sets it apart somehow I know there's a bunch of structure stuff but for my for most nor the most of my knowledge it is uh yeah Monster Hunter but a different uh developer or something like that or maybe even the same develops I don't freaking know either way though copy the name go to our place and try to ignore how much of an idiot I am at times so slash read and paste add air and yeah uh let's see like we said if we can do an evening stream uh we'll have to see what it is either we do more Tomb Raider maybe dump binary domain if ROM is available and if not we can do some yeah we can do some slime Rancher or perhaps do an early start on headlander yeah we have a lot of options here because I do want to blow your mind with that so to speak I mean like how do I blow your mind on daily basis I've asked there I've asked Rick here to try and avoid looking up as much as possible about headlander just I almost said yeah to see his original reactions I saw the person who founded the six second uh saw your message that stopped myself so I only seen six six and six seconds of a video okay say that five say that fast six times no you know what fine either way though uh thank you again anyone has been watching now or later and thank you as always look here you're welcome as always my friend yeah these these streams wouldn't be half as entertaining without you oh same oh wait you're gonna do a lot of hard work yeah and yeah until next time uh I forgot what happened the other half of my outro but uh yeah thank you all again for watching and until next time have a nice day and until then also let's start this raid be safe everyone have a lovely day and watch out push-up rats | Captain Hillyan | UCFlT7HwYS2SaMLvSB_Am4zA | 2023-03-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 10,530 | 53,318 |
tXVW_8I1v1s | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXVW_8I1v1s | Bioinformatics for plant and animal sciences - Lecture 13 (Part 3) | so welcome back also if you're watching it on moodle oh wait that's not sort of i just see that there went something wrong with the mood box thing but i'll fix that as well that it goes behind the uh behind my webcam because now if you if there would be too many people with a mood and all of a sudden i would have to duck down to be below the uh below the text anyway journal impact factor so the impact factor of a journal the general impact factor of the academic journals is a measure reflecting the yearly average number of citations to recent articles published by a published in that journal so the number of citations received in that year by articles published in the journal during the two preceding years divided by the total number of articles published in the journal during the two preceding years that's the way how you would calculate the uh that's the way that you would calculate the journal impact factors so and but because of this if you are a new journal you only get an impact factor after two years of being indexed so um that is uh one of the uh one of the drawbacks of the journal impact factor so there is a lot of controversy controversy controversy around the uh around the uh impact factors uh because it's not always a reliable instrument so um let's hit him with the text yeah i'm gonna duck a little bit um so and because if you make a list like here above here and you give people access to put themselves on the list right then people will start to game the system just by making a list online which is like an ordered list with numbers like one two three four five people will start and try to game the system and journals do that and so one of the things that journals do is that they publish a large percentage of review articles because review articles aren't generally cited more than research novel research doesn't rack up a lot of citations in general but an article which very nicely describes the uh which nicely describes all of the literature which is available and that will of course um get cited much more because it gives an overview of all of the things so there's also the fact that journals decline publish publishing articles which are unlikely to be cited which of course is bad for science in general right because if you have good results then you want to have your results published in a nice journal but if the journal says well this is a really good finding but since you're working in a field with only five other people and then of course they will say we're not going to publish that because we won't get the citations and it will hit their hurt their impact factor um and there's all also the thing um that you submit your article in january right to a journal let's say nature or science and nature and science say well this is a top of the line article right this will be cited hundreds of times what they will do is that they will wait right so you will have to have your review period and then you get accepted in like end of the year like in november what they will do is they will only put your article online at the first of january because the date at which an article is published counts heavily because if the article is published in um in in november then the first year is only two months long right so there's only two months for this article to get citations well if they would publish it in january then they have a whole year 12 months to rack up citations so and not only that but there is also coercive citations where an editor or a reviewer forces and forces someone to put citations to their own work which are not relevant or not relevant enough and that happens a lot as well so there are a lot of controversy surrounding the journal impact factor and all of these things also kind of hold for author level metrics so author impact factors let me actually just um do this and then i can move myself down so then you guys have a more difficult time hitting me with the with the text and everything looks good again so journal impact factors are nice but there are issues with journal impact factors so when we look at author level metrics there is the average citations per article which is a very simple metric but in general it's not the most accurate metric what is more accurate is the h index so the h index attempts to measure both the productivity and the citation impact of publications of an artist and it was invented in 2005 by a physicist called jorge e hirsch it was published in us and it is one of the most cited papers ever i think so it's a paper about citations which gets a lot of citations which is interesting um but what you do is you order the number of citations called f from the largest to the lowest value so hey if you have like 50 publications and then you just order them uh based uh on the on the on the number of citations and then you looked for the last position in which f is greater than or equal to the position right so and the first h paper so if you have 15 papers then the the the age index is the paper is the point at which your citation count is higher than the number of papers published i didn't know citations are such a grind they are in a way what if i just have one if you have one paper or one citation so if you have one paper with one citation then your h index is one if you would publish another paper then your h index would be still one right because you only have one paper with one citation and one paper with zero citations as soon as your first paper gets another citation so it's two on the first paper zero on the second paper your h index will still be one only when your second paper gets cited will your h index start climbing right because as soon as your second paper hits two citations then your citations his papers is h will be two and and not only that but there are there's like the simple age index and then you have the five year age index which goes back only the last five years so all publications older than five years are ignored in the five year age index then there's the i10 index so that is the number of publications which at least have 10 citations it's very simple and straightforward to calculate the problem here is that it's only used by google scholar so here you see the different citation indexes for me i think this was in 2000 beginning of 2017 and so you see by then on on all of it i had 585 citations and the last five years i had 543 citations my age index went down right so that means that i was a better scientist before compared to now right so the h index varies um and the i10 index does the same thing um so so it's it's it's a it's it's a way of kind of showing the world um i could actually show you guys the current one that i have so let's go to scholar go to my profile and then let's show you guys the firefox window so you can you can claim your own profile um and then where is the nice bar graph and so you can see that by now i have racked up 1363 citations um since 2016. it's 865 my h index is 16 if you count it across all all time since i started publishing and since 2016 my age index is 14 the i10 index is 21 if you count all of my publications if you count them only in the last five years then my my i10 index is only 16. right so that means that i should publish does it count if i cite myself in my next paper yes when was my first publicat when was my first publication um i can just sort by year and then go all the way in the bottom i think it was in 2010 is my first official publication i did have a this is a [Music] it's not really a publication but i collaborated in my master on this genome-wide identification of master regulators and then this is um a symposium where i joined so these are not public errors so this is not a publication publication this is from a symposium and this one is a real publication but i generally don't count it since i i it was done during my masters and i'm only somewhere in the middle so i'm not like one of the first authors but the first real paper that i i published was the the ktl paper and the rqtl paper which is also from 2010. so and you can see that by now i have 63 publications in total which also doesn't mean that much but it's just a metric all right so google scholar so google scholar provides a simple way to broadly search for scholarly literature you can search all scholarly literature from one convenient place you can explore related work citations authors publications you locate the complete document through your library or on the web you keep up with recent developments and you check who's citing your publications you can create an author profile like i just showed you but so google scholar has a lot of this advantage it's more like a it's almost like a social networking site in a way and just like researchgate is very important nowadays or is getting more and more important um google scholar is is kind of the same thing but the problem with google scholar is is that it includes a lot of dirty data so by just google scholar profiles may not last and it's only a narrow kind of scholarly impact like i said like it's not science unless it is in web of science so these people here um are in emilio delgado lopez corzar nicholas robinson garcia and daniel torres salinas in 2012 or in 2013 they became the highest cited authors on google scholar ever with millions and millions of citations and the way that they did it is just by having their own website and putting pdfs on their website which has nothing but citations to their own work literally hundreds of thousands of citations and google scholar it just takes the pdf it says well this looks like a citation and then it credits you with one citation so by having like literally a million citations in a single pdf all citing your one of your articles and this article will just go through the roof in google scholar and that is because google it just indexes what's there and they they don't really care about the dirtiness of their data although you can nowadays let me switch back to they have this star here and the star means that there might be something weird here right so the star will tell you that citations count and then they say that there are two different versions of this article one one is cited seven times and the other one is also and so these articles were merged and then the citation count was merged as well um so it might be that it doesn't really reflect the official citation count and that that sometimes happens um and especially if you do um retractions of um of of articles so they they are getting better in kind of cleaning up the dirty data but it's still not perfect and you can still become the highest cited author ever just read this paper it's a really good paper to read if you want to learn more about how citation indexes work and how you can game the system to make yourself look more important than you really are but in the end web of science is where where what counts right and normally when i write a a cv or something i list not only the google scholar citations that i have but also the citations from web of science because those are reliable because they those are more or less manually checked before they are entered into the database all right so a little word about researchgate it's a social networking site for scientists and researchers but citations count only if i publish the paper where i cited someone yes so a citation is if you publish in a journal which is indexed in web of science and you cite a paper which is in a journal which is indexed by web of science only then do the authors get credited with one citation so it doesn't matter if you cite the same article five times in the same paper in the end it just counts for a single citation so having like blah blah blah citation to danny adams blah blah blah citation to danny islands if these two citations are towards the same paper then it only counts as one clear but the dirty citations people didn't publish their work no for example it might be something like a phd thesis right in a phd thesis there are citations as well and phd thesis are generally not peer-reviewed but they are published by the university right so if you go to the university of groningen you can find my phd thesis there so google also found my phd thesis there so all the work that i cited during the writing of that phd thesis gets counted as a citation for these people well actually it's not a real citation because of course the university of groningen is not a authoritative source according to web of science and so according to google scholar i cited these people which i did because i did cite them in my thesis but my thesis is not a peer-reviewed publication so those don't count according to web of science but google scholar counts them so there's a big difference in in citation counts between the two all right so researchgate is a social networking site for scientists and researchers it was founded in 2008 by dr ilyad matic and it's located right here outside in in if you if i walk out of the building here at the invalidus there's the research gate kind of building where they have their main headquarters so the features include you can upload papers data chapters negative results which is very good because negative results are very important research proposals methods presentations software source code main thing about researchgate is that there's this ask and answer section so if you have a question about for example pcr or dna meta barcoding you can ask that on researchgate and people within the field can answer to your question and they can also vote on your question and you can vote on the answer so it gives you kind of a it's kind of a combination between reddit on the one side and facebook on the other side but it's really a nice tool if you want to find collaborators so people who are working in more or less the same field as you um and you kind of want to find people to work with so that's why it's really handy but there again is a lot of criticism about researchgate one of them is their emailing of unsolicited invitations to co-authors of its users so they will pretend that they are you so imagine that i would write a paper together with commando then as soon as i upload my paper into researchgate they will start emailing commando in my name and that that's not done and i don't think that they do that anymore but they used to do that at the beginning to kind of get scientists to sign up to their website and that's that's a little bit tricky and i think gdpr wise nowadays in europe that would not be allowed anymore they have something like a research gate score i can i can show you my research gate profile as well just to show you guys how that looks so this is my research gate and then i can go to my profile right and then it says here that my research gate score is 33.79 and then i can go to things like my statistics to kind of see what my statistics are right and then they have these nice graphs and all of these things but um the thing that i wanted to show you is not my experience i think the scores so you can see that in their score multiple things count it's not just the publications it's also the amount of questions that you asked and amount of answers that you've given and the amount of followers that you racked up so all of these things they add up to your researchgate score which of course is not really a fair way and no one knows exactly how they calculate this research gate score it's it's kind of their trade secret but they they weigh multiple things in there and of course questions and answers like if i would be very active on the site and would answer a lot of questions and then of course i would artificially inflate my score which would make me seem like a more important scientist which doesn't mean right you can make a research gay profile have no publications whatsoever and just start answering um questions and asking or asking questions and answering questions and that will improve your score um so hey that's uh so it's citation social media yeah yeah it's it's really a social media site um and um nowadays you have like literally hundreds of these sites because after researchgate elsevier tried to do the same thing and a whole bunch of other journals and you can see that i never go here so i have 19 of these unread messages but it is something that is there and it hey you can use it to promote yourself and to get more um and there are profiles on the researchgate site which are not owned by research by real people but which are created automatically and sometimes even dead people have a research gate profile which is of course not really nice and they are often criticized for failing to provide safeguards against the dark side of academic writing so there's a lot of fake publishers that use researchgate to try to convince phd students to kind of publish in their non-existing journal and rack up like or make money from that because normally when you publish something you have to pay publication cost and these journals are not real journals they're more or less ghost journals so they don't really exist um or at least not on paper um so there's a head they they try to find people who are more or less at the end of their phd and they just need one or two more publications had to get a cumulative thesis um and then they try to kind of have these people publish their work in this non-existing journal and researchgate is is really bad in separating out real journals from fake journals and it just it's not good all right so that's all that i wanted to say about like social media for uh or social networking for scientists and of course like using twitch is is just a different form right and i have 77 followers on twitch which makes me a very very famous scientist or not i don't know but you could mention it right like as soon as everyone in science starts talking on twitch about science and and bioinformatics and stuff then of course the number of twitch followers that you have starts counting then for some weird reason but that's not the way that it should be in the end it should be about the quality of your work and the quality of your work is measured by the number of people in your field that agree with you and people agreeing with you as mentioned or is kind of citations or that's kind of the metric that we use nowadays so about managing these things right because if you write a paper or if you're starting to write papers then of course you have to make citations hey you cannot just write a paragraph and just come up with it like that no you have to build up your argument right so you have to say well author a proved this author b proved that so if we take these two facts combined together with the results that i just had then we find out this is the way that it is right so this is the truth so to do these or to to manage scientific references you can use a reference manager and hey a reference manager manage things like publications reviews bookmarks notes and the ideas is that you collect and you read and you integrate all of these references in a manuscript and normally that's very very time consuming like when i did it when it first started out in like 2007 2008 no one told me that there was something like mandalay or endnote so i was just manually typing over all the information needed and then when citations had to shift from one format to another format and because you decided oh i don't want to submit to nature but i want to submit to science and the citation style from nature to science is different so you had to go through the whole paper and change all of the citations but reference managers kind of make that a a very easy job me too at some point yeah at some point everyone wants to publish an article right like that's that's the reason why you're inside and so the idea of scientific reference manager is to not have this so not have a desktop which is filled with all kinds of icons but everything is structured in a really nice way so citations you can kind of identify in a unique way so for books if you want to uniquely identify a certain book then there is the isbn number the international standard book number then things like specific volumes or articles or identical parts of a periodical are having a serial item and contributor identifier or a siki number most journals or most articles published nowadays get a doi a digital object identifier and not only electronic documents can get a doy but you can also get a doy on things like a data set right so if i have done a lot of work in the lab and i've collected like millions of data points on like hundreds of of samples then i can take my data set and i can then ask for a die on that data set so when someone else uses my data in the future they can cite the data set which which means that you don't have to write a publication no you just have to make your excel file or text file or whatever you use to store your you just have to make that publicly available besides that biomedical research articles get a pubmed identifier so a pet like the the pubmed database when your article gets indexed by pubmed then pubmed puts next to the doi it also puts a pubmed id there so that you can uniquely identify it so a reference manager supports researchers in performing three basic steps it helps you search relevant literature it helps you store relevant literature not only the literature but also things like notes or pdfs or other things and it allows you to insert citations and references into a chosen style when you write a certain text so i hope that i have the example still here but there are a couple of citation managers i think that there are two to three very big ones but the ones that i want to talk to you about is endnote so endnote is a commercial reference manager it is available for windows and mac osx so that's the reason why i'm not using it because i'm running a couple of machines that run linux so then i cannot use it under linux so endnote groups are referenced into libraries and the file is called an enl file and an enl file has a corresponding data directory so if you want to give your library to someone else you have to send them the enl file plus the data directory which belongs to it so references can be added manually you can export them from the web you can import them or you can copy them from another endnote library and nowadays everything is in the cloud so also endnote has kind of a cloud solution which is a web-based implementation of endnote and here you have the integration with the web of science which is really nice besides by side endnote you have mendeley and that is the reference manager that i am using most of the time it is a free reference manager and it's also an academic social network more or less just like researchgate in a way mandalay also has your own mendeley profile and all your publications and links to scopus and all of these things but it's kind of the same as researchgate without the question and answer section and without the mailing people and these kinds of things so it's available on windows mac x linux it's now of a nowadays even available on your smartphone if you want and you can backup and synchronize across multiple computers and via an online account so everything works via the cloud it has an integrated pdf viewer where you can put like sticky notes there text highlighting and you can do full screen reading if you have a screen reader or a kindle or something like that but the pdf so the sticky notes and your highlights and stuff they are saved with the paper so when you share a paper or a citation that you have with someone else they also can see your sticky notes and your highlights which can be really really handy they have an app for phone and ipad and it provides readership statistics about papers authors and publications which is also kind of nice because it helps you to see which of my papers are people reading right instead of just looking at the citation count you can get an idea of which of the topics are interesting to to readers of your of your articles so a very quick example so you have to create an account and after you create an account and you can download the software when you start the software you have to log into your account and you have when you want to probably install the plugin to integrate it with microsoft word or or some other text editor that you use i think they also have a plug-in for libra offers and and these kinds of things and you can add a bookmark in your favorite browser and this will allow you to just click the bookmark when you are for example on a web page or on a pdf document and this will then automatically make a citation to the web page or to the document that you are currently viewing which is sometimes really handy i don't have it installed because i don't like things in my browser i like well i do like things in my browser but those things are like ad blockers and these kinds of things so after you log in then it looks like this and here you have the literature search and the mendeley suggests so the literature search is more or less where you can search for literature and mandalay suggests is kind of this social media thing where they look at what you've been reading in the last couple of months and then they suggest articles which might be useful for you as well so for example if i search for cow genetics right then you get a whole bunch of of papers and then you just can you can click on the paper that you want um and you select the paper and then you say save the reference to my library and the nice thing is it also gives you the abstract right so you can see if this is really the paper that you want to cite so it gives you an overview of what the paper found and once you have saved your reference right then you might want to cite this paper and so when you go to word as soon as you have your mandalay installed you get this references tab and have for example you can say we use the whole genome assembly of boss taurus and then you say well i want to then so you click the insert citation button a new window opens up you search for cow genome you click the correct paper and then it will tell you um it will add the citation for you right so it will say we use old and then it will say zimmet all 2009 and but this is a special field so you cannot edit this field directly and then if you want to use a different citation style you can click on the top and you can say well i want to use the american psychologist citation style or the nature style or the science style or frontiers in genetic style so every journal has a slightly different citation style right sometimes it's zim it all 2009 sometimes it's just a number sometimes they mention like two authors and then at all but it's different every time that you cite and if you want to add the bibliography so the overview of all the citations then you have this insert bibliography button which allows you to insert the bibliography so then it looks more or less like this and of course you can then just from the drop down list select the style that you need and then for example hey if i want to switch to the genome biology style which is a slightly different style it uses a number and then here the citation gets changed as well as so you can see here that there's like the doy in there which is not in this citation style and here you don't have spaces and tabs so it saves you a lot of space a lot of time so if you write an article and then you want to go from one article or from one journal if for example you you think well i wanted to write it for genome biology you send it to genome biology and genome biology say well we don't want your article but you can submit to genome research which is our sister then genome research has a slightly different citation style but the updating of the citations is just a single click and and selecting a new one there are a lot of styles there are even more styles that you can think of but when you go to mendeley itself then you have to click the more styles button to download additional styles and this this is an old one because we already had the break right so and there's 12 additional slides so in theory i was hoping to be here so version control so any questions about citation managers and the reason why i like mendeley is because it's free and it saves stuff in the cloud so it's available everywhere and if you guys have questions or suggestions then just let me know in the chat all right so the last part of the lecture last like 20 minutes i wanted to spend with going through version control systems because version control systems really have saved my ass many many times and i'm still happy that my phd supervisor peoter forced me to use version control because it's it's difficult to start getting used to version control it seems like a lot of additional work every time that you change some code to make a commit and then make make a make a bunch of changes and then save it somewhere but version control comes in two different formats and the reason why you want to use version control i think i have a slide about that so i will talk about that later but there's two very different types of version control one of them is the centralized version control like subversion and the other one is the distributed version control so in the centralized version control the repository so the the the code or the changes to the code they all live on a single centralized server and everyone so this is me on my computer everyone gets a working copy so you can commit changes from your working copy back to the repository and you can update changes that other people have made to the repository so if you're working together with like three people and everyone gets their own version and then there's only one truth right because the server repository here that is the truth version that's the real version right so if if everyone updates at the beginning of the day and then people start working on their working copy changing pieces of code and every time that they change like something fundamental they commit back to the repository but before you can push your commit to the repository you have to make an update so to get all the changes that the other people did it might be that the guy working next to you committed like five minutes earlier so you have to bring in his changes from from the server to your working copy make the changes or integrate the changes with what you have done and then commit the changes back so the distributed version control is relatively new well not so new but distributed version control works a little bit differently so you still have a server which has kind of the the golden standard repository but everything is split into having your own repository so instead of just having the working copy you get also a copy of the repository so you can commit an update locally and only when you feel like oh my version is now hey i've added a complete feature then you can push and pull to the server repository right so to the higher level repository which is online and so you have like the ability to continue working on local copy until you feel comfortable to kind of push everything to the repository and everyone has their own version of the repository and every everyone has their own working copy so it just it just makes that you don't have a single kind of entry of truths or a single golden standard but everyone has their own repository which can change and which will diverge over time as well but by pushing and pulling you can you can update the central repository with your changes so the purpose of a version control system is to enable multiple people to simultaneously work on a single project so for example i am one of the programmers who works on g network and g network is a is a group of people and we are like between eight to 15 people when you work on over cloud no no no repositories do not get updated um in real time because that makes no sense because um the idea is that that when you the idea is that when you update the repository on the repository a lot of checks will start running so it will do like integration checks and it will do all the unit tests and if any of these fail then your push or your pool will be rejected to make sure that the repository here is always in a working state because people downloading source code will download it from the repository so the repository cannot be broken at any point in time so the push and pull will run checks or can run checks so there's no updating in real time no you decide which blocks of data you kind of change so and the purpose is to work together on a single project however it's also very useful when you are just a one person with like six laptops right i have a working computer i have a computer at home i have a laptop which i take with me traveling and all of these i want to have the code kind of up to date but also i want to be able to work locally on that and sometimes i'm on a plane flying through the us doing some work and then at the moment that i land in the u.s i have wi-fi again and then i bundle the changes and then i push the changes which i did during the airplane flight and i also use version control on my own projects when i'm the only one working on it why because sometimes you break things and version control allows you to go back in time so to find out where a certain thing broke so one of the advantages of version control is is that it integrates work done simultaneously and simultaneously here is not real time but simultaneously means over for example the span of two days right i can work on adding a new feature to g network while someone else adds a different feature and a third person adds another feature right so as soon as i think that the feature is more or less complete and ready for either production or for testing i push my code to the central repository all kinds of checks are run by the central repository to make sure that i didn't break all of the code or put in an exploit in these kinds of things and only then does the testing server pull the new version from the repository so and simultaneously means if i work for three days on a feature then someone else in the meantime can also work on that feature or on a slightly different feature and then have once we start merging the stuff to the central repository do we need to fix conflicts between what we did and the main issue that you want to do this is that version control gives you access to historical versions of your project and since we are working in science science should be reproducible right so i am writing code and then i'm publishing a paper and then i'm continue working on my code right because i might be using the same code in a different project but someone might come in two years time and say well that analysis that you did in 2019 i want to redo that analysis so what they can do is then they can take the version controlled software they can roll it back to the exact time point in 2019 when i did the analysis and they can reproduce everything that i did at that point in time which means that the the going from the data to the graph in the paper this path is more or less fixed and it is fixed at every point in time because it could be that a database gets updated in the meantime it could be that i change my code slightly while and and p values start changing slightly right so to have reproducible research you have to have everything from raw data to the figure that you are present or the table that you are presenting in your paper the the pipeline or the head the code which couples these two together should be fixed and should be restorable so you should be able to go back in time but you can also then go forward and backward in time so it gives you historical versions of your project all right so some terminology when we're talking about version control a repository is a database containing all the changes so it is nothing more than changes to a version so it doesn't say files it saves changes to a file so once you first make a file there's a new entry in the database when you update the file there's called their these are stored as changes to the file not as a new file so the working copy is a personal copy of all the files and people also use the word checkout for that so and when i when i check out the repository i get a working copy locally which i can change which i control which is not under control of someone else a commit is a collection of edits on a working copy and an update also called a pool is a collection of edits on the repository relative to your working repository right so how does this looks i have my working copy here where i make my edits and this is the repository which is the database of all edits and versions and i can commit my changes to the repository and i can update or pull the changes from the repository to my working copy updating to the new version of the software so there are two varieties like i told you centralized so in centralized version control there's just one repository so there's one database maintaining everything an example of this is a subversion also called svn and then there are different distributed versions so distributed versions are a little bit more modern they run a little bit faster they are less prone to errors but they are a lot more complex to understand and work with because there are multiple repositories so you always have to realize am i working on my repository or am i now wanting to make my repository equal to the repository online but there are some examples are for example mercurial or git so centralized version control we already saw this there's one central repository each user get their own working copy and as soon as you make a commit all the other people's can see your all the other people see the changes when you commit they have to update so there's no local repository which you can keep stable now when when one of your colleagues committed commits a change the repository gets updated and before you can continue working you have to update so you have to get those changes from the repository so distributed version control works by giving everyone their own repository and working copy after users after users commits others have no access to the change so it can make commits independently of other people so i can make changes and then more changes and more changes and no one can see those changes until those changes are pushed to the central repository because then they are visible to everyone but they don't have to update they can say well no i'm sticking with with my version of the repository that i had like this denny is a fool he doesn't know how to program so my version of the repository is the one that i want to work against so when you update you don't you do not get the other changes unless you have first pulled in those changes from the global repository so the um the structure here is you make a commit you push the commit to the central repository they pull the changes from the central repository into their own repository and then they update their code they working copy based on the changes there so a note about distributed commits and update commands only move changes between the working copy and the local repository they do not affect any of the other repositories push and pull commands move changes between the local repository in the central repository and they do not affect the working copy so they do not affect how code looks on the hard drive a little bit of a note on hit kit doesn't separate pull and update well it does separate it but when you do hit pull it actually does pull and update so it's a little bit of a misnomer there so that it's not named properly so version control lets multiple users simultaneously edit their own copies of a project can you just pull a selected part of the code no no you you pull when you pull your repository is harmonized with the global repository so you get all the changes that are done and to make it even more difficult it's not just the repository that you get because a repository can have like things like multiple branches like different versions of the software like i have a branch for windows one for linux and one for android right so four different operating systems they're different branches and these branches are coupled together into a single repository so it's in everything or nothing yeah no because you can pull and nothing changes for you unless you update so you can pull in all the changes that people made and unless you update your working copy nothing changes with the code that you have written all right so because version control lets you edit multiple copies of a project for each line in in the in in the in a text file or in a code file the new line is the original line if neither user edited right so if no one touched the line of code then this line of code is is perfectly fine if one of the users has edited this code then the edited line is the new line right because edits go before the original and that's because it's just a it's just a patch system right so you have an empty file then there's a patch coming in putting some text in there then there's another patch changing part of the text and then there's another part changing a different part of the text however conflicts occur when two users simultaneously change the same line of code right if i would change the line of code in my my work and my friend in the us would also change a line of code there and then there's a conflict because when he pushes his so when he so he is my working copy i make a commit where i change the line of code i push it to my repository i commit it to my repository then i push it to the central repository as soon as someone else now has touched the same line of code they can make a commit updating their own repository but when they then try to push their version to their central repository it will create a conflict so it will not allow them to push to their repository unless they have pulled in the changes that i made update their working copy fix the conflict commit the fix to the conflict and then push the fix plus the commit to the repository so it's kind of a a a difficult situation or not difficult but it's just a kind of three-step procedure to kind of fix these conflicts and so manual intervention is required to resolve conflict so as long as no one's touching the same lines of code everything will be merged automatically so you just say pull and so you just say oh i have a new commit so make a new commit push it to the online and the repository will merge all the changes from hundreds or thousands of users unless some of these users start touching the same lines of code all right so merging changes when you do this centralized then updates your update changes the working copy by applying any edits that appear in the repository but have not yet been applied to the working copy in a centralized version control system you can update at any moment even if you have locally uncommitted changes but if you update in a central system so if you update in a central system you get all the changes that other people made which might have which might introduce conflicts into your working copy right so then you have to fix the conflicts and make a commit that kind of solves this conflict um but in a distributed version control if you have an uncommitted change in your working copy then you cannot run the update step because you have to have a stable working copy before you can update before you can get the changes from someone else and so before you're allowed to update you must commit any changes that you have made after this you can run the update which then can create which then can create conflicts and then you have to merge the two sets of edit and then commit the result so head it just tells you well this line of code you wrote this the other guy wrote this which one of the two is the truth and then you just say well take my version or take his version and you delete the other version and then you commit the resulting code all right so this is more or less how i work so when for example i'm working on my web server which lives here the first thing that i need to do is get a repository and a working copy of a project so i only have to do the first two steps one so i say hit clone and then the thing where my repository lives right so if i i can then go into the directory and from now on i have my own copy so all the changes um and so first get any changes done by others because hey well and so when i start working in the morning i i look at my own copy and then i say hit pull and hit pull does a pool and an update so i pull in all the changes that everyone else made overnight then i start working and working means i repeat the following steps so i make some local changes right so i for example add a feature or change some lines of code or i make or i fix a bug so what happens is then i examine the changes i can do that using hit status hit status lists me which files have been changed i can then do a hit diff with the file name to show what has changed in the file i can then add the changes that i made with add so i can say hit add file one because it might be that i changed code in file one then i create a meaningful commit message saying hit commit minus m i added a new feature and then i update your version with the changes pushed by others in the time that i was working so i do a hit pull and then i publish my changes doing a hit push and every time that i do a hit pull i might run into a conflict so when i do a hit pull other people might have created or other people might have worked on file one as well and as soon as they hit the same lines of code that i hit then i have at this point when i do the hit pull i have to make a merge so then i have to fix any conflicts that occur and then i push my changes to the local repository meaning that other people from now on have to do it when they do a pull they might have to fix the conflicts that they introduced towards me and of course this is just something that goes round and round and i do this sometimes 20 times a day sometimes 30 times a day sometimes zero times a day it depends on how much i'm coding and but the way that it works is i do a hip pull get all the changes that other people made i go through this loop every time and the other people do the same so they just go through the loop all right so some best practices when you're using version control use a very descriptive commit message it take take a moment of time to write a very good commitment message this is the thing that goes mostly wrong people say hit commit minus m updates and then no one knows what's getting updated so commit messages are more or less your documentation of what you have changed on the code so a good commit message is added the implementation of feature x or um fixed bug number 16 or fix the bug as reported by this forum post or these kinds of things right so they have to be logical concise and short and this is useful when someone is exterminating the change because it makes the purpose of the change clear each commit should be a logical unit right you shouldn't change 100 files and then just commit all of the changes in one go no commit should be small so you should take like okay so i add a new file and to import this file i have to change one or two other files so so commit should be as small as possible and should be a logical logical unit right so i'm working on fixing a bug or adding a new feature i don't add a new feature and fix a bug in the same commit that's not how this works and you do step by step so you should avoid indiscriminate commits so do not commit all the changes at once if you're having changed 100 files then first separate out what are the logical units like i fixed the bug in file number one i added a new feature in file number two i changed the wording in the documentation in file number three so all of these are individual separate commits and so incorporate other other people's changes frequently and this prevents conflict so every time that you start working or when you are working especially if you're working in different time zones and make sure that you get the changes from other people as often as possible which also means that you do you make branches for each individual update fix as well yes and no yes and no it depends so for my web server i have a single branch called development and the development branch accumulates changes relative to the master and when i am happy and they have a new version which i deem to be stable then this branch get merged into master so for example for my web server i only have two different branches um but for my 3d engine i have like four or five different branches because sometimes i'm working on a feature which i'm not going to complete or might not complete and so for example android support for the 3d engine was its separate branch which got merged back when the android support was completed but in the meantime i also did other changes like bug fixes which then went into individual branches so it really depends on what you are working at and especially since for example the web server is available online right and people can can kind of follow the repository i try to never directly push to the master branch because if i make five commits then people would get five emails a day of me changing something so that's why i use a development branch and i just accumulate all kinds of different versions bug fixes and and new features and then i merge it back to the main branch in one go and i also rebase so that that in that case there's only one big commit that other people see and not the like hundreds of little commits that i do does it answer your question so it depends on the project if i'm working with other people then i generally work in branches if i work on my own i sometimes work in branches depending on the software and depending on what i want to add or what i don't want to add for example my how berlin repository which is all the code that i wrote to it only has one branch just the master and all commits directly go to master because i'm the only one working on it and i don't accept changes from the outside so all right so um some best practices is coordinate with your co-workers right i used to work um at the umcg with mole genus well jenna's had like 17 different programmers and when we would come into work in the morning we would just sit down and have like a little chat so what are you doing today what are you doing what are you doing what are you doing so that we did not start doing the same thing or work on the same bug which sometimes happened that you didn't know like someone was working at home and he fixed the bug and i was working and i also fixed the same bug and then we only figured out when we tried to commit the changes because then one of them was first and that that so version control tools are line based they work for text files so you should never ever add binary files like word documents powerpoints images well images might but only put under version control text files that is what they are there for do not write excessively long lines especially in commit messages or in or in code but incommit message is very important because as a general rule try to keep each line a maximum of 80 characters and this 80 character it stems back from the 1970s uh when we were all still doing like um dos because the screen would only show 80 characters and the rest would either go off screen or it would start wrapping around which is really really annoying um never ever ever commit files which are generated because they will change every time right i run the generator um and i put this in because molgen is used to generate a lot of code so it's a it is a software package which generates a web interface based on a database structure and i made this presentation like years and years ago when they were moving from svn to hit to kind of explain them what the differences were between centralized version which they were doing to distribute it which was kind of the future at that point so version control is intended for files that people edit generated files should never be under version control and never commit binary files that are the result of compilation because that's actually a double no-no right because you're committing a binary file like something like an axa or a dll or an so or a dilip these files have nothing to do in in version control so they should never be under version control because they are not line based right in a binary file everything in theory is on one line so if you change a single byte then the whole file has changed and you're just making the repository like gigabytes big in the end all right so often your version control system can ignore certain files so in hit this is called the dot hit ignore file and you can just add extensions that you would never want to commit so for example in my let me see i can show you an example here so i have here a hit ignore file so this is my web server um i know this is in no way linked to biology but we add that we do add generated files in version control our css gets generated compiled from css yeah shouldn't do that should just have this css css files under version control same from minifi yeah shouldn't be in version control generated files have nothing to do in version control because you can generate them at each time and the generation might be different depending on which tool you use if you use a different minifier the file would look completely different but the content of the file is the same so you should never generated files should not be there it's it only should have text files but about the hit ignore file so i have a hit ignore file right and this ignores um my websites that i'm hosting oh i still have crossland um but also like the the executable files um the the test executable i don't want any of the certificates in there so certificate of course you should also never commit certificates right like if you have a public key private key you should not commit the public key or the private key and you should also not commit passwords so because my server is running https i have a server certificate and a server key and of course i never ever want to commit them by mistake because that would kind of blow up the security of my whole server so i just put them here to make sure that that never happens and i never want to get these are my generated files so my generated files are dot in files which are input to the web server error files list files log files definition files never ever commit those and also don't commit any qr codes that the website generates because those should not be in there as well um but that's the and also never never put my let's encrypt script in there for security reasons but you can create these files so never so tell your version control system to ignore certain files that you shoot and so add a filter so that you cannot commit these types of files and never force it if a version controls if a version control system refuses to do a certain action for example push to the remote repository you should figure out what is wrong you should never ever force push your local version to remote because this breaks everything for everyone so never ever do that so never force push a version control system all right i hope you guys are not too too worried about the fact that we took 10 minutes longer just remember that the lectures used to be four hours instead of three so you're already lucky but today we talked about dna meta bar coding we talked a little bit about pubmed about medline about web of science google scholar researchgate h index i index scientific scientific reference managers head citations are there to keep people honest and to attribute who invented what we talk about reference managers like endnote and mendeley and i told you a very little bit about version control and that you should use version control and of course if you have any questions about version control or these kinds of things then just let me know like for things like hit and subversion and mercurial there's like a lot of tutorials online which you can read but i just wanted to give you like a little idea of why you should use it because you reproducible research means you have to stabilize things and you have to be able to go back in time because i want to do the same analysis there's a very interesting lecture i have a new view now on citations thanks i will stop the recording for the people that are watching | Danny Arends | UCYWBlijAB6IOpHIwsb3cecA | 2021-04-30 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 10,905 | 56,938 |
UXmrLWga53Y | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXmrLWga53Y | Chuck Taylor All Star White Lugged Converse High Tops | [Music] hi guys and welcome to enigma 77 review so I have put a picture of this item up on Instagram and lots of people have been asking me where they're from have I got the link and so forth and I did say I will get them on now most of you will know I've had a little bit of darling with my editing PC it is died it's crashed it's kaput it's gonna cost me 100 pounds fix it so until then I've actually had to download kdenlive onto my windows which slows me down completely but I've got a pad so I can actually communicate and do my promoting on my on my pad rather than use my PC so guys before I dig into the shoes that everybody wants the link for I picked two items from Amazon now as you know I've got a competition coming up well most of you should know I've got a competition coming up oh and if I just noticed something's got a little bit of a thread I need to cut that and it's the alternative modeling competition I've decided to join in meet some lovely people it's been on my list to do some kind of catwalk I used to be a child a child model and if that makes sense I used to be in the back of the pair so up as a kid and I did a little bit modeling when I was younger so and it's something I always wanted to do but because of my way and fluctuating and being like conscious about things I never bothered so now I'm gonna do it Amazon and they were super cheap there was 649 each and I ordered them both and they came the next day how about that I'm gonna on prime anymore so they came regardless they were just super fast so this is the first one as you can see it's like a corset a corset belt and it's on big elastic this one is the three press studded buttons and you have a belt upstairs that's got like a faux leather like this but it's completely different I love this because it matches my Doc Martin boots my Ferrando I think the old Vonda boots now the outfit I'm wearing for my competition is in these colors so I just thought this would look nice with my outfit so I grabbed this for that reason now what look as good with what I'm wearing but just give you an X on pop it it just sits let me just put my jumper down so that's I've got a jumper on it just sits nicely and it kind of cinches you in at the waist as you know I'm dated the minute oh the way things are going at the minute I'm losing went quicker than I anticipated I was gaining weight for a little while and now I'm losing wear so these came super super fast so I've got one in the red I will link them down below guys they have them in black they haven't been brown had him in blue a think we had him in pink and they had green they didn't have purple which I was gutted about because I needed purple so instead of getting a purple I got a plain black one now this one is velcro and it's quite a strong foul cross so it will stay on so I thought these were really nice for the price so guys go and check em out and I'm not going to do a trial because these are part of my outfits for my competition I'm actually having outfits made by the lovely Sarah Eddie and Michael Eddie which from the shop Moo Maiden if you haven't checked them out go check em out absolutely brilliant and I'm actually having two headdresses from the Gothic hats as well which should be here very very soon I don't know if I'm gonna do a review on I'm just yet because I don't really want to reveal too much of my outfit if that makes sense I want to make it as a surprise for everybody right so for mothers their eyes I've actually been bought two pairs of converse one is actually from Ben but he said just say it's it's another present I don't know maybe from all the kids or something even though they're old enough they're too bad the wrong gifts but none of them have been able to get home um but zach-bots with this pair so these came the other day I did take a picture of them and I absolutely love them as you know I do like converse I do find him comfort I don't like the flat / I've got a black pair of high-top converse upstairs in the two flat I don't like the soul of the real other thing and I kind of feel everything underneath my feet and I have done a review on all the converses if you go into my shoe playlist you'll see all the reviews on there and so far out of all them the comfiest pair I would say is the pink ones which are not the high tops are they're just the novel plimsoll ones and the white ones are quite confident so that's not a problem with having white trainers converse don't say Rick Lee oh absolutely love these so I didn't pick these I had no idea about these none whatsoever so this is what they look like guys I have less them up and I have tried them all and the information for this in here so let's do a little bit of a review I have tried them all and I've taught some pictures I will do a trying at the end for you okay so these are from the office dot uk' I get all my I think they're from eBay guys I get all my converse from here I'll show to say Ben and sack Chris man we've done that got it so guys these are Chuck Taylor All Star luggage high white high tops there were 45 pound it was 3.50 delivery so it's 48 pay 50 altogether I've got customer number order number and a delivery number and the dispatch so their dispatch from the 15th of March and they came pretty much two days ago I don't even know what day it is today guys don't know anything I am behind everything I do have another pair coming they do have returns no and he told you how to do the returns if you're not happy with them I'm happy with them I've tried them on I will discuss the one thing that I find a bit weird so these are what they look like white but walk at the Soul I love chunky platform shoes trainers Boop's anything platforming I love absolutely love now I do like high tops because they do protect my ankles and they were very very sturdy wearing my ankles I do have a white pair of Converse that I've got the strangest strangest of souls but the grips absolutely amazing these again are really good grips sturdy very very sturdy inside they've got the black converse sole they're quite squishy inside so I don't need to put any insoles in them the insoles in itself are extremely comfortable I love the fact that they've got the little symbol here now the problem that I'm having is the chalk sign is on the inside on both of the bloody shoes they are converse hey I mean I want like a doc anywhere so do-do-do-do-do you're gonna see them but for me I would have liked them to be on the outside now when the next pair come I will check to see if they're the same by seven guys as well and I just think because they've got such a wide platform quite a thick platform they have that spongy effect of like you're walking on sketchy starters like sketch of style shoes which I love sketches they're not very pleasing to the eye some of them but they're comfortable and when you've got issues like mine sometimes you've got to go with comfort I know I collect shoes guys and some of the shoes like I buy a cab were which seems pointless really but am I like them and that is just my aesthetic that's what I like that's what I collect and these I will were summer times coming I have my new Melissa sandals which I will were this year and I will get my pleasure out of them I don't wear madam or new sandals so much now because when I crawled in and they're hurt and I've never worn them since but I will start wearing my converse in the summer as well so I love the fact that I'll get my pink ones out yes and our pink I would like another purple pair of high-tops I keep saying to my husband if you're going to get me anymore get this one purple or green or red don't have to do red high-tops but I'm actually love these and I think the worth the prize without a doubt I will then come down below and we'll go and do a tryout now you can see how jazzy they actually look I've just got some normal grey trousers on today which for like cropped so you'll get to see what they look like with them alright guys make sure you subscribe comment below and let me know if you bought these do you like converse what do you think these these are actually women's as well for not men's you can buy men's ones as well and let's see what the black ones like when they come apparently my husband said you probably won't like the black ones but we'll see we'll see alright guys take care of yourself and I see you in the next one you will see how this look was created on a video which is gonna be a weekly video it's gonna be a weekly pallet testing and using up some of my makeup alright guys take care bye for now guys can I just say that doing the problem with high tops I don't know if everybody will have the same issue because I have a back issue I can't physically bend down for too long to pull white shoes on and a fire with high tops you've got to loosen all the laces to try and get your foot in these are not as hard or some high tops to get on just fart I'd come back and tell you that alright guys see at the end [Music] [Applause] [Music] you | Enigmareviews | UCm5hPX7pYqj89dwEz1Ok3gw | 2020-04-18 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,829 | 9,047 |
ocJKvOZDHuA | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ocJKvOZDHuA | Getting Started wtih Xmonad - Part 1 | hey everybody welcome back to the channel uh i forgot to hit the damn start record button again in obs but this time i remembered it after only like a minute i didn't get through the whole video like i did yesterday this is getting ridiculous i'm gonna have to put a sticky note to my forehead or something it's dumb anyway so on this channel i do some tutorials and i label them as tutorials because usually when i do a tutorial i know what i'm doing it's a pretty well established assumption that if you're going to teach somebody some how to do something the teacher knows how to do it other times i do these learn along with me style videos where i set myself a task and i have no idea how to accomplish the task i just do the video in hopes that you learn from my mistakes that's what today's video is going to be today we're going to get started with x monad now x moment is a dynamic tiling window manager i think maybe that's what you call it it's a tiling window manager for sure i'm just not sure if it's dynamic or not i think it's like dwm and spectre wm or whatever in terms of how it tiles i've only been using it for about five minutes i've got so far as to install it i've got it running on bare metal in in arko i've found that the configuration files and i've changed the configuration file so the mod key is the windows key and not the alt key and i've also changed it so that the binding to quit the windows is a little bit different so because it it's like mod shift c or something is is the default i just want mod q um i also got my shift q to quit q tile and mod shift i think much if q is to restart i don't know i've changed it that's the point but that's all i've done um i have found that the i did try to change the default terminal i have not succeeded in doing that yet um so that's going to be one thing so here are the things that i want to do today i want to so let's actually just jump into the so you can see actually what i'm doing here this is xmo and this is um that's literally all you get um there's no bar there's nothing this wallpaper here is just uh the default um arco linux wallpaper i'm not sure why it's there because usually you would just get a black screen so i don't know how that's being pulled up or where it's being pulled up from but i don't have even a wallpaper really set yet i don't have a bar um but the things i want to do today i want to get a bar i want to get it so that when it has hit mod enter i actually get a uh terminal which right now i do not um i do want to make sure that i'm actually recording because i'm going to be one of those people that stupid have to check two or three times my ocd just is not you know anyway so i'm gonna bar terminal i also would like to do some coloring you know because right now if we do um mod p which is d menu which i'm gonna have to change that to and open up terminal you know the long way this border right here is red i want to get rid of that and probably match my dracula thing right now um and i also want to if i have time on this video uh transfer some of the key bindings over to an sxhkd file which means i'm going to have to figure out how xmo nab does autostart files um so we got a little bit of road ahead of us i don't know how much of it i will get done in this video um i'm assuming that this is probably going to be part one of me messing around with x moned uh so just make sure you subscribe and hit the notification icon if you want to see part two if this doesn't turn out to be a complete farce which it very may very well be so um xmln stores its configuration files in dot x moon at in the home directory okay and this is what the file looks like it has some things here um now my ex known ad config is xmonhed.hs and this is just the bog standard default configuration files which i believe comes from this folder here i actually found it on the internet because i didn't know that folder was there i just found that out right now so uh that's how like i said that's how smart i am so just and we'll make this bigger i think that should be big enough yeah okay so for those who don't know x monad is written in haskell i know absolutely jack shite about haskell now for some reason the first let's first see if we can troubleshoot why the terminal thing is not working because because termite should work um i think that's the class so it might maybe the maybe the class is um different so let's open up x prop so let's do a ctrl p terminal termite okay and x prop alright so let's see if we if we do this with a capital t if that works change letter okay and write right quick and we just written quit and do xml add recompile okay so it did succeed which is good okay so if we do mod shift and q that should do now if i do mod enter no my enter did nothing oh you wanna i bet you there's a conflicting key binding i think i did see that because you notice when i press mod enter the window is switched around ah i bet you i bet you okay so what if i do my shift enter no okay so the okay what the hell where'd my config file go oh it's because i'm in the wrong uh close that okay all right so v okay and then let's go down here to the key bindings i bet you i have a duplicate so i have right now i have my shift return should start a terminal mod shift return does not do that why my shift return should terminal.com i'm i don't know anything about haskell this doesn't make any sense because my term they define up here they differ defined the terminal as my terminal but down here where we have to launch the terminal thing they don't use that variable they just use terminal weird okay but still right now i have mod enter mod enter swaps the master around um so what if we just commented that out for right now and we'll come back to we'll just eventually we'll find a different um because might enter for to swipe the master around is just really weird why don't you use mod and vim key or something um anyways so why don't we just you want all right we'll just do this we will oops we will we'll leave this and do comma so these are two um parentheses mod m okay comma there's some spaces here x k underscore return parentheses comma spawn termite i mean what's it gonna hurt let's see if that works okay we'll right click this here and we'll recompile that that oh you wanna it would help if i s if i actually you know oops typos are the the dickens i actually got to spell things right who knew okay that's actually really cool um when you make an error it shows you exactly where it is it doesn't do that in dwm or um even q tile doesn't do that now um i3 will do that that's if you have it set up properly um okay so actually see look at this spelled spawn with an m so change letter n like a q and now we can recompile and now we and now i'll do my shift q and mod enter huzzah now that's only for temp temporarily because eventually that can be deleted and moved to sxhkd which i'm going to use okay so quit out of that and back into our config file so the next thing we have to do is go to a different workspace so we'll just go to six here and open up mod p and firefox all right and we're in firefox now we need to learn how to use xmobar or do we want to use let's see how to uh use auto start in xmode ad how to start programs in xmomen ad i want to start some programs the next moment i've read that you have to write them in a accession file the problem is that they will all be auto started in my other window managers too that's dumb there's no way that's true if that is true that's dumb i'm currently configuring testing next month so i don't want to affect the startup programs of my other window managers i have is there another way use dot x rc you can have a look at the x session of the group for example you really have to use that x in nrc there's no other way to do to do auto start files in because xn rc is going to be used for every window manager if you use slim what the is slim then it will send let's zoom this in so people can read it if you lose use some then it will send a session name as an argument to the accent because i know you can use different excellent rc files maybe i think i saw that on a video somewhere but still no that's not what i want the other option would be to use the startup hook in your xmoy.hs i'm using the first method though so best ask someone okay so startup hook i'm gonna search google for startup hook um xml uh zooming in okay let's see here doo doo doo doo so do start up look okay right here easy enough okay modifying the okay so to run a desktop the desktop starter hook plus add further actions to be run each time x moment starts or restarts use the plus i don't know what that means to combine actions as in the log hood example or something like this comma startup all right so let's go ahead and go to one here and search for startup hook that's the only okay let you wanna let's go look at dts i mean when in doubt look at dt's config file so we'll do this one here and i i happen to have his dot files download cd downloads get things dt dots ls see not files s okay so cd.x won't add ls okay so vim xml hs okay so start up hook and that's the only startup he is so he has autos okay hey look at that i learned how to make vid make windows bigger cool okay i don't know any of these things mean um [Music] that's a lot of stuff dt that's a lot of stuff holy hell okay i don't know what the truth true selection is going to be for that menu that he did um that doesn't do me any good my startup hook do okay this is what i want to do um so what if i okay that's good all right so let's do this okay my startup hook equals do okay so i'm going to change that at the dollar sign let's see here so do okay i'm not going to add this line here but i'm probably going to end up having to because mine doesn't have that by default but let's just see all right so we want to do spawn once and we do want to let's see quotation marks nitrogen dash just restore ampere stand okay spawn once python yeah and the ampersand okay did i spell that right s no see look at this that's better do there does there need to be a space after the ampersand no okay spawn um let's do it again once and we want um hmm s x h k d uh i can't remember i think i'm gonna hold on off on s h k because i'm gonna have to go and see what the flag is in order to uh it's either gonna be dash c or dash dash config i can't remember which one it is um i think that's good right there okay so let's um we may end up having to do this line here i'm not sure yet okay and then x1 add recompile that did not work variable not in scope spawn once so i bet you hmm okay well you wanna we'll try again my startup hook okay and we will do this my startup hook yep two colons x and this here okay and see if that will allow it to compile no still won't okay variable not in scope what does that mean i don't know haskell my my limitations in haskell are proving to be my downfall okay so let's go back to um see this is one i think i was on six for the browser without a bar telling me where my damn uh okay so that works the same way as other ones all right you got some little artifacting over here um this is which startup hook do it isn't called my startup it just calls it startup hook um doo doo doo well let's go see if this works instead because i'm using i'm not using dt's config file i'm using the default one so it makes sense to do because this one doesn't have spawn once it just says startup hook desktop config spawn okay let's go back to one and get rid of these okay we can get rid of dt's because his obviously don't his thing doesn't actually work okay my startup okay so we will delete this line here and just call this startup hook okay and i think that's what it was this startup hook equal to with a capital h yep weird syntax uh i can't believe i've already been recording for 20 minutes crazy stuff okay so if i wanted to do i'm assuming desktop config is a program and this is how you do a script but i bet you if you spawn i bet your spawn is done for the same way as program okay so we just use spawn okay so go back to one okay i'm gonna leave the ampersand and see if that worked i'm gonna take that ampersand out i was gonna say i don't probably need to put the ampersand back in i'm okay excellent add recompile still no okay ambiguous recurrence you could refer to startup hook i'm so confused so if we let's go in here and call it my startup hooking that worked okay so if we quit this out here and do mod shift q hahaha that worked um and my preview for for obs died so i'm hoping that my um recording is still going but uh that worked because i know it worked because here's my wallpaper okay and turn my end pi comma is working because i have transparency ah we're so good okay so now i need to go check and see so cd.dwm ss sxhkd msxhkd rc i wanted to see well that's not what i needed to do that's the wrong one so cd dot uh vim auto start here we go this is what i want to need to check for sxhkd it's dash it's the dash c flag okay so we want to do here is go to um we want to quit this actually we're just going to spawn another one and make this bigger so cdna.xml add and make directory sxh kd okay and a cd into that directory s hkd and we're going to touch sxh kdrc okay and we're going to then we're going to quit this okay and we're going to them sxhk drc and we're going to open a vertical split of um let's see here uh it doesn't really matter either because the top ones are going to be the same anyways so if we do um tilda slash dot dwm sxht dsx kdrc okay and we and go into visual mode here and while that transparency really makes it hard for um so we're going to do is uh go all the way down here to the non yeah we can leave those there i think we want the volume ones and honestly i'm pretty sure all this stuff can actually go right here it doesn't matter so technically i could have just used this file but we'll do uh yank and we'll do let's see okay and we'll do oops oh no i was in the wrong one apparently we gotta do some undo okay so visual mode uh g uh yank okay and we need to go into the other uh buffer which is this one here i think and paste there we go okay and then we just uh right quit that and right quit that we can just quit that okay all right and then we want to do uh cd up a level and them into oops x oops xmode.hs and do my startup hook okay and we want to do this spawn all right gonna quotation marks s h k d dash c tilde slash dot co exponent slash sxhkd ah right in line like that okay and slash sxhkd rc why does it do that time okay now uh we need to do some removing of uh key bindings here so we want to um get out of insert mode we want to remove this one here so dd we want to remove the menu um we definitely want to keep this open so i can undo these changes just in case okay when i remove that one uh we want to remove um i'm going to keep the kill one because i don't i think that's good this is gonna be different one um i don't think uh let's see we want to remove doo doo doo we want to remove none of these restaurants i don't think i don't think i've removed any of these other ones um nope i think we can just leave all of that for now because i don't think that i'm going to be and do be able to do any xml ad specific key bindings like this recompile things you know with sxhkd i just don't think that that's going to be possible so we should be able to do this w we'll write because we're going to stay in this and open up a new one here and do x moment add dash as add recompile and that worked okay so we do mod shift and q and now we should we should be able to still do mod enter for yes yes sxhkd success this is a successful video so far as long as i remember to repress the record button all right so we can quit out of that and um we want to keep we can keep that open we want to um okay so the last thing we want to do before maybe maybe messing around with college and we're at um 28 minutes so far in this video wow uh i want to see if i can do do get a bar running so the question i have is do i use xmo bar so if we go here to our things here and search for xmobar uh so xmobar continues to we have a tutorial here well okay cool well this looks like the q tile uh config file or um documentation here's what's inside my x-mobile rc okay so blah blah blah blah blah okay i don't know any of those things mean these are just run weather i mean it a little weird okay there's a lot of options let's break it down here so border color this defines border color is black until this person is british there's an extra letter in the word color uh border is throws a border background colors defines the background color that's really easy but it doesn't say where to put this so you're like i can download xml xmo bar from the uh what i'm thinking about doing is just using polybar why can't i just use polybar why do i have to make myself you know why must i hurt myself so badly trying to learn something new i mean why why i've pushed myself to learn xmobile when i could just use what i know um i think for now that's exactly what i'm going to do so we'll go back here and we'll uh because we're going to need two terminals so we we want to go to my startup hook hoop i wonder what the key binding is to switch focus because right now i don't really want to use my freaking mouse every time i suppose we could mod k is focus sync so that's going to change mod it's my jk my jk oh there we go look at this i'm learning stuff all right so slash my startup hook okay and we want to do this okay spawn um oh man i can't remember i think it's i think you just have to use i you just have to do the launch.sh command so what i want to do here is um man i don't know if that's going to work do i still have xmonet i think i do so if i do um cd.config polybar and then then config slash xmod i do good okay so what i should should be able to do is get out of this and just do um ls if we just go over here and do um launch tilde slash dot config slash poly bar slash launch dot sh okay and do colon w and we'll go over here and see click here and x mode add dash recompile i think actually when i think if i just do i think i looked and saw just now that if i just do mod shift q that actually recompiles it all automatically that didn't work spawn okay i bet you if um okay we can close this and go to six and um [Music] go backwards right here the that should explain xml sh i won't let you do so won't let you do a uh very confused so you can't use spawn i don't want to move this to path i really don't want to because i have mult i i use poly bar in in bspwm as well and i have that as its own configuration file so i don't want uh i mean i could theoretically i could move it to path but call it something differently but i don't want to do that so the startup here this would be calling a this is going to be a script as well these are all i bet you both of these are going to be in this person's path hmm what does this mean i don't know what that means okay all right so we're going to stop there for now this is this video has gone on for 35 minutes we were not successful with the bar but overall pretty successful we've got a lot of key bindings changed we can close this and go back to one uh we got some auto start things working which is muy bueno so good um i haven't got that you know working yet but the poly bar but i will the next time i do a video on x1 i'd work on the bar we'll work on the coloring inducing doing some racing uh that'll probably be in january when i get to that because i've got a whole list of videos i'm going to be doing but that's still overly very successful so if you enjoyed this long meandering video on how to do things that i didn't know how to do give us a thumbs up or give us a thumbs down if you really hated it for some odd reason thumbs downs are so not nice i mean just be nice and give us a thumbs up make sure you subscribe for when the eventual part two of this video comes out and we continue to do my explorations of the x monad and also the notification icon notification bell icon thing will alert you to videos that uh i uploaded because i do upload new videos every single day uh some of them are tutorials some of them are rants some of them we do a weekly podcast and i'm still working on increasing production value i hope i've uh if you watched the first few videos that i did this um these are definitely better not that much better but they are better uh and they're even better when i remember to press the record button which i did do this time i've checked four or five times now okay so anyways um hopefully uh hopefully uh yep audacity is still recording i would have been so mad anyways thank you for watching uh we'll see you next time | The Linux Cast | UCylGUf9BvQooEFjgdNudoQg | 2020-12-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 4,353 | 20,807 |
dFAKAzrzkx8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFAKAzrzkx8 | Love in the Time of COVID: Ask an Abolitionist | immigrant and refugee communities if you are interested in becoming a multilingual natural helper please contact lori at api chaya.org i hope we can add this to the chat we um api taiya proudly supports language accessibility and we thank them for their support for love in the time of covet we also give thanks to the seattle department of neighborhoods for support with interpretation to the seattle office of arts and culture we're going to start today's program with youth interviews and i want to thank alex for having that media ready we have a media rich program and we're doing it on zoom and anything is possible so thank you to our audience for your support um the art club young people who do those interviews are part of a program at butler family place and standpoint and special thanks to david oliveira and oliver for their support in doing that workshop i am going to hand you over to our our amazing event emcee i'm going to show my face really quickly nikita oliver um nikita thank you for taking it away thank you so much davida good evening everyone my name is nikita oliver and i use they them pronouns thank you for joining us um i'm going to do my very best to speak slowly to support our interpreters and our cart interpreter to make sure that this event is accessible and i want to encourage others who speak to also be mindful of that all right tonight's program is designed very intentionally to be bilingual and to connect the themes of mass incarceration and detention for black indigenous communities of color including black native asian latinx pacific islander and all of our melanated siblings around the world to make this event as accessible as possible we are utilizing captioning in real time also known as cart interpretation so shout out to cleo brooks and lisa hutchinson we also have live interpretation from english to spanish and from spanish to english so big thank you to stefania fannis sandra and orlando and i just want to encourage us english speakers who are not used to this experience to really pay attention and note the value of having this experience of hearing the beautiful language of spanish and then needing to access interpretation and just note what that means especially for those of us who have grown up in a place where our mother tongue has maybe been centered let's tune in to some of our spanish content and hear some mantras recorded by the distinctive family please hit the chat with one word about what love and the time of covid means to you and while you're doing that let's talk about access to interpretation there should be a globe if you look to the bottom on your zoom screens it's in the bottom right corner it looks like a world or globe and if you click that the language options will show you and you will have an audio in spanish and an audio in english when you click the icon with the square and the cc button or closed caption button the english captions should appear so again look at the bottom of your screen to the far right is a globe that says interpretation and it provides language options you can also mute the original audio that way you can if you need to isolate the language that you want to access you're able to do that and if you want to access closed captions there's a button that says cc that you can also click all right i just want to type go ahead divide it esperanza [Music] thank you so much davita um and i also just want to let y'all know uh if you need to access support lrt is our tech support with api chaya you can message them and they will provide you with uh directions on how to access interpretation and then again if you're looking for the closed caption button if you go to the bottom there is the tab it says or a button that says cc and that should help to access the closed captions i hope you all will enjoy this next video with young folks from the art club and standpoint you'll be hearing from azeeb lizeth and nevaeh whose brilliance and critical thinking we deeply appreciate we love your energy and we're going to also see for one of our loved ones dakota camacho on deck who will show us about getting moving to music and i want to give you a heads up grab a marker and a blank piece of paper because uh dakota does a live set where we will have opportunities to do some drawing the the video we're going to watch with these young people is going to direct us to our four themes for tonight those themes are healing and repair eyes on native and black mass incarceration free them all art hit with sayer family stories of detention and care not cages a mother on the front lines of covet outbreaks so please prepare yourself to hear some stories and also watch a very hilarious video i invite you all to stand up and i'm going to play a song i'm going to invite you to just do what you see me doing our goal on thursday is to help community members understand what an abolitionist is so am i correct nevaeh lizette and azab that the word abolition is new to you yeah wait i've been this i can't say it how do you say the word again okay so the nice thing is you get to use all of your curiosity to have a conversation with the abolitionist on the call butler art club you ready yes what is an avalanche what is an abolitionist well i understand an abolitionist to be someone who wants to abolish the police and the criminal punishment system what is abolish well abolish means to take it apart and get rid of it so i want to take apart the police take apart jails and take apart prosecution take apart other systems that maybe hurt our communities get rid of them and then build something better that actually takes care of us i don't understand why you guys want to be an abolitionist i have no idea what that means i see myself being part of a bigger movement of people so we're not sometimes it feels like a club right like we all share this value of wanting to end policing and detention centers um close down jails but really just kind of this bigger movement of this bigger dream of a better world i have a real quick question are you guys both like standing um there you guys should have like a better place for people that get arrested so at least for me i think that there are alternatives to sending someone to jail and actually like working with people so um that they don't continue those cycles of harm in the future um what kind of app initialist are you i i help people build relationship skills help us be able to relate to each other in a good way and address conflict and also help people who are being harmed find a way to get safety and support and usually that means getting away from the person that's causing them harm i learned about this because when i was growing up my mom used to beat me and my sisters up and we didn't tell anybody because the cops and the school system would take me and my sisters away from her and from my dad and we didn't think that that was a good idea and so my older sister reached out to a bunch of community members that were outside of our family and built a safe home for us did your mom hit you guys for no such reasons or do you guys do something bad well i don't think that anybody deserves to get hit and yeah i think that my mom was actually hurting too because she used to get hit for no reason and she didn't know another way to help us stop doing things that she didn't like and and she did didn't have the support that she needed to make a different decision is trying really hard to say my hand is raised oh that's what you're doing this seth thank you and this is why we co-facilitate so we don't miss cues what's your question lizette why are you an abolitionist i am an abolitionist because i believe that you and and i and our communities our friends and our families already have what we need to take care of each other i would rather have a future where we all treat each other like family like community i'm an abolitionist because prisons and jails have a long history of being based on hurting people discriminating against people picking out people that are black and brown and send them away way out in different places across the state you get forgotten about never see them again sometimes that's not how we treat people it's a it's a broke system to start with and so you can't ever fix something that has a bad foundation and it hurts people that look like you and me are there different adventists i can't say it but i think you know what i'm talking about abolitionists are there different ones i think so like you've heard today like abolition means different things to different people but i think that like at its core it's coming from like the same place it's about making the world a better place not just prisons and i think abolition is about creating a different kind of system where we're not punishing people when they've done something wrong and that means not having prisons at all about that to not have prisons how about like someone literally just killed someone so that's why we need prisons in my opinion because everybody needs a punishment for something they have done wrong part of part of our hope is that we get to a place where we're able to help stop harm if we put people in jail it doesn't mean we'll stop murders it's about creating a world where people are well cared for and we have strong healthy relationships we can do the work of preventing things like murder or hurt to each other may i be your not just your facilitator but your art teacher for a moment because this is for love in the time of covet and i want you to put your hand on your heart say this okay my heart is my heart i love my heart i love my heart five minute free draw what's making a world so safe and beautiful that it never needs a prison or you're drawing one of the beautiful abolitionists that you met nice yeah that's what's said i like that big people can we give our interviewers a round of applause for their curiosity get real close to the screen all right that was an amazing video hello everybody my name is john page how you doing matt yeah good good good to be here that video had a lot of energy had me moving over here i i thought it was live and i yeah he cut a rug in a minute so it's good to be here it's good to see everybody thank y'all for joining us and matt and i i'm gonna let y'all share in on the conversation matt what did you uh what you think about the video would anything resonate with you and and you know were you thinking of responses to uh how you would respond to what's an abolitionist um yeah i mean yeah abolition yeah but uh the thing that stuck out to me most and i wasn't surprised was that as amazing as those those young people were and with all their brilliance in that moment that the young people the way that they thought to respond to harm was was with punishment and uh unfortunately you know that's what we've all been socialized to believe that's what we've all been socialized to do to me harm with punishment but punishment is just another word for harm and it doesn't involve accountability it doesn't address circumstances or conditions that make our impossible it doesn't center those who have been harmed and it only perpetuates harm what do you mean 10 of those who've been harmed what does that mean so in centering the people who have been harmed with the current criminal legal legal system um their role in justice is is non-existent other than just being labeled the victim and being used against the person who caused harm they aren't asked what what are they needed or what do they need or how they've been impacted or what could help them in their healing okay okay okay okay right on matt matt um i think i was remiss so y'all i um i work with david i work for the city i work at office civil rights and i work with david and other folk uh on this call trying to make our communities better so just give you an idea who's talking and matt if you want to introduce yourself and then we'll get into some other stuff okay uh my name is matthew murphy i am a heel fellow with collective justice which he is huh what is he um so hill is healing education for accountability and liberation it's a restorative justice process that um i had the opportunity to participate go ahead john okay so matt what what what brings you to this what brings you here tonight what what brings you to uh to the work that you do you mentioned restorative justice yeah yeah what brings you to this work well what brings me to to this work is it's it's my truth it's it's my lived experience um like so many others when i grew up i grew up experiencing harm um i grew up witnessing people being harmed people in pain without access to resources dealing with depression and intergenerational trauma we were all living in a constant state of crisis not not knowing how to cope and i drank i smoked i took from others what i didn't have and i hurt people and uh when i went to prison i continued the cycle of harm even though as i grew older it began to make less and less sense it was my learned behavior it was my uh that was that was my uh survival strategy it's crazy because there were all these things that i knew so intimately that i i i couldn't make sense of but i knew them so intimately and the things that i was doing didn't make sense either but 12 years into my 16 year sentence i had a chance to participate with uh collective justice in that that restorative justice and transformative justice practice and uh well it was a restorative justice practice and i was introduced to transformative justice but uh i was given language and names names and things that those things that i knew so intimately and uh as well as skills to care for myself um while i began to process my experience and uh the language and names for the things i knew so intimately um it really helped me in processing but uh there we built community and uh i would just say the reason the reason why i'm in the work and what brings me to the work is that my experience is not unique and that i'm not the only one suffering and i mean everyone that i knew they were suffering from the same thing so that's why i'm in the work okay matt again you said a whole lot but for the sake of time and the other thing so what's restorative justice and you mentioned transformative justice what are those yeah yeah yeah okay okay so restorative justice and transformer justices there they are a way to respond to violence and harm that doesn't create more violence and harm and they work to cultivate the things that can prevent harm and my understanding is that while restorative justice can be done within systems of oppression like the prison industrial complex transformative justice is politically aligned with abolition and the doing the way of the prison industrial complex um i do so i don't mean to interrupt you sorry man you're on a roll you're you you're a good practitioner you wear it well so man let me ask you a question though how does restorative justice transformative justice how to pick one of them how do they keep me safe how do they keep people safe okay so with uh with restorative justice um restorative justice and and transformative justice what they do is they center they center community and they center relationships okay and they center the needs of people and the things that keep people safe our community their relationships and there it's having what you need so i mean because if you don't have what you need it's hard to have healthy relationships uh when you're in a desperate state of crisis it's hard to be present with others and have their interests their well-being in mind when you're fighting to survive yourself so yeah building healthy relationships i would say that that's that's a key role and uh and and recognizing other people's dignity as well as yourself your agency autonomy and uh i mean valuing those things accountability is a big part of it too right can you talk about that what you mean when you say accountability because i think people people uh connect accountability to uh punishment right so what what do you mean when you say accountability okay so what's true for me is that when it comes to accountability that a person can't be forced to be accountable accountability requires agency and people say people will say if if you know people say all the time well i want this person held accountable yeah yeah so so that's whether they want to or not so if you're in system if you harm me and my reaction is to hold you responsible by harming you back with punishment um you have no active role in that and you're you're not accepting any responsibility you're just being harmed in for the sake of it and that there's no accountability there accountability is a continuous practice it involves defining your values striving to act in alignment with those values and when you fall short of it considering the impacts of your actions apologizing for that and making a plan for the future where you can honor your values and honor the well-being of other people and their agency and being punished and thrown in prison it doesn't do that um in prison all i felt was shame around around what i did i didn't feel any sense of accountability um yeah it's matt you just you just met i got you to smile you just heard my long golf so we got about a minute a little more in a minute so is there anything that would be helpful for us in terms of thinking about some of the stuff you talked about um i would say that when something happens or a harm happens that it's important to ask what is going on and why is this happening and consider the conditions surrounding the harm how is this possible um and then ask the person who has been impacted or harmed what is it that they need i mean and you know if they if if they want accountability help them find that you know um or if they want answers if they want understanding if they want restitution um but it's important to center the person who's been harmed not just uh brush them aside and throw some of it away in their name you know ask what they need okay matt and we hope to see more of this work man we really appreciate it i really appreciate you talking to me man i'm building a beautiful relationship and got you to smile a couple of times we really appreciate it thank you thanks everybody yeah thank you thank you thank you thank you so much matt murphy and john page for talking to us uh sharing with us about the importance of healing and repair to our live stream audience please show some love for matt and john in the chat or using some of the reaction features it's beautiful to have our loved ones from inside offering insight into our work across communities to address mass incarceration so we can build safety for everyone and that is what we value welcome to folks who are joining us for the program now i want to provide a friendly reminder to our speakers to remember to speak slowly for our captioning and for interpretation please click on the little globe icon to access spanish audio and click the cc icon which stands for closed captioning to activate the the capturing features tech support is also being provided so feel free to chat lrt from api chaya on the zoom chat if you need further assistance thank you for your patience and thank you so much to our squad that is making sure that this event is accessible for everyone an art hit with cyree is about to happen and we cannot wait before we do that i do want to give a shout out to mom and nikki who made that incredible video uh listening to the young people interview us about abolitionists i think that's how you say it that was a really fun time and they did an incredible job on that video so now we will have a free them all art hit hi everyone thanks for having me um my name is cyrie rafai you say them she her pronouns and i'm calling in from the occupied lands of the pyola people or tacoma washington i'm going to share a little bit about this mural that i painted back in 2018 that's on the corner of market and 11th in tacoma called reemerging and healing and then talk a little bit about what i say stencilia's free them all campaign and a recent art project so with abolition you know we need our creative juices flowing um so for me this piece here um is something that i was able to work on through spaceworks tacoma and every time that i approach a public art project i really want to think about what is the story that needs to be told so in 2018 when i had this opportunity um i was really been deep in with um ledezi sensia and with a lot of work around the liquid natural gas plant on the tacoma tide flats both of which i feel so much are linked so i'll talk a little bit about that and before i show some close-ups of the mural i'm going to read what the text says for everyone we can no longer afford to be possessive we can no longer profit off of caging and deporting our neighbors and call this a welcoming city we can no longer rape and pollute earth for her resources and expect her to survive for our children's children we must listen to those impacted by environmental injustices trust them protect them love them so i won't have time to go into everything in detail for all of you um but my hope is to share a little piece so for me my first introduction to the detention center was in 2011 i personally had a family member that was picked up in oregon and brought to tacoma to be detained in the detention center as a student in college um i learned that there was a hunger strike at the detention center um and that was the very first hunger strike of any detention center anywhere and pretty soon after that there was a big solidarity day and that was my first rally um at the detention center i heard folks like mottu speak and began to learn about this place that um similar to matt was saying that my family member has had a lot of shame about and i had no idea kind of their experience so i wanted to share a little bit about this historic moment of the very first blockade at the detention center with and four undocumented peoples um including maru moravial pando featured here on the right and i was actually finishing this portrait on the very night before maru's first immigration hearing the department of licensing had colluded with ice and given away her information and so i wanted to make sure maru knew you know whatever happened the next day we would keep fighting on the next panel over features puyallup tribal member dakota case so the liquid natural gas plant if you're not familiar is something that puget sound energy has worked on to construct this 8 million ton tank to hold liquid natural gas on the tacoma tide flats not too far from the detention center i remember one summer evening in 2017 um that we were all down there trying to stop the construction of pipes being put into the ground which psc was saying was um pursuer which we knew was not the case right it was for this lng plant um and dakota at that time you know was pretty quiet was saying hey the police are being hostile you know we've held the space for three hours um we'll come back tomorrow um and as we were leaving my friends and i noticed a van full of swat um police and swat gear right so they were ready to come not to protect the people who were there protecting the land protecting the rights of the puella tribe and their treaty rights but to protect the corporations and we found the very next day that puget sound energy was um paying five police to be there um for 62 000 a day to protect the corporation and not the people um on the last side i want to honor mariah who's also been a young leader within the lng movement mariah is standing rock sioux and puyallup and in the middle of the mural is the the medicine wheel from the standing rock sioux tribe right before folks in tacoma and from the tribe had learned that the lng was being unlawfully constructed you know standing rock was facing a lot of pressure with the pipelines being built in and so folks here were saying this is our standing rock when we need to stand our ground here so all on this to say the detention center you know is a for-profit immigrant detention facility on the tacoma tide flat it's also a super fun site right so we get reports from people inside saying the vibe the water is not viable for us to drink you know the air depending on the the time of year whatever chemicals are being spewed into the atmosphere on the industrial zone it also impacts them right so these environmental injustices that we continue to see happen in black and brown communities you know all of these things are interconnected in the ways particularly corporations and our police state continue to uphold that to extract resources to you know possess human bodies for their profit i want to move to a more recent project um over this quarantine time right with kovid um we're getting testimonies from people in detention unless that assistancy in particular i'm hearing testimonies from people inside you know who are already stressed for all the multiple reasons they could be being detained right on top of the fear of catching covid inside of the detention center so a woman from the congo by the name of naomi wanted to have her case come forward um because of naomi this whole campaign for free them all happened over the last few months and increasingly more people being detained wanted to share their story so with the collaboration of a lot of local artists who drew their portraits in tandem with sharing their testimonies even video testimony this was the very first time that letter assistancio was sharing faces and names of people because of how dire the situation is inside of the detention center so with the henry art gallery at the university of washington and seattle very recently there's been silk screens made of a lot of the portraits that myself and a lot of other local artists have made for this free them all campaign that is now visible to see on the streets so my hope is that one day um the detention center um will be closed and we can dance on the ashes of the detention center in front of this wall i'm with people who have been released with people who have been organizing in the background and we can celebrate and eat food and have beautiful music together and that's my dream let's give the big round of applause for sorry and sharing with us uh the importance of advocacy art systems change um and how those inner intersect to really build the culture of abolition and given us the vision of a world beyond you can find out more about about free them all by checking them out on instagram following and giving support i know on november 30th there will be an action a caravan um to show that detention centers like the northwest detention center are deeply interrelated with things like the department of corrections and we need to free them all next up we have a deep dive with resistancia on detention centers we know that the separation of families is unfortunately a common theme in our country recently undocumented communities were left out of the cares act to help make connections between mass incarceration and the stories of detention you are about to hear dakota will share some facts about mass incarceration by the way stay up dakota is going to also close out at the end but first dakota you mind dropping some knowledge on us about mass incarceration some facts about it in the u.s absolutely my name is dakota and yeah i'm going to share these facts with you i think the first you know really important thing to know is that native youth are incarcerated at three times the rate as white youth three times as likely to be incarcerated as white folks and another important element of the story is that the u.s has the highest incarceration rate in the world the u.s only has five percent of the population in the world and we also have 25 percent of the worldwide prison population in our country which is really terrifying also important for us to know in washington is that the the three strikes law has had a really negative impact um on our communities washington was the first state in the nation to pass the three strikes law and that was laws that made long mandatory sentences um unfortunately um you know of the close to 20 of incarcerated people in washington in washington are serving life sentences and of the washington prisoners who are serving life without parole 50 of those are the results of three strike sentencing and so we really want to see an end to that as a part of our abolition strategy and the last important fact that i'll share with you tonight is that the the black black youth are are are most affected by mass incarceration the criminal justice system affects black children more affects some more than others and that is black children are 10 of king county's kids and 50 of the children locked up in the juvenile detention center so that means that black children are five times uh five times more likely to be locked up um those are some really horrible things um to have to share with you all today i look forward to being able to share some other facts um on uh on a day soon over to you nikita thank you dakota for bringing that to our attention and also i gotta love the video behind you also done by mama nikki uh just reminding us legendary children is happening on november 21st and i want to also highlight that since 2017 the seattle public library has been following communities lead in focusing on abolition as one important strategy for addressing the harms of over incarceration or mass incarceration here in the united states on turtle island thank you again dr kosa for those facts and the sobering realizations that you shared with us as promised we have estorias de these are oral histories shared by local community members who have experienced detention first hand for this portion we will have spanish to english interpretation for non-spanish speakers again please click the globe icon to access the english audio that's in the bottom right hand of your zoom screen for cart interpretation there is a slide deck with english on it for folks to follow along i also want to provide a content warning stories of harm can be hurtful and triggering please take care of yourselves and one another breathe and be gentle and between these stories will be we will be chatting with resistant seo organizer madu mora in the chat you will find info on different articles and organizing efforts foreign a is let's pause for a moment and take in what each of these stories is bringing to us to do this we're honored to bring a beloved organizer mario villapando maru do you mind introducing yourself and adding context for community around the stories these families are sharing with us gracias nikita my name is [Music] it's not deliberate as he said bail is not low the bank is not little today we heard about the story of ten thousand dollars [Music] foreign thank you so much maru let's dive in again and listen to the last two stories amado will share her closing thoughts right after is [Music] oh foreign [Music] um [Music] is [Music] is [Music] is thank you so much for sharing those stories maru i'll give you closing thoughts gracias nikita um [Music] you have a certain amount of time here you don't know how long you're going to be here you can't really have contact with your family because there's glass and phone and now with kovid you don't have social visits people are starving they're they're doing strikes they're saying it's not hard because the food is is disgusting to incite people to work for a dollar a day to to purchase from the commissary which is another business what we're seeing in these stories is the impact why uh do we allow to criminalize people for being adults and making any mistakes they also started criminalizing children it's not surprising that now the extension of prison extended to immigrate immigration immigration is extending to uh the detention of children this system continues to expand if we allow it so we have to fight to end it we have to fight and it is urgent because today at least according to ice one person has uh coveted in the detention center we don't believe it we believe there are more people with covet in the detention center in the past two weeks at least we know that there have been three people from prisons outside of the detention center they brought them knowing that they have covid at the same time that in governor ensley said that um that the gatherings of five people at home are not allowed how can we allow that that there are units of more than 30 people in the detention center how can he talk about a protection order and he forgets about detained people so we have to take care of ourselves except for the people who are in in jail uh are they not human do they not count we are asking to demand from the governor his silence is only approving the torture that our families and our people are going through so we ask you to go to our social media follow the instructions there communicate with the governor and and tell him stop your silence do something and also in tacoma and pierce county because they support the governor's order so if they do support it they cannot forget that whether they like it or not the people detained in tacoma are residents of tacoma whether they like it or not we are also asking you to join our campaign we have a campaign to close the detention center you can sign uh for our campaign go to our webpage and if if you're not an organization it's okay you can support us by calling the governor you can tweet you can tag him and also uh tag the city of tacoma and pierce county we cannot allow for the situation to get worse and let them think that we just pretend enough of this terror enough enough treating our families this way thank you thank you so much much motto um i just want to take a moment to let uh all of that breathe um there is a lot of suffering that many of our loved ones are enduring some things that we can be doing around calling emailing tweeting at the governor and also the mayor of tacoma and other folks in that area on puyallup land who have the ability to respond immediately to the human rights crisis that is happening at the northwest detention center in tacoma so i encourage everyone to do what you can um and support uh our loudest distinctive family and really pay attention to all that is happening just because we will have a new administration does not mean that everyone is safe so let's be thinking about how we can stand in solidarity with all of our loved ones so thank you again maru for helping us understand and receive those stories at this point we're switching back to english with spanish interpretation available so the way that you can access this again is by going to the the globe at the bottom right hand of your screen where you will see interpretation and you can select for spanish interpretation there's also the option if needed for closed captioning by clicking the icon that says cc and i want to remind our speakers to please speak slowly so that our interpretation can keep up with what we're saying and make sure that our our evening together is accessible or as accessible as possible for everyone and as i promised we are bringing back dakota to help us do something more interactive so take a moment grab a sheet of paper or use your voice we have been dropping a lot of knowledge during this program and growing with each other but it's also important that we find ways to connect in real time even though this is a virtual event so if you have a loved one who is incarcerated or a message about love in the time of cobit do this first let's say the names of our incarcerated loved ones all together av folks can you please put us in gallery view so we can see each other's faces and you might have to change the view on your screen uh from speaker to a gallery if you had it set for speaker and on the count of three i would like for us all to unmute and so and when we do to say the names of our loved ones that we can know we are lifting them up together tonight and every day one two three donald moss anthony wright anthony hamm benjamin nathan billy fryburg james and jerome christopher blackwell johanna everyone in the northwest detention center shelton monroe there's some folks saying unmute them please av free them all danielle regis all our babies in the youth jail before i move on i want to acknowledge the names in the chat and if you don't feel comfortable in muting but do you want to share the name of your loved one please feel free to place them in the chat and um maybe on the count of three we can all wherever we are say free them all one two three thank you so much for sharing the names of your loved ones if you have your markers and sheets of blank paper go ahead and take them out because we want to see your signs what's one word for what love and the time of covid means for you and be ready to share once dakota closes their set and after dakota we have our final story about a mother who lost her son during the coveted pandemic she'll be interviewed by the lawyer who helped her find her son and we will talk about care not cages to close out so dakota it's all you are so excited for you boy hoffa family um well first of all i just have all these tears um so i want to uh invite us to um just acknowledge our tears acknowledge our bodies these beautiful bodies that we have and maybe i would invite you all to touch yourselves just to like just to make sure that you know that you're here and um if your video is off and you want to take a risk tonight i invite you to turn your video on just for this moment because you know if we were in person we would get to like actually see each other and and be with each other hey what's up larry um and um and right now we have the beautiful opportunity to try something different and new in this digital space right and so with that that uh that's something new and different i know after hearing all those facts and hearing all the stories i've done a lot of emotions that are coming up and i'm feeling a little bit uh scared so i just wanna like invite you all to like shake shake your bodies and maybe even just have let out a little shout like [Music] oh my gosh yeah make faces in the screen like this oh my gosh this world awesome cool and then i want to invite you to um if standing feels accessible to you to stand up and just acknowledge the floor that's supporting you and acknowledge knowledgeable ceiling that's above you or the open sky yeah and reach up reach up to the sky [Music] and take a breath and then fold down to the floor if you can or just go and touch the floor if you can touch the floor take a breath and come back up and this time we're gonna reach up to the ceiling and we're gonna say thank you skye and come down to the floor and say thank you earth yeah come back up and uh in my culture the past is in front of us so i want to encourage you all to reach out to your ancestors right now reach touch them yeah and then if you can't just get really close to the screen like we're reaching out to each other because we're all each other's ancestors oh i can almost actually feel your breath on my hands how awesome is that and then you want to reach out to the past behind you and then maybe you after you reach behind you to the pat or to the future see i don't even know my directions reach out to the future and then you might want to just shake because you're like oh i don't know what's going to happen but then you want to jump up and down because the future is collective liberation yeah anyone to get really close to the screen you want to show just like the best part of your face you know like for me it's this like lip corner right here get really really close really yeah a lot closer can you get even closer like just like this one little corner yeah what's your favorite part of your face larry's it's uh that one little dot under the eye ricky the oh yeah okay [Music] okay how is that are we all alive here are we alive can you feel can you feel each other yet yeah awesome those are the gorgeous smiling faces that i love to see hey everyone my name is dakota i've got some music to share with you all um and i just want to give big gratitude and thanks to everybody that's been a part of this event so far and i want to invite us to keep that same interactive loving energy as i share this music and i want to give a big shout out to the black communities of the south end and the central district for teaching me about what it means to be an indigenous person for teaching me what it means to be in connection to my ancestors through sharing this like beautiful technology of hip-hop and i'm going to share some of the things that my ancestors taught me and some of the beauty that uh that the black communities of uh the central district in the south end have taught me um yeah here we go are you all ready okay yeah you have to have the same energy that we just had don't quite sit down yet i just sat down yeah larry's got it larry's got it if anyone needs some energy just pin larry right yeah i'll invite you to stand up or even groove in your [Music] who's doing this copy me just copy what somebody else is doing until they notice you you know the pathway that i'm taking is sacred cause i walk it conscious of creating the world when i am talking stopping all the traumas of my mamas and my fathers my flow immerses my whole lineage in holy waters so your sores of those before we spoke your words i open doors to ocean shores and hope for more healing and revealing reconnection to my feelings seeing to the sky embodying the ceiling revelations are creating bonds of our relations i'm taking the path to facing the facts facing the backs of our existence reconnection to the mystics the language of the spirit is the og scientific dancing the inscription intuitions hieroglyphics reading current movements is all pacific physics listen to the birds as their direction pivots cause they sing the song of life and they taught me how to live it so i live your best life as you're jamming out to this song you can practice all these things we had close to the screen far away close to screen far away have a little fun this is not a zoom meeting at the end of your day i'm dreaming to sell the sack man more than chase the stack man my path ends running up in cages like the past been coming from the past been to where the future happens i travel when i'm rapping laughing the passing the time crafting around i happen to find a path of divine teachings ancestors reaching two dimensions when i bring attention to genealogy's meaning seen while i'm dreaming receiving tarot card readings or when i'm focused on my breathing honey lone trees as live your life a good way everyone hey that liberation is coming toward us soon y'all okay can you copy me [Music] me oh larry's really taking us to the end here yeah oh i love y'all too that was amazing dakota okay well this uh last thing i'll share with y'all is a it's a prayer to priya ma and it's a shout out to my lineage insy what was that i don't know what i just heard but this is a my creative and cultural lineages it's a prayer that for all of us of the planet to remember that we belong to the earth we belong to each other and uh nikki remind me not to ever do a live performance on a turtleneck again oh yeah thanks tracy you love that too much shout out to the central ditches of the south maybe i need to put my hair up next time you know maybe that'll make a difference the lineage of the lines that i inscribe as the right palms transcends mine's concepts of timelines and time zones i'm from the ancient earth crust the birth thus the primordial is my home i've flown around the sky godzilla the jungle with mother earth on a tightrope made to ban your route as i pray i can understand the truth bit brother cedar teach me how to heal as i withstand abuse and buddha teach me how to be lonely as a bandicoot as my family move away from homeland the usa bro nukes in a movement became a new trend in human history miserably called diaspora another concept that can capture what we've been through so my pen move to trace my line back home and i roam through the infinite black zone classic rocking with my dad's homies praying is the star of hawaii's navigating her jazz songs africa's children making melodic atlases indigenous craftsmanship and i practice this craft so i honor the masters of the free flow all this within the degree oh yeah absolutely hip hop is that old i fast for the sci-fi on 20th and jackson fool is the satisfaction food ladies first to hip-hop period is every sunday night african hands are doing patterns on the drums that go can every sing to el dia ropanae is getting his snack on you speech true speaking eclipse and gentrification community unity's got your back huh back when sexy beast was that ceremony and that song before the battle in seattle was won by dot-coms no matter the tactic that we practice they say we fought wrong they murder enslave occupy and drop bombs we say on the tail to the wherewithal and go on like is [Music] we are the people of the land y'all every single one of us [Music] see [Music] hey here [Music] oh show some love big love thank you so much oh yes let out let out our cries thank you so much dakota for leading us and our liberation our bodily autonomy freeing our bodies and our voices free them all includes brina so um deep love i also want to acknowledge that um this week is transgender awareness week and tomorrow is the transgender day of remembrance and also remember our trans loved ones are that are incarcerated and knowing that that is one of the fastest growing populations within the department of corrections nationally and so you know as we're as we're talking about mass incarceration understanding the intersection with genders is really important um thank you dakota for leading us in that moment of liberation and at the end of tonight's last interview there's going to be announcement about dakota's incredible work co-curating legendary children with the library it'll be an incredible celebration of body and movement and freedom and liberation and yet again another opportunity to engage with our beloved queer and trans community so please show up and show love but for now if you grabbed a sheet of paper earlier we want you to get real close to the screen like real close and show us your one word meditation on what love and the time of cobit really means shout out to art club and standpoint for showing us how to use our imaginations to dream up a world of safety care and compassion so go ahead and get yourself in gallery view so you can see other people's words keep them up there so we can get some screenshots i love it awesome i see liberation i see intentional revolution revitalization interdependent regenerative imagination i might miss a few y'all so apologies thank you so much for participating dakota you might have to say that word for me patience nevaeh yes none thank you connection community thank you so much for sharing your words with us that's so beautiful and exactly what we were hoping for so we're gonna prepare for our last segment and if we could prepare the audio i just want to remind folks that if you need access to interpretation you can click down on the globe at the bottom right and if you need access to closed captioning there is a button that says cc and that provides cart interpretation thank you so much hello america my name is becky brown mother brown my son is 24 years old he was taken from reynolds work release in april in the middle of april 2020 or actually the date was may the first he had just gotten there two weeks prior from shelton he was released to reynolds work release and he was on his way home two weeks into him being at reynolds work with me i've come to find out at a very very oh the words how i found out they took him i lost contact with him and i knew something was wrong because he was excited to be home coming home and then he stopped calling us the only way i found my son was through the help of the community i called reynolds work release after two weeks of calling and writing letters no response from my son i knew something was wrong he's right around the corner and he's not contacting me no something's wrong the worst fear for a mother where's my child at you know in your heart so the community helped me locate here and it was so terrifying now they ship them to shelter and they're threatening these young men they're bullying them they're intimidating them in this day and age with the corona virus going on while we're at home in our cold little outfit these men are being tortured they served their sentence it was that reynolds work release to be sent home but by them being black they got sent back to shelton now six innocent men were shipped to children they're only crying that they're black man now i have to go through this again you know my son is in transit he's not listed at no penitentiary shelton or monroe i cut put money on his book for him to reach out to his family on the media j spot or whatever when he was in sheldon we got him what he needed and he kept in contact with the family like that but now if he gets my letter which he does in the last two weeks he calls he stays in contact but um no it's not fair they serve they're spending they were supposed to be coming home but they get sent back in my case my son got sent back to prison without an infraction just that was audio from mother brown we've been working on a little bit of tech difficulty so i think we have her on the line but in the meantime let's bring up nick allen all right thanks uh davida um mother brown are you there it's um it's good to see you hello yeah it's a it's really an honor to be able to sit down and talk with you um those are really powerful words that we just heard from you but also uh really heavy too and i think that has been um uh from all of the speakers that have uh that we've heard from tonight really heavy stuff um i know you've done a lot in the last few months to speak on behalf of not only your son but advocate to advocate for people in prison and other dlc facilities just wanted to ask you some questions about that experience how's that sound wonderful good thank you so this segment is called care not cages can you tell us what it means to you as it relates to your son's situation and other folks who've been locked up during the pandemic they're not cages unfortunately they're in cages they're not getting care it would be nice if they were getting care the cure that they need especially during this time being in the penitentiary and then the system is hard enough but with the epidemic going on their safety and their health is of being concerned their living conditions is a mess and the things we take for granted like soap and water is probably like gold you know they don't have the resources that they need just to be living healthy so that's a big concern right right and uh can you tell us some more about the situation that your your son was in you said you didn't have a lot of access to soap and water no telephone calls i think you had mentioned other anything else can you give us an example of the conditions with my son we stayed in contact while he was then doing his sins and then we got the reynolds work release we stayed in contact and then i lost contact with him he was like two weeks from coming home and i lost contact with him and i'm like what's going on i knew something was wrong he wasn't answering my letters he wasn't calling so i reached out to the community i called reno's for about two weeks and never got an answer fine if they finally asked him i said oh your son has been sent back to prison i'm like what how could that possibly be he was on his way home he's five minutes away from home and they sent him back to prison without an impression because they was having a peaceful protest outside with the inmates can't control what goes on outside their inside so they shipped i knew the word but they sent six fellows back without no infraction and while they was in transition there was no contact on my end for two weeks two to three weeks i didn't know if this boy was alive or dead because he used to reach out on the media but while he was lost in the system he didn't have access to the media because he was not uh what's the word i'm looking for in the system that's how they put it well he's not he's not in the system here he's not in the system there but he's located here but he doesn't have no pencil or paper he can't write he can't he's walked in his room 24 hours a day you know who was stir crazy not 24 hours a day i'm sorry 23 hours they're out an hour a day so it's really really hard on these man especially with the epidemic going on so he says like you know i'm writing this kid every day because i'm just something's telling me he's not getting your letters so the few that he got he said it just gave him peace of mind because it was his only communication right right and and what about you as a as a mother who was unsure of what had happened can you tell us what what you went through like um what were you afraid of what hurt i just went through a dark time in my life because um i'm feeling his pain you know a mother knows when her son or her child they feel this they know it's a fiction when something is wrong so i'm feeling this with him in my heart and i'm at home with my cozy little house watching my tv with the mask locked down while these men are living shoulder-to-shoulder in unsafe condition and i'm just wondering well there's there's no safety there no there's no safety here i'm just so scared any given moment well of course they're living in an infectious population when he was at real there were seven people and now bishop lewis this day november 2020 there's 49 people infected with the corona virus that's half the population and they're all living together so it was very unsafe and very scary and i can imagine i've even grown there and feel and if they complain they get threatened to be sent back to prison and these men are sick they have no voices they get lost in the system so let's be their voice let's do something and help these men have a safe passage home all right thank you mother brown and and and how how were you able to find you know things like support comfort um care compassion during this during this trying time and i use this word when i say amazing i don't i'm just saying the community you know i was so lost if it wasn't for the community i couldn't have gotten through this because they helped me locate them they gave me resources they've been a support factor in my life and um i've seen that i've seen a community come together in all my 62 years as uh human beings during this i've seen the people actually come together as one voice because it's about all the people now it's about all people so other people can see how you get treated badly if you're different it's not a crime to be black it's a privilege and honor and mother brown that's um you know this this event is focused on the the concept of of abolition i wanted to talk to you a little bit about that i wanted to see what your thoughts were on abolition and how it applies to the to the situation faced by your son and the others that were that were transferred back to prison uh wrongly um during the pandemic what's been your thinking or takeaways about abolition uh during this time do we still have you mother brown yeah i'm still here i would have to say it goes back to the to the community the people fighting for what's right trying to change the laws that are unjustified and just bringing the people together as human beings justice for all so the community played a big help a big part in fighting for a change changing the law of the land as i said before we won our freedom in the civil war but we lost it back to man's law so it's time for a change at last gotta change the way of the system it's failed us [Music] and it was built to fail so now we need to rebuild it to win that's right well mother brown thank you for your your time and your insightful words and all the support and work that you've been doing during this time um to raise awareness and uh support your son and the others that were put in this situation i wanted to uh go back to something you had mentioned earlier about a number of people testing positive at bishop lewis work release what happened back in may was an outbreak at reynolds work release and due to the department of corrections mishandling of the outbreak a number of people fell ill with covet and as mother brown said there were demonstrations to call doc out about that which ended up in a number of people being retaliated against and sent back to the department of corrections for doing nothing wrong the same thing is now happening at bishop lewis work releases mother brown said over uh 35 people have tested positive there and we're seeing the same pattern take place where individuals that have uh spoken up that have challenged the mismanagement of the covid virus in the work release facility have been sent back to prison and placed in isolation there uh some folks with covid and now are being told that they may have to serve the rest of their time in prison these are folks that are a few weeks away a few months away from release back into their communities and i wanted to raise that because a lot of the folks that mother brown is referencing have been organizing again around these troubling circumstances in doc facilities and i believe in the chat there's a letter that's been put together to request that legislators the governor hold doc accountable and take steps to make sure that these actions don't occur again in the future it's interesting that the uh reynolds six situation was a a great experience for community for legislators for legal advocates people in the institutions to come together to really make a difference to call dlc out um but we have to remember that uh it's not limited to this one circumstance we still have a lot of work to do and this is still going on to this day uh as mother brown mentioned so i'd like to thank um mother brown for her time for her insight and also direct you all to the chat if you're interested in following up on the bishop lewis outbreak thank you thank you very much nick i just want to take a moment to celebrate nick and celebrate mother brown mother brown has been incredibly courageous and um caring for and collaborating with other families and teaching us all how we can be fighters for our loved ones inside and before passing it off to dakota i just want to remind us of the things that we that we heard about tonight we heard about healing and repair eyes on native and black mass incarceration experiences free them all and uh an incredible art hit with sorry and history is the resistance family stories of detention and care not cages a mother on the front lines of covet outbreaks and for us to hold those stories and then even more be moved to action so please don't miss the chat where there is the letter that you can sign and share and also the things that matu pointed us to earlier in the evening of how we can be tweeting at emailing calling the mayor elected officials in tacoma and supporting laura's distinction in their work and dakota on to you to close us out for the evening um well thank you thank you again i i'm actually here to make an announcement to you all um this that you see right here is the uh the promo for legendary children which is an annual library event uh happens every five years this is the fifth year anniversary it's digital this year it's an event that celebrates and honors the house and ballroom scene as it is practiced here in the pacific northwest we have a really fly lineup for you which includes the marvelous monets the royal house of princeton the royal house of noir the illustrious house of essence the house of boba and the celestial house of arcadia you have to make sure you get those names right but it also has some of the most fly queer and trans artists here in the pacific northwest including stormy weber guru matt yellett um sai wonderland who is from tacoma we're going to be featuring a video of christopher paul jordan's uh i'm good and i'm going to miss everybody's new uh aids memorial sculpture that is going up and it's there's just so much there's just so much and you don't want to miss it um you see all this fun that people are happening in this video this could be you saturday at 8pm it's free it's streaming it's seattle public library's brilliance in collaboration with the seattle art museum thank you to davita ingram and to david rue i am one of your community co-curators and so if you had any amount of fun with me today you just know what we're going to do on saturday and that folks we are at the end of our program can we give it up for all of our speakers for our incredible mc nikita oliver um there is an event survey and the rsvp link for legendary children we do have uh one other program that we haven't posted which is december 11th the black trans prayer book with jay mace iii we could not have done this event without you we also want you to know once it's uploaded uploaded and captioned we will put this on youtube and you can help us spread the word thank you for coming to love in the time of covet we love you and we appreciate you and good night | Columbia Legal Services | UCKUIcbMaJIqPxBiaC7C_p5g | 2020-12-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 11,682 | 61,728 |
MGA9XrLMV78 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MGA9XrLMV78 | Let's Play: Undying #1 | this stops isn't here by undying on the best part um einen yeah Tommy's after Peter Maivia home kent ave Mac mice to summon let's plays exactly homeowners Tommy stop California shop yup I'm coming to us can coffee roaster futures long since I've only read the script actually finish dance movie ok a minute yeah not merely requests aquahydrate clive barker's are dying that's what i Sartin simply watch english wooden dick soft jonvoyage stop against my principles must suppose it's not gay so we will cover the los alamos but do not return sequence yeah oh my god yeah oh my dish please stop saying atmosphere skype name Jimmy shona super bomb BCM per second yeah but it's alice is it resource or auto shop to your toys in amnesia by the speedy 74 thousand times you know this can also mrs. Aquilla pompous Cossacks this is Lisa horrors of my CB insurances cell phone I am horrible out wha McCann system industry and this is eigen my nizzle of be claiming the atmosphere that was creepy amisha out of tycoon dissolves very first heart big client so show my support minimize Yaga now kinda so much on a butt spanked my story forget a flight man must remove meeting Avenger on the ancillary order stream of light mayo most affected Sasaki's for quick safe quick Lord gave us a new designers we go to make a story then it's all driver I neogenic novelist skills across story eat my fetus Weissman I also miss get it Lardon hostess transistor big boy ah I'm tired of traveling or fighting superstition in its many manifestations even though it was me who chose to debunk folklore and mysticism little did I know I'd end up being labeled as Patrick Galloway the man with endless occult knowledge before I knew it people all over the world paid me to investigate all kinds of weird things huh long as they paid me I'd look into it funny thing though the more I saw the more I believe there are forces beyond our control creatures not explainable in any human terms make me skin crawl I fled from Ireland in hung around Paris and London with no real purpose till the great war started I joined a special unit whose job it was to squelch the fears of the superstitious farm boys who made up the fighting ranks the truce auntie were the biggest pm's he command an officer Jeremiah covenant but our unit 100 a camp we were ambushed the King streaming out of the woods we even swords and Holland like banshees I saw their leader Holden strings to laura's he yellin weird words in a strange tongue and just when was gonna pull the trigger he glared right at me a bright green flash came from his hand and it bowled me over asmik gun went off I woke up in a hospital bed with severe Barnes they told me Jeremiah and the unit had gone on without me but he'd given me the shame and stone to keep I hadn't given any of this much thought until I came back here to find this letter that Jeremiah wrote me almost six months ago asking me to come back to Ireland and helped enough this is not something I'm dying to do for a name mean the death of me he saved my life though so I owe it to him just hope it's not to me whoa so that's a quick start service positas mm order media actually see what you missed ich bein Hetrick Galloway this is come on Zach today chief they are all witches holes getting this or stand up I see him pass matric [ __ ] Jeremiah open some avoided the spotlight on sentiment you know Monsieur own is enshrined in an indentation Tina feliz manager was a vice of whiskey now the character gets filled pasta sauce time match as well miss our family in love with moans sign of its SIA they are Jeremiah jihad against beautiful from Petra communities to Dinah won't respond i know who or what is ej are several art central British you know things yeah I swear it can find some liberalism ex-wife drive for any semen school lets you kind right we're done shows disappearance image Caputo's missing merged estas listo pues back that's all about a capacity magenta this Lisa get sleep opening Jewish just ignore with people yeah they are Saddam it show husband k now or I get some positive oh I'm please leave on this uh in everything all is more than Cadel positive they are optical fiber switch to listen ya know assertiveness sets of victories the heinous under sir Aidan oft nice of speeds design Denise I got some fish a very big mind something like the NDL movie this is not apply to prescribe objectives meet with your old friend Jeremiah covenant so you must be a smart dish Miami team something since Thomas soft channel I've distasteful sake or the choppa it's over this person she has itunes a moment of madness Ryan considers the siege punish the seat back to contain sa house in an activity which must be Dacia for them this is this like a secretion which all performance right hand side this passivity mother managed the soda machine is in the key all right our witnesses are respectful you're Jeremiah's World War button right recent 10 signs of use save it side agonal f6 is Betty's pole of light now I'm Patrick Galloway a friend of Jeremiah's sorry it took me so long again the letter said it was most urgent Jeremiah was beginning to think the letter never arrived in your hands easy what anxious to see you we've all been quite worried Jeremiah's now bedridden follow me and I'll show you to his living quarters such a fire sorry doctor but if you see what's becoming a look at the house but there's area skeleton crew of servants like Jeremiah let's go with everyone else and the house is much too large for us to clean it's an ending in all schools are you take physics to most parts of the house system this family's had so much prodigy I hope you can help him reflection 140 kilometers and 99 flesh be redundant in sequence not glamorous Massey I Perseid is Jeremiah ish mr. Sinha liquor store bones after familiar lasted through my ear ansa news mr. means dumpling machine compute our most advanced all units since Anika's visitors and it will told and practice or comment 0 means we are dead as possible he was in an 11 on another pc so forth with us so health artisanal suguha I just believe items love of salmon patties Patrick you made it at your service Jeremiah sorry for the delay but I've been abroad what happened to you it seems I've come under the watchful eye of the Reaper my friend it's been a long time hasn't it a paranoid too long Patrick I came back from the war only to find my entire estate in disarray my brother Aaron disappeared first and then my sister Bethany my declining health is a result of an old war wound and unfortunately the symptoms are you reversible I didn't summon you here to watch me die I need your help anything I can do just name it strange events began happening around the manor after singing of my staff they ransacked my estate caked in whatever they could carry the rest of the hell was quick to follow as they feared rumors of my family's curse I can't help but think it's more than a coincidence that strange happenings have increased since I've been back from the war I want to get to the bottom of this but I'm just too weak to investigate it myself I'm relying on you to step in for me a course Jeremiah the only reason I was common back here is to assist you however I can my thanks to what the hell's up sounds like it came from downstairs I'll check it out lock the door behind me ISIL at Stefan critical mr. Jeremiah sakuma she sang the perseids its asses as a Buddha avid for this vital death on the same as I Scarlett said comment triadex Irish papa yeah just a non-business China two Jedi steps the Homer we take off Martha's not simpler latest phones acting up a seer um only solace consumers rule yeah the shopping suga's don't know man hey can I own a China to say Jose [ __ ] team is to set on foot hurts english lean on oh um okay go on it's more on this is nice stock markets nervous first week Jesse ships quickly what gift Oh mechanics lien honey turn right uh f1 foul get all health son alright a suburban solution to my socks cry out a look gonna see the it sliced apples anyone's trying I'm solid can you describe but you can only see health bars a pleasure broken the world becomes apparent Oh kisses no punishing ok ha Pancho off pill hey for example moves is bad nightmares cause nightmares equis a photographer | DoppelDeeLP | UC6_GWEldkBa9qQipabMaiEQ | 2011-11-03 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 1,558 | 8,330 |
RuM44ukuw_8 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuM44ukuw_8 | Oldtimer Centre - Marrickville NSW | hi and welcome to the Old Timer Center my name is Philip Tarrant and today we have for you a 2002 BMW 320i with the six cylinder engine it's got these lovely BMW Motorsport Wheels I think they're offer a seal of M3 CLS it's got tinted windows it's silver in color with black leather interior it's traveled 105 000 kilometers but is in very good condition it's got a few extra little options like it's got an iPod dock there as well so you can play music through your radio which is good looks like it may charge your phone as well it's got log books there the tires are very very good the car really is is unmarked really is in very good condition looks like it's been looked asked by Peak Performance to a BMW specialist I believe the six cylinder really is a very nice engine a lot nicer than the 1.8 liter four-cylinder yet secondhand there's not a major difference in terms of the price there's your spare wheel there I've checked it does have all the tools in here as well it's got a sunroof I have driven it dries beautifully it really is a smooth engine and for a little six cylinder it goes very very well the car came in last night I've just given it a quick wash with soap and water it's come out very well it will get a full detail shortly so yeah normally these seats especially the driver's seats gets quite worn and whatnot but it actually looks to be in really good condition quite surprised the 320i to updated steering wheel as well which had controls on the steering wheel which is great it's got cruise control as well just a few extra little bits and piece you get on top of the 318i as I said second hand there's no real difference in terms of the price the personal owner before looks like they may have been a bit of Enthusiast with these wheels but also put these updated lights on it and it's got a permanent running side light here as well so it just looks really really good the reason why I put these lights on is because they were standard on the 7 Series as you can see on the background and they do look a lot better so if you are looking for a three series of this sort of vintage please give us a call you're certainly not going to be disappointed it drives very very well notice that with those extra you know bits and pieces which would have cost quite a bit of money I think it makes it very very good value so we're the Old Timer Center we're located in marrickville and I certainly do look forward to hearing from you | Oldtimer Centre | UC_Iuil2OGlzb_RPudo3NdLA | 2013-10-10 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 475 | 2,455 |
OXGRvI-w05Q | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXGRvI-w05Q | My flight back to Alberta, from Mexico | all right it's nine I mean 8 45 right now quarter to nine and I'm at the uh Cancun Airport I don't leave until five o'clock but I want to go to the lounge and check it out I'm supposed to get some free food or free drinks and hello so I'm gonna go check it out and see if I do sign here uh real early that's like I said quarter to nine there is one fight that goes out at one so I may be able to check in my baggage then and then head up to the lounge so this is the last day guys we're on our way home back to Canada back to Calgary tonight I'll be there tonight at 9 10 o'clock tonight so we'll catch you back in between a little bit uh two times in between and then we'll catch you back when we're in uh Calgary okay guys stay tuned all right we're sitting at the airport at our gate gate number 61 waiting for the plane it's another another hour I think you should be on back to Canada the Calgary for the night there we go gate number 61. waiting area for uh terminal number four okay we'll get back at you when we get on the plane information there is a safety features card located at your seat which contains the safety features of this aircraft please take it out and follow along as we cover some very important information seat belt and no smoking signs are visible throughout the cabin please comply with them at all times [Music] everything [Music] on please remain seated with your seat belt securely fastened we recommend that you either keep your seatbelt fastened anytime you want to see that would like to remind you that smoking including the use of e-cigarettes and vaporizers this prohibited at all times for your convenience mushrooms are located at the front and at the back and please use the washrooms located within your Quest yet connect is now available and charging elements are located on the receipt if flight service will begin shortly please refer to the menu in your seat back which lists the items you might need we would also like to explain to extend and a very special welcome to WestJet rewards members and guests of our Airline partners for more details on how to join WestJet Rewards or how to apply to become a Westgate RBC MasterCard holder please ask one of your family group [Music] thank you yeah that's what I do and I'm gonna pull all my money and I'm going to live like a king and mercy with my girl she lives in Medellin thank you I'll tell you YouTube I have uh there's so many videos it took me like three four days before I felt yeah I I felt it was just I don't know why it felt so hard this time so many times you know realize but nothing is made out of wood nerve you know everything's probably important parts all the benches yeah and that's because everything rusts everything falls apart the bugs need everything yeah termites in the wood you can't have a carpeting house so even paper like like yeah yeah it's all curled up there's so much humidity it sucks up right out of the air well I was wondering but I let them sitting on the counterfeited yeah yeah you know you couldn't have you couldn't have faucets that wouldn't rust your ceiling fans if they were metal they would just rust here all rust you could you couldn't keep anything from wrestling right it was almost impossible everything looks like house and that's because I hated about going home because the maintenance on your house is yeah and all the houses are made of yeah and your roof of like almost every roof is flat yeah nobody wants to put that right cauliflower so couple things I did not like was um yeah um it's you have to sort of figure out how much you can use right to always make sure that the gas is I was just months I don't remember the last it cost me 400 pesos was 100 . it was huge thing but a lot of people do almost a smaller as you start Ed and then our gas barbecues yeah you can still have to pay for it wow it's amazing good morning all right back okay number three don't matter right just go to the bathroom okay great thank you foreign [Music] foreign [Music] just picked up the van from the friend that was uh holding a place for me and I picked up the van and now we're heading to our favorite one of our favorite I guess spots where I park all right you just get back and you go right back to this place you were it's amazing so I'm heading from Walmart to begin with and we'll find a see a parking spot at Walmart for the night | Nomadic Vanman | UCsEf8YwfuMKj2IuPZIwX6wA | 2023-05-18 | Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed) | en | metadata | en | 851 | 4,384 |
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