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9-DGFTYLAK8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-DGFTYLAK8
Electric power system | Wikipedia audio article
an electric power system as a network of electrical components deployed to supply transfer and use electric power an example of an electric power system as the grid that provides power to an extended area an electrical grid power system can be broadly divided into the generators that supply the power the transmission system that carries the power from the generating centers to the load centers and the distribution system that feeds the power to nearby homes and industries smaller power systems are also found in industry hospitals commercial buildings and homes the majority of these systems rely upon three-phase AC power the standard for large-scale power transmission and distribution across the modern world specialized power systems that do not always rely upon three-phase AC power are found in aircraft electric rail systems ocean liners and automobiles topic history in 1881 two electricians built the world's first power system at Godalming in England it was powered by two water wheels and produced an alternating current that in turn supplied 7 Siemens arc lamps at 250 volts and 34 incandescent lamps at 40 volts however supply to the lamps was intermittent and in 1882 Thomas Edison and his company the Edison Electric Light Company developed the first steam-powered electric power station on Pearl Street in New York City the Pearl Street Station initially powered around 3000 lamps for 59 customers the power station generated direct current and operated at a single voltage direct current power could not be transformed easily or efficiently to the higher voltages necessary to minimize power loss during long-distance transmission so the maximum economic distance between the generators and load was limited to around half a mile 800 meters that same year in London lucien Guillard and John Dickson Gibbs demonstrated that secondary generator namely the first transformer suitable for use in a real power system the practical value of Guillard and Gibbs's transformer was demonstrated in 1884 at turin where the transformer was used to light up 40 kilometres 25 miles of railway from a single alternating current generator despite the success of the system the pair made some fundamental mistakes perhaps the most serious was connecting the primaries of the Transformers in series so that active lamps would affect the brightness of other lamps further down the line in 1885 Otto Titus blabby 1862 1939 of ganzen Co Budapest perfected the secondary generator of Guillard and Gibbs providing it with a closed iron core and thus obtained the first true power transformer which he dubbed with its present name the same year Vladdy and two other engineers of the company set up the CBD system from their initials by implementing the parallel AC distribution proposed by British scientist our Kennedy in 1883 in which several power transformers have their primary windings fed in parallel from a high voltage distribution line the system was presented at the 1885 National General exhibition of Budapest in 1885 George Westinghouse an American entrepreneur obtained the patent rights to the Guillard Gibbs transformer and imported a number of them along with a Siemens generator and set his engineers to experimenting with them in hopes of improving them for use in a commercial power system in 1886 one of Westinghouse's engineers William Stanley also recognized the problem with connecting transformers in series as opposed to parallel and also realized that making the iron core of a transformer a fully enclosed loop would improve the voltage regulation of the secondary winding using this knowledge he built the first practical transformer based alternating current power system at Great Barrington Massachusetts in 1886 Westinghouse would begin installing multi-voltage AC transformer systems in competition with the Edison Company later that year in 1888 Westinghouse also licensed Nikola Tesla's US patents for a polyphase AC induction motor and transformer designs and hired Tesla for one year to be a consultant at the Westinghouse Electric and manufacturing companies Pittsburgh labs by 1888 the electric power industry was flourishing and power companies had built thousands of power systems both direct and alternating current in the United States in Europe these networks were effectively dedicated to providing electric lighting during this time the rivalry between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse as companies had grown into a propaganda campaign over which form of transmission director alternating current was superior a series of events known as the war of currents in 1891 Westinghouse installed the first major power system that was designed to drive a 100 horsepower 75 kilowatts synchronous electric motor not just provide electric lighting at Telluride Colorado on the other side of the Atlantic mikhail de levo dobrovolsky of aeg and charles eugene Lancelot Braun of machine and fabric Oerlikon built the very first long-distance 175 kilometres a distance never tried before high-voltage fifteen kilo volts then a record three-phase transmission line from laufen M Necker to Frankfurt AM main for the Electrical Engineering exhibition in Frankfurt where power was used light lamps and movie water pump in the u.s. the ac/dc competition came to an end when Edison General Electric was taken over by their chief a/c rival the thomson-houston electric company forming General Electric in 1895 after a protracted decision-making process alternating current was chosen as a transmission standard with Westinghouse building the Adams number one generating station at Niagara Falls and General Electric building the three-phase alternating current power system to supply Buffalo at 11 kilovolts developments in power systems continued beyond the 19th century in 1936 the first experimental high-voltage direct-current HVDC line using mercury arc valves was built between Schenectady and Mechanicville New York HVDC had previously been achieved by series connected direct current generators and motors the thery system although this suffered from serious reliability issues the first solid state metal diode suitable for general power uses was developed by Ernst presser at tech aid Germany in 1928 it consisted of a layer of selenium applied on an aluminum plate in 1957 a General Electric research group developed a solid-state PNP and switch device that was successfully marketed in early 1958 starting a revolution in power electronics in 1957 also Siemens demonstrated a solid-state rectifier but it was not until the early 1970s that solid-state devices became the standard in HVDC when GE emerged as one of the top suppliers of thyristor based HVDC in 1979 a European consortium including Siemens brown boveri & cie and aeg realized the record' HVDC link from Kabara bossa mozambique to Johannesburg South Africa extending more than 1420 kilometers and rated 1.9 gigawatts at plus or minus 533 kilo volts that resorted to top-performing 3.2 - kv thyristors developed by aeg under g e--'s license in recent times many important developments have come from extending innovations in the information and communications technology ICT field to the power and Engineering field for example the development of computers meant load flow studies could be run more efficiently allowing for much better planning of power systems advances in information technology and telecommunication also allowed for remote control of a power system switch gear and generators topic basics of electric power electric power is the product of two quantities current and voltage these two quantities can vary with respect to time AC power or can be kept at constant levels DC power most refrigerators air conditioners pumps and industrial machinery use AC power whereas most computers and digital equipment use DC power the digital devices you plug into the mains typically have an internal or external power adapter to convert from AC to DC power AC power has the advantage of being easy to transform between voltages and is able to be generated and utilized by brushless machinery DC power remains the only practical choice in digital systems and can be more economical to transmit over long distances at very high voltages see HVDC the ability to easily transform the voltage of AC power is important for two reasons firstly power can be transmitted over long distances with less loss at higher voltages so in power systems where generation is distant from the load it is desirable to step-up increase the voltage of power at the generation point and then step-down decrease the voltage near the load secondly it is often more economical to install turbines that produce higher voltages than would be used by most appliances so the ability to easily transform voltages means this mismatch between voltages can be easily managed solid-state devices which are products of the semiconductor revolution make it possible to transform DC power to different voltages build brushless DC machines and convert between AC and DC power nevertheless devices utilizing solid-state technology are often more expensive than their traditional counterparts so AC power remains in widespread use topic balancing the grid one of the main difficulties in power systems is that the amount of active power consumed plus losses should always equal the active power produced if more power is produced and consumed the frequency will rise and vice versa even small deviations from the nominal frequency value will damage synchronous machines and other appliances making sure the frequency is constant as usually the task of a transmission system operator in some countries for example in the European Union this is achieved through a balancing market using ancillary services topic components of power systems topic supplies all power systems have one or more sources of power for some power systems the source of power is external to the system but for others it is part of the system itself it is these internal power sources that are discussed in the remainder of this section direct current power can be supplied by batteries fuel cells or photovoltaic cells alternating current power is typically supplied by a rotor that spins in a magnetic field in a device known as a turbo generator there have been a wide range of techniques used to spin a turbines rotor from steam heated using fossil fuel including coal gas and oil or nuclear energy fallingwater hydroelectric power and wind wind power the speed at which the rotor spins in combination with the number of generator poles determines the frequency of the alternating current produced by the generator all generators on a single synchronous system for example the National Grid rotate at sub multiples of the same speed and so generate electric current at the same frequency if the load on the system increases the generators will require more torque to spin at that speed and in a typical power station more steam must be supplied to the turbines driving them thus the steam used in the fuel expended are directly dependent on the quantity of electrical energy supplied an exception exists for generators incorporating power electronics such as gearless wind turbines are linked to a grid through an asynchronous tie such as HVDC link these can operate at frequencies independent of the power system frequency depending on how the poles are fed alternating current generators can produce a variable number of phases of power a higher number of phases leads to more efficient power system operation but also increases the infrastructure requirements of the system electricity grid systems connect multiple generators and loads operating at the same frequency a number of phases the communist being three-phase at 50 or 60 Hertz however there are other considerations these range from the obvious how much power should the generator be able to supply what is an acceptable length of time for starting the generator some generators can take hours to start is the availability of the power saw acceptable some renewables are only available when the sun is shining or the wind is blowing to the more technical how should the generator start some turbines act like a motor to bring themselves up to speed in which case they need an appropriate starting circuit what is the mechanical speed of operation for the turbine and consequently what are the number of poles required what type of generator is suitable synchronous or asynchronous and what type of rotor squirrel cage rotor wound-rotor salient pole rotor or cylindrical rotor topic loads power systems deliver energy to loads that perform a function these loads range from household appliances to industrial machinery most loads expect a certain voltage and for alternating current devices a certain frequency and number of phases the appliances found in your home for example will typically be single-phase operating at 50 or 60 Hertz with a voltage between 110 and 260 volts depending on national standards an exception exists for centralized air conditioning systems as these are now typically three-phase because this allows them to operate more efficiently all devices in your house will also have a wattage this specifies the amount of power the device consumes at any one time the net amount of power consumed by the loads on a power system must equal the net amount of power produced by the supplies less the power lost in transmission making sure that the voltage frequency and amount of power supplied to the loads is in line with expectations as one of the great challenges of power system engineering however it is not the only challenge in addition to the power used by a load to do useful work termed real power many alternating current devices also use an additional amount of power because they cause the alternating voltage and alternating current to become slightly out of sync termed reactive power the reactive power like the real power must balance that is the reactive power produced on a system must equal the reactive power consumed and can be supplied from the generators however it is often more economical to supply such power from capacitors C capacitors and reactors below for more details a final consideration with loads as to do with power quality in addition to sustained over voltages and under voltages voltage regulation issues as well as sustained deviations from the system frequency frequency regulation issues power system loads can be adversely affected by a range of temporal issues these include voltage sags dips and swells transient over voltages flicker high frequency noise phase imbalance and poor power factor power quality issues occur when the power supply to a load deviates from the ideal for an AC supply the ideal is the current and voltage in sync fluctuating as a perfect sign at a prescribed frequency with the voltage at a prescribed amplitude for DC supply the ideal is the voltage not varying from a prescribed level power quality issues can be especially important when it comes to specialist industrial machinery or hospital equipment topic conductors conductor's carry power from the generators to the load in a grid conductors may be classified as belonging to the transmission system which carries large amounts of power at high voltages typically more than 69 kilo volts from the generating centers to the load centers or the distribution system which feeds smaller amounts of power at lower voltages typically less than 69 kilo volts from the load centers to nearby homes and Industry choice of conductors is based on considerations such as cost transmission losses and other desirable characteristics of the metal like tensile strength copper with lower resistivity than aluminium was the conductor of choice for most power systems however aluminum has a lower cost for the same current carrying capacity and as the primary metal used for transmission line conductors overhead line conductors may be reinforced with steel or aluminium alloys conductors in exterior power systems may be placed overhead or underground overhead conductors are usually air insulated and supported on porcelain glass or polymer insulators cables used for underground transmission or building wiring are insulated with cross-linked polyethylene or other flexible insulation large conductors are stranded for ease of handling small conductors used for building wiring are often solid especially in light commercial or residential construction conductors are typically rated for the maximum current that they can carry at a given temperature rise over ambient conditions as current flow increases through a conductor it heats up for insulated conductors the rating is determined by the insulation for overhead conductors the rating is determined by the point at which the sag of the conductors would become unacceptable topic capacitors and reactors the majority of the load in a typical AC power system is inductive the current lags behind the voltage since the voltage and current are out of phase this leads to the emergence of an imaginary form of power known as reactive power reactive power does no measurable work but is transmitted back and forth between the reactive power source and load every cycle this reactive power can be provided by the generators themselves through the adjustment of generator excitation but it is often cheaper to provide it through capacitors hence capacitors are often placed near inductive loads to reduce current demand on the power system ie increase the power factor which may never exceed 1.0 and which represents a purely resistive load power factor correction may be applied at a central substation through the use of so-called synchronous condensers synchronous machines which act as condensers which are variable in var value through the adjustment of machine excitation or adjacent to large loads through the use of so-called static condensers condensers which are fixed in VAR value reactors consume reactive power and are used to regulate voltage on long transmission lines in light load conditions where the loading on transmission lines is well below the surge impedance loading the efficiency of the power system may actually be improved by switching in reactors reactors installed in series in a power system also limit rushes of current flow small reactors are therefore almost always installed in series with capacitors to limit the current rush associated with switching in a capacitor series reactors can also be used to limit fault currents capacitors and reactors are switched by circuit breakers which results in moderately large steps in reactive power a solution comes in the form of static var compensators and static synchronous compensators briefly static var compensators work by switching in capacitors using thyristors as opposed to circuit breakers allowing capacitors to be switched in and switched out within a single cycle this provides a far more refined response than circuit breaker switched capacitors static synchronous compensators take a step further by achieving reactive power adjustments using only power electronics topic power electronics power electronics are semiconductor based devices that are able to switch quantities of power ranging from a few hundred watts to several hundred megawatts despite their relatively simple function their speed of operation typically in the order of nanoseconds means they are capable of a wide range of tasks that would be difficult or impossible with conventional technology the classic function of power electronics is rectification or the conversion of AC to DC power power electronics are therefore found in almost every digital device that is supplied from an AC source either as an adapter that plugs into the wall see photo in basics of electric power section or as component internal to the device high-powered power electronics can also be used to convert AC power to DC power for long distance transmission in a system known as HVDC HVDC is used because it proves to be more economical than similar high voltage AC systems for very long distances hundreds to thousands of kilometers HVDC is also desirable for interconnects because it allows frequency independence thus improving system stability power electronics are also essential for any power source that is required to produce an AC output but that by its nature produces a DC output they are therefore used by many photovoltaic installations both industrial and residential power electronics also feature in a wide range of more exotic uses they are at the heart of all modern electric and hybrid vehicles where they are used for both motor control and as part of the brushless DC motor power electronics are also found in practically all modern petrol powered vehicles this is because the power provided by the cars batteries alone is insufficient to provide ignition air-conditioning internal lighting radio and dashboard displays for the life of the car so the batteries must be recharged while driving using DC power from the engine a feat that is typically accomplished using power electronics whereas conventional technology would be unsuitable for a modern electric car commutator scannin have been used in petrol powered cars the switch to alternators in combination with power electronics has occurred because of the improved durability of brushless machinery some electric railway systems also use DC power and thus make use of power electronics to feed grid power to the locomotives and often for speed control of the locomotives motor in the middle 20th century rectifier locomotives were popular these used power electronics to convert AC power from the railway network for use by a DC motor today most electric locomotives are supplied with AC power and run using AC motors but still use power electronics to provide suitable motor control the use of power electronics to assist with the motor control and with starter circuits cannot be overestimated and in addition to rectification is responsible for power electronics appearing in a wide range of industrial machinery power electronics even appear in modern residential air conditioners power electronics are also at the heart of the variable speed wind turbine conventional wind turbines require significant engineering to ensure they operate at some ratio of the system frequency however by using power electronics this requirement can be eliminated leading to quieter more flexible and at the moment more costly wind turbines a final example of one of the more exotic uses of power electronics comes from the previous section where the fast switching times of power electronics were used to provide more refined reactive compensation to the power system topic protective devices power systems contain protective devices to prevent injury or damage during failures the quintessential protective device is the fuse when the current through a fuse exceeds a certain threshold the fuse element melts producing an arc across the resulting gap that is then extinguished interrupting the circuit given it fuses can be built as the weak point of a system fuses are ideal for protecting circuitry from damaged fuses however have two problems first after they have functioned fuses must be replaced as they cannot be reset this can prove inconvenient if the fuses at a remote site or a spare fuse is not on hand and second fuses are typically inadequate as the sole safety device in most power systems as they allow current flows well in excess of that that would prove lethal to a human or animal the first problem is resolved by the use of circuit breakers devices that can be reset after they have broken current flow in modern systems that use less than about 10 kilowatts miniature circuit breakers are typically used these devices combine the mechanism that initiates a trip by sensing excess current as well as the mechanism that breaks the current flow in a single unit some miniature circuit breakers operate solely on the basis of electromagnetism in these miniature circuit breakers the current is run through a solenoid and in the event of excess current flow the magnetic pull of the solenoid is sufficient to force open the circuit breakers contacts often indirectly through a tripping mechanism a better design however arises by inserting a bimetallic strip before the solenoid this means that instead of always producing a magnetic force the solenoid only produces a magnetic force when the current is strong enough to deform the bimetallic strip and complete the solenoid circuit in higher powered applications the protective relays that detect default and initiate a trip are separate from the circuit breaker early relays worked based upon electromagnetic principles similar to those mentioned in the previous paragraph modern relays are application-specific computers that determine whether to trip based upon readings from the power system different relays will initiate trips depending upon different protection schemes for example an over current relay might initiate a trip if the current on any phase exceeds a certain threshold whereas a set of differential relays might initiate a trip if the sum of currents between them indicates there may be currently 'king to earth the circuit breakers in higher powered applications are different - air is typically no longer sufficient to quench the arc that forms when the contacts are forced open so a variety of techniques are used one of the most popular techniques is to keep the chamber enclosing the contacts flooded with sulfur hexafluoride sf6 a non-toxic gas that has sound our quenching properties other techniques are discussed in the reference the second problem the inadequacy of fuses to act as a sole safety device in most power systems is probably best resolved by the use of residual current devices are CD's in any properly functioning electrical appliance the current flowing into the appliance on the active line should equal the current flowing out of the appliance on the neutral line a residual current device works by monitoring the active in neutral lines and tripping the active line if it notices a difference residual-current devices require a separate neutral line for each phase and to be able to trip within a time frame before harm occurs this is typically not a problem in most residential applications where standard wiring provides an active and neutral line for each appliance that's why your power plugs always have at least two tongs and the voltages are relatively low however these issues do limit the effectiveness of our CDs in other applications such as industry even with the installation of an RCD exposure to electricity can still prove lethal topic SCADA systems in large electric power systems supervisory control and data acquisition SCADA is used for tasks such as switching on generators controlling generator output and switching in or out system elements for maintenance the first supervisory control systems implemented consisted of a panel of lamps and switches at a central console near the controlled plant the lamps provided feedback on the state of the plant the data acquisition function and the switch is allowed adjustments to the plant to be made the supervisory control function today SCADA systems are much more sophisticated and due to advances in communication systems the consul's controlling the plant no longer need to be near the plant itself instead it is now common for plants to be controlled with equipment similar if not identical to a desktop computer the ability to control such plants through computers has increased the need for security there have already been reports of cyberattacks on such systems causing significant disruptions to power systems topic power systems in practice despite their common components power systems vary widely both with respect to their design and how they operate this section introduces some common power system types and briefly explains their operation topic residential power systems you residential dwellings almost always take supply from the low voltage distribution lines or cables that run past the dwelling these operate at voltages of between 110 and 260 volts face to earth depending upon national standards a few decades ago small dwellings would be fed a single-phase using a dedicated two core service cable one core for the active phase in one core for the neutral return the active line would then be run through a main isolating switch in the fuse box and then split into one or more circuits to feed lighting and appliances inside the house by convention the lighting and appliance circuits are kept separate so the failure of an appliance does not leave the dwellings occupants in the dark all circuits would be fused with an appropriate fuse based upon the wire size used for that circuit circuits would have both an active and neutral wire with both the lighting and power sockets being connected in parallel sockets would also be provided with a protective earth this would be made available to appliances to connect to any metallic casing if this casing were to become live the theory is the connection to earth would cause an RCD or fuse to trip thus preventing the future electrocution of an occupant handling the appliance earthing systems vary between regions but in countries such as the United Kingdom and Australia both the protective earth and neutral line would be earth together near the fuse box before the main isolating switch in the neutral earth once again back at the distribution transformer there have been a number of minor changes over the year to practice of residential wiring some of the most significant ways modern residential power systems tend to vary from older ones include for convenience miniature circuit breakers are now almost always used in the fuse box instead of fuses as these can easily be reset by occupants for safety reasons our CDs are now installed on appliance circuits and increasingly even on lighting circuits dwellings are typically connected to all three phases of the distribution system with the phases being arbitrarily allocated to the houses single phase circuits where as air conditioners of the past might have been fed from a dedicated circuit attached to a single-phase centralized air conditioned that require three-phase power are now becoming common protective Earth's are now run with lighting circuits to allow for metallic lamp holders to be earthed increasingly residential power systems are incorporating micro generators most notably photovoltaic cells topic commercial power systems commercial power systems such as shopping centers or high-rise buildings are larger in scale than residential systems electrical designs for larger commercial systems are usually studied for load flow short circuit fault levels and voltage drop for steady-state loads and during starting of large motors the objectives of the studies are to assure proper equipment and conductor sizing and to coordinate protective devices so that minimal disruption is caused when a fault is cleared large commercial installations will have an orderly system of sub panels separate from the main distribution board to allow for better system protection and more efficient electrical installation typically one of the largest appliances connected to a commercial power system as the HVAC unit and ensuring this unit as adequately supplied as an important consideration in commercial power systems regulations for commercial establishments place other requirements on commercial systems that are not placed on residential systems for example in Australia commercial systems must comply with US 2293 the standard for emergency lighting which requires emergency lighting be maintained for at least 90 minutes in the event of loss of mains supply in the United States the National Electrical Code requires commercial systems to be built with at least 120 a sign outlet in order to light outdoor signage Building Code regulations may place special requirements on the electrical system for emergency lighting evacuation emergency power smoke control and fire protection topic see also power system simulation
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gWP36GCJrig
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gWP36GCJrig
LibreOffice Conference 2016: UI Hacking explained, episode 2: Revenge of sfx2 dispatch API
so I made a similar talk on this very topic on last year's LibreOffice conference in Denmark and I get some positive feedback from from guys that were just starting with the UI hacking telling me yes this is this is exactly what the newcomers need to get introduced to the UI hacking in LibreOffice and one of the issues you I hacking is kind of pestered with is like a cute lack of documentation in many cases the only documentation is an old openoffice Vicky and if you are not really a fan of abstract computer science paper language this documentation will be very hard to read for you and in the meantime some new UI hackus appeared and also some I meant it to g-shock projects focused on you I hacking and and I realized well the situation with doc you mention didn't improve at all and perhaps I could make one more tutorial one more talk on this very topic and to begin wait let me quote some or let me first explain why why is this talk called The Revenge of SFX to API and let me quote some wise men in the process yes so SFX do I di dispatch ap is basically driving force behind everything what happens in in the liver of the season interface fortunately will we will not look how it how it what what's inside because it's really scary perhaps you don't want to know but we will at least see how it have it looks from the outside and well how so and in the so is there anyone who ever wrote a liberal office user interface code some hands raising so I have a plea for for all of you please don't copy paste the code and the reason why why you should not copy paste the code is that like this is this is free maybe it's not specific to to user interface hekkus but that's what the people who somehow start with you a hacking frequently do that they take the code that it works somewhere else and they use ctrl C and ctrl V and copy paste this code to to a different place and in some cases it behaves okay it's it works well but then it fails in like very very subtle ways very strange ways in those ways are kind of and it makes it somehow somehow hard to do back in a little bit to say oh but this code works somewhere else why doesn't it work here so this is something also we will look at some some common bugs or some some problems we can encountered one when hacking on the UI and how to fix them so let's start with some summary cap off of yet you know commands you know commands are some kind of some kind of like basic building block of the user interface so there's this behind every toolbar button there's some you know command as you can see this is this is some kind of a sample snippet of XML it's a configuration of toolbar and if it references those those doc you know Colin something those are the unica man's also have behind every almost every sidebar button or sidebar control as you can see you can all begin see some some snippet of sidebar configuration of the UI file there is some you know command behind them and all those commands are stored in in a central place which is in office config folder there are two kinds of them there are generic commands that are shared by all applications and then all the other applications like raita calc impress they have their specific set of commands that I used and only in this application and nowhere else and to make it a bit more visual here is some some snippet of xml config of menu bar containing containing you know command and then on the left well it's my left its your right on the right you can see you can see how it how it max to to a particular command in the central storage of the you know commands and as you might also know as well all the you know commands have hotkeys this is an example like in calc if you press f1 f9 it will execute this very you know command that is highlighted in red and the funny trick about those commands that that they're localizable so if the particular particular shortcut doesn't fit your language with your keyboard layout there's a possibility to change it so that's one end of pipe there are toolbars there's a sidebar there are menus there's some user interaction with those elements and thats that's one end of the pipe and on the other end of the pipe there are some c++ functions and methods would actually carry out the work that I don't know format the page change the feel of the shape or I don't know inside insert some data somewhere and what's in between it slots slots somehow connectors user interface elements with with those functions you can I uh put some some some funny image of a negative and leave my blackboard so you can imagine it at some some kind of blackboard with with using the face on 11 and the C++ function or like the usual the the code doing the heavy lifting like actually executing the work and those slots if live in those those funny SDI files so if you ever found SDI file in the open in the liver of his code base this is where the slots live this is where they are and for every you know command there is a slot it's it's a bit hidden so the command has dis you know prefix but this load doesn't and here is some some clever trick if you're looking if you have a you know command and you want to find the slot for this particular you know command you can you can use this you can then download my slides and copy paste this command line you'll be base this command line and you will it will take you to the slot that's responsible for this command so what are the SSDI files there are two types of SDI files and one of them contains slot definitions so that some description of how this particular slot behaves and the other type of SDI files is some kind of interface house lot are organized into some lists or arrays how those are organized into shells and how does shell somehow connect to the actual C++ classes and functions and those SDI files by are processed by something that's that's called as VI dl that crunches those files and then create some how to say that some some huge array of pointers to C++ functions those live and work directory work there and yeah if you're brave you can you can have a look at those those files that are kind of I don't know very little human readable so this is how an average low definition looks like as I see like all those those entries like describe or define how how does the slot behave if it can be assigned keyboard shortcut for example if it can be used in menu entry if it can be used in toolbox and some clever tricks I can show so if you ever wondered how if you have a slot and if you have a toolbar button you want to make a toolbar button some kind of binary toggle this is how you do it to set this double attribute to true or if you have a toolbar if you have a slot and you want to expose it in the toolbar button make it accessible allow to make it to it to be a part of a toolbar this is how it is done again this toolbox conflict can be set to true and this aciphex svx page item highlighted um oh I used to in my previous job I used to do some network programming so I like to imagine those those sfx svx items are some kind of network packets some they'd added travel like from the use of type of data to travel in small packets from from the user interface to the c++ code and those data kind can be of different type it can be colored it can be formed it can be either no cell border and this particular example this is a slot that's responsible for for setting the attributes of the page and the packets the item that travels to the slot some kind of main communication unit contains the attributes of the page if it's a landscape or portrait which layout which numbering and and so on so this is this is what those items are for and as I mentioned there are some to two types of those as di files this was one of them with the slot definitions and on the right we can see the other the other SDI file which defines slot interfaces or shell interfaces so on every every slot which is defined in in one st i file is then part of some interface and then interface are organized into shells so what's the shell if we simplify that it's some set of different functions for different objects or different contexts and here we can see some example of calc spreadsheet is a pivot table there are normal cells there's a graph a chart and all of those like different types of objects are in fact different shells so we can have a we can have a cell shell and some set of operations that are possible for a cell so we can the format cell we can we can delete its content we can insert some image and then yet another set of operation that are available for a pivot table like edit layout or insert subtotals and yet another set of operation that is available for chart so those are somehow group lineage and chart shell so we can we can format the data series or inside labels or I don't know format axis and there is those arrays like of functions or groups of functions available in a particular shell are grouped in big arrays like this and it's the it's the interface entry and an interface sudden ten parts of the shells so every shell can contain multiple interfaces and now we finally get to the meat so how where's actually the cold carrying out the UI work like the where's where's the C++ code where's the C++ class and method executing something doing something when i click on a toolbar button or wear it when i do something in you I see this is a as I said this is this is the interface that's organized that's put in the shell and this stock shell is the name of the class so if you're looking for a C++ code implementing particularly you I function look for this class and if you are looking for a particular method implementing the function this is the method to find and as you can see there are two types of methods one is the execute method and the other is a state method what's the difference between them I will show an example so execute method is what what happens when you well what's actually executed so if I if I click on this funny area formatting button next acute method will get cold and the color of the big object changes but now the toolbar buttons should somehow it would be nice if it would reflect the change just made and that's for the state method is for so the state methods carry queries the state of the object and updates that will bar button back and this is this is wearisome let's say common errors or common problems happen so I've listed a couple of them on the next slide which we which we encountered in in the development during g-shock and implementing some UI features so if you ever wondered why why a tool virus sidebar control doesn't pick up to the state like something has changed in the in the spreadsheet or something has changed in the drawing and the sidebar button doesn't update by the method I outlined on the previous slide try to locate the get state method for this particular slot and see what's happening there put a breakpoint another issue is we we once had we correctly updated the slot definition and we exposed the toolbar the slotting for we made it available for a toolbar but it stays disabled like no matter what what what was done it was always great out so a part of this SFX API is is disabling the slot so if you disable the slot it means that menu entry is grayed out or order the toolbar button is grayed out it's not accessible so what you can try to do is to grab for this load slot locate the slot and find some code try to find some food that is disabling it and like find out why why is that happening and I think by that I I came to the to the end of my talk
LibreOffice - The Document Foundation
UCQAClQkZEm2rkWvU5bvCAXQ
2016-11-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
2,252
11,581
yp7ksStPSVo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yp7ksStPSVo
Invasive plant control – Water hyacinth
Water hyacinth is one of the worst invaders in the world and in South Africa is especially quite bad. My name is Matthew Paper. I work currently for the CBC as a research assistant.. I work for the water weeds program at the CBC focusing on water hyacinth The water hyacinth is a beautiful plant there's no mistaking it has a gorgeous purple fluorescence I mean bright purple you can see it from anywhere from meters away and this very vibrant green and glossy leaf Water hyacinth has large negative effects on water flow, water quality and ecosystem structure within a system so oftentimes you'll have specific fish specific plants that occur in a artificial lake or a a pond or even a river water hyacinth will first off cover the entire surface and it actually changes the water chemistry of the water itself and so killing off everything below it so it will kill off local fish local fauna and even native plants to that area. If you have a single little crown or a single part of water hyacinth with just a little bit of root that will take up and it will just grow and grow and grow. What I do is I have researched specifically on a insect called cornops aquaticum which is a beautiful looking grasshopper multiple colors. beautiful green a black and what it does is it feeds quite extensively on water hyacinth and only on water hyacinth and are the agents that we have On each leaf we look at the different types of damage So we have a couple agents there at the moment but cornops has a really specific damage where it if you imagine the top ofthe leaf it kind of shaves the very top layer of the leaf as a nymph and then when it gets to an adult it actually eats the entire leaf It's a continual release but the cost to benefit ratio is far exceeded than what you get for spraying The fact is that it's a release and you let it go and it will do its own thing that's the the benefit of it is that if it once in the population has established in the location it kind of it does its own thing and then and it feeds specifically on what it's meant to do. The Nahoon River which is an incredibly impacted system there was a Egeria densa which is a submerged weed there was water hyacinth We released our insects there to see what would happen and so part of the survey was to lay down transept lines so just an imaginary line that you set up through water hyacinth and every time what you're doing is you laying down a quadrant of 0.25 meters so that you can scale it up to what you imagined the whole system would be like if you can replicate a small subset enough times you'll be able to get an idea of what the whole system is doing and you count the number of plants the number of leaves the number of flowers thirty-five It is socially impactful and environmentally impactful in a positive way and I think it's important that people understand that anything they do as long as they have that mindset towards creating positive reflection on their environment and their surroundings even if it's small it makes a big difference
RUTV Journalism Rhodes University
UCM3YHtuIxmvYotFLakkLpBQ
2019-07-29
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
570
3,041
2Hkw1S0b6nI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Hkw1S0b6nI
Definitely Not A Pecan Orchard: A Pizzamas Question Tuesday
Good morning, Hank, is Tuesday- good morning, John! Oh, we're in a pecan orchard. It's really nice. We're on the side of the road in this beautiful pecan orchard. Hank, it's question Tuesday, the day that we answer real questions from real nerdfighters First question, Hank, do you have a favorite hat? Hmm.. Available at dftba.com only for the next five days along with all the other pizzamas gear! Extra cool if you wear like this- oh boy I mean, that is, that is a dad hat. Hank, how's the tour been? Uh, so good, so good, so good. It's really just two 'so good's. It's three 'so good's. So good, so good, so good. Hank's right. Too much or not enough? I would rather have too much. Oh yeah - I'm American. John how's the book doing? well It's been number one on the New York Times bestseller list for three straight weeks So thank you, everybody. How does one explain Pizza John to somebody who doesn't know about Pizza John? I Don't. I feel like it's not something you explain. It's just something you accept Yeah, you just like it's the guy he wrote The Fault in Our Stars That's all you gotta say, and then they're like oh, and he's a pizza. Which of you is more of a lightweight? Clearly me. I mean. he- Hank is the lightest weight. John how sad are you to be missing out on Saturday at Podcon. I'm sorry to miss the first day of Podcon although there's still gonna be plenty of live dear Hank and John. I'll still be there, but I'm missing it because I'm interviewing former Vice President Joe Biden so I'm not that sad because I'm pretty psyched about interviewing former Vice President Joe Biden I think people know who Joe Biden is you don't have to qualify them every time. Oh, yeah? I don't? I don't know Did I ever tell you- poll on the sidebar! Do you know who Joe Biden is? I do feel like you could say nothing and Uncle Joe would fill up the time. Good old Uncle Joe. Oh, god, what if he knows that we call him Uncle Joe? And he introduces himself, he's like "Hey, John, nice to meet you. I do not appreciate being called Uncle Joe on vlogbrothers". They're gonna have to like prep him- right- and it's gonna be like so who's this guy was interviewing me And they're like well actually he made a video about you in a pecan orchard while wearing his own face on his torso. That was my Joe Biden dance, that was just for Joe. No one else gets to enjoy it. Hank, are hotdogs sandwiches? No opinion. WOOAAHHH! So, a thing that Hank and I have been doing on tour is we have decided that we have too many opinions, so every day Hank and I are abandoning one opinion. I've abandoned my opinion on whether a hot dog is a sandwich. I've abandoned my opinion on Phil Collins's music. I no longer have an opinion about it. I've abandoned my opinion on other people's opinions of M&M flavors. Yeah, which is a big deal for Hank because -it was difficult-he was a hardcore anti peanut butter M&M -so bad- nope But oh you are allowed to love them -there you go I'm gonna abandon one opinion every day until I find that I am left with some really core important opinions. Hey, Hank, how would you summarize the book tour experience in the form of a haiku? You didn't give any prep for this?! you-didn't-give-any-prep-for-this. No. That's- you're not even close. Nau-se-a-ted bus Now I'm drunk again. Han-ging out with John a lot Birds fly... ...around me... I don't know if you knew that about the tour experience but every time you go out it's like -woowoo-. Well, because of the nauseated bus. Oh right. Cos of the birds flying over- like in the cartoon. Hey Hank, where can I get Pizzamas gear and for how much longer? Somebody knows how to get on question Tuesday. This way No, you have to go to dftba.com, and it's only available until Friday. Happy Pizzamas everybody! Hank, I will see you... whenever you get back! Oh, there you are! Oh, P.S., Hank, someone asked "Can we get a discount code for Pizzamas merch?" and I decided, you know what? Yeah! For the next 24 hours if you use the discount code 'Pizza' you will get... One percent off- one percent off of your purchase at dftba.com It's a great discount, Hank. For anything on the whole site? For anything on the whole site. -woah- One percent.
vlogbrothers
UCGaVdbSav8xWuFWTadK6loA
2017-11-07
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metadata
en
787
4,220
14PGqnfVFQo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14PGqnfVFQo
No Wonder Kmart Went Out of Business
if you can't find what you're looking for in store we'll find it at kmart.com right now and ship it to you for free so saying we'll find it so it's like the Associates in the store look it up for you and then ship it to you their whole thing is you're in the store they don't have it you can still get it to you stupid concept no wonder they went out of business this is like pre everyone's on Amazon come on 10 years ago yeah I know but they didn't embrace it is all I'm trying to explain I was in this though it wasn't like a full econ push like Walmart did they adapted Amazon well they did this weird hybrid that's what I'm trying to explain that's why they died
Original Marketing Podcast
UCH0g6UOeXdnUDRevJUwNIzg
2023-06-23
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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metadata
en
136
666
x8zadiXPcuo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8zadiXPcuo
Anarchism and Other Essays (Version 2) | Emma Goldman | Essays & Short Works | Book | English | 5/5
the modern drama part 2 of anarchism and other essays by Emma Goldman this LibriVox recording is in the public domain recording by expatriate in Bangor Maine the modern drama a powerful disseminator of radical thought part 2 how could a society machine zone fathom the seething depths whence issued the great masterpiece of Henrik Ibsen it could not understand and therefore a poor the vials of abuse and venom upon its greatest benefactor that Ibsen was not daunted he has proved by his reply in an enemy of the people in that great drama absent performs the last funeral rites over a decaying in dying social system out of its ashes Rises the regenerated individual the bold and daring rebel dr. Stockman an idealist full of social sympathy and solidarity is called to his native town as the physician of the baths he soon discovers that the latter are built on a swamp and that instead of finding relief the patients who flocked to the place are being poisoned an honest man of strong convictions the doctor considers it his duty to make his discovery known but he soon learns that dividends and profits are concerned neither with health nor principles even the reformers of the town represented in the people's messenger always ready to pray to their devotion to the people withdraw their support from the reckless idealist the moment they learned that the doctor's discovery may bring the town into disrepute and thus injure their pockets but dr. Stockman continues in the faith he entertains for his townsman they would hear him but here too he soon finds himself alone he cannot even secure a place to proclaim his great truth and when he finally succeeds he is overwhelmed by abuse and ridicule as the enemy of the people the doctor so enthusiastic of his towns people's assistance to eradicate the evil is soon driven to a solitary position the announcement of his discovery would result in a pecuniary loss to the town and that consideration induces the officials the good citizens and soul reformers to stifle the voice of truth he finds them all a compact majority unscrupulous enough to be willing to build up the prosperity of the town on a quagmire of lies and fraud he is accused of trying to ruin the community but to his mind it does not matter if a lying community is ruined it must be leveled to the ground all men who live upon lies must be exterminated like vermin you'll bring it to such a pass that the whole country will deserve to perish dr. Stockman is not a practical politician a free man he thinks must not behave like a blaggard he must not so act that he would spit in his own face for only cowards permit considerations a pretended general welfare or a party to override truth and ideals party programs ring the necks of all young living truths in considerations of expediency turn morality and righteousness upside down until life is simply hideous these plays of epson the pillars of society a doll's house ghosts and an enemy of the people constitute a dynamic force which is gradually dissipating the ghost walking the social burying ground called civilization name or absence destructive facts are at the same time supremely constructive where he not merely undermines existing pillars indeed he builds with sure strokes the foundation of a healthier ideal future based on the sovereignty of the individual within a sympathetic social environment England with her great pioneers of radical thought the intellectual pilgrims like Godwin Robert Owen Darwin Spencer William Morris and scores of others with her wonderful larks of Liberty Shelley Byron Keats is another example of the influence of Dramatic Art within comparatively a few years the dramatic works of Shaw Pinero gulls worthy ran Kennedy FK read radical thought to the ears formerly deaf even to Great Britain's wondrous poet thus a public which will remain indifferent reading an essay by Robert Owen on poverty or ignore Bernard Shaw's socialistic tracts was made to think by major Barbara where in poverty is described as the greatest crime of Christian civilization poverty makes people weak slavish puny poverty creates disease crime prostitution in fine poverty is responsible for all the ills and evils of the world poverty also necessitates dependency charitable organizations institutions that thrive off the very thing they are trying to destroy the Salvation Army for instance as shown in major Barbara fights drunkenness yet one of its greatest contributors is badger a whiskey distillery who furnishes yearly thousands of pounds to do away with the very source of his wealth Bernard Shaw therefore concludes that the only real benefactor of society is a man like Undershaft Barbara's father a canon manufacturer whose theory of life is that powder is stronger than words the worst of crime says Undershaft is poverty all the other crimes are virtues beside it all the other dishonour is our chivalry itself by comparison poverty blights whole cities spreads horrible pestilences strikes dead the very soul of all come within sight sound or smell of it what you call crime is nothing a murder here a theft there a blow now and a curse there what do they matter they are only the accidents and illnesses of life there are not fifty genuine professional criminals in London but there are millions of poor people abject people dirty people ill fed ill clothed people they poison us morally and physically they kill the happiness of society they force us to do away with our own liberties and to organize unnatural cruelties for fear they should rise against us and drag us down into their abyss poverty and slavery have stood up for centuries to your sermons and leading article they will not stand up to my machine guns don't preach at them don't reason with them kill them it is the final test of conviction the only lever strong enough to overturn a social system vote bah when you vote you only change the name of the cabinet when you shoot you pull down government's inaugurate new epochs abolish old orders and set up new a wonder people cared little to read mr. Shaw's socialistic tracts in no other way but in the drama could he deliver such forcible historic truths and therefore it is only through the drama that mr. Shah is a revolutionary factor in the dissemination of radical ideas after helped Mons D Weber strife by goals worthy is the most important labor drama the theme of strife is a strike with two dominant factors Anthony the president of the company rigid uncompromising unwilling to make the slightest concession although the men held out for months and are in a condition of semi-starvation and David Roberts an uncompromising revolutionist whose devotion to the working man and the cause of freedom is at white heat between them the strikers are worn and weary with a terrible struggle and are harassed and driven by the awful sight of poverty and want in their families the most marvelous and brilliant piece of work in strife is galls were these portrayal of the mob its fickleness and lack of backbone one moment they applauded old Thomas who speaks of the power of God and religion and admonishes the men against rebellion the next instant they are carried away by a walking delegate who pleads the cause of the Union the union that always stands for compromise and which forsakes the working man whenever they dare to strike for independent demands again they are aglow with the earnestness the spirit and the intensity of David Roberts all these people willing to go in whatever direction the wind blows it is the curse of the working class that they always follow like sheep led to slaughter consistency is the greatest crime of our commercial age no matter how intense the spirit or how important the man the moment he will not allow himself to be used or sell his principles he is thrown on the dust heap such was the fate of the president of the company Anthony and of David Roberts to be sure they represented opposite poles poles antagonistic to each other polls divided by a terrible gap that can never be bridged over yet they shared a common fate Anthony is the embodiment of conservatism of old ideas of iron methods I have been chairman of this company 32 years I have fought them in four times I have never been defeated it has been said that times have changed if they have I have not changed with them it has been said that masters and men are equal can't there can be only one master in a house it has been said that capital and labor have the same interest can't their interests are as wide asunder as the poles there is only one way of treating men with the iron rod masters are masters men are men we may not like this adherence to old reactionary notions and yet there is something admirable in the courage and consistency of this man nor is he half as dangerous to the interests of the oppressed as our sentimental and soft reformers who rob with nine fingers and give libraries with the tenth who grind human beings like Russell Sage and then spend millions of dollars in social research work who turn beautiful young plants into faded old women and then give them a few paltry dollars or found a home for working girls Anthony is a worthy foe and to fight such a foe one must learn to meet him in open battle David Roberts has all the mental and moral attributes of his adversary coupled with the spirit of revolt and the depth of modern ideas e two is consistent and wants nothing for his class short of complete victory it is not for this little moment of time we are fighting not for our own little bodies in their warmth it is for all those who come after for all times Oh men for the love of them don't turn up another stone on their heads don't help to blacken the sky if we can shake that white face monster with the bloody lips that has sucked the lives out of ourselves our wives and children since the world began if we have not the hearts of men to stand against it breast to breast and I too I enforce it backward till it cry for mercy it will go on sucking life and we shall stay forever where we are less than the very dogs it is inevitable that compromise and petty interests should pass on and leave to such Giants behind inevitable until the mass will reach the stature of a David Roberts will it ever prophecy is not the vocation of the dramatist yet the moral lesson is evident one cannot help realizing that the working men will have to use methods hitherto unfamiliar to them but they will have to discard all those elements in their midst that are forever ready to reconcile the irreconcilable namely capital and labour they will have to learn that characters like David Roberts are the very forces that have revolutionized the world and thus paved the way for emancipation out of the clutches of that white faced monster with bloody lips towards a brighter horizon a freer life and a deeper recognition of human values no subject of equal social import has received such extensive consideration within the last few years as the question of prison and punishment hardly any magazine of consequence that has not devoted its columns to the discussion of this vital theme a number of books by able writers both in America and abroad have discussed this topic from the historic psychologic and social standpoint all agreeing that present penal institutions and our mode of coping with crime have in every respect proved inadequate as well as wasteful one would expect is something very radical should result from the cumulative literary indictment of the social crimes perpetrated upon the prisoner it with the exception of a few minor and comparatively insignificant reforms in some of our prisons absolutely nothing has been accomplished but at last this grave social wrong has found dramatic interpretation in goals were these justice the play opens in the office of James Howe and Sons solicitors the senior clerk Robert coaxin discovers that a check he had issued for nine pounds has been forged 290 by elimination suspicion falls upon William folder the jr. office clerk the latter is in love with a married woman the abused ill-treated wife of a brutal drunkard pressed by his employer a severe yet not unkindly man folder confesses a forgery pleading the dire necessity of his sweetheart ruth honeywell with whom he had planned to escape to save her from the unbearable brutality of her husband notwithstanding the entreaties of young Walter who is touched by modern ideas his father a moral and law respecting citizen turns folder over to the police the second act in the courtroom shows justice in the very process of manufacture the scene equals in dramatic power and psychologic their adiy the grey court scene in resurrection young folder a nervous and rather weakly youth of 23 stands before the bar ruth his married sweetheart full of love and devotion burns with anxiety to save the young man whose affection brought about his present predicament the young man is defended by lawyer Frome whose speech to the jury is a masterpiece of deep social philosophy reefed with the tendrils of human understanding and sympathy he does not attempt to dispute the mere fact of folder' having altered the check and though he pleads temporary aberration in defense of his client that plea is based upon a social consciousness as deep and all-embracing as the roots of our social ills the background of life that palpitating life which always lies behind the commission of a crime he shows father to have faced the alternative of seeing the beloved woman murdered by her brutal husband whom she cannot divorce or of taking the law to his own hands the defense pleads with the jury not to turn the weak young man into a criminal by condemning him to prison for justice is a machine that when someone has given it a starting push rolls on of itself is this young man to be ground to pieces under this machine for an act which at the worst was one of weakness is he to become a member of the luckless crews that man those dark ill-starred ships called prisons I urge you gentlemen do not ruin this young man for as a result of those four minutes ruin utter and irretrievable stares him in the face the rolling of the chariot wheels of justice over this boy began when it was decided to prosecute him but the chariot of justice rolls mercilessly on for as the learner judge says the law is what it is a majestic edifice sheltering all of us each stone of which roughs on another folder is sentenced to three years penal servitude in prison the young inexperienced convict soon finds himself the victim of the terrible system the authorities admit that young folder is mentally and physically in bad shape but nothing can be done in the matter many others are in a similar position and the quarters are inadequate the third scene of the third act is heart dripping in its silent force the whole scene is a pantomime taking place in folders prison cell in fast falling daylight folder in his stockings is seen standing motionless with his head inclined towards the door listening he moves a little closer to the door his stocking feet making no noise he stops at the door is trying harder and harder to hear something any little thing that is going on outside he Springs suddenly upright as if at a sound and remains perfectly motionless then with a heavy sigh he moves to his work and stands looking at it with his head down he does a stitch or two having the air of a man so lost in sadness that each stitch is as it were are coming to life then turning abruptly he begins pacing his cell moving his head like an animal pacing its cage he stopped again at the door listens and placing the palms of his hands against it with his fingers spread out leans his forehead against the iron turning from it presently he moves slowly back towards the window holding his head as if he felt that it were going to burst and stops under the window but since he cannot see out of it he leaves off looking and picking up the lid of one of the tins peers into it as if trying to make a companion of his own face it has grown very nearly dark suddenly the lid falls out of his hand with a clatter the only sound that has broken the silence and he stands staring intently at the wall where the stuff of the shirt is hanging rather white in the darkness he seems to be seeing somebody or something there there is a sharp tap and click the cell light behind the glass screen has been turned up the cell is brightly lighted folder is seen gasping for breath a sound from far away as of distant dull beating on thick metal is suddenly audible folder shrinks back not able to bear the sudden clamor but the sound grows as though some great tumbrel were rolling towards the cell and gradually it seems to hypnotize him he begins creeping inch by inch nearer to the door the banging sound traveling from cell to cell draws closer and closer boulders hands are seen moving as if his spirit had already joined in this beating and the sounds swell still it seems to have entered the very cell he suddenly raises his clenched fists panting violently he flings himself at his door and beats on it finally folder' leaves the prison a broken ticket-of-leave man the stamp of the convict upon his brow the iron of misery in his soul thanks to Ruth's pleading the firm of James Howe and son is willing to take folder' back in their employ on condition that he give up Ruth it is then that folder learns the awful news that the woman he loves had been driven by the merciless economic mullet to sell herself she tried making skirts cheap things I never made more than 10 shillings a week buying my own cotton and working all day I hardly ever got to bed till past 12 and then my employer happened he's happened ever since at this terrible psychologic moment the police appeared to drag him back to prison for failing to report himself as ticket-of-leave man completely overwhelmed by the inexorability of his environment young falters seeks and finds peace greater than human justice by throwing himself down to death as the detectives are taking him back to prison it would be impossible to estimate the effect produced by this play perhaps some conception can be gained from the very unusual circumstance that it had proved so powerful as to induce the Home Secretary of Great Britain to undertake extensive prison reforms in England a very encouraging sign this of the influence exerted by the modern drama it is to be hoped that the thundering indictment of mr. gulls worthy will not remain without similar effect upon the public sentiment in prison conditions of America at any rate it is certain that no other modern play has borne such direct and immediate fruit in wakening the social conscience another modern play the servant in the house strikes a vital key in our social life the hero of mr. Kennedy's masterpiece is Robert a coarse filthy drunkard whom respectable society has repudiated robber the sewer cleaner is the real hero of the play nay it's true and only Savior it is he who volunteers to go down into the dangerous sewer so that his comrades can have light and air after all as he not sacrificed his life always so that others may have light and air the thought that Labour is the Redeemer of social well-being has been cried from the housetops in every tongue in every clime yet the simple words of Robert expressed the significance of labour and its mission with far greater potency America is still in his dramatic infancy most of the attempts along this line to mirror life have been wretched failures still there are hopeful signs in the attitude of the intelligent public toward modern plays even if they be from foreign soil the only real drama America has so far produced is the easiest way by Eugene Walter it is supposed to represent a peculiar phase of New York life if that were all it would be a minor significance that which gives the play its real importance in value lies much deeper it lies first in the fundamental current of our social fabric which drives us all even stronger characters than Laura into the easiest way away so very destructive of integrity truth and justice secondly the cruel senseless fatalism conditioned in Laura's sex these two features put the universal stamp upon the play and characterize it as one of the strongest dramatic indictments against society the criminal waste of human energy in economic and social conditions drives Laura as it drives the average girl to marry any man for a home or as it drives men to endure the worst indignities for a miserable pittance then there is that other respectable institution the fatalism of Laura's sex the inevitability of that force is summed up in the following words don't you know that we count no more in the life of these men than tamed animals it's a game and if we don't play our cards well we lose woman in the battle with life has but one weapon one commodity sex that alone serves as a trump card in the game of life this blind fatalism has made of woman a parasite an inert thing why then expect perseverance or energy of Laura the easiest way is the path mapped out for her from time immemorial she could follow no other a number of other plays could be quoted as characteristic of the growing role of the drama as a disseminator of radical thought suffice to mention the third degree by Charles Cline the Fourth Estate by Medill Patterson a man's world by Ida crouchers all pointing to the dawn of drama in America an art which is discovering to the people the terrible diseases of our social body it has been said of old all roads lead to Rome in paraphrased application to the tendencies of our day it may truly be said that all roads lead to the great social reconstruction the economic awakening of the working man and his realization of the necessity for concerted industrial action the tendencies of modern education especially in their application to the free development of the child the spirit of growing unrest expressed through and cultivated by art and literature all paved the way to the open road above all the modern drama operating through the double channel of dramatist and interpreter affecting as it does both mind and heart is the strongest force in developing social discontent swelling the powerful tide of unrest that sweeps onward and over the dam of ignorant prejudice and superstition end of the modern drama a powerful disseminator of radical thought recording by expatriate in Bangor Maine end of anarchism and other essays by Emma Goldman [Music]
Priceless Audiobooks
UCly1zcKPGzGW9wZMCZodWOA
2017-07-16
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
4,012
22,548
4SrcYf7rsKs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4SrcYf7rsKs
Overlanding in Prescott Arizona
[Music] sean's trying to get some cool drone shots while we're out here like on the top of this mountain i was going to get some but when i woke up the jeep was dead i found out that if i leave the fridge on at night usually because it's cold at night it doesn't have to run that much but i had my my phone my computer and the fridge all running and at one point the fringe got turned off so i guess it had to cycle a little bit so in the morning my battery was already dead so i had to let the jeep run this morning just to kind of get everything warmed up now just watching sean get some drone shots before we head out [Music] so [Music] down here at sean's shop or i guess it's technically his dad's shop but my jeep's bumper is about to break off the welds on the actual hitch are falling off and so it showed sean and he was like yeah i can help you out with that so came down here he's gonna get me all hooked up and everything and just one less thing to have to worry about on the road it's actually gotten to the point where it's probably a major safety hazard if i don't get it fixed so definitely need to get that fixed and that's pretty much all we're doing [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] so [Music] so so i actually ended up opening the present from my parents yesterday and i didn't get it on camera because i'd rather just open it up but check it out new headlights which is good i was like 90 sure this is what they were gonna get me since they have witnessed first hand what happens when i can't see squat at night um and it ended up costing me a lot so we're gonna install these leds real fast get the jeep all ready for night night vision [Music] so [Music] so [Music] [Applause] sean and i got everything fixed up on the jeep well mostly sean i mostly just watched and made videos so we got everything hooked up bumper's looking good didn't break up it didn't break off on the trip down here so i guess i'll call it a plus since if it didn't break down here it's probably going to be good at least for now and if something else happens it's probably just going to need some kind of modification because it was actually already shocking that it was started breaking at this point since it's such a heavy duty bumper but um hopefully it doesn't happen i might have to cut back some weight on it i do have some stuff on the top i had my toolbox on top there and i think that it's mostly my fault that it started breaking i probably exceeded the weight limit on it had a great day hanging out here today got to see got to see a pretty cool place this morning and now sean's working on the firewood we're going to try to get a fire started pull the tree out and got to play with my winch so overall a successful day jeep's looking good got new headlights in pretty fun anyway talk to you guys later have a great day you're becoming a wolf guy he killed him yeah he killed kill a while now he's eating it eating its liver a monster a monster [Music] you
Life of Trevor
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2020-11-30
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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UNqG5g3AU2s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNqG5g3AU2s
Plot twists already?! 👶🏻😳 | The Sims 4 | Antonia's Legacy [2]
how's it going mama llamas welcome back to another episode of antonia's legacy and before i get into anything um if you haven't noticed your girl got some better audio quality like do you hear it like the audio's a little bit more spicy a little bit more sexy you know what i'm saying so um yeah that was bad so um i recently bought a new microphone and i could not figure it out for the freaking life of me like it was just not doing what i wanted it to do um so i just kind of gave up on it for a while but i was like you know what i am not liking my um blue snowball mic right now i kind of want something different something a little more clear that's not going to pick up every single freaking keyboard tap i do and mouse click that i do um so i just tried to do it again i looked up tutorials and stuff and it finally worked so you are not going to hear as much background noise in this i do sniff a lot so you won't hear that as much i guess but yeah i'm super excited um it's the rode pro caster mic if you know what that is it's it's technically like a podcast mic but oh she's going ham it's um it's kind of like a podcast mic so i just kind of i had to figure out how to use it without like those um podcast sound boards that girls stop those podcast sound boards that you need for like the mic and stuff so i figured it out we are all good so let me know uh what you think of the new audio in the comments because i'm super excited i already tested it out so i know how it sounds so i'm just vibing right now but um good morning guys so this is uh well today is tony's first day of work as a writer's assistant which i'm super excited about this is kind of like her dream job um just being a journalist and whatnot but she just made um some eggs and toasts and they are normal quality so she's not a terrible cook right antonia she's like no i suck holy crap okay i saw the fish i saw the fish out of the corner of my eye and i totally forgot that we got it so i was like what the heck um wilson wells have you been to blackspire outpost on batu yet oh yeah i just i just got a journey to batu so that's been happening but i don't think she wants to go to batu uh quite yet or or quite never actually i feel like she's a stay in my shoe no gal you know nothing and nothing too crazy but i'm gonna have her clean up and she does go to work at 11 o'clock so we do have time to put this away and get a shower really quick um also tonight is night on a night out on the town ally can you talk please um yeah tonight is night out on the town so i thought tonight after we got off of work we can hang out with um the girls i also want to let you guys know that antonia recently went out clubbing with the girls as well because pride day was like three days ago and she met this guy named tag and you know she kind of hit it off with him you know they talked a little bit um she learned that he was bisexual so that was really cool but she kind of she kind of digs him um and he seems to kind of dig her but you know they got each other's numbers it's nothing too crazy see she's in her bride outfit right now oh my gosh she has such a cutie oh my gosh she's hot i'm sorry but tony tony got that lit the booty oh my gosh okay i'm being weird um but okay so work starts in an hour um not sure what we can do till then but i did have her read some books so she'll probably get more performance today at work but yeah there's not really much to do while she's at work so i i really might just skip but yeah so again let me know what you think about my new audio i'm very very excited about it like my old microphone kept picking up like the weirdest sounds like the sounds that you wouldn't even hear in real life like it just picked it up but she seems happy as crap she's like i'm so ready for my first day this isn't my dream freaking job i love her she is so beautiful but is she going now no she's gonna play in the rain babe no i don't want you to be wet no today's your first day work you're not gonna you're not gonna go in that soap do we have any like bills or um who's talking to us right now sorry i'm all over the place um this guy why is he just staring at boy you good oh she went up to talk to him first um he's i mean harry oh wait he's kind of cute wait hold up hold up yeah i kind of like him harry um i love how he looks just like a tag too just like a little bit of a different skin tone um and hair but he looks a lot like tag um mom what do you want uh she wants us to go to her house no i'm sorry we gotta work um but tony's going to go ahead and grab her stuff and head off to her first day of work and i will pick up with you guys when she gets off what's up guys so tony just got home it is seven o'clock p.m and she brought home 200 today so she's doing real good also do i have autonomy on yes i do okay so she's just she's just gonna stand in there um just doing her thing but it is raining outside so since we're going out tonight i definitely don't want to go out somewhere that is out in the open but um i do want to see if let's see so we got bella mila and reagan and then maybe we can invite tag out too or maybe we should wait to invite him out like by ourselves like one-on-one um i feel like tonight should just kind of be a girls night it is night out on the town so i kind of do want them to uh go clubbing a little bit so let's go ahead and do crystal bella and mila and let's go ahead and bite mariella too marill is not really close friends with the other three but they do get along really well so like it's not a big deal so i actually just downloaded this new lounge called the lux light luxury lounge i think it was called i'm not sure i don't remember who it was by i got it off the sims resource but i'll definitely have to link it down below half of it is outside but we can totally do just the inside parts because it is raining in semi suno and we don't want to get soaking wet but antonia's party outfit i swear to god she she is a woman of class all right guys we made it to the lounge and i definitely feel like especially um because of antonia just kind of worrying about who her parents have been recently and just kind of trying to figure that out also there's a celebrity here uh britney cho what's up um i just feel like um her just being worried about that i'm sure the girls would probably just be like hey you know we want to take your mind off of it let's um take you out tonight and do something fun especially because food and drinks are free um oh my gosh is mary like wait there's thorn bailey and she's getting a so i want to get a selfie with lauren bailey shut up um asked to take a picture of thorin please um if brittany can you stop please but she's like can i please have a picture with you and thorn's like sure babe sure thorn's kind of cute i mean you know what can i say no not a picture of him oh my god i meant i asked asked for a selfie ask her selfie i i didn't see what i actually picked but i'm gonna speed up real quick um i might have to give her a energy potion just because i want her to spend all night here um just kind of relaxing and kind of forgetting for a moment the worries of her life so i guess she's not going to get a photo but i did get this notification earlier that says the talent showcase is upon us prepare to be entertained by some local talent sign up at the bar to participate so i definitely want to do that um let's join the open mic and she does have to pee um but can i do psych okay never mind she doesn't have to pee um that was again the ui cheat spawn but i love her outfit like it's oh my gosh it gives me life she just okay honey okay um she just teleported but antonio mendez has been signed up for the talent showcase feel free to use the mic or instrument once it's time to get on stage so i don't know if antonia would be very good at musical instruments also i did not know there was a bed here that's kind of spicy um okay but i definitely want her to can she could she tell jokes or practice singing let's go practice singing i don't think she has enough um singing skill to necessarily sing a song but i i hope like if she just practices that that will count for um participating in the talent showcase and i'm actually not sure how long um it's going to last so i didn't want to take advantage of it also i didn't know the words oh i didn't know there was oh it's her turn oh i love that i didn't know we had to wait for our turn okay i really want to see okay boy oh we we love a good county but let's listen to tony i love how britney cho a proper celebrity is hyping her up like that's so funny but um yeah yeah she's like yeah girl go oh and bella's like in love with her singing that's so cute i wonder where reagan and mila are and mariella i want to listen to this real fast oh my gosh this is just like when we went um at the karaoke bar when we did karaoke thorn's like that sucks this sounds just like that but oh she's super cute i wonder um do i have to like keep doing it until it says i'm done also who's this chick oh my god she's pretty ali herrera are you seeing this she's so pretty i felt like her face like glows like that's so weird oh my god she's beautiful i kind of want to introduce oh there's reagan okay reagan come hype us up foo reagan's like here here's an extra dollar reagan is very prepared the talent showcase is finished sorry for anyone who didn't get to participate maybe next time well who won can i know that like what when will that be um told oh my god mila's mila no wait why are all the girls in here why are they all sleeping what no wake up go and wake up mila mila stop okay she's like she's woken up okay we're good um but i do want to get some drinks for tonight for the girls um and some food too because we are kind of hungry so let's order some drinks for the group um oh totally forgot that it's zero simoleon so that's awesome um so i guess i wanna do let's do the most expensive one um just because it's night out on the town so literally nothing um has any cost but um i did actually reinstall base metal also are you gonna hurry up please all right she is going down there now and i think all the girls are gonna meet her down there definitely feel like antonia is a lover of alcohol um nothing too crazy i don't feel like she'd get too addicted but she does like to do like wine tastings and beer tastings and whatnot but are you gonna grab your um sour what's it called sour punch yes um i actually did reinstall base metal did you just take our drink shut up shut up oh my gosh okay at least it was free if it actually cost money i would have lost my do it again but i did reinstall base metal and base metal allows for your sims to get drunk and have like realistic drunk like moodlets and stuff and like they walk all wonky and stuff but i guess all the girls are leaving um no marielle is here okay i have no idea what they're doing but the night is young i don't know why they laughed but i actually did want to get a um a selfie with a celebrity whoever it was i didn't really care but let's go ahead and talk to mariella because she's the only one that stuck around so thank you mari love you um but mari's like hey are you feeling okay is your mind taken off of you know your parents and and tony's like i really don't know like i'm i'm having a great time thank you for taking me out but um it's just something that she has to deal with for now um not sure if she will ever find her parents that's just something that um fate will have to decide but where is she going to drink her drink is murray gonna come with her no mari's just gonna stand there um i actually want her to go and this guy i swear but tony's having a great time so far she is tired so i'm gonna raise her energy up a little bit um pretty cheaty i know but i really want her to enjoy this night uh for what it is free drinks free food i mean come on i i do want to raise my hunger too because i'm not feeling this right now but um let's go ahead and talk tomorrow night on the town was successful that's awesome so let's tell her a funny story what else can we do um can we like i want to thank her for taking us out tonight taking the girls out um because like okay tony she's like 23 22 23 and mari's 19 but i said this i think in um the machinima for this series that mariella um sometimes she acts a lot older than antonia not not in the sense of like maturity but tony has been through a lot more than mariella um so mariella kind of feels um and she doesn't feel bad like it's not like she feels obligated to but she feels like it's her duty to kind of um be there for mari or no no for mari to be there for antonia um which i love i love their sister dynamic it's something that i've never really had so i just love it i really love it um but she's talking about heartbreak right now i'm i don't know what she's talking about i don't think she ever had a boyfriend or a girlfriend um previously so i think she's just talking about her parents and all that but she seems really happy right now so i'm really happy about that um i guess she's just gonna sit down right now also i've never noticed this before um like i'm yeah i'm guessing that's a giraffe that's super cute um but i want to see how much is she done with her drink i want to see if um she can get drunk or at least tipsy but this has cooped up from lovely outdoors traits this sim needs to spend some time outdoors soon to relieve this tension which yes she actually she freaking loves the outdoors like she loves to hike she loves to camp um and i think i do want her to like go on a camping trip soon um i'm not sure when not sure with who but definitely soon um but this says tipsy from drinking and tony is feeling slightly inebriated so she's obviously she's not like batshit crazy drunk which i didn't want her to be in this episode but what are you doing girl she's gonna go watch civic public access oh my gosh she would be the one to care that much about society which i feel like she would do a protest like i feel like she would start that and there's this process thing right here i think it's part of slice of life because i just reinstalled it and i just saw it so i mean maybe we can do that sometime definitely feel like she would fight for the greater good um but she's just going into this laundry room right here what is this oh incense oh shoot okay let's do um soothing sage that is so awesome i totally forgot that we had incense in the game um but it's 4am and she's all here alone but don't you guys just love her party outfit like she is just oh wait does she have tears in her eyes wait hold up she's not sad right i don't think so that's that's really weird um but just got a little bit of lag but she's just chilling right now i actually feel like she would want to text a little bit but it's really early and he probably would be like why are you texting me no he he's super sweet um i'm really not sure what will come of them i know you guys haven't met them so we'll definitely have to do that soon oh actually i did one i wanted to fill the fountain with chocolate um why can't i fill it with cheese i would be sick um oh cooking skill level four uh something we obviously don't have that's fine but let's see can we grab a chocolate covered strawberry yes ma'am oh my gosh i've never used this before that's so cool but she's just gonna munch on her chocolate covered strawberry oh okay can't see you um oh she's super cute but literally like through all of her trials and tribulations she is just oh my gosh she has persevered but she's done with her chocolate covered strawberry she liked it a freaking lot is there like a moodlet that we get from it um just fantastic food which that really did look fantastic but she doesn't have work tomorrow thank god um because it is five almost 5 30 in the morning and she'd probably be dead and probably want to stay home um from work but tonight was really fun i'm not sure who won the talent showcase kind of wished that it was us um i didn't know if we got like a oh is there a pool wait hold up i kind of want to swim um no we're fine we need to go home um we're not too tired but then again i did cheat and make her awake um but she's gonna go ahead and head on home and i will see you guys back at the apartment good morning guys or should i say afternoon tony stop antonia's just um whipping up some sugar cookies for um her next-door neighbors because we haven't met them yet and i feel like tony really wants to get to know them because she just moved in and she's feeling kind of lonely here in the big city so she's just making some cookies right now i kind of did want her to make chocolate chip cookies but um we are only cooking level one so that was unfortunately off the menu but actually when she woke up um we got this uh notification from this guy who i'm assuming is our landlord that said i couldn't reach her mailbox but i managed to throw the mail in there good luck getting it back out and i was like how rude can you possibly bee seriously but actually i did want her to send a quick text to a tag just send him a little bit of text see how he's doing if he wants to meet up soon but let's see so raj is here and then we have um okay so nobody's home here and then we got okay nobody's home there either so let's go ahead and um let's i don't know if we want to go in there i don't want to go through another loading screen to be honest wait they are home they freaking lied why did it say oh i love your tattoos though i kinda wanna can i finally introduction you please um you are very pretty what's your name um mindy lynn also this woman something about her i just um is she walking into our home actually no she knocked on the door um yeah let's go ahead and invite her to eat uh wait what does it say decline to eat no okay we're gonna invite everybody what's cooking good looking it smells great in the hallway what are you cooking and can i have some i am great company oh okay what's your name ciara you're beautiful um i don't know if antonio likes girls but if she did ciara would be one of them so let's go ahead and take out our sugar cookies here um and then i do let's see let's um can we call to the meal yes okay so let's go ahead call to the meal um we also have a few posters that we should hang up but let's just go ahead and get to know these ladies first um it looks like they live in the same building so that's really cool but let's go ahead and put up these posters so this one's really cool it's like kind of like fall-esque like autumn um this one is too it has like a tattoo on the back of the neck which um does tony have a tattoo on the back of her neck i can't tell because of her hair i don't think so um i definitely feel like that would be the next tattoo that she would get but i'm gonna put the posters right here and then she actually did get a snow globe so let's go ahead and put it right here and it's a dinosaur how cute is that oh my gosh wait and it burns oh my god oh no it's a comet that is so cute i love that i've never noticed that i've never really gotten a um or i've never really gotten to take a close look at the snow globes but looks like everybody's getting along pretty well um can we gossip about the neighbors yes okay um but it looks like they're done with their plates so let's just go ahead and put it in the sink um so this is mindy and this is ciara okay that's cool so we have a lot of girlfriends not many guy friends maybe we'll meet some eventually harry was kind of cool but he does have a spouse i just noticed named jason so he's kind of off the market but tag is definitely single i'm not sure if i gave him a career i don't think i did which is my fault but i'm pretty sure he does have a dog named um chandler i think but crystal is wondering if i want to go over to her house and hang out you know what let's go ahead and do it we haven't seen a mom in a little bit and i do want to take mari um we haven't seen our mama in so long so this is probably um a great opportunity to go see her i kind of wish i brought these sugar cookies with us that's kind of my fault guys we made it back to antonia's childhood home oh my gosh i'm going crazy right now um i don't even live here i'm not even in a video game and i just feel super nostalgic right now but i do want to go hug our mother um and then i can show you um antonia's room when she was a kid so she was more of a tomboy growing up she really liked dinosaurs and sports and stuff like that so this was her room and then she gave it to mariella when she moved out for college so mariella also had this room so they both kind of grew up in a more of a tomboyish kind of room but here is miss crystal and she is literally so pretty like i would say she's probably in her like early 50s mid 50s and she is looking not a day over 30 like damn crystal um but this is um their cat penny they got just recently um happy holidays antonia everyone is decorating and celebrating well thank you reagan but it's just a big summer blowout so i think we'll be fine but here she is going to read the first unicorn she is such a freaking book hog i swear but if we go up here i think yes here's our papa marco um let's go ahead no not drugs let's go ahead um and hug him to who's lee chen um i've called to inform you that your great great grand second once removed cousin's friend's grandpa has passed away and for some reason has left a vast fortune specifically to you will you accept shoot that is that is some i don't know about this i don't definitely don't feel like antonio will be like money money money give me now um under what conditions oh very clever well there was were some conditions but one of the conditions was there would be no conditions if you asked if there were any conditions so there are no conditions wait right um so it looks like she did get two thousand dollars which is cool um mariela stop texting me you're literally right here but um let's go ahead and hug um our papa and i did want to give mariella um wait reagan's here why is she reagan are you good wait who's jaden wait do they have a baby stop stop they do you do not have another sibling right oh what wait oh no are you kidding me crystal you're 50. oh my god guys where's the baby oh no freaking way are you serious do we have a new baby brother um was he adopted too stop stop you guys i didn't plan this i'm serious i didn't even know they had another baby oh my gosh this is crazy um so because of crystal's infertility issues i'm just going to assume that jaden was also adopted and they didn't want to stop at three or two kids oh my god this is freaking news holy crap um let's feed him because it said that um he needed food oh my god i'm about to okay i'm just gonna assume that tony knew about this that they were gonna going to adopt um another baby and this was gonna be their last one that they're getting old um i mean my mom had me when she was like 43 and crystal's probably like what 51 so it's not that bad um but oh my god guys is it such a plot twist i mean tony loves her little brother um i guess i mean i mean i guess crystal was calling us over here to say hi to the baby oh my god that is insane okay you know what i'm probably going to have to turn something off to where they don't have any more kids because that would be bad but they're just chilling like crystalline i mean what are you making marco it looks like toast but i guess mari left um she didn't even say hi to the baby i don't think but um yeah guys there's that so i guess i'm gonna end it right here um you know things just aren't as they seem um but go ahead and like the video um and turn on your post notifications so you get notified whenever i post the next episode of antoni's legacy and as always don't forget to subscribe for more sims 4 videos bye y'all hey tag it's me antonia from the bar i don't know if you remember or not but i was just wondering if you wanted to go out and maybe do something how could i forget you of course i would love to do something i'm a little bit busy right now but i can definitely make some plans with you in the next few days if you want totally unrelated to you i just have a bunch of personal stuff going on so for sure i'll let you know when i'm free
Cozaly
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2020-09-25
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ya9iI7oDlU
FLS 10/11/11: The Challenges of Immigrant Integration
come on welcome to loyola marymount university and the urban lecture series sponsored by the center for the study of los angeles the chicana chicano studies department and the political science department we're going to discuss today immigration integration we're not going to have an immigration reform debate we're going to have a dialogue about what to do with the immigrants that are currently here in the united states for the purposes of context i want to ask manuel pastor a couple questions but i also want to clarify what we're talking about we're talking about legal permanent residents who are here legally immigrants who are here legally those that have been come naturalized so that's the second group and then we'll also in the discussion talk about undocumented immigrants so those are three very distinct groups that we will continuously make reference to and when you hear the term lpr that's a legally permanent resident that's someone who is here legally but not a citizen yet yet okay so i want to for us to have that that understanding manuel pastor a professor at usc has done quite a bit of studying about the integration of immigrants in the united states and in los angeles and has quite a bit of data and i'd like to summarize that data in terms of three points okay number one that civic infrastructure is associated with immigrant integration number two that there's an economic advantage to becoming a citizen controlling for all kinds of variables and then number three that there's a potential political mobilization of a latino vote in terms of the voting eligible population in terms of integration so that immigrant integration is about politics it's about economics it's about civic society um i've just uh in one minute uh did what you took you 15 minutes uh manuel is that true or am i missing a major component no and i'm kind of feeling crushed by your brevity actually but um no i think that's absolutely uh true it took a lot longer to put together the data to make those points but uh that really is true and so there's an economic case for this uh there's a political case for this but moving back to your first point uh there really is an argument for investment in civic infrastructure as well because the analysis we did which tried to use sort of your predicted rate of naturalization given objective factors and your actual rate of naturalization those of us who know those locations for the most part the answers make sense that the places that seem to be over performers seem to have been places that got have good immigrant serving organizations and lots of mobilization so places that seem to be underperformers are places that either have unsympathetic governments in terms of providing those uh infrastructure where they really haven't developed the immigrant rights immigrant serving infrastructure so one of the things to really be thinking about is what are the areas that we should target if we want to make sure that we address some of these underperformers and when you say about uh civic infrastructure elaborate a little bit on that on what you mean by that term well i think for example in a place like los angeles we have a magnificent array of immigrant rights groups who are supporting naturalization we have media which is echoing the message and we also have a set of uh you know political figures including some on this panel who have been quite supportive of naturalization as well and i think that you see this in places like chicago as well when you go to fresno which is a wonderful place i urge you to go there have a good time but you begin to realize also that that's a place where a lot of the civic infrastructure has been built on the exclusion of immigrant voices partly because of the worry about whether or not that would change the political economy of reliance and agricultural labor where there isn't as much of a developed immigrant rights in immigrant serving infrastructure and whether originally isn't as developed as a media infrastructure as well all of those things if they were more developed would probably lead to more naturalization and that would be a good thing so you've heard from the academic the other academic here and we're going to talk about different institutions um we have political uh nonprofit uh in business and media here represented let me quickly represent our uh the remaining panelists and then get into a discussion about what can be done regarding immigrant uh integration right next to me is gil sedillo or gilbert sedillo who was elected to the california assembly in november 2010 but he is about to finish 13 or 14 years in the state legislature he has championed the issues of the working class and the immigrant community in the district and and uh not only in his district but across los angeles and across california he quickly emerged as a leader in state government where he became chair of the assembly budget subcommittee on health and human services and served as assistant majority leader i can go on and on about one of my political heroes in terms of all the type of legislation that he's been involved with that he's authored that he's voted that some of that he's important legislation that he's defeated uh but there's one that we're going to talk about and that is the dream act and i'll get to that in a second this is gil cedillo uh representing the 22nd california state senate district in the past and currently in in the state assembly uh next to him is monica lozano she is the los angeles media veteran has been involved in the media since i think you started talking she was named chief executive of emperor media the nation's largest spanish-language newspaper company and the current owners of the los angeles la opinion a newspaper that was started by her grandfather and that her father and brother and other family members have been intimately involved with and this goes on back for 85 years that the the lozano family has been involved with informing los angeles and now across the the nation what's going on not only in immigrant communities but throughout the world and throughout the united states next to her is adam hunter and he is senior advisor excuse me they moved on me arturo is not adam next to monica is arturo carmona who has led the consejo de ferraciones mexicanas in north america or cofeme as we like to refer to it we love acronyms in spanish since its incorporation and founding in 2005. as an executive director he leads one of the most dynamic movements of organic leadership in the nation and i'm going to have him explain to you to you what that organization is what it does and how it interacts with the more conventional uh civic uh organizations that we see in los angeles and again i can go on and on about arthur and all the great things that he's done and now i'm going to get to adam who i've just met today adam hunter is the senior adviser to the director of u.s citizenship and immigration services in the department of homeland security adam started his career in washington d.c managing foreign policy grants and institutional relationships at the german marshall fund of the united states and additionally led study tours and conferences to promote transatlantic corporation so we have politics with senator sedillo we have the media with ms lozano we have the non-profits with arturo we have government with adam and of course we have my favorite academia with manuel pastor um and these are our panelists uh let me get right to you um uh i know you're an assembly member now but i can't help but call you senator um senator gil sedillo we made the distinction between legal permanent residents naturalized citizens and then undocumented talk to us about the dream act which of those groups that it impacts and basically the the struggle that led to that success and why now why did this get signed this week not 10 years ago not 15 years ago i mean you've been in assembly for 14 years how come it took you 14 years in a word leadership leadership matters that's why it's taken so long that's why this topic in this subject first of all let me thank everyone for being here what an incredible campus you have what a great environment of course we have that typical great los angeles weather and i'm just wondering why all of you are here instead of being outside with all your other fellow classmates so let me thank you for being here and then my colleagues and people who i have admired david aion fernando guerra monica the entire panel artudo and manuel thank you because the victory of the dream act would not have been accomplished without your type of intellectual leadership and monica without the type of information that you provide distinct from other journalists and other journalism that is informative and that's educational uh those are all critical to where we're at today in this this victory uh fernando though back to your question of how this happened and why it takes as long as it takes it really is a question of leadership and this proposal and these ideas and that we have about the role in the place of immigrants in american society this nation that's uniquely made up of of immigrants that's our legacy that's our tradition the challenge before us is whether or not it remains our future i think the dream act contributes to that we've been working on that i was the co-author of ab540 with marco antonio fireball my my colleague but without the type of political leadership that we have at the top of the ticket or in the governor's office we could not accomplish this this bill is no different than than the proposals that i had vetoed on the previous occasions three previous occasions and it's it ties in perfectly to this discussion because we cannot afford let me just say this we cannot afford to have large populations of legal permanent residents not applying for citizenship the political cost of that is too much the economic costs of that too much the the cost on our ability to build civic and civil society is too much and so just let me say here be very clear in terms of where we should go next this is an incredible victory the dream act uh it was the execution of a vision uh building a broad coalition having a strategy that we executed year in and year out one part of it was simply a strategy of maintaining ourselves uh until the period that schwarzenegger would leave the office and then being engaged in the efforts to elect a governor at a very critical moment when we were in fresno and the question was asked which of you two will support the dream act and tonight i think that question will be in the debates of the republican candidates for the presidency that same question and so those questions were presented to us they would be much easier resolved if we had a much larger population of the electorate of people who supported this of people who understood the transformative role of education in our society and how important it is for all levels of ourselves well give us the profile of the specific type of person or student that this act would assist so the ab540 student is extraordinary that's a student who's brought here through no choice of their own some as short as three days out of the country we met and others who are young children who whether they come with their parents and fly into an airport in new york or or california from seoul korea and their parents overstay their visa and then they grow up here knowing no other country having no other experience and then when they're filling out their applications for college go ask their parents where's what's our social security number what how do i fill out this form and then have that really unimaginable conversation with their family that tells them you you can't do that you're not you're we're not eligible for that you're not you're not a citizen and i heard many stories of that during the course of this or it's somebody brought from latin america i've had some work for me who you know are those students that attach themselves to trains coming from guatemala and you know try to make it through the mexican border the guatemalan mexican border and then the u.s mexico border and then others who come from mexico who are told get in the car and you know they get in the car and they say goodbye to their friends and they pack up and then they come here and within their short life period learn another language become part of the best and the brightest get fully engaged in their schools they're the cheerleaders and the captains of the soccer team and the football team and and become part of the best and brightest to be admitted in many instances to schools like the university of california or more or less even tougher loyola marymount yeah let's go to marymount where only one out of ten gets admitted and only half of those accept and they become part of that potential leadership class of our society and then the same with the csu system and then the same at the community college level these are really extraordinary students and they reflect let me say this last point reflect the culture and the kind of not just the spirit but manuel the characteristics of the immigrant community entrepreneurial innovative hardworking family values probably socially conservative very focused very resilient very tenacious and those are the types of students those are the types of people that we want to be engaged in civic society they should be our political leadership and they have an incredible and we have committed ourselves to this have an incredible role to play in the future of california's economy that's why it took 14 years to get that done because we needed political leadership that understood that value for the future okay and that was last week what are you going to do next week what's next what's the next important obstacle or that that would be a follow-up to this type of legislation i think two things one obviously and i've had this experience before we actually did pass the legislation for the california driver's license it was law but we weren't politically positioned to defend it and that's why two and a half million motorists today will get up and continue to drive without being licensed and it's a danger to the entire state to have two and a half million motorists 10 who aren't licensed trained and insured and so we learned that that that was a political moment but we have to have a political infrastructure to protect that and so obviously the first thing since i i heard that there's a filing of an initiative against the dream act is to protect the dream act and we'll have to do that with the same coalition that was effective in realizing the dream act working with faith-based organizations immigrant rights groups the chambers of commerce and the political leadership of the state so that's obviously one second i think and and why i'm so excited about being here today is the importance of this aspect of the life of the immigrant community in this state and in this country is that we cannot afford not to integrate them and i think that is imperative that is something that we must do i think that's at this moment historically the challenge that exists for our political leadership is to move forward on this i will return to sacramento in january before that i will have conversations with the governor i had authored before a proposal called the office of immigrant affairs there is no reason why the state should not have a role in expediting this process and we should so funding is a secondary question but the the vision and the mission of the state should be how do we facilitate the integration of immigrants into the mainstream of our society language acquisition and then changing their legal status to citizenship encouraging civic participation and political engagement that should be in a non-partisan way a project in the state of california i will talk to the governor of that about that and then just so that i don't get lazy or anything there's this challenge of of highway safety we will go back and talk to him about given that we let students get scholarships now perhaps trusting them that they can drive with a driver's license and not only them but might as well extend it to their families i want to go back and have that conversation with them um monica lozano 85 years you and your family through la opinion have been talking about talking to talking with los angeles um who are you talking to who who who reads your paper who who's your audience so um lempignon's audience are primarily immigrants ninety-nine percent of everybody who reads la pignon on a daily basis was born someplace else um on average but they've been in this country for more than 17 years their children were born here or came very young they are absolutely committed to doing everything that senator sadio said which is you know to work hard to provide a better life for their families to contribute to ensure that they're having come here and having left where they were born is not in vain it's actually to be able to offer a better future for the next generation it's a fallacy to think that spanish language media is is about a community that wants to remain isolated um what i've always said that the role of spanish language media in fact is to help further the integration of this community and the role that we can play is to close what i call the information gap because for so long what we found is that all of these aspirations you know you come you want your kids to get ahead you want them to go to college you want to start a business you want to buy a house you you know the aspirations very often come up against the the reality of a system that is just unfamiliar and whether it's understanding how the educational system works once you get your kids enrolled in public schools and you know instead of getting abc's you used to get you know numbers and there's just a whole different way of understanding how how the the environment here works and so if we can help to explain the institutions and the systems and to break down some of those informational barriers then we're doing our job how different is la opinion than the la times so when you look at it on a random day and you look at the front page and assuming there's about five or six stories on that front page how many of those stories are going to be similar very few very few um no why because you're both talking about la you know i i all i can say is that we're very cognizant of the issues that are of importance to the people that read our paper and i i should say we reach almost 500 000 people a day just through the newspaper and then you extend that online and you extend that across mobile et cetera so we're talking close to seven to eight hundred thousand people every day and um you know the day that the dream act was signed into law it was a six column banner headline fierman and dream act um the day that um that's truly bilingual and dream act feared my dream act the dreamers you know these were people that actually became known you know everybody understood what the dreamers were about but you know we're very close to the issues that are of importance to our community and it's a very local newspaper it digs deep into issues around economic issues of inequality of you know good schools and and we're deeply rooted um in the communities that we cover so no the stories are not going to be necessarily the same the one thing i would say for none of that i think is important there was a a moment uh gilbert talked about you know leadership people talk in business a lot about the pivot moment you know where you learn certain things and all of a sudden you take those learnings and it helps you shift your direction there was a really important moment um right around erka um mentioned it um 1986 um the president reagan at the time signs into law the immigration reform and control act immigration reform and control act erka and it allowed people that met certain criteria um to become legal permanent residents after five years and five years after that to become full citizens so it was a ten year process of integration but it opened the door for people who otherwise had been living in the shadows that were undocumented and i think over three million people actually moved through this process of of eventual citizenship the important thing back then was that that was the first time that we really connected to um what is the educational component of what we do so here's this wonderful opportunity and people didn't know how do you how do you access it what do i need to know how do i do it what papers do i need don't go back to mexico because if you go back to mexico you'll lose your eligibility so all of the things that are just very one two three the practical nature of information that people need every single day that's the kind of thing that that really we we we do every every day and and is sort of the hallmark of spanish language media but that law 10 years later you know 1985 1986 to 1996 1996 it sort of butts right up against proposition 187 and so you have this um legislation an an initiative that would deny basic civil rights for immigrants living in this country and those two things came together in one of the most profound ways that i've ever seen and so you know all of these folks that were eligible to become citizens raised their hands and became citizens and the rates of voting and participation for the first time i think surpassed native-born latinos and and this you know that that that sense of adopting this country where you raise your hand and you pledge allegiance you say this is my country that actually leads you to participate in much greater ra and much greater rates and and you've done a lot of work around this fernando so not only higher rates of citizenship wage and economic opportunities go up home ownership the contributions to your neighborhoods people start volunteering at their schools in their churches the whole engagement that comes with that that that one act of becoming a citizen i think was a pivotal moment and and what we're seeing today is you know the the the pushing forward of of what occurred you know decades ago now um and and i'll all then there but i would say that this this the relationship between spanish language media with the political leadership and the nonprofit community is absolutely essential and um you know later on we can talk about the ways in which spanish language media is very active not an observer but very much an actor in what are these movements towards immigrant integration let me ask you one more question because one of the things we always forget we say media but media is typically a business as well and you're you're a business person a businesswoman but by the way you also sit on the disney board you sit on other corporate boards you sit on the usc board of trustees so you're manuel's boss you see regents and a variety of different others um so who advertises an opinion just about anybody who understands the the power and the growth of this community you know latinos are fueling the growth in in terms of u.s population you know in the last decade 56 of the growth experienced in this country came from latinos um you know i heard this statistic yesterday i'm not sure if it's absolutely appropriate but um every year 500 000 latino youth will turn 18 half a million latino youth will turn 18 every year and if you dissect that that's like one a second one every 30 seconds um this is the future of the country that is true by the way monica so well if anyone says it is true so if um if you're a company that wants to grow market share you turn to your latino media and so we've got every national advertiser down to you know the small mom and pops so arturo um when i think about la opinion and the la times they're like on parallel universes i mean about a couple years ago i had a couple of students take a look at the coverage for one month and their conclusion was that they were like talking about two different cities and sometimes i feel about your organization the same way not latinos and others but within latinos in that even within the latino community there are parallel universes meaning that there's the conventional latino leadership beginning with gil and monica and others in this room but they're somewhat detached from that undocumented immigrant that we're talking about in immigrant communities they're really the leaders and elite of the mexican-american or or those that were born salvadorans and guatemalans that were born here your organization i think is one of the those that is beginning to um really bridge that gap but from the perspective of the immigrant talk a little bit about your organization its origins and what you guys are up to right now yeah so the council of mexican federations is basically a coalition of hometown associations basically mexicans have embraced the immigration patterns of other communities that make up the history the rich immigrant history of this country italian americans jewish immigrants german immigrants all created hometown associations that basically unified families from common towns from common regions in their town in their countries of origin to support themselves to support their immigrant integration into this country but also to help their their families and their countries of origin their grandparents at the left behind and so mexicans have adopted a similar form of organization this form of organization dates back to the 50s even there's traces even before that that hometown associations have emerged but it's really in the 70s when we start seeing a real growth of hometown association especially in california and chicago hometown associations start forming around a need to to really integrate into american society but also uh in a way to support their their hometowns that's really a main motivating factor for hometown associations and mexican immigrants coming together to also support their hometowns what we've seen over time is that immigrants have sort of uh matured and you know immigrants have created these hometown association gradually as the community has matured they began to look at other issues not just the development of mexico but issues that are impacting their families here issues around education issues around policy issues political issues and and i think that that monica was talking about some very critical phases that start changing sort of the psyche of of many of our organizations particularly after urca and especially i think a defining moment was in the was in the 90s after the pete wilson uh 180 uh proposition 187 that really to clarify for the students and the audience that proposition 187 was an initiative on the 1994 ballot that would have impacted heavily immigrant rights and even asked different uh um uh public service officials to uh to not service those communities and me and even actually uh turn them in so it was a direct attack amongst immigrants and that's how the immigrant community viewed it as did the latino citizenship community viewed it so when you really look at the grassroots mexican-american mexican community you really see a tremendous growth of organization thanks thanks to that particular initiative and you see the growth of hometown associations especially in the los angeles region you see for the first time that these organizations organized acharya which is a rodeo to fundraise over 150 000 to oppose that particular proposition that was unheard of before that was thanks to the help of some elected officials so you really start seeing a change in the mindset and you start seeing that immigrants really need to integrate into a society that that that you know increasingly they're they're seeing a society that they're not going to go back to mexico they're going to really lay roots here their children are here they own property here uh and they're going to make their their future here and so you start seeing a real transformation and that continues on for several years but you really start identifying certain patterns that it's really political instances where the communities attacked that that really have fueled certain key instances for the organ for communities to organize you all you see the same same cycle in the mid 2000s 2006 uh to 2008 when the sensenbrenner bill came about uh and actually was responded by a very coordinated effort by a number of both national but very much local organizations as well uh to promote a naturalization initiative across the country but explain the sunset brenner bill and u.s senator sensenbrenner what he had what his bill would have done that was actually a u.s house of representative member uh sensenbrenner that sought to pass bill uh h.r 4437 that would do similar things as the california bills had to do in california to really criminalize criminalize families for using public services it actually criminalized agencies that would provide certain services to undocumented immigrants so it was a horrendous bill that threatened the community and and really pulled the community together we saw a much different response to this initiative in the sense that a much more coordinated effort towards naturalization was accompanied and you saw another wave of naturalizations that hadn't been seen since the since the mid 80s so uh talking about what manuel was mentioning in terms of uh civic infrastructure you really see that when you combine the civic infrastructure with with funding from from both corporate foundation sources and you get the political uh actors to support you could really see some some dramatic changes in the in the naturalization trends you're seeing you're seeing a pattern here in that um oftentimes we want hope to mobilize to hope to lead to action meaning that on the basis of what you want your life to be you should try to naturalize etc but it's really been fear that has mobilized both in 1994 and then the one the ascension brenner and that fear is the greater mobilizer and that in a sense that kind of a moment uh we don't know when it's going to happen but that the infrastructure has to be there so that when that mobilization occurs it could be led to a certain type of action you you are seeing some changes though i think that uh uh organizations and and and community based groups and and funders are starting to come together there's been some discussions over the last year where we're really starting to look at uh how do we communicate with this particular population particularly the immigrant population mexican immigrants a very unique population that you know it's it's very much very strong roots to their nation to their national country uh certain certain pressures to not become u.s citizens uh but there's dual citizenship how do we message that how do we communicate with the families how do we develop innovative strategies to educate the community in a way where we're not going to just react to particular political campaigns but really go on on a more proactive campaign i think there's a lot of interesting information that's coming out and ideas that that could be harnessed to to really support an effort that that harnesses the the local infrastructure that's in place not only with hometown associations but community-based organizations both local and national and really has the right strategy the right leadership the right campaign that that allows us to move that forward you know we're in hollywood so i've always wanted to do a uh a script and my movie is going to go something like this it's about aliens and they land on earth but they land in an immigrant community in the united states and then they say take me to your leader and i don't know how to go from that so i've never written a script so when the alien lands in an immigrant community says take me to your leaders who are the leaders it's a good question i'll say you're not helping me write the script it's like monica who the leaders gilbert said is clearly one of our leaders well they're going to go to gil but he's up in sacramento they want to they want a leader like right away hey manuel help me out well we've got quite a few in the crowd we've got uh angelic generically to the i mean without names who are the leaders in the immigrant community what what are they like what makes them leaders well i think there's uh a range of them i mean they're people who had community-based organizations some in this panel and some in the audience there are also people who are simply elders in the community and garner the respect for those kinds of reasons as well but finally an important institution is the church the catholic church and also increasingly the hispanic evangelicals asian evangelicals and i think that one of the things that would really help promote this issue of naturalization is to be able to get the message through the church and through these other churches right about the importance of being a citizen of voting of speaking up for your children in this country um adam hunter uh you work for the government you work for the feds you are director of u.s citizenship and immigration services also known as uscis department of homeland security or dhs you deal a lot with ois the office of immigrant statistics i love acronyms i was just going to say you've thrown any three acronyms and you're in you're in in government but besides being in dc you also worked in europe you you ran political campaigns in europe you worked for elected officials in europe you've seen that and you still maintain that you've been involved obviously with all kinds of different uh uh immigration issues not only in the united states but but in europe what is your office supposed to do and i'll just get to the point why doesn't it why doesn't dhs do more to help integration why does dhs charge money when people are trying to become u.s citizens it would be a bucket a drop in the bucket in terms of the costs i mean help me understand that wow okay that's a lot of questions it's very big questions indeed um just quick note of thanks um i'm obviously not alejandro mayorkas the director of uscis he was very upset not to be able to be here today i wasn't going to tell anybody that you were a substitute no no he would want me to say so particularly he is an lmu alum and really valued coming here today but he was called by the white house to join the president today in pittsburgh for the jobs council meeting and we made a special announcement today so i have the pleasure to be here which i'm very glad to do um but to to the point um let me just start by saying who uscis is and for those who are writing hollywood scripts please note ins no longer exists we still have a lot of references in public media about ins the immigration and naturalization service which existed for about 90 years in the department of justice disbanded no longer in existence as of 2002 legislation so in 2003 when the department of homeland security was created my agency u.s citizenship and immigration services was stood up as one of three immigration agencies that broke apart ins the brilliance of that and say what you will about how we are housed the brilliance of that i think is that they separated the time benefits from immigration enforcement so interior enforcement is done by u.s immigration and customs enforcement otherwise known as ice our border and port security is u.s customs and border protection and we at uscis only do immigration benefits so we are adjudicating a lot of non-immigrant visas immigrant visas the green cards naturalization refugee asylum adjudications international adoptions and increasingly immigrant integration so since that time we've actually had a much more proactive focus and i would i would quibble a bit with it with the premise that we don't do anything for immigrant integration we frankly do quite a lot and one of our own shortcomings is not being out in front and selling some of the good things we should buy some ads right well i think we do i think we i think we do buy more so that's that's an area that we that we are working on and we can get through in questions some of the more details of of what it is that we are actually doing but it's important to also understand it is expensive to become a citizen uh in the united states it's right now 680 um the filing fee for app for naturalization um we are a fee-for-service agency however so it's us and the postal service um that are deemed by congress to fund itself through the fees for services wait a minute we know the post office doesn't fund itself well hey we know that and as we're about to lose our saturday delivery we'll see how far that funding goes that's okay you don't have to integrate uh immigrants on saturday just the rest of the week the rest of the week that i will take back with me to uh washington as an advice um so we are trying to recoup obviously our operations model through through the fees we are appropriated very few dollars and in the current economic climate those are likely to stay few and perhaps go down for some of our refugee processing and some of our military functions but outside of that we have in the last few round as part of the director and the agency's priorities around naturalization and recognizing the importance that citizenship plays in immigrant integration we've actually held the naturalization fee steady there was a large increase in 2007 but in the last round when other fees went up the um the fee for naturalization stayed the same so that was at least something that we were able to do in the fee review this time around so um i know alejandro mallorcas who used to be u.s attorney here in the in this region uh he asked me to go with obama as well but i i thought it was much more important to be with my class so but but uh um actually i have met president obama and it was you who introduced me to him when uh nobody knew him at that point okay and i know you have a good relationship yeah and i know you have a good relationship with him and so he's going to come to you and he's going to say gil i'm going to make you my immigration czar and say and you're going to say i'll take the job if i can do the following and that you have to do the following mr president what would that be well i think the president has a real particular challenge at the moment and i think everyone in the in the agency is is trying to do all their best and and we acknowledge that but there's a political challenge that exists and big commitments were made and there's a challenge of integrity challenge of credibility and that is those are difficult words from someone who campaigned in three states for him who introduced him to all my political friends and intellectual friends and who was with him at the beginning when the meetings were of five people i think you were at one of them also um and so that's difficult but when you invited and so i think the first thing would be to to use all his discretionary power and there's a dispute to the extent that that he has a broad range of that but people need to be confident that he is exercising all his discretionary power and i think there's two areas where that would be best suited one is to simply make a clearer statement i know there's been three statements this year but a clear statement on the end of deportations of dreamac students and and be very clear about that with respect to dream students and and their families and their family members i think that is one that we hear frequently i think another has to be in terms of support of of your agency and your work clearly there's such a broad and large numbers we saw the statistics today of people who are living here we have to as a society promote citizenship and the agency just simply needs more support it needs to be prioritized and and all within his discretion all that he can do within his discretion should be done so that he could uh regain the the the confidence he's very fortunate the good news is or the the political reality is is that that um you know governor perry's being clobbered for his support of our ab-540 program there will not be people who take advantage of this vulnerability for him in terms of his political opponents and so there's an opportunity for him for a community that is very forgiving if they see that one an acknowledgement of a failure to keep a word or promise which is a core value and then second a very energetic constructive action and actions subsequent that there still remains opportunity for for the president to to capture the incredible and emerging as monica said voting uh population so the in in his powers to pardon and give amnesty can he act alone and give amnesty to a white group of individuals adam does he have that ability it's not that easy unfortunately um what what the administration has prioritized and i can speak generally to this outside of my role um is a level of discretion similar to what we see in law enforcement across the country obviously given limited resources local police departments aren't going to go after and prosecute and have the resources at the attorney office level criminals who are charged with theft necessarily when the docket is full of real felonies before them so a similar thinking i think similar argument has entered now into the um the memo that our sister agency uh u.s immigration and customs enforcement has issued to prioritize their deportation for the same types of reasons to say you know what there are a lot of law-abiding immigrants in this country who are undocumented or without status but few of them actually rise to the threshold of being criminals felons or ones that warrant immediate attention from a national security uh landscape so to put efforts to saying you know there may be some cases that are not worth acting upon at a current time or at any time we'll we'll sit those aside and really devote the limited resources we have to truly engaging and really fulfilling the law enforcement function of the agency which is to get those out who have reached the threshold of crimes that are deemed as felonies in the jurisdictions where they live you know you've worked with a lot of foundations which is i mean i just i can give in your bio i consider you not only working for government but really being an academic of sorts and i want you to give us kind of a comparison in terms of uh immigrant integration in the united states and in europe about three or four years ago i was on a similar panel and there were um five or six scholars from europe who study uh immigration and they were here visiting and um number one fascinating thing is in europe they don't collect data by ethnicity uh like we're so used to it and i know a lot of you are working uh and putting papers together about different ethnic groups or whatever you can't do that in europe because they don't have that data but on this panel were about four or five scholars who on every policy issue i would describe them as being left if not socialist i mean far left okay except on immigration you know and when i started questioning them because it didn't compute to me because they just on immigration they were within the context that i understood on the right wing and one of the guys said to me you don't understand our immigrants are different than yours your immigrants are just like you and i'm like are you kidding me that's not the way most americans view that and he says no they're they they speak a romance language they're all christian or catholic you know they want to be there they believe in the economy et cetera et cetera he went down and he was talking about from a comparative perspective how in the united states the immigrants that come mostly latino mexicans were very different and from their perspective a hundred times more easy to integrate than the immigrants in in europe what is your experience and your reaction to that yeah now this is where it gets really personal for me and the and the note of my bio that uh that is that fernando is kindly highlighting now is actually i worked in germany for the the the first non-ethnic german if it could be described elected member of the german parliament and actually i ran his national campaign when he was running for the european parliament so his parents had immigrated from turkey um part of the guest worker generation in the 1970s he's born and raised in germany actually spoke poor turkish although many assume that he oh we're all used to that here where we speak sports poor spanish similar similar similar issues indeed um and i it really opened my eyes to the challenge of really our western liberal democracies and the beauty that america has struck by being fundamentally two things in my view which is both a nation of laws where the rule of law is paramount but also as fundamental in being a nation of immigrants that is welcome and open from newcomers from all over the world to attain the same rights and responsibilities as those born here we may say it's an arduous process at times expensive maybe a bit circuitous but we are truly unique in that mentality that one can be perceived can perceive themselves as american but also be perceived by the receiving community as american as anybody else and it really is a brilliant that is not struck in many other places um i had experiences on the campaign of people were writing in and saying you know why aren't you running for parliament in ankara in the capital of turkey for example for someone who never lived in turkey i mean just that that type of understanding and the even i mean from the media aspect you know equivalent of the german new york times writing about him and saying you know oh chem and you know his name and all of his turks went to this meeting so by the terminology used even in public discourse you're disenfranchising their citizenship because you're assuming because they have a different skin color or different religion that they necessarily are not of that country so it's that sense of otherness that is still very pervasive in europe uh on the the data point there are good and bad reasons that europeans would say that they don't collect the same types of data but from a research perspective as many on the panel would agree if you don't have the data you can't find the problems and you can't devise the solutions to those socioeconomic problems and you see what happens in france as well france is among the most ardent countries that do not collect data and from an idealist mindset of saying you know liberte egalite fraternity they are you know a civil society where anyone born there as well as is french unlike some other european countries but they don't collect data to differentiate among the french and uh you know what happens in terms of of public policies and the reality there is quite different yeah we also saw what happened in london this summer so i know i'm going to ask you to come in and respond to that but first i'm going to ask anybody who has or wants to ask a question especially if you're getting skittish about the midterm and you think you might need extra points to come up here and form a line and ask some questions and i know angelica had a question that i was supposed to ask and david i was supposed to ask some question but i i've totally forgotten about it so maybe manuel will remember the question i was supposed to ask and answer it as a response well i probably won't do that but uh like any academic i will go ahead and say some stuff as though you actually asked me a question um i don't know i didn't even want to bother asking you a question because i knew you wouldn't even really address what i asked yeah and on your own tangent so that's pretty much you can proceed that's an economic that's an academic strategy first i want to say that one thing ois has done is provide this data yes and one of the things that's really important is to break down the barriers so that we can use this data if the government's short on money there's a lot of energy out there to take advantage of this data and really do the kind of mobilization to move people forward so while there's all sorts of gaps and and problems in the administration that i've and frustrations that i would share with many people i think this data partnership has been really useful second i think it's wrong for all of us to think when we think about the economic cost of being a citizen as being just that application fee it's also getting lawyers in place taking english as a second language classes learning a little bit about u.s history having the time to do those kind of things so you can pass the exam so i think when we think about that we realize that the economic barriers are actually higher and one thing that i think would be very interesting would be for both foundations and the corporate sector to providing people money so they can go through the arduous process not just the application fee but the preparation steps that would be necessary to actually become a citizen it pays off i mean people will be able to raise their wages and they will be able to pay people back you can think about loans you can think about the tax revenues uh finally while we tend to do these inter-country comparisons with regard to the warmth of welcome we can actually also do those with regards to the united states and we have a project that's been funded by the macarthur foundation including which we've been looking at several different metropolitan regions and their receptivity to immigrants the things that matter there's four r's the rapidity of change it's a lot of rapid change it discombobulates the political system the recency of the immigrants if a lot of them have recently arrived that's sort of the new thing that scares people the racial regime of the region whether or not it's an area where there's been a lot of racial tension or a place where there's kind of a tradition of immigrants and then finally the last are republicans that is and i can say this adam can't because he works for the government where there's opportunism and it's not limited to republicans here there's democrats as well who basically are really opportunistic about taking advantage of the political moment in which there's a lot of frustration a lot of anxiety about the economy etc and sort of whipping up fears i've been surprised at how hard i shouldn't have been surprised at how hard rick perry who's simply admitting the realities that in a state like texas you've got a lot of people undocumented who are very loyal texans that it's impossible to build a border fence etc i mean he is just responding like george w bush did by being a realist about the state that they're in and the reality of that state and the fact that he's been attacked about that for really completely opportunistic reasons i mean i'm not a perry supporter but looking at the way in which political opportunism is really moving people away from common sense strategies about what we do about people already here we really need to uh address that issue and that's part of what determines the warmth of welcome you have to remind people that it was ronald reagan who signed urca and uh frankly i think george bush was probably in a heading in a direction that was going to be very pro-immigrant until 9 11 happened and so it's not all republicans and you know it's just more of a recent phenomena monika no question just calling on you very good so um so i because i'm slower than everybody else on the panel i thought about leadership and and what are some of them back to that question back to that question now but i actually wanted to um refer to an example of of of an initiative that i think has been very successful and that if i left and i hadn't mentioned it i would feel terrible um and it's it's the effort called yay soda and this was really born um in the mid-1990s and the idea was that yayasora means it is time and it was really around all of the stuff that we talked about earlier and it basically said it is time to become a citizenship if you are eligible become a citizen and the first element of this campaign was yeah which was yeah so to become a citizen and then over time it then reached out and said yeah if you can vote register to vote and then yes it was a it's a campaign around civic engagement the elements of the campaign though i think are really important because it really is three-fold one is it's it's really strategized by community-based organizations that every day are touching the lives of immigrants through the service that they provide and then the second piece is the caring of the message and that's where national media organizations became the second layer of the yasoda campaign if you've got the organization's developing strategy the messaging that's coming through spanish language media univision in our company or the two spanish language media partners and then at the end of the day those who are on the ground who are the the community-based organizations who are actually talking to people every single day signing them up the yay soda campaign has been so successful that in fact um for all the people in this last round that were eligible to become citizens one out of two said that it was through spanish language media carrying just this constant reminder one out of every two claimed that it was because of those messages that they actually did you know activate and and became citizens if they were eligible to become citizens so that campaign i think is really important to to remind ourselves that if you can pull these three institutions together in a very coordinated way it actually does deliver results the other thing i would say is that we're talking about immigrant integration and and and the panel and the data is about naturalization rates and citizenship but immigrant integration goes beyond that and not everybody is eligible right now they're not lprs they won't find themselves on the pathway immediately for citizenship but there are lots of ways that we can help integrate immigrants into this community the most recent example would be around the census again just a constant reminder of the value of the census that it will determine you know the kind of money that comes into your district which then determines the quality of your schools so the the efforts around you know be counted and the and the census i would say also the efforts around um parent involvement you know so you've got all of these folks who came you know immigrants to the country but their kids are going to the public schools and how do you help them navigate the school system and so a lot of the issues around parent involvement so i would just say those two things um the yazora campaign is really actually i think a um a demonstration a demonstrable demonstrable um example of of the way these coalitions can actually drive results and that there's a lot of work being done around integration that goes beyond just the stuff that's happening in the area of naturalization i think i think monica lozano just answered my question but it was for professor manuel i think a lot of immigrants once they reach the lpr level are comfort like they're comfortable because they can work they can live comfortably in this country and they want to just once they get that level that they work so hard to get they just stay there and they're not aware that they're eligible to apply for citizenship so my question to you is are there any initiatives that you can present all the information you presented to us like the it's pretty much an investment because you showed us the level of the income um is there any initiative that you have started to present this to people um so that they can go to the next step and apply for citizenship so in other words she's saying good academic work but how are you going to implement it that's not my specialty what is it that academics say that uh that works fine in practice but not in theory um so uh you know first i think you're really at the coming out party um of the of this data that would be called the quinceanera i know and believe me we've been working on it for 15 years so so you're really at the initial launch of this data and it's possibilities and what we do hope is that both that economic argument i mean the really key things in uh fernando again with great brevity summarize this but i'll add one thing is that you know there's a tremendous economic argument but also there's just a tremendous political argument right if you look at this recent data that shows that people who are recently naturalized actually do tend to vote at higher levels and you begin to think about what you could add to the voting eligible population there's a really compelling economic argument for politicians to really support this particularly if they themselves are sympathetic toward immigrants the last thing i would say and it relates to the thing that monica was commenting on you know we have a very thin notion of what citizenship is in this country the notion of citizenship is that you get a paper and you're a citizen and then you know every once in a while you go vote uh hopefully without paying too much attention to what the candidates are actually saying or actually reading any of the ballot propositions etc that's not citizenship citizenship is about engagement it's about having a community voice it happens in schools immigrants who are not yet citizens do it by mobilizing others to vote by getting their churches to care about community issues and social justice issues so i would hope that any campaign that we do around naturalization makes it really clear that naturalization isn't the end it's really the beginning of a much broader range of civic engagement and you need to practice before you're a citizen at how to be a citizen that's that parent engagement stuff you're talking about that's being able to go out and mobilize the vote even if you yourself can't vote it may not even be legal these dreamers changed policy in sacramento and they should have had quote unquote no right to do so because they had no legal right to vote but they really engaged in a tremendous act of courage and citizenship to capture the hearts and minds of people like senator cedillo and others and really begin to make the argument that they could be here and contribute citizenship is more than voting thank you hey arturo um could i make the yeah could i make the argument though that integration for who or for what that there are plenty especially in southern california pl plenty of immigrant communities that are an integrated whole amongst themselves where they are actually quite organic and doing well and that when you talk to them about integration that there could be a response integrate to what to uh gang violence to health practices to individualistic culture that we don't particularly want that we want to maintain the culture and the community that we have right now that is well integrated in what you're offering us and what we're talking about we we have a bias of what we mean by integration here that you're going to be part of the broader civic society and there could be communities that say we don't particularly want that do you find that with the communities that you deal with i think you used to see that a lot a lot more i think what you're seeing now is a realization that that families can integrate into american society and like many other immigrants in america's past enrich american society bring our culture bring our traditions uh our work ethic and really strengthen the fabric of america that's what that's what america is all about so i think i think you do see some of that but but it's above it's above and beyond that i think what what the student just mentioned is very important i think uh one of the things that we need to do is really raise a sense of urgency we cannot wait for the next sensen brenner bill or proposition 187 to come about i think we've learned what what has worked monica was talking about the yay soda campaign and other campaigns that have been about we know the combination of sort of leadership that we need we need the political leadership uh we have a member of the latino caucus here we need corporations or folks that have access to corporate leadership we need obviously the ground operations and you have sort of that combination already there it's just it's just figuring out how we combine that leadership and we create a sense of urgency at all levels and really push for this i think that that there's no question that uh that the community will be empowered that there will be great political change that comes about by this type of of uh naturalization wave if we were able to to sort of create that synergy uh but but we need to really invest in in that organization and and and i think it it it falls down to leadership and figuring out how all these actors come together and make it happen okay generally what is the normative status of immigrants in the u.s and how does that change when you factor regions and also in the the chain of events that are necessary to reach that ideal status what are the what are like the major events that occur along the way well i'm going to turn to manuel and to adam to you know first talk about the the different regional differences the national origin differences and then adam to talk a little bit about the process so briefly one of the main purposes of working with this particular data set was to look at some of the regional differences in terms of the composition of who's coming and so you do see parts of the united states that are pretty wildly in terms of one group or another but let me give you one factor which i like to quote frequently of recent immigrants into los angeles county people who arrived in the last 10 years what percent of recent immigrants do you think are mexican students any answer yeah okay ninety percent that is certainly the public image right in fact the public image is 150 right like super mexicans cross the border and they are now 1.5 right the actual figure is about a third 32 percent of recent immigrants into los angeles county are mexican there are other latin americans but there's a whole range of folks from asia armenia uh western europe etc yeah but if you sell latinos together yeah come on this when a typical non-latino angelino sees a guatemalan walking down they don't say oh excuse me are you mexican or guatemalan they see a mexican so when you still see when you add mexicans and central americans and certain other caribbean nations it's got to be more than 30 i mean it's got to be more than 32 but it's around 50 which means that half of the immigrants i mean when somebody says and i think that's the public perception ninety percent of them are just mexican and you're right everybody else gets to become an honorary mexican right uh like you yeah there you go as fernando knows i'm cuban although i have a friend because i grew up in la and said i don't know man i don't know whether you're cubano or chicano maybe you're chibano so you're really taking me off here fernando so in certain areas we have a very diverse population here there's a very diverse but changing population uh in new york i think one of the things that's really flared up in phoenix is that's an overwhelmingly mexican really just mexican and undocumented migration into that area and it's caused a lot of changes in shocks so there's big regional differences and i think in terms of the normative question of how folks are doing which i think was part of what you're asking too i think what we find is that in those regions where integration is looked at as a two-way street and where there really are supportive programs to help people do better those folks are doing better so for example two places that are really exemplary in the united states at all levels of immigrants are the san jose area and chicago both are doing a remarkable job at moving immigrants along economically socially and politically i would argue in part because in both those locations immigration is not seen as a racialized phenomena even though there are also a very large share of mexican immigrants into both of those locations there's a big sense of europeans in chicago in a big sense of the asian contribution and multiple skill levels in the silicon valley that tends to de-racialize the issue and it tends to lead toward more investments on the part of local authorities we need to take that kind of insightful forward-looking investment and begin to apply it to other regions okay adam we talked earlier about lpr a legal um permanent resident if um they want to get citizenship what is it that they have to do what are the steps sure um if i could also just answer gentleman's question and bump professor manuel's um statement up just a notch and provide some overarching numbers meaning that he's mexican i'm sorry so in the u.s we have roughly thirty nine thousand a thirty nine million foreign born in our population about three hundred and ten million so that's about thirteen percent of our overall population about eight million of them are undocumented of course we don't know exact numbers nobody could um about 16 million are naturalized citizens about 15 million are lawful permanent residents so we have a significant chunk in the united states i think 39 million of roughly 200 million people worldwide who live outside of their home country so we are a significant recipient of the world's migrants if you would say so um in terms of of what we do in terms of volume lawful permanent residents there's pretty much a steady stream because there are for many complicated reasons we won't get into different categories and preference categories and wait times for different countries of origin but we roughly do about a million a year about 45 to 50 percent of them actually come directly and immigrate from abroad the rest of them actually adjust their status within the united states they've been here on another temporary visa or another type of worker visa and have rights to then become a permanent resident within the u.s so that's about a million a year in terms of citizenship there is no quota or preferences it's anyone who's eligible after five years as a lawful permanent resident or three years if they're married to a u.s citizen can apply for citizenship and we naturalize between six hundred and seven hundred thousand each year which is roughly three thousand people each and every business day so we in my agency of eighteen thousand are quite busy and to the point of of yeah and and the initiatives in 2007 2008 our fiscal year 2008 we did 1.046 million naturalizations more than in any year since we began keeping records in the 1890s in any single year so it's over a million people became citizens in that year in addition to residing in the united states those who file need to certify that they have there's a couple pref there's a couple of residence requirements of both maintaining their residence for a period of time and also the actual physical presence they won't get into it's complicated um but there's also um old um terminology that goes back to the 1790s in fact on good moral character so there are character questions about um even some esoteric sounding questions about habitual drunkardness through terrorist activity which are now part of the citizenship process but really it goes to establishing that those who are applying don't have any of the threshold of crimes in their past during their statutory eligibility period to meet the threshold to become citizens they have to most often when people think of the requirements they think of the naturalization test and that's in law that that immigrants who apply for citizenship need to demonstrate that they can speak read write and understand words in basic english and demonstrate knowledge of the history and of the united states and fundamental principles of our government so we do that in a two-part naturalization test so there's an english portion of the test which actually has a reading and writing portion of it and then there's the citizenship i'm sorry the civics portion of the test which is what people commonly think of and what happens if you don't pass if you're a u.s citizen and don't pass that test can i take it away because i actually applied that test to my students about two semesters ago and half of them failed no it's it's um there are 100 possible questions and there are there are specific questions um to historical facts that you may not remember from grade school i certainly didn't before i started this job either i've gone back and be sure that i could answer all of them but really the point is for our for our test and the design of the the test that we've redid in 2008 is not to say and should be a punitive measure to try to impose some level of trickery but to say you know what we have requirements in law that actually make some sense so why don't we leverage these requirements and use the test as an integration tool to promote this concept of shared citizenship and equip those newcomers with an understanding of why it's important to vote and why it's important to participate i grew up in this country went to school here and you know i may not remember all the specifics but i learned enough to know why it's important to engage somebody coming from another country or another country where your government was not your friend and where your law enforcement was rather restrictive and invasive may not have the same associations and to start on a slate of saying you know what i can engage as a an individual in this country i have rights to participate let's use the educational opportunity of the naturalization process to say you know what here's some opportunity to to learn about the country to learn enough english to communicate with your neighbor to improve your skills at the job workplace what have you and get to a point that you're welcomed into an equal society and participate go ahead hey monika i just wanted to respond to another question you asked half an hour ago um this is the media at work because you talked about fear is the motivator and there was a lot of um concern that for example after the 187 era you know voting participation rates would spike and then they would drop off and that we needed to wait for another you know hb 4427 for that to happen again and what the data showed is that actually you know not only do foreign-born naturalized you know citizens vote in higher rates but they vote consistently and they vote about things that really matter to you in your everyday life so when the the the general populace is not voting for things like bond measures to improve schools latinos are the ones who are actually putting that over the goal line and saying you know what we are going to invest in in the future of our economy and so a lot of what you know this concern that well if you don't have the boogie man to you know force you to you know get out and mobilize we actually see that there is consistently high levels of voter participation and it's about things like um you know investing in infrastructure in schools and transportation all the things that um you know government should provide in a society like this so fear is not the only factor good point um senator uh cedillo i have a question for you and maybe for the whole panel how do we fight back the laws that are being passed in states such as alabama that are basically racist laws laws that mock civil rights going back to the question of leadership how do we fight back when we don't have a clear leader in the latino community and how do we fight back with the latino community that is not really politicized so i mean we've seen this great success this last week with the dream act passing in california but at the same time there are laws being passed in alabama arizona georgia and some other localities that are labeled anti-immigrant what can be done how can we mobilize against those well i think that's the whole point of the dream act there was discussions for years about do we do federal do we do state do we do local and i don't think we have the luxury of making those choices or those distinctions i think we have to operate and take action on where we're at and and so we while others were focused on on the federal dream act and think about where we were just last december the california dream act had been vetoed in the fall and congress had failed to act on the federal dream act it was important in a angelica is here with us we talked early on in the beginning of the year the need for victories and so if we look at the dream act as a template we look at its history we look at the elements that were part of what made it successful then we can follow that that model and so one of the things that was very important in our efforts is building a broad coalition creating the right arguments creating the right message and messengers i don't i don't take the premise that latinos don't have leaders they have leaders every day everywhere there's leaders in the household there's leaders and on the parks there's leaders in the church there's leaders in in in hometown associations there's leaders all over everywhere you go you find latino leaders so i don't think there's any shortage of that we may need more organization and infrastructure but clearly leadership is not one of the challenges that affects our communities in alabama we need to to figure out strategies and and share with them strategies about how the business community has a very invested interest in working and nurturing and cultivating the immigrant community in that state the faith-based community the evangelicals and the traditionally the catholic church they have a very vested interest in integrating immigrants into their their organization their we need to build that coalition with other political leadership other visionaries that we started by saying leadership matters and so there are people in a state that has a very rich tradition that served as the basis for the civil rights of this nation for the african-american community there are leaders who understand the importance of unity in our nation and so we need to to find for we need to to examine the success of the dream act here in california and then figure out what are the templates what are the strategies what are the plans that can be replicated in arizona and alabama in georgia et cetera well um gil monica arturo adam manuel thank you very much for coming to loyola marymount university thanks we'll see you guys
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2012-09-19
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Anthropological views on researching parliaments | GRNPP | SOAS University of London
[Music] anthropologists look at the structure and function and the rules and procedures by which people organize themselves and live in the world looking at how economics politics culture kinship and cosmology are entangled in people's everyday lives using methods of long-term immersive field work which often involve both participation and observation combined because it's so effective at exploring what bordeaux calls silent traditions i.e the cultural aspects of life that we find very hard to talk about because we take them for granted in the form of assumptions and they ask actually what does that experience look like what are the relationships through which people kind of make sense of their lives with others and thereby anthropology encourages awareness of different ways of thinking different ways of looking different ways of living and making meaning of ourselves and the world around us [Music] anthropology has been described as the most humanistic of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities balancing subjective understanding and objective analysis of the matter makes ethics in anthropology different from other social science discipline i think anthropology is very tuned in to the fact that actually our data on our knowledge is produced collaboratively and it's a kind of inter-subjective experience that takes place within the ethnographic encounter with other people being ethical as researchers is a continual ongoing process of negotiations as it is between any group of people so in international coalitions discussion is needed within a collective to work out what the group finds ethical in a way that doesn't necessarily impose for example uk ideas about what ethics amounts to and this kind of ongoing continual negotiation is also important for asking each other whether or not you're living up to your promises and if you're not what you can do about it [Music] reflexivity is a really interesting concept it helps the individual to pose and revisit already held positions and attitudes anthropology isn't a laboratory science it isn't a test of a hypothesis and determining an answer it's an ongoing dialogue or conversation and encounter with a set of complex and messy and sometimes contested realities is about acknowledging that we live in a world of inequalities and that we are shaped by our histories our geographies our experiences in any conversation anthropologists have to ask themselves who am i speaking to how am i speaking to them what's being said and who's saying it how does that affect me how are my own beliefs and knowledges affected by this how do they cause me to see this differently what different views are coming across here and how do i understand the what the reasons for those differences and you can't stand outside that process because it involves getting into processes of relating with other people so to do good research you need to make your own involvement and your impact on the research how your thinking affects the way you see and the way other people see you um you need to make all that part of the inquiry so you know what kind of impact you're having on your own inquiry [Music] anthropologists use different kinds and forms of data data such as text audio video and other forms are first transcribed into the language of the field or the language of the community the anthropologist is studying and this data is finally translated into the language of the researcher or the language that the researcher is using at one point this would have been to shore up the colonial enterprise it has also turned its attention to development and to development discourse and praxis as well as to decolonizing think a really exciting trend uh within anthropology is how might it benefit the lives of those with whom we study how might it contribute to um policy change for example or advocating for more inclusive democracy or in the case of the global comparative ethnography of parliament's politicians and people you know how might parliament and parliamentarians maximize the opportunities to engage with various publics [Music] this is tricky it's it's different from other fields of observation exactly because of this collective character of decisions made inside it and here i'd argue that actually it doesn't that parliaments and those that work in them have um distinct cultures have ribbons and rights and and rituals that order activity and in this they're not really any different from other field sites other cultures other societies they're no different from groups of villagers in the indian himalayas for example or people going to work in gold mines in south africa or take another example wall street bankers they are a collective institution that brings together people who think in different ways in many cases different thinking opposite ways you know they have parties from a complete opposite signs of the political spectrum and so they represent everyone but same time they represent no one because you won't find someone who agrees with parliament all the time so it's an institution that is bound to disappoint it's an institution that it's bound to have people don't necessarily agree with it if you see them from outside it seems that all political actors have the same amount of power and influence but we know that this isn't true so when you are looking inside the parliament you have to understand how the distribution of power is operating and where people are acting to get more power where the relationships are being more conflicted in the way they are distributing power so this is a very different point of view from other institutions that have a single command for example um it might need [Music] a communication skill is slowly maybe needed in the case of research by anti-polyps [Music] one thing we have to bear in mind when studying parliaments is that this institution is a collective political actor which means all decisions are not made by just one person one group or one segment of society instead of this decisions are made in a complex relationship of different interests opinions and demands but parliaments are also highly sensitized and sensitive environments you know this is where the work of legislating goes on these parliaments are institutions of paradoxes they are public but they are private they are they belong to the public but at the same time they are part of an elite and so the collective of the institution and the fact that it brings different people from very opposite sides they all work together makes it a very unique type of institution for an anthropologist to understand how parliament works or what parliament is or how parliament operates really needs to get to know the people within it and getting to understand the subtle side of politics access can be even more difficult and here in lies a tricky problem if you want access to scrutinize powerful people they might worry about whether or not you're going to criticize them and of course you don't want to promise that you will portray them in a rosy tinted way because that will compromise your scholarly integrity and your your aspiration towards academic freedom so there is a tension sometimes between securing access and academic freedom and bearing in mind that often what an anthropologist will see on the news or what is seen outside is probably not what actually happens within parliaments because palmers do have a very paradoxical like nature between what's shown outside and what actually happens or the reasons why things happen within the inside it's a place full of performances for lots of different reasons the structure of parliaments is very difficult to be understood by from just one perspective because of this is a very interesting to have some kind of comparison and different ways of looking the same phenomenon [Music] you
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2021-08-09
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Darling Portrait Prize winner announcement
- I'd like to begin by acknowledging the Ngunnawal and Ngambri peoples, the traditional custodians on the land in which this gallery stands. I'd like to pay my respects to the elders of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri nations, both past and present. I welcome here today Mrs. Marilyn Darling AC, founding patron and member of the Foundation of National Portrait Gallery. - There seems to me to be no doubt that the National Portrait Gallery of Australia should be the home of an annual prize for painted portraits, just as it is for photographic portraits. And the winner is Anthea da Silva with her portrait of Dr. Elizabeth Cameron-Dalman. (applause) Congratulations! - Thank you. - Congratulations. - Well, I'm gonna talk on the judges' behalf. Because I think feedback is always important. What we loved about this work was the sort of mild chaos in it. It's got a seemingly unfinished nature. It's evident that we had a senior figure, who's full of energy, and has more to do in her life as a professional dancer. And there is joy and happiness, and a sense of accomplishment in her face. I noticed on the artist's website, Anthea's website, a detail of the face. And I find it quite intriguing and see many years of experience and physical endurance. A life of achievement that is evident in the gaze. If it's okay, I'll use your words. Your statement. Elizabeth Cameron-Dalman OAM, has a PhD, and has been described as the high priestess of Australian contemporary dance. And Anthea says, "She's inspired by "her constant reinvention as dancer, choreographer, "actor, director, and environmental activist." And here is Elizabeth, momentarily resting her feet at Mirramu Creative Arts Center, Bungendore, preparing for her next adventure. So, Anthea for me has respectfully captured the essence of her subject, Elizabeth. A person who has lived her life with commitment and love of her profession and the institution of performance. She takes a deep breath now, and has a rest in portrait as we admire her history and her professionalism and love of dance. The judges congratulate Anthea for successfully capturing one moment from a big life, and a highly successful one at that. And Anthea has a passion for drawing, which is evident in this painting. And portraiture is central to her work. The bleeding within the work is deliberate. And to us, it emphasized the fragility of human nature. There is an inner fascination operating within this work. So often portraiture lacks breath and movement. But as we concentrate on her face, we somehow connect to the sitter. The work is honest and unapologetic. Its unfinished quality is engaging and whimsical. On behalf of the judges, I congratulate the artist and the sitter, Anthea and Elizabeth, and I thank Marilyn Darling for enabling this moment, in honor of Gordon Darling. Their shared vision has come to fruition. Not only do we have a globally significant portrait gallery, we have a prize that will recognize artists and highlight our unique Australian identity. - We're very excited to be here with the winner of the inaugural Darling Portrait Prize, Anthea Da Silva. Congratulations on your win. - Thank you so much. - I was just wondering if perhaps you might be able to introduce your gorgeous subject here to us. - With pleasure. This is Elizabeth Cameron-Dalman, OAM, PhD, OMG. (laughter) - And can you tell us a little bit about how you met, and how the portrait came to be? - Yes, okay. So, I've known Elizabeth for a number of years now. And I just keep being inspired by Elizabeth's activity. She's just off on other adventures constantly. So, I was really fortunate to get serious about a sitting, or several this year, last year. I've known Elizabeth for many years. - More than 20, I think. - More than 20, oh we were so young once, yes. (laughter) But I've really loved watching Elizabeth's career just going off in so many amazing tangents. I think two years ago, you said you'd take up acting? - Yes. - Yes, and you've toured internationally now with Swan Lake. And how do you pronounce that? - Loch na hEala, which is the Irish name for Swan Lake. But it's with an Irish dance theater company called Teac Damsa. And we created this work, Michael Keegan-Dolan is the director, was created in 2016. And we continually are touring the world still with this production. So I feel very lucky that I'm part of this group. - And Elizabeth, your background is in dance. Can you tell us a little bit about your career? - Well, yes, I think I've been dancing since I was born. But I founded Australian Dance Theatre in 1965, and was their director for 10 years. Very proud that the company still exists. 2015, we celebrated the 50th anniversary. And Garry Stewart is now directing that. Then I spent many years in Europe. But I came back to Australia in 1987. And then moved to Wheeler Well, Lake George in 1989. So I've now been at Mirramu Creative Arts Center for 30 years, both as a freelance performer, choreographer, teacher, but also director of Mirramu Dance Company. As well as doing lots of other things, as well. But I just love being around artists, and artists of all disciplines. And that's what drove me to set up Mirramu Creative Arts Centre. And then the Centre has drawn people like Anthea, who first came to one of our Dance in Nature Workshops. And I know that she has the same passion about relationship to nature, and how important we need to respect and take care of our environment. And that she's managed to capture a little bit of that in this painting, I think is fantastic. - We were just commenting earlier, we saw you sitting on a bench over in the corner, just having a little break from all of the lights and cameras and action. And you were in exactly the same pose as you are in this portrait. So, clearly this is a very natural pose for you. Anthea, do you think you've captured something of the essence of Elizabeth in this portrait? - (laughs) Oh, I hope so. I hope so. We did lots of sittings, I think. And I think I love charcoal, and I love the stumbling nature of oils too. But this is the most un-layered version I think of any of the studies that I did. And I'm just really glad that it's got that kind of fleeting look, you know. It's like a number of sketches. Because there's so much dynamism and action with you, Elizabeth. (laughs) And I wanted to get your feet in. I think most of the other studies I did were just shoulders and head, and your amazing hair. So this one, I wanted to incorporate those dancing feet. - Dancing feet and wild hair! - Not necessarily dancing. And wild hair!(laughs) - I think it's really interesting. I think about 10 years ago, I was thinking about actually, eventually cutting my hair. And then, with the Swan Lake, very particularly, the director wanted a woman, a senior woman, if possible, with long white hair. And so I went "Oh, there it goes! "I'll have to leave my hair!" (laughter) And now, yes, more recently too, I've been working on a project called, "Crone," about the importance of the senior woman's voice in our society today. And for that project, having my long hair was really important. And I dance with my hair, as well as my feet, and the rest of my body. (chuckles) So, my hair has become a really important thing for me. - Well, we're delighted that Anthea could bring the senior voice to the walls of the Portrait Gallery today. So, thank you so much. And congratulations on your win, and congratulations and thank you to both of you for being here today. - Thank you so much. - Thank you.
National Portrait Gallery
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2020-03-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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OER Debate: Finale - Judges feedback
thank you very much Frank any other responses to any of the issues of race thank you very much I teach chemistry and I have come across a lot of simulation and applets and I think when you talk about creativity once I attempted to make an applet and I ended up wasting a lot of time making that applet so I think when you talk about creativity it depends you know what exactly are you referring to my creativity because I said to myself I wanted to be creative and why should I depend on someone else's applet and this was 67 years ago so I think it depends how far you want to go with this extent of reusability your creativity so I am in favor of pick what you want so I agree with Martin and then I with Frank steam use as much as you can and coming to Elizabeth phones point reuse even once it's done you don't have to go under using it thank you thank you for that comment any any other comments and responses it Thank You Billy could I have the microphone to Billy thanks for much I think you know I think I'll just continue with the commenting I made yesterday regarding the d.school effect off of open resources I got this idea from a project that I was engaged in last year on on laptop or OLPC one laptop per child and denied he came up and I thought I keep a lot of a lot of thought and then through this week it's the one laptop per child project it's it's about access to a laptop it's about access to open resources and when we when I came into this notice listening to these discussions that the ideas are beautiful but that's a contender did not it pops up nope ever back to mind they whether it's going days that there will be a dis colon effect of this on the traditional school I'm not a traditionalist I'm a constructivist I'm a futurist I like looking and looking forward and I'm positive about changes but I'm what I'm concerned about is that if North things falling I don't know getting out of hand because I see the resources i like open open resources which are free and cheap and students have access though but this should be we are our students in especially here in the Pacific should have access to thing with within the boundary of the curriculum now we still need as our students to come to the classroom and listen to their teaches within in their schools I when resources are readily available cheaply and especially when students have computers in their own home their own internet access let's I see that it's a negative impact on on traditional education in not only here but area everywhere else students will tend to stay home because they have access to everything it's just a comment Thank You Vinny that's a bit of a challenge any responses today would anyone like to respond to thank you Miss I think this is another example of some times where we have confused thinking just like Frank side because what we talk of oh yeah I think just as well the judges are gone when we talk of oh you're basically we tend to confuse the two things the use of a year as teaching material by the teacher and the use of voyeur our self learning materials so these are two different things so a student so anyone who has access to the Internet has access to know your repository can have access to some material for learning by himself on like YouTube anything but you have some resources which are free and you can learn anything from them so this is an example of self learning and then you can if you have such access you can feel that there is no use for you to go in a formal classroom to learn the specific idea but when we talk of earlier as teaching materials or teaching resources which means a lecturer can go on the internet look for these resources download them Pakistan Syria and then use them in the classroom to demonstrate to the students as additional resources which in that case he should not have gone and make in themself for example that's an applet so if you are a chemistry teacher you want to do an update possibly you need to know programming Java advanced programming and so on which is very difficult to do so once you get an applet which meets your criteria and so on you can just download it or run it in the classroom to demonstrate it to the student for instance if you want to demonstrate braking distance in physics and so on so these are the two elements so it's not necessary that when you use or you're the teacher it will have that aunty schooling effect it depends if all your students have access to the Internet very rapid bag reach and so on then they might think that why is an way the need to come to class when I can get these resources elsewhere so we need to differentiate between these two aspects thank you very much Mohammed and traitor I think yesterday time but Finley raised interest in using interest word which is control a friend of mine Brian lamb says he likes technology that's cheap fast and out of control and that's the kind of lot this lightweight where to stuff and Jonathan's is drained very good book with the future of the internet and he said that the reason the internet is such a fabulous thing is because it's it's generative so it has unpredicted outcomes you you you don't control the system you let people use unpredicted outcomes and I think all that so I grew both those things are cheap fast nap control technologies the good stuff and you want a generative system I think re ours as they're kind of constituted in higher education currently are about trying to control so they're not generative at all they're saying this is what you do this so you use it rather that's kind of much more lightweight kind of free approach so I think as that they're kind of counterintuitive I think to what we might want to do with with the matter thank you very much ma'am could I have one final comment please I think that there's still a little bit of a discussion about with it with the judges so if we can just keep the discussion going for a little bit longer I'm sure that we've almost earned our morning tea are there any more final comments okay thank you very much colleagues and I think the judges are ready so I will hand over to Aidan Aidan if you want to step step over to the podium please thank you very much okay thank you very much did come do it all we talked about how everybody was and actually come to some significant agreement both about the result and sort of the reasons for that result of course the result has to come at the end so we'll just waste your time with some of the reasons so looking at just briefly going through first affirmative speaker Frank was of course very clear and very sort of persuasive and the reply was very sort of clear and simple and persuasive so certainly this sort of points for style there first- speaker probably was probably a little less persuasive certainly demonstrating a sort of a an internal discomfort with being on the wrong team which you're not really not really as a professional debate is supposed to be revealing so that probably you know was it strategically all that good that's right but other than that you know certainly gave us a lot of content in terms of that sort of the list of things the reply was probably slightly stronger maybe gathering you know maybe getting little bit angrier as it went along or something and gathering a little bit more steam so the particularly I think by the reply you are crystallizing this point saying we'll hang on something important here as we need to distinguish between everything else on the web and what we really call OE ours which I thought was beginning of sort of a kind of a strategy that was putting some distance between the teams the second affirmative speaker gave us a lot of examples of oer projects and one of the things we thought with a number of the speakers this applies to a few was that you know there was a lot of rhetorical debate but not always a lot of data and evidence and we were told at the beginning that the use of data and evidence was a significant criteria so we did bear that in mind and so particularly when we got to the second- speaker we were impressed that was probably the high point of the use of data and evidence we started to hear statistics and percentages and these things that I know my learned colleagues on the bench were very pleased to hear particularly I think coming from the sciences as well I mean being a lawyer I can deal with rhetoric but that certainly was impressing pressing us according to the criteria to hear that come across so that was a strong empirical performance for the second- so similar things getting to the third affirmative speaker again sort of dealing very much with the specific concerns but again I suppose that criticism which we have really nearly all the other speakers that it was sort of mostly rhetorical rather than you know fighting it on the fighting it on the data which I sort of suggests maybe that you had other things to do during the last week and a half and finally Mohamed certainly went in for for the attacking did a very very point-by-point attack perhaps not with lots of data but certainly with some enthusiasm so where we get to when we add all that up and we take into account the various bribes that we've been off at overnight for the first judge and we don't tell you which judge it is okay in case you move us to the other side of the island to run port over there for a few years so the first judge 36 for the affirmative team in 38 for the negative team for the second judge 35 for the affirmative team and 40 for the negative team and for the third judge who was very unhappy with not really getting good enough bribes at all 44 both teams so that gives us 111 for the affirmative team despite their sort of assurance that it was a walkover and 118 for the negative team so I can take the local we just have a few tokens of our appreciation for the efforts of the of both teams so the first prize being the vaca goes to the negative team of here Professor Martin Weller thank you very much it's elliott Graham Fraser thank you and it's the Muhammad Santelli thank you very much actually they do they do in the and the in these parcels just in case they don't have internet connection yeah and that colleagues concludes our debate this morning I do have to say a very big thank you very much to you as our colleagues attending without users with them the event there was I think the judges again Aidan government and the via thank you very much for taking time out and go green come and do this it is not an easy job so thank you for my team and thank you also to the side kept project by the dissemination and Secretariat was setting us up so quickly I I because most of you might have noticed of India earlier the format was a little different we need a little bit of a makeover and that was done very quickly and efficiently for us last night
TheSidecap
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2010-11-02
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K3lOe7-ElEU
Inside Keith Haney Racing | Road To The Finals | Enigma | Lights Out 9
Brian Markowitz and Keith Hanie the guy who takes a lot of good-natured ribbing from Don along comes up in his 2016 Camaro with 948 cubic inches of monstrous nitrous engine in the front of it rear Morrison powerplant I forget his name oh that's right Brian just announced it but Brian Markowitz oh we came on the left-hand-side the Largo Florida our 69 Camaro but here we go egg nygma and a right hand side here comes market with the Markowitz making his you know he'd put the car together got this thing ready to rock and roll and he wanted to be a competitor right here in the radio verse of the world category $50,000 the winner right here bro line Pinter play on the left he insane but a lot of people know Keith Hanie he's too short to see over the Willys actually got the booster seat on board so we're gonna see if he can lay down a number here Brandon square Brandon Switzer Switzer dynamics out there and bring the pass through the tuner so Hanny purging the nitrous the Larry Jeffers built chassis in this car built really to compete at this event some other the Highline radial events across the country moments of brilliance out of this car but has not really come together the way Haney wants it to at any one particular race he's not find that the winner certainly isn't trying to say but car certainly has all the parts of pieces to get there Markowitz a long history of the sport not really long history in this car though so we'll find out what he's able to put down the racetrack his first shot through these shows on board here fine plus about feisty to the nitrogen right hand side is going to go in first the turbo car puts it in here he goes 385 with an 896 62 so Keith Hanie crushing it down low sub one second 60-foot time he's 262 the split and 85 with an 8 out the door he leads the class by 1/10 and a half now as Brian Markowitz costa's way to a 701 at just 70 miles an hour in the Camaro Wow bambam Thank You Man Keith Hanie said you know what bring it on man I'm tired of all the craft knocking 385 196 right here on this conditions pretty good and he about tore the green tent off the bulb on the way by a no.26 reaction time for Keith Hanie so take that duck he says oh here he comes the man who was the number one qualifier up until about three minutes ago Keith Hanie well line up against mark Mickey this is great this right here is a heavyweight it's not race to each other at this point they're running the clock but these are two obviously the best cars in the country talking about price of a missional become an idol waterboxx right here hold your ears as nobody knows his name that's right he's too short to drive big neck bucket and here we go that's ring the car that actually took a little chassis there he got the weight out of it this car he says this capable of going 60s but can we see it here light sound dying that is gonna be the question believe it or not that stock wheelbase 78 Chevy Malibu is the fastest car mile an hour wise in the history of this category having gone 215 miles an hour down in Florida a couple of weeks ago duck claims that mark Mickey is going to take that foxy little Chevrolet and stick it into the number one qualifying spot one of the coolest things about Mickey's car is the engine of course the standard bore spacing big-block Chevy it's gut feeling it's not like it's got to set a cast so it's gonna fill it heads it's got all the great stuff on it but it's not a big bore spacing block and they make a ton of power yeah this is it a great job let me into the partly right there he's got peel tech on board right hand side right hand I feel look at the now man this car has potential to set the record right here right now goodie new and that's gonna be the question - how about 280 you can buy his birth today so manufactures big Wayne the man that is a smallest man in the category trying to go back the number one so race means this is it man worth the price of the mission come another starting line right now two of the baddest in the world what here lights out nine mark Becky imminent transmissions Jason Carter says go get'em boy GT knee left he inside a race track the Oklahoma man potential here if they both get all of it potential with a quickness side-by-side run of the history of drag radial racing 3 9 0 1 95 but Mickey goes 385 at 205 102 60 flick coming out their mark Mickey goes number 2 and actually pumps now Keaney the number 3 that's right yeah Mickey Smith sneaks around and it looked like they really walked that thing off the starting line pretty gingerly and then put the power to it 205 mile an hour top edge speed he's only the second car to go over 200 so far in qualifying 211 to top speed you're fired it is number one in two qualifiers going at each other Steve it fares in the right lane Keith maybe I'll be over in the left lane Auto broke Broken Arrow Oklahoma I'm gonna be like your partner here yes right here call me at times DV Jackson buckle up is a brewery and I'm I bet you another 50 bucks if Steve is out funny tho your big ass or the whop whop whop to the gasket Stevie fast they got Keith Hanie just run does run your moments away from fire these two watch out because when Stevie yeah alright so go to your ears oh one the only the world favorite Stevie does jokes ain't gonna kill the one side by side load them up baby let's do this why don't call mine session quite literally the hole is today's trip is on their feet every person in this place is on their feet to watch this look at everybody standing up out there to try to figure out who's gonna win the big runs race look at the people on the starting line [Music] this is the price of admission rider units one race is worth the price of admission so Jackson backing up the shadow 2.0 with its strange engineering sponsorship on the doors and the enigma coming back with Keith Hanie tucked up close to the steering wheel he always is man these are two of the biggest trash talkers aligned Dylan on a key teeny left-hand side Stevie things to the right hand side nobody knows his baby's got the the big seat inside cuz he said he's thinking of Stevie Ferris right here remember Haney wanted the back tire when they started going back and forth of all stuff never been as quick as yours give me the advantage and Stevie so I'm not gonna keep it advantage and Haney finally relented last night this whole thing came about the two of them were betting each other on quarter flips and one of them wants this back side to the other so they're trying to race for the money back they got side bets going on the reaction time advantage side bets going on who makes it to each and every cone or block down the drag strip first student fires with the damp steel the players with the down there you get a little nitrous version Olympian soon you got multiple speed just funny stages to be exact the rear warships our left hand sander East ranked and the brand Anderson heavy Stevie pants puts the prestige on this are gonna be any games as they put a little beams right here in White's out nine Stevie's in 378 seven in a hundred and ninety eight point zero six miles an hour in old forty reaction time for Jackson of twenty three life for Haney who goes 3 900 196 let those two guys hear it as they go around the turn at the top end of the racetrack that was awesome 600 cubic inches of turbo engine for Jeff shopper Chevrolet style engine and Keith Hanie relying on 948 cubic inches of nitrous Willing rear morrison power in the front of that larry Jeffers race cars built camaro all right in this nine pcc radial versus the world a brought to you by tonight in pistons let's do this first round action $50,000 up for grabs and nobody knows the guy's name on the right-hand side that's right oh that's Keith Hanie that's for you for Brooklyn Arrow Oklahoma and the reality here is all the pressures on Keith Hanie Jeff shopper happy to make the show shoppers main kind of competition his main class is gonna be running here is not necessarily radial verse the world but the fact that he's in here is just some gravy some gravy being able to run in front of a pack drag strip on a Saturday night here in Valdosta Georgia Keith Hanie by all accounts needs to win this round is expected to win this round and really can only do stuff could not win this round get out there and not screw it up the name of the game Leigh I'd argue that it's tougher to me in my mind anyway it always seems to play on the sport this way it's tougher to take a car like detainees and tame it down to make sure you know it's gonna go down the racetrack then lives for a guy like Jeff sharp and maybe leaned out a little harder and go a little faster I mean without a doubt but I mean he knees got brannis went to right there he's got brand apes' they caught a Brandon Square tuning rear Morris and horsepower he's made it down every single pass down this drag strip so you know he's just gonna have the same exact tune appended I think just for the victory Haney's gonna have some confidence coming to the starting line again a reference back to that a great Oh 23 light he pulled out again Stevie fast so we know he can leave we know he's comfortable at the christmas-tree he's just gonna have to be very comfortable and very able to do what he can if this car brakes traction off the line and Jeff drivers hooks up if he can pedal it quick he still may have a fighting chance Oh chopper double bold them all right Wow now to apply it start [Applause] Haidee almost put it across the centerline he stood it up on the back proper and rolls it across I don't believe he I don't believe he crossed the centerline Holy Smoke unbelievable right there who says the tracks the hook and now baby that's right Keith amy was go for a fly all right so let's do this is Keith Dean he's come to life and right hand setting and here comes Paul up major all major heating the tyres and here comes Keith Hanie both cars back of their way to the starting line turbochargers or nitrous oxide Paul major fort long in New York the 2001 a Corvette the 526 cubic inch turbocharged Hemi and Keith Hanie nine hundred and forty eight cubic inches of rear lorrison Mountain motor with a load of nitrous oxide cursing through its veins you can see the purge happening raining the starting line so you got about funny seizures at nine trees come another where he and same brilliant square doing a tuner right there top secret nobody knows about it granite is behind it Brandon Schweitzer Schweitzer dynamics helps tune this guy Paul main journal left-hand scientist got the Jeannie automotive power machine he's really enough to turn it up though Keith Hanie went for a flight last night almost let's see if he's got the front end tied down yeah thankfully the car not damaged with that pilot landing it had the guys had did have overnight to fix it if there was anything that needed replacing it's a well stocked well-funded team we'll find out if Haney's got the nitrous to enough to knock off Paul major in the turbocharged Corvette Joe and evil or put some of the beams here we go who's it gonna be wall major moves in left hand side here comes Keith mediator right six at 196 with of a pre-major goes at a three-second zoom for the first night on a weekend but not enough as he goes 396 at 204 ya Paul's best week run by a bunch down that 396 you saw the 204 mile an hour speed and you saw major starting to pull on Haney unfortunately for Paul major it's only a 660 foot drag race and Keith Hanie by about two car lengths takes the win light at the finish line getting serious now Keith Hanie gonna roll into the box now he hears a hold on I like to think in here Keith Hanie and Ken Joe Kelly Haney has roared off a string of runs in the mid three 80s here Ken Joe Kelly is on a first-time basis here on radials made his first three second pass just the last round down in the low 90s we'll find out if if those guys can stand on Ken Joe's car and get it back down on the 80s in theory to be competitive where Haney has lived the entire weekend yeah I be absolutely crazy man you know his name everybody knows his name Keith Hanie can you imagine if Keith Hanie can take home $50,000 out of ducks pocket it would never end we've never hear the end of it there would be so many different shows out there Facebook live feeds you name it alright so here we go Ken show killing a left hand sign he's gonna be coming alive but listen to this 900-plus cubic-inch is a rear ah can Joe Kelly roll sure the waterboxx comes to a complete stop and now begins to heat the tires we birthday my co classes kids Joe Kelly making his debut right here radio where's the world a man I think he's been he's letting everybody know that he's there he's in the quarterfinals can he make it this is this is a I don't know what Ken Jones Kelly Ken Joe Kelly's expectations were coming into this weekend no matter what happens in this pair there's no way that guy leaves disappointed everybody knows who he is now everybody knows he has a car that can run and everybody knows that he has made it right now at least down to the round of 8 here at the most prestigious radial drag race in the world so the question is will the real key theni stand up right here in the car that's gonna be the question as Kinzua Kelly says I want to take you out red hat mafia helping them out look at Josh leopard left furred over there was a banker it's a bring it on sasquatch baby think of the brain part in the starting line right now you get all those Pro line guys stacked up over there then you got branded Pez and Brandon Switzer on the side of the racetrack behind Keith Hanie there are multiple layers for rooting for these teams or what's interesting about these teams and the tuning aspect of it is fascinating so many very smart guys have their hands in these race cars square doing the turnover there Brandon Pez Brandon Switzer - right-hand side of the racetrack what do you put those two together it could be unstoppable when it comes to nitrous racy jinjo Kelly on the left hand side Ken the turbo car make the boost the Platini on the trailer the first 60 feet maybe the first 20 feet of this drag race will absolutely tell the entire tale they're both pre-staged Ken Joe's in here comes Keith Hanie it's gonna be key Wow 83 80 101 98 986 60-foot Oh 40 8 on the tree the real Keith Hanie stood up all right so if you're still in a property start hit the past and that's right is they'll be semifinals of BTC radio versus the world brought you my time and Pistons right here coming at ya who nobody knows his name key teeny that's right killing you come out the right hand side 948 cubes in rear Marsa power but hold your ears here comes low Black Betty though Haney and the right hand side is known therefore tnq be if there's a rear morsel power he's got Schweitzer young and a makes Brandon's Glen Brandon Schweitzer of course bring the pass doing a tune in the right hand side under a string Clary Jeffers race guys Malo juice coming out of Canada deep horse race guys Jim Salemi doing the tune in Johnson let me I'm sure as one stood out in California and Melody's watching on from Canada something that we talked about earlier in the week was the fact that paula juice has been in the high three 70s with this car just in the last couple of weeks if Jim Salemi can dial up with tune-up in that zone if we look at the history this weekend they'll probably go to the final round P P Annie's car has been a very consistent 383 to 385 car and I'm sure Jim Salemi knows all about that most definitely we're gonna plan out Haney in the right hand side and juice coming in a left-hand side this could go either direction who's coming on the final rounds here in lights out nine no escape i'ma call a shot 379 right lane okay so Don along saying to keep Danny's going 79 right lane tall in the shot Paolo juice is pre-staged Keith antes pre-staged follows in here we go thirty maybe three 79 at 198o 17 on the three Paulo is Oh 48 3 Silvia to 198 unbelievable incredible Keith hit he wins it on a whole shot that Oh 17 like we talked about it last round Keith Hanie is locked in on the Christmas tree he has so much confidence in the race car he is killing the Christmas tree Paulo's juices Oh 48 of the tree runs one of his quickest runs in his history 378 7 198 and he has to watch Keith Hanie pass about a car lengths ahead of them that is incredible is holy rare BTC radial vs. the world flirt around killing a campers it up by tiny Pistons it's the radial tire 10 thighs to the front no I said her wrong radial tires to the front right Oh radial tire cars of course to the front here we go these guys are about ready to fire it up listen I have what a mighty good way to be able to do what am I gonna do this guy's doing the thing over here if douche a was here he could hoody cannot to get Stevie Jackson he got Keith Hanie everybody online that's right we got 13,000 plus Twitter back in at 12 13 in the morning mark savage drop some go spray some fuel into the top of the ejector Stevie fast hits the button and the blown Hemi is lit and ready to roll the shadow 2.0 trying to do a job that the original car couldn't hear at South Georgia Motorsports Park and will this finally be the moment for the enigma to shine the Larry Jeffers build machine that was created not to be a pro mod and a radial car it was built to do this and this only the two of the most talked about guys coming to this race Keith Hanie who I never thought would make that a flat around is actually there he has proven that he deserves to be there and he's got Stevie Fest Jackson said no way that Haiti could take him out none of these rounds have been one on either side of the racetrack by a fluke like you just mentioned Lee each guy earned his way to this spot they didn't get there by spinning the tires and pedal of 90 times they've made solid of they've made solid hits down the racetrack it does not get much better than this the fact that it's played out this way with these two guys you couldn't have scripted it any better if you're on the property get on your feet that's right I don't care how tired you are you need to get on your feet it's $50,000 up for grabs at Radio versus the world right here lights out nine no escape the only major question remains if Keith Hanie turns on a win light what will duck named his new pet moose as he moves to Canada alrighty then me and Marty moose are gonna be doing a lot of hanging out Jackson wings the motor a little bit there to keep it cleaned out as the screw guys ringerman big Phil Schiller standing behind the racecar with the radio in his ears I don't know how you can stand we have five crew members per car and then we got Phil Schiller so that's six and five that's 11 11 people watching excitedly from the starting line Freedom Square to the 211 Valesky instead of the racetrack here we go Rudy got flying around radio verse the world Jackson Wow Stevie Jackson 374 Oh 199 Hanny was 377 to 199 Jackson gets them on the tree get some 60-foot get some 330 and get some eighth mile baby Jackson that is called a gaff and right there cancel the order for the mail-order moose duck is staying in the USA the mail-order to brew the mail-order moose has got to go what a final round there is Keith Hanie the best ruddy is ever made in that car 377 zero and a hundred and ninety nine and a half miles an hour but Steve Jackson was the one who rose highest to the occasion on the starting line Oh 27 9 57 short time I don't know what the quickest short time in the history of radial drag racing is but 9:57 is very very stout awesome right here but here we go panel the yarns machines gotta go move on out law 632 is Ken core to tio
Keith Haney Racing
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2018-02-27
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Herman Dune - LA BLUES (feat. Caitlin Rose) - Official Video
[Music] people don't apologize when i stand in loneliness the minute i open my eyes i can't even see the phony now i try to stay up but i can't i fall asleep to fireworks my name under a sickle fent on the marquee of the echoplex yeah i forget all about you [Music] there's more important things to do i forget all about you [Applause] there's more important things to do [Music] someone always wants something from you when you live in hollywood line up at your door to inform you that everything you do is good now where is the entourage when i'm at the end of my rope i'm looking for nicki minaj down by the slipper is slow i forget all about [Music] [Applause] there's more important things to do [Music] i forget all about you there's more important things to do [Applause] so hey [Applause] [Music] hmm [Music] you
Herman Dune
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2021-01-27
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Objectivism and libertarianism | Wikipedia audio article
I'm Rand's philosophy of Objectivism has been and continues to be a major influence on the libertarian movement particularly in the United States many libertarians justified their political views using aspects of Objectivism however the views of Rand and her philosophy among prominent libertarians are mixed and many Objectivists are hostile to libertarians in general topic philosophical disagreements you topic aggression some libertarians including Murray Rothbard and Walter block pulled the view that the non-aggression principle is an irreducible concept it is not the logical result of any given ethical philosophy but rather is self-evident as any other axiom eyes ran to argued that Liberty was a precondition of virtuous conduct but argued that her non-aggression principle itself derived from a complex set of previous knowledge and values for this reason Objectivists referred to the non-aggression principle as such while libertarians who agree with Rothbard's argument call it the non-aggression axiom Rathbun and other anarcho-capitalists hold that government requires non-voluntary taxation to function and that in all known historical cases the state was established by force rather than social contract they thus consider the establishment and maintenance of the Nightwatchman state supported by Objectivists to be in violation of the non-aggression principle on the other hand Rand believed that government can in principle be funded through voluntary means voluntary financing notwithstanding libertarians consider that a government would by definition still violate individual rights commits aggression by enforcing a monopoly over a given territory one Objectivists do not specify what would be the legitimate expanse of the state's territory nor what would be the proper way of reaching political decisions without violating the rights of disagreeing minorities to topic objective isms rejection of the primitive Jennifer burns in her biography goddess of the market I'm Rand and the American write notes how rands position that Native Americans were savages and that as a result European colonists had a right to seize their land because native tribes did not recognize individual rights was one of the views that particularly outraged libertarians burns also notes how rands position that Palestinians had no rights and that it was moral to support Israel the sole outpost of civilization in a region ruled by barbarism was also a controversial position amongst libertarians who at the time were a large portion of rands fan base topic foreign policy libertarians and Objectivists often disagree about matters of foreign policy Ren's rejection of what she deemed to be primitivism extended to the Middle East peace process in the 1970s following the arab-israeli war of 1973 Rand announced Arabs s primitive and one of the least developed cultures who are typically nomads consequently Rand contended Arab resentment for Israel was a result of the Jewish state being the sole beachhead of modern science and civilization on their Arabs continent while decreeing that when you have civilized men fighting savages you support the civilized men no matter who they are most scholars of the libertarian Cato Institute have opposed military intervention against Iran while the Objectivist ein Rand Institute has supported forceful intervention in Iran topic Renne influence on libertarianism you the united states libertarian party's first candidate for president of the United States John Hosparus credited Rand as a major force in shaping his own political beliefs David Boies executive vice president of the Cato Institute an American libertarian think-tank described rams work as squarely within the libertarian tradition and that some libertarians are put off by the starkness of her presentation and by her cult following Milton Friedman described R and s an utterly intolerant and dogmatic person who did a great deal of good one rand biographer quoted Murray Rathbun as saying that he was in agreement basically with all Rand's philosophy and saying that it was ran too had convinced him of the theory of natural rights Rothberg would later become a particularly harsh critic of rand writing in the sociology of the iran cult at the major lesson of the history of the Objectivist movement to libertarians is that it can happen here that libertarians despite explicit devotion to reason and individuality are not exempt from the mystical and totalitarian cultism that pervades other ideological as well as religious movements hopefully libertarians once bitten by the virus may now prove immune some Objectivists have argued that objectivism is not limited to rands own positions on philosophical issues and are willing to work with and identify with the libertarian movement this stance is most clearly identified with David Kelly who separated from the ein Rand Institute because of disagreements over the relationship between Objectivists and libertarians Chris shiburin Barbara Branden Nathaniel Brandon's former wife and others Kelly's Atlas Society has focused on building a closer relationship between open Objectivists and the libertarian movement three topic Rand's view of libertarians ran condemned libertarianism as being a greater threat to freedom and capitalism than both modern liberalism and conservatism Rand regarded objectivism as an integrated philosophical system libertarianism in contrast is a political philosophy which confines its attention to matters of public policy for example objectivism argues positions in metaphysics epistemology and ethics whereas libertarianism does not address such questions Rand believed that political advocacy could not succeed without addressing what she saw is its methodological prerequisites Rand rejected any affiliation with the libertarian movement and many other Objectivists have done so as well Rand said of libertarians that they're not defenders of capitalism they're a group of publicity seekers most of them are my enemies I've read nothing by libertarians when I read them in the early years that wasn't my ideas badly mishandled ie the teeth pulled out of them with no credit given in a 1981 interview Rand described libertarians as a monstrous disgusting bunch of people who plagiarized my ideas when that fits their purpose responding to a question about the Libertarian Party in 1976 Rand said the trouble with the world today is philosophical only the right philosophy can save us but this party plagiarizes some of my ideas mixes them with the exact opposite with religionists and artists and every intellectual misfit and scum they can find and call themselves libertarians and run for office topic Rep proche maan in 2011 Yaron Brook then executive director of the Iran Institute spoke at the foundation for economic education he was a keynote speaker at Freedom Fest 2012 and appeared on recent TV on July 26 2012 I'm Rand Institute board member John Allison spoke at the Cato Club 200 retreat in September 2012 contributed the real causes of the financial crisis to Cato's letter and spoke at Cato's monetary conference in November 2011 On June 25th 2012 the Cato Institute announced that John Allison would become its next president in Cato's public announcement Allison was described as a revered libertarian in communication to Cato employees he wrote I believe almost all the name-calling between libertarians and Objectivists as irrational I have come to appreciate that all Objectivists are libertarians but not all libertarians are Objectivists on October 15 2012 Brooke explained the changes to the American conservative I don't think there's been a significant change in terms of our attitude towards libertarians two things have happened we've grown and we've gotten to a size where we don't just do educational programs we do a lot more outreach and a lot more policy in working with other organizations I also believe the libertarian movement has changed it's become less influenced by Rothberg less influenced by the anarchist crazy for lack of a better word wing of libertarianism as a consequence because we're bigger and doing more things and because libertarianism has become more reasonable we are doing more work with them than we have in the past but I don't think ideologically anything of substance has changed at the Institute topic see also objective isms rejection of the primitive Objectivist movement outline of libertarianism
wikipedia tts
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2018-12-06
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Solomon Foot | Wikipedia audio article
Soloman foot November 19th 1802 to March 28th 1866 was a Vermont politician and attorney he held numerous offices during his career including speaker of the Vermont House of Representatives States Attorney for Rutland County member of the United States House of Representatives and United States Senator a native of Cornwall Vermont foot began working on local farms at age nine helping support his family after the death of his father after graduating from Middlebury College Foote worked as a teacher school principal and college professor while studying law after attaining admission to the bar in 1831 he opened a practice in Rutland entering politics as a Whig Foote served in several offices including member of the Vermont House of Representatives delegate to the state constitutional conventions of 1833 in 1836 in Rutland County State's Attorney he was Vermont Speaker of the House from 1837 to 1830 9-foot served in the United States House of Representatives from 1843 to 1847 and was noted for his opposition to the mexican-american war and the extension of slavery he did not run for re-election in 1846 returned to the Vermont house he served as speaker from 1847 to 1848 in 1850 foot was elected to the United States Senate he became a Republican when the Party was founded and one re election in 1856 and 1862 Foote served as president pro tempore of the United States Senate during the American Civil War and was a strong advocate for the Union he headed the joint congressional committee on public buildings and grounds beginning in 1861 and which included supervising completion of the United States capitols construction Foote died in Washington DC in 1866 he was buried at Evergreen Cemetery in Rutland topic early life flip was born on November 19th 1802 in Cornwall Vermont he was the son of dr. Solomon and Betsy cross at Foote and his family lived across the road from William Slade foots father died when he was nine years old and he worked on local farms to help support his family he graduated from Middlebury College in 1826 and also received a master's degree from Middlebury he was a tutor in Middlebury in Burlington preceptor of Casselton Academy and a professor of natural philosophy at the Vermont Medical School in Casselton while teaching he studied law with attorneys Benjamin F Langdon and Reuben R thrall foot attained admission to the bar in 1831 afterwards practicing in Rutland topic start of career Flitz served in the Vermont House of Representatives in 1833 and was a delegate to the Vermont State Constitutional Convention in 1836 he served again in the Vermont house from 1836 to 1839 and was speaker from 1837 to 1830 9 he served as Rutland County State's Attorney from 1836 to 1842 topic congressman foot was elected to the United States House of Representatives as a Whig in 1842 and served two terms 1843 to 1847 as a congressman Foote opposed extending slavery in the mexican-american war he declined reen ama nation in 1846 returned to the Vermont House of Representatives foot was again chosen to serve as Speaker holding the post from 1847 to 1848 topic 1848 Whig convention foot was a delegate to the 1848 Whig national convention and was chairman of the Vermont delegation Abbott Lawrence of Massachusetts who had worked diligently to obtain the presidential nomination for Zachary Taylor expected to be the vice presidential nominee counting on the support of Birla wheat of New York and the southern delegates who had backed Taylor northern and border state delegates who had backed Henry Clay or Daniel Webster for president threatened to run a northern candidate in opposition to Taylor unless a northerner other than Lawrence one Scene is less willing to allow slavery was selected for vice president they proposed Millard Fillmore of New York other delegates promoted Fillmore because they opposed the efforts of weed and William H Seward to control the party in New York and believed that weed was working to install Seward a Secretary of State in a Taylor administration they backed Fillmore for vice president because in an era when the president vice president and cabinet were expected to reflect Geographic balance if Fillmore became vice president another New Yorker Seward could not be expected to claim a place in the cabinet foot went to the convention as a supporter of Lawrence recognizing that the Whigs would likely collapse if Lawrence was nominated and northern delegates left the party Foote agreed to support Fillmore Lawrence's support eroded as other northern delegates followed foots lead and on the first ballot Fillmore had 115 votes and Lawrence 109 Fillmore won the nomination on the second ballot and the ticket of Taylor and Fillmore went on to win the election topic United States Senator foot was elected to the United States Senate as a Whig in 1850 he became a Republican at the party's founding and was re-elected to the Senate in 1856 in 1862 he served from March 4th 1851 until his death in early 1861 foot met the Vermont delegates to the Peace Conference which attempted to prevent the start of the American Civil War sharing with them his view that the conference was a sham by secessionists who hoped to obtain additional time to plan for the withdrawal of their states from the Union but was also chairman of the Senate committee responsible for the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln in 1861 Foote served as the Senate's President Pro temporary from 1861 to 1865 iced president Hannibal Hamlin was often absent Foote usually presided over the Senate during the war and he was commended for his tact and fairness he was chairman of the Joint Congressional Committee on public buildings and grounds from 1861 until his death in this capacity he oversaw completion of construction on the United States Capitol topic death foot died on March 28 1866 in Washington DC funeral services were held in the chamber of the United States Senate he is interred at Evergreen Cemetery Rutland Vermont topic honors you foot was a trustee of Middlebury College and the University of Vermont he received an honorary LLD degree from Middlebury in 1857 topic family foot was married in 1839 to emily fay of Rutland they had one daughter Helen Eliza foot Emily died on May 2nd 1842 his second wife was Mary a Hodges Dana Foote who had a son William Hodges Dana Fitz brother Jonathan born October 31st 1804 graduated from Vermont Medical College in 1829 he settled in Whitby Ontario Canada where he practiced medicine Solomon foots mother lived with him in Rutland until her death in 1845 topic see also list of United States Congress members who died in office 1790 to 1899
wikipedia tts
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2018-12-07
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#32 DOUBLING Your LOOTS!!! In Planar Fissure | Honkai: Star Rail
pangoli mccage lapan is now live streaming honkai star rail drop number 32 doubling your loots in planar Fisher [Music] hybro stream element spot running robot face bro I can't hear you talking ah thank you so much man ah I'm so sorry I hope you can hear me right now okay let's see okay ah here we go yeah I'm so sorry okay so thank you so much everyone who uh coming here so today I will uh show you uh the newest event in Hong Kai style it's called bladder Fisher this event is a kind of short event that's happened yeah just a five days so there's a catch like uh double reward is only just two time per day so let's see if the another catch I already uh read one like there's only two rewards per day uh yeah double word count reset daily at 4 pm okay got it be sure to use this app I haven't seen you in four days plus I'm dayron okay yeah man you're always well a lot of people are always changing the names so I don't know okay by the way they don't come again if any word by changing stimulus universe and obtaining one ornaments Trailblazer can automatically consume an event opportunity to receive double reward so it's not 100 sure that you can have double reward to confirm and click it oh here we go silver universe okay I already answered Universal close by I mean okay I think I will go to with a world tree because I really want a this oh double here we go Okay so there's a okay that's uh in immerse reward there's a double word word stop this one are you gonna be being double okay this one is really good what are you playing uh honkey stereo I think uh all of them being in double okay yeah in immersed reward every world this double let's see with world one and two no uh from world three okay oh because I really want the world reward in here I want a spaces real station let's see is there any word sales station nope yeah there's no world I need a harder space thingy no yeah so let's go guys to Word level three let's go I think I will have you ever heard of the show South Park yeah I don't like to see the the the the animation so I will I'm probably not gonna see it ever I moved towards uh like anime guys so yeah so uh let's go that's the question absolutely because in World 3 we need a physical thing so we use participation I want to go to the world 6 but I need this one [Music] upon entering [Music] I mean I will use this one instead of reservation the option for restoration is a bit meh so yeah we're gonna take this one first people are afraid of me visions of the past what there you go um let's not be six bruh the truth of life and death the sanctuary is but a vision there you go destroy what headache oh still easy oh here we go yeah good preservation it's another yeah here we go press up again last no preservation [Music] I think this one yeah what was that there you go I'll free you from your disappear among the Sea of butterfly here we go come on there you go yeah guess what of course the main occasion occurrence I'm with you this was in her position that's it and see what the event infect net and a blessings I think I will take the negative career insect web we become paralyzed character attack increase by foreign what the heck man one percent special sealed absorb damage equal to one percent of them I think I will just use this one okay run again bruh [Music] come on man no fight again clock Cosmic fragment required man this is I'm so unlucky today there is two Courier that I have thread away man no fight man it's kind of waste or that enemy certainly isn't friendly [ __ ] that ah great take this shape of taishu I see this one first don't mess with me the truth of life and death of the sanctuary is but a vision what a headache I'll free you from your disappear among the Sea of butterflies illusions of the past like that I'll end your misery what yeah in the name of Landau a will forged in ice never faltered fighting is meaningless I have no interesting conflict it's a little bit man there you go like this um what a headache there you go attack again butterflies Illusions the curio make me a losing help like hop crazy I need find a way to uh remove the Korea I'm so unlucky man 's with me what a headache there you go will forged in ice never falter don't mess with me there you go ah let me through yeah man my health what a headache bruh you go PC call is there any reservation oh here we go there's no reset okay here we go let's see emergency word double oh let's see um you're seeing uh Quantum immersive [ __ ] here we go double in immersive word Abra my hap God stupid okay sorry imagine world always God man God what are you doing man here we go you must see word no ball of blurry word here we go oh look at that oh it's doubled a lot of extra including experience crazy wow that's a five star in there oh defense good at the space station imaginary boss ah imaginary device level here we go level I cannot using it again ah man I only have two time man I'm with you [Music] oh don't bought available man I need Balu uh but for now I still can you sing them there you go but after this I need a bail man I need Korea uh here we go curio Max HBO obtained history a blessing Bangla mentality foreign [Music] oh man [ __ ] wow thank you God thank you I'll free you from your disappear among them illusions of the past [ __ ] you who's next dad what are you doing man always doing this bro man I'm so unlucky today foreign nice disappear among the Sea of butterflies illusions of the past have no interesting conflict too late to repent the truth of life and death but the sanctuary is by the vision but bruh thank you what a headache I'm with you one Korea of course is that ah here we go replace finally here we go ah one two three four five I don't I don't care anymore man breaking God always do this to me man energy drink battle critical hit here we go this one seize the initiative I'm with you man F you got ah great the name of Landau a will forged in ice never faltered first surprise I'll free you from your chips disappear among the Sea of butterflies illusions of the past foreign no more playing nice I have no interest conflict yikes Steel good there you go fighting is meaningless don't mess with me yep this ends here don't mess with her yikes who want to see what I can do no we're just back with shushan I don't care here we go attack again destroyed [Music] what a headache fact that oh I thought we all used illusions of the past the truth of life and death ah yikes here we go oh a will forged in ice altirst don't mess with me who's next [Music] I'll enter misery um should I attack them I don't know I will just like this one illusions of the past here stands the Silverman God bruh bruh yeah I think you're done huh counter I don't know I think oh [Music] let me through what okay good oh good oh good she sound good really really good there you go anywhere yeah no I become eyes I have no interesting let me through did I no no I need to see a lot here we go see a lot there you go one more time there you go this is the end of you here we go oh here we go Hunter now here we go oh okay oh life is as uh something is do you want a leaf huh okay here [Music] I'm so mad again let's see double again here we go attack oh the yes the defense okay ha oh remembrance here we go electric okay I like to read a Bello is a quite a good electric I think I will use uh just another basic so main character the upgrade um random good this is not the best day for me but I will try my best oh what what oh my god oh my freaking look look at that man what's God what are you doing to my man on my character okay I need below I'm sorry and he has surround them reservation and history random one star I think this one ah I only have one of course of course man I'm so unlucky today bruh what's now fighting I don't know I don't care loose HP no I cannot lose HP if I lose high speed oh my character is dead bruh man I'm so unlucky today man God what are you doing to me man why are you doing this to me okay download again oh I don't care maybe silver whop I don't know I don't really care Raw but I think this one ah yeah this one is so important match SP ooh ah here we go that's damage yeah last damage here we go finally enough okay we I guess boss oh man it's so wrong it's a lot of Korea but I don't have you want it really really good maybe this one yeah bro should I change him to shushing nice I don't know he gonna uh no are we not changing it bruh enemies ahead no they're gonna attack it I'm not taking it okay we sang our main character okay I will just using my main character bro this is so bad man I need value there you go uh and this one and basic and there you go fry that's really good are made to be broken yeah I think destroy this one is good yeah this one here among the Sea of butterflies illusions of the past Sailors good yeah stop it I think I will just attack this one what on my commands I think I will using it right now yeah there you go mess with me here we go attack again rules are made to be broken here we go destroy this is our chance oh again what a headache there you go oh disappear I will not using the uh ability right away I will using it when I really need it let's make it quick what's up don't mess with me with me um next there you go here we go now is the time hi in the name of Landau here we go here we go let's go oh yeah we're all doing it oh one more time they're made to be broken there you go oh what the heck We Stand Together in the name of preservation this ends here what a headache goodness I'll free you from your chains oh man I cannot destroy him illusions of the past let's go more than that destroy the seal are we noticing it I hate to do this hope you're prepared good never felters time to finish this in the name of preservation here we go good let's make it quick yeah make it quick again they're made to be broken oh good there you go destroy visions of the past there you go still up step dad on my command this ends here stop it man stay focused on my command destroy in the name of Landau a will forged an ice here we go never Walter let's go now I can attack her right away yeah we'll attack him right away disappear there we go illusions of the past We Stand Together in the name of preservation ah man again twice twice man let's make it quick I should I destroy the I will wait you seeing it playing again let's go are made to be broken there you go seven percent takes more than that in the name okay now I need to you sing it in the name of Landau a will forged an ice never never falter it's time to show questions let's make are we allowed to sing it yeah here we go no are we allowed to sing it I'll free you from your chains here we go um illusions of the past well ah man come on man that why can't I destroy it there you go one one down welcome nice try good oh we are good oh man reach the end of the story in your own way here we go immerse ah no Korea ah there is no bonus for today yeah tomorrow maybe tomorrow okay I will I will yeah we're using it once what's inside imaginary why defense yeah confirm okay oh everything decade or 80 oh that's quite good Sam or the architect here we go oh 20. oh there you go there's for events and now for the curio oh here we go nuclear IPC Coco called man this is so bad bad Korea negative career last one the station ability okay which one should I buy damage increase 10 percent then it's really interested I I think this one 10 percent so that's it guys uh for the curioso uh the summer up is uh summoning it up first thing first that the bonus career is only happened twice per day so if you want it again you should doing it uh tomorrow so you need to uh preserve your what it's called Uh Stone a store in immersify so you need to waiting it so that's it you can change the you can replace this one oh yeah I'm still thinking that way replace this one and changing it to sorry oh yeah replace driveline's power first and storing it to immersifies later yeah that's a good good strategy That's it man okay I will doing it tomorrow not not for today though okay so uh I will end this stream so thank you so much to everyone who are watching this stream I will see you again tomorrow okay see ya
PanglimaKegelapan
UCUSMh_Y0nY38_wnDjdYzFJg
2023-06-23
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9heuWBsAEVY
Research for Change: African women's empowerment through local transformation of land rights
my name is Dr Olivia robocono I'm a lecturer at SOS the School of Law specifically I teach on Law and development based on the African context that I was born in and that I come from I could not just engage with lot theoretically and legal principles and procedures without looking low in context and how law influences people's lives from that point of view I'm also interested in the most marginalized the most discriminated and women come to the fore within the African context the best way to empower them and transform their society through law is to ensure that they have more access to land and they are the most marginalized when it comes to access to land through customary systems and cultural systems but also through the legal system itself that borrows and engages interacts with these cultural systems and has been colonized and so I wanted to set up a project that brings in the voices of women throughout Africa engaging with love from this particular point of view we've been focusing on Broad legal policy practice issues I think if we're able to identify case studies in terms of how the Forum now developed the participation reflects versions and views from different parts of Africa so it was conceptualized as a regional project that brings in comparative elements of our law and policy has been implemented in different countries in Africa it was also conceptualized as an intergenerational project that ensures that the views and participation that is brought in reflects different groups of people that have worked within this area so from people who have been working on property rights in relation to women on the African continent from early on in the 80s to people who have actually now just entered the field or gotten out of school so for me I was fresh out of University I had not even imagined in my wildest dreams that I would have an international engagement I got experience and exposure to different jurisdictions I gained colleagues connections and it also reflected different levels of participation and different levels of Engagement so we had policy makers people were at the Forefront of implementing laws and making decisions we also had academics people were involved in teaching and research and we had Community workers people were working down on the ground sometimes we read the prayers we read books but when you actually go to the field you find that the perspectives are different the realities are different and maybe that goes for a different approach to dealing with those specific issues in a particular community The Women Within the group are already working together and supporting each other in different Endeavors whether it's research support whether it's supporting completing PHD programs or projects whether it's supporting participating in initiatives that one has if it's workshops feminence guest lectures the impact is in having a community to draw from that might have done these things literally in a community that is ready to offer you support to implement those reforms in your own area and so SOS was the one place that could bring together all my interests the legal interest the regional interest that is Africa the development and transformation interests the decolonized approach interest dealing with the marginalized the the downtrodden that is sos's bread and butter I love what I do and what I do is not just about being a researcher but changing people's lives because it's important for the context I come from to to not just theorize to theorize but also transform foreign
SOAS University of London
UCwlZZGmE1e_6PI2e-HOPOQw
2023-05-16
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvhsieZbH28
*FREE WESTERN SAHARA REPORT* URGENT PUBLIC APPEAL by Norwegian Support Committee 4WS and #NomadsHRC
[Applause] [Music] ah [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] welcome to healing and justice telltale episode number one tossy date november 22 november 22 2020 this is a urgent public appeal escalation of the western sahara conflict and repression in occupied territories i dedicate this episode to all of my soul family and indigenous people of western sahara swahari people of western sahara hashtag free western sahara and nomads hrc who want a voice their freedom and their self-determination and a future without threats of fear and violence and this this report was published in november 2020 of 2020 by the norwegian support committee the background of the slideshow is from the report in a recent photo of moroccan police and city of elway iu occupied western sahara on the 15th of november of 2020 feel free to distribute and publish this report if you are in need of additional information please contact the undersigned organizations at m c a r r i o n d e q u e s a d a at protonmail.com or tone dot s dot mo t o n e dot s at m o e protonmail.com i share this report knowing well that countless people have been arrested detained tortured and killed i share this information with others to share immediately this is the urgent public appeal escalation of western sahara conflict and repression in the occupied territories 20 november 2020. dear friends we are issuing an urgent public appeal in response to the alarming increase of of repression and violence against suhari citizens in the territories of western zahra under moroccan occupation following the recent escalation of the 45-year conflict between the quesaro front in morocco the situation is extremely dangerous for sahari citizens as morocco launches a massive campaign of collective intimidation harassment and mass arrest due to morocco's effective ban there are no international observers or media on the ground we need international organizations to shed light on these abuses and from morocco to know that it cannot act without impunity on 13th november a 29-year-long ceasefire between the kingdom of morocco and the western sahara under the leadership of the national liberation movement the sorrow front came to an end following a military operation carried out by morocco against a group of peaceful swahili citizen civilians in a buffer zone located in the southern tip of western sahara a grave violation of the cease-fire accord bosaro proclaimed the end of the ceasefire and the un-led peace process and consequently the resumption of war without the escalation of war between morocco and plasaro we have witnessed fierce repression in the occupied territories of western sahara since the 13th of november there is an increase in massive presence of moroccan military gender mary police and intelligent forces on the streets of the occupied western sahara these armed units are terrorizing sahari civilians with night raids on the homes of civilians and activists and the rounding up and mass arrests of young people are well as beatings and other forms of abuse sahari activists and human rights defenders report a massive campaign of collective intimidation and harassment parts from trusted sources say that in response to street protests in support of the sahari right to self-determination on 13th 14th and 15th of november a total of 25 young suharis have been arrested in the last days the youngest reportedly 12 years old and rose reported to be 16 between 16 and 17 years old scenes of streets filled with police vehicles and agents have been caught on camera by eyewitnesses right before the end of ceasefire this past november 13th several prominent suhari activists including award-winning amanata have been targeted for harassment and increased surveillance surveillance for creating a new organization named iscom whose primary goal is to end the moroccan occupation of western sahara the main prosecutor in the occupied city of liu have announced an investigation into whether iskom's founders had violated laws in morocco that criminalizes activities threatening the regime's territorial integrity we are concerned that morocco might use the current situation and its perceived impunity to make good on its threat the situation of the two last months have been categorized with the continued continued persecution of sohari human rights offenders belonging to iscom kodessa and other sahari human rights organizations with the continued and systematic prosecution of suhari journalists attempting to document and report on what is happening in the occupied territories the repression escalated in the last abduction and torture of two sohari activists ali on 10th of november for decades morocco has tried to ensure that there are no international witnesses to its human rights violations in western sahara the u.n peacekeeping forced in western sahara minerso set up to oversee the promise refermandam does not have human rights monitoring within its mandate despite numerous calls by human rights organizations such as amnesty international and human rights watch in response to rights of human rights violations by morocco against the sahari population in addition there is no practical de facto moroccan ban on the international human rights monitors and media and the territory saharis who tried to fill this void including citizen journalist and human rights defender are practically targeted for harassment arbitrary arrest and judicial harassment this means that the only witnesses to their own conditions as victims of human rights violations are sohari civilians themselves through images captured clandestinely at great risk to their lives and via frequent reports through social media and other means soharis has been sharing information these past days on these abuses and plea for help from the outside we need to respond to the urgent calls before it is too late western sahara is listed by the united nations as a non-self governing territory subjected to the right to self-determination in conformity with the principles contained in the un general assembly resolutions 1514 and 1541. in 1975 morocco invaded western sahara a territory in which it does not hold sovereignty over since that time a part of western sahara estimated to be around 80 percent have been placed under occupation by the kingdom of morocco and sequently illegally annexed to this day the situation in the territory remains a humanitarian crisis with systematic gross human human rights violations and breaches of international humanitarian law being committed as direct consequences of the prolonged illegal military occupation morocco has as occupying power to de facto control both over the territory and the people living on the occupied land who are deprived of their civil political economic social and cultural rights what can you do to respond to the calls coming from the occupied territories of western sahara we encourage individuals to number one reach out to elected public officials in your city or area and ask them to highlight the issues of western sahara and the repression in the occupied territories number two write an article in your local newspaper or contact journalists to make them aware of the escalations of the western sahara conflict and the repression in the occupied territories number three organize a demonstration or meeting in your community in order to protest the continued illegal occupation of western sahara and the persecution of sahari human rights defenders number four use your social media platform to tell about the suffering of the people of western sahara and join the international campaign referendum now for western sahara number five encourage five of your friends or family to do the same to respond to the calls coming from the occupied territories of western sahara we encourage national ngos to number one write a letter to your national government and ask them to denounce the current situation in the occupied territories of western sahara number two write a letter to united nations secretary general antonio guerteres and en urge him to immediately take action to prevent a humanitarian crisis in the occupied territories of western sahara and number three write a letter to the moroccan government and ask them to ensure respect for their obligations both under international human rights law and international humanitarian law and to ensure that all sahari activists and civilians are free to conduct their activities and express their opinions without fear of any form of retaliations number four take public actions on writing an article or issuing a public appeal or create a campaign in the support and the support of the right to self-determination for the people of western sahara and denouncing of the continued illegal occupation and the repression of the occupied territories of western sahara and number five organize a demonstration or meeting in your community in order to protest the continued illegal occupation of western sahara and the persecution of sohari human rights defenders to support your work support you in your work we provide you with further information into the recent escalation of the conflict since the 13th of november in the appendix information on the conflict and relevant practices of the u and human rights mechanism is also provided appendix the present appendix provides information into the recent events in the int the occupied territories of western sahara in the escalation of the conflict the present appendix includes one summary of repression witnessed in the occupied territories of western sahara two fact sheet the escalation of the western sahara conflict and their oppression in the occupied territories three the western sahara conflict and relevant practice of the u n human rights mechanisms number one summary of repression in the occupied territories mid-november 2020 on 13th of november moroccan forces launched a military intervention into gurgarat a buffer zone in the southwest corner of western sahara targeting non-violent suhari protesters who had blocked a morocco built road in the zone since 20 of october the road paid by morocco in 2016 in contravention of the un-sponsored ceasefire and military accords between morocco and the fossaro front was a strategic route for morocco to import and export goods towards martinia and west africa and the blockade was resulted in long lines of backed up traffic in both directions the protests were well documented by the suharis himself who shared photos and videos of the civilians chanting holding up signs digging up the asphalt and even playing traditional sahari games or dipping their feet into the nearby waters of the atlantic ocean on several occasions the protesters allowed specific travelers to cross including senegalese and some moroccans they did not allow the circulation of trucks laden with products which they had said included resources plundered from western sahara reports on the ground indicated that the moroccan military entered the buffer zone by making a breach in a wall built by morocco that separates the placaro controlled western sahara from the territory occupied by morocco and the pasaro whisks the civilians to safety according to some images the small camp erected by the protesters were set on fire the plasaro front responded to the moroccan intervention on the 13th of november stating that it was a serious breach to the 29-year long ceasefire between the two parties and declaring it to be over during the nights of 13th of november plasaro launched military attacks in the form of artillery strikes at the morocco built wall dividing the territory of western sahara in two further military attacks were reported on 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th and 19th of november on 13th of november corresponding with the end of the 29-year long cease-fire the occupied territories of western sahara witnessed a wave of military gender mary police and intelligent forces entering the cities further strengthening the military sieged imposed suhari activists journalists and human rights defenders found themselves effectively under house arrest with their houses completely besieged by moroccan applying forces there are reports that houses of prominent activists were attacked by moroccan forces throwing rocks and knocking on their doors trying to enter terrifying and intimidating the activists reports were simultaneously received that the suhari political prisoners of so-called gaddin zeke group held in kantara and tifelt prisons were being subjected to verbal assaults intimidations and increased isolation with the prisoners continually constantly monitored monitored by prisoner prison guards who are especially concerned about the health and safety of human rights defender and political prisoner mohammed who remains disappeared since october of 13 when he was removed from the cell at bozarcom prison and taken to an unknown location after telling his family that he even exposed to a prisoner ill with coven 19. we fear that yahaya's case may indicate morocco's intent to weaponize kova 19 against buhari political prisoners in an urgent appeal frontline defenders has called for morocco to allow his family access to the el hath azah and to release him during the nights of 13th of november massive protest in occupied cities took place particularly in the capital of l.i.u with young suharis coming out to the streets to protest morocco's military intervention in gergera on 14th of november protests continued now in support of the sorrow declaration of ending the ceasefire the sahara journalists organized equity media reported that the streets of samara tantan mazara al nada witnessed hundreds of protesters among them women and men the protests were repeatedly met with excessive police violence and arrest on the 15th november in response to a protest the moroccan police and intelligent forces raided several homes of suhari civilians and activists reportedly looking for young suharis that participated in demonstrations of 13th and 14th of november according to equipping media at least seven young suharis were arrested in the evening of the 15th november protests again erupted in the cities of the occupied territories and in support of plasaro and the sahari right to self-determination on 16th of november moroccan forces raided the homes of several suhari activists and civilians reportedly the police were looking for young suharis who participated in the protests on the day prior according to equip media following the raid of the 16th november a total of 25 young suharis have been arrested the identity and current location of some remain unknown on the 16th of november the police have raided the homes of muhammad in sharif two suhari journalists from the media collected foundation they were repeatedly able to flee and they as well as other journalists from have come into hiding frontline defenders resources references the situation in its most recent recent urgent appeal since november 13th nisha hatta has covered the protests and communicated with international media on the 17th of november reports received about the continued massive presence of military police and intelligent forces according to activists the oppression including raids on homes and collective arrests of the days prior has led to the muffling of demonstrations with many civilians not daring to enter the streets on the 18th of november the local activists reported our arbitrary violence was carried out by moroccan forces against buhari civilians and activists in the streets of occupied cities also on 18th of november moroccan authorities at liu airport prevented prominent suhari human rights defender aminato hardar president of iscom and winner of the right lively hood reward of 2019 from boarding an aircraft bound for spanish canary islands khadar recorded a video from the airport explaining what had happened and saying that her son had been allowed to board along with the rest of the passengers while she had been told that she needed a negative pcr test spain will not be crying pcrs for travelers until november 23rd and hadar reported that no other passengers were asked for a test please see below for further up on 18th of november reporters reports were also received that a twelve-year-old sahari girl had been arrested and tortured by the moroccan police after having attended school wearing a t-shirt with the flag of western sahara on the 19th of november reports received that prominent suhari activist and human rights defender sultana kaya was detained and abused at a checkpoint between the cities of liu and volhador after returning to the occupied territories from spain reports state that she was beaten under police custody according to local activists she was she was released from custody after 1.5 hours and before her release her house was surrounded by moroccan police before sultana arrived home the police had raided her home and subjected her mother to aggression leaving the mother in a critical condition after having her hit her head activists are currently prevented from visiting them and family is unable to obtain medical help from a trusted doctor on 19th of november in response to aminato hadar having denounced her legal ban on traveling the previous day royal maraca airlines issued a statement that manata hadar had tested positive for cloven 19. reporting about the incident the bbc quoted the document by rolo era marat stating that the reason of hidari's flight ban was that she had tested positive for cover 19 which had probably denied through another video tape statement in which she had also called on the icrc and human rights organizations to assume responsibility and protecting human rights defenders in western sahara it appears that hadar was singled out for discriminatory treatment through the weaponization of kobit-19 a prominent pro-morocco activists by the online name of z z abdidain l o ali whose profile information states he is vice president of the sahara league of democracy and human rights lsddh has shared on his twitter account an official looking document with moroccan ministry of health letterhead that included adara's passport number and which stated that on the 12th of november she had tested positive for kona kobit 19 per a lab test called kamar per allah called kumar we have not been able to verify the document but we are deeply concerned about the nature of this type of online activity which can induce to hatred stigmatization stigma nitration and violence currently few suhari activists journalists and human rights defenders dare to go to the streets in fear of retaliation increasing the chances that human rights violations will be go on her unreported number two the escalation of the western sahara conflict and the repression of the occupied territories below the events of 13th of november 14th of november 15th of november 16th of november 17th of november 18th of november and 19th of november are provided in a chronological order the present fact sheet is not intended to be exhaustive and but intended but intends to provide an overview of the recent events names of sahara civilians have been removed from the present fact sheet the events of 13th of november the first moroccan military invasion and the end of a 29-year long ceasefire on friday 13th november and early morning morocco launched a military operation in the area called gurgurat in southwest corner area created as a part of the un sponsored 1991 ceasefire agreement between morocco posaro front and it was strictly no go buffer zone for military personnel or equipment of either party according to reports from the ground the moroccan military penetrated the buffer zone via three branches that were opened in the wall separating the western sahara occupied morocco from the buffer zone its aim was to forcibly remove a group of suhari civilians who was staging a peaceful sit-in that for several weeks had been blocked blocked a road built and used by morocco as a trade route from western sahara to martinia and beyond the road located in the buffer zone to connect the last moroccan checkpoint in occupied western sahara and the martinia border and considered illegal by the passaro front had become a major route for morocco's export of products to martenia in west africa it is used to export products from western sahara that trans transit through the port of noaada hebel maurtania spanish truckers also use the route to transport seafood plasaro refers to morocco's use of gerbera as illegal is claimed as sustained when morocco and blissaro entered into the cease-fire agreement in 1988 in the so-called military agreement number one in 1997. the trading point was not there eight years later the eu started talks with morocco for trade from morocco in western sahara in 2021 in 2001. morocco state started the construction of the asphalted road across buffer strip and gurgura the yogan condemned the undertaking stating it involved activities that could be in violation of the ceasefire agreement but never acted on the commercial and civilian traffic in the area and it has been described in reports by the un secretary general in 2016 completed paving the road according to an article published on august 30th of 2016 by the associated press a confidential u.n document leaked to the news agency stated that the u.n considered morocco have violated the ceasefire agreement by deploying armed personnel and equipment to the construction site while pasaro protests vehemently femininely tensions did not escalate in to armed conflict on the 20th of october a group of suhari refugees who had traveled around 20 to 2 000 kilometers from the refugee camps in algeria staged a sit-in on the road blogging blocking transit along with protesting the road which they said was used by morocco to export funded goods from their land they demand that the un nation mission for western sahara finally implement its mandate and organize a long promised referendum on self-determination the protests included non-violent direct actions such as chipping away at the asphalt forming human chains chanting waving signs and flags playing traditional sahari games and even a visit to the nearby atlantic ocean where the sahara refugees dipped their feet in the water the protesters filmed and photographed their actions and shared them with a wide network of solidarity organizations and supporters as days and weeks went by the traffic in both directions grew in length protesters periodically allowed some of the truck some of some to pass such as senegalese ortanians and moroccan citizens who were trying to get home but they refused transit to trucks carrying goods from western sahara some drivers turned around while others tried to wait out the protest stranded moroccan truckers and martania complained to moroccan consulate that they ran out of money bloomberg news reported on the 5th of november that around 150 trucks transit the road daily as morocco tries to build trade relationships with sub-saharan africa after its econ economy took a dive from the effects of kova 19 on tourism the blockade according to bloomberg had already affected prices for fresh produce in mauritania which goes which gets most of its fruits and vegetables via this route on the 6th november reports again began to emerge that the moroccan troops deployed in western sahara was moving south in the direction of gurgaorat and the next day protesters reported hearing heavy machinery noises on the other side of the morocc morocco built separation wall they photographed a bulldozer on 8th of november sorrow announced that it remained committed to the ceasefire agreement but it would not take the necessary action to protect suhari's civilians should morocco's military enter the buffer zone in the early hours of the 13th of november pasaro reported that the moroccan military had entered the buffer zone via three breeches on the wall and that a group of men dressed in civilian clothing had rushed towards the protesters videos emerged of columns of smoke destroyed vehicles and what appeared to be civilians riding in a truck pasaro said that it had moved the protesters to safety that morning the moroccan general staff of the royal armed forces said in a statement that the royal armed forces set up on the nights of thursday to friday a security court on in order to secure the flow of goods and people against the buffer zone leaking morocco to martenia plisara responded that the military invasion was a violation of the ceasefire with morocco having carried out a military invasion in the liberated territories during the night of 13th of november shooting was reported but from the front line among the moroccan built sand wall currently dividing western sahara in two the glisaro military of national defenses reported 13 november that lasaro had attacked the wall the sahara media outlet suhari voice reported we've received official confirmed confirmation that the sahari people's liberation army has launched artillery strikes against moroccan military targets alongside the moroccan military wall that devised western sahara the targets of the sharks are following moroccan military bases and surveillance points along the wall moroccan military base number three wahhabis iraqi military base number four surveillance point number 71 moroccan military base number 17 surveillance point number 7 172 moroccan military base number 17 and number 18. a press release from sohari people people liberation army added that their shelling of moroccan hashtag military positions had caused losses of life and material losses to moroccan army and that the moroccan soldiers fled some other positions among the moroccan wall several videos of artillery strikes circulated online the video have however not been has not been verified the intensification of the military siege in the occupied territories and the persecution of a whole people on 13th november shortly after the attack of the sohari protesters in gergera reports from activists inside western sahara stated that the moroccan military police and intelligence forces were effectively flooding into the cities of occupied western suhara the sahara journalists organization equipped media issued the following statement the occupation forces mobilize their units in all cities of occupied western sahara and terrifies civilians militants and aku activists quit media l iu november 13th 2020 moroccan occupation authorities early hours deployed their forces in all streets of occupied western sahara cities and imposed strict security surveillance around the houses of suhari militants and human rights activists in what they believed to be an attempt to attack or intimidate them such as attacks by occupying army units to control the illegal breach of the gurgarh western sahara hundreds of occupying police and ancillary forces have been seen on alert on the streets of l.i.u city as well as various vehicles charged with collecting public information as well as public employees in the occupied city of liu who are still being used to collect information and pulse from the suhari population about what is happening in gurkura south of occupied western sahara later in the evening reports emerged as sohari human rights defenders and activists were placed under surveillance with their houses being besieged some reported that their homes were attacked by military personnel police and intelligence officers throwing rocks at their houses and knocking on their doors threatening to enter according to equip media young suharis took to the streets to protest the attack on the demonstrators in gurkharat the following days the quick media explained the events of 13th of november in the following way equipment 14th of november 2020 friday 13th november 2020 stores of moroccan military and police have been deployed in the occupied lau to suppress any forms of protests against morocco or any demonstration supporting the decision of the frante polisaro in resuming war raids were made by para meritari military and police forces of activist homes such as the house of what in the evening of on in the evening on samar streets dozens gather to express the support for basaro enchanted slogans against the moroccan occupation but the police quickly intervened and violently attempted to end their peaceful protest sahari journalists organization nishata foundation reported the same incidence of poli police violence against young suahari protesting on 13th of november news was also received stating that the suhari political prisoners of good physique group held in tiffelt and kentra kendria prison was being subjected to ill treatment and abuse in the form of verbal assaults threats increased isolation and relocation of huge phone rights according to families the prisoners are being followed by guards when they ex sells and with a guarded guard permanently sitting outside their cells the events of the 14th of november massive presence of moroccan military gender mary police and intelligent forces intimidated both suhari civilians and prominent bahari activists according to the local activists the moroccan authorities are using the corona legislation already in place in order to limit the movements of activists with authorities having ordered a lockdown the fourteenth of november continue protest protests in support of bosaro ended in 29 year long ceasefire took place reportedly protesters consisted mainly of young suharis equipment reported the following equip media occupied november 14th 2020. demonstrations continue continued in the occupied city of liu and support the decision of the frontier bosara to resume the armed struggle for the second day in a row despite the moroccan police alert and demolition the streets of samar tantan witness hundreds of protesters from women and men in demonstrations during which they raised sohari flags of republic and echoed slogans of enthusiasm passing cars during the protests by honking the horns the occupation forces with various devices surrounded the neighborhood and violently to miss the demonstration eyewitnesses told equity media reporters that protesters faced the oppression of the occupation forces with initially closing the roads and allies to ensure that their demonstration continued before reinforcements from various forces including elements raiding motorcycles and cars and police chased them and several young men were arrested media couldn't confirm their identities on the 14th of november further artillery strikes by the sorrow military bases were reported deaths were also for the first time reported with the sorrow news agency sps reporting the following 14th of november 2020 attacks of the sohari people's liberation army in units continued against various hiding places of the moroccan army enemy along its positions in the occupied parts of the suhari territory causing losses of lives and equipment and disrupting its military plans the military communique number o2 of the military or national defense confirmed that the several military bases support points and supply centers came under fire the most recent of it has attacked last night on the 15th base of the 67th 67th legion in the car centers near tin lake meanwhile mahatma sectors witness rocket shell and machine gun attacks on the 14th november is also reported by the same news agency that lasara has received a phone call from u.n secretary general expressing serious concerns of the situation the events of the 15th of november on the 15th of november military and intelligence forces carried out several raids on several houses with swaria activists reportedly in search of suharis having participated in the protests of 13th and 14th november according to equip media at least seven young suharis were arrested occupation forces raided sahari houses in responsive friday and saturday demonstrations in lau equip media editing department occupied liu november 15th 2020 moroccan special forces with the police units and intelligence raided the houses of three sahari families sunday afternoon without telling them the reason this concerns a source confirmed that is it is about the demonstrations in zinga al-sharif and i'll read yesterday to express buhari's support for the decision of the frenchie posario to resumed armed struggle later in the day equipment provided further information into the raids calling on the icrc to urgently intervene quickly november 15th of 2020 hoards of occupation authorities raid a number of suhari houses in the occupied iu in some halle neighborhoods and at the end of tantan street and batman intimidating suhari families and arresting a number of young people on the pretext of the participation and demonstration in the city yesterday we do not get the overview of the detainees and rated houses these moroccan violations of sohari's citizens come after protests in the occupied iu over morocco's violation of the ceasefire does the declaration of the french equal sorrow to end this ceasefire and the beginning of the war is an illegal is illegal and legitimate justification which allows the international red cross to intervene and to protect suhari's civilians and to enjoy all their rights especially their right to peacefully demonstrations according to equip media the raids carried out on 15th november followed with arrest and torture on the 15th of november the sohari journalist organization to publish the names of two of the young suharis arrested reporting that the two men had been subjected to torture of a violent nature nashanta issued the following statement russian sahara as war begins morocco escalates violence against waharis nashata foundation staff 15 november 2020 occupied western sahara foundation a non-profit media and human rights organization based in the war zone of mark rafkin occupied western sahara has learned that the two days ago victim age 16 was abducted by the moroccan authorities after breaking down the door of his family's home last sunday the moroccan police forcedly removed the victim and transported him to the police headquarters in the downtown of occupied city of el aion all over the next 24 hours victim was injected to a horrific torture and abuse that he is currently unable to move or speak when his family attempted to assertion his whereabouts they were told that is their son as being held as a civil prisoner and been an interview with nashata foundation victims mothers described a conversation the family had with the doctor who is in charge of this other son his family has been forbidden from seeing him and they have been told by the doctor that he is currently being targeted for mental and psychological issues resulting from his mistreatment at the hands of occupying authorities furthermore his doctor describe his condition as critical the wrongful capture of victim is just one instance of widespread campaign by moroccan authorities to threaten abduct and silence soharan citizens include living in the occupied territories whether they are ordinary citizens or political or human rights activists these actions are understood to be in a direct result of the situation that arose in the buffer zone last week on friday november 13th moroccan authorities attacked peaceful protesters and a double violation to the national law ending a 30-year cease-fire agreement with osara the sohari protesters then returned fire and that has led to a declaration of war above lasaro today the situation continues to escalate as plain clothes policemen have been leading a contingency of special forces from house to house searching for saharan citizens who clashed with the moroccan authorities yesterday on the 15th november further plesaro attacks were reported its press agency reported by lar liberated territories 15th of november 2020 for the third consecutive day the sahara people's liberation army fighters continue their intensive attacks and shells on the trenches of the moroccan occupation soldiers last night and today among the brim despite the enemies air stories and the responses of his cannons according to the military community number three of the military national defense and intensive attacks of the suhari people's liberation army targeted the following moroccan military positions phase 17 base 18 the farcia sector base number 13 the 67 course in the bacar center sector base four of the six course in the dirt region and surveillance point seven one of base seven near la raresh and federer lagarde [Music] sector base 25 of the fourth quarter in the um region of the farsha sector base 20 of the 68th infantry corps of the absaro sector in the theme collegial region the communique concluded that the attacks have left many dead and wounded soldiers as well as those who deserted from the battlefields dealing a harsh flow to the morale of the soldiers and officers of the moroccan army events of the 16th of november on 16th november further raids of houses of suhari civilians and prominence for heart after this were carried out in suhari neighborhoods in the cities of occupied western sahara with american forces looking for youth who participated in the demonstrations according to the quit media a total of 25 young suharis have been arrested in response to protests carried out in the latest days the raids carrying with them intimidations threats and abuse were intended to intimidate suhari's civilians and activists according to equip media on the 16th of november equip media issued the following statement occupied lu the arrest and intimidation campaign continues and raids on media activists house houses [ __ ] media editing apartment november 16th 2020. moroccan occupation forces raid several houses in the occupied liu to rest in numbers of young men for participating in the peaceful demonstration organized in liu over the past three days to the man the independence of western sahara and in the support of the decision of the frenzy prince porsaro to resume the armed forces and the liberation of the suhari republic from morocco these raids included the home of activists victims who were not in their homes during the raid the moroccan arrest and intimidation campaign continues and the fate of the detainees is not known not yet known after the occupation authorities have banned their families from visiting them on the 16th of november the police had raided the homes of two sohar journalists muhammad hadi and sharif bakhil from media collector shahata foundation they are reportedly able to flee and they as well as other journalists from nashahata have gone into hiding in the past years media activists from rashad had reported from being followed and monitored and several have been been arrested most recently on the may 15th of 2020 for a photograph for abraham where haveli was arbitrarily detained in liu by agents and playing close and accused of among other things insulting public servants and violating quarantine regulations an urgent appeal from the frontline defenders stated that the arrests and direct reprisal of his peaceful and legitimate human rights work documenting violations in western sahara on 16th of november further plasaro attacks were reported its news agency stated the suhari people's liberation army units carried out today monday's intense attacks on a moroccan military wall a defense targeted different positions of the army forces according to military communica okay number four the ministry of national defense targets the tax targeted the following enemy positions morning point 71 of hazard sector at seven am base number four of angala sector from 8 30 to 9 30 a.m base number 20 near first cevati at 12 30 pm warning 0.191 of first year sector at 10 50 am and at 2 30 pm base number 12 of 47 quartz at 11 50 a.m base number four 63rd corps in the bakara sector at 2 15 pm the valiant the valiant sahari people's liberation army you units continue to strike the invader stronghold among the wall of humiliation and shame added the communique sps the events of 17th of november on the 17th november it was reported that the massive presence of military police and intelligence forces was still increasing according to local activists the cities of the occupied territories is currently placed under a fierce siege with few people daring to leave their houses according to the activists the repression has led to the muffling of demonstrations with civilians not daring to enter the streets on the 17th of november equipping the old media detail the events of the latest day by publishing the following statement on their website state of war and violent repression of civil protests in western sahara following the action of moroccan occupying forces in gagara against sahara civilians on the 13th of november of 2020 and the response also by the sorrow against the moroccan brand which cuts the country the sahara tories of the various cities of western sahara have expressed their support for their national liberation movement in its act war action and america oracle's occupied western sahara west of lebron towns have been besieged by moroccan security forces with checkpoints blocking all roads and homes of suhari militants have been particularly monitored every night since february friday third november 13th 2020 hundreds of demonstrators have been taken to the streets of l.i.u and dahala in the streets of all districts of l.i.u demonstrators shout and wave s-a-d-r flags chanting free western sahara long-coined convoys of cars joined the demonstrators honking the horns clashes between clashes took place with the moroccan security security forces who wanted to disperse the crowds and circlemen of neighborhoods is not without difficulty everywhere the districts of red apartments and demonstrators succeeded in completely closing the streets thus blocking the axis of occupied forces they gathered to continue the protests until moroccan enforcement succeeded in dismantling the makeshift roadblocks the protesters were then chased away by motorcycle squadrons police cars and auxiliary horses 25 young saharis were arrested after the demonstration they are in solitary confinement and banned from visitors according to several accounts moroccan agents in mask and or in civilian clothes mixed with the crowds and demonstrators filmed the activists including the leaders who then chased and arrested and occupied takala protesters took place in kisat forced to leave the villages of beer and zoron 150 kilometers east of dakar women came out in large numbers shouting against the moroccan occupation in the support of the army we want to return to our village to live free without worry under the flag of the suhari public we are also interested in choosing our way of life without fear says one participant for sahari civilians arrested on november 16th are appearing today in liu since november 15 long calls and moroccan military reforce reinforcements have been absorbed in l.i.u 1010 and some more tomorrow recruit media november 17th of 2020. sahara human rights organization is published the following statement on his facebook page the sahara human rights organization is the following statement on its facebook page statement on the kidnapping of suahari militants and raiding of family homes the sahara organ against the moroccan occupation iscom was notified on several raids carried out by the moroccan occupation forces against a number of safari family homes in the whole city of lau after several deterioration of human rights situation in the occupied cities of the suhari arab democratic republic this has taken place after the military aggression launched on friday the 13th november by the moroccan army against suhari civilians who are peacefully protesting in the front of a legal breach opened in elgar gervat region the raids are part of retaliatory campaign targeting the sohari civilians after morocco violated the ceasefire agreement signed between the fronte plisaro and the moroccan kingdom in 1991. in this record we have registered the following violations rated homes in the occupied cities of liu victim victim victim victim victim victim and victim one of these one of this family members was bitten by security agents and victim their son victim was arrested in occupied city of budohardor the moroccan repressive forces arrested three minors mainly victim victim and victim in addition to young men victim on the evening of 16th november of 2020 after they participated in a protest demonstrating the independence and the immediate withdrawal of the moroccan occupying forces from western sahara the miners were presented under arrest under before the persecutor of the king in the first instance court of the moroccan occupying state we also received information from eyewitnesses regarding the prosecution of peaceful demonstrationers demonstrators in the occupied cities of dahala and samara who are also participating in demonstrations to demand the sahara people's right to freedom and independence we further learned that the suhari activists by were abducted on november the 10th of the afternoon two police officers from the moroccan security services took part in the kidnapping operations near tantan street in the occupied cities of liu the activists were intercepted by two security agents in plain clothes these two police agents were well-known torturers named ali al-bihari and the other known by the nickname [Music] both have committed numerous violent crimes and repressive practices against buhari civilians and total impunity ali's was bitten inside police vehicles then transported to separate directions towards the northern area of where they were again subjected to physical and psychological tortures in the outskirts of the city then they were threatened to be incarcerated and even raped if they continue expressing their demands for freedom and independence the sahara organ against the moroccan occupation condemns intimidation violence and raids on suhari citizens during the past two days as well as kidnappings torture and serious abuses committed against the suharis activists alisa aduni as a result of their peaceful struggle and their steadfast rejection of the continuing moroccan occupation of western sahara we also would like to withdraw to draw the attention of the international community towards the seriousness of the crime of forced disappearance previously carried out by the moroccan authorities of occupation in the occupied cities of liu against several members and militants of iscom as well as hundreds of other suhari civilians many of whom are still missing this is one of the most heinous political crimes that require the attention of all peace-loving people and to ensure that the perpetrators are taken to justice for sahari oregon against the moroccan occupation while we consider that the cowardly kidnappings of ali and noradine rbi is a revenge measure deliberately committed by the moroccans secretary forces and while we continue to be concerned about the constant monitoring and persecution of members of iscom by moroccan police vehicles using special tag numbers since the end of september 2020 and wonder if it is related to the preparations to kidnap them we call on the international red cross to intervene urgently to pressure morocco in order to implement and respect the fourth geneva convention on the protection of civilians civilians in time of war after moroccan occupation regime ignited a new war against the suhari people on november 13th therefore we remind the icrc of responsibilities it has ignored for a long time under the pretext that there is no war in the territory we also launch an urgent appeal to the united nations and all the international human rights organizations to intest to intensify their pressure on morocco to find out the truth and circumstances of the operation of kidnapping carried out by the moroccan authorities and also call for the perpetrators mentioned above and many others to be brought to international justice we condemn the moroccan regimes continue acts of intimidation against suhari civilians including physical and verbal attacks as well as raiding of their homes behold the united nations responsible for morocco's persistent in these violations due to its decades-long silence on this issue we call on united nations high commissions for human rights and its related organs to dispatch investigation missions to the occupied territories particularly now in times of war we renew our call to the icrc to guaranteed international protection for suhari militants by virtue of its responsibilities in accordance with the fourth geneva convention and we hold the united nations and its various organs responsible for the safety and security of the suhari peoples whom it has failed for 30 years on false promises and delays as a result of their submission to the moroccan pressures the executive bureau of swahari oregon against moroccan occupation occupied liu suhari arab democratic republic 17th of november 2020. on the 17th november further plus our attacks reported this news agency reported sadr targeted territory 17th november 2020 sps the sohari people's liberation army spla fighters continued on tuesday for the fifth consecutive day intense strikes on the enemy entrenches along its walls of humiliation and shame causing human and material damages according to the military communique number five of the national military defense the strikes of the spla fighters targeted the following positions of the armed enemy army warning point 51 of the 29th corps of angala sectors at 6 00 6 40 am base 19 the mahabas sector from 9 40 to 10 07 am base 8 of the 70th course of the hausa sectors in bahrat al hasha from 13 under hour to 1315 pm the same time the suhari loyal young people continue to join with pride the fighting fronts in military schools on the 17th november news surfaced that the bosaro three demands for ending the war are close to the gurgarh crossing to set a date for the render mandom and to free suhari political prisoners a recent rep published a report published in april 2020 details the different cases of suhari political prisoners suhari human rights defenders activating for social justice and activists who demand the celebration of long-promised un referendum on self-determination for western sahara are often charged with violent crimes torturing tortured into signing confessions and given long prison censuses effectively ending or severely limiting their advocacy work the arbitrary detention of suhari human rights defenders have been widely documented by the u.n united nations human rights mechanisms particularly on the u.n working group on arbitrary detention whom have founded the suhari advocating suhari's advocating in favor of self-determination is subjected to discriminatory practices in breach of the of the quality of human rights we are especially concerned about the health and safety of human rights defender and political prisoner ahaya mohammed al-hafiz who remains disappeared since october of 13th when he was removed from his cell apple zaricom prison and taken to an unknown location after telling his family that he had been exposed to a prisoner ill with copper 19. we fear that hayao's case may indicate morocco's intent to weaponize cover 19 against buhari political prisoners an urgent appeal frontline defenders has called for morocco to allow his family access to el hazza and to release him the latest developments in the case of muhammad fell in line with continuous and systemic racial discrimination and punishment of suhari political prisoners continuing through their detention and absolutely and also recently witnessed in other cases two of the members of the so-called student group were recently transferred within the prison abba zai khan with one of them elk being subjected to the physical abuses before being forced to stand for six hours in the courtyard of the prison under the scorching sun the course the case was treated an opinion rendered by the un working group on arbitrary detention opinion number 67 of 2019 holding their detention and arbitrary and the students should be released still morocco has not implemented the decision on contrary the young students have been subjected to acts of reprisal in response to their appeal made to the united nations on 21st of october a young suhari student ibrahim was sentenced to 12 years in prison by the appeal courts prior to this his case has been tested in a joint commission communication issued 7th 7th of july of 2020 by the un special procedures expressing serious concerns in the lack of evidence uses of confession signed under torture as evidence and evidence that hussein had solely been imprisoned due to his activism the continued isolation and and in true ill treatment of katara dahara a 21 year old buhari activist and journalists recently sentenced to a total of 20 years in prison remains a great concern according to a joint communication issue 21 july of 2020 by the un special procedures in the communication the un special procedures also expressed special concerns serious concerns into the violation of the right to due process the continued isolation of several gadim zeke physique prisoners similarly remains of great concern after being held under arbitrary detention for nearly a decade following their arrests in conjunction with the dismantlement of kadani sikh protest group in the occupied territories of western sahara in november of 2010. the case of gadim isaac prisoners have amongst other been treated in a joint communication issued by the un special procedures in july of 2017 with the special repertoires expressing the concerns over the violation of the right to due process and evidence showing that the activist has slowly been arrested and imprisoned in response to the human rights activism and participation in the peaceful protest the events of 18th of november on 18th november local activists reported the continuance of fear suppression of the occupying forces still few suhari civilians and activists dare to leave their homes reportedly leading to the muffling of any demonstrations local activists further reports of arbitrary campaign of violence stating that the sahari civilians who enter the streets are targeted and subjected to arbitrary abuse and violence by moroccan police officers actors were supported that moroccan horses or stopping cars and taxis to get people out of them and beat them up and target those walking the streets on 18th of november it was further reported of an escalation of the persecution of suhari human rights defenders with the president of the newly established suhari human rights organization iscom and winner of the right winner of the rights livelihood award of 2019 aminato hadar being prevented from traveling from the occupied territories of western sahara to the canary islands in spain she was prevented on the grounds that she needed to do a medical examination prior to traveling to spain however her son was allowed to travel to spain with activists informing that the rules of medical examination in order to travel to spain does not come into effect until the 23rd of november through her twitter account aminato denounced at the airport that she was being illegally stopped from traveling and with the occupation authorities preventing suhari human rights defenders on the scoring terminally discriminatory grounds from leaving the occupied territories on the 18th of november reports are also being received that a 12 year old girl had been arrested and tortured by the moroccan police after having attended school wearing a t-shirt with us the western sahara flag local activists reports that the child was subjected to torture and that she was by the moroccan police forced to sing the moroccan national anthem while playing tribute to the flag and the king of morocco el gravaroth media issued a statement detailing the rest of the child valgogorod media 18th of november 2020 a suhari girl victim tortured and kidnapped by the moroccan occupation forces the sahari girl victim was born and victim of 20 of 2008. she was arrested at al nahada secondary school last monday and transferred to the secretary dictori of occupation of morocco where she was subjected to psychological and physical torture the reason of her arrest is that she wore a military uniform and drew the rasd national flag on her uniform school uniform the moroccan occupation forces in the moroccan intelligence team are surrounding the house of the suhari girl to prevent rights professionals in the sohari media from visiting her it is should be noted that the moroccan occupation forces threatened the father of the girl that no suhari journalist or human rights worker would be allowed to enter or that the moroccan occupation forces would punish him and after all these events a girl was in a state of fear and panic and could not return to the school for fear of being kidnapped and tortured by the moroccan occupied occupation forces reports of attacks by the sorrow was simultaneously being received this news agency reported sadr liberated territories november 19th to 2020 sps the sahara people's liberation army spla fighters continued wednesday for the sixth consecutive day and ten strikes on the enemy entrenches along its wall of shame causing human and material damages according to military community number six of the national military defense the strikes of the spla fighters targeted military positions of the enemy in the fascia mangala samara and bahagari sectors events of 19th of november on the 19th of november reports were similarly being received of arbitrary violence against buhari's civilians in the streets of the occupied territories of western sahara the presence of military police and intelligent forces continue to be massive with the suhari activists find themselves being placed under continuous surveillance on the 19th of november reports were received that prominent suhari activist and human rights defender sultana kaya was detained and abused at a checkpoint between the cities of liu in bohar after returning to the occupied territories from spain a report states that she was beaten under police custody according to local activists she was released by from custody after 1.5 hours and before her release her house was surrounded by moroccan police before she released her home was surrounded by moroccan police this is a typical modest of moroccan authorities in the occupied western sahara whenever an activist returns from abort or from prison their homes are put under siege to prevent people from gathering and welcoming them there are videos showing the siege taken from the home according to sultana on her own account and eyewitnesses including her sister and other family members police entered the family's home on the afternoon of the 19th of november before sultana arrived in order to remove several young men who arrived to welcome her home saltana's 82 year old mother confronted the agents and told them to leave one of them shoved her violently and she fell against the dorm frame hurting her back he then pushed her again and she fell to the ground hitting her head on the floor there is a video of the aftermath of this of the assault with the mother laying on the ground at around 4 a.m on the 20th of november her conditions were so concerning that the family took her to the border private provincial hospital the family was told that she was in serious condition and needed to be evacuated to the hospital in liu but that she could not be occupied if accompanied by anyone so they decided to take her home it should be noted that due to prior experiences suhari particularly well-known activists consider moroccan-run hospitals in western sahara to be unsafe places and do not trust the medical teams or treatments that they prescribe the baharidor hospital did issue a medical report which had been shared noting injuries to her back and head the case was assisted as aggression the family also has an x-ray which they have also shared there is serious concern for the mother's health and the family is too afraid to return to the hospital and is unable to transport her to liu or to obtain medical help from a trusted doctor because police is not allowing anyone to enter or leave the house on the 19th of november in a response to amanato's hedars having denounced her illegal ban on the traveling the previous day royal morocc airlines issued a statement that amanato's hadar had tested positive for clova 19 reporting that the incident reporting about the incident quoted the bbc quoted the document by royal era morocc stating that the reason for adar's flight plan was that she had tested positive for copper 19. richard prominently denied through another videotaped statement in which she also called on the icrc and human rights organizations to assume responsibility in protecting human rights defenders in western sahara it appears that siddhar hadar haidar has seen was singled out for discriminatory treatment through the weaponization of clover 19. a prominent pro-moroccan activist for the online name of zine l abdeen l whose profile information states he is vice president of the sahara league of democracy and human rights lsddh also shared on his twitter account an official looking document with moroccan ministry of health letterhead that included hadar's passport number which stated that on the 12th of november she had tested positive for copa19 per a lab called kamar who had not been able to verify we have not been able to verify the document but we are deeply concerned about the nature of this type of online activity which can induce to hatred stigma citization stimulation and violence reports were further received that drones were flying over the occupied cities of the in southern western sahara several reports have been received of drones flying over liu terrorizing its citizens news the sahara news outlet suhari voice outlet reported that the drones were acquired through a moroccan israel israeli 48 million dollar arms deal on 19th november further attacks were carried out by bosaro this news agency reported the swahili republic november 19 2020 sbs the suhari people's liberation army units conducted today thursday intense attacks on the moroccan military walls of defense targeted different positions of enemy forces causing significant damages along enemy ranks according to military communique number seven of the military the ministry of national defense the strikes of the spla fighters targeted for the seventh day seven days consecutive military positions of the enemy in farsia and gala khaza and andrega sectors sbs number three the western sahara conflict and relevant practice of the human of the un human rights mechanism western sahara is listed by the united nations as a non-self-governing territory subjected to the right to self-determination in the conformity with the principles contained in the un general assembly resolutions 1514 and 1541. in 1975 morocco invaded western sahara a territory in which it does not hold sovereignty or sovereignty over at that time western sahara fell under the administration of spain as an administrating power the fact that western sahara at the time of the moroccan invasion was placed under the control and authority of spain renders the conflict conflict in international armed conflict morocco's presence in western sahara is therefore one of an occupying power following under article 42 of the 1907 hagoone hague regulations in article 2 of the 4th geneva convention of 1949. the part of western sahara i'm estimated to be around 80 percent has thus been placed under occupation by the kingdom of morocco since 1975 and sequentially illegally annexed to this day the situation in the territory remains a humanitarian crisis with systemic systematic gross human rights violations and breaches of international humanitarian law being committed as directed consequences of the prolonged illegal military occupation military morocco has as the occupying power the de facto control both over most of the territory and the people living on the occupied land who are deprived of their civil political economic social and cultural rights the moroccan authorities exercised power arbitrarily and occupied western sahara through the use of police and military forces in order to control the activities of citizens to limit the freedom of people in order to prevent further support for the call for the right to self-determination the use of force against suhari's form part of a state policy intended to silence the call for for self-determination whereas buhari's are subjected to systemic and systematic persecution by moroccan occupying forces accumulating in numerous human rights violation and violations of humanitarian law the systematic and systemic persecution of sufari's activists and civilians have been widely documented by the united human united nations human rights mechanism the un working group observed these trends amongst other during its visit to morocco from 9 to 18 of december of 2013. after its mission morocco in 2013 his visit to liu western sahara the working group stated that it had considered the situation in l.i.u western sahara and found that torture and ill-treatment were used to extract confessions and that protesters were subjected to excessive use of force by law enforcement officials and it also received numerous complaints indicating a pattern of excessive use of force in repressing demonstrators demonstrations and arresting protesters or persons subjected of participating in demonstrations calling for self-determination of the suhari population the working group found that people arrested are beaten insulted and forced to reveal names of other protesters and that these practices are aimed at punishing and intimidating protesters in order to prevent further support for the call for independence similar observations were also made by the united nations committee against torture and the special repertoire on torture having expressed the concerns regarding the systemic systematic use of forests against the suhari population highlighting that people advocating for the right to self-determination are subjected to comprehensive police violence abductions torture and subjected to arbitrary arrest and arbitrary detention the working group has similarly documented the political persecution of suharis and numerous decisions rendered as documented in opinion number 39 of 1996 opinion number 4 of 1996 in opinion number 11 2017 concerning nadine basar in opinion number 31 of 2018 concerning muhammad al bambari in opinion number 58 of 2018 concerning muhammad ali in opinion number 60 of 2018 concerning opinion number 23 23 of 2019 concerning la rossi in opinion number 67 of 2019 concerning the student group and latest in opinion number 52 of 2020 concerning the opinions render document render documents how saharis are subjected to arbitrary arrest and detention in response to their opinions and their support for the right to self-determination in breach of the equality of human rights with the persecution of swaharis constituting racial discrimination the opinions rendered by the united nations working group on arbitrary detention was supported by communications issued by the united nations special procedures communications issued by the special procedures include interior alia the communications issued in relation to the arrest and torture and the breach of the right to a fair trial for the ezekiel prisoners who were arrested in response to their opinion and their exercise of freedom of assembly in a peaceful protest camp ganim zeke in addition the communication issued in response to the violent arrests of suhari activists and communication issues in response to the legal charges and brought against the sahari activists and document thoroughly the persecution of suhari journalists the latest communication issues issued relates to the imprisonment of the young suhari journalist [Music] katara imprisoned baha'i student hassan bakar ibrahim further documenting the systemic persecution of suhari by morocco's and how you its individuals and non-government officials and community can help this and repeat this again what you can do to respond to the calls coming from the occupied territories of president sahara we encourage individuals to number one reach out to elective public officials in your city or area and ask them to highlight the issues of western sahara and the repression in the occupied territories two write an article in your local newspaper or contact journalists to make them aware of the escalation of western sahara conflict and their profession in the occupied territories three organize a demonstration or meeting in your community in order to in order to protest the continued illegal occupation of western sahara and the persecution of suhari human rights defenders four use your social media platform to tell about the suffering of the people of western sahara and join the international campaign referendum now for western sahara incur number five encourage five of your friends or family to do the same to respond to the calls coming from the occupied territories of western sahara we encourage national ngos to number one write a letter to your national government and ask them to denounce the current situation in the occupied territories of western sahara number two write a letter to united nations secretary general antonio cortez to urge him to immediately take action to prevent a humanitarian crisis in the occupied territories of west sahara three write a letter to the moroccan government and ask them to ensure respect for the obligations both under the international human rights law and international humanitarian law to ensure that all sahari activists and civilians are free to conduct their activities and express their opinions without fear of any form of retaliations and four take public actions by writing an article or issuing a in public appeal or create a campaign in support of the right to self-determination for the people of western sahara and announcing the continued illegal occupation and the repression in the occupied territories of western sahara and lastly five organize a demonstration or meeting in your community in order to protest continued illegal occupation of western sahara and the prosecution of sahara human rights defenders and for more resources um check out democracy now for days in western sahara um looking on the internet um so many and to um end this by saying please by ending this healing and justice telltale what please stay safe look after each other and may peace be with you all for our soul family and we're going to get through this and i dedicate this episode to the sahari people of western sahara for them to have a voice to have freedom and self-determination without the fear of violence and fear i love you to allah [Applause] [Music] bye [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] ah
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2020-11-22
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTq6erJPfOk
Science Talk: Why Being A Scientist is Not Enough
welcome to NOAA's national ocean service 2014 science seminar series the goal of this seminar is to communicate and discuss a variety of marine topics of interest to NOAA the coastal marine community and anyone else who is interested if you or your partners would like to present your work here or you have a topic you would like to suggest or open for discussion please contact me tracy gill if you are not receiving the NOAA weekly seminar list and you'd like it please contact Hernan Garcia or me or just Google not--not at seminar to find out more Zener would prefer to take sections after the talk unless you have a clarifying question and if you are interested in getting a PDF copy of today's presentation it will be made available through either Janna or myself you can email us so today's topic of the seminar is a really important one to NOAA and sometimes we have a hard time addressing the title is called science talk why being a scientist isn't enough and our speaker our speaker is Janna Goldman from press here a little bit about Jenna she has been a daily newspaper reporter and editor press secretary for a u.s. senator and the communications director for - Washington area nonprofit organizations in March 2013 she retired from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or NOAA she was the public affairs officers officer ever NOAA's research office for 14 years she launched her company press here in May specializing in science related press events plain language and mission training Jana lives here in Silver Spring Maryland with her husband anthropologist and author Michael French Smith and they're mixed Airedale Zoey please welcome Jenna Coleman thank you all and I'm just so delighted to be here there's so many people here in person some familiar so I ran into Tracy in the fall we were over at Caribou Coffee she invited me to speak at the series and I said which I talked about she's looking stuff people want you what you've been doing and so and she said I retired in March some of you in building three of notice that it's a lot quieter there because I'm not there making noise where I was the public affairs officer for NOAA research Monica Allen now holds that position and I hope she is enjoying it as much as I did so what exactly have I been doing you know while the term is retirement it really isn't all just kickback fun by an eating lady of leisure I've been really busy but fun busy and it's busy on my own terms which is one of the great joys of not having a full-time job but one of the things I do is I volunteer at the Wheaton riding stable one day a week where I muck out stables and learning horsemanship literally from the ground up I also joined the board for the Center for plain language many of you know I'm an advocate for clear communication and plain writing and plain communication and as Tracy said I started my own little science communications of company called press here which so far like the Center for plain language is a non-profit but we're working on it so you have my own schedule also allows me time to do a lot of things like participate in events like I was at the American Geophysical Union meeting in in December in San Francisco I presented a poster with one of my colleagues at the National Science Foundation about working with scientists and reporters in the Arctic and I've been to a couple of excites communications conferences given by the National Academies there's a lot of interest from a lot of science organizations about science communication helping scientists communicate their work better and those are the two things I love to do working with reporters working with scientists and a lot of the things I learned at the workshops I'm going to share with you today some of this very familiar to those of you who are in communications but it's probably worth hearing again so as is my pride suggest the title being a scientist just isn't enough you also need to share your science and learn how to share your science you should tell people what you do while you do it and why you should care as I said I'm encouraged that the science organizations are taking this seriously and offering a lot of science communications workshops for both communication practitioners such as myself and scientists such as many of you in this room and on the phone I'm also delighted when I hear instances of Sciences initiating of opportunities to improve their communication skills and one I just turned up a couple days ago was called the hot-air society and it's a group of scientists from NOAA's geophysical fluid dynamics laboratory GFDL up in Princeton and they started a little Toastmasters group to learn communication skills so one of the young women who started this scenting one of her videos of her giving a presentation and I was delighted that she did because she gave some great examples in her talk and one was she was at a meeting and people were talking about computer racks and somebody said well what exactly is a rack person very clearly explained that it was like a refrigerator okay size of a refrigerator that's something that people can understand another instance she gave was people starting thoughts to talk in acronyms and somebody had mentioned OBE well she has a British background so OBE for her was Order of the British Empire instead of over overtaken by a gun so I overtaken by events or that could be out-of-body experience too so again there's a nice little lessons to to take with you that you know the language of people to whom you're speaking so the numbers vary but the most part people generally trust scientists once that you're given at the HU meeting was a study found that 93% of Americans believe that scientists contribute to society well being however that same speaker notice with just three percent of scientists say they talk to reporters and only one point seven percent of news is about science that shouldn't be surprising because a few months earlier the National Academies someone has reported that US business spends about one trillion with a trio with a T on trillion dollars out communications but only one billion with a B on science communication so three zeroes might look like a lot but it makes a huge difference about the amount of money spent on science communication another study shows that about 15% of the merit the American people say they know a scientist which is not very much but they may know you as a neighbor they may know you as Muffy's mom so that could be either your your dog's name or your kid's name they might know you as the Little League coach but they don't know you as a scientist and scientists to tend to look at the big picture which is the telescope but the general public wants local information they want to know what are you doing hi what are you doing this is going to affect me how's that affecting where I live what I do my everyday life people also want to know who you are why you do what you do and they want to hear from you when I was a public affairs officer reported didn't want to talk to me they wanted to talk to you people who are doing the work because you have that passion you know the importance of your work you can explain your story better than then I possibly could but a lot of people don't know how to do this I say I don't know how to talk to reporters on the rock talk to somebody else or some people just say I don't want to do what I'm paid to be a scientist I'm going to do my clients nothing else but should you decide you want to do this there's some help you might say how do you do it so how to tell your story let people know why they should care about what you do easiest thing is good try to take three or four of your main points and distill it in a way so they're easy Sounders fans watch out for jargon and prepares a memorable quote I mean I'm sure those two people Illustrated perhaps very interesting stories to tell but it isn't easy simplicity is an easy one hallmark of intellect is the ability to simplify to make the complex indeed understand anyone could be unclear this is most Dallas Morning News editor sorry about this pre quote yeah I was a lovely quote also to discuss is enjoy hassle who is a great science communicator I'm sure many of you have heard of her she says it's not dumbing down what you know but smartening up what you know because I ran into this when I was at know I come into contact with some scientists and we try to simplify I say not you're just dumbing down as this is the science that I'm not going to do it and I said no you're giving people an opportunity to to learn new things and then I would always get the argument well let's let's let them learn new thing but we're use these big words in these complicated things well if people don't understand it they're just going to stop that an example I've used in my plain language training a lot and a lot of you have probably heard it was when I first came to NOAA I really didn't know what the word anthropogenic meant but I learned what it was when I started using it everywhere and then found out I was boring and of course then went to human cause people understood that once you start throwing big probably swap affords the people you're going to lose them but this is not easy to do so how do you reach your audience once you've decided to I talk to them there have been huge changes in media I said I was a daily newspaper reporter and editor explained way way way back but it was a completely different your you don't have your traditional news sources which usually are vetted in some way there's been some fast checkers or some editors or people wanting to know you know the says who is we called you know who are your sources nowadays most people get their news from internet from blogs from all these different sources that you're not quite sure what you where they're getting their stuff so they're not necessarily a credible source and usually when people don't have that checkers or they're picking up stuff from the internet you often get instances where people are picking up stakes news I'm sure a bevy you know the onion which is a satirical news site and how many times has somebody picked that up and you know gone like wildfire because somebody thought it was true it's very very difficult so I when I was in the newspaper business I had editor say you know if your mother says she loves you check it out so always try to find the source of your information here so what would cap Colorado now you know making marijuana legal it might be a good to say okay to say this in public touch your dealer is another rough ways to trust your news so what's you know what's your news source so there was a story recently it's Colorado pop shop accepting food stamps taxpayer-funded marijuana for welfare recipients people went nuts over this and in fact there was a Colorado Legislature who started some sort of a bill to prohibit this from happening and all these other sites were picking it up until they found out it was fake it was from a fake news site again this has caused a lot of problems and you know your source here so one place you could trust or who are the trusted people who you know who can you trust when you're getting information or craft Fagin was was one and he was actually vilified by the scientific community when he started speaking speaking to the public and he's well-known for Kosmos and even though he's associated with billions and billions apparently he never said that but it was such a great process the tribute to him but he said we live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology and which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology so you as scientists you as communicators have a real opportunity to improve the scientific education here's another person who's recently been doing of insanity is going to be i'm the new version of prognosis is neil degrasse tyson is an astrophysicist and he says we have adults who either don't understand or don't like science saying we need our kids to learn it and you says no i say no how about you you need to learn it i think adults might be the dis most difficult audience to crack kids are like sponges no they want to learn everything we want to know everything adults are a little little a little bit harder and i used to be a volunteer at the reptile house with the National Zoo and handle snakes lizards and I loved it wonderful I've never had a problem with his wanting to touch snakes to touch lizards or ask questions those are the adults who kind of shrink back and I go up to them afterwards I said well you know if you'd like to go and see your little uneasy you'd like we can go into the resource room I can bring out a snake or a lizard you could touch it and get over this fear and fill it in with some other fear a lot of people decline and I said why not and I wasn't being pushy I was just really being curious you know why not you know why are you afraid of touching this you know very neat animal which is you know smaller than you are is not venomous it's not going to hurt you why are you afraid and nine times out of ten people said I just don't know I just can't do it so again it's the adults who I think you're going to have the biggest challenge with but of course the dollar the adults as people who are voted adults to the people's control budgets the adults are the people who are the decision-makers so this is an important audience so scientists who will use narratives or stories and I'd like to find another word for story because when somebody says I might tell you a story you're not you know it's almost a fairy tale I'm trying to find a word and if anybody knows of a word in any other language I'd appreciate it letting me know trying to find a nice word for fat based story or narrative or account that isn't story or narrative both of those to me are clumsy so you know that might be your assignment before the end of that my presentation if you can think of a better word let me know and if not like email addresses at the end of this presentation please please do let me know so we'll use story the narrative until we come up with something better but scientists are using narratives or stories are perceived as warmer because they're talking to their audiences rather than talking at their audiences they're telling personal stories they're showing their own personality when they talk to people and you may have heard people who say they can't handle science but rarely and you heard somebody say I can't handle restored I can't take a story I couldn't understand that so why tell stories or narratives people remember it's as simple as that there was a research study in 2002 that showed narratives are recalled twice as well and read twice as fast as evidence-based content so if you tell if you're putting out a science paper and you're able to put that in some sort of easily to understand story or narrative people remember that rather than reading your science paper it's also often less about the data than the narrative so what is the story how science has done is a story in itself those are the stories that I loved when I was working at North Noah how do you do this what equipment are you using we are you going why are you doing this though they're very very integral part of a really good story and they're interesting the people that capture people's in the origination one of the speakers at AG you noted that story is contained that there are stories get in science stories I'm getting ahead of myself alright they're dead ends their surprises their mistakes their characters is personalities there's motives and two things right top of the study all these elements go into a good story as you all know science is also messy findings can change with better data and so another speaker noticed that you're when you're a scientist you're really speaking to four audiences one is data-driven your peers these a group of august gentlemen sitting there their constituents people who need or use your work craft that person would be interesting flying machine on his back committed skeptics they're the ones who are trying to find the weaknesses in your work and constructively done it can be a good thing and make your work better process that judgment there and then there are the rest of us the end of the people who seeks to understand we're interested in what you're doing would want to know what was what you're doing we think what you're doing is going to make our lives better so we want to understand that but sometimes things don't work so don't be the condescending authority this is something i have to keep reminding my husband who's an anthropologist about disease a little bit of a know-it-all and like to show it off as those of you who know michael no he's charming and endearing but every now and then you have to bring about a few notches don't tell people what you think what you think and why you think that and as carol might always says how you know what you know and that's very good advice but don't expect your values to change people's believe i'm sure many of you saw the study a couple years ago where even when people were presented with that they clung to these particular ideas and beliefs very difficult to change people's mind don't talk this on winning the arguments and that's something that Michael has to learn better and use simple intuitive statements like if we put heat trapping gases into the atmosphere it will trap heat that's something that people can understand Kerala is a great example and I don't know well it well enough to to relate it but if it involves just knowing physics that if you put something and you knock something off of a event it's going to fall down it is not magically going to rise up into the air so some of the basic science of people still need to understand better so it's worth your while it's worth science as well to tell stories and it helps people to use the science it's interesting it's fun captures people's attention like you know you wonder what these people are doing up here it helps with decision making and it's fun and interesting as I said most research has something useful and interesting your job is finding it and communicating it if you help if you need help finding the story there are a lot of communications professionals in this room and on the phone who can help you there is a story in there somewhere users have to help find it so everyone in this story this was one of the mornings at aju but he is now on wireless there but everyone in this photo is doing some interesting research and therefore their potential communicators they can tell those stories if one of the things you have to do is make yourself available so do media interviews do things like this sign of seminar talk this is a greater a great opportunity and find other opportunities get out there and practice and this is not easy to do it is still I think public speaking is still number one followed by death is what people are most afraid of believe me I was very shy I know you'll find that hard to believe and I had a tough time learning how to speak before people such as you I still have a lot to learn and then want to improve my speaking sticky but uh speaking skills like learning how to say speaking skills but being afraid of talking to you I'm not so again work with your public affairs people or communicators because they can help you refine your message and they can help you learn to speak plainly and you're the plug for plain language plain language gov is you don't know it is an excellent excellent excellent resource for perfed I was a plain language trainer and then when I left they told me it couldn't be a trainer anymore so that's when I went to the Center for plain language which also has some excellent resources and that is a center for plain language all one word dot or both of those places have some wonderful wonderful things to do also to correct errors of fact I I must admit I in the recent Rush Limbaugh Al Roker flap and for those of you might not know during polar vortex apparently mr. Limbaugh one time is radio show is that this was just a made-up turn by the right wing left wing liberals of blah blah blah blah blah until Al Roker posted a picture of the 1959 American Meteorological Society glossary showing that polar vortex and then a term used for quite a long time I'm sure it didn't convince all of mr. Limbaugh listeners but at least he was getting the facts out so there are some challenges language uses one we talked about that so how you talk to the people with whom you want to talk to the willingness of your audience hear the message this almost refers back to maybe mr. Limbaugh audience some people just don't want to hear us but a lot of people do there are fewer outlets to get your message your story's out I call them folks models but you know there needs to be who are trusted sources like Carl Sagan was or Neil deGrasse Tyson telling your stories and of course the money available to do this the resources and the synapses dollars is technology as individuals but your resource know everyone is you could be an excellent storyteller and I know some of you are excellent storytellers so science and arts does belong to the whole world so go do it there's a lot of help available and it's gonna gasps thank you very much I will take some questions comments and I really appreciate seeing you on thank you all for coming out and being on the side of it [Applause]
SciShare
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2017-05-12
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0dX4Vl3soY4
Anne Marie Waters instructs Boris Johnson on nationalism and tells him what the real racism issue is
in this instance the uk is providing for its own people and not for the people of zimbabwe or namibia and so it's unequal it's not equality that the uk should have vaccines or whatever it might be if we're talking about something else it's not equality if the uk has it and namibia doesn't have it how is that equal i mean this is steeped all this language it's steeped in that open border internationalist globalist anti-nation state anti-democracy terror tyranny that will continue to be subjected to and which as i said actually results in practice in governments abandoning their own people and prioritizing the needs and interests of people from all over the world more of the same is coming with this post-covert treaty further erosion of our nation-states and with it our democracy and with it our government's duty to be concerned about the people of their own countries uh and not people from all over the world okay racism i mentioned at the start this report that the government commissioned and that has found much to the disgust of the left much to the disgust of people like diane abbott and david lammy professional race speakers people who make a living out of their skin color people who are professional skin color that's what that's that's what they rest on that is their identity that is that is what they are obsessed with it always always the victim and always blaming someone else david lammy even said he wasn't going to talk about this report because it was detrimental to his mental health always the victim absolutely always and the people who want to be victims the people who want to find an excuse a reason for whatever it is that is wrong in their lives so if they haven't succeeded at something the problem isn't them the problem is racism and if you can't find any surface racism you know what we what we used to call racism actual hatred between people of different skin colors for example actual active discrimination um active disadvantage suffered by people deliberately suffered or imposed upon people because of skin color if you can't find any of that and you can't because there are laws in this country that prevent black people being discriminated against for example so if you can't find any of that you've got to make up something else and there's an invisible racism now it's in the line of what the the left talks about now unconscious bias unconscious bias is when you're not a racist but you are anyway you just don't know you are so they find it when it's not there the actual racism that i mentioned what we used to think of as racism hasn't disappeared but for normal people in normal people's lives it's really not that much of an issue anymore and what this report found is that people are not actually being discriminated against non-white people i should say are not being discriminated against either by law or in society and for those who want to be victims because victimhood remember has an exalted status in society today people are desperate to belong to a victim group it makes them feel special but it also gives them more importantly it gives them a reason an excuse for any of their own failings in life so when a report concludes that this structural racism i don't know what it is either neither do its proponents by the way or institutional racism isn't actually a reality those who desperately want to be the victims of racism are very upset indeed about this so this is from the daily mail and this is the part you might not be wholly familiar with that boris johnson doesn't agree with elements of this report he truly is appalling this article goes into the views and i've picked this one because she's not speaking only for herself she's speaking for a lot of other people who have come out with similar responses to this the racism industry i call it those who who survive on the assumption of the existence of racism in british society boris johnson admits he doesn't agree with elements of landmark race report as stephen lawrence's mother says it gives racists the green light and slams authors as not in touch with reality now a lot of the problems we've got in society today actually happened in the wake of the murder of stephen lawrence a lot of the division you would think that a post-racist society would look for color blindness that in order to move in order to move towards a color or a post-racist society we would be looking to move to a color-blind society the very very opposite was concluded after the investigation and the report the mcpherson inquiry into the murder of stephen lawrence and how it was handled by police and authorities it concluded that colorblind policing must be eliminated that actually colorblind policing was not an in by extension colorblind authority colorblind society was not actually what should be aspired to instead we should take color into account at every opportunity it encouraged us and it shaped policing from that moment onwards it was also the introduction of terms like institutional racism which again is never really explained in language that we can all understand but this is the mcpherson inquiry in the macpherson report was the birth of all of this and it specifically said that we should not and cannot move towards a color blind society that we must instead make color and make race central to governance to policing and to society more broadly and if you take out as this report has tried to do if you take that out you push back on the race obsession in society that was encouraged by the mcpherson report and those who want to keep racial division alive because they make a living from it or as i said they get their victim status status from it are very upset by it so it goes on boris johnson admits he doesn't agree with elements of a landmark race report as stephen lawrence's mother says it gives racist the green light the document published by the commission on race and ethnic disparities said geography family influence socioeconomic background culture and religion all affect life chances more than racism the prime minister insisted there are serious issues that our society faces to do with racism and that work needed to be done to fix it but warned the reports findings weren't necessarily aligned with the thoughts of those at number 10. he said this is a very interesting piece of work i don't say the government is going to agree with everything in it but it has some original and stimulating work in it i think people would need to read and to consider there are very serious issues that our society faces to do with racism and that we need to address well he is actually right about that but i bet a few quid that he's not right for the right reasons there are issues about racism in society that we need to deal with and largely that we need to stop this obsession this victim status and the anti-white hatred which i got onto in a second he never talks about that he never talks about that as an issue of race there are race problems in this country and they are exacerbated by the very people who are condemning this report by the very people who don't want a post-racism society they're the problem that's the real race problem we face and some of the findings of this report as i wrote in my sunday column yesterday it's actually found that in for example in terms of education non-white kids in many areas or in in across the board in in various uh elements of education are doing better than white kids yet there's nobody jumping up and down and talking about equality let me take you to something i said that i found out this week this was which was horrifying and if boris johnson really wants to talk about the issues involving race in society that need to be fixed then he needs to start talking about the race obsession of these groups and the influence that they have in society the racial division that they are stirring up the tensions that are stirred up by groups like black lives matter the active and open discrimination against white people in the jobs market those are real issues that he could be talking about and those are the real issues about race that need to be fixed boris johnson in our society however it gets much worse than that i was genuinely horrified to read this this week and horrifying is in the headline horrifying guidance says toddlers need to be taught about white white privilege and systemic racism gobsmacking new guidance from education bodies including the national education union states that children below the age of six need to recognize racist behaviors and develop anti-racist views and their teachers need to understand about white privilege so that children are stirred onto the right course the birth to five report claims young minds are brimming with racism their rampant racial prejudice and misconceptions are in danger of being maintained or these are quotes by the way from the report from the guidance that comes from the biggest union teachers union in the country rampant racial prejudice from children under five are in danger of being maintained or reinforced unless addressed by a teacher who has undergone essential practitioner training the training will enable teachers to teach kids about white privilege systemic racism and how racism affects children and families in early years setting so let's put that into let's let's picture that you've got a room classroom full of five-year-olds and the teachers banging on about white privilege systemic racism which is of course evil whites again evil whites trampling all over the perpetual victim which is everyone who isn't white and a little five-year-old white kid is sitting there surrounded by non-white kids and thinking there's something wrong with me i'm a racist i'm privileged i'm essentially evil i'm a threat to all the little kids who sit around me that aren't white there's something wrong with me because i'm white that is what any white child who is sitting in the room hearing this abuse will be thinking it's the impression that will be imposed upon them we're talking about small children who will be subject to abuse at school because of the color of their skin and i remember and i think i mentioned i might have mentioned this last week i've certainly mentioned it recently about a mother who her i did mention last week actually um about ray honeyford's school and i interviewed her when i was writing my first book and her kid her white kid was in school and was mercilessly bullied for being white she had to take him out of the school and while he was bullied for being white he was called racist by the kids who were bullying him this is a charter for the emotional psychological abuse of white children and it is a charter for non-white children of any description to bully and persecute white children and it is for children under the age of six and this is being put forward by the national education union as i'll read guidance a little bit more because it's terrifying the report put together by the national day nurseries association the association for the association for professional development in early years as well as the neu counters government guidance that already acknowledges racism needs to be addressed on the play mat oh my god this is a tory government remember while many would argue there was no room for racism teaching at nurseries and schools at all the government's existing guidance insists that alongside learning to count and read five-year-old kids should know some similarities and differences between different religious and cultural communities in this country drawing on their experiences they're five and what has been read in class the chairman of the commons education select committee robert halfon responded this is just unacceptable but what are you saying it's unacceptable this the last quote by the way knows some similarities etc is from the government it's from the government drawing on their experiences they're five years old what experiences that's from the government the government same government then says that this latest guidance is unacceptable if we are in i don't know what we're in alice i wonder i i just don't it's absolutely incredible government goes on to say this dogma and doctrine is totally out of place we have all got to combat racism but this is the wrong way to go about it but you have just i've just read out the government's own guidance on it this is tory this is so typically tory say all the right things do right let me let me put it this way the tories sound like tories act like labor that's basically how it works they'll do all the things that labor does go along with all the pc multicultural rubbish that labor does and then make a speech to say they're doing the very opposite that's the tories but this is a genuinely genuinely scandalous and i guarantee you that it will go ahead this will be taught it's we will have little five-year-olds sitting around with their crayons being told that the little white kid in the group is a racist oppressor and is systemically pre or whatever the hell it's going to be responsible for systemic and institutional racism and is privileged this little white kid over here who may come from a family would not too pennies to rub together but they're still privileged and all the non-white kids are all oppressed victims and this poor little kid over here is responsible for it guaranteed it's going to happen so boris johnson if you really want to deal with the issues surrounding race that need to be fixed in this country there's your starting point stop this psychological mental abuse of small children in the classroom because of their skin color and stuff with the white privilege rubbish it's absolute nonsense and actually this report if you read it will show that whites are becoming extremely disadvantaged in this society and the only racial group that can be lawfully discriminated against so there's your race issue boris johnson if you want to do something useful which of course you don't but if you if by some miracle you decided to do something useful that might be it
Anne Marie For Prime Minister
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2021-04-06
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Making Ravioli Pizza | VOMIT WARNING 🤮 | Food Experiments Episode 3
so today we're making ravioli pizza yeah uh we need pizza ravioli cheese let's buy it you may ask why are we using our own dough and starting from scratch well it's a very old pizza [ __ ] why am i gonna put effort into this why am i gonna put time and effort and money into this [ __ ] sake way out some cheese like i don't know how much cheese do we want about 60 grams maybe and there we go perfect now start pulling out pieces of ravioli i'm placing on the pizza trying to get it too juicy like so who the [ __ ] messaging me ruining my video oh i almost forgot preheat the oven to 170 ish ravioli is applied let's start sprinkling on some cheese like so put it in the oven [Music] it's done okay right it's ah all right we'll try some this is the [ __ ] mess look at this [ __ ] [Music] um
Big Dogge Tom
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2020-08-17
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0KCPgSd8VWE
The Daily Dozen Challenge launches this Monday, March 4! #dailydozenchallenge
I'm thrilled to announce the daily dozen challenges back this spring each week I'll focus on one category and challenge you to check off the recommendations uh for the daily servings with the goal of uh breaking down the challenge in more digestible bits I'll encourage you to pick a day of the week to complete this week's Challenge and document it on social media use the hash daily doesen challenge on your post to help build the community of people taking the challenge Inspire others to join be sure to follow along on on our social media Pages where we'll share recipes and tips each week to support you in your challenge the daily dozen challenge starts on March 4th the first Monday in March so follow along let us know how you're doing together we can help encourage more people to adopt healthier habits
NutritionFacts.org
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2024-03-04
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H4uZ5nM9cOo
Commanders VS Eagles Monday Night Football Betting Picks | Covering The Spread
[Music] this is covering the spread part of the FanDuel podcast Network [Music] [Applause] [Music] after a thrilling Sunday of football between all those fun games especially the late window a lot of good ones as well we get to close things up on Monday night with a game that doesn't appear all that fun at first glance but maybe we'll get some more chaos to close that week we're gonna break down commanders at eagles with Ryan Williams getting his read on this game to close that week number 10 on a high note this is covering the spread right here on the FanDuel podcast Network and numberfire.com my name is Jim sanus I am a senior writer and analyst for numberfire.com join you once again and by Ryan Williams check him out on Twitter at ryanalexander underscore W Ryan week number 10 almost fully in the books how you doing today oh I'm doing just fine Jim you know we're just trying to it's crazy and then week 10 going on to week 11 the weeks start to wind down and you start to see the light at the end of the tunnel for postseason uh so I'm just enjoying life here yeah I mean I'm excited because uh next week week 11 we get Cowboys and Vikings and for some reason in my brain that matchup is always associated with Thanksgiving I know it's not on Thanksgiving but like if we get a Cowboys and Vikings matchup that means it's November which means I am very close to putting out Christmas decorations which means I am very close to being in a good mood for an entire month so we're almost there we got some really fun football on Sunday too that that Vikings uh Bills game um I bet the Vikings money line because of the Josh Allen news on Monday and Sunday morning I was like well that was a waste of money and it wound up being uh very stressful but very fun um your Bears uh had Justin Fields play pretty well again and they lost to improve their draft pick so I feel like we bought gotta both be in a pretty good mood on this Monday yeah I mean you know I think the fact that they're losing these close games right is kind of a little bit where weary some you know you'd like to you'd like to see your team have a chance to close it out at the end but yes it's all about the draft picks for adjusting the fields if we can get a top 10 pick or better um that's really what it's about um and you know just try and get some get some momentum going into 2023. and you also negatively impact the Lions draft pick so hey it's uh it's a win-win uh for sure we're gonna break down this commanders at Eagles game on Monday night here in just one second but first a reminder to make sure you are subscribed to covering the spread wherever you get your podcast because we got podcasts every weekday right here in the same feed we've got uh this one we've got our week week 11 First Look coming up we've got Ed Feng doing some World Cup previews coming up on Tuesday and also uh Wednesday a fun guest on the covering the spread a college football podcast with Ed as well there uh we'll have our full preview of The Ride coming up Thursday and then our player prep breakdown with the JJ zachariation Friday all those right here are they covering the spread podcast feed and up on the FanDuel YouTube page as well now is the perfect time to download FanDuel America's number one sports book because right now new customers getting no sweat first met up to one thousand dollars that's read That's back if your first bet doesn't win try out features like sand game parlays play your weight and bet on more than just the final score wager on everything from touchdowns to total yards to catches on an app that saves secure super easy to use so sign up today and for your no sweat first bet make every moment more of this season with FanDuel official Sportsbook partner of the NFL must be 21 plus and in present in select States first online real money wager only refund issued is non-withdrawable free bets that expire in 14 days restrictions apply see terms at sportsbook.fandual.com gambling problem call 1-800 Gambler or visit fanduel.com RG and Arizona 1-800 next step or text next step to 53342 in Connecticut 1-88-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org chat in Indiana 1-8009 with it in Wyoming and Kansas 1-800-522-4700 in Kansas gamblinghelp.com in Louisiana 1-877-770 stop in New York one eight seven seven eight open wire text open why in Tennessee call the red line at 1-800-889-9789 let's just our Focus now to this commanders at Eagles game for Monday night before we talk about the traditional markets here Ryan what's your overall view of this rematch here between the commanders and the Eagles yeah so I I think for me it comes down to you know how far can the Eagles take this and how kind of legit they are right when we're talking about the brass of the NFC I mean they gotta they probably were watching football yesterday see what the Vikings can do as they're right on their tails there with only one loss um and you know this is a divisional game where you like can't let this one slip away your 10 Half Point favorites I think that number is pretty hefty I know we'll talk about the markets in general but like this is a game divisional game like heinecke he's only played one game in this matchup like in his career which I was kind of shocked about but like you know they only lost about four points in this game uh earlier this year when they played in January last season so we know he's a gamer um Washington has some pieces there I'm not sure about this that is the face young but you know I expect Washington to go out there and you know still try and play for something I mean they they've only got three wins on the season they're definitely in the mix to you know be playing for draft picks here but um this this is just one of those games for me where like you know we talked about the Eagles you know playing the Vikings earlier this year and like we'll see how legit they are and all these you know Dallas coming down we'll see what they are but to me it's about the Eagles now can you beat up on these teams that you're supposed to win against handedly and uh that's really what I'm looking for tonight I think beat up was the right word can they do that can they accelerate and just bury a team because they kind of did that the first time they faced the commanders um I was watching that game I'm playing I just have like these flashbacks of every time Carson Wentz drop back the Eagles defensive line was absolutely just lighting up the Washington offensive line it was honestly a pretty dominant showing and I'm curious how that changes the second time around because you know you can kind of better account for a better game plan for a pass rush you expect to be very good I'm just not sure if the commanders are good enough to nullify that complete so let's talk here about the traditional mark it's for this game Eagles are 10 and a half Point favorites total in this game comes in at 43 and a half when I look at my numbers I think so I have the Eagles money line in um earlier week in an early week parlay um that was tied at the Giants so that one's still alive that was when it was I think minus 460. it is now minus 590 so I've got nothing there uh 10 and a half is a pretty big number so despite the fact I've got them at 11.62 I can't land ten and a half because of the key number at 10 there so right now with where things stand I feel like I've kind of been priced out of the eagles which is unfortunate but what about you what are you seeing in this game uh from a traditional markets perspective yeah I think uh I was just actually pulling up just to make sure I had the line correct here as we look at the over under in this game I feel like we could you know really see two teams kind of slot I get out we got the over at 43 and a half right now on the FanDuel sports but I would you know that that's a tough one you know you're really kind of looking at going past that number there but I'm an island game I'd be willing to say that you know these teams you know they play it 100 times it's it's probably going to hit the under um over 50 percent so I'm looking I'm looking at that I mean you talked about like the eagles being healthy healthy or um we'll see what the Washington side of things again is is like on on defense especially uh but they the Eagles just had their way with this team um so you know maybe some drives us all out um the Eagles defense is is very Stout um so they can make you know heinecke's life a little bit miserable looking at you know traditionally taking the under 43 and a half in a game like this um the spread like I said it's just too it's just too big um for me to to get on that line I mean at 11 yeah um it got up to and now ten and a half it's just it just feels weird you know and I'd be willing I'd definitely be willing to take the Washington side if we get any type of status on Chase Young's um ability to be playing in tonight's game because I think that really would help the Washington defense out um to help give them some uh shorter shorter drives on the field that's the biggest bummer about these these Island games is that the the activation rules are different um so like let's say it's a Sunday game you have to activate guys from IR Saturday at 4 P.M that's when you have to activate them or bring them to their practice squad for a Monday night game I believe it's like four o'clock which is super annoying four o'clock day of like right I deal with it like they don't want to compete with like the games going on on Sunday but like it means we're not gonna go chase young until 4 00 p.m Eastern today um it sounds like he's probably not gonna go based on what I I've read but he actually is a legitimate Difference Maker so I understand uh your hesitation there the the scheduling though is super annoying with these uh games also trying to like game plan around like single game DFS lights it's it's a nightmare trying to figure out who will be called up and stuff like that let's talk about this Eagle side of here as you mentioned they are pretty healthy right now uh but the problem is we've seen them Coast when they've gotten leads and we've seen that because they've gotten a lot of leads they've been able to Coast quite a bit this year but it's been a bit annoying because they're not full foot on the gas at all times which to me makes it tough to really get enthusiastic about betting props on their side unless it's an under where I feel like maybe that guy won't be involved earlier than they they Coast later on so I've not seen a whole lot right now what's the rate on the eagle side of this game yeah I think I think there's some fun to be had um when you're looking at the prop Market we can start it off with uh with Jalen hurts there I was looking at his Russian prop um for a while and now I'm surprised they had it up it's 42 and a half um I really like that number if we were going to get Chase young playing because just the pressure and the way that the Washington defense plays I thought he'd be you know running out there but it is you know playing in the home crowd and they still you know have a tendency to do what they do um try and get pressure on the quarterback um so I do like that yeah I'm not really on like the eagles backfield they're just you know this could end up being a Kenneth gainwell game and you know everybody would be talking about miles Sanders type of thing because they're so heavily favored um it's just it's just one of those things I stay away from um I am interested in the in the past Sketchers though um for the Eagles across the board I mean and AJ Brown has you know been lighting it up for this team he's 70 and a half over receiving yards I mean he can hit that on two play is right I'm not sure if I'm willing to take the over on that but when you look at Devonta Smith being at 52 and a half I was actually surprised by that and it's possibly because the books haven't seen him you know kind of not get it going as of late but when we looked at this first matchup I mean Devonte Smith against America coverage against this team this guy went for 160 like with ease um it was it was it was nothing um so that that line felt a little bit low for me knowing how they play and then Dallas Goddard especially um at his line where he comes in at 45 and a half this guy's traditionally um at least with Jalen hurts being the quarterback has you know Gone Bananas against this team um and the coverage that they play so and he's been leaned on the past couple of weeks as well so I love that and then with quez Watkins I was looking to see if we had a longest reception for him it's not listed on the market there but his receiving prop is 11 and a half and like I'm willing to kind of take that bet because you know especially when things kind of get dicey like especially like the way I'm seeing this game go under if the Eagles are looking for big plays this guy is on the field I'm not really sure I don't want to misspeak I don't know what his Aid out is but just from the eye test with the Eagles being on so many Prime Time games and things like that this year so far he's been involved in and when they want to take a deep targets so 11 and a half like this is just a low number for him when he's going out there and can catch a bomb over 20 plus yards um in general yeah his 8 out 10.4 yards so he's getting a lot of downfield Works last year was uh last year was 12. uh so in general that is kind of his role is You're Gonna Go downfield effectively I did want to ask you about the the Dallas Goddard and Devonte Smith ones any interest for you in alternate markets there the because goddard's actually had a lot of receiving yardage upside this year which is surprising for a tight end he's plus 114 to get 50 plus yards yeah I I think that's like if I had to pick between the past catchers I would go God's Direction I know that the question is would I go towards the alternate Market oh or go to go towards the strict over under would Goddard be your favorite one there do you like Smith more which one if you had to pick one would be your favorite and you go into alternate Sergeant they are just the the Baseline one yeah I think well really it comes down to those two right because I think we I don't know if we've really seen a game where aj Brown has struggled and Dallas Goddard and Devonta Smith have done all of the work and I don't know that this Washington defense is good enough to just you know take AJ Brown out of the scenario so then you're looking at the second mouth to feed right is it going to be God or is it going to be Devonta Smith um and you know I feel like people would lean Devonta Smith because of the previous matchup but Dallas got her like I said historically against this Washington team like this guy has put up 60 139 um 70. so yeah when you're looking at the alternate Market when you're getting it uh plus 50 or 50 yards plus he's already at plus money plus 114. if you go 60 yards you're getting plus 170 uh or 182 plus 182 so I think that's interesting um to kind of dabble in that market there um with this team you know we talk about concentrated offenses and it's really hard to think of the Eagles because they utilize you know all these different pieces but really it comes down to that three-headed monster of AJ Brown Devonta Smith and Dallas Goddard um I've you know four quarters yet got her to 60 70 yards I'd be willing to take a bet on that two to one yeah I think that uh The Goddard one if you look at like number Fires projections he's at 66.06 receiving yards which seems kind of high I think the projection might be kind of high but if you plug that into um I talked on Friday about the the bed scope distribution calculator you plug in a projection and it shows you the odds that get different thresholds you put that number fire projection into the BET scope distribution calculator got her to get to uh over 50 receiving yards should be minus 166 so getting that at plus money is interesting I think the projection might be a little bit high so I'd probably manually lower that a bit personally to somewhere probably closer to 55 or so but I think that overall the thought process of God are potentially being undervalued is something that I would agree with uh there for that one let's flip over and talk about Washington because uh there will be no JD mckissick here for this game second straight game without him Johan Dotson's back though um he re-aggravated his hamstring injury but it seems like he'll be good to go here so when you look at the Washington side any prop standing up to you there yeah I'm I I want to pick your brain on on the the running backs um for this team but I mean Terry McLaurin his over receiving prop is 49 and a half um we know that that heinecke or he just loves to Pepper this guy with targets like even with Jahan being back um Curtis Daniel being in the mix like I'm just trusting uh Terry McLaurin to go out there I mean now the secondary is good for the Eagles but he's also had some success in the past and has played with heinecke Alex Smith Carson Wentz in these basketball matchups so it really doesn't matter who the quarterback is back there um when we're talking about the anytime touchdown Market um and this is kind of where I want to pick your brain like Brian Robinson at plus 230. um it is one that I'd be willing to take a shot on I mean he's still been out carrying Antonio Gibson um for whatever that's worth and without mckissick I expect or I would predict Antonio Gibson to be more involved on passing downs and let Brian Robinson get going but he struggled he struggled mightily the past couple of weeks so I'm not sure if there's a change of guard there I mean Antonio Gibson was supposed to be the returner is what Ron Rivera told us like to start this season we wouldn't even think about him being in the mix at this point but Brian Robinson's story is just kind of so crazy um and I'm wondering you know this is me trying to think of the narratives and I'll be real quick with this I'd love to think outside the box with things you know me um everything that was kind of surrounding Washington right like in the news around Brian Robinson and what was going on with the I believe the Attorney General there in Washington and just how the the shot uh him getting shot was made public and taken about with everything going on politically like is this a chance for them to kind of like entrust in Brian Robinson give him the carries and give him you know that momentum to say that the team's around him so I feel like they owe it to him at this point like if they're gonna like use him as a way as like a crutch to get out of this thing like they should as like a oh we're sorry we did that to you kind of thing right like it was pretty pretty irreprehensible they were doing that so maybe extend a little fig Leaf you know like hey well sorry bud um our organization sucks he was they were so excited about him and everything about the preseason was just like this is our guy like they invested a high draft pick and getting him in there so you know trying to maybe write that ship with him um but you know on Monday Night Football with everybody watching could be something to monitor so I'm one that's related to that um my initial like thought process when I was thinking about this game was okay I want to look at um Antonio Gibson receiving props and I looked at his yardage number it was 23 and a half but it's the the over is -128 that's a lot of confidence in a in a volatile market so I'm not quite willing to get there it's like okay I'll look at his rushing plus receiving number and in the process I saw that a Gibson's rushing prop was 33 and a half that seems really high because of the Robinson involved in early Downs you think about this there are two paths to an under for Gibson at 33 and a half the first one is you know he's just not involved and I think that's as a rusher I should say as a receiver he will be involved I can almost guarantee that the other path is the Eagles defensive line just torches the offensive line again they can't get anything going on the ground and I think that's a very real possibility as well um Eagles Rush defense is not great however they are 10 and a half Point favorites um it's going to be a split backfield I think that kind of playing off what you were saying I think if I were looking at this game the place I'd want to go would be the Gibson under rushing yards at 33 and a half I think that's just a little bit too high with the way they've been using these two guys specifically using mckissick or sorry uh Gibson as a pass catcher and Robinson as kind of the early down Bruiser type guy yeah no that's yeah I I can get behind that absolutely for sure I mean Gibson's benefit he he's got a place in my heart for you know playing BFS um you know a couple times in him helping me out uh but uh yeah it's been it's been a rough go for him I mean you just look at that guy and it it's probably time for a change of scenery um almost like just let him move on to to another team and and be able to Blossom elsewhere but uh but yeah I like the under rushing yards for him as well too because I I do think that you know with Brian Robinson Leading The Way with carries the past couple of weeks if he can you know get any type of juice going they'll just ride the hot hand yeah um I also have a soft spot for him yet I think it was Thanksgiving he had like three touchdowns against the Cowboys um I remember that one fondly yeah good for him he'll always have a soft spot in my heart but we'll take the under tonight and uh see what happens there okay you mentioned the Robinson touchdown prop that's plus 230. is that one where you're willing to bet or anyone else any others or you're seeing that you like for tonight yeah of course I'll definitely be willing to to back up put my money where my mouth is on Brian Robinson at plus 230 I also think Dallas got her um at plus 200 um is is a pretty fair number um when you're looking at all things considered and then Jalen hurts just any time that we get plus money um on a Russian quarterback of that magnitude to you know score one um I'm always going to be willing to take that plus 100 like why why not um when they get into the Red Zone uh we know that he's at to kind of take it off and run especially if they're on the one yard line I'll just keep you sneak it there um so really really that's what I'm liking um for this team ques Watkins is interesting just because of his deep threat you're looking at plus 850 for him to score um I think he just scored one last week if I'm not mistaken I mean he's been utilized um a lot when you're talking about the pass catchers outside the top three that we mentioned so um plus 850 that's a nice number to to get on somebody um who's seeing the field as much as he is yeah I think that is intriguing for sure just because he'll be out there so that's you're always going to give yourself a shot by playing snaps the one that I thought about ultimately will not wind up firing on is Jahan Dodson he's plus 490 and we've seen him when he's been healthy being like this touchdown threat he was at a Penn State he was at uh before his injury seems like he's healthy the reason I couldn't talk myself into it is kind of what you discussed at the beginning with the under at 43 and a half I think this game probably winds up being low scoring so and my numbers think that one of these teams is justifiably a 10 and a half Point favorite so so I think there's a path to Washington just not doing a whole lot so even though I I was intrigued by that the overall fear of Washington just dropping a dud prevented me from getting dots net plus 490 um so that was that was my kind of hang up was I agree with you where I think we could see a few points here so to me the touchdown Market wound up uh being less fruitful than I thought it might be I thought I'd be looking at Dodson maybe maybe Gibson looking at the because of the passing stuff but I couldn't quite get to either just because I think this game could be kind of gross yeah and this doesn't really factor in for me at all just a straight up question because I don't think this is the first game that Johan dachshund is playing without Carson Wentz this is the first time yeah okay yeah so I would have to look at see like if there's any numbers for them like preseason related or anything like that um but yeah I was I was hoping that we'd get over five to one I'm honest touchdown I mean I think he's just an awesome player um so definitely you know getting him back healthy is just awesome to see um but yeah interested in that uh Taylor heinecke also alternate passing yards like over plus over 220 is plus money yeah I mean I'm just gonna take that because I think that it's going to be a long long day for them yeah I'm looking up 225 passing yards for him at plus 114 250 is two to one um and we know he has the propensity of the throw the rock so I'm willing to get in on that market he's a d gaffer too which is two your benefit in this market where he'll just Chuck and pray and it doesn't always do what it's supposed to because it's got kind of a noodle arm but like hey I mean negative game script gonna be playing from behind probably not gonna be able to run super well I don't mind that at all so uh hi Nikki uh over 220 he said plus 114 on that one plus yeah plus 114 now 225. okay perfect well we'll check out that one as well there has been some money coming in on the Commander's money line while we were talking apparently because that uh Eagles money line is down to minus 550 not again not quite enough where I bet it where it's currently at but did take that one earlier on in the week so we'll see how things play out here and we'll see if we can nail some props to close out the week but that is all that we have here for today for this commanders at Eagles preview as mentioned I'll be back with you once again tomorrow to break down my first thoughts on the week 11 spreads and also talk to Ed Fang about some some matches in the World Cup because we are not too far down the road from that we'll talk about some actual individual matches are you World Cup guy Ryan or no uh I I'm not a soccer guy and I don't claim to be but the World Cup is fun um you know I I like I like getting around the things that happen you know every so often every Bloom yeah kind of thing um where people can rally behind you know their specific teams and everything like that so I watch for just the enjoyment of that I do not pretend to act like I know what's going on or what's happening um but it always makes it fun to uh to see those teams compete for sure yeah I know nothing um it's like my one excuse to be like quasi-patriotic you know for the us for a little bit so it's easier for the women's team but like uh we can do it for the men's team this year as well so we'll see how that goes let's talk about that uh on tomorrow's show to get that make sure you are subscribed to covering the spread wherever you get your podcast and also check out the FanDuel YouTube page where the these are posted as well Ryan uh appreciates you as always good luck to you tonight and we'll talk to you once again Thursday for our full week 11 preview appreciate you Jim thanks to everybody who's listening we'll catch you guys next time alrighty check out Ryan on Twitter at ryanalexander underscore W I am on Twitter jimsonus j-i-m-s-a-n-n-e-s good luck to all of you tonight we'll talk to you once again tomorrow to break down week 11 and talk some World Cup this has been covering the spread right here on the FanDuel podcast Network [Music]
FanDuel
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2022-11-14
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BOWhvngUWZE
How to Enter BIOS or UEFI in a Computer or Laptop and Boot from a Flash Drive or a CD, DVD 💽🛠️💻
Hello everybody! This video will show you how to enter BIOS or UEFI in a computer or laptop, and how to make them boot from a flash drive or a CD/DVD. BIOS is a set of microcode that allows you to adjust items of your system unit, as well as set the boot sequence from CD/DVD or a flash drive in order to install an operating system. UEFI is a modern version of BIOS that has a graphic interface. To get into BIOS or UEFI, restart your PC. Right after starting the computer you will see a window showing the key sequence to enter the BIOS (in my case, it says "Press Del to enter Setup", where Delete is the button to press). It may be different for various PC or BIOS manufacturers (for example, instead of Delete it can be F12, F10, F2, Esc and other buttons). Read more about it in the description of this video. I’d like to note that some Bluetooth keyboards may not work with BIOS, so it is better to use an ordinary USB keyboard. There are three main types of BIOS: Award (Phoenix-Award), AMI (American Megatrends) and UEFI. Let’s study each of them. Award (Phoenix-Award) BIOS looks like this. There are quite many versions of this BIOS, and yours can be a little different, but the following steps will be similar. In order to boot from a flash drive or disk, go to "Advanced BIOS Features" (there is no mouse support in this kind of BIOS, so you need to use Up and Down arrows to select a section, and "Enter" and "Esc" keys to enter or exit a section). In the next window, look for "Hard Disk Boot Priority" and "First Boot Device". If you want to boot from CD/DVD, then change the "First Boot Device" selection to CD-ROM. If you want to boot from a flash drive, go to the same section "Advanced BIOS Features" as before, but change the selection in "First Boot Device” to "Hard Disk". After that, go to "Hard Disk Boot Priority" and select the USB flash drive to be the first item. Now you should save changes to BIOS. At the bottom of the screen you can see a hint about the saving button (in my case it is F10). Press this key and here comes a warning. To save changes, press “Y” and then “Enter.” Modern versions of BIOS Award (Phoenix-Award) look like this. Things are a bit different here. Pressing the Right Arrow key, go to “Boot” tab. If you want to boot from a CD/DVD, then use Up and Down arrows to highlight the line “CD-ROM Drive” and then press the key "+" to move it to the first position. After that, save changes by pressing F10, highlight “Yes” and press “Enter.” If you want to boot from a flash drive, use the key “+” to move the line "Removable Devices” to the first position, highlight it, press “Enter” and select the flash drive from the list. After that, save changes as in the case with a CD/DVD. AMI (American Megatrends) BIOS looks like this. As you can see, it looks very much like a modern Award BIOS. Pressing the Right or Left Arrow key, go to “Boot” tab. If you want to boot from a CD/DVD, use “Enter” to go to the section "Boot Device Priority", and then to “1-st Boot Device". From the list of devices, select CD-ROM and save changes with the F10 key (just as you did in the previous BIOS). If you want to boot from a flash drive, select hard disk in the tab "1-st Boot Device”, go back to the previous window by pressing the key "ESC", go to the section "Hard Disk Drives" and select the flash drive in the tab "1-st Drive". After that save changes with F10 key. Here is another example of AMI BIOS. Go to the tab "Storage" and choose "Boot Order". Move the necessary device (CD/DVD ROM or USB flash drive) to the first position. To do it, select the device, press “Enter” and move it with Up and Down arrows. After that save changes with F10, go to the File section, press "Save Changes and exit” and confirm the operation. UEFI BIOS has a lot of variations. The first example is UEFI – GIGABYTE. Using the mouse or arrow keys, go to the BIOS Settings tab. In the section “Boot Device #1" select the necessary device you want to boot from - a DVD-ROM or a flash drive (USB Hard Drive). Then go to the section “Save and Exit,” press “Save and Leave Settings” and confirm this step by clicking “Yes.” Another example is Dell Business UEFI BIOS Setup. It is also very simple. Go to the tab "General” and then to "Boot Sequence". Check the boxes next to the devices you need, and then go to the right window to move the USB drive or CD/DVD ROM to the first position with Up and Down arrows. After that, click "Apply" and then "Exit". After booting from the device, you will have to go to BIOS or UEFI again and change its settings back to booting from the hard disk to prevent booting from flash drive every time you start your computer. You can also use Boot Menu to boot from a flash drive or CD-DVD. I will show how to do it in one of my next videos. If you liked this video, click the Like button below and subscribe to our channel to see more. We’ll be glad to answer any questions in comments. Thank you for watching and good luck!
Hetman Software: Data Recovery for Windows
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2017-03-20
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FUYBXWRLGs
Weaponizing Toxins (Likable Science)
[Music] think tech away civil engagement lives here [Music] [Applause] [Music] okay the two o'clock block on Friday usually we call this likable science today we're going to call it thoroughly dislike of a science at seasonality is CJ he's he's a real host but we're doing a cute nan who the real host and today we're going to talk about something completely unlikable dislikeable toxins weaponizing toxins it came to my attention this week how much is going on well in weaponizing toxins in the world so today we want to study that and talk about the actions of how it works you know biochemically and talk about how people make them and issues of safety and self-protection and how you deal with them either on the battlefield or in the water supply okay Wow so Ethan as in so many of the things you are an expert in biotoxins and we want to ask you about it so the first the first thing is let's define our terms what is a toxin a biotoxin how does it come into being and what does it do to people so toxins are substances that are produced by organisms that's a real key distinguishing thing they're they're not artificial chemicals or chemicals you've extracted just from the environment they're substance produced by organisms that other organisms basically the harm other organism usually mike chemically reacting you don't do it synthetically not allowed to be by an organism right if you bacteria or a virus or a fun fungus or an animal oh yeah some you know or or a snail or a lot of snails and snailed yeah play outs can have toxins right any living thing if it if it's not living and produce it it's not a toxin maybe a poison which has basically the same impacts but it's not a toxin technically it's a toxic and they work all so how am i exposed to a toxin well that can be through any of a number of different ways toxins if they are injected into you by their animal hosts are called Venom's typically snakebite is a classic example bee stings are a classic example the bee is injecting a substance it's produced in to you and that substance is causing your tissues to react rather badly usually a beast and it's not too bad right it's just a little wealth of some sort but if you're allergic to these things it can be quite powerful active shock and if it be fatal yeah if it's something like a coral snake or a Cobra the toxins that's injecting are heavy-duty neurotoxins they affect your nervous system and stop your nervous system from working and pretty soon you can't breathe and when you can't breathe you can't live when you can't breathe you got three minutes left town okay so they can operate in different ways but it sounds like the most lethal of them is the kind of toxin that stops it's a neurotoxin it stops you from breathing those are certainly a very very deadly class of them because we rely on a nervous system so much yeah others can be there are others those necrotizing toxins that just are sort of chewing away at whatever cells they end up on causing the cells start leaking out their contents and dying off that would be the rattlesnake toxin those are some the brown recluse is a classic example little spider bites you you first get a little well but well this doesn't heal instead gradually your skin just starts deteriorating and sloughing off and goes deeper and your your underlying tissues begin to die off and the muscles up beneath it begin to die off and yeah and your all your tissue just begin to just corrode away basically and it flows through the body it's not just limited to one site right and some of these some of these bacteria or viruses can be infectious so when they create a toxin in one person that's that can that can pass to another person by virtue of the ridge dating bacteria or virus and right exactly if it's if it's a living system that is a bacteria or virus or a fungus that's in you and replicating what it's not when poisoning you releasing its toxins into you but then you may be spreading it around giving your friends and families new colonies of these bacteria or viruses or fungi or whatever and start poisoning down the - yeah so yeah so there's really the whole thing about toxins at least as far as human beings are concerned it's a study in poison it's a study in lethal poisons right and a lot of these are lethal and you may think that a certain introduction of a certain toxin you know you can you can deal with that you can shut it off but but some sometimes it's pretty clearly gonna be lethal and you cannot escape yeah most them do have they've got what's called an ld50 a lethal dose 50 percent right that it is a tiny amount of it won't hurt you and a bigger amount will kill off half the population and I still figure amount will kill off anyone who gets it yeah indeed this is the whole principle they use toxins cosmetically the watch line is toxin in the classic example oh tox Botox right a little bit is okay very very tiring that that toxin is so nasty that literally a few micrograms I believe it will kill a person and so and they're giving it to you to get rid of your wrinkles that are giving you nanograms or Atta gram so that I mean they're giving you just really a few tiny molecules I mean it's really remarkably tiny doses it's hard it's hard to think that having the benefits of Botox justifies having the dangers of botulinum toxin you would think so but again the people who eat the pufferfish right to target toxin is incredibly toxic incredibly dangerous the chefs who prepare the puffer pufferfish after you carefully trained because they purposely leave just a little bit of the tissue that has this toxin on the meat that you cook and then eat because it gives the funny mouthfeel to it and all that and they it worth it I don't care just in training picture like this away yeah nice slips a little bit well you know but when our show today is you know it assumes I mean it's where it wraps around the notion that these these toxins really don't enjoy all do any good for anybody they're they're they're they kill you yeah I mean they're men biological organisms are producing it for one of the reasons they're either defending themselves against potential threats or they're going after other organisms to try to yeah it's not these other organisms they're super voices yeah and so of course naturally you know men kind humankind is imperfecta below their for there are those among us who will take these toxins and all these biological processes and weaponize them yeah so can you talk about that sure so I mean there's a classic example back in the 1980s in in Oregon the the Rajneesh II followers about one she Rajneesh decided they wanted to win in the local election in their County basically and they had their own candidate up with a new wouldn't win basically so they went and put some toxins in the water systems and sprayed it on much of lettuce and distribute all the food stores they spread it on doorknobs they did everything they second 700-800 people you know they they thought they can keep a voting population down and win the election this way and I think drove him to try to flee the country you results in the clock and charlatans is serving jail time somewhere but I mean yeah people tried to use them on math scales like that well yeah there's true there's two levels of it one we should talk about Kim jong-un and how he killed his brother right and my understanding of that is that like like the glue epoxy glue you have two elements right and either one of them is kind of inert but if you put them together they form a very strong bond it's the same thing with some of these toxins you you have a one element and the second element neither one of them as dangerous as soon as you put it together they're they're fatal yeah and what he did was he had one woman go to the brother and stroke his face with her hands you know hold his cheeks I guess and she put on element number one which was okay and the second woman comes around and her hands were coated with the act of active activating agent she put his head her hands on his face now the two were together okay and and he died and he had he had neurotoxins in his body couldn't breathe and he died I don't know which one it was but that was pretty dramatic and very high-tech for that area you got to give him credit if they knew that much and by the way the asterisk of the story is that the second woman by touching the the the face of the individual yeah she had both kinds of toxins on her hands okay and she her job was to get into a bathroom really quick and wash our hands but she wasn't quick enough and she also got sick no they're very fast-acting often that biological mixing of things is actually common in the bombardier beetles that produce these Jets of explosive caustic chemicals do that they have two chemicals that by themselves are perfectly fine and they essentially sport glands mix them in a little chamber em at this explosive cloud of acrid toxic stuff you know poisoning has been going on since Romeo and Juliet before what they used for I guess it was just a it was a plan it was in that culture and that's that's directed at an individual was a singing person like like what the Russians did to that the spy were and his wife and in the UK it was with some advanced kind of poison like this but that's just targeted at one person new people now we have the notion of weaponizing that changes it as you mentioned you could do 700 people in a shot and if you give the right thing in the water supply for a city which is you know an intensely populated you're going to be able to reach a lot more than 700 people and if you use the right mixture in the water system everybody drinks that water you could you could kill the city in theory most big cities are pretty careful these days about they work for a lot of different things and their water or if they understand they look for look for they look for things oh yeah I don't know if they are aware that people may do this I hope so no so I mean if you want to weaponize things you have to figure out how to reach a large number of people you know either in a city in a civilian setting or in the battlefield because it really works well in the battlefields everybody can't breathe and then you have to deploy all right that weapon somehow through the water or the air or maybe an infectious disease the same effect yeah I mean basically these days producing a sort of a biological toxin it's really child's play more or less anyone can do it in a garden shed for a couple thousand bucks I'll be cranked out is anthrax wonderful about modern technology but then getting into the right format storing it well getting it dispersed where you want it when you want that having to stay only there and not blow back on yourself and your friends that's much trickier part lots of stuff to keep it some some things you do many of these biological men so you don't have to freeze it but they may not be very stable I may have a shelf life yeah oh yeah yeah so it's it's the weapon on weaponization is really the much harder step that actually producing the toxin you know well it is this something that a terrorist would try because justice stands that argument has been as you said it could blow back on you right so you think you know you got to kill somebody else who I'm killing yourself or you wind up killing the whole world including you so it may have people that attractive and in terms of a way to go maybe there are other better ways to find it dirty but but what about that I mean is that still a disincentive or for people who are capable for example of doing suicide bombing sure they don't care why don't they do it well I mean so again anthrax is a good example because anthrax score it's quite deadly if you're doing an inhalation dust form spores can be up to 90% in untreated individuals now you can treat people for us and reasonably effectively but you can also sort of pre protect yourself with a other chemicals antibiotics treatment you can get ready so that even if it blows back on you if you've given this treatment to yourself and your friends you're good you guys are going to be ok and as we get more sophisticated biologically with technologies like CRISPR and I've talked about before yeah this kind of thing is going to become even trickier because they're gonna make more finely tuned toxins they're gonna make more highly effective antidotes so you can put out a nasty blast of compound that's really toxic to a lot of people quick pop yourself with all the antidotes and your friends with all the antidotes and now you guys are the only survivors and a big mess of dead people and what's interesting is that you really described two situations one is you can vaccinate them in advance you can take all the troops who are going to go on the battlefield in catchment boot camp right vaccinate them against you know known known risks like this or you can wait and or wait until they've been exposed on the battlefield and try to come then you can give them an antidote of some kind yeah so which one there's a different strokes for different folks different strokes for different kinds of toxins what is it yeah I mean it's a situational thing some of the protective treatments may themselves have bad side effects and so you you're reluctant to do it to a big group of people who you don't know we're going to be exposed right it's gonna hurt some of them maybe needlessly I'm a made debilitate some of your soldiers on the other hand far better a few get debilitated in boot camp than 90% of them die on the battlefield right so again and some of these things are quite rapid-acting and it's hard to track them once they've been exposed so if you believe that your soldiers are gonna go into an area where they're going to be exposed some of these toxins yeah you want to treat them before they ever get these toxins because prevention is better than you know yeah well when we come back from this break eat and we're gonna talk about how you test a remedy an antidote or vaccine how you test that it's pretty dangerous business and and if you want to try to find something that'll stop it you may have a problem on your hands oh yeah it would be right back oh there's so much more we'll be right back after this break he stay on the energy man here on think tech Hawaii and they won't let me do political commentary so I'm stuck doing energy stuff but I really like energy stuff so I'm gonna keep on doing it so join me every Friday on the stand the energy man at lunchtime at noon on my lunch hour we're going to talk about everything energy especially if at the ends of the word hydrogen we're gonna definitely be talking about it we'll talk about how we can make Hawaii cleaner how we can make the world a better place just basically save the planet even Miss America can't even talk about stuff like that anymore we got it nailed down here so we'll see you on Friday at noon withstand the energy man Aloha and aloha my name is Kelvin Griffin the host of Hawaii in uniform and every Friday at 11 o'clock Kieron think Tech Hawaii and we bring in the latest and what's happening within the military community and we also invite all your response to things that's happening here for those of you who haven't seen the program before again we invite your participation we're here to give information not disinformation and we always enjoy response from the public but join us here Hawaiian uniform Friday's 11 a.m. hero and think deca white Aloha well I guess you've been thinking over the best minute or so about exactly how they test antidotes and vaccines with such legal to lethal you know organisms and toxins so I guess you know the question is who volunteers for that and how can you how can you actually bring a volunteer force in without getting somebody dead yeah it's that certainly it's one reason that probably not a lot of that formal testing has been done in a in a rigorous clinical setting because essentially it's completely unethical to expose people to a risk like that with no benefit to it and if you're the kind of person who's going to think about using these toxins in a warfare situation the odds are you're not too worried about the niceties of clinical trials and medical ethics and also your problems your unethical in the first place you're probably going to care much about research ethics finding people you don't predict you care for anyhow and shoot it over them and see what happens to them as your test case you know yeah but we care rest cares where it's still less time I looked anyway all right still yeah so I mean the thing you've tried to do is find something that's closely related as possible you would figure you know macaque monkeys might be one of the better bets of very closely related species to us likely anything that hurts them is probably gonna hurt us and vice versa but not humans yeah so the cases they can really be no clinical trials with humans on some of these things I don't think you could ever get anything past the medical review committee yeah but I suppose you could take you can take your antidote or vaccine in and you could try that on a human and see with that without having the toxin that introduced it to his body right and you can see whether that hurts yeah and you can try again micro doses of the toxin then again and see what kind of see do people who have been vaccinated against it do better and not suffer any ill effects yeah it's on these things yeah you're you're lying between a safe dose and a deadly dose is very very thin I mean are there other other you know ways to deal with it for example sometime after 9/11 people forget now but there was anthrax and I was being deployed by my envelopes to VIPs and anybody and they would open the envelope and be this white powder inside and there were a number of people who had envelopes with anthrax powder inside right which is a bacteria that causes a very serious toxin right that could be fatal yeah anthrax spores right yeah because they're very very light and so soon you've open the envelope you've put these things already into air and you're probably gonna start inhaling some and the inhalation repeatedly within racks something like 90% of the people who get a decent dose inhaled I unless they're treated pretty promptly I was really clever if not it didn't work really well I mean there were something like maybe a couple hundred people 75 people who were impacted but no guesses all recall no even really serious illnesses Oh find out who do I I never heard that yeah there was a spate of them weather investigations were getting too close to the source and the source stopped doing it because of this thing they were being watched or what who knows or is it something the average citizen can learn about this I mean about opening the mail for example I don't know if that's a the best way to deploy anthrax powder but what we learn from anything well I mean right would this person have been better off instead setting them up in air conditioning systems or mylar balloons over festivals having popped loose you know and the shower stuff down long on Beaver crowds if they really wanted to cause some chaos and disruption they were trying to target individuals obviously and and that's yeah again it's a difference between sort of that broad euthanizing for berlad military use or versus targeting people who you want to assassinate the to requires some sort of different strategies well you know we live at a time when things that were considered horrendous before seem to be less horrendous now maybe life is cheaper now I don't know what it is but don't you think that this could happen I mean in the past we've had you know lots of talk about germ warfare but originally called turf war biological warfare that was kind of a biotoxin warfare and not only that but you know attempts at this dis this disturbing discombobulating a city or a civilization surely agricultural bioterrorism where you've knock out the food supply that's that's actually been tried and practiced in some in some cases technique yeah get your enemies or wait for it yeah you learn how to do it manual I mean actually I think that information technology type of terrorism is the best of all but hey this other way would be very disruptive as well yeah you know so what are we doing about this you know I mean it could just you know you wouldn't research this you came up in a matter of minutes with a whole lot of material that I don't think the public knows about no there are whole groups of biological weapons experts people who study biological substances and the toxins and the delivery modes and try to keep on top of that charted they're in touch with latest so-called dual use research research may have very good applications to help us but could be diverted into very bad areas they they try I'm sure our security agencies try to track the materials are using that research very closely to see that everything is going to people who are doing legitimate research and not for disappearing into dark alleys where you don't know it's gonna be using or so now and I'm sure they're coming up with very clever ways to deal with it but our options for doing that kind of stuff are rapidly expanding with the new bluff that sort of biological technologies that are available now this CRISPR or you can talk about CRISPR yeah close out set genes in so you can begin to fine-tune some toxins maybe make them more lethal to some people and less lethal to other people similarly make an antidote that might be more effective so with CRISPR you're not gonna actually change the toxin itself oh that too you want to change the genes of the organism that's producing the stalks that's what I mean so change the bacteria right and change the host right you change you know the virus and now the resulting toxin can be stronger right it could be we're targeted right or the host organism is now tougher and survives longer or right or dumped sell more of it yeah I'm you know there's sort of different ways you can go here and there's so many these are expanding so rapidly that I I do feel that we're living in times when we are likely at some point to see some more biological attacks I don't think we've seen last of them at all I mean the Japanese cold a few years ago did Japanese subway sarin attack it botched that terribly and didn't even hurt a single person but like it shows you the future yeah again I can't believe more people aren't gonna be trying that it's it's so much short cheaper and simpler than doing something with an atomic weapon yeah right well but you can do it in your garage all right exactly I do an atomic weapon and you're yeah so okay so so we have we have CRISPR that maybe that's something you do garage tool I don't know we make it more powerful we make them more focused we make it easier to store to deploy we make every molecule of the toxin stronger and we make more of it well and maybe you know generally make it easier to deliver so you know question though is how far can you go with this for example can I say that I want this toxin only to make American people sick probably not that far but I mean so I was just reading something recently that they've developed a new way to encapsulate medicines now in this this to new form of crystallization coating that that's very resistant to degradation in the body so you inject these things and 96 hours later the stuff is still circulating through your body your blood just gradually one time these old capsules are popping open releasing this medicine in a nice time controlled fashion so you might be able to do that with a toxin usually would disintegrate and degrade within a matter of a few minutes or a few hours in a battlefield instead you make it long-lasting now anyone who steps that battlefield and gets it on their skin a day later a week later may get this thing so you know I mean the person really ugly potentials now for these to have change and strikes me also that you could have that same kind of epoxy process happening where you could introduce one kind of one element of the toxin right and it's just it's not doing anything it doesn't make you sick and then when you're ready and so he you're setting up the Vic right now then you introduce the other one right some other easier way fly over with your drone and Misty are do with with component went to the drifts down and suddenly all your surface has become pucks and leading and the only the only person who is affected by this is the one who has received dose number one on the first element so your troops have not received dose number one yeah but they're not affected by ghost number two yeah boy that's dangerous business tricky game to play I mean you selling that British case there was a couple on short on the side who both got poison too and nobody quite knows how they probably touch something that the had the compounds on a tail huh so it's yeah that is that's the classic dilemma with how do you make stuff for enemies and not hurt yourself where's this going Ethan it strikes me that when you know when you've added crisper to their so the recipe here Christopher we don't even know the possibilities are crisper at the microbiological level we could create somebody in the garage could create some toxins that would be unimaginable and would be easier to handle and would a state actor wouldn't be so concerned about it blowing back on him right because he could control it because of these biological changes that CRISPR could make in it where are we going on this season you know I don't know I would like to think that the state actors are all of sufficient moral character like I say that they won't mess with us we do have a treaty 181 nations that have signed swearing names rights is a pretty against they won't develop they won't deploy they won't store this stuff they convention use it but there's no enforcement for that tree right there is no no inspection no enforcement of any sort but the non-state actors to me are the bigger danger now that the fanatical cell a group of people who really don't care too much and if you've got an antidote for it even if you've only got a few dozen doses that's enough to take care of you and your dear cell numbers right and there's little way for the assassination yeah you don't care getting a population yeah now a subset population can be reached by Chris Berg treated and toxin no well I I really enjoyed this unlikable scientists thoroughly just a so it's been least likable science I think we've had if you don't mind don't touch it [Music]
ThinkTech Hawaii
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2018-08-04
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFiMs28ezww
Remember when the mainstream media said, Donald Trump can't win?
he's not gonna be the nominee Chuck I mean as you know I'm ahead in Ohio so Jenny could he actually win no freakin way he will be tempted to run be predictably shellac do not tell me that Donald Trump is in this to win this okay he's a sideshow this is going to turn a three-ring circus into a freak show he's not running for president he's running for keep me famous I thought this was maybe some strategy for a new reality show how should Republicans handle Donald Trump ignore him and Donald Trump is not gonna be the nominee of this party well I don't think it's likely that Donald Trump will be the nominee well III do based on your theme believe that he's here to stay for a while maybe through a few primaries but he is not gonna be the nominee well I'm gonna support the Republican nominee and I'm comfortable it's not gonna be Donald Trump there's not going to be a president Donald Trump [Music] he's not gonna be present he is not Donald Trump is not gonna be President of the United States take it to the bank Oh Karen T all right all right I think if he becomes the president it may make it great it's the state's authority I think that man will be President states right about the time that spaceships come down there were dinosaurs in red capes and then of course there's Donald Trump Donald Trump has been saying that he will run for president as a Republican which is surprising since I just assumed he was running as a joke [Music] Donald Trump just last week he confirmed the National Review that he is again considering a run in 2016 do it now on behalf of this country which does not want you to be President but which badly wants you to run so when you stand and deliver that State of the Union address in no part of your mind or brain can you imagine Donald Trump standing up one day and delivering a State of the Union address well I can imagine it in a Saturday night's skip I continue to believe mr. Trump will not be present he will never be President of the United States and we'd better be ready for the fact that he may be leaving the Republican ticket next I know you don't believe that but I want to go on okay here we are and which Republican candidate has the best chance of winning the general election of the declared ones right now Donald Trump [Applause] and so right now mr. Trump to answer your call for political honesty I just want to say you're not going to be President all right but come on come on buddy oh let's say cow poo poo aside there is zero chance we'll be seeing you being sworn in on the capital steps with your hand on a giant golden Bible I'll make a prediction though for you I don't really get into predictions much but this one I'll go way out on a limb Donald Trump will never ever be President of the United States the Trump should not be in this race he's an absurdity he is a travesty Donald Trump will never be elected president United States Donald Trump is though here today going tomorrow Kennedy for President of the United States Donald Trump is not going to be President of the United States ever respectful the fact that the people have not voted he's not gonna be President of the United States let's be clear Donald Trump will lose the election we had a really good chance to be different and really have a chance to change things but he doesn't do the work he's lazy we talk about him every day and we continuously do you a wake-up call the Republican Party despite Boris thinking that Donald Trump could win New York like this the president's race is over it's just could I just cut through I have one thing to say one thing only and that is that this race is over tomorrow morning the money will dry up the Republicans will start to hide Trump has no place to go this race effectively as of tonight is no longer a presidential race I will get I mean everything I know about presidential politics and I've been through five of them I've never seen one like this this race is over you might as well accept it and the question now is how do you minimize damage and the only way you can do that and seems to me is to try to grab hold some old conservative value things and do what Mondale didn't 84 which is trying to save a few people down ballot but as far as I'm concerned it will never ever ever happen President Obama will go down as perhaps the worst president in the history of the United States exclamation point at real Donald Trump at real Donald Trump at least I will go down as a president our new NBC News SurveyMonkey poll is out today it puts Hillary Clinton up by 10 points over Donald Trump and this is not the first poll since the conventions to give Clinton a double-digit lead this is actually the fourth for polls that have Clinton up by more than 10 points or at least 10 points gained the kind of lead she has leapt out into into this race you could see other states that suddenly get crazy states who wouldn't have even imagined like a South Carolina even a Texas they could at least become competitive and what it would mean doesn't mean Hillary Clinton's gonna win all these it means we could have more competitive states than we ever imagined that's the way to lay the land right now at this low moment for Donald Trump we'll be back right after us that means no scenario that we could lay out to get Donald Trump to 270 like promote to something he would buy so we thought we'd get David in here to look at those scenarios that the Republicans are talking about citing them as a potential path to victory explain to us why they are not just implausible but impossible if you look at Wisconsin the Marquette poll came out yesterday she's up six points she's up four points in our polling in Pennsylvania if she keeps those together all she needs is New Hampshire and she puts the race away and she's oh look at fortune there's true fortune favors the bold its it'll be interesting tomorrow night I think when Hillary Clinton wins that Donald Trump will have lost this election from the very first day he announced if the numbers bear out what we're seeing thus far Hillary Clinton will win Florida and the delicious irony in this is that Donald Trump will have been kept from the White House by a big beautiful brown wall on CNN projects Donald Trump will carry the state of Florida Kentucky Indiana West Virginia Oklahoma Tennessee Mississippi South Carolina Alabama Kansas with its six electoral votes Nebraska with his five electoral votes and Wyoming with its three electoral vote North Dakota with its three electoral votes and South Dakota Texas Arkansas he has now taken the lead Donald Trump has a hundred twenty-eight electoral votes Louisiana this state of Montana Missouri Ohio he has 167 electoral votes compared to Hillary Clinton 109 Idaho North Carolina Georgia Iowa Utah Wisconsin Arizona of what we've secretly just take a moment here and look at this holster is predicted that Hillary Clinton was going to have not just a victory but that she was going to win some an electoral landslide not only is that not here it is entirely possible the Donald Trump is truly redrawing the map the way that he said he was going to it was Donald Trump versus almost all of the experts and as of right now it looks like Donald Trump was right Donald Trump has defeated sorry to keep you waiting complicated business this is not the outcome we wanted and I'm sorry in this election I love this country the shockwaves from Donald Trump's victory continued to be felt across America and around the world on the trumpet they're sinful to you because you don't elect Donald Trump everyone was wrong the backlash begins some magazines are facing big embarrassments today newsweek had already shipped out this cover madam secretary but quickly had to change it to this president Trump please raise your right hand and repeat after me i Donald John Trump do solemnly swear i Donald John Trump do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute that I will faithfully execute the office of President of the United States the office of President of the United States and will to the best of my ability and will to the best of my ability preserve protect and defend serve protect and defend the Constitution of the United States the Constitution of the United States so help me God so help me God [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] you
Ryan Novédo
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2019-03-08
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H64Bw6FvnMw
ESMARConf2022 Special Session 2: Review processes from A to Z (part 2) - Steph Zimsen
Hello, I'm Steph Zimsen. I'm a systematic  reviewer at the Institute for Health Metrics   and Evaluation in at University  of Washington in Seattle.   I'm here to talk to you today  about automating data cleaning   and documentation of systematic review extracted  data using an interactive R markdown notebook. My institute takes in data from a lot of different  kinds of sources to inform our modelling. We have   a very large set of coherent detailed models  covering many years, locations, diseases,   conditions, the global burden of disease project.  We've got other global scale health projects going   as well and do about 40 systematic reviews  a year. These take in peer-reviewed primary   scientific lit and fit them into our research  databases, so they can inform those models. A quirk of our institute is that  the extracted databases usually are   handed off to a different person from the  reviewer before analysis and modelling.   That lets data set clean-up fall through the  cracks and can get left off at the handoff.   So we've got a problem with that. The data  extracted by hand are inherently messy,   and patchy, and inconsistent. Uploading messy  data wastes computer infrastructure, analyst time,   reviewer effort in getting those rows that never  make it in. And if the data set ends up biased   or has incorrect numbers in it, that can lead  to unrealistic models. A systematic approach to   cleaning these checklists once we have decided  the extractor should clean it before handoff.   The next systematic step is to do checklists, but  that can be very tedious to go through in Excel.   Making the computers do the  checks saves some of that tedium,   and extra usefulness out of that  is that the code is reusable.   And one more step to make it even easier: An  R-markdown notebook allows even easier code-based   checks, an R-markdown notebook acts a lot like a  lab notebook where you can take notes and paste in   your experiment, or actually run your code, put  in figures, all those kinds of things, detail   it and print it out as a copy of what you did.  So you get the documentation out of it as well. I have a repo holding all of the code that I'm  presenting here today. And that will be available,   I'll post that again at the end. I want to  talk to you about the code in automating the   clean-up. So in the previous iteration, 'runs',  we had a script that launched functions with   a configurable set of inputs just in R, and  that works great. But it's a little fiddly   to get it configured. What I'm working on  now is this interactive notebook, and it   doesn't run yet. So to demo today, I'm going to  show you the example data set I came up with,   give you a live demo of the working code,  and then a narrative tour of the notebook. So my test data set, I won't  go into the details, but it's   got a lot of different kinds of fields in  all kinds of different areas. It's not a huge   extraction, but it would be tedious enough to  do this by hand. But we have an internal policy   to not share unpublished data, so I needed to  find an example data set to share with you.   Infectious Diseases Data Observatory to the  rescue! They're an institute at University of   Oxford in the UK. They have several published  data sets from systematic reviews. One of them   is 'Soil-transmitted helminths' such as hookworms.  That is like the data that, it's one of the causes   we extract in our neglected tropical diseases  team. And from what I can see, the data use   policy says I can use them this way. So there's  a script to download their data, prep a data set   similar to mine with it so that the test will  work fine, and I've got that script on the repo. So here is a glimpse at this example data set.  I'm selecting some fields that I will talk about   later. These ones are going into a unique  key in a minute, but it gives you an idea. The next step is to show you the working  code base using this example file. This code   came out of a final project for a class I took  last term at Health Metric Sciences here at UW   with fabulous collaborators Rose Bender and  Allie Eastus, stellar graduate students in   our department or institute. And there are  three files I'm going to talk about next.   The three files are here in my RStudio  document. I've got a README file,   we've got the save_report parent file,  and we've got a configurable file as well.   I'm showing a little bit of the check  functions as well, I won't get into those,   but they feed into this one. So the README shows  you what it's about and how it works, gives you   broad instructions on setting up the config script  that collects all of your inputs in one place,   and saves it as a set of arguments accessible to  the parent script. And the parent script runs them   and calls those child scripts over here. It saves  everything out as a report of what rows failed,   which tests with which columns. So we'll talk  about those in a moment. Here is the parent script   where users update two file paths.  Everything else is either the   function scripts, or the details from the  config file, or the data, the input data. And   the rest of it just runs. Here's the config  file. I've set it up already to match   today's demo, so I'm just going to run it. But  you start out defining the source directory   and the path to the input data,   path to the output root and directory, and  create a whole new directory out of that with   an internal folder dated with today so that you  don't get confused and get things stacking up   too much on top of each other. Here are the checks  themselves. These are the input's arguments to the   different checks. Checks for missingness,  a check for duplicates, a check for valid   values within a column, so the missingness check  checks individual columns to make sure there's no   hole in the data where you don't want one. The  duplicate check concatenates your input columns   together to make a unique key to say are there any  rows that have the exact same combination of this.   And the validation check is more complex.  It has a column name, a logical operator,   and logical conditions to be met,  so if we want the minimum age   to be less than 19 in this example. If it's  not less than 19, it will flag it for us.   So how far have we got. We got the  the output directory. Let's start   entering the criteria for the  validation checks. And then   this saves all of these inputs as an RDS file  elsewhere, which will be called again by the   parent file. Again the parent file has  directions. It says 'just update these two items'.   So there they are. And then we can run  all the other functions. So here we are   collecting a list of functions to run and sourcing  them. This is the call that gets them to actually   be a thing to be able to be called upon. Load some  packages. Here's where we import the arguments   from that RDS file that we saved out. Here's the  data table, sorry here's the input data. Loading   that up. There we are. We've got observations and  rows, columns, observation rows and field columns.   And that is everything. The rest of it is  just running what we've already asked for.   So here's the missingness check. One observation  with missing values in this column in this row. Here's the duplicate list. This is handy when  you've fixed everything. You're going to get   answers that say 'no duplicates found' or 'no  other errors found'. Finally, the last one.   Ten observations that don't  meet this last criteria.   And then we can save all this. We get out of this  a... it repeats it all over again... but we get a   print. And it tells us that our output  is saved. So we have documentation on   which rows need which fixes. Super, super useful! It's a little crude as you see from the output  there, but it is still going to be useful.   So that worked. Let's look at how far we've gotten  with turning that into an R-markdown notebook to   make it even easier. I've got a file name here  for you. I do have to give credit to people who   have helped me get this far. Not quite everything  i know is from Jenny Bryan, but the book to help   set up your R projects, and your R studio, and  your Git, and everything working nicely together.   Super useful, as is the code chunk options  from Yihui Xie and all their markdown help. Here is my R notebook, my R-markdown notebook, in  RStudio with the usual YAML. The output is set up   to be a notebook. It has a standard setup code  chunk, loads of packages at the top. And then   instead of a README, I've got that here in the  notebook of what the state is and what it does.   This is very similar to, it's just the reformatted  same thing as we just watched. I'm calling this   section a form to fill in instead. For each of  these sections, you've got narrative instructions   and a syntax-formatted example, including there's  what I just showed you in the old R setup. I've got some places for feedback, commented  out right now so I don't get error messages,   with instructions. Some of this has instructions  if there's nothing for you to do here. But   again, more feedback. Then I've got  the three checks for missingness,   duplicates, and valid values. And  each of these has an explanation,   an input section and an output to expect,   and then directions. Two directions for this one  because you want to define what's missing. You can   add to the previous stuff just by adding another  'or' in case you have say a numerical null. And this is still part of looking at  missingness, which columns to check,   again formatted blanks and formatted  examples. Here's the duplicates again.   This one more explanation inputs,  results, directions, formatted blank,   formatted examples, and the more complex  one for checking for valid values   with explanation inputs, results,  directions, formatted examples... We've got the end of the interactive part clearly  marked, but also here is some information for you:   'Find your report at here'. This part says  'still run the code chunks' but what the   cleaning steps are. So cleaning  steps automatically done.   This is still formatted. Just like the other one,  I will do some refactoring, but it still keeps   reminding people to run the code checks,  source the functions, run the functions,   write the report. Same thing. Easier for  a lot of people to read and manipulate. Let me go over again what I showed you. So if  you have a problem with no clean-up at all,   you've got fewer usable rows of data, you  have a waste time, among other things,   we don't need that. Checklist is a systematic  first approach. The configurable script takes   away a lot of the tedium and potential  for human error of just missing things,   that high-attention/low-intellectual-reward work  is really draining. Computers are great at it,   make them do it. So R-markdown notebook is easier  to use for a lot of hours as systematic reviewers,   including me to some extent, who are less code  proficient. Again we've only got so much of that   attention to spare. Let's save the cognitive  effort for doing systematic reviews. Because   it's easier, it may be likely to be adopted wider  across the institute, which would lead to a bigger   return on investment, more and faster systematic  reviews, fewer dropped rows, better data. And   of course you can automate those reports about  what the heck happened, how did you clean this.   Thanks for listening. It should be about 4:15 my  time in Seattle when you're watching this live, so   I will try to be around to answer text questions,  but I may not be and I'll get to them when I can.   And again, the code repo is here. Thank you for your time.
ESMARConf
UCZy7G3R6bk6AE6Vbfgc0Qhg
2022-02-22
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
2,064
13,557
2-DN35LSCE8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2-DN35LSCE8
The Best Offense Ever! Over 500 Yards Passing Xbox vs PS4 Pt.3 | Madden 17 Ultimate Team Gameplay
[Music] if you think that I'm a cck down your ass down I got Stu I never [Music] had you try to riing packs wasting money not getting anything in return visit bmu coins.com use promo code jmail for 10% off to get the god Squad you always wanted what's good YouTube it's your boy J fly aka Mr let's get it let's go Bringing y'all some Madden 17 on the PS4 and yall like jam man where you been with all the game plays I missed you three days like I said like I said here let me tell let me explain yall something like I said be sure to like comment subscribe if you new to the channel road to 100K still going on yada yada yada but like I obviously we got a new team we talk about that in a minute but I'm I'm running a new offense now Denver's offense Playbook I had to figure out how to run it all the reads all the different reads for y'all like I said I wouldn't run a new offense the old offense was lowkey getting born same thing same dots every game and I'm like ah it's time D them up a new way so we running Denver offense now and also the nickel Blitz scheme I just uploaded probably yesterday or two days ago I am running out on defense it's a very nasty scheme if people don't know if you know how to run it right but like I said it's a very nasty scheme so that's uh why I wasn't really been uploading have to figure out these new schemes had to lab them first or had to just you know what I'm saying no figure out what I'm doing like I said you cannot hop into a game with a brand new playbook and expect it to be successful but now we know what we doing in this new team I want to thank everybody who donated car to me on my stream like I said if you don't follow me on Twitch we get lit we get turned up I know a lot of yall watch this video y'all don't follow me on Twitch like that's honestly more exciting than the videos to me and the game play like we in there we turned up y'all interacting with me I talk to y'all y'all talk to me like I think we hit like 800 900 viewers the other day we only got a th we almost got a th but we didn't quite get there like I said link will be in the description turn on your notifications cuz I upload a video every time on YouTube when I go live on Twitch so have your notifications turned on and also just to thank y'all for this new team I got that's the offense and and everybody who donated to Me Like Somebody donated 1.7 mil so another person donated their whole team and now this prob be able to get this whole good God Squad like it's not really a god Squad it is though it is it is I'm going tell about little look we got Vic Beasley he get plus two finesse move to the whole team so boom pass for taken care of plus two block [ __ ] run shut down then we got David Emerson plus two man to everybody sha Lee cross man and linebackers anybody plus two man it's it's unlocked so that's the defense that's the offense and also just because y'all been giving so much y'all been supporting me so much commenting especially you with notification Squad y'all just been support me I'm doing a giveaway for Xbox it it's going to be for Xbox or Playstation we're going to be giving away 500,000 Ultimate Team Coins like I said I got 500,000 on Xbox and the PS4 so only thing you got to do is like comment and subscribe just like this video comment on the video and subscribe to my channel and then I go to a website and I basically cck I'm going to click on this video on the website and they're going to ask me to filter uh the the comments and then I'm going to filter by who like the video who's who's I'm going F my filter going to be like whoever like the video whoever uh subscribed to the channel that's what I'm going to filter they going to pick a random comment on this video comment anything it don't got to be oh J J can be it it can be anything just make sure you like comment and subscribe like I said I want to see one of y'all win and like I said Xbox or PS4 can win I got 500k on both systems but only one person will win so be sure to do that like I said we going to get into this game this the new team new offense new scheme new us new me you know so whatever but like I said I love this offense though like I said thanks to everybody who's donated to me I love y'all wouldn't be possible but TG stand off you know what time it is here we go J Jerry Rice 44 I wish you the best of luck but we going to send them heers at you o we you got a god s I'm not going to lie I mean so it should be no excuse for him but we got this new offense new defense and we win this game we in the Super Bowl we win this game we're in the Super Bowl but y'all know what the time new offense new defense let's get it and we starting off on defense so that's always nice that's always nice come here come I don't know if y'all can see it it's just me no sir that's why you get that plus two block [ __ ] that's not going to happen with us that's not going to happen with us you got to make a real read we go like like we getting stops but what the heck is going on come I'm trying to play hard flats and everything come on that's oh I tried to play the hard fls yo this is oh I was there for the I was see I'm bro I don't really know I can't really upload this game play I don't know I can't [ __ ] do anything bro come on come on that's not that's never the move inside Zone not going to win you this game sir I know you got the best cards in the game and we laging but you still are going to lose this game oh mommy you are I got to probably reset my PlayStation after this I don't know why it's doing that we going we going to Prevail we fights the fluke we fights the fluke bro we fight fluke 2017 bro like was that that that oh oh is that what that that how they told you to I can't speak you're a man Up 3D bro come on that's how they taught you to win games oh we missed a wide open do we got another one we got another one though we got a tutty we got a tutty we got a tutty coach 73 we fights the fluke I'll let you know we fights the fluke coach 73 let's get it hopefully this BR my gosh bro y'all heard me hit the freaking button okay we going to reattempt it bro y'all heard me literally hit the button and it still went bro now you now you did it right okay I think the lag rer went away they did that cuz I was going to show y'all bro you got to watch the middle of the field how do you make that read with your eyes shut though with his eyes shut bro why is this first and 10 on his 34 you going to have to make a read bro you going to have to make a read I'm telling you CU you going to have to make a read I'mma Force you man I'mma force your hand bro let's go we screaming though like I said this new defense going to eat this new defense is going to eat bro I tell people this they don't listen to me coach call me the ball even though this a laggy game we going to we fight fluke I'm telling y'all bro we fight the fluke all right come on new playbook new us guys new playbook new us I let people know this hopefully he's glitching us I think he is hopefully he's blitzing us I think he is and Tim Brown does hold on to it let's go that ultimate Legend Tim Brown ain't no joke he ain't nothing he ain't nothing to mess with Coach crazy come on come on Dion good sh Dion good [ __ ] Dion we got dots we go that rout that route is going to eat that Rob is going to eat coach don't try me don't try me we got DOD Chad your sinko don't try me we got dots over here 14 and three bro but you know how F how good it feels to finally show that like oh yes you're clearly better than this dude you know what I'm saying cuz the three four odd low key you can do that with the three4 eye but the three four ey can be like since I had linebackers out there a lot of people would just throw at my linebackers even if they was Crossman or cover like cuz it's a linebacker most likely the little 99 overall receivers will AG me you know what I'm saying but you can't now that we in nickle we got three cornerbacks out there yeah he a it's not the same bro and the heat is just a lot better bro bro I shift it and everything get out there get out there there you go there you go we going to hold on that you got two minutes to score you got two minutes to get down the field I I I you get had at come here I'm after you yes sir bro bro you can't just be thr blind read like that bro oh you threw it right there you go boy I going say he threw it right at you he threw right at but that is big beasy so I can't get mad like bro this lag is killing me though we going to fight we fight the flu but this lag is K killing me [Music] bro [Music] go go you got one of them catches I got one of them catches real take it the [Music] house we got dots I told y'all this Denver Playbook has dots 7 for1 I told y'all about the dots they listen but that's why only reason I hate mut because like it can make someone think they're I'm not going to say that it can make someone think they're better than what they really are like this dude got all 99s basically on his team and like I'm not catching these wide open passes got him my [ __ ] God I'm I got to run that back [Music] bro see what I'm saying bro I just had to let him know you see that that that that was a touchdown last play but like I said we still in this we still in this hopefully he's in his cover to invert again though expose him expose him come on come on I'm smarter than you yo I swear I've been blowing people out like once I got this new playbook in defense bro oh my Lord like literally it's been so hard for people to even score points on me bro oh and one other thing I want to give a shout out to Y Boy Pizza uh a lot lot of y'all was tweeting at me like yo he gave you a shout out on his last video and I just wanted to tell him thank you uh if he's watching this right now I know he's a busy dude like I said I just want to tell him thank you like he didn't have to do that I didn't even know he did it you know what I'm saying but like I said he did not have to do that whatsoever uh you know what I'm saying this kid blew up last year I just want to say thank you if you're watching this video I really appreciate that and I I I like I said I didn't ask for that he just did out the kindness of his heart and I want to say anybody who's here from his channel I appreciate y'all bro honestly from my heart that bro my dots we throw dots we throw do like I tell you we got to there's an answer for everything in this Playbook y'all it's beautiful this play this Playbook is beautiful man but I'm tell you I'm in love I'm me oh that might be that it might be time for him to go it might be time oh he he resuming it let's go let's get it oh he challenging I don't know am I EET is in too I don't know but we we going to fight it we fight some FL do that can I thank you we had a Dodge bro cuz and I hit the button and it's not throwing it because the stupid L bro Moss Miss yes BR they call it legal [Music] touching I'm sorry boom let's get it let's get it our defense back on the field though let's go let's go that defense out there eating defense out there screaming can't make no adjustment bro y'all see me look bro go give me that give me that give me that yo I cannot wait to reset my PlayStation I like I literally I know a lot of y'all like this game a that laggy I've been in worse but of course the game not laggy like I'm telling y'all bro I don't even know how to explain it I'm trying to figure out how like when you learn like when y'all start making adjustment fast a lot of y'all know what I'm talking about y'all start making them adjustments fast let's get it let's get it let's get it let's get it I'm not going to score yet I'm not going to score yet we want to drink some clock go and Roger let's get it we in there we in there like swimwear bro no no no no that's Shan T shant T is never going for that man he never going for that give me that thank you thank you shank you I said a shank you I told you we got dots I'll take that I'll take that I told you we got dots I told you we got dots 14 for 20 yo 398 yards two TDS talk to me take off he going to take off then he going to take off then with you that mighta be the end of that that's probably the end of the uh end of the first end of the third like I said dominating we we out here dominating pass oh my Lord Randy Moss Randy Moss all right we do [Music] know ooh we that was that was hot to me boy oh God D my controller down coach I told y'all about this Bronco Playbook let's go let's go let go let go this defense just it's scary this defense out here is scary coach like I said you make the right adjustments the RO is yours the RO is yours you make the right adjustments go we got dots we got dots bro this Playbook is sick let's go got another one we going to shot the clock on him though let go let's go oh I wanted that touchdown I wanted it want it I wanted it go let's get it 40 bomb we exposing Xbox versus PS4 I told y'all that three4 OD is good though you know what I'm saying three4 OD is all right oh no let's go let's get it let's get it man can't let him score he fighting for Pride at this point you're running he running for his life more we in there we in there I told you I got the Dodge yo we about to hit 500 yards pass on too bro okay possession catch boom there it is 52 yards and four touchdowns I told y this new offense is sick it's sick then see what else they got why did I throw that I tried to throw it to the drag but then the drag wasn't the drag was on the right but I thought it was on the left and he sent that Blitz and yeah oh we shot that Gap no let's go user strip let's go we don't give up touchdowns man come on I told y'all oh Frankie all right well that's going to be GG to my opponent like I said hope you enjoy this 41 and three this new offense I told yall this new offense and this new defense I got hope y'all looking forward to it I'm looking forward to like I said if y'all want to win that 500k just like comment and subscribe I will be picking a random with like I said I'm just going to go to the website I'm going click on this video it going to say filter comments by I'm F the comments by subscribe to the channel like the video and comments and then like I said Xbox or PS4 one of yall going to get it so make sure you subscribe and like the video but until then it's your boy jmail Flo aka Mr let's get it let's go
Jmellflo
UCO_mwnlHJtM0KQnX9q33Q2Q
2017-02-28
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
3,050
14,434
PK38uP8xIk0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PK38uP8xIk0
Rare off Centre Vise Restauration FAILED
[Music] [Applause] [Music] I learned an important that's today the natural acids totally either the pattern of the virus clamps it's really yeah shame but this as it is let's see if it still works as expected and also I need to fabricate newer new vice clients [Music] try to mount device clamp but is it the the threat is completely gone but in the next episode I'm gonna produce some yeah some new voice clamps I'm gonna use a good amount of the linseed oil to protect the guy around against some more rust you the restoration of this vise turned out exactly as expected it's a beautiful one I three did it with linseed oil the only thing I really really don't like were the vise clamps they were deteriorated by the natural vinegar the threats are gone I can't attest them to device so what I need to do is buy new ones or yeah design some myself I don't know how to do that but let's check it out it may be in the next video [Music] [Applause] [Music]
Zjakkoo Blacksmith - Smederij
UC8aC0P8lUChTlhuNo_LN_Zg
2019-05-05
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
183
955
VzTQ6uXOLaw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VzTQ6uXOLaw
Train Tales Larry Morton - Apple Valley Model RR
up at our train club we get a lot of groups come in to visit our model railroad and a lot of them are school groups and quite a few are home school groups and i gotta tell you something there's a difference there's a difference you bring in a group of home school kids i'm always impressed always impressed they seem to be for some reason more polite and they seem to really know what's going on in the world i give two talks about the saluda grade i've done them both here before i think the opening the grand opening of it i did a talk about the history of why why and how they built it and and the ramifications and so on and then about a year later i did a talk here about all the wrecks that occurred on the saluted grade because that's something you don't hear very much about i'm going to do two things i'm going to give you a tour of the actual grade through photographs because uh most of you i i venture to say almost all of you in this room have never actually walked to salute a grade or seen it you can parallel it by driving pearson falls road but you either have to look way up or way down and for the most part you can't see anything so i'll give you a little brief tour so you know what the saluda grade really looks like very similar to this diorama that we built for the for the depot here then i'm going to tell you how the railroad went about taking a train up the grade and down the grade because it was a it was a project to get a train especially uh up the grade and then i'm going to tell you about all the wrecks that occurred this is a map of the saluda grade this dotted line right here is the tracks okay so we're up in saluda right now we're at the top of the grade as you leave saluda it makes about a 90 degree turn and starts downhill the actual top of the grade is about where the street right here crosses the tracks so instantly you're going downhill now if you picture well freight trains back in in the late 1800s and around 1900 were not very long they're not like the trains you see today typical freight train might only be 20 or 25 cars today they're generally at least 100 to 150 cars but a train is literally draped over the crest of the hill when it's sitting here in town because these tracks go downhill this way toward lake summit so you're so part of your train is pulling back this way and the other part of the train is pulling that way as you crest the hill all the momentum shifts and it puts all that weight on the locomotive as it starts downhill and so the engineer really has to know how to control a train in hilly country it's much much more difficult and i'm talking about the days of steam locomotives a whole different animal with diesels but with steam locomotives the guy really had to know his stuff to handle up and down hills uh places like the loops up in old fort marion where you're constantly going up and down up and down you could have part of your train going uphill part of your train going downhill another part going uphill and another part going downhill all at the same time and these strains on the couplers and everything are hell the to deal with when you're driving a locomotive so just remember that when you think about a train leaving here and starting down the grade i want to point out some of the names in red there so that when i'm giving my talk you know where i'm talking about as you turn and go out of saluda you start downhill it's pretty much a straight run it kind of meanders a little bit but they're not really curves but when you get down here you've got a very sharp about 120 degree turn it's called sand cut this was actually a a hill across here and they had to cut into it for the train to go through that's where most of the wrecks occurred because they would lose control and they gained speed going down here and just like on a car if you're going too fast on a curve you're going to be thrown to the outside of the curve and crash if you didn't crash there this continued downhill and you crashed here at slaughter pen cut and i'll tell you how it got its name and you're probably familiar with melrose all these tracks are still down there that was the staging area for the trains going up and down the hill they had to stop and do some things to the trains before they negotiated the hill the saluda grade is three miles long exactly three miles long from here to the uh to the first turnout you encounter when you get into melrose it's a constant five percent grade the whole way and if you have trouble picturing what a five percent grade is in a standard passenger car and a train if two guys the same height were to stand at two ends of the car the guy at the low end would be looking at the belt buckle of the guy at the upper end so that's how much of a difference there is within the length of a passenger car that's a five percent grade when you get out here on i-26 you know you got that long grade there's a big sign there caution seven percent grade you see how that's how steep that is well this is slightly less than that and picture getting hundreds and hundreds of tons of train up and down a hill like that an automobile is not so much of a project you're talking about three or four thousand pounds okay as a matter of fact i was thinking about this on the way down a modern day coal hopper one loaded coal hopper weighs more than all the cars that brought you people here tonight combined one and they run hundred car coal trains these days uh back when that when all the wrecks occurred on the grade a typical train would have maybe a dozen to 15 cold hoppers on it but still a lot of weight so that was that was the problem the weight versus the steepness of the grade and the two sharp curves we pull out a town here and we start down the grade and you can see the track immediately starts to drop off it goes around a 90 degree bend and then the two tracks come together into a single track the rest of the way down the grade and this is sort of the way it meanders down towards sand cut that fell as a member of our club and he was with me the day that we took the pictures and walked the grade just before the curve and sand cut pearson falls road goes under the tracks comes out on the outside and the interesting thing about this is this is a stream here i believe it's called either joey's or joel's creek that goes under the road and comes out on the other side so you got a stream with a road crossing it with a train crossing it that's that's a unusual feature you're entering sand cut you can see how they cut into the bank there to make it now this shot is shot going uphill and i did that for a reason i wanted to get a good shot of these rocks that particular rock felt formation has a name it's called tallow pot rock i know what a tallow pod is but i don't know why they named that rock a tallow pot was used by the rail people to they would put kerosene in it and it would heat the switches so they wouldn't freeze back before they had the electric heaters and the oil-fired heaters but that that rock is called telepot rock and all these pictures were taken about five years ago when i was designing the diorama that's in the heritage museum up in hendersonville so these are pretty current uh there's mile marker 34. we're at mile marker 32 up here so that's two miles from right here we've got one mile to go continues on down and then you come to a sign it says start timing sector just remember that i'm going to talk about it later getting near and there's an end timing sector those two signs are a thousand feet apart and i'll explain what they're used for and we get to the bottom that bridge over pearson falls road is considered to be the bottom of the saluda grate so i just took you on a three mile walk and the track flattens out there it levels out that track off to the right is the second safety runaway track that's still in existence and uh it could still be operated if needed but then on the left there we enter the melrose yard and that's in the melrose yard looking back at the grade so you can see how suddenly you're in the grade i mean within a couple hundred feet you're going from level to a five percent grade and this is the melrose yard typical freight train would pull into melrose coming up from spartanburg and it would be let's say 21 or 22 cars in length they could not pull that train up the grade without several locomotives what they did is the railroad had a one steam locomotive that would sit here right up the street and i'll show you in a picture where it sat he'd sit up here and he'd hang out in the depot and he'd wait for a telegraph to come through saying you got a train coming up from melrose from uh spartanburg he would jump on this helper locomotive and he'd go down to melrose and he'd sit down there and when the train would pull in they would cut off the first six or seven cars on the train and those seven cars and the road locomotive would start up the grade and this helper would come behind and those two locomotives would push the cars up here and they'd drop them off right across the street here where there's a passing siding then the two locomotives would go down and get another third of the train and bring it up and then the final third so it took nearly an hour to get a train three miles and they'd do this day and night because there were 30 some trains going through here in a given day and that's that's all they would do is just go down there and get get the cars bring them up get the cars bring them up 24 7. quite great job but anyway that's what it took to get a train up the grade back in the early days of steam because this helper engine resided here they needed to be able to service it to put coal in it put water in it sand and so on and so forth so this was a whole service facility over where the weeds are growing on the left there was a colding tower there was a water tank on the right they had an ash pit to dump the ash out of the boiler they had a sanding tower to put sand in the in the locomotive those domes up there hold sand and there's nozzles that go down right in front of the driving wheels and the engineer can pull a lever and it'll shoot sand on the track so he can get grip so all steam locomotives carried sand and diesels do too you just don't see the sand bin but that's what those domes are they're in the middle of a steam locomotive they're for sand so all those services were provided here in melrose and sometimes the road engine that was coming through needed more coal or water or whatever so they had it down there so that's the reason that melrose existed so he continued out of melrose and this is heading south toward tryon it's it's double track because when they bring a train in the trains were getting longer and longer they had to have a pretty good length of double track to house the train while they brought it up a third at a time and also that was a good spot for a train going south to pass they could pass each other this is slaughter pen cut through here first it's a right hand bend and then the left hand bend so you can imagine a train out of control doing 75 miles an hour you think it's going to make it through there i don't and then finally it comes back to a single track and goes down to try on so you've just taken a tour of the whole saluda grade facility including the yard that the managed the trains for those of you who know locomotives they generally use a santa fe type or a consolidation type locomotive as the pushers you wanted a locomotive that had small diameter wheels and a lot of them that gives you a lot of power at a low speed passenger trains have fewer wheels and they're bigger i'm talking again about steam locomotives they had to have a lot of grunt here in saluda and all these tracks still exist that helper locomotive would sit over here and of course you know the depot wasn't here in those days it was down the street are you all aware of that yes okay but at one time when it was down the street that helper locomotive would sit over there on the left and as they'd bring cars up they'd park them on that center track where those junk cars are now that's where the depot set well let's talk about taking a train down down the grade train would come into saluda and they would stop and there was on each okay brakes on a train are air activated there's a compressor in the locomotive that pumps air into a line that runs through all the cars if you ever look at it underneath a freight car you'll see a line usually a steel tube that goes from one end of the car to the other and you see a rubber hose hanging out the end and when they couple up they connect those hoses together that's an airline and in the caboose they would have a air gauge so when they couple up a train to take a trip they would pump air in this line and the conductor who rode in the caboose would watch the pressure gauge and when it got up to about 90 psi he would signal the engineer that they've got the proper pressure for the brakes so when the when the engineer would pull the lever for the brakes it would shoot air back there and all the brake shoes would clamp onto the wheels well they had something called brake retainers on each car and it was it was just a valve that that the brakeman would throw on each car so that if you picture this you're driving your car and you're going to go down a hill you put the brakes on you have to hold your foot on the brakes going down that hill if you want the brakes activated okay well in a locomotive this is done with a lever you wouldn't want to be sitting there pulling on this lever for three miles so these what these retainers did was you would you would apply a certain amount of brake and when you release the lever the brakes would stay where you set them so you could let go and you had brakes if you wanted more brakes you could pull a little harder on the lever and they stay set that way the engineer was free to do the rest of his work and the brakes were applied all the way down the hill so they would stop here they'd set the brake retainers on every car they'd have to walk the length of the train and throw these levers okay when they got down to the bottom in melrose they get off the train release all the levers so that was the process to take a tank train down the hill they did not break the train into pieces they took the whole thing down and there were occasions when they used the helper engine on the back to help slow the train and hold it back all right but that's that's important because one of the key wrecks on the grade was because of a brake failure let's talk about the wrecks as you probably know the first train came here in 1878 and the saluda grade was born it went into use and uh there was a lot of criticism of the railroad to to try to do something like this and make it safe but they were convinced that they could handle it well two years after it opened 1880 there was a runaway train and i have not been able to find out any facts about it other than 14 men were killed and i believe it was all convicts they used convict labor to build the grade i believe that it was a train that a coupler broke and it came uncoupled and several cars rolled backwards down the track and these guys were killed they were probably chained together or whatever i don't know like i said i can't find any facts on it but i but i found several references to the fact that there was a wreck and eight fourteen guys were killed uh the next wreck that occurred was in 1878 and again this involved convict labor uh the reason even though the grade was open the reason there was still convict labor is they were building on up to hendersonville so they they'd work up there and i guess they were housing the prisoners down here somewhere i'm not sure where but uh six convicts two guards and a foreman were killed when a train ran away uh the crew that was driving the locomotive jumped off but these guys didn't make it now we get into the wrecks that that are documented 1890 three men were killed by a train uh the tracks were wet and they were headed downhill and before the engineer realized that he had lost control uh he was building up a lot of speed and at that i don't think that at that point they had the eight mile an hour limit in place i'm not sure i haven't been able to find out but by the time he realized he was out of control he tried he and the crew tried to do everything they could to save the train they have a few things they can do but not much but they all stayed on the train and they were all killed by the time it reached melrose they estimated it was doing 75 miles an hour and it went into what's now called slaughter pen cut and it crashed there and uh the three crew people were killed and i believe well i'm sure it was a freight train there was never an injury or a death on a passenger train the passenger trains uh they were able to handle them safely up and down the grade these were all freight the freight trains are much heavier they did a lot of coal and coals about the heaviest freight you can haul so they were much heavier trains so that was in 1890 now 1903 this is probably the most significant wreck that occurred on the grade engineer was named pit bellew and he picked up his train in asheville uh consisted of 13 loaded interstate railroad coal hoppers two merchandise cars with generally your car no box cars or flat cars something like that a couple other box cars and a caboose he stopped here the top of the grade they set the brake retainers and they took off he got to that curve over there and applied the brakes and normally when they apply the brakes you hear a loud sort of a banging sound because all the brake shoes grab the wheels at the same time so if you can picture that on about a 20 car train bang well he pulled the lever and he heard and he immediately yelled to the crew jump off we've lost the train he wasn't even out of town his caboose was right over there he already knew he lost his train no way to stop it so the crew jumped off pitt stayed on the train trying to save it trying to do everything he could by the time he got the sand cut it was doing well over 60 miles an hour he knew it was going to crash so at the last minute he jumped off he rolled down a a stone bank and they found him nearly dead a couple hours later he had broken his back they took him up to the asheville hospital and he was in the hospital for a couple months he woke up one morning and he started yelling for a nurse so the nurse thought there was something really wrong she ran in the room what is it what is it he said get on the phone get the superintendent of the southern railway down here i know how to save the trains from wrecking and from people getting killed so the nurse called the superintendent who was a man named gr loyal l-o-y-a-l-l and he came down to the hospital and met with pitt and pitt said what you got to do is build safety runaway tracks right before you get to sand cut and right before you get the slaughter pen cut put a switch in there and have the track run uphill at a 10 percent grade for about a thousand feet and just let the train run up there and gravity will will stop it bring it under control then you can fix the problem within six months the railroad came down and built both safety tracks and that changed everything that made it much much safer to run the grade there were still a number of accidents that occurred but the loss of life was cut down there was one more wreck that occurred after that where some guys were killed now think back i showed you the pictures of the start timing sector and end timing sector the engineer's responsibility when he was taking the train down the hill when he saw the start timing sector he looked at his watch and when he got to the end timing sector he looked at his watch and he knew how long it should take to get between the two at eight miles an hour if he was under control he blew two blasts on the whistle and the switch tender would throw that switch and he could continue if he was out of control he did nothing and up the safety track he went and there's uh that tall thing right there that's the water tower over there and you can see up in the in the sky there that's part of the coaling tower this was a little passenger depot you could actually pick the train train up down in melrose if you wanted to get on board come up and visit the apple valley model railroad club in hendersonville that is still there and eventually over time that became electronically controlled they didn't have to have a guy sitting down there anymore one month after pitt's accident another freight train again 13 loaded interstate coal hoppers and a few box cars lost control just before sand cut so it it proceeded through the switch headed down the hill and by the time it got to melrose it was up to about 60 miles an hour now this was this was be remember i said it took them six months to build the safety tracks this was one month after the accident so safety tracks weren't in place yet but it was doing about 60 miles an hour when it reached melrose as they passed melrose of course the crew knew the train was out of control but they stayed on board and i read somewhere that as the train passed that little shack and the switch tender was standing there aghast as this train is shooting by him and the fireman was standing in the window of the locomotive and he just went like this with a big smile on his face and a switch tender passed out he fainted fainted and fell to the ground the crew stayed on board the engineer and the firemen were buried alive under the coal when it wrecked for all the coal from the tender you picture this thing hitting a bank and that tender's right behind you all that coal poured on they were buried alive the brakeman had both legs cut off and he died later in the hospital the conductor and the flagmen were unhurt they may have jumped off or they may have been at the back of the train i don't know but anyway that's when three more men were killed at this point the local newspapers around here the asheville times and the newspaper over in rutherfordton had headlines in it saying southern railway seriously considering abandoning the saluda grade too many deaths too much loss of equipment and so on so the safety tracks were coming within a few months and and that's what saved it but it was just about dead when when that happened three days after that accident a train started up the grade this was called a shirttail train and what that uh means is the train was too short to need the pusher locomotive it might have had six or eight cars on it it was going uphill and at that tallow pot rock that i pointed out right before sand cut it started to slip and when the engineer applied the brakes the things started to slide backward it slid all the way to try on all the way to try on nobody was hurt that must have been a joy right huh you know because even after you pass melrose the track doesn't level up it continues downhill it's just less of a grade it's one to two percent instead of five but the train slid all the way to try on in 1916 an engineer named tom tarpley was running a passenger train and it was under control it stopped here in saluda picked up passengers and so on and he started down the grade it was under control and he got out he got down to the timing sector he timed his train yep we're in good shape he blew the two blasts on the whistle as the approached the safety track the switch was thrown for him to go up the safety track so he blew it again and the switch tender just stood there and the train went up the safety track and stopped while he was furious he's got a passenger train so he jumps off the train he ran down to the switch tenor was about to ream this guy okay this was in 1916. how many of you know the history 1916. what happened here in nineteen right the the flood had washed out the bridge over pearson falls road if he had let him go that passenger train would have been in the pacolit river so he saved the train by having that safety track that would that would have been the one and only passenger wreck that would have been devastating i thought that was a pretty interesting story the stranded passengers were put up around saluda overnight and the trains sat on the safety track for 13 days until the bridge was repaired and then they were able to put it back in service diesels came along in 1949 the first diesel locomotive negotiated in the saluda grade a diesel locomotive is a whole different animal when it comes to controlling a train do you all know that a diesel locomotive is not driven by the diesel motor the diesel motor drives a generator that makes electricity and there are electric motors down between the wheels and the electric motors drive the train not the diesel motor if you think about driving a standard shift car if you were to get out here on i-26 and start down the road and lose your brakes if you had a standard shift car or even an automatic you can downshift and let the motor hold you back and you can slow yourself down well you can do that with a diesel locomotive it's called dynamic braking they actually reverse the direction of the electric motors and that back pressure will slow a train and even bring it to a stop you can't do anything like that on a steam locomotive so now they had control that's why they could eventually take hundred car coal trains down the grade they'd put like six or seven locomotives on the front and another six or seven in the middle of the train they could take the world down the grade and control it safely without a problem so most of the problems on the saluted grade disappeared once they diesel eyes and as i said 1939 was the first diesel used out here all right in 1964 now we're talking about diesels now they had six diesel locomotives pulling 70 loaded coal hoppers and a caboose and they ran off the tracks uh up the safety track down in melrose and the train was going so fast that it reached the end of the safety track and at the end of the safety track they had a big pile of gravel and some logs so it slammed to a stop and 16 or 23 of the head-end coal hoppers overturned and coal went flying all over the place total damage was 70 thousand dollars but no one was hurt that was a big thing no one was hurt so the safety the safety track saved lives and there would have been more much more damage to equipment than seventy thousand dollars that was on september 20th of 64. in 1971 uh three locomote three diesel locomotives uh derailed as they started up safety track number two in melrose and 44 coal hoppers piled on top of each other in the space of seven coal hoppers the only thing left on the tracks was the caboose when it came to a stop no one was hurt but uh 44 coal hoppers damaged so that was probably about a couple hundred thousand dollars worth of damage when the accident happened to pit bellew and he came up with the idea for the safety tracks they also made one other change in the rules to take a train down the grade that was important i mentioned when i talked about the coal hoppers i identified them at the beginning of my talk as interstate coal hoppers the interstate railroad is a small railroad that operated up in virginia and it primarily just hauled coal most of it it would take down to the port charleston south carolina well the interstate railroad was never very profitable they were always on hard times and they would do things on the cheap to try to save money make a profit they had inferior brakes and wheels on their hopper cars they were too small the amount of grip the brakes had was insufficient for the cars so the at the same time they built the safety tracks they also enacted a rule that you could have no more than half the train could be interstate coal hoppers because the other cars had good brakes and they could compensate for it so that was another minor change that helped help slow these car trains down as they were going down the grade thank you for coming thank you [Music] laughs [Music] you
Saluda Historic Depot
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2022-02-26
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1990 Greenwood Raceway TAKE A LOOK Toronto Pacing Series Final $134,500
[Music] the half is reached in 58 seconds flat ships fellas fourth pilgrim's patriot is in fifth take a look is six my guru under stuck hold up the rail in seventh folio is in eighth and rampage hanover is ninth three eighths remaining commonwealth with the lead be crafty second barely visible on the outside is third ships fellas fourth pilgrim's patriot is fifth take a look six by guru seventh folio is eighth rampage head over his ninth three quarters in 126 and two on the final turn and here comes barely visible on the outside to take charge at the rail commonwealth is second b crafty hemmed in third ships fellas fourth here comes take a look rushing up in fifth inside the 16th barely visible has the lead take a look is out for a stretch drive folio on the extreme outside rampage hanover and take a look has measured barely visible take a look in the final of the toronto series in 155 and 4.
harnessdom
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2020-12-06
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What are bologna bowls?
flip it over it's a balloon abou hey y'all and welcome to hot chocolate chat today I'm drinking a hot chocolate from Starbucks even though it's like 90 degrees outside but yeah let's talk real quick about that hot chocolate chat from yesterday because for real y'all need to all Taylor Swift it and calm down cuz it's like here's the deal tuna fish casserole casserole tuna fish casserole is basically some sort of pasta and cream of mushroom soup and tuna fish macaroni and cheese with tuna is basically pasta with a cheese sauce and tuna I mean almost the same thing let's talk about Bologna bowls they are as tasty as I found so you take a juice glass just a small glass turn it upside down and put it in the microwave and then you take a piece of Bologna and you set it on top and then you microwave it for like 10 to 15 seconds and then it goes Shh so then you take it out of the microwave flip it over it's a balloon a bowl would and you can fill it with things like SpaghettiOs macaroni and cheese if you can fill it with things I've only done macaroni and cheese and SpaghettiOs I can't speak for any other feeling for that baloney bowl but that's that's the concept so raise your hand if you've ever had one I made these for my kids it was just like a fun way to do lunch so that's what I want to talk about today have you ever had a bologna Bowl would you ever eat one are you now curious to make one [Music]
Our Gray House
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2020-04-17
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Food in SG's Red Light District (Geylang): Food Finders S3E3
I'm trying not to cry I'm back welcome to another episode of food finders and today we are in geylang and obviously we need two guys okay long if not you know it's not appropriate for the other ladies Gary then glad to be here again thanks everyone for uh commenting on the last episode we are gonna base the locations today Loosely on one of the articles that we have 10 foods in geylang that live up to the food Havens reputation we're gonna sprinkle in a few new finds that I found I mean I've never been a gay long this early in the morning before not so early because it comes at night yeah I come at night so what do you come here at night four for food oh okay and let's go find our first spot boom oh I'm gonna bring you to eat turtle soup what have you ever had turtle soup I've had frogs I have never had Turtles Okay so we've actually arrived cancer thing is oh freak it's actually quite crowded turtle soup what [Music] legit legit Clay Pot turtle soup man we have a it looks so normal here but like to me is look at everyone it's like it's normal this is normal this is normal okay [Music] you want to run through what we got Gary so we got the turtle soup we got the ginseng black chicken right here we got the coitus steps 40 cents not quadriceps not quadriceps uh we also got the Jade tofu over here it says four pieces but because it's satui they gave us a six oh wow and ironically I don't like tofu so I don't know why they gave me motherhood uh and then we have the age preserved radish omelette they also got what is this yam rice so I've had quite a few yam rice this one actually uh I would say it looks a lot better than the normal yam rice I was like they did a lot more work so fun fact turtle soup is traditionally served for royalty back in China I'll try the chicken soup it smells like herbs soup is good it's like clean it's like herbal but like yeah I think as he said it's a bit cleaner it's not it's not very thick the ginger flavor is pretty distinct super is good though I'm really interested to try out this the meat yeah I don't know whether this is the shell or not but I mean it looks like skins that's the shell no it's not that shell the Turtles used here are ethically farmed not of the endangered species just be clear I got like a nice meaty meaty I got a meaty part it's like soft and chewy wait you only try the meat powder I just tried the meat try the fluffy I mean the thing is I don't know what this is it looks very collagen like yep definitely you know like uh cook pork where the fat just melts it's kind of got like that you can taste a little bit of like that that collagen in the soup as well yeah it's got a little bit of fishiness to me it's still a novelty because it's not something I would eat every week I wouldn't consider eating right other than turtle soup of course there are other turbo soups you have tried black chicken yeah I have tried black chicken that's like a white chicken and also a black chicken how do you find the soup it's slightly different you could definitely taste the difference in it yeah the texture at first of the turtle is like soft right it's just it's stringy but as soon as you start chewing on it then it gets more fibrous and a bit more chewy but then um obviously just the chicken is like your standard well cooked chicken and it just melts it just like melts you just stretch it yeah so you can see there is a whole ginseng I think that's probably why the flavor is so different yeah the flavor is so different I'm actually quite surprised that the soups between the chicken soups are different I'm actually quite amazed that they they bother to use like a different basement how do you find rice I actually quite like the rice the rice is amazing but it's good it really goes out of the soup I actually am a big fan of herbal soup and I think I think overall like I've had a few over in in Singapore like you know you're cooking down something they have purple soup I can probably say this is the best one I've had like if you're a big fan of herbal stuff bubbles stuff tonsil thing does it really well the consistency is excellent every table's got the same quality yeah and the quality control is really good okay I'm not a huge fan so I'm gonna I'm Gonna Leave Gary to evaluate the tofu it's not a hard crust tofu it's just like lightly deep fried I think just lightly deep fried so not super hard the inside of the tofu is not the silk tofu it's like the one with the little Tauruses but then it's also very juicy it's good it tastes even better with the chili but it's a different chili right it's more like the sweet the sweet sweet sauce the sweet sour but I prefer this one but yeah this this chili is the bomb it really goes with the turtle and the chicken as well it covers up like the whole fishy flavor otherwise I'm not like I don't find a lot of herbal places but I don't know how it could be improved so I guess it's a okay every herb soup has a unique flavor the consistency looks very very consistent they are doing something right very right I give it a five stars as well you don't really see any tourists tourists in a way this is very local you need to be super adventurous you need to be willing to try new things and stuff like that and I gotta say the yam rice if this is the first yam rice you have in Singapore you're gonna spoil the market right with like this quality is that Hero of the Day okay let's go uh Chopsticks transition let's not do this again that's lovely lovely day for some tea feel very fancy here fancy we're in geylang indeed where are we we're at a TWC PWC the wonderment collective some biscuits and crumpets and crumpets cheers dude the British God rests the queen kid obviously is really like the different dimension by itself in geylang classic look I mean I really like that they spent a lot on the decor I love this blue though this the steel color is very calming the food is here this is the high tea set so TWC is a artisanal gifting company but they also do this store as like their Showcase of what they can actually do for your events you know if you want to cater from from TWC you can do so as well and we have a french toast and a very tart and later on we're gonna have some coffee to wash everything down we have scones some macaroons some Tarts this looks like a Tiramisu some savories some things like smoked salmon egg yeah yeah so this place is is not for I mean it's not for a proper meal this is more like the cafe I would never have known about this way because it is such a Hulu place our scones have some scones Okay so it's pretty interesting shape for a school no like usually it's like more Square this is a cranberry scone smells buttery it's very buttery I love schools it's not it's not bad and it's it's not like dry like I've had scones where it's uh dry scum you know what let's do it through me too here we go okay we're decent still tiramisu still wet below I like that I don't really get that um like the alcohol yeah all right if I'm not wrong so yeah but it's nice for me soup without alcohol though yeah I really like the cream I think I think we have quite a few things let's move on uh should we do the tire or do you want to do say Reese okay you know let's just do one pick a sandwich you want a salmon one or the uh first okay let's go with egg first I like the bread though like it's it's really it's a denser bread oh they use Main or what there's a little bit a little bit yeah right yeah a little bit I thought that they maybe replace that with cream cheese like a nice light cream cheese it was a great Savory moving on to French toast I think the presentation is really nice really nice very nice very nice very nice generally everything so far plating wise the core wise I think quality and everything it's like a it's a solid two thumbs up for me so far I really like the the toppings and the creams everything is tastes are good with cream I'm gonna move on having a fancy tart now it's custard for the feeling fresh ingredients your high quality ingredients the pudding's on on point I could probably say like the the cooking like the baking technique all seems to be all fundamentally I think you know everything is is great A Lot they've not done anything wrong and I think that's all you need for like a nice afternoon tea like you just need decent enough food great onions a lovely company of course with Gary my lovely company today but there's one final thing the coffee coffee do you want to fire it up I do want to fire it so apparently we're gonna light this Flame the Flame's gonna boil this water I am a flame God fire and then it's going to transfer over here and brew and then as it's Brewing then there's going to be pressure negative pressure over here or something and then it's going to suck it back in there and you got coffee it still needs to go back into the thing right I think yeah yeah yeah it's uh yeah it will go down yeah as he is going down oh oh oh oh oh oh so much physics at work here oh all right now that we've seen the magic happen we're just gonna dispense they're hot uh doesn't mean I'm metal I guess yeah that makes sense but she's not very good design though why did they make the handle there you go kind sir oh thank you thank you for the cafe so there's a siphon coffee all right cheers it's really clean clean it feels like it extracted a lot more flavor through this process and not like all the in just like the pure intense flavor but this is very nice it's nice this is uh yeah I think if you appreciate coffee like I think just watching it is so entertaining it's really good it's very good all right let's round up how do you find here you see bro you know what I think there's no way you know what this would be a five this is the most unlikely place I would think you give a five though like why would you give a five yeah what the hell the thing is like there's not a huge amount to really comment too much on the experience so far is uh surprising before before I hear about the price okay you know what you know what let me get the menu I'm back I'm back with prices before we go guess high tea how do you think the high tea set 50 60 easily I would say like close to 80. okay it is 60 for set and for two so 60 for that I I think that's pretty okay having coffee it's twelve dollars for two oh man that's cheaper than uh okay oh French dose normally this would be like 20 25. I like at Orchard area yeah so if it beats that then it's already winning it's 15 I'm I'm actually surprised by a surprise for me it's just personal prefer I just don't I'm not a fan of like sweets I guess I would still rank it highly though the 4.5 for me but it is uh very clean and nice place to sneak a date in I guess if you have a date that's it for the high tea Chin Chin Chin Chin okay so we are now at uh geylang huangs one time me this is a super old one-time install since 1960 for they make their own me so yes let's go try oh uh one time in Canada [Music] so one hand noodles here first impressions Gary very peculiar plating style instead of like having all the toss you you know lined up on one side it's just like scattered to me I noticed I'm a Penang boy I won't tell me over there is like a lot more black color yeah this is a very traditional Singapore style so you can see the chatsu is also like the old school style is this red dye thing a lot of times it's actually pretty dry but you know we'll we'll see how we will find out the noodles also look a bit different to my understanding they do have their own recipe let's give it a go man so let's pork lot as well right so like pork lot you can you can add more okay that's okay a lot more chili below oh yeah you want to try one time as well they make that one one time yes tell you what it tastes like one ton I've had the wontons that are pure skin and like the Little Italy skin it's like just skin this is that me like yeah I really like the noodles so like the what do you call that QQ the QQ it's kind of QQ so it's different as well there's more flavor to it because this this is egg noodles and sometimes for one time you get this Alkali taste so this has slight Alkali taste but not it's not super strong I think it's good I mean for Singapore wonton noodles one of the better ones I've had I'm still not completely used to this type of wonton noodle but you're right this one is more cute noodles is yeah it's a bit more bouncy I like that this place actually you know has their own recipe of the noodle so you get you can tell it tastes different it's not like you know you go out to a banham install and the noodles do not taste like regular ones plus you're surprising right like it actually looked kind of dry for traditional chaos you say I think it's more flavorful than normal yeah I I have had the old school style tattoo that's still super dry and like marinade is just coloring gray this upon five I rate this 3.5 3.5 come on let's be generous with your stars okay nevermind you keep your people I'm gonna go it feels like a four I feel like just at least a four of me in my mind one time me is still the black sauce very few noodles and then the wonton it's not in a soup it's like on the one ton you know I think it's good not good enough but not good enough Malaysia one still win in England better or that's it for here we're gonna move off to the next location oh a good thing with geylang is everything is pretty close by oh it's on the street it's on the street I mean it's on it's on this street so let's go on the left I think you should Park and then I don't think there's parking in front now yeah we could try it that's it we're here okay so just a two minute drive away from where we were we're not at home fish and duck forage okay we're halfway through our day long journey let's go okay foreign [Music] fish part and then the dark porridge if you had that porridge in Singapore no this will be the first time I've had duck okay with porridge but never like a company that's like the bread is done right yeah okay this is actually not typical of what that porridge usually is so it's more like a muy the Congee and then there's like a bit of pieces of duck inside with whey sauce but this is more kind of like the to fish for it so you're trying to adapt for it yes what I've noticed is the soups are like uh you know what the french corn like consume so I find like both of them to be more of that consumer style and with that style usually comes with a very clean taste I actually think this one has a lot more flavor than this one I actually really like the fish it's really fresh so this is the um it's a batang fish so but this is really fresh I think it's a good clear soup it's not super out of this world I really like the hint of fried garlic it has a bit more excitement to the dish how do you find a doctor on first looks I thought the duck was going to be a lot more flavorful than it is but after trying it I like the look of the dog but I actually think the taste of the fish soup is superior the meat is good it's not bad but because it's like boiled in a soup you still use a braised duck as a dish right but this is like the the watered down version of of raised that if I was like sick I need like you know substance this is this is great normally I would actually prefer duck but like I actually think the fish one is very good this one I go three solid three three uh nothing crazy special not bad either it's just a it's a great piece Yep this one I get four uh definitely above average the freshness the clarity the cleanness there's some finesse in this one I think yeah five Quick Maps Quick Maps 3.5 overall I would give this 3.5 I think the duck pulled it down to be fair we also didn't try all the other stuff yeah let's move off look at this dude so we're just like onto this next location but uh we're passing by this one place which I've had before personally it's like a charcoal Singaporean Hawke and me for me this one is like five like the best that I've had so far I think they open around five or six open at five so we gotta go to the By Me place right yeah it's right around the corner that one so yes around the corner from is I I don't know I don't know how to see it you've tried here all right I've tried it here before uh they also baked their own bread they sell their buttons all the other botany places around so the banmi cartel okay let's go can I get one pork pork bun me and one party one to go I think I really like the fact that there are actually quite a lot of Vietnamese here yeah I think that's a good sign that this is a authentic ban me place you got the bunnies uh I got the beef I saw I ordered pate and pork but like it came beef and pork but I think it's very true to the Vietnamese service right sometimes they hear you sometimes they don't let's try it the meat is not as generous as I thought it would be though five dollars they were fairly generous with the the beef for me oh I do enjoy it's just like the bread right it was Fluffy and then you can just crush it down this is this is the more classic original funny but it's a very like crushable bread as well right and I think you really need to like Smash It smash it I really like the aromatics like the vegetables and the cilantro and there's a lot of things going on leave us some meat really good it's growing on me like this is like um it's not like corned beef or peppery corned beef yeah yeah so definitely they they marinated it and like cured it a little bit broke down the enzyme so it's a bit soft or some kind of fermentation or something like they did something to me that makes it tender as far as five dollar bun me goes I think the bread is on point home baked they bake everything bacon house I think all the meat and everything they do in-house as well I I'd like to see a little bit more stuffing but I think they would also increase the price range for that if they gave double meat like I know of better by me places in Singapore but this is above average all right I'll go over four I've been here a few times so maybe I'm being a bit more biased here now the first time I was here I was very impressed uh but I've actually tried all four or five different flavors I tried all of them you can't really go wrong yeah it's just like a great staple you wanna bun me this is the place okay well done the last part we're just gonna try one dish it's really just the Tinky tofu have you tried stinky tofu before yeah I've actually tried this thing oh oh so you've tried this one what made you come to this place I live over there right when we go on the way to geylang we just pass by all these these places and oh is it crowded not lining up crowded but there's a fair amount of people all the time yeah it's like this one uh this is our final spot and where have you brought me Gary fermented uh bean curd didn't really know you were not a big fan of yeah I wouldn't have planned this myself I've had it once or twice so I'm not gonna say what I think about it but yeah you know it is quite popular we actually featured this place before but I nothing has made me want to try this because it's firstly stinky secondly it's tofu so not the best combination for me but but here we are we're gonna try it might as well dry it out this is like the last and only singi tofu in Singapore left let's go order let's order one well the smell inside is even more in pungent foreign [Music] you know when you get to like the the flavor does it have a big flavor to it to me it's got a funk to it yeah yeah okay the punk is strong it reminds me of like you know the the aftertaste of garlic I think the smell is okay it smells weird harsher than smells way worse this is really not my thing I mean I I have tried it I hate tofu and I've tried it but still I am unconvinced to be fair I'm not a human stinky tofu fan either but I just know that this particular place is the only stinky tofu place I've ever seen and then apparently now it's a long lost Legacy in Singapore so I mean the recipe here is is from the founders mom who used to sell this in Hong Kong so you know it's like a traditional very classic recipe it's hard for me to gauge because I don't really know I don't eat enough all right so I would say reason why if you don't have a cream it's a three it's a good standard I I don't know how many people how many viewers actually enjoyed this like very curious like you leave a comment if you actually like because I I'm giving this a one I will not come back here but I just want to say hey I tried it all right I think that concludes for that concludes it stinky tofu flying bird animations so we're back we're back in the car do you like today's episode yeah I did we had a very good variety today the herbal soup place okay that was a big surprise I did not think I'd be eating Turtle today but that was a pleasant surprise the TWC place also a big shocker this is a really nice atmosphere to bring your your girlfriend or you know just to hang out for some afternoon tea if you're gonna go for a brunch date you don't want to kind of you know pay a arm and a leg for that type of quality I would say that place is it's actually really affordable part of me is good nothing too fancy I don't know is there a proper way to eat by me anyone in the comments section in the house please let us know how to eat a proper by me without dripping everywhere no before we end now because it's reading through comments time okay so we are gonna go through Gary's comments on his episode I enjoy Gary's appearance I want to see what will get him to read it for and above I think today there was a lot more selection I think the quality was just better generally yeah Gary knows his food love seeing him on the show by Gary's wife that's that's my wife Gary should be a permanent host I love ass licking it should ask for empty place instead of sharing from the same place what are your thoughts on this I really don't care it doesn't bother me as much I mean it does make sense if you want to be a bit more hygienic about things we were friends before as a while too think of the cleaner you have to watch more please just cause like what you don't share from a month you can play it okay I think I think this concludes the comments so remember to like And subscribe to our Channel there's a little button that's gonna appear now anyone else who has any interesting stuff to try on Gaylord yeah recommend some stuff so I can try it out and then maybe I can be featured again but today was really fun thank you for having me again hope you guys enjoyed this episode in gay lung show some love to Gary and you know we definitely want to bring him back and who's your favorite Canadian I heard there's two yeah thanks again see you guys bye guys bye great to be back guys thanks for uh commenting on the first video I I understand you probably got tricked because you thought it was banking it's not Ben King that guy's way way more prettier than me uh but I'm glad you guys uh asked a lot of questions in the comments good job commenters let's try to get round three again oh he's back okay
SETHLUI.com
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Jesus & Mary on Toxic Parents and Childhood Guilt
there's a difference between feeling guilty and um self-punishing about our actions that may have caused Soul damage to our children or someone else between because that's a very um static place we just beat ourselves up and feel really terrible and oh we've done something wrong um where in actual fact the more freeing thing there will be some LW of compensation as we open our soul emotionally we'll feel and release that but um to get underneath that I'm not sure I'm explaining it very well but yeah the law of remember the law of compensation is a result of you taking actions that are disharmonies with love and having a penalty upon your own soul right and then there's a law of compensation effect and remember I also talked to you about how repentance is the way past law of compensation so when you feel deep feelings of sorrow in yourself for doing something uh that was actually wrong in God's eyes and recognized it then God's love or God's grace can come and you'll feel the change in you about that issue you'll no longer cry about it now that's what i' would call a feeling of repentance and the feeling of repentance is totally different than a feeling of guilt guilt is often imagined and guilt is often created by child of events so what's happening with yourself for example is you're in this cycle of guilt you can't get out of guilt guilt is a fear and and so it's in the cycle of fear really you can't get out of it that is not the same as the law of compensation and that is not the same as repentance because true repentance results in immediate cleansing or immediate response from God you follow me true repentance actually causes an immediate action upon the soul from God's love entering it so therefore you won't site all over guilt all over and over over and over and over and over and over again guilt is something that covers a deeper emotion and it usually is a deeper emotion we don't want to feel and in your case the emotion you don't want to feel is the emotion of how unloved you being from your father and instead of feeling that emotion which is going to be quite a like it's going to have a lot of different parts to it when you feel it instead of feeling that emotion you prefer guilt cuz guilt means you don't have to feel that emotion does that make sense guilt means you can try harder to feel that tion and the reason I cover it is because he was beautiful and I really good out and I don't want to feel guilty every time I think you made your dad was beautiful yeah and even though he yelled at me even though he yelled at me I still feel every time I get to that point I feel guilty for thinking that he does something wrong to me well the truth is he did do something wrong to you and the truth is he wasn't beautiful now I know that sounded quite blunt but but but a parent who's yelling at a child constantly to control them is a very unloving parent now they may think they're loving and they may look beautiful but there's some major issues in a parent doing that to a child so so that is not loving and that's not beautiful and you don't want to face that you don't want to say that to yourself cuz if you say that to yourself all of these emotions will be unlocked inside of you that you don't want to feel and a very good book to read um as parents but also uh with children to read is called toxic parents and now do you remember James who was a writer of that you be able to find it on the net it's called toxic parents healing the shame of childhood something trauma or something like that we'll bring the title along tomorrow with this but that book was written I think in the 60s or 7s by a by a woman who is very bluntly truthful it's a really good book to read Because what it does is it exposes a lot of our false beliefs about parents being good or bad and uh what actually commentate you know what actually is unloving behavior to a child and that's why it's such a good book to read and it's a very confronting book if you if you have got sexual abuse issues or violent abuse issues in the family you'll find it quite confronting but it's a very good book to read and what it does is it exposes the emotions behind why parents do things and uh and tries to break the definitions of whether M had been good or bad M and and get down to at an emotional level so many of you want to hold on to a belief that your parent parents were good the reason why you want to hold on to that belief is because inside of you you have some emotions that will be unlocked if you no longer believe that you see what I'm saying so the addiction is I want to believe mom and dad are good I want to believe mom and dad were loving I want to believe mom and dad were fantastic with me I want to believe they did everything they could I want to believe and the reason why we want to believe all of these things is because underneath all of that is a lot of hurt that we felt children that if we don't believe those socalled truths that we've written in our mind we will then start feeling these emotions and if we do that then we feel out of control so we going into control wanting to believe things about our parents that are not true it's okay to say my parent was abusive to me my parent yelled at me they might have stopped doing it they might even be a great person now and they may be even be sorry about it now but that doesn't change the fact that it happened and I need to connect to that emotional does that make sense and
Divine Truth Clips
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Moore Hypocrisy, Please - iWire Daily 17 11 13
welcome to the show ladies and gentlemen my name is Paul Gordon and this is I state TVs I wire daily for Monday November 13th 2017 on this show we feature of a Keurig 8 or how to politically weaponize the marketplace Chelsey's tweet hypocrisy called out vaguely building a gun confiscation loophole again why Santa's elves are crying hint it's about 3d printing and finally our ILO's of the day highlights the story of meme storage device thieves with a sweet side and now on with the show you this is Paul Gordon of I state on TV and this is your I top daily report for Monday November 13 2017 and this report will talk about the Keurig kerfuffle in the age of politically weaponized corporatism Keurig dropped ads from Hannity deplorable z' drop Keurig so Hannity supporters are essentially destroying Keurig coffee maker so Sean Hannity recently interviewed the embattled GOP Alabama Senate nominee Roy Moore on his radio show and somewhat confronted him regarding the allegations that he had inappropriate sexual conduct with underage girls and Media Matters of course being Media Matters the progressive attack dog that utilizes the tactic of attempting to intimidate advertisers to not support mostly conservative shows launched into another round of attack against Hannity accusing him of enabling pedophilia by not confronting Roy more hard enough and by seeming to say it was okay to have sex with minors if it was consensual so the unfounded and unwarranted charges what Media Matters is using to scare intimidate cajole advertisers to remove their ad revenue from the Hannity show in what seems to be well it seems to be a blatant attempt to shut down another conservative voice and the effort is being conducted by an organization that has a tax-exempt status an advantage in the market that its profit-making competitors simply don't have Media Matters efforts actually bore fruit this time with Keurig sending the message to a man who virtues signaled his outrage at pedophilia and again accusing Hannity of enabling and endorsing pedophilia Angelo thank you for your concern and for bringing it to our attention we worked with our media partner and Fox News to stop our ad from airing during the strong Hannity show and don't forget to check out the article which is in the top right corner there that this is based on if you're watching YouTube and if you're watching this on Facebook you'll see the article link in the description above so this story to me this is about the decision by large corporations who have tremendous market manipulation power to use its economic and market power to support and advance the status progressive agenda now this story to me is about finding out the real market power that conservative consumers may or may not have in response to the corporate progressive cabal as a loosely calling Sean Hannity he interviewed a man under investigation for potentially having inappropriate sexual encounters with one underage girl and two young women and even as I as I as I do this video more news is breaking and I gotta tell you that more more look so it's looking like maybe Roy Moore yeah the evidence is mounting against you buddy but be that as it may may back to this story so he could have pushed more harder but conflating an endorsement of pedophilia with not being hard enough on a man who faces allegations not convictions a man who has denied all allegations to date is a transparent attempt to exploit pedophilia for your own political ends and again there is breaking news going on there's more evidence coming out but that evidence that may be coming out was not the evidence that Sean Hannity had when he interviewed Roy Moore this past Friday and Saturday or this past Friday this is what Media Matters is doing and this is what these corporations which are to me they're either status progressive controlled or they're weak before the state of progressive attack dogs now from what I've seen the case against Roy Moore as I've said it looks pretty damning it's getting more I'm not convicting the guy but man I don't know I don't know so I I can't convict this man without way more evidence than has been presented so far but even as I'm doing this video apparently there's more stuff which I haven't even seen yet and as far as I know up to this point it's that format women have subtly come forward to claim that this man did sexually inappropriate things with them when they were either underage or are inappropriately young for a man in his 30s to be pursuing the precedent being set here is that we could Vic but then that precedent is consistently already followed in and I want to say be it from progressives assuming the worst about their conservative enemies or conservatives assuming the worst about their progressive enemies it's kind of happening now that the mega corporations have decided to put their money where their politics is the cost of offering up any thought any opinion that falls outside of the very very narrow political perspective of these corporate owners whose views are are becoming more and more rigid and more and more narrow is becoming increasingly high without the continued rise of grassroots crowdfunding for alternative voices such as which is offered on this website I say TV the corporations and billionaires sponsors such as in the case of mini matters and even its conservative counterpart Media Research Center will be the sole arbiters of the voice that you get to hear in the news media marketplace in another wrinkle to this story really more is now coming out swinging against the Washington Post where the stories originally appeared Roy Moore said this past Sunday night November 12 at a campaign stump but Washington Post published another attack on my character and reputation because they are desperate to stop my political campaign these attacks said I was with a minor child and our false and untrue and for which they will be sued and during the speech Moore also addressed the allegations in the Washington Post story and denied that any of them were true this is Paul Gordon of I state got TV and this is your ayah pol daily report for Monday November 13 2017 on today's I folder or we looked at D tweet life not so funny comedian Chelsea Handler or a lesson and how to get owned on Twitter in one easy step it's Chelsea's and Chelsea Handler's sex abuse tweet backfires they glaze so Chelsea took her brave self to Twitter bracing herself to boldly declare that yes she too is against sexual assaults rape and all that stuff I know I know I know you're shocked right much brave so courage Chelsea declared in a tweet imagine being molested by an older man then that man denies ever doing it and then goes on and gets elected to the United States Senate what kind of message does that send the young girls everywhere and men to all the men who abuse women I fixed her quote for her with the if you're watching the video you can see the the meme here imagine being molested by an older man then that man denies ever doing it becomes a powerful Hollywood producer what kind of message does that send to young girls everywhere it's pretty much gonna be the heart of what we're gonna be talking about here now hey yeah now to be sure what she said in her tweet absolutely that would suck I mean screw that guy right she's of course referring to Roy Moore who may or may not be guilty of the charges being leveled at him by four women and if true well yeah that guy that guy's for the major sucking right right I mean mmm right am i right now Chelsea wasn't Chelsea if she didn't have the rich history of being what some might describe as a sex abuse enabler hey hey I'm gonna go ahead and go with that that tweet might be bravely held up as another fine example of the moral courage of Hollywood standing up against Tebow Bravo cheers would well up and we would say to ourselves this this is why they're better than us this is why we should take their moral and political advice they just get it now don't forget yeah don't forget to check out the article this report is based on what should be appearing at the right hand corner there it's for my state TV and it'll be on the upper right hand corner if you're watching YouTube and if you're watching Facebook it'll be in the description above there so it turns out that there was someone who had a powerful story to tell a story that was not just ignored by the Chelsea Handler's of the world but one that was ridiculed that story was by Juanita Broderick and the story she told was about being allegedly raped by Bill Clinton the darling of the state is progressives and husband to their other darling and failed presidential candidate I really like saying that candidate Hillary I hate at least half the country but they don't understand how I am lost Clinton so we need a broader it tweeted back to Chelsea I can't imagine I was raped by the Arkansas AG who then became Cup comes governor president an NBC held my interview explaining the rape until after his impeachment hearing but I'm sure you don't want to go there needless to say Chelsea doesn't want to go there because people like her have no real care or concern for real victims they only see opportunity to exploit victimhood even if they had to invent it from nothing to nudge people towards their highly controlling highly oppressing state worshipping dictator dreaming status progressive waves there was there was one more tweet that came at Chelsea that spoke even louder of the hypocrisy of this self-righteous morality police language cop thought controller wannabe in hackneyed comedians clothes and that tweet came from the gay patriot who simply said tell us more while displaying a picture of Chelsea Handler nuzzled right next to the man who who seems to have started off the whole frenzy of sexual allegations allegations Harvey once teen himself to say that Hollywood including Chelsea didn't know what a sexist molesting and possibly raping piece of proverbial this guy was this Harvey art Weinstein guy is to deny all the rumors that have been floating around Hollywood for years around this guy but Harvey Harvey made you money and you got connections for Marvy so yeah yeah Chelsea wasn't so concerned about the struggles of women facing sexual predators as she is now you see this time the predator in the crosshairs alleged is a Republican running for Senate and destroying him means getting one of her kind in the seat of power the kind of controlling highly oppressing state worshipping dictator dreaming status progressive that reflects the true values of Hollywood I want to say a last note here this video is not at all about defending Roy I I don't I mean I haven't dug deep and uh you know who or what why I'll just say that the little that I have seen I it doesn't look good for ROI more it looks highly highly questionable I'm going to say so this isn't about ROI more this is about Chelsea Handler and her high-handed hypocrisy this is Paul Gordon of eye state TV and this is your eye gun daily report for Monday November 13 2017 on this eye gun report we talk about increasingly low standards to justify confiscating guns and how one county in Washington state plans on becoming a new test bottle for gun confiscation strategies around the King County Council members have taken to using a federal law that requires individuals who have served who have been served with a domestic protection order to turn in their firearms to the local police in their area and what they plan on doing is combing through their database of domestic abusers who have not turned in their guns and developing a strategy to go out and seize their guns to that end the council members have earmark $600,000 to fund the program that will be required to go out to these alleged domestic abusers homes and confiscate their guns this one of course is an easy one to get the public to support and don't forget to check out the article this report is based on it I state TV and if you're watching YouTube the link will appear in the the right-hand corner of this video and if you're watching this on Facebook it'll be in the description so what we have here I'm gonna spell it out for you these moves by the King County Council members to me or basically it's a test model for other gun grabbers to study how successful will they be in confiscating guns how much will it cost to collect some said number of guns how does the community react to armed government agents knocking on doors to take guns from people who have been convicted of no crime and the us they haven't phase due process before their fundamental rights are violated the precedent set by a civil asset forfeiture I believe and that's what's at play here the and and the press it precedent that it's set is that the state should have the power to seize your property and limit your rights based solely on the fear that you might engage in criminal activity and this is this is why such things as done confiscation from people merely being accused of being domestic abusers this is a perfectly reasonable use of state power against its own citizens and sadly III doubt very much that the citizens of King County will will see much wrong with stopping dangerous men and and I'm sure that's what most people imagine when they think of domestic abusers and and so so you picture these dangerous men and yeah you you the idea of preventing them from having the tools to do bad things to helpless women this is the image that they're building in your head it's the perfect victimhood scenario to nudge people towards the false choice of surrendering more Liberty in exchange for more security so the best scenario to this is this to encourage more people to be armed to be trained to be reasonable gun owners one thing almost all real domestic abusers have in common is this they like to target people who can't effectively fight back a woman with a gun and knows how to use it that's not the type of target that most of these domestic abusers want to go after King County Council members aren't interested in actually helping in under threat from dangerous men rather they're interested in exploiting a genuine fear to nudge people towards an acceptance of a more powerful state that controls citizens that are increasingly weakened to resist the abuse the state has in the pipeline for the not so distant future this is Paul Gordon uh by state TV and this is your I build daily report for Monday November 13 2017 in this report we're going to let you know exactly what smart phone apps have to do with advancing 3d printing and introducing the technology to a whole new marketplace home toy manufacturing hobbyists this is smart phone app brings 3d printed toys to the home or the apps that will launch 3d printing to great heights astroturf uses smart phone app toymaker to introduce 3d printing to a whole new audience all right I went to the wrong place but I'm back in the right place so 3d printing is a technology that we regularly track on I state that I state TV as we view it as as one of the key self empowering technologies out there today news on the smartphone app front gives us even more reason to be excited about this technology Astro print released a new smartphone app called toy maker that enables you to download toy designs and print them out on your 3d printer and here's more information we're gonna share from 3d print calm but first don't forget to check out the article that this report is based on a Thai state TV and if I'm doing it right you should see the link appear in the upper right hand corner of this video if you're watching on YouTube and if you're watching on Facebook that link is in the description above so Astro print just released and this is I'm gonna be reading now from 3d print comm Astra print has just released a new toy app called toy maker meant to offer kids away - 3d print their own toys with 170 different options to choose from features that make this app very attractive for kids and parents include one well it's free the designs are of premium quality the process is very simple requiring just a few clips clicks learning opportunities abound okay I'm great and slicing the 3d design distributing designs and getting started on 3d printing and then this is again this is still from 3d print comm not only will your kids be engaged and learning more about how the 3d printing process works but they'll learn about 3d design it and many materials available to bring innovation tonight like skipping the process of shopping in a mall or online store you can look forward to producing toys at the desktop in your own home and all the support system of experience Astro print designers behind you Astro print no.1 is one of the fastest growing platforms for desktops ad printing as a company we've followed often and especially as of late as they've launched their own mobile app offering new file management features slicing options and far more the goal of this progressive company is quite simple to make 3d printing simple for everyone and I'm for that so what is the get for Astro print in doing this free thing well it's simple Astro print wants to create more useful reasons for you to buy us product a 3d printer and build trust with the rapidly growing 3d market the app is a marketing tool for the 3d print making company so don't be surprised if you see more 3d print companies following suit as well as the providers of the materials you need to use your 3d printer so this is going to open up a world of much more individualized product creation from the consumers themselves in this market the product is not the product it's the tools and the supplies to create a product of your choosing and you can bet me any of these home 3d print manufacturers may very well make a little product selling their own our little profit selling their own unique printed products to others this is Paul Gordon of eye state TV and this is your ILO's daily report for Monday November 13 2017 on this ILO's we report on the tragic story of meme robbing but this story has a sweet ending mean storage device and donut shop robbers show kinder gently gentler side or meet the donut robin hood's of Houston Texas donut robbery oh sweet robbery three masked men walk into a donut shop with one intention to rob every and any one of everything they have but along the way one of our masked met decides to offer up a consolation prize if you will to the people the donut shop robbing bunch just robbed and be sure you check out the link to the article on estate TV which is posted right in the upper right corner there if you're watching on youtube or in the post description above if you're watching on facebook this is the article that this video was based off of and it also has the video surveillance of the great donut heist of 2017 in it as well so here's the story of three masked men who were thinking of a robbery one night they thought hard about the target and then they said a donut shop sounded just right yes yes I wrote the two opening lines of this presentation to the theme song of the Brady Bunch and I sure hope that you got that I'm assuming you did and yes sang along with my glorious re rendition of a television so in this ILO's of the day we have three masked men not no mass gals well not no mass nouns but no mascots why don't we just say but no is a double negative that's right you don't want a double negative but no masked gals and definitely no mom and dad Brady because yeah they're actually both dead now kids I don't want harsh your mellow they're still we have a wholesome story to tell in much the same way as a Brady Bunch episode and this story comes out of Houston which is apparently in Texas which my euston friends remind me is now home to the world series Houston Astros and yes I'm dating this video it's 2017 November 13 fire he said that but yes so so yeah I threw in a sports ball reference into this ILO's fight me but not really Houston police are on the lookout for three masked men who as the opening lines of the ILO's suggests were on the lookout for a robbery target and decided to choose a doughnut shop in an effort to find the donut shop robbers the houston police decided to share the surveillance footage of the crime taking place and this this video shows three masked men going into the shop with one of the masked men letting the world see that yes indeed he does have a gun the gun wielding masked man targets the cash register and immediately relieves a nervous monetary burden meanwhile one of his fellow masked men donut shop robber powell's decides hey what stopping money so it takes the cellphones from two donut shop customers this is when it gets kind of kind of because yeah that's freaking rude and I and I hope that he at least emailed their memes back to them mean theft is no joke kids once the phone thief successfully acquired the phones he then appears to talk to the customers and I'm really hoping he's telling them that the memes will be emailed to them because otherwise yeah I could get really upset about this because folks memes their life don't you forget it so while mr. meme robber and and yeah that's what he is to me don't judge do not judge checks out the donut tastic display before him the other two masked men donut shop robbers proceeded to take stuff from the employees but at least these guys were not robbing means stash storage devices which is all a freaking cell phone is anyway let's be honest and if it's more than that for you then what's your problem oh here's the time when we enter into the ILO's part of the story picture if you will the bumbling stumbling soundtrack of a scene from The Brady Bunch may be one where Cindy is about to fall down a flight of stairs and you know I don't I don't know if that ever actually happened on the show but so long as no actual Cindy was harmed in the making of the show that would have been funny and when I say funny I mean to a low brain a lowbrow e'en such as myself now ladies gentlemen with that music in the back of your mind group something like that take in the image of mr. meme robber offering to the customers various and sundry sweets from the donut shop counter see it's a meme robber with a heart of gold a freaking heart of gold now this is where you get a close-up of mr. meme robber and that old shark smile comes over his masked face with his shoulders stick you lating in that all shucks way then the laugh track smacks you hard in the face and the credits come up better yet a to be continued sign comes then you see scenes from the next episode of The Brady Bunch which is now renamed the donut Robin Hood punch and the narration says next week are in a very special doughnut Robin Hood Bunch episode the bunch learned the lesson that robbing people of their means of production is not cool and now ladies and gentlemen the moral of the story never ever look a gift doughnut in the mouth even if it just stole you mean stashing device thank you for making it through to the end of the show be sure you tune in tomorrow right here on youtube.com slash I state and facebook.com slash no consent to gov for another exciting episode of I wider daily featuring me your host the votes [Music] subscribe button and be sure notifications when we post new video
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2021 Women's Conference - Session 1
aren't necessarily wrong burdens cares and concerns um in fact somebody who's completely carefree you might wonder have they ever been faithful with any responsibility that god's given them but i did use those terms because those are all synonyms and in fact even good and godly concerns and burdens and cares can become idolatry in our lives and can distract us and cut us off from joy in christ these worries anxieties cares concerns burdens pick your pick your term there they weigh down on us they beg for attention and our response to them ladies inevitably proves our theology so in the normal flow of your life your response to your um burdens and concerns and anxieties prove your true theology your true theology comes out and it's on display in your response and your reaction to those things and and i get it there are so many things there are landmines out there of elements that would pose a threat to you that could become potential temptations to fear and anxiety you might be asking questions about your own fulfillment your own success your own satisfaction on any given day will i be fulfilled today will i accomplish what i've planned will i fill out and check off every box on my mental day planner today or will today be a failure will i have interruptions will i be able to minimize those interruptions how are the kids going to respond and so on and so forth you might have anxieties and concerns and burdens with regard to a relationship maybe with your your husband you might be asking am i truly helping am i being truly godly am i truly serving am i interesting enough am i compelling enough you might have worries and burdens and anxieties about your children will they be successful do they need more training are they lazy are they going to inherit all of my weaknesses and limitations are they going to be popular can i minimize the pain and suffering that they might face in life and those of course are are are ones that certainly could be common to uh to a mom and to a wife and to a woman and those also could obviously be common to any of us in the church i mean as a dad uh my fears and anxieties might tend to take on a different manifestation but fear and anxiety is of course a is not a gender specific sin uh you know sometimes we joke about uh you know mama bear coming out when it comes to protecting her kids well i kind of know a little bit about mama bear myself i remember one time one of my children was um you know we had a birthday party and and this child uh we invited we invited his friends over and i remember being so excited about just celebrating this kid's fifth birthday with his friends and then i walked out after preparing all this stuff and activities and we're getting ready to do the cake and and there he is with all of his friends and i was putting them in quotes because i'm already just seething just kidding i'm not seeing i've gotten over it really i've forgotten over it and all of his friends were on top of the monkey bars spitting at him on his fifth birthday and i remember just okay i know you're not supposed to discipline other people's kids but today is the exception i no i didn't do that i wouldn't do that i just spit in their cake to get get back at him but i you know i i just remember like this this fear and just this in this with this worry and of course maybe it's a more masculine or maybe it's just a personality trait just the that fear and anxiety starts to manifest itself in frustration and anger or maybe it manifests itself in fear and anxiety and timidity maybe you have anxieties and fears about health finances in-laws your role in the church in the home i mean i'm just this we are barely scratching the surface and if i were if it was my job to list out every particular trigger that you might be facing on any given week one day wouldn't be long enough but you understand where i'm going with that that's what we're facing and this first session what i want to do is we're going to look at a passage in the in the gospel of matthew from the sermon on the mount and so you can grab your bibles and make your way there we're going to get there in just a second we're not we're not going to quite there yet but as as i introduce why we're going to matthew 6 the sermon on the mount jesus's instruction on anxiety i want to ask the question what's so wrong with anxiety what's so wicked about it why is it so bad and of course that's a in one way that's a very simple answer why is it so bad because because god hates it because it's a sin against god's character it's a lie against god that's why it's so wicked jesus says do not worry so ladies you cannot worry without sinning against your god it's impossible that's the short answer but before we get to the fuller answer that jesus gives us in matthew 6 i want to ask another question as well to kind of appreciate matthew 6 i want you ladies to be able to appreciate matthew 6 afresh because from probably a good number probably a good majority of you ladies this matthew 6 passages is very familiar and so before we dive in i want to i want to answer one more question to help you appreciate the freshness and the the power of what jesus does here in matthew 6 and i want to ask this question why are we so prone to think lightly about anxiety i i just i just never ceases to amaze me how how many buffers and and barriers there are in my brain and in my mind to downplay anxiety and to downplay worry and i thought i was thinking about that this week and i listed out i listed out a bunch of reasons and then i just edited them out some of them were you know not helpful but i just kind of boiled it down to five five reasons why we are so prone to minimize and downplay anxiety number one because of its acceptance in the culture anxiety is accepted in the culture it's accepted on a on a massive scale in 2006 it was estimated that 10 percent of americans suffered from anxiety disorders in 2021 it's estimated that this number is 18.1 percent that's only what is that 15 years 15-year time span now does that really mean that one-fifth of our population is now anxious whereas only 15 years prior it was just one-tenth of our population have we become that much more anxious as a society no the heart of man does not change there's no difference between the heart of man in 2006 and the heart of man 2021 what changed was the diagnosis and the indicators of what qualifies as a mental disorder anxiety is just becoming so increasingly broad and so increasingly accepted that it's actually becoming the norm psychologytoday.com had an article called anxiety is the most common of all mental illnesses for what it's worth let me give you this this will be kind of a little introduction to um popular level secular level diagnosis of anxiety the american psychiatric association apa they write every few years they come out with a new diagnostics and statistics manual that's that's the bible that's the virtual bible of psychiatry and going back to 1980 you were at the dsm-3 and then they had a revision of that then the four and then the five now we're at the five and that came out in 2013. so these these editions have just been changing and changing well here's a list of disorders pertaining to anxiety fear and panic listed in this is in the the four so this was back in the nineteen two thousand uh oh sorry the 1994 edition here's the list of uh disorders contained in that section panic disorder without agoraphobia panic disorder with agoraphobia agoraphobia without history of panic disorder specific phobia social phobia obsessive compulsive disorder post-traumatic stress stress disorder acute stress disorder generalized anxiety disorder anxiety disorder due to a general medical condition sustenance uh i'm sorry substance well maybe maybe there should be one sustenance induced substance induced anxiety disorder anxiety disorder not otherwise specified and so that's fairly comprehensive except when 19 2013 rolled around the dsm-5 separated all the anxiety ones from the ones involving other circumstances especially the trauma ones and so now they have just this in a very tightly knit section and so now in the anxiety disorder section it's this separation anxiety disorder selective mutism specific phobia social anxiety disorder panic disorder panic attack specifier agoraphobia generalized anxiety disorder substance medication induced anxiety disorder anxiety disorder due to another medical condition other specified anxiety disorder and unspecified anxiety disorder i think that should get it until dsm-6 comes out and i'm sure it'll be even more comprehensive we are we are we live in a society that is increasingly defining anxiety disorder in broader and broader and broader terms and so you take the same heart of man in 2006 the same heart of man in 2021 and of course lo and behold anxiety disorders haven't doubled not that anything's changed but the diagnosis of it have actually doubled i read a book by alan francis who chaired the dsm-3 in the dsm-4 he taught psychiatry at duke university and um he kind of blew the whistle a little bit on what's happening in the american psychiatric association and he's describes he describes a banquet that he went to as kind of like the former head of this whole project as it's being passed to the dsm-5 committee and so he goes to this you know uh really fancy banquet and he's walking around seeing his old friends and and he's talking to these old you know experts in the psychiatric world who are diagnosing anxiety and fear and he says he says that um he soon discovered that he personally qualified for many of the new disorders that were being suggested by them for inclusion in the dsm-5 my gorging on the delectable shrimp and ribs was dsm-5 binge eating disorder my forgetting names and faces would be covered by dsm-5 minor neurocognitive disorder my worries and sadness were going to be missed anxiety depressive disorder the grief i felt that my wife died was major depressive disorder my well-known hyperactivity and distractibility were clear signs of quote adult attention deficit disorder an hour of amiable chatting with old friends and i had already acquired acquired five new dsm diagnoses and let's not forget my six-year-old identical twin grandsons their temper tantrums were no longer just annoying they had quote temper dysregulation disorder and so he goes on to just document what's going on as we continue to describe and diagnoses of diseases and disorders that just require just just describe normal life why is that well it's because the dsm is of course the gatekeeper to pharmaceuticals and pharmaceuticals is a multi-multi-multi-billion dollar industry and so the dsm is obviously connected to all of that as i was thinking about panic and anxiety i was thinking about do i have this disorder and yes indeed i do technical diagnosis requires four or more of the following 13 criteria and i'll read them to you in just a second but let me explain the scenario as i read these criteria i thought back to a moment in my life where i clearly have this disorder i um i had a i blew up blew a knee out in in playing college basketball and so i had a knee reconstruction and i remember this is in 1996 1997 was the no 96 was the the mri and so i went to the university of chicago illinois medical facility and i go into this medical facility and there's this thing called an mri and if you've ever if you've ever had an mri back in those days you know they don't look like today you know today it's just like this tiny little donut thing and it's pretty pretty simple i mean in 96 this was cutting edge technology i walked down to the basement of the uci medical facility and there's this thing that looks like some cheap low budget sci-fi spaceship taking up this entire room you kind of open the door and you're like sliding you know this massive thing and you go around the end there's this tiny little opening you get on this table and they roll you into the the the bowels of this massive machine and so i had this mri done in there it took like an hour and so then fast forward uh until about 15 years later and so i had some more problems with my knee and and um and i had to go they prescribed an mri and so then i'm sitting there and i remember two days before the mri i got up one morning i just went and i'm going about my day i'm just brushing my teeth i'm literally standing in the bathroom and i'm picturing that old cheap low-budget sci-fi spaceship that i sat in for an hour and i started panicking i remembered what it was like you get rolled like i felt like i got rolled about 30 feet i mean the room wasn't even that big it felt like i got rolled 30 feet into this thing and then it's just like it's right there and my whole body is trapped and i'm thinking like what what if that little conveyor belt thing breaks and then i'm stuck in there and i mean they're gonna have to disassemble that that low budget spaceship and get me out of there it's gonna take days they're gonna be slipping here comes another serving of water and so i'm picturing all of that i am palpitating my heart rate is accelerating i am turning pasty white i mean i'm already pasty white trembling shaking that's three nausea abdominal distress for light dizzy light-headed or faint five chills or heat sensations six according to the american psychiatric association i only need four of the thirteen i pass with flying colors i got six of the 13. and there i am anticipating an mri having not seen an mri machine in 20 years and not realizing how small they had become terrified of getting lost in the bowels of this of this beast and panic took over and that's just normal sinful response to circumstances that i don't like but i got a diagnosis there's a medication for that that's one of the biggest reasons we downplay anxiety it's because it's just accepted in our culture it's accepted as a norm the rest of these are going to be pretty quick number two ignorance of the sin if number one is kind of where secular diagnosis and secular psychological thinking are creeping into the church number two is just flat out a lot of times we are ignorant of what god thinks about anxiety jesus says in this passage do not worry it's not a suggestion it's not a it's not just a statement it's a command if we worry we are disobeying our lord and savior jesus christ don't worry to do so as to sin against god i i think some people especially in the in the christian um integrationist movement are unaware that it's actually a sin i remember uh in my undergrad degree i had to study a lot of psychology and i remember uh one time and this was about two semesters after i was genuinely converted to the lord and savior jesus christ i love the lord i was devouring the word and i was starting to see that the bible does not agree with what i'm learning in class and i walked into chapel i went to a christian university and i walked into chapel and this psychiatrist presents in chapel a presentation about how psychotropics help you deal with anxiety worry and depression and i remember listening to this person make a case for this is the answer to this problem and i'm sitting there looking at my bible thinking okay wait a minute this is a sin jesus and paul prohibit this in the scriptures and now for 1900 years no one's been able to beat the sin until psychotropics come along made me want to stand up in the middle of chapel and shout out a paraphrased version of galatians 2 21 if righteousness came through psychotropics then christ died needlessly now we've got to be we've got to start addressing anxiety and worry biblically number number three we blame it on circumstance and this is so common i listed out a whole i started scratching the surface but it was a several categories several areas of your life that could be potential triggers for you to become anxious or fearful or worried and it's very natural to blame your anger and your fear and your worry on those circumstances the very circumstances that caused you to be anxious i remember counseling one husband who blamed it on his wife we literally could not meet we met for three hours in two different settings and i could not get anywhere but his wife he was completely embittered and totally anxious and consumed with her flaws and her ills and her sins i remember one woman consumed in anxiety blaming it on her veterinarian whom she accused of outright murdering her dog and she couldn't get over it and she was just her whole life her every interpretation of her world was consumed with worry and anxiety because of how she'd been wronged by this um horrible veterinarian whatever we find that our circumstances that cause worry we're prone to to blame those circumstances as the cause and of course we know as we'll find out in the scriptures they are not another reason we downplay anxiety is number number four we blame it on personality we might imagine that we're just a worrisome type of person you know i'm just i'm just prone to worry and now i'm not going to fault anybody for saying that if you're just admitting yeah for whatever reasons of my my upbringing and that affects me and the way that my mom responded to certain things that becomes a kind of a natural i get that there's a pathway your sensitivities aren't as high in areas where you've just lived so there's an element where that's very right and appropriate and biblical to recognize those things but when we start ultimately blaming it on personality you know this is very relieving to just say finally i can blame it on personality i know why i'm worried it's just my personality it's the way god wired me i read an article where the person discovered that they had panic attack disorder and this author says i was i was surprisingly enough relieved relieved to finally be able to put a name or a label on what was happening to me and then this author goes down to ask about the panic-prone personalities and they write in my quest to find an answer to the question why me i began to uncover some interesting data i discovered that there was a certain set of personality traits shared by people who suffer from anxiety disorders and so this person looks at their personality realizes they're prone to anxiety and voila there's their solution okay yeah okay it's my personality got it that's why i'm anxious well of course if it's your personality then that's not something you need to be delivered from that's something god gave you christ didn't come to die for personalities he came to die for sin and so until he gets a proper diagnosis there's no hope in the gospel for anxiety if it is personality number five undiagnosed biblically we downplay anxiety when it goes undiagnosed biblically and now why is that not why is that different than number two and number two it just means you're ignorant of what the bible says about it number five this is probably more closer to home for many of us what i mean by when we don't diagnose sin biblically this is when we know it's wrong we know it's a sin but we don't diagnose its causes biblically this is where this is where hopefully today it becomes a real encouragement and ministry to you ladies if you already know that the worry is a sin but you're struggling with it and maybe perhaps the sin of anxiety or worry might feel like it's hounding you and it might feel like it's your front burner sin and you feel like i don't have power over this at times because the circumstances are too much too strong i don't have resources for this then i pray that this seminar or really this this whole day helps you biblically to be able to diagnose the cause because what happens is if you know that this is sin but you're not equipped to diagnose the cause it starts to produce despair and being being trapped in the sin of anxiety and worry leads to despair and people start to fig start to just doubt their salvation they start to doubt whether the gospel has any power in their life and they start wondering am i going to have victory over this am i going to live a am i going to live a worry-free anxious free life am i going to ultimately be able to trust the lord or is there am i even in christ if i can't beat this sin and so those are reasons why we begin to downplay it and if you start to downplay it that way if you start to question whether you really have power over you'll either excuse it or you just live with the lack of assurance in in your life that the lord wants you to have the lord wants you to have assurance by seeing that sin killed not that you'll never be free of it but you can kill its power its dominion over your thinking so we need to dive into matthew chapter 6. grab your bibles matthew chapter six jesus is so helpful here because this is uh the sermon on the mount jesus is teaching on anxiety in the in the in the paragraph that we're looking at but i don't want to just look at the paragraph i want you to benefit from what jesus is doing in the middle of the sermon on the mount and so we're going to move really quick i realized that was a kind of a long introduction we're actually going to kind of work through this paragraph it's a lengthy paragraph we're going to work through it really quickly it's going to feel like we're just flying through it like almost like a running commentary i'm going to show you the outline i'm going to show you what jesus is doing here and then we're going to to to look exactly at you know what's so wicked about anxiety when we when we finish and once we have the passage in our mind we'll be able to look back at that and answer that question very appropriately so to get at this paragraph let me just make a couple of comments if you're if you've studied the sermon on the mount before it goes from matthew chapter 5 through matthew chapter 7. if you've studied it you're probably you're probably familiar with how jesus teaches here it's really a powerful sermon it's the you might i don't think it's an understatement to say it's the greatest sermon ever preached i mean obviously the greatest sermon ever preached would be by jesus and this is one of many that we have and this might be the greatest sermon ever preached in the history of humankind jesus's teaching model is very clear it's very repetitive and it's just absolutely simple negative positive negative positive negative positive all the way through the body of this sermon why is that important because we need to recognize that in this paragraph so real quickly just just for the sake of enjoying this just let's nerd out for a second and look at what how jesus is teaching because this will actually be helpful for us in the anxiety portion go back to chapter 5 verse 21 notice he says you have heard that the ancients were told you shall not commit murder and whoever commits murder shall be liable to the court okay that's a that's a negative statement he's telling his audience here's what you've heard traditionally articulated out of the old testament verse 22. but i say to you and so he turns around so he goes from negative to positive this is the popular exposition of the law but i'm telling you what and what's interesting about that is of course we're not surprised that what he corrects then is actually truth and he actually brings the truth to bear on those errors he speaks truth but what's what's unique is he doesn't just start showing them from the old testament where they're wrong he starts quoting this on his own personal authority and saying here's here's actually what what's true he does that again in 27. you've heard it said you shall not commit adultery but i say to you that even looking at a woman so the inter the popular interpretation is external he shows how the law actually indicts the heart every single time 31 and 32 do the same thing with divorce 33 and 34 with oaths 35 38 and 39 with law of restitution lex talionis 43 and 44 does that with what it means to love your neighbor he continues he changes topics now he starts looking at the horizontal the vertical relationship between god and man and in chapter six he basically says don't practice your righteousness before men but do it so that god in heaven sees what you do so in verse two don't give this way chapter verse three you should give this way verse seven don't pray this way verse nine you should pray this way verse 16 don't fast this way verse 17 you should fast this way so it's negative positive negative positive now here's what we've got to slow down everybody look at chapter 6 verse 19. i got to belabor this paragraph because our text starting in verse 25 starts with for this reason okay so when jesus says for this reason in verse 25 through 34 we know that he's actually making a point built on the previous paragraph so what's the negative positive in verses 19 to 24 verse 19 is the negative do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth where moth and rust destroy where thieves break in and steal positive but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven where neither moth nor rust destroys where thieves do not break in or steal negative don't store up treasure on earth positive store up treasure in heaven now why does jesus say that verse 21 for where your treasure is there your heart will be also what a powerful statement from christ christ knows ladies that wherever your heart finds preeminent value that's where you're whatever you value most in life that's where your heart is going to go so he's saying look if you store up treasure on earth your heart's going to go that way all of your life faculties all your life juices all of your focus all of your resources all of your energy all of your concerns and burdens are going to be wrapped up in this life you won't survive that you will you will squander your life if what you treasure most is in this life but if you store up treasures in heaven your heart your focus your resources all of your faculties are going and all your concerns and all your burdens are going to center around eternity and none of those concerns and none of those burdens will be squandered goes on to say in verse 22 and 23 that whatever your ultimate focus is determines uh whether you're walking in light or dark in darkness verse 22 the eye is the lamp of the body so if your eye is clear your whole body will be full of light but if your eye is bad your whole body will be full of darkness if then the light that is in you is darkness how great is the darkness and he just says ladies look at your soul don't picture it like a living room with windows on all sides picture it like a cell with one sun with one little um sunlight in the in the ceiling and if your focus is on this life it's like a pitch black sunroof it's like a window on top that's completely filthy and not letting any light in how great is the darkness in the soul when your light is focused on this life however if your light is focused on eternity then how great is the light that's the implication so verse 24 no one can serve two masters he will either hate the one and love the other or he will be devoted to one and despise the other you cannot serve god and wealth so what does that mean jesus knows that whatever you value most that's where your heart's going to go and because of that reason verse 25 because of that reason he says to us do not be worried about your life don't worry there's our negative our negative is don't worry about this life that goes from 25 all the way down through 32 and he even repeats it in 31 do not worry then saying what will we eat what will we drink what will we wear for clothing but then in verse 33 we have the positive but seek first his kingdom and his righteousness and all these things will be added to you so ladies here's a very simple way to think about this paragraph in light of the previous paragraph for that reason you need to do two things number one don't worry about this life but focus on the kingdom don't worry about this life but focus on the kingdom so let's just work through these verses very very quickly and i i warned you it's going to be fast in verse 25 he says don't be worried and this worried word worried has the connotation of being apprehensive of having anxiety of being anxious or unduly concerned about something you can actually be concerned about right things but to be unduly concerned about it is going to cause worry it's something that you're really concerned how well is it going to turn out is it going to succeed it might be out of your control and you start to see worry it's something that you attend to it's something that demands focus it's something that you care about you're concerned about something those are the meanings of this word translated worry care concern now in verse 25 he prohibits that but he spells out for us for a couple of particular categories here he says don't worry about your life as to what you will eat or what you will drink or nor for your body as to what you will put on is not your life more than food and your body more than clothing and so that kind of becomes an outline for this paragraph in verses 26 and following he talks about food and then in verse 28 and following he talks about clothing so let's just unders he introduces it in 26 with those questions is it is it is it food is it clothing is it is it your sustenance is it is it your possessions what is your life what are you concerned about what's what's consuming you what's focusing your your heart with all this attention and worry and care and concern so the first category food well let's just look at that here's the example look at the birds of the air they don't sow nor reap or gather into barns you know i grew up in kansas and so i remember you know i worked in a green elevator and and you know i remember every every uh uh the previous season before the before the the the the crops would grow up you you have drilling season right after uh particularly if it's winter wheat right after you harvest and then clean your wheat you have seed wheat you take that you drill and when they drill they just drag the drills through the field and they're putting putting the the seed in the ground i mean these farmers have to store this stuff they have to purify it they have it certified and then when you drill it it's going to sit there and start to grow and then the next following spring it starts to come up and then you're you're you're cultivating you're making sure it's irrigated and then come in well at my latitude you know harvest is usually in the end of june depending on how rainy it is maybe early july and so then that harvest comes and you run the combines runs through the field and you you store it all up and you you load it into a truck you take it to the green elevator you store it in an elevator and then you can sell it to the market depending on the rising falling prices and it's all stored in stockpiled and there i was i was working in this green elevator that stores one million bushels of wheat i've never seen birds do that i'm i'm still waiting to see like some sort of bird civilization with barns in an economy so they can let out certain amount of wheat so they can make the greatest profit i mean it's like they don't even think about it just oh some came up let's go get some food and god provides for them now it's not the point is not that they do nothing like i just sit there in their nest with their remote they do nothing i mean yeah they still they still go out there's still activity uh it's not that it's it's not that there's lack of activity it's just that there's lack of worry and concern in fact god regularly uses your diligence as means of providing the issue is not laziness that's not the point of the birds they're actually very active the point is there is no worry or concern they do not have anything stockpiled they just go out and get their daily worm and they're not even praying lord give us this day our daily worm they don't even pray they're just they just go do it every morning and look at look at 26b yet your father in heaven feeds them god feeds birds who don't store they don't sow they don't harvest they don't stockpile they don't even pray and god provides for them and so are you not worth much more than they i mean how profound is that birds just created out of god's sheer delight and here we are men and women created in god's image is he not more concerned about our sustenance than the birds verse 27 starts to bring into focus the arrogance of worry and who of you by being worried can add a single hour to his life and the word single hour is is actually a cubit and um and what that is is that's the measurement from your uh middle of your uh the top of your hand of your middle finger down to your elbow it's you know typically uh estimated at 18 inches um and so what would that mean to add 18 inches to your life and i think the idea is life span so like you know like if you have one of those watches that like keep track of your pedometer and you're keeping track of how many steps you you make in a day you know and so you're like oh i i walked you know six miles today or whatever it was imagine how many steps you have in your life i don't know let's just make up a number just 50 million seem about right i don't know who knows let's just say you walk 50 million steps into in a lifetime who of you by worrying has the power to make it 50 million in one to add 18 inches to your life who of you have that kind of power and ability do you realize the arrogance of worry oh what am i gonna do what are you gonna do i mean seriously let's just be honest with ourselves what are we actually going to do but it's just my universe and i kind of run oh oh it's sheer arrogance to imagine the universe rests on our shoulders to think that we could worry and change anything one study i read said that um 85 of worries are never actualized in other words 85 percent of the things that we worry about are are absolutely fiction and uh and you're thinking i know and that's why those 15 are absolutely critical and how am i going to know the difference on the front end whether it's the 15 or the 85. i get it i get it well just think about that for a second let's say it's one of the 85 oh it never actually happened what a waste but it's the 15 okay so let's just let's think about the 15. let's say that what you're worried about actually comes true what did your worry accomplish to avoid it zero verse 27 already prepares us for an answer of what what's so wicked about anxiety because one of those has to do with the sheer arrogance of it let's keep moving verse 28 why are you worried about clothing so now he picks up the clothing that he introduced in 25b and he says this let's just pick another observation and if if this took place uh in the traditional site of the sea at the sea of galilee the traditional site of the sermon on the mount um i mean i've stood uh actually taught us a a an overview of the sermon on the mount from that spot it was really sweet but if you stand on that little hill and there's like a little unnatural amphitheater and you know the birds and the lilies would have been everywhere this is probably regardless if that was the same spot or not it's probably just right there at hand and jesus is using these word pictures from what's right there in their in their view consider how the lilies of the field grow they don't toil nor do they spin we could just repeat the same illustration we used for the birds i'm still waiting to see a group of lilies with the you know shops and clothing and all the styles and it's just no they just they're clothes like god just makes them beautiful and yet i say to you that not even solomon in all his glory clothed himself like one of these i mean this is profound here you have now you have if it's one thing to have birds which actually have a heartbeat in the brain now you got lilies i mean look at how god gives care to plants to make sure that they are adorned verse 30 here's the obvious point but if god so closed the grass of the field which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace will he not much more clothe you i mean if god feeds birds and he clothes lilies what are we doing worrying about whether he's going to do that for us this starts to become an assault on god's character jesus says very important very instructive little phrase here he's just addressing the audience and he says simply you of little faith it's just an address and he doesn't he doesn't do anything with it i mean it's it's literally just name calling and it's the most edifying use of name calling you can possibly imagine because jesus is helping us as the audience to know how to think about ourselves how to label this how to diagnose this you of little faith what's so wicked about anxiety is it's a lack of faith we're not taking god at his word we're not believing he is who he said he is when we worry so in verse 31 he repeats the prohibition do not worry then saying what will we eat or what will we drink or what will we wear for clothing and this is so so important verse 32 begins with the word for and he's going to explain why you should never ask those questions in a from a position of worry you should never be gripped by worry about such things why jesus why on what basis can you say that this is totally inappropriate on this basis because the gentiles eagerly seek all these things jesus makes the point that the pagans and again this is before the church right so when he says gentiles this is not a this is not um some sort of um genetic issue here he's talking about people outside of uh revelation of truth and so he's talking about people who do not worship yahweh people who do not worship the lord outside the people of god and so of course after pentecost the the translation of this very same phrase would be don't you know that the unbelievers don't you know that the outsiders worry about those things he's making a comparison about the inconsistency of a christian worrying and that being actually more like the atheist think about your pagan friends think about the people that you're trying to reach think about the people in your family who do not trust the lord who do not believe the gospel who do not know the lord jesus christ how do they live how else can they live except to worry whether their chosen gods and their chosen idols will provide for them when we as christians worry we are actually becoming practical atheists because in verse 32 jesus is showing us that the pagans worry about those things and they should because their gods can't provide for them and as a christian now think about the advertising as a christian i mean here i am i'm a christian i'm a pastor for crying out loud you think what is worry in my heart what is anxiety in my heart tell a lost dying desperate world i'm a preacher of the gospel i worship the god of scripture and he is of no more ability than your idol to provide for my basic necessities oh man that's verse 32 is so penetrating so he says the gentiles seek these things secondly i'm saying that because your father in heaven knows that you need all these things we've got the father in heaven we're worshiping the god who's in charge we're worshiping the god who gave us life and ladies this is an interesting interesting reality god gave us life and he's going to sustain us and our anxiety and our worry is a lie against god and so i'm going to read to you a quote i'm going to read to you a quote here from lloyd jones and this helps us to expose some of the pride behind our anxiety and our worry lord jones said this about this about this statement here in matthew matthew 6 what does our lord mean by this the argument is a very profound and powerful one and how prone we are to forget it he says in effect take this life of yours about which you are tending to worry and become anxious how have you got it where has it come from and the answer of course is that it is a gift of god man does not create life man does not give himself being no one not one of us has ever decided to come into this world and the very fact that we are alive at this moment is entirely because god willed it and god decided it life itself is a gift a gift from god so the argument which our lord uses is this if god has given you the gift of life the greater gift do you think he is now suddenly going to deny himself and his own methods and not see to it that life is sustained and enabled to continue god has it has his own ways of doing that but the argument is that i need never become anxious about it of course i'm going to plow and sow and reap and gather into barns i'm going to do the things that god has ordained for man and life in this world i must go to work and earn money and so on but all he says is that i need never be concerned or worried or anxious that suddenly there will not be sufficient to keep this life of mine going that will never happen to me it's impossible if god has given me the gift of life he will see to it that life is kept going but this is the point he's not arguing as to how this will done will be done he is just saying that it will be do we trust him do we believe him to finish our quick exposition of this paragraph verse 33 is the positive we need to remain focused we need to remain focused on the kingdom on eternity verse 33 seek first his kingdom and his righteousness and all these things will be added to you i mean think about it if we remain focused on the kingdom if we remain focused on obeying the lord he'll take care of all those details all we have to do is entrust every concern and burden that pertains to this life to him leave it in his ability leave it on his shoulders put it in his hands where it should reside and just get busy doing what he's called us to do if we literally resign ourselves to obedience there is literally no worry that could possibly dominate our thinking get busy focusing on eternity on his kingdom and his righteousness verse 34 then is a conclusion so then don't worry about tomorrow for tomorrow will care for itself each day has enough trouble of its own i mean we can worry about tomorrow we don't even know if we get tomorrow what a waste of energy that would have been and if we get tomorrow and we worried about it we have zero ability to actually change it so what a waste that would be so either you get it tomorrow and you wasted your time worrying or you get it tomorrow and you wasted your time worrying either way you wasted your time worrying that's helpful that is so helpful of jesus to give us this paragraph and to put this paragraph tied directly to verses 19 to 24 because when we are worried about this life market ladies when we're worried about this life we are trying to serve two masters our hearts are going down a road that if left unchecked we will find our wife our life squandered you can't serve two masters you're gonna love one and hate the other and so the more you worry and the more you start taking matters into your own hands the more you try to start trying to control your life the more you start trying to fearfully protect circumstances from happening that you're so terrified of happening the more you do that the more you are going to find yourself at odds with god and then the temptation becomes even stronger to despise god and this is why anxiety and worry is it's just so wicked so here's a list of reasons why it's so wicked and i've already alluded to several of these as we went through it um well here it is and by the way i'm so grateful for dave doing the powerpoint because um he was not ready for that i sprung it on him and so he's been doing a phenomenal job kind of translating it the format we didn't have time to get it get it all right so here's the list so what's wrong with anxiety just from this passage number one it's arrogant it's arrogant you can't control your life verse 27 says who of you by being worried can add a single span to his life who can turn your 50 million step life into 50 million point five at 18 inches of your lifespan who can do that no one you are so arrogant i am so arrogant when i imagine that my worry that taking matters into my own hands that relying on myself that trusting in my own ability can change something about my life i am making myself to be sitting on the throne of god as if i'm in control of this universe it's sheer arrogance number two it's worldly it's worldly because it binds our heart to this world my anxiety and my worry have never ever shocker made me more eternally minded ever my worry and my anxiety have always made me more earthly minded it binds your heart to the world and that's the point of verse 25 saying for this reason appealing back to verse 19 to 24 specifically verse 21 where your treasure is there your heart will be also so when i'm worrying about the things of this life now my heart juices my priorities my focus are getting wrapped up in this world and i'm becoming temporally minded i'm becoming a worldling i've taken my eyes off of christ off of eternity and off of spiritual truths if you worry and you give in to worry and you keep feeding it then here's why anxiety is so wicked because every time you do that you're going to reinforce a lie in your soul you're going to keep telling yourself this is actually true soul your life consists only of food possessions clothing temporal comfort your children's welfare fill in the blank so soul value that live for that and all those things that you've attached your worry and your care and your concern to can get stolen eaten by moths and it can turn to dust in your hands number three it's unbelief and so you saw in verse 30 jesus says you of little faith we start doubting god's word if we doubt god's word we're calling him a liar when god says something in his word it is a testimony that is fully confirmed its righteousness exceeds the mountains john 3 33 says he who received his testimony has set a seal to this that god is true so when you take god at his word you're signing your name on the dotted line of a contract saying god tells the truth but when you don't take god at his word first john 5 10 says the one who believes in the son has the testimony in himself the one who does not believe god has made him a liar because he has not believed in the testimony that god has given concerning the son so when i doubt god's word i'm signing my name on the dotted line saying ah gods of questionable integrity we'll talk this afternoon about the example of sarah but i just want to give you the example of abraham in romans 4 it talks about him believing god and god gave him an impossible promise and if god only gave naturally believable promises then it wouldn't require faith would it so god gives a promise to a man who's almost a hundred with a wife of 90 who's been barren even through her childbearing years and tells him you're going to have a child and god and abraham believed god he believed in him even god who gives life to the dead and calls into being that which does not exist abraham could have started reasoning saying oh god said you're gonna have a kid well that's impossible she was barren even when we were at the right age and now we're not the right age doubly impossible or you can take god at his word say oh well this is the god who gives life to the dead and he calls into being that which does not exist so he actually doesn't even need a womb to create a son he promised it's true okay i'll have a son in hope against hope he believed so that he might become the father of many nations according to what had been spoken so should your descendants be without becoming weak in faith he contemplated his own body now as good as dead since he was about 100 years old in the deadness of sarah's womb and so with respect to the promise of god he did not waver in unbelief but grew strong in faith giving glory to god isn't that sweet ladies you take god at his word and you're giving him glory you're telling the world no he's totally worthy of being trusted your your killing of sinful fear and your killing of anxiety glorify god it tells to a watching world that no you profess christ he's trustworthy i believe him so number four leads right to number four it lies against god the reason why it's so wicked is because you're telling the world that your god is no better than theirs and that's again from verse 32. gentiles seek these things ladies anxious christians are a living contradiction how tragic it would be to say i worship the god of scripture and at the same time we're practically saying i'm anxious that things will work out i'm actually not sure about it i don't know that god has the ability or i don't know that god cares that's what's so tragic about our anxiety jesus is so helpful because he kind of you know i wanted to start in matthew 6 this morning because it just helps us ladies to kind of set the trajectory for for today as we look at a few more passages um we're going to look at um next session seminar we're going to look at luke 10 uh with mary and martha and start to help you know get help on how worry can distract us from the word and then we're going to start looking especially this afternoon on two passages from first peter on how to kill fear and then how to kill anxiety but hopefully this helps us to just calibrate our conscience to make sure that we're our conscience is sensitive like this is that this is serious we cannot be anxious we cannot be worried uh and so hopefully that's a help let's let's close an order of prayer father we're so thankful for your word we're so thankful for how clear it is because lord i know how tenacious the sin of anxiety and worry can be and for any uh dear sister here this morning who is plagued by it i just pray that these sessions would be an incredible encouragement i pray that it would give hope that it would give confidence to to her about you and that it would put wind in her sails to strive and to win the battle of faith to repent of lies she's believing about you and to begin believing what's true and to walk according to that i pray that these truths would just absolutely annihilate the stranglehold of anxiety or worry on anyone's heart or mind here this morning thank you for the power of truth thank you for delivering us from ourselves and from our puny tendency to think so wickedly about you and to think so small of your character and so lord i just pray that your each passage that we look at today would become a ministry to us and it would become food for our soul in your name we pray amen
Grace Bible Church - Tempe, AZ
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2021-08-26
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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How To Reroute Coax Cable Wire
hey guys welcome back to dial TV where we teach you how to do things yourself so for today's project I'm going to teach you guys how to reroute your cable box TV cable or it's called also called coax cable so here's the deal we actually just rearranged our room and our dress shirt used to be in this area our TV was right here that's why you find that this cable is right here but what we want to do is we're going to reroute it to be in this area over here because that's going to be right next to our TV right next to the cable box on our TV where we want it at and that way uh you know we avoid having wires everywhere it's you know you avoid the trip Hazard and it just looks nicer all right so let's get into it so first I'm going to just put this piece off pixel and I'm actually gonna just stuff this cable down the hole and I'll come back to that a little bit next step is I got my drill right here and I'm gonna get I'll probably use a half inch size half inch spade bit that'll be they'll be thick enough to be able to push the cable through a hole ah you can just pick it where you want it at so I think I went right there after you got your whole drill like I just did the next step is use your um fish sticks so these come in handy actually I bought these not too long ago they were 20 bucks on Amazon and uh you just screw these together and make them as long as you need them um so I'm gonna make it about this long and uh This is Gonna help me to pull the cable back up from under the house so I'll just push it through here until I feel it actually fill it here um the ground okay guys for the next part of this video I actually got my crawl suit ready um this is about a 40 investment and just it just helps to do certain jobs that you need to do in the house I really recommend it so let me get suited and booted and uh we'll get to it yeah so here it is with the the CrossFit on it's a pretty nifty uh piece of clothing to have with you and also going to go down there with my lap headlamp can't forget that so yeah I just wanted to show you guys the way I do it if you don't have a crossroad like this you can actually just go down there in your regular clothes you could put cardboard down and just crawl on that or you can buy the ones they have at Home Depot or Lowe's and and you use them and you throw them guys basically our house is is raised up um there's actually space underneath the whole house and this is actually one of the entrances so actually going to take you guys down there with me so you can see what it is that is done underneath the house the entrance which is on camera but I was telling my wife that uh I won't be down here too long because if you see right there right there that green stick that's the that's the fish sticks that I had pushed through my room so you see how close that is to the engines and this is a cable that I pushed through that hole in the beginning also it's just just over there just over there so all right let's do this it takes a little bit of maneuvering just trying to be careful not to uh break anything when I'm down here uh you see where I pushed it through it's right there so all I gotta do is actually just pull this pulling this foreign get you guys some footage yeah my wife's pulling on it I'm gonna um I'm gonna put tape on this and then she's gonna pull it up not yet honey okay let me do that okay guys you guys can see I have it taped up I put a little bit of electrical tape on it and my wife's gonna pull it up go ahead honey you got enough all right guys that was it I'm gonna go back up there and finish up on top just before I get out of here I want to show you guys what it looks like down here in case uh some of you haven't been down here but look at how freaking crazy it is on here yeah it's not I don't have a place to be in or crawl through or anything but he's also houses are gonna be done man yeah it's dirty Dusty nasty dangerous but you know it's what has to be done okay guys I'm back up on top as you can see um I had my wife up here on this end and she pulled out plenty of this uh coax cable for the next step in this process uh I'm gonna use my crimping toolkit um I bought this on Amazon for 28 it includes the crimping tool um stripping tool and I came with the packing connectors um I bought it knowing that I wasn't going to do a lot of it just a few jobs here and there around the house so I just felt like 30 was was enough for me to spend but um it depends on your situation so just do do according to what what you're gonna do okay so I'm gonna show you guys my way how I do it um basically I like to start off with a a clean piece right here so it the end's a little uneven I'm gonna cut that off it's a nice time for the clamp is okay so now that I have um a clean piece to start with real quick um this is not the best quality stripper it actually the part that I want to use right now is right here but this piece broke off so I'm actually gonna have to finesse it with this back piece and I'll show you guys uh what I need to do so I'm going to go one inch back and I just gotta look at it so I don't cut through it so I just look at it like so and then I just twist it okay guys basically this is what you want can you get a close-up of that that's what you want I exposed about about an inch of the middle copper piece and then what I'm gonna do now is I'm gonna cut back just the white outer jacket I'm gonna cut back about a half an inch and once again um I'm gonna use this back piece right here and I you need to watch for it that you don't cut um the the braided jacket I'll show you right now but you just do this lightly twist The Wire you do enough just to cut the outer jacket and then I didn't cut it all the way so I'm going to do it just to get on the part where I didn't cut just a little bit and then I pull it out like that so this is the next step you want so you got the exposed middle copper piece and then you got a little bit of this braided jacket exposed and next thing you do is you pull this back away from away from this like aluminum covering if you guys can see it so now from there you get the connector and you see one side is threaded that's going to be on top right here so you put the blue side in first and you can just sort of like turn it you can feel it going down and I basically want it to go as far as where it's inside it's like it hits the top of it and it can it can go further down but you don't want it too far down you want to just right you'll notice so that's how you want it like that okay so once you have it like that you're ready to crimp put it in like so and just start squeezing right there it's good you see the cramp they pushed the blue the blue piece into the silver piece and I do a little tug test I pull it it looks pretty good and now it's okay if you have a little bit of excess copper because you can actually just cut that off I use the side cutters and there you go I have it so now what I'm going to do is I'm going to connect it into the cable box so we could see that that it works okay guys so there you have it um we have the finished uh Cable ONE it's already connected to the Box did you see the TV's on and that's basically we want it so yeah guys um please comment like share this video subscribe to the channel thank you guys for uh watching me and I'll catch you guys on the next video so for diotv see you on the next one
DIO TV
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2023-06-06
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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How Racism Shaped the Housing Crisis & What We Can Do About It — November 6 2019
for that thank you for coming my name is Neil Gorn Flo I'm the executive director of shareable and I'm here jit always nice to have fans yeah I'm just here to introduce the program right and I feel super lucky to have gathered such incredible speakers and to have have you guys join so my organization shareable we're we're the co-hosts along with spur and I want to thank spur and know in the crew you know fantastic partners they they helped make this this possible and this is the beautiful space a kind of temple to cities and a temple to urbanism in San Francisco so thank you spur we should give them a hand and and sharable aren't you know we're an NGO we've been around for 10 years our mission is to empower people to share and power communities to share we do that through a few different programs where most known for are publishing so if you go to shareable net sign up for a newsletter every day we have stories coming out about the latest sharing innovations from around the world tool libraries public banks all kinds of cooperatives you know more and more stuff on cities you know in 2011 here at spur actually we we kicked off we launched the sharing economy working group with the city of San Francisco and spur and many other people and that became the sharing Cities movement and we recent recently launched a book called sharing cities activating the urban Commons so there's you can go to shareable dotnet download the book for free it's in PDF form it's also for sale downstairs and you know besides publishing we also do campaigns and and also consulting we help cities with their sharing strategies and now there are over 100 C's around the world that have a sharing Cities program of some sort so that's that's really really impressive and a good sign so just also want to just thank other some other folks that helped make this this night possible the the thriving resilient communities collaboratory leslie here in the third row is it's in the house from from that group who we've been part of for years also the threshold foundation and some of our sponsors to Paul tape platform OS my turn stock C United and seats2meet you can check those companies out on our website at the bottom of the footer and and yeah let me just quickly go over our program tonight so after I'm done in the next few minutes I'm gonna invite Richard Rothstein up the author of of the color of law and and you know he'll spend 40 minutes and his talk is based on his book by the same name which is also for sale in the lobby here if you haven't seen it yet or or or gotten it and I highly recommend it it's it's fantastic and so Richard will do 40 minutes on his book and then donate session will come up executive director of of the East Bay permanent real estate cooperative and and and our panelists and we'll have a discussion you know we'll go from the history and then age of solutions right with some transition probably in there as well and and then we'll have a Q&A after after the panel and then there if there's time left over we'll we'll do breakout groups with each of the speakers so you can talk to whoever you want to talk to and even move between different different people that you want to talk to and so let me let me introduce the speakers so yes Richard Rothstein is the research as a research associate at the economic poly Policy Institute and a fellow at the Thurgood Marshall Institute of the n-double-a-cp Legal Defense Fund he lives in California where he's a fellow of the hospital Institute at UC Berkeley and you know as I said he's written this incredible book the color of law highly recommend it it's in lobby also noni session she's a third generation West Oakland er and plus a cultural anthropologist and grassroots organizer and 2016 she ran for Oakland City Council getting 43% of the vote that's very impressive she she through that process she came to believe that her community's clearest path to economic justice and reduced displacement is a cooperative economy that is the sentiment that I also share and we share at shareable she's yeah as I said before director of the East Bay permanent real estate cooperative which is a democratically run cooperative people of color led model that is creating permanently affordable housing in the East Bay we also have Chris glacis he's the CEO of the Unity Council so unity councils is one of East Oakland's most vital community assets it's 55 years old now it's a social equity development organization devoted to improving the quality of life for residents of the largest Latino neighborhood in the Bay Area oak dales Oakland's fruit dale district and and through a place-based economic and in turn generational equity agenda so please check out the work unique council is doing in Fruitvale village which is an award-winning mixed income mixed-use transit oriented development I got a one-pager on some of the work being done there it looks awesome and it's a great example of Chris's and unity councils visionary leadership and then we also have Sarah Jo Champa sham Balin and she thought the research director at spur and she you know her research spans a range of policy topics and she's always aiming to bring better information about how to best provide user managed shared public resources among many other things she leads Spurs place type research which leverages her data science and GIS experience to document how we've used land in the Bay Area and so the samples of her work are out in the lobby all those place type posters that's from her work and that's just a sample of him she's there's quite a there's a I think double the number that that's actually in the in the lobby and and that work is a real eye-opener so I hope you you know check into it further so just a little bit before we get started on you know why shareable event you know hosting this event tonight so I I think we're at a critical turning point in cities and in the housing situation I the housing crisis has become so acute that a previously I think I'm almost untouchable building block of the American Dream is being reconsidered the single-family home and the sprawl sprawling suburbs where they're found as Richard will detail for you in just a few minutes local state and federal governments went to incredible lengths to segregate white middle-class Americans from african-americans other minorities and low-income folks starting about a hundred years ago in the mid twentieth century white flight to the suburbs was fueled by propaganda and gigantic subsidies while it was made very difficult for minorities especially African Americans to live anywhere else but a relatively limited areas within cities or in the countryside so this helped create a separate and unequal America and while many of the rules of this system have been reversed we still live with its legacy I hardly need to tell you that you know we're still separate and unequal and even more some so in some ways like school segregation another critical legacy is the fact that most of the land in and around our cities was set aside for single-family homes you know this is a resource intensive low density settlement pattern that has helped make housing unnecessarily scarce and expensive so to give you an idea what I mean a recent sightline Institute analysis showed that you could fit all of Paris in just half of Seattle yet Paris houses three times as many people than all of Seattle this is what you call sprawl so single-family zoning the foundation on which this separate unequal housing system was built is now starting to be reversed in cities and states across the country due to the severity of the housing crisis and this is you know over 40 years after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which was intended to desegregate our society so Minneapolis were the first city to do this late last year Oregon followed suit and this year many other jurisdictions are mulling this and last month we just passed a b68 in California which allows up to two accessory dwelling units per lot and all single family zone areas across the state this means that three residences can now exist where only one was previously allowed and this applies to a massive swath of land in most of our cities including including the berry Bay Area where 75% of urban land was zoned single-family I got that stat from spur naturally so you know we I I think it's important that we recognize this date wide and nation wide change as a turning point as a potential turning point where housing justice has been injustice has been done we have a rare opportunity to create more justice where segregation was created we can integrate and make sure that public goods are distributed more fairly we're a wasteful expensive and socially isolating settlement patterns created we have a chance to build a new one that can help us meet our climate targets and meet the UN's sustainable development goals but these outcomes will not come naturally they won't just materialize because of this change right up zoning single-family neighborhoods is no guarantee of justice by itself there needs to be many parallel measures to this that this point in history turns us toward more light not toward more darkness and this couldn't be a more important turning point look at our body politic today in this country look how divided we are I've never experienced something like what we are going through right now and as Lincoln said so long ago at a historical moment not unlike ours a house divided against itself cannot stand and I humbly submit a little modification to that beautiful line for today that a country cannot stand on a housing system that divides its people and what does the outcome of this turning-point count on Wow counts on us you and I each one of us it's up to us to face the truth of who we are and what we've done decide to do something different we all deserve better especially African Americans who have sacrificed so much who so much has been taken from and who have gotten so very little still I have a lot of questions to answer before I jump in myself into this moment and try to make a difference and maybe you have questions too for instance Wilson single family hunter homeowners build affordable units or just market rate ones will they lease their units to people unlike themselves will they East will this ease segregation and make it worse does this move make single-family homes instantly more valuable and if so does that exacerbate wealth inequality won't this attract even more institutional investors who after the subprime crisis began buying up single-family homes across the country right is allowing two extra units per lot going far enough won't this encourage more Airbnb style short-term rentals what can be done to ensure this shift may actually makes things better and gets us justice gets us more equity and what about reparations you may be wondering the same or have your own questions like this I hope that tonight you get some answers or you start asking more questions and with that I'd like to invite Richard Rothstein to the stage to begin our program thank you very much [Applause] thank you very much bill and thanks to all of you for coming here this evening to engage with me in this conversation I see there are a few seats up here some some of you who are standing one through there are the lot but at least three I can see four can come on up and take a seat good I've got one taker she can't sit in three seats so again thank you as you all know in the there's one here too as you all know in the in the 20th century Neil alluded to it we had a civil rights movement in this country it began by challenging segregation in law schools because civil rights lawyers figured that if judges were too dense to understand anything else they might be able to figure out that you couldn't get a good legal education and inferior and segregated law school and then that precedent was used to abolish racial segregation and other institutions of higher education and then as you all know in Brown versus Board of Education in 1954 we prohibited legal segregation in elementary and secondary schools and then the brown decision gave rise to a movement of activists engaged in marches demonstrations civil disobedience people lost their lives as you may recall but by the end of the 1960's that civil rights movement that succeeded in abolishing segregation and everything from lunch counters you remember the Greensboro sit-ins or many of you do with buses Rosa Parks is a symbol of that struggle interstate transportation public accommodations of all kind water fountains from the and yet even though the civil rights movement and the nation as a whole had persuaded the nation as a whole that racial segregation was wrong it was immoral it was harmful to both African Americans and to whites that it was incompatible with our self conception as a constitutional democracy as a democratic society even though it come to that conclusion and abolished all of these forms of segregation had left untouched the biggest segregation of all the biggest segregation of all which is every metropolitan area in this country is residentially segregated everyone I've lived in many of them many I've lived in New York and Boston and Denver Chicago and Charlotte North Carolina Los Angeles San Francisco everyone was residentially segregated clearly defined areas that we either all black or mostly black clearly defined areas that we're either all why the mostly white how could it be if we understood that racial segregation was wrong immoral harmful to both blacks and whites incompatible with our self conception as a constitutional democracy how can be we left untouched the biggest segregation of all it's not that we well not that we like it we think it's too bad but we've never felt an obligation none of us never felt an obligation to do anything about it partly of course it's because it's harder it's a hard thing to do it's harder to desegregate neighborhoods at the desegregate water fountains you prohibit segregation of one offense the next day you can drink out of any water fountain but we could pass a law prohibiting segregation in neighborhoods the next day things wouldn't look much different so what we've done all of us and I mean every one of us myself included liberals conservatives Democrats Republicans northern or southern there's what we've done is adopted a rationalization an excuse that we use something we tell ourselves that excuses us from accepting our obligation to redress residential segregation and that rationalization goes something like this what we tell ourselves is that those other forms of segregation that we abolished in the 20th century weather of public accommodations or schools and colleges or interstate transportation any of them those were all created by government those were the product of laws requiring segregation ordinances public policies it was the federal government doing it that was a Fifth Amendment violation civil rights violation and we had an obligation to do something about it if we took our citizenship responsibilities seriously if the state and local governments were doing it it was a Fourteenth Amendment violation also a civil rights violation something that we have we understood we have an obligation to prevent and redress but residential segregation we tell ourselves so that's something entirely different that wasn't done by government that wasn't done by law by regulation by public policy it just happened by accident wasn't a civil rights violation happened perhaps because bigoted white homeowners wouldn't sell homes to African Americans in white neighborhoods so maybe landlords wouldn't rent homes brett-brett apartments to them or maybe businesses in the private economy like real estate agents or banks discriminated and how they carried out their businesses too bad but it was private activity not governmental action or maybe we tell ourselves it's just that people like to live with each other of the same race you know the race of people move into our neighborhood we flee because we like to be with others just like ourselves or maybe we tell ourselves it's just because of its an economic thing because of income differences on average everybody but on average african-americans have lower incomes and whites and many of them can't afford to move to middle-class neighborhoods all of these individual bigoted perhaps but non governmental actions and decisions is what's created the residential segregation that we know today and what happened by accident can only unhappen by accident and we give a name to this rationalization all of us use it I did and all of us I'm sure have we call it de facto segregation something that just sort of happened in fact not in walk well I spent many years not on this topic writing about education policy that was my specialty I didn't know anything about housing and during the 1990s and 2000's early 2000s I spent most of my time attacking the dominant educational theory of the country and this again was one that was shared across the political spectrum it was the idea the reason that on average african-american children have lower achievement than white children excuse me was because teachers have low expectations of black children they just don't try very hard the teachers don't try very hard to educate them and the following we could force teachers to try harder the achievement gap was disappear it was a ludicrous theory and yet it was embraced across the political spectrum in button embody the national law called a No Child Left Behind law which was passed in 2001 promoted by a Republican President George Bush sponsored in the Senate by the most liberal Democratic senator Ted Kennedy sponsored in the House by our own George Miller the most liberal Democrat in the house this was a national consensus and the law said that in seven years the achievement gap is going to disappear because we're going to make teachers try harder and the way we were going to do that was to by testing children more and then hold teachers accountable for their test scores well I wrote many many columns and articles about this why I thought it was such a foolish foolish harmful thing I remember writing one column about asthma is you may know African American children and inners to the urban neighborhoods have asthma at four times the rate the middle class children four times the rate because they live in more polluted neighborhoods more to deteriorate buildings more vermin in the environment and if a child have asthma has asthma that child may be up at night wheezing come to school the next day drowsy sleepless and I tried to explain to the tickle doesn't take a lot of sophistic mystical sophistication to understand this if you have two groups of children who are identical never respect same racial composition same social and economic background same family structure except one group has a high rate of asthma and the other that group is gonna have lower average achievement no matter how hard a teacher tries because teachers trying harder can't make children why the way could come to school sleepy and I went through example after example in different columns I was writing about weathers asthma or lead poisoning or homelessness or insecurity from rental unemployment or chronic stress toxic stress explaining how each one of these cause lower average achievement and then I was thinking about in the early 2000s and I'm a slow learner I was quite old by then as you can see it finally dawned on me that it's one thing if a child comes to school with asthma or lead poisoning or homelessness but what happens when you have a school where every child has either asthma or lead poisoning or homelessness or economic insecurity how can you ever expect that school to achieve at the same level of schools where children come to school healthy and well rested well nourished someone we can't we didn't law but you can't realistically expect that to happen and we call places where we segregate where we concentrate children in schools like that we call them segregated schools and the reality is that schools are more segregated today in this country than they ever have been in the last 50 years more segregated and the reason they're more segregated is because I finally realized the neighborhoods in which they located the segregated so the biggest educational policy crisis we faced was neighborhood segregation that's how I got to this topic and then in 2007 I happen to read a Supreme Court decision that evaluated the efforts of two school districts Louisville Kentucky and Seattle Washington both of them made a very token trivial attempt to desegregate their schools they gave parents the choice of which school and district their child would attend but if the choice was going to exacerbate racial segregation that choice wouldn't be honored in favor of the choice oh that parent whose child wouldn't make a school more segregated so if you have an all-white school or mostly all-white school there was one place left excuse me in both a black and the white child applied for that last place the bike shop to get some preference can't imagine a more trivial desegregation plan how often do you have one place left in the school and both the black and the white child apply for it but this was their plan the Supreme Court denounced it said you couldn't do such a thing that was a violation of the Constitution to do this Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the controlling opinion he explained that he said yes it's true the schools in Louisville and Seattle have segregated but he said the reason they're segregated is that the neighborhood saw which they located a segregated well I thought that was a pretty wise observation the Chief Justice apart don't you think pretty smart and they ought to say though that the reason that the neighborhoods in Louisville and Seattle are segregated is the fact though and he went through all the reasons I just described government nothing to do with it and if government has nothing to do with it government is prohibited from doing anything to correct it well I read this decision as I say sir in two school districts Louisville and Seattle and I remembered and reading this about something that happened in Louisville Kentucky some years before a white family in a single-family home in an all-white suburb outside Louisville suburb called Shively had an african-american that the owner of the home and the husband had an african-american friend living in the center city of Louisville renting it up he was a decorated Navy veteran yeah the wife child good job wanted to move to a single-family home in the suburbs but nobody would show him one nobody would sell him one so the white homeowner in this suburb of shyly bought a second home resold it to his african-american friend and when this african-american friend and his family moved in an angry mob of that white neighbors surrounded the home protected by the police the mob threw rocks through the windows the police somehow couldn't interfere wouldn't interfere they dynamited and fire bombed the home and the police did nothing to prevent this but when the riot was all over the state of Kentucky arrested tried convicted and jailed with a 15 year jail sentence the white homeowner for sedition for having sold a home in the white neighborhood to an african-american family I said to myself this isn't sad that me much like the facto segregation if the police the prosecutors the entire criminal justice system was mobilized to maintain racial boundaries in Louisville Kentucky and when I looked into it further I discovered that there were hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of cases here in this community in Los Angeles and Chicago and Detroit in New York of police tolerated or protected mob violence that drove african-americans out of homes they had legitimately purchased in white neighborhoods every one of those to the extent the police were involved was a civil rights violation a Fourteenth Amendment violation that has never been remedied and then I looked into it a bit further and I found that it was not just the mobilisation of the criminal justice system to maintain racial boundaries but there were many many federal state and local policies they were explicitly designed racially explicitly designed to create perpetuate and sustain racial segregation in this country that the racial segregation that we all know is not the fact though it's an other myth it's as the jury as the lawyers say as the segregation that we abolished in the twentieth century and if we understand that history then we have to understand it's our obligation as American citizens to do something about it do something proactive about it not just wish it goes away well I'm going to spend a few minutes this evening talking about some of the most important federal policies that were pursued in the 20th century racially explicit policies that were designed to create segregation the first one sue Musial excuse me though sorry the first one I'll talk about this it's public housing something that I think many of us misunderstand I certainly did before I did this research we think of public housing as a place where poor people live a place where the lots of single mothers with children lots of young men without jobs and the formal economy may be a gauge and oppositional behavior and confrontations with the police lots of deteriorated buildings that's our image of public housing that's not how public housing began in this country public housing began in this country for civilians during the New Deal the Roosevelt administration during the Depression wasn't for poor people it was working-class middle-class families who can afford to pay the full rent of the housing that they they needed but for whom no housing was available because there's so little construction going on to the depression Public Works Administration built housing for these workers and we had 25% unemployment in the depression astounding the high figure but public housing was for the 75% who were employed and the public housing built housing for those workers those 75% who were employed not all in the course but projects for people like that and everywhere it built that segregated it creating separate projects for african-americans and whites frequently frequently creating segregation where hadn't previously existed there were many integrated neighborhoods working-class neighborhoods in this country in the mid early 20th century we would all be stunned if we were transported back there to see the extent of downtown the urban integration and existed and it did so for a simple reason if you think about it you realize it had to be we were a manufacturing economy at that time I know here in San Francisco it's hard to imagine that but there was none of this internet stuff then you know they were making things and factories had to be located in the theme or the ports near railroad terminals because that's where they got their parts and shipped their final products so all factories had to be concentrated in a single factory district or several factory districts that when their ports or Railroad terminals and if you had a factory district that employed both Africa the minute American and white workers I had to live in broadly the same neighborhoods they didn't have cars to drive into the suburbs they were living in suburbs so we had many integrated neighborhoods the Public Works Administration segregated many of those neighborhoods with its first civilian public housing projects and the great African American novelist playwright Langston Hughes talks about the how in his autobiography he describes how he grew up in an integrated downtown Cleveland neighborhood it's not how we think of Cleveland downtown today he said his best friend in high school was polish said he dated a Jewish girl it's what you would sort of expect to happen in an integrated high school the Public Works Administration came into that neighborhood demolished housing had built separate projects one for blacks one for whites creating a pattern of segregation there and with other segregated projects in Cleveland that built on some informal exedra Gatien that existed before but created the pattern that was so strict that it persists to this day of segregation in Cleveland this it did in many many places in my book I like to pick on the extent than those who read it know on place smug self-satisfied places like this one but another is Cambridge Massachusetts you may have heard of that one now you shouldn't feel alone you're not the only one of Cambridge Massachusetts the area between Harvard and MIT called the Central Square neighborhood was a fully integrated neighborhood the 1930s was about half white and half black but the Public Works Administration demolished housing there to build two separate projects one for whites one for african-americans and with other segregated projects throughout the Boston area created sustained the pattern of segregation that otherwise would never develop at the strength that it did during World War two the action of the federal government to create segregation where it hadn't previously existed intensified the biggest cause of that was the hundreds of thousands of workers who flocked from rural areas in small towns to work in more plants taking jobs that were scarce during the Depression if the government wanted the tanks and the jeeps and the aircraft carriers on the ship to be produced it had to find housing for these workers they were overwhelming the communities where they they were working when the government did build housing more housing for workers everywhere in the country built it and segregated it creating separate projects for whites and blacks who were working frequently in the same war plants but they were living separately in separate projects and this area is the best example of that because the West Coast had very few african-americans living here prior to World War Two there were some but not to the extent they were African American populations in the Midwest and the East historians divided up the the migration of African Americans out of the former slave holding States into the rest of the country into two big periods the first great migration which took place around World War one and that brought African Americans into Chicago in Detroit and Pittsburgh in New York and other Eastern and Midwestern cities but not here it was the Second Great Migration around World War two that brought african-americans mainly from Louisiana and Texas into this area they came to an area where there was no segregation because they were very few african-americans living here the segregation but the federal government created a segregated pattern here in San Francisco we've built five housing projects for war workers mostly in shipyards four of them were for whites only one for african-americans the African American project they place in the Fillmore district the government decided that Fillmore district was going to be an African American neighborhood and the reason that picked that one was was because there were a lot of vacancies in the Fillmore district and some african-americans had moved in there filling those vacancies in the private market so the government decided that had to be an African American neighborhood and built a project for African Americans there you know why the vacancies occurred in the Fillmore district of course because the government why yeah the government that had evicted african-americans and move them into internment camps excuse me what did I say hey good night I'm not obviously yes the vacancies in the Fillmore district were created when the the government moved japanese-americans out into internment camps and so the government made the Fillmore district into a black neighborhood the city of San Francisco wanted to build one integrated project Navy Department prohibited from doing so so it had to be segregated because integrated housing for war workers would interfere with war production they might get into arguments when they were working together in the plants they were living together that was the reasoning after World War two there was an enormous housing shortage still not only had very little housing been available during the depression except for those few projects that I mentioned there was no construction being done during World War two is unlawful to use civilian use construction materials for civilian purposes except for war workers so there was this enormous house and Road backlog and then millions of returning War veterans came home needing housing it was a housing crisis similar to the one we have today President Truman responded to it by proposing a vast expansion of the national public housing program again for working families these were returning War veterans who could mostly pay rent they had jobs in the postwar boom this wasn't a welfare program conservatives in Congress wanted to defeat Truman's proposal for expansion of public housing they wanted to defeat it because they thought that it was socialistic the private sector they said should be taking care of the needs of returning War veterans even though the private sector wasn't doing so it was housing only for the affluent much like today but they thought that the private sectors who they wanted to feed Truman's expansion of the national public housing program and they came up with a device that the term you may have heard of a poison pill device to defeat the 1949 housing act and the poison pill devices were opponents of a bill in Congress come up with an amendment to the bill which they think can get a majority and then when the amendment is attached through the bill and it comes up on the floor of the House and the Senate as an amended bill that same amendment causes a different majority to find the bill unacceptable and the entire bill goes down to defeat so conservatives in Congress some of you I see here old enough maybe the remember he was called mr. conservative Robert Taft of Ohio proposed an amendment along the following lines from now on no more discrimination no more racial discrimination in public housing can't do this kind of thing anymore it has to be a non-discriminatory program of course it was a cynical amendment the services didn't want public housing at all but they plan to vote for the amendment they thought they could get some northern liberals to join them in voting for a non-discriminatory public housing program that would create a majority and when the full bill came up on the floor of the house in the Senate the conservatives would flip and vote against the final bill they would be joined by Southern Democrats who are all in favor of segregated housing but not integrated housing and so the full bill will go down to defeat so liberals in Congress faced a very very difficult choice not minimizing the difficulty of the choice and I'm going into some detail about the story because this is exactly the choice that you face today exactly the choice they faced was this were they going to insist on non-discrimination and ensure that they would do nothing to solve the affordable housing crisis or were they going to oppose the non-discrimination amendment in order to get public housing built I'm not minimizing the difficulty of the choice the leading liberal in the Senate at that time was Senator Paul Douglas senator from Illinois he was joined by someone perhaps you're more familiar with a senator from Minnesota who is called mr. Civil Rights Hubert Humphrey they decide the campaign against the non-discrimination Amendment Senator Douglas got up on the floor of the Senate gave a speech along the following lines he said I want to say to my negro friends that you'll be better off if the non-discrimination amendment is defeated then you get the housing that you need then you will be if the non-discrimination is passed amendment this passion you get no housing at all well he persuaded his liberal colleagues to vote against the amendment the amendment was defeated the federal government used that vote in Congress against non-discrimination in public housing as its justification for continuing to segregate all federal housing programs pretty much for the next 15 years under the 1949 Housing Act the vast expansion of public housing that we're familiar with all of you're familiar with today all over the country probably you know the giant well here in this community certainly but also perhaps the more famous ones are the ones that Robert Taylor homes in Chicago or Cabrini Green or pruitt-igoe in st. Louis these were all built pruitt-igoe as to projects Pruitt was for African Americans Iko was for whites and this was the case throughout the country it's not because you know Pruitt the African Americans somehow like the sound of proof do they maybe whites like the sound of I go so they self segregate this was an explicit racial designation of these projects I'm not so sure that Douglass was right that we were better lawful though I say I don't minimize the difficulty of his choice as a result of the concentration of African Americans in public housing I'll explain how that happens in a minute that resulted from this vote we have not only the achievement gap that I described before in schools that results from concentrating the most disadvantaged young people and single schools single neighborhoods it results in health disparities between african-americans and whites african-americans so many of them live in less healthy neighborhoods more pointed profits have higher rates of heart disease shorter life expectancies it results in the mass incarceration crisis that we have today because we wouldn't have it if we weren't concentrating the most disadvantaged young men as single neighborhoods where they can engage in the kinds of confrontations with police that police sometimes provoke and I think and I think Neil Lutz this before I think another consequence of that choice that Douglas made is the very very dangerous political polarization that we have in this country they frightening frightening political polarization that threatens our very existence as a democracy because how can we ever but think that we can preserve for very long this democracy you can see why the threats under now if so many African Americans and whites live so far from each other they have no ability to empathize with each other understand each other's life experiences how can we ever build a common national identity and that on in apartheid society well those are the consequences of this choice and we make exactly the same choice today we have affordable housing programs they're not not enough of them the biggest one is something called a low-income housing tax credit that subsidizes developers to build housing for low-income families those projects are disproportionately placing or rather you low-income segregated neighborhoods reinforcing their segregation because it's easier same reason that Douglass made those arguments easier to create segregated housing the non segregated housing developers would rather build in those neighborhoods because they don't have to hold a hundred community meetings explaining to people why they're bringing black and brown people into their neighborhood there's no community opposition land is cheaper there they can put a sign in the window advertising a for rent an apartment for rent and eligible people will be walking by wouldn't happen in the high opportunity community so they prefer the bill there it's exactly the same kind of reasoning that Douglass used and so we are continuing to make that choice and perpetuate segregation by doing so well very soon after this vast expansion of public housing took place a development occurred that was surprising to many experts I think to all house here expose really and that is that all the white projects developed large numbers of vacancies the black projects have long waiting lists these were all returning War veterans mostly who had jobs in the post-war economy why did the white projects developed large numbers of the vacancies in the blacks of black projects long waiting lists pretty soon the the situation became so untenable untenable even the most bigger than public housing official had to open up all the projects african-americans couldn't have justify a situation where some of his projects were half-empty and others had long waiting lists soon the projects became predominantly overwhelmingly african-american and very at the same time and some of you will know this this economic history at the same time those factories that I described before that had to be located in the urban areas because they need to be near ports and and and railroad terminus moved out of the cities because the highways were being built and they can get their parts and ship their final products by truck once they did that the good jobs that the public housing residents were depending upon disappeared people in public housing predominantly black became poorer and poorer the government had the first time had for the first time began to subsidize the projects people would no longer paying the full cost of the projects and their rent once they did that the government stopped maintaining them they speak an to deteriorate and we got the kinds of urban public slums that we associate with public housing today well the question is why did all the vacancies develop in the white projects and not in the black ones and that was largely because of another federal program that was even more powerful and creating segregation in this country than the public housing program and that was a racially explicit program of the Federal Housing Administration to move white working-class families out of urban areas into single-family homes in the suburbs this was a racially explicit program and you know all these projects you were there here in this area the probably the best-known in this area little boxes on the hillside south of San Francisco Westlake and Bailey's the 15,000 homes in that suburb built in mid 20th century on the East Coast the most famous is Levittown 17,000 homes built east of New York City was a Henry Dahl sure was the Builder of the west lake south of San Francisco and Daly City where was he going to get the capital to build 15,000 homes in one place no bank would be crazy enough to lend a developer capital to build a project like that we were in the suburban country the banks thought he was crazy who's gonna want to move to single-family homes in the suburbs nobody's gonna do something like that you're gonna have 15,000 empty homes he couldn't get a bank loan neither could Levitt the only way they could build those projects was by going to the Federal Housing Administration submitting their plans for the project like architectural design the materials that were going to use the layout of the streets and make a commitment to the FHA that they would never sell a home to an african-american the Federal Housing Administration even required places like West Lake and Levittown and San Lorenzo and San Leandro and you know even named many others in this area required that they place a clause in the deed of every home prohibiting resale to african-americans or rental to african-americans this is an explicit federal program wasn't the action of rogue bureaucrats the Federal Housing Administration had a manual called the underwriting manual that was distributed to appraisers everywhere in the country whose job it was to evaluate the applications of developers for federal guarantees for the bank loans the manual prohibited the appraisers from recommending for a federal bank guarantee a development that was going to have african-americans in it the manual even prohibited a recommendation of a bank guarantee for an all-white development that might be near where african-americans were living because the manual in the words of the manual that would run the risk of infiltration by in harmonious racial groups this is what the federal policy manual said as I said before the notion of de facto segregation is other nonsense we do not have the facto segregation we have an apartheid society that was created and enforced and sustained by the federal command of course there was private bigotry that contributed but without these federal policies we would not have the segregation that we know today well the white working class families who moved into those suburbs in the mid twentieth century bought those homes cheaply they sold a West Lake the first home sold I think for $9,000 a piece in Levittown was about $8,000 in today's money that's about ninety thousand a hundred thousand dollars I suppose you could go try to buy a house in West Lake now for a hundred thousand dollars but you can't of course those times so now with West Lake they sell what for $700,000 and Levittown four hundred five hundred thousand dollars the white families who bought those homes gained over the next couple of generations equity wealth from the appreciation of the value of their homes they used that wealth to send their children to college they used it to perhaps take care of temporary unemployment emergencies they used it to finance their retirements and they use it to bequeath wealth to their own children and grandchildren who could then make down payments on their own homes african-americans who are prohibited by federal policy for participating in this wealth generating exercise of course gain none of that wealth and the result is that today while African American incomes are about 60 percent 6o percent of white incomes and there's another story behind that like I'm not gonna go into it now but sixty percent it's a big disparity but it's sixty percent income ratio African American wealth is now five to ten percent of white family wealth and that enormous disparity between a ten percent wealth ratio and a sixty percent income ratio is entirely attributable to unconstitutional federal housing policy was practiced in the mid twentieth century and that wealth disparity is the cause of much of the racial inequality we have today and you add that to the achievement gap in school the health crisis in the african-american community and the mass incarceration and our political polarization I think you have to agree we've got something of a problem here that we need to solve well the solutions to redress segregation are well known it's not no mystery to do what to do about it and you can talk maybe later the question period what policies are but we don't need more policies we know what the policies are well we need is a new civil rights movement that's going to be as aggressive and militant and as demanding as the one that existed in the 1960s because policies don't enact themselves think tanks and lawyers can't make policy the only people who can make policy is the people who can enforce elected representatives to enact them so we need a new civil rights movement there is a group that I'm associated with national civil rights leaders who are trying to create a new National Committee to redress residential segregation we expect to have an announcement about it in the next maybe six months anybody is interested in receiving that announcement should feel free to give me their contact information and I'll put you on the list but that's what's necessary we don't like I say we have all the policy ideas we could for example I'll just conclude by giving you a couple of policy ideas just to show you how easy this is not easy to implement but easy to think of what we need to do if we understand this history take the example I just gave before about westlake the homes now sell there for $750,000 they've sold for a hundred thousand dollars when African Americans were prohibited from purchasing them well the federal government should be buying up homes in West Lake for $750,000 and reselling them to qualified African Americans for a hundred thousand dollars that would be a narrowly targeted remedy for a very specific constitutional violation and any court even the Supreme Court that understood this history which they did not they would have to agree that that's a remedy for a constitutional violation of course much more simple things can be done we should for example be restructuring the way in which we implement that low-income housing tax credit program that described before so it doesn't redress it doesn't reinforce segregation we should also be restructuring the way we implement the section 8 voucher program so it doesn't reinforce segregation because most families who receive section 8 vouchers can only use them in existing low-income neighborhoods both because zoning ordinances in higher opportunity neighborhoods which also we should repeal as a remedy for this prohibit the construction of townhouses and apartments and affordable units there are many many think we should have inclusionary zoning programs which we prohibit now in much of the country we should have rent control to prevent the mass displacement of African Americans and gentrifying neighborhoods to new segregated communities farther away from opportunity many many solutions are available what's not available it's not existing yet is a civil rights movement that's going to demand them and I'm confident that as you and your friends and neighbors relatives learn this history that you'll be part of that civil rights moment so thank you very much what thing they'll mess everything I just want to say this the subtitle of my book is a forgotten history of how the governments this was all well once well-known obviously people who moved to segregated projects knew that they were segregated but it's forgotten in the sense also that there's nothing I wrote in this book that wasn't written before but that we've all forgotten about because it's been so long ago and one of the chief writers who led me to this book who wrote the most amazing documentation of all the policies I described is sitting here in this room and so I want to give credit now to james Kushner for leading the way me the way he wrote an article in 1968 called apartheid in America which went through everything I just described and I'm grateful to it we just [Applause] thank you I don't know if you recall this but I was your discussant at the Goldman School of Public Policy and I didn't get to complete all my questions for you so I'm excited to have an opportunity to pick up where he left off I'm thank you shareable for hosting this conversation it's particularly important and personal to me as a third-generation West Oakland er and as a social scientist myself trying to pinpoint some really effective places for us to apply our pressure in our region and we are we still waiting for Sarah Joe is she will she make it out okay come on down Sarah John this is our power researcher Sarah Joe and so I'm going to plant myself in that spot right there and we're going to launch into our conversation for this brief amount of time and I hope that when we're completed all of you take away one very important thing and we're asking questions about housing and we're asking it in the context of a market thing we call the free market and all of our solutions will have to contest with presumptions about free market and market actors at the end of the day no matter what the solutions and so here we go again thank you so much mr. Rothstein and I didn't imagine that organizations all over the country are asking you to speak about this book particularly at the time we're at this moment where not only nationwide but worldwide we're experiencing this trend of what I refer to as Reverse Organization where communities that were formerly relegated to the undervalued urban density space are now being removed and displaced with the demands of tech labor and the reorganisation of our economy and so I wonder I myself potentially having read your book cover-to-cover I am experiencing a gap between your assertions around what we were valuing at the time which is this highly coveted suburban space and communities being relegated to the less coveted space what you believe is the connection between land use and urban sprawl and these phenomena you discuss in your work the color of law well I think they're separate issues urban sprawl is an enormous problem but we could have sprawled African Americans along with White's it's not the urban sprawl itself did not create segregation what created segregation was the decision mostly the federal government although they were private influences as well the decision to sprawl the white population and not the black population thank you very much so that opens the way to our researcher Sarah Sarah you can tell us a bit about your work on place type use and this great I mean still we have in the back but and and as you do that can you talk to us as you see it about the connections between land use patterns or what I may be calling erroneously sprawl and please correct me on that and the racialized displacement that is being experienced in urban areas and this thing we're calling the housing crisis are we getting so Spurs started some research into place types as part of a large project that we're doing a multi-year project that aims to set a vision for the nine-county Bay Area over the next 50 years and a suite of policies to help achieve it we're calling it our regional strategy but before we could make policy recommendations around housing and also transportation and a host of other issues we really needed to understand kind of this the state of play today and we needed a baseline and a profile of the region which is where the police types research came in so we set out to understand how the land-use across the nine-county Bay area is distributed in a way that is comparable for very small areas so we're talking a half mile by a half mile for the entire now nine counties so we set out to create these these place types and would there are 14 of them they range from open space and cultivated lands to primarily housing place types which is what I'll talk about the most primarily jobs and then places that are too mixed to be called either primarily housing or primarily jobs some of the surprising things that we learned in doing this research who didn't expect is that 80% of the nine-county Bay area is open space that was surprising to us within the urbanized footprint so that remaining 20% over two-thirds of our land use voted to pretty much single-family homes within that kind of urbanized footprint about 44 percent of it is a place type that we call suburban edge and this these are very very low density housing that is kind of up against that open space in in the category below that which we call coal to sack suburbs which is still pretty pretty large lots and single-family homes that's about 26% of the urbanized footprint of the Bay Area so we kind of run in our own circles maybe our own neighborhoods go to where we work see a few people but when you look across the entire Bay Area up some places perhaps you don't go we were really surprised by what we didn't know about our own about our own region so I hope that that can shed some light in terms of and instead of baseline for perhaps some of those solutions that I know other people will be discussing here today in terms of how that breaks down racially it's not going to be surprising the suburban edge placetype is very much white primarily owned owner-occupied housing so this is where a lot of the wealth is is living it's higher income but it's also higher wealth and we weren't surprised by that but to see it bare out in this analysis over such a large area was staggering so just to give you some perspective when I say you know 44% of the nine-county Bay Area's kind of hard to have your head around but that's 500 square miles and that's 11 San Francisco's so that's a really big chunk of land and asset ownership can I follow up with you a little bit we recognize that the shift that's happening in our urban cities are those folks who have significantly higher levels of asset ownership are now wanting to live in the congregated urban density areas for various reasons right so what is the connection between what your work characterizes as inefficient land-use patterns and the current process where folks are asking that cities up zone in order to remediate and unjust displacement patterns that's such a good question I might defer to some other people as well to answer it because I feel like my answer is not going to be completed for such a for such a tricky yeah sorry about that better so oh here's a here's a map of the other place types thank you thank you so so the question about kind of what how do you how does the more mixed-use kind of taller buildings intersect with this placement is that you're measuring and please someone jump in if you are finding a place that really you can dig your teeth into what I'm questioning is the assertion from the place-based research that it is our inefficient use or our suburban sprawl that tells us a lot about the necessity to up stone in our cities to increase density in order to better serve those who have been historically and systematically underserved by our housing process thank you thank you for being at so I think you know we have such competition for housing and that has driven prices threefold to fold over the last handful of years so we've created this fierce competition where people who already have the wealth and who already have the income win so if we can create more opportunities for more people then and that comes in the in the form of different types of housing I think sometimes we talk about that single-family home neighborhoods there's like a war on single-family homes but actually it's there aren't very many options there for different types of housing for different types of people with different types of needs and means and so increasing that offering is one way to help people compete who haven't been able to compete or have been systematically left out of the competition all together in the past Richard ya upzoning is frequently justified as a way of redressing the racial inequality we have by giving more opportunities in fact it doesn't up selling itself and when Neil gave his introductory remarks he asked a number of questions at the end about the weather up zoning was going to simply about summarizing the what what he meant if up zoning is simply going to create the technology is angry with us if up something is uh I know no it's not yes you have to have the screen down for the mics to be up hello the well can you hear me hello okay okay yeah if ups only is simply going to result in the creation of opportunities for young professionals to afford homes that are now unaffordable in suburban locations and I guess my view is that you know I supported Scott wieners bill last year because the mic is gonna go off in a minute now I supported the bill because I thought it was a opening and a discussion but it was not going to create any opportunities for african-americans to move into higher opportunity neighborhoods we need race specific policies and saying that we're addressing segregation by up so Minneapolis did you know very few black people are going to be able to move into the condominiums that will be built on single family lots as a result of the up zoning in Minneapolis so we need race specific policies up so it's not something that people want to confront it's not possible to think they were just gonna have a nice effect of racial justice by increasing density increasing density is necessary but it's not sufficient and to only increase density without an explicit remedial action for the segregation that we've created is going to reinforce segregation as neil suggested it might thank you so much Chris mr. Iglesias CEO of the Unity Council you guys have done some great work with fruit Belle village and Casas Casa Bella Bella coming up a couple of questions number one was zoning changed in order to accommodate those builds and what's different about those housing developments out in relationship to this idea that we need to increase density in our community um well thank you for that question because it's not too difficult like the other one you know thank you for inviting me I think I mean I remember when I got the invitation I read what it was about I was like oh my god are you serious at night you can do it at night after like doing this all day it's like oh my gosh and then I realized Richard was gonna be there I hadn't read his book so I had to get his book and read it and I'd heard about the book from a lot of people and specifically landing williams over here from the san francisco foundation so he makes all of his staff read it to come work for him he makes his wife we get his kids his grandchildren hit that dr. Seuss book out of your hand put this read this book before you any doctor since you know but what would you expect from a former Black Panther you know of course you know he sees that he saw it and let me just make it a little more complicated for okay since it was so easy and in the work you're doing and in the developments that you're pushing forward how does the legacy of exclusionary land use and housing policies shape this work in addition to the relationship to increasing density well I think so I've been at the Unity Council now for six years and you know in East Oakland where I was born and everything and but I worked in the public sector for 23 years and 20 of those years were in San Francisco so before I'm going back to health when I was at work in the city for the city at the Redevelopment Agency for the first twelve years doing logged down here and working with Jennifer Bell right over there and she was our attorney keeping us out of trouble back in the days when we were building all that you're going to send her and everything but you know being able to to work in San Francisco and and just see the options of development and what what they had available to them to create these developments and trying to make up for years of wrong right and the best that they could build in a portable housing first-time homebuyer program all that I said that is just amazing what the resource that they had over there so leaving that leaving the city and my nice comfortable job my nice bureaucratic position nice retirement and all that stuff and going to Oakland not not to downtown Oakland where they're still you know there's a lot of investment in resources but east and going into East Oakland and just seeing what's happening there or what's not happening there you know it's basically the farther you get away from downtown Oakland the the resources go like this and the needs of the community go like this and there are parts you know now if the Fruitvale I think you've had organizations like the Unity Council has been there for 50 years like Clinic central the government all these organizations been there decades doing this work and it's one of my staff recently told me she said like the Fruitvale like people have been tending to the land for decades right so people so things can grow there you know the Fruitvale Transit Village can grow there other developments can go them because it's been tended to and cared for but if you go farther east you just got like another mile or another you know ten the deeper East Oakland and you go in certain parts you didn't realize where you're at like you didn't make it my feeling like the Bay Area just because of the glut and you know a lot of these policies that have happened you know generations ago it still there still haven't had that kind of change and that's I think the most discouraging thing for for ourselves you know for organizations like myself and other organizations that are that are trying to do that work in deeper he stoking these huge enormous challenges that they're up against right now and that's why I think you know I think these gatherings to really throw out crazy crazy ideas on how do you how do you address that to really make movement and I think you know I always I always talk about you really need to get into these like these really uncomfortable partnerships with and do business with folks that you've never thought about even doing business with to kind of create to spur that kind of those kind of thoughts and ideas I don't know that completely change answers your question but I want to talk a little bit about defining what inclusionary housing would look like right and how we're thinking about it in terms of the work we're doing so mr. Rothstein mentions that initially public housing was really for the 75% that were employed when we're thinking about building inclusionary housing there are some other numbers that tell us that we may be repeating this so-called de facto segregation so when we're discussing the need for affordable housing I'm one of your spur researchers Egon Turk Len how much housing should the Bay Area have built to avoid the current housing crisis he tells us that even for units that count as affordable less than two thousand per month we are four hundred and seventy thousand rental units behind okay cities like Oakland are making plans to catch up by about four to nine thousand what they call income restricted units however the income restricted units there are about 15 plan for extremely low income below 30% AMI that means about 650 units over the next 20 years for folks who make less than $22,000 and 15 percent for those 30 to 50 percent who make about fifty thousand and thirty percent for low income those who make about eighty-five thousand so we're talking about roughly two thousand units over the next twenty years and at eighty percent ami with the average black Oakland are making thirty five thousand dollars an average white Oakland they're making eighty five thousand dollars what that means is even these minor numbers planned for our larger twenty thousand forty seven thousand that are planned in the next twenty years are actually slated for white oak lenders so I guess I'd like to talk a bit about how we define inclusionary housing who it includes and does this sound like a continuation of so I'll just tell you a quick story when I got to Oakland in 2013 so the bill that the Transit Village was built into it was open to 2014 and so on and then 2010 the Unity Council and the city and bar figured this complicated land deal to buy what we call fate the Phase two lot three point six acres right next to the existing transit villages surface parking lot they bought it from Bart went into the city and then if they're gonna deeded to us in partnership with Michael Medi to build 275 units of housing this is 2010 thirty percent mark to rate seventy percent no seventy percent market rate thirty percent affordable and then you know the economy was struggling so Mike walked away from the project but he left the entitlements with us which was huge right I mean he just those are your entitlements you know you you do whatever you guys want to do with it so when I got there in 2013 I had a fully entitled site right next to the BART station right didn't have any money or anything because you know the Unity Council coming out of the Great Depression just like everybody else in Houston people say oh no Chris if it's a recession I'm like yeah if you're white it was a recession if you were black Latino and East Oakland and you know you got subprime mortgage and your net worth is zero it was a depression right and those are a lot of folks that were working with right so anyway so I wanted to kind of get that deal going and see what we could do but I talked to a couple of council members then and they were adamant they're like Chris no more poor people housing don't build any affordable build all market rate we need folks that have means to live down here and I totally understood that but 2013 it was a little bit there was a different economy than it is now right and it started I mean it started changing fast right the rent started shooting up all that kind of stuff so but that was their position kind of like you know we don't even need to get more people with means down here to live down here so I was you know I was a little surprised by that initially right I mean I think I kind of understand now because when you looked along East Oakland specially long International Boulevard basically the flatlands that's where they built all the affordable housing not only for the City of Oakland but for Alameda County so yeah San Leandro Pleasanton but build your affordable housing you know in Oakland along that corridor so I get that but now that property is like switched and now it's the most coveted land right being next to transit you know you're in San Francisco and 15 minutes from the Fruitvale BART station and and then we started just seeing the you know the rents start just going up in the neighborhood so this naturally occurring market rate housing is already happening right so then I think the need was like then we need to build more affordable housing so we were so we focused on the 30 percent initially and partner with you policy and we're finishing the project right now so ninety four units of family affordable townhomes will start moving families in hopefully in a few weeks and then the remaining the 70% we were trying to make it work as a market rate but again the economy was switching and switching and it was just a so much pressure and we have to started seeing so much displacement we're like if we build the market rate are we kind of becoming part of the problem around displacement because the rates we needed to I mean the rents we needed them to make make that project work still started here probably around 3200 a month just like you know Studio One but in the food to make that project work and that was crazy that was nobody that that's we're working with right that one another staff or the clients that working with so about a year and a half ago we basically made the decision to switch it so now so basic now that's all gonna be affordable housing and we're very very close to financing that one right now but again you know the whole concept of are we facto segregation or whatever I mean these are coveted areas to live now right so I don't how much I'm just kind of grappling with I don't even have the answer but that's but that's kind of what we're doing right now I can make a couple of points one is that poor people and african-americans and not synonyms lower middle-class and working-class african-americans are segregated in this country as well and remedies for segregation need to address those as those also the second point I make is and it's another way of saying what Chris was saying and that is that in an area like San Francisco and San Francisco is not the only one in many of the many urban areas in this country the private sector is incapable of building housing not just for poor people but for working class and lower middle class families there is no private sector solution to it you can't make it pencil out no matter how much you try so we need public housing you know the fancy term these days is social housing but we need public housing that is attractive that is desirable you know the public housing I was describing earlier was the desirable housing available people wanted to live in public housing didn't have the ajar patience that we have today we need public housing that's mixed income housing and it needs to be placed in all kinds of neighborhoods and that's the only way to solve this problem we can't rely on the private sector to do it and we certainly image that we certainly can't rely on the private sector with a few subsidies for people at the very bottom of the income scale thank you I have a couple of follow-up questions for you Chris one is and I can't remember if I asked this in the opening did Fruitvale experience up zoning in order to move your projects forward to is did that slow or exacerbate displacement and property values and three how are you getting these projects to pencil out penciling out if folks are not tuned into that in the room is a terminology that you hear quite often from commercial market actors when in reference to building pro formas the cost of the build and what ultimately what kind of units can ultimately be created from the cost of the build and often we lose our access to affordable units through this concept that the projects do not pencil out so tell us a little bit about that well I think I mean there was some zoning changes around the Transit Village when when they first envisioned it I mean it was all pretty much surface parking lots right and so there had to be they actually the way the street ran through the area and then you know being able to create more density of housing now I always like I wasn't there when they built the existing transit I was Arabella Martinez and I think you're just a miracle that she was able to do that back then right and every time I walk through the village it's like I think from a community asset it's been kind of beyond expectations in fact there was a study that UCLA did about a year ago on the existing transit bill and its benefits the community around educational attainment health outcomes is very very positive from a real estate perspective I think it's been struggling since a day it opened right and one of the things when I first got to uni council they warned it you know the bonds gonna run out city city banking I shouldn't say the bank I don't know any bankers here but I have a whole different vision relationship with banks now that I've been at this job for six years and I won't I won't talk too bad about them and look at cases any bankers here but you know they they were one of the early investors in the transit village they had a bond on it on it right and I was warned it you know at the end of whatever his left 2018 the bone expires and if they pull it it's gonna really cause a big financial issue and sure enough they were gonna pull it and I was like well you know you guys have been telling this project that you guys were partner why would you pull it well we don't we don't do those kind of products anymore so we need to get it out there and I'm like well then obviously you could help me be financing right no no we'd never find a Transit Village it's just you know we don't have a product that fits that so I always you know I was appalled because of you know I just know they got their nice big tax package from the president of the year before or whatever and but none of the main banks would touch it we they they just don't have a product for that so we know we eventually refinance it with risk and community and pet partners but for me that was just really glaring like that you know it's a CRA project this right next to me it's all these things you think of bank wouldn't want to do but they know they're that's not you know and I could get into that but I'm like the grip on him too much so because they still have a nice fountain there and there's still a tenant so I got to be kind of nice to them but so said yeah but I think one of the things that I always wish I think my neighbors wish that they actually built more housing in in the development right there's 47 units you know if they would've built like three hundred you know I think and most of that's market rate but market rate that I think the highest two bedroom one on the half bath in the existing transit village is probably $2,100 I know that's like the highest rents were target right now so it's still very affordable to many many people a lot of students too but I think that's one of the things we're really looking at around that area is decreased density on the honey I guess did you have something you move the other question there's another one um has it slowed displacement and the artificial inflation of speculative property rates I think it I think it has I think that the the village and then the surrounding areas has really kind of been like a buffer around displacement education to a certain extent which is kind of what we're finding but again it's still it's very challenging out there for many folks that are trying to staying I believe we only have two more minutes is that accurate yeah okay I had I guess I'll choose final question and I will ask it to all of our panel members and go down I'll start from the other end this time mr. Rothstein which I think we kind of know your response but do we need to legislate desegregation again particularly in the housing market and how can we when housing as you just mentioned Chris is a product that is to be bought sold and traded when we valorize and prioritize market actors over the need for stable and rooted communities that are living houses with windows and doors well you said you know my answers in the question my answer to the question is it will only be possible if we have a movement a civil rights movement that makes it too uncomfortable to maintain the prison system because so long as we proceed with market forces as well as well-intentioned policy experts we're not going to solve the problem but anything is possible if the people demanded you asked about financing yeah I asked about commodifying housing and how one creates equitable outcomes when you're dealing in a commodity when we know that our use and our prioritization of market actors around commodities are virtually unbridled which is one this speculative market we're all suffering under it's one of the symptoms of an unbridled free market culture nobody answer that question you really are passing on that question well I'm just like what does one do when a basic human need is commodified housing water air space what do you do I don't know I mean we fight I think you know we fight you know I think right now it's just it it very much feels like a war out there right to fight for this what we're trying to do and you know I think last week there was article that came out in the paper about Facebook you know thrown another billion dollars into the pot to support housing and everything and you know I read it and I sent it i text it to a foundation the one of the CEOs of the fountain foundation and I just like oh my gosh serious more money you know I go and if I go from where we sit we're on the ground we're doing this work and it feels like we're in the war and so you see like the Google money flying around the Facebook money around now the Apple money and it's just kind of like circling around us right and we're just like is any of that gonna land I mean is it really gonna land and make an impact because right now it's just you know we're on the front lines we need ammunition and we need support and that is just kind of floating around and it's like it has to start hitting and I said I'm like I don't see that money hitting anywhere and that's total BS right and you're the conversations with these people so you just need like there's such urgency to all of our work right now and that's what you know when I go to places when I'd meet with people I could tell I could very quickly if they don't feel that sense of urgency then I got to move on quickly right because that's how urgent it is out there how many of those folks have ever walked through a pile of trash and found that there was a human living in it I mean I also feel like how can you answer that question about how do you or what do you do when you've commodified a basic human right there's a like a classic philosophical question about what's more valuable water or diamonds and we've created something that we all need housing we've modified it and we've made it scarce and so we've made it we've made it both kind of this something that we we both need and we can't have at the same time and I don't know that I have any any solute or solution that I think it was really great Territory talk about some of the policy solutions that are not just about the built form but about what do we do for people and I think that has to be part of a conversation thank you we're going to open it up to audience Q&A our wonderful Tom will be circulating with a microphone and questions with a question mark at the end would be really great one to two sentences I don't want to be super awesome so my question is so my takeaway from mr. Rothstein's book in short was discriminatory policy equals greater white homeownership equals greater wealth accumulation over time equals this wealth gap that were in now this racialized wealth gap and so my concern is conflating affordable housing which I understand is affordable rental housing with with all the progress because I think they're still going to be a huge wealth gap so do you think we are being short-sighted when we push for affordable housing in terms of rental units because they're still gonna be this long you know this wall you know bigger problem of the wealth gap or should we just take progress where we can so that's my question thank you well first of all homeownership is part of the solution but home on the ship is not the only way to build wealth people who rent can build wealth if the rent is affordable and their wages are high enough savings is also a way to build wealth and you know not all people who've owned homes have gained wealth from them who owned homes in those suburbs I created generated wealth but many not every neighborhood appreciates at the same rate and people who live in neighborhoods where housing prices don't appreciate as rapidly as others don't gain the same wealth so we shouldn't look at wealth generation and homeownership is identical they do overlap but there are other ways to build wealth as well and we need to solve both problems we need to solve the housing problems of affordable rental not just for poor people but for working-class and middle-class families and we need to open up opportunities for homeownership as well I do have something to add to any of our other panel members want to respond to that question as well um I did have a as a moderator I held back a lot of my opinions but that's one of the things that stands out for me it's this idea that one could buy a house in Berkeley in 1975 for $35,000 and now hold a 1.3 million dollar asset this concept that one of our authors in the room reminded me is unearned income and the gap between black Latino and our white citizens has grown exponentially through the loss of land and housing assets in the underrepresented communities particularly in these ways that as we see in mr. Rothstein's book African American communities were black from ownership they had ownership legally sort of extra legally taken from them and then of course we're still riding the wave of the 90s foreclosure crisis with these subprime these this rash of subprime loans so some of the work that we do at East Bay permanent real estate cooperative is think about how to bring divert extractive capital back into communities in order for them to build ownership and wealth so we are blending a motto we are developing small site housing and building units that would otherwise be rental units where folks put their money into our pot and the banks pop forever and instead we are causing these units to be ownership units where as people pay down what is now their lease share they also build capital accounts that they can take with them move around invest in a business put their child through college so when we're talking about housing we're also talking about ownership and we're also talking about Community Development which is another way to build wealth back into communities so okay sorry I had the microphone earlier hi thanks for the great discussion and I really appreciate the way Richard was describing this need to understand the difference between the defect the idea that there was de facto discrimination and I think similarly maybe to that question you were asking about the commodified housing there's a myth about the idea that the market is fair and I my question is that because it's been well established that there's monopoly effects at the lower end of the housing market so we look at all that existing housing that's for rent and people are paying really high sums of money for substandard housing in unhealthy neighborhoods and they're protecting and clinging for housing that's overpriced in unhealthy neighborhoods and so what about this question of the monopoly effects at the lower end of the market and the fact that that's you know shouldn't be okay um with someone like to address that I don't know I don't want to waste time by repeating myself the private sector is incapable of building housing for lower middle-class and working-class families yes there's a question here and and I would add if you look at in the very least city of Oakland's downtown and Lake Merritt plan there seems to be a very tight lockstep adherence to commercial builders presumptions about what can be done and what our cities then believe and incorporate into our city plans for what can be done I wanted to ask about a dimension that hasn't come up yet tonight and that's the environment and climate change and Americans consume much more land and drive much more than most places in the world even as you know where there were we have climate refugees being created now and will need places to live so I'm wondering if that kind of you know affects this question of whether there's there's sort of a you know what I what I would see is a moral imperative to create more housing in cities now to to get ahead of that and there's obviously big just as you know implications of letting climate change proceed unchecked there can I refer that to you yeah particularly the view and use patterns yeah I think so one of the things about climate change in our region is that if you look at this map kind of there are multiple hazards that that affect the bay area and every time we talk about this at spur it feels very doom and gloomy so don't get too sad but it at Duman gloomy so a lot of the a lot of the kind of space where the yellow is touching the green on this map is prone to fire and then on the other side we have sea level rise so there's actually kind of affair and then throughout the region we have earthquakes but we can't not build where there's earthquakes because that's like all of California but so when we talk about climate change we're talking about a few different dimensions here so making sure that the people who live here now are safe and that we're not continuing to double down in places where there's going to be floods which happened to be a lot of places that are either low-income or people of color or both and so there's kind of not exacerbating existing risks and the inequities that go with those with and also if we are bringing in more climate refugees from other places around the world not exposing them to our risks here as well and and these risks are evolving and we learn about the probabilities of them and what that what they mean for people as we go like we know we know climate change is happening we know it's real but exactly what that means in exactly which place is a guessing game and it changes us climate change accelerates over time so it's a great question and one I think we have to keep asking and answering over time I'd like to stack on that question if someone else doesn't want to comment well I think I just think you know we're building it to prevail bar we we've found a model I think that works that needs to be replicated and they need to double down on you know the cost all these sites around these parts stations right just to its create more density which I know you know we're trying to do but I just think that's that's kind of our our view and a Howard at least very much aware and tackling that the best we can okay so um I actually live in a community that has traditionally been Oh like working poor community where there has been like it's a mix of home ownership and and rental housing and public housing so I live in district 6 in Oakland it has it's probably the district that has the most public housing projects within the city and our neighborhood is changing in ways of which it's not just it's higher income people of all kinds so people of color and also white people are buying up houses in my neighborhood and there was there was a affordable housing unit that was going to be built from an out-of-state developer and all of the new neighbors they totally protested it even though it's been historically a community that has had public housing that welcomes public housing but you know you know folks that have moved there in the last five years have been like up in arms I mean I can't get them you know to go to you know abort like a project that has to do with like the AC ba or the community benefits agreement for the A's but talk about building this affordable housing project you know there they they means they get organized I go to City Council and my question is do you all have any width like nuggets of wisdom when I faced up against people that look like me who who don't want the housing projects there you know like we all know it's there for the common good but folks just don't want it there yes and I'd like to stack on top of that one of the questions we didn't get to which is the bill eighty eight six eight which allows two additional accessory dwelling units on every location with the I find erroneous assumption that this will let more low-income and POC into neighborhoods that were once highly segregated by class and race so I'd like to hear some of the panel's thoughts on our audience members comments as well as this sense this yummy phenomenon if you will again I want to take time by repeating myself you know the the accessory dwelling units is a form of up zoning and you're absolutely right up zoning in itself is not going to desegregate this country it's going to provide up if it's simply up zoning without explicit requirements for racial and economic diversity it's going to result in solving the housing crisis for urban professionals who cannot afford to live near where they're working in the Internet industry can you comment Chris additionally on new members coming into communities like fruit bell and then excluding folks yeah I think with you know with the affordable housing and I think there's one a lot of it is just perception people just they don't understand it right they have they have their own kind of historical oh my gosh maybe but you know they whether they think it's public housing or subsidized housing you know it's very negative kind of connotation for a so I think a lot of it is just kind of educating what what it is and who's living there and it's you know basically work force housing that however you would want to call it but to me that's that's another thing that I felt that I've been challenged with you know going back and working in East Oakland is that the perception of East Oakland it's you know especially with a lot of my colleagues I'm trying to get over from San Francisco to come visit they won't come visit like I have to coded food file station actually get off the train and walk into the community I mean like what and there's such fear and I'm like like this one guy who built these products right around here big construction guy he was coming over to visit me and you know he kept call me like you know is it safe how's this gonna work you know and I'm like whoa what are you worried about and he's like well my wife said that there is like a shooting there couple weeks ago a couple days ago whoa yeah there was you know whatever but not not where we're gonna be and I'm like are you are you worried about getting hit by a bullet Oh Chris that's not fair that's kind of BS I'm like no I just but there's a much higher probability that you're gonna get hit by a stroller because East Oakland is basically the land of families that's like look that's the majority of families living there right and this is where they have a chance to grow their families start their families and survive in a sense and you know the affordable housing is a tool is it's a mechanist and do that at it but people don't see that and that's what I think is a challenge that kind of education the perception is how do you miss bust how do you get somebody to see what's actually happening versus what is happening in their mind and it's it was a huge challenge if you have tips for us actually that's where I would love to do yeah I our organization usually resists being referred to as affordable housing developers specifically because of a stigma but what also happens is a compression of the imagination for what we can do and how we can arrange our performance our build plans our outcome rent sorely shares so the language itself seems to be one of the starting places that creates a challenge for transformation yeah so first I just want to start by Richard thank you so much this is such a service to this country the world tremendous work I know you you've repeated yourself about the market of I think can we just name that a market-based system that it that measures its its success by in affordability is fundamentally flawed in achieving these outcomes not to even mention the racial intersection that we've said of course is separate from economic equity and so this idea whether you know we're talking in this room about building wealth through homeownership is predominantly at least historically in terms of what be seen achieved through the increasingly in affordable housing stock that we have and so my question is to your solution in particular Richard but for everybody's engaged in this work you talked about how we don't have a shortage of policy answers what we have is a shortage of will and leadership and where are our solutions going to come from around that around building the movement that you talked about which I would imagine includes traditional movement building and organizing principles but I'm curious in particular how do we build the capacity in our leadership California and beyond to to lead on these issues in in fundamental ways when as we've been addressing tonight we're tinkering around the edges microphone this way to this I don't know what you guys what you guys think about the fortune 500 come see iou's and came together in August and talked about them you know how business needs to be different I don't know you know but they said that right and it's funny because right after they did that Jamie Dimon the CEO of JPMorgan Chase came out to Oakland and met with a few of us right I never touched a billionaire before I was able to shake his hand nice hand is but you know but he's sitting there with us talking about Oakland and and kind of really changing the dynamic so to me they just like crack the door open a little bit right just on how they're thinking about business and I think we haven't like just poured through that door right because I just like a little bit of opportunity that you know maybe though they will pay attention to some of this so I just think it's it's open right now we have to take advantage of it I overheard so Neal made a fleeting reference to reparations Richard made a more substantive indication that there needs to be essentially affirmative action in the housing sector so I'll just pose a hypothetical you're the next president of the United States President Rothstein and you you suddenly find that there are three resignations on the Supreme Court you you appoint three new members you you have a solid majority the Congress is is on your side in your in your party whatever that party is what policies do you put you put in place how does a racialized or a racial justice housing policy work what what specific ideas are out there in this hypothetical you know Mirror Universe of the future if it were to come to pass after a you civil rights movement what what kind of policies could be put in place that would be seen as not only progressive but universally fair Richard well you're asking that I'd like the microphone to go this way and create some balance in the room there hand up for quite some time both in black cops thanks well you know if I are president United States and I had three Supreme Court justices to a point I would do exactly the same as presence of doing now until I looked out my window and saw five hundred thousand people marching down Pennsylvania Avenue as they did in 1963 for non segregation and housing that's what's required you know I said before I can go through them again they do we know what the policies are the policies are subsidies for African Americans to purchase homes that are now unaffordable to them and that were denied to them substantial subsidies that would denied to them when they could have bought them its requirements there's affordable housing be placed in all communities not just you know the Treasury Department for its low income housing tax credit program now has a priority for placing low income housing tax rate developments in low-income communities that's the Treasury Department regulation I couldn't change that as president united states with a Congress and a Senate that supported me and three support creme justices I couldn't change that because there would be the kinds of uproars in communities to oppose placing low-income housing in their communities so unless we have a mass movement that's going to make it politically untenable to maintain the present system no matter who's in office is not going to change this and I think it's a mistake to focus on what the policy should be rather than what can we do in our own neighborhoods with our own neighbors to develop that kind of political movement that kind of so rights movements for example I mean I I talked in my book about how high school textbooks lie about this history well if we continue to teach children the myth of de facto segregation they'll be in this porridge position to remedy this is we've been so maybe one of the things before we start bringing about the president should do make one of the things we should do is make sure that our schools are teaching that history accurately says the next generation will be able to act on it maybe you know I you know perhaps not if you live in those neighborhoods but if you live in San Lorenzo or San Leandro or Westlake take a look at the deeds in your homes and when you see that there that you're living in a home that's for Caucasians only start to get your neighbors enraged about it and start to build a movement on that basis so that's those are the things I think are more a higher priority than fantasizing about what you would do if you were President of the United States because you know Barack Obama was well intentioned it's not because he didn't have the right ears he has a Democratic Congress for the first two years he had what three with two or three Supreme Court appointments maybe two yet two to a Supreme Court ones that didn't able to do anything because the political support for doing something wasn't there and that's what we need to focus on I'd also like to take moderators privilege and stack another question on top of that right Sarah in your place-based work you mentioned that you're trying to understand how we and so one question is who is we can use public resources more effectively but many of these resources were referring to here tonight are privately owned commercial developments that benefit from our public resources our coffers are low income tax credits ninety nine years leases from city's impact fees in the creating affordable housing which incidentally in Oakland turns out several million hundred million has not been collected since being passed in 2015 I believe so what to do about these place-based policies where we have tried to create more public resources for affordable housing and I think it it's really hard it's hard to collect it's hard to collect and enforce a lot of these policies and even when you do compared to the revenue we collect and the need that's out there there's still such a there's still such a mismatch so I think taking stock of the victories that we do have and seeing what we can learn from them is at least one positive thing and then finding we're like pointing out where we're totally failing like yes we enacted this legislation to collect impact fees and build affordable housing we don't monitor and enforce that it's just something that's nice on paper and I think that's where a lot of the local policies actually begin to fall apart is that they don't they're not always implementable and they're not always monitored and tracked so the kind of day-to-day grind of what is good government and what does it take to be effective public servants and are in our cities is something that it's not often talked about but is the real work of getting these policies to do their job okay okay my question is is kind of stacking on top of that but I wanted to ask more about not just nonprofits but organizations in general doesn't necessarily have to be nonprofit you guys can speak to yours but I kind of wanted to ask about kind of increasing communication because I feel like there's so many naam there's so many nonprofits but I feel like they're not really talking to each other in creating partnerships to have really united front about affordable housing I wanted to ask kind of like the partnerships that guys you guys have to kind of initiate stuff like CRA or you know other stuff like that now that's a good question and I think we have to do more that and you know even right now when we're developing the stability in partnership with a policy right and you know when we first started the project ideally we would wanted to do it ourselves but we couldn't right so we had a partner with somebody and for me it was important to be part of it another organization that's based in Oakland that has that history that can help us and they did and they've been a great partner but I think a lot of times these you know just now kind of run running an organization and you know a lot you're just kind of focused on your work and you don't really look up enough and that is a big mistake because if one you're missing a lot of opportunities and I think with how challenging it is out there on a lot of different fronts we have to be able to do that better right and I know there's you know some foundations that are trying to bring organizations together to collaborate and everything but that's what I think it's gonna really take to move the needle on a lot of fronts these these these partnerships these collaborations even with folks that you don't necessarily trust they weren't even like that much but they have such strong skill sets that you need or the folks that you're working with me you got to drop that stuff that's not now it's not the time to do that so I think it's so that's why I kind of call me an uncomfortable partnership whatever you want to call me just really for the you're trying to serve i think super important and just have on that i think that sometimes with single issue nonprofits there's often fighting for scarce public resources where there doesn't need to be so often at spur because we work on more than one issue we see that people who who want transportation funding in people who want affordable housing funding are often fighting with each other for the same pot of money and so finding common ground and sometimes you have to entrench yourself in a fight and sometimes you have to back away and and see the bigger picture and knowing when to do which this is really hard and i think that that the having that common understanding going back to a common set of principles and values kind of helps people and different organizations work better together so yeah that question is actually greatly appreciated in our organization in east bay permanent real estate cooperative we consider ourselves not only an investing and land investment fund a worker cooperative housing cooperative a Community Land Trust but also a movement building organization where we're looking to break the silos and the competition between actors in the field so that first of all we can share resources which makes economic action much more potent so that we can exchange skills so that we can exchange community legitimacy and reputation so for example our first small site development project was undertaken in partnership with Northern California Land Trust our second one undertaken with Oakland Community Land Trust and our third from a community partner who was a former Tesla employee employee who cashed in his stock but didn't want to see another plot in West Oakland go up with a townhouse an overpriced townhouse so that's actually a critical element of the work as you all point out is that we choose to invest in a common goal as opposed to simply organizational solvency or competitive advantage thank you I'm an educator and so I really appreciate your focus on inequity and education and connecting the dots to housing and how that it all ties together and all makes so much sense you mention us meeting new civil rights movement and I want us to remember that youth were putting their bodies on the line in that movement and that youth are going to be the ones in this as well if we can ignite them and so I'm wondering you know I've had students hit the streets because Greta thumbr got them out there for climate change and Emma Gonzales bet them excited about gun control and at least you garceau got them out there for black lives matter who is the face of fair housing who is igniting the movement around this yeah you're pretty sexy Richard but you gotta get yeah so what you mentioned that you have this national civil rights group forming our youth involved how can we get youth up there and out there well the reason I'm killing myself running around the country giving talks like this is that you will help support it but also it's not only youth you know if we look back at that successful movements youth played an important role but no movement was ever successful with youth alone so it doesn't let you off the hook or any of us off the hook and a cassette ecology we are working with the people to try to create the structure to create these committees but most of its going to have to be spontaneous if it's going to be successful but if if you want me to notify you when we're ready to announce things that can be done let me know and I will put you on the list I'd like to be on that list as well um shall we close or do we have time for one more okay one last question uh my question is Richard do you feel what do you feel transitional housing fits into the strategic is design to can dismantle generational poverty or kind of tackle the other side of housing that's also needed so specifically transitional housing what do you think that fits I don't know I'm sorry it's not something I really have thought much about um I can comment in the sense that um we know that one of the ways that you build community strength is that people have somewhere to land right about four years ago the Alameda County Center for Disease Control officially declared a health crisis in relationship to the housing crisis so we're not just talking about epidemiology in terms of disease control but we're talking about mental health we're talking about how that reverberates out into jobs out into our children's education out into safety on our streets and when you're building a movement it is if we if we attend historically to all the movements that have been overturned it's through the creation of instability in the communities in the nations and the government so if you want to build anything your community needs stability and it needs a land base to return to to revive itself to define itself and a place from which to launch itself and fight so um thank you guys so much for listening to these amazing folks up here tonight and Neil's going to close [Applause] and just a couple quick things things to wrap up if you want to stay and chat with the panelists please do also Richard will be selling and signing books out in the lobby be sure to catch our series on shareable net on on housing pausing zoning and housing policy everyone that can and register through you know Eventbrite will is entitled to get a free ebook so all of our articles be wrapped up in an e-book so look for that we'll send it a message about that we have Liz Enix right there stand up Liz right she's an editor on this series and she we just published the main bar the main feature story of the series today so go on channel that net and check out that story talk to Liz and yeah and thank you very much thanks for coming [Applause]
Shareable
UCGlrlE2obvRQCj2WK-fgW3g
2019-11-09
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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19,537
109,289
V-keyuNPI6Q
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-keyuNPI6Q
SMALLRIG vs TILTA - MATTE BOX CHALLENGE
all right let's take a look at their behinds [Music] wow [Music] all right guys here they are welcome to another timer with me on alexgtv my name is alex godwin if you're meeting me for the first time of course you're not seeing my face i thought it would be nice before i unbox this one proper since we it's brand new we haven't unboxed it yet this one we have check out the video i'll put the links here or in the description as well and yeah starting with the size the tilt is smaller they both the boxes looks good and let's get on to this small so the mini i guess this should be called the small rig right [Music] whoa this is good now i know this is really small let me turn it down to you uh yeah this is the definition of compact yes yes yes yes i like it i like it all right so let's take out the parts test so we have 77 we have 82 67 the same thing 72 okay they both don't have the 95 one but they have the options of buying two screws two allen keys here one big one small well packed away and they have this oh okay and then this thing so obviously this is a different approach of mounting i noticed that for the mounting of this it's a different approach okay but i can see how it works yeah i can see it okay then the box itself wow this is this is really small wow i can't believe it i can't believe i'm is this for real this is this is crazy what this thing looks like a toy it feels like a toy can you see that this like this like buying a toy like a toy version for my kid is this real and this looks a little bit smaller uh we will have to do some tests now we have the sigma here this is 72 so i'm going to try out the 72 millimeter thread we'll have to lock it in this is this is good but i wonder how much light it will cover when it's just so i won't say small but portable it feels solid this is not something that the wind will take away like yeah it feels solid and compact but you know if you want to work on a gimbal this will be the way to go so nothing else to talk about here besides go to the field and actually experiment oh there is a there's a costume out here that's good now please excuse me i have never seen one of these before i bought it just to make this comparison and see if i can use it on the on my camera b my old school set okay feels 72 oh oh 4x4 will not work so this is a no no it's going to make you spend more by not allowing this grass all right so this one is already fixed and you can screw it a lot tighter with your allen keys if you want it tighter but i think it's just all right you could just enough to move the way you want it and it will stay in place this one however it's got a lock here which you can um open to make it to make it fall or lose make it really really tough you know i think this is good if you leave it on this side it is loose until you take it to the other end so at this point this is locked okay so it is has enough tension unless you want to go in here and screw some more but this is this is good enough in fact it's stronger now than before i think i i guess i didn't know what this was used for so this is the same lock they both have a lock there this is the locking mechanism okay um why for this it's more like a screw on okay you screw and still lock same thing same thing let's see now about the fabric this feels like plastic i think it is plastic and then there's metal um this is definitely plastic this could easily break but not easily though not easily though but i mean if it falls you can have it tear here okay and then it's um lined with like a stronger plastic and then these are metal rings metal and this is carbon fiber this is way bigger and it's all carbon fiber well not all it's just more this and all this now this part is meta not plastic i don't think there's no plastic here there's no plastic here all right let's take a look at their behinds wow [Music] what do we see how wide is the hole this can take a 114 millimeters which is standard industry standard lenses and this will take 95 so in terms of weight this is definitely this is definitely lighter almost two times do it that should be expected now let's find out how these do okay i ordered for the uh adapter for this don't come with the mud box so you have to get that one separately [Music] and that would thread thread this lens in so this is my documentary go to lens and let's get in on the mudbox so you have to buy this one separately from small rig okay all right i already modded this to converted these two ef lens from pl so if you want to find out about that you can watch what the video in the links description or link right here there we go this is the the glass that speaks in volumes oh 86 it is 95 wide but the thread is 86 inside so means we'll not be testing with that today we'll be testing instead with this guy so this is common to both of the mud boxes so perfect to test them but okay sounds good and here we go and we have a secure lens let's go outside [Music] uh [Music] let me break this down as fast as i can they are both the same price what's really the value for money here i think it's money because buying that will secure you for the future if you buy small rigs now and you plan to grow into cinema lenses in the future you are covered but um tilta was just for now and confidence so i think i'm going to keep both of them because there will be times i need each of them i know that i'll be using the small rig more thank you guys for watching let me know in the comments what your thoughts are which you'll be going for and as always the links will be in the description and if you're new don't forget to subscribe like comment like share yeah it'll help and i'll see you guys in the next one
Alec Godwin
UC5yTyhr22Pgl6LrhCVhsc_A
2021-01-26
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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1,191
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Q3LBnkb23co
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3LBnkb23co
UFC Full Fight : Carlos Zarate vs Alfonso Zamora Highlights
in 74 fights between them these two fighters they have scored 73 knockouts the winner of around must get 10 points to lose her anywhere 9 on down depending on how badly he lost around most rounds through 10 9 however and now is the more a little rocky as we're inside the final infected of this post right there it is Arthur q yo Hernandez a Mexico City about a year ago however Hernandez souls the morning now the height and reach advantage he's trying to keep some more often good ring level shot [Applause] he was hurt by that punch Gamora battles back with the left hand himself bharath a scoring again is put a good round or carlo's RFA that's round two [Applause] you've got almost a Hollywood script or is it a Mexico City script they make movies there they're both in Mexico City not only do you have two undefeated bad blood between the two managers Julia Howard amis who manage both fighters up the last year popping at each other in the Mexican newspapers ever since they have 20 left foot left book almost dropped some more he's in terrible things right now [Applause] right hand and he popped Wilma too short right to the gym and that yes indeed was an official knock down the first knockdown of the fight what do you think do you think it'll go Tim there's the Bell he is the taller of the two he is stream left now screen right the red front the white stripe down the side and he feels he has Alfonso's Amara in trouble and wants to try to finish it knock down number two of the site closed lower down in the third row [Applause] tamura just nailed hard a the right to the Tim guard they didn't even blink came right on coming tomorrow is wise you get off those ropes you go be down again he is down again through the rope and hanging over here comes the cow thrown by his father here comes to Laura's father into the ring we threw it in the fight is over a knockout for sorry penny went over screen right here's referee Richard Steele oh and here there is the father the following screen right here is the winner of being interviewed on Mexican television Carlos are they gwen zamora went down of the third time of the fight the second time in the fourth round his arm draped over the ropes his father threw in the towel and I'm sure he didn't do it deliberately but the towel it's a more right in the face threw in the towel indicating he wanted to fight stopped of course Richard Steele did stop the fight so Carlos arte now 47 wins no losses
Laurence Torres
UCYQXFLtBZOd7CoSmorXN4Dg
2017-04-05
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471
2,460
doNA07ikgig
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doNA07ikgig
A Virtual Tour At Hords Creek Lake – Exploring Friendship Park
welcome to dude RV hey I really appreciate you stopping by and you got here just in time without pickup that's right just in time for another virtual Campground tour we're out at horns Creek Lake somewhere in West Texas I'd have I'll put up a map and show you where so we're gonna do this this whole Horse Creek Lake experience in two different sections we're going to do the north side the the lake the Lakeside area and then next week we'll visit the other side that way the video is not forever long but I have little red the high speed Mobility Scooter I have to Go Pro Hero 9 with the max lens mod best of all I have you so let's find some tunes and go check out hordes Creek Lake that would be close to the city of Coleman Texas thank you all right cue the music [Music] and the day started out with sunshine we were camped we were set up out at Lake Colorado City State Park welcome to a beautiful sunrise and as the day progressed and we drove East the clouds got thicker and heavier so I'll do some post editing light adjustments and try to make it as pretty as possible you're gonna like this one though this is this is this was a pleasant surprise [Music] most of the time foreign up here a little this little core of engineer U.S Army Corps of engineer Lake and Campground facility set up kind of different the first one I've ever been to where the Park Entrance Road is also the road across the dam [Applause] [Music] there are some very beautiful campsites in in this Lakeside Campground let's go see him [Music] thank you but there's several group Pavilions [Music] it's the day use Pavilion we're gonna go down here first if you need full connections they got you covered if you're looking for a pull through site they got you covered there too of course we're in It's the middle of November actually it's just past the middle of November Thanksgiving coming up this week [Music] and and we didn't need we didn't need our 50 amp we don't need full connections but look at that that's a beautiful sight there [Music] lots of beautiful campgrounds campsite my boat ramp fans are going to be disappointed because that gate right there attaching the boat ramp desperately low solo as a matter of fact there's a sign as you come in that says due to low lake level the the whole lake is now a wake-free Zone thank you that's provided you can find a boat ramp that you can launch from heading down to the day use area they had some wide spot in the road signs they're not actually pull through sides they're pull over signs [Music] just right there and it is severely low I won't say it well I was gonna say I won't mention the lake level being low again but I I have to because we've got a couple more things a couple more points of interest foreign campsite right next to it is an open field there's quite a bit of deer scat [Music] foreign and I almost ran into a herd of pigs as we were driving out here literally a herd of pigs about 20 of them crossed the road in front of us fortunately they they were far enough ahead that I was able to slow down and come to a complete stop before I took any of them out destroyed the front end of my my motorhome [Music] messing with the campsites here at horde Street Lakeside they're all very level I like the fact that the corps of engineer they put up the pipe fence to keep people from driving or parking on the grass of course we're so far out away from most of your major metropolitan areas that probably don't get too many of them weekend party crowd of course I say that and somebody's going to post a comment oh no no no that's a crazy party place during the summer group Camp group Pavilion screen Pavilion with a kitchen and 12 thank you water power connection sites for RVs [Music] this is the loop that we're set up on more of those RV sites you know I'm gonna have somebody ask me what what is the best site I'm gonna have a real hard time answering that question for this Campground they all are good nice sites they all have trees they're all pretty easy to get level in you're not crammed right in on top of the next campsite where we're set up I love that big clump of oak trees starlink is working pretty good out here cell reception we have Verizon and we're talking on the cell phone I I don't know if we have connectivity enough to watch YouTube foreign [Applause] that's the only shower facility over here let me swing around so you can see that fight that's a good sight right there I really dig that big tree [Music] all right let's go see if this other boat ramp is open I really don't think there's a bad campsite here are there some that would be a little more challenging for a big motor home to get level kin all right so that boat ramp is off limits because they're there's snow water all right now we're gonna make a long ride to the end of the road maybe we'll see some Wildlife as we travel that's the only dump station that I have found so far there when we came through he had a sewage mishap I hate that people dump their sewage all over the dump station rather than in the double station it's a bit chilly out here case I haven't mentioned that [Music] we inadvertently drove down here because we missed our turn we had to turn around pulling the truck pulled in White Lightning there's some deer ahead of us you probably can't see them four of them five of them maybe they'll stop and Pooh [Music] there they are going right up there too bad we don't have more sunshine [Music] I don't know if this part is of the Park is open or not I've been out here we turned around at the other Gatehouse oh look a whole bunch of deer there must be feet must be putting out corn there's a dump station well there's two there's another big group of Pavilion gosh number one shelter there's another group shelter with RV Connections where do we go where do we go there's a boat ramp that we were not able to get down to covered and there's another deer oh look at that one number two that's a good eating right there action [Music] and this is the swim area for this side I don't think anybody's gonna be swimming there today only because it's 40 degrees and the water is [Music] Center's way down a little bit low thank you I'm not sure if these were they appear to be 30 amp sight number two that looks cool right next to the swim area that would be a big plus if you could actually swim [Music] that's a cool sight five I like it yeah we should we should have got number six way over here we would have no Neighbors fish cleaning station [Music] 25 26. [Music] foreign that Loop that I missed and we want to come in on that one from the other direction so we will loot this way foreign [Music] I was wrong it's Monday the week of Thanksgiving we're gonna Loop through we're just gonna be going in a circle round and round in circles we're gonna go this way and then we'll come back and go doing the twisty windy road see these would be as an outdoor living area they have 30 amp power [Music] thank you with easy access to the lake even we'll take that twisty windy road and see where it goes oh owner's ringing that was spam green shelters with mending [Music] beautiful oh now this is cool that's that's awesome what is that what number is that number eight sixteen how far does it go I should have brought the electric bike a little red still got plenty of power [Music] we'll see how far down we can go let's go somewhere the road looks well traveled thank you I'm gonna be disappointed if there's nothing down here I see a restroom though so there's obviously something back here here's to be another group Pavilion foreign examining the handy dandy map they gave me at the front gate turns out the only thing that's down there is a boat launch and we know that it's going to be closed so we're going to close out the Lakeside scooter tour right here because I'm about out of battery hey if this is your first visit to dude RV and you enjoyed our little scooter ride through this Campground I'd be most honored if you'd consider clicking on the Subscribe button and for those of you who have been following along thank you that's that's why I get to see stuff I would never have even known about this if it wasn't for y'all so thank you for that opportunity and for my patrons I am most grateful you rock all right y'all come back now you here [Music] thank you [Music] [Applause] [Music]
Dude RV
UCVTePfhBJpFPGzZp47QMWPg
2023-01-25
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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1,608
8,374
L2v5MU5VkjA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2v5MU5VkjA
PEACEKEEPER VS EVA-8
they fix the jetpack around the map yeah yeah yeah yeah they say yesterday they fix it pretty quick honestly I'm happy they fixed the the twitch prime loot abuse or whatever used to you could just like type a command and console and you get the twitch prime loot without actually having twitch prime but they fixed it they removed all the skins that people like all the people that use that they removed it that's good I don't think there's I don't think they're gonna touch weapon balance for a little bit unfortunately I think they want to keep waiting and really see what the weapon balance is gonna be like it makes sense but at the same time it's like so painfully obvious what needs to change and it's also very obvious that you need to change balance changes from console to PC right it's like I bet you the wingman each [ __ ] on console I bet you it's not even that sick Franco I'm a bar I chased that kill [ __ ] I'm mark I'm mark good that yeah they're in this room charged up shotgun I'm ready we're gonna work we're basically watching all the Marvel movies to end game but oh sure [Applause] I just don't like the Peacekeeper at all I'd rather have anything else with my secondary well anything I just think peacekeepers [ __ ] trash the only time it's good is when you hit the point-blank in the face which is not very often honestly most of the time you're a little bit too far so you're hitting for tens and then if you if you use the choke on it where you hold it and shoot it it owns but like it just doesn't really match my playstyle you know like you could just hold the choke and you hold right quick charge it up boom old boom boom you can keep doing that and it owns when you use a peacekeeper like that and you just hold a [ __ ] cork power he's like I'll [ __ ] you out of here I'm going through ready how did you guess what happened nobody gotta kill me they baited us so hard that words like [ __ ] it oh we gotta test something dude next time that happens because you know they're baiting next time we got to see if a narc star follows you through when stuck in a portal because like if that's the case they would bait us I throw a narc star on you you jumped through the portal you warp up in front of them and then it pops good enough time uh-huh I don't probably not cuz you're going through the rift for so long maybe not huh there's have to be a much shorter rift for it to work that was a really long one I was like three seconds of [ __ ] flying sorry oh you're still a child you're right oh right sorry stretching Oh turbo charged me Oh turbo charger oh yeah you like that [ __ ] like that [ __ ] no way again you gotta stop doing that other oh yeah I've seen this yeah I can't there's no way I can save you what the [ __ ] you like in the match like in the rock yeah in the raw solid game has happened twice jewel yeah that happens actually quite frequently you're getting stuck like that yeah I don't know what I could do to save you like sit on the edge there yeah just like that yeah I swear I could get you don't nail I think the box will fall I'm just trying to stick all the teenagers I think it will classy you're I see your leg clipping through stay lit yeah just like that Mike's gonna jump up there and proceed to the suck em inside the rocker try walking forward as you diattou I'm holding on the strafe oh god dammit I forgot you [ __ ] eye let's go make me a cup coffee sixty [ __ ] second I'm taking your Luke the zone is the most useless thing in this game and literally it's just nothing look how log we're here look how long we're in this [ __ ] zone we can I sit here all day I need a buffett do enough damage we're almost there we're halfway through [Music] this is a team market dollar it's definitely work even though you've seen all the Marvel movies it's definitely worth it definitely worth it to re-watch it poor robot doesn't realize is a massive hitbox that's right here trimming flesh let's recap I could protect them I'm trimming the tree I'm excited for the season castle this game about the new boy is coming out wonder if that would be a [ __ ] Power Move by them making a coming out with the battle pass and then preemptively being able to buy a season pass so that are like a year pass or something you know how they get all the battle dress yeah you know like where Rainbow six has like the yearly [ __ ] [ __ ] that you can buy right right I wonder if they should do something like that when they'll just get a little bit off of there like already projected plan of passes that they're making the only risk with that is if you don't deliver on time then it becomes a problem god I [ __ ] destroyed lifeline hemlock headshots goodness that's so bad single-edged so [ __ ] fast I broke her armor in like three shots was a headshot headshot body and Hunter and her purple armors was gone knowing what are these [ __ ] the beggars that's gonna sneak up on me like I can't see him everybody's about to kill him though hold on stop Oh we started mailing - I think those you that came in - thank you David Emmys gonna move we're dying response just my battery life that was such a [ __ ] don't buy it dude so bad this look like what is he doing okay so yeah explain a goodie baby be evasive credible yeah [Music] robot got away race got away yeah the Ebates the best shotgun in the game you got that you got a purple bolt on that thing soon it's unstoppable nothing can [ __ ] beat it maybe I thought I got beat down but he double fake me dude I was weird I just didn't look real he just looked like a [ __ ] like you just run the Avenue strain my god that second guy got dropped seems that last time on you I knew their Buffalo so I knew I could do that I just I knew I had to hit both those shots without that go down perfectly [ __ ] called that whole thing I was like yeah I'm gonna flank these guys right here to you I'm gonna get flanked okay thank you I want some more healing characters more support for somebody that somebody that she was a healing gun somebody that has with like a Gibraltar type grenade you know like they fell there's a path your boys know that's there naturally it keeps the two rocks from falling down yes who has needs and they guys got they got tons of days oh I'm climbing they might not be Esther I really don't know Holy Bible I'm just assuming because that's all about there I don't think anyone's left here chief no keep going Mission Impossible Tom Cruise mensuration dude what what how did one fall bro if you threw one nade like one frag grenade and it landed there those guys would have gotten pushed off the map Mike 19 kills yeah I tried getting that last one I [ __ ] died just I literally see how I'm asked if he had won HBO's about to click with my Mastiff and died to an art star who's [ __ ] crazy close
Shroud
UCoz3Kpu5lv-ALhR4h9bDvcw
2019-03-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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1,325
7,068
oynPrt0UHdE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oynPrt0UHdE
2019/01/26 3v3 Triple Threat Tournament - Swiss Tiebreakers - Zero-K
welcome everyone to the zero K 3 3 triple tournament Dharma heroes Dominic or shadow fury whichever you prefer we've gone on that's the Swiss effectively into a double elimination we don't have a bracket as far as I know yet but we you can see we have essentially a three-way tie between fire pluck sparks menu and goobers or drones team and we're deciding to do essentially a double elimination where winners is going to be between seen fire block and team spark Amanda that's gonna be on titan duel and they're gonna have whoever loses that essentially in the losers final against drones team against team goobers 14 effects whatever and then grant files between the two I don't think that would bracket for that yet but I could be wrong but anyway we're gonna be moving on X I could make a bracket as I'm busy casting so no anyway yeah we're on Titan duel that is going to be is Right fireball UFC going in with his we're going in air for FF see going for jump pots fire blowgun fork Loki on Titan two of all links on the other side we have it looks like men who go in for air like last time and doing a lot of strategy discussion trying to get the same things set up looks like strategy discussion is taking a little wild be a fireplug is going to be Comfort cloak II which is the one thing I'm guessing is gonna be our main source of damage I mean these things Empire is gonna have to see but I'm guessing for the V&A we're gonna see a lot of glaives come up use that destroy it looks like oh no right what saying slice slice no fire pluck fire pluck said I've been going for sighs Ron are getting shields up and not we're not sure what sparkles is planning on going to I'm thinking we're probably gonna see sparkles going for something probably like vehicles Rovers maybe but I'm not sure anyway see what having sparkles one wild card here looks like they're gonna be going for Rovers indeed so we have one map one factory at counter picks but in this map and Bobby's coming out quite quickly out from okay so that's interesting choice F is he go over the puppies we have fire blog going for the size as it was expected because they were saying slice slice which implies puppies I mean certain place sighs yeah puppies I mean it's a cheap scouting unit that's a good thing that especially when you're you have sites although that might be a bit of a dead giveaway when I won't be dead giveaway I say might be a dead giveaway if if the if team spark man happens to see that there are cookie mods and doesn't see claves and I think oh what's going on but that's what I meant the Aryans actually get that far which it looks like they won't I don't write no they will that spark oh man who's there my bed actually will it will say jump busted we'll see Chloe bicep listen to Chloe battery's not doing anything which is really unusual because normally you'd have glaives coming out actually scouting but no they don't so that might be a bit of a dead giveaway I'm not sure if that's gonna be scouted or spotted or whatever now let's be honest no one is actually prepared for we aren't seeing any outlaws which is about the only thing I can think of that would actually work I'm kind of curious who's commanded they only go for first though I mean the fencers won't really stop the signs too easily will stop the puppies no problem as far as commander has gone a bit too far forward I'm not sure this we'll be able to do this kind of damage per second no not even go for it going on the back maybe they want from any twelves commander or just trying to go for scouting a bit of a careful thing there but at the same time we do have no other Scouts coming up we have a few puppies that have been built up and not much else at the same time though team spark from men who coming in here with a lot of fencers and a lot of bandits and not a lot of defenses to actually contend with for those units so it says coming their gun format until commander mantle is commander under heavy fire able to jump away defensive should be able to get rid of one of the size and the Swiss will help out to manage wells commander alone he's actually that's a huge part of the help here but at the same time that cloaking on that last sight allowing it to finish off mannitol's commander so rather that Manitoba losing their commander the size did their job good job fire plug I've worried that would have resigned have that worked because well fire plug has a bit of reputation now this point the question is what do you do now because at this point the southeast team team fire blight as much going for them they're going for more Reavers okay so they're just gonna go to try to build an anti Raider defense that's not a bad idea they're all raiders coming in this bandit and such that are being built up so I like the idea not sure I was gonna work out and the puppies aren't managing to do much either Behrman you can't actually attack ground the puppies I'm pretty sure they still will fly those a bit of a change but pretty sure you can still use attack on the ground with puppies to just dance the forward dodging shots it's a lot of really intense micro but I'm pretty sure you can do it if you put your mind to it and actually do it I know it looks like we're switching over from that to Jack's which makes sense those give ur defense is quite effectively see I go over the jacks and all that however I don't know this is gonna work like this this is not yeah that's nice which did what it was planning to do but I agree with drone that scythe rush cost a lot compared to the actual damage dealt this is not a 1v1 this is a 3 B 3 maybe 2 V 2 is worked fine to put in the 3 BC there's still two other commanders on that side and the map like Titan dual when it comes to the protected expansion element of commanders which is the really meaty important part of commanders well they have to that's only need and those two are doing a great job going for that forward expansion like the middle expansion that has been slow down asthma has been mentioned that's true but I don't see a whole lot taken advantage of that Nick Park looked kinda taken advantage of that sure but 400 essentially is setting themselves up to easily come in and start just cutting off the center I mean between sparklin 400 they could just to get or we have sparkles it actually going forward and expanding they would actually be able to just go from there cut off the center and then secure everything especially with manuals Air Force making sure that nothing can really move forward without having to pay at least some price in blood and considering the amount of metal that was given I agree with John's analysis completely here because yet the sides being lost means that at this point team spark for man who has about twice as much metal as what has available to them twice as much metal as what team fire plug could possibly hope to get without be claim or heavy rating which I mean might happen there are a lot of glaze coming here with the Pyro's and the powers will help a lot getting rid of those comfortable okay it'll help getting rid of the pickets sort of the glaze will just be destroyed by the Pickett so as a matter of when things come in what timing but yeah at this point team fire plug is locked in the corner right now and that's kind of the problem is that there's there's nowhere to expand to because the fact that yeah one commander died I think a spark well this commander was killed it would have been a different story I think it sparkled lost their commander said a managed 12 then the northeast side would have been far easier to take now for fire pluck and then from there it would have been an easy win like aren't made an easy win but it would've been a split in half like where destroy sparkles commander preventing the expansion over the Northeast manner 12 might have gone in to help out but it still would have slowed down that expansion and then would have allowed for the map be split in half and then from there we could have seen a more even game but going from mannitol scanner in the back like that both meant that you presume that the commander that was not actively expanding forward so not slowing down any expansions and you're also dealing with a commander that was very well protected now Sparkle this commander was not very well protected at the time that a few fencers but those would have been easy to get rid of so Sparks was commander was an easy pick was easy pickings I don't know why fireplug didn't go for that but would have died easily would have kept the size alive size might have still been able to get manacles commander afterwards and sparkles commander wouldn't have been able to expand over the Northeast which would have slowed things down enough for thus the harassment to actually or the big raid the cheese to actually have done its job anyway at this point that gives team spark from and in first place they win at least in the double elimination category I'm gonna show yet but I don't wanna show the lobby either yes so double elimination has been a win for them sorry not at first place there in the grand finals it's not 1st place yet it's double elimination so grand finals is still up in the air but at this point it's a question of what is that gonna be because now we have team drone against team Spartan right now wait what yeah Firefly for understand swap what's going on here for our plucks d'Alene yeah it should be a fancy 400 fireplug oh no FZ is right fire black wanna sing [Music] but look [Music] okay it looks like arena playing Titan duel again okay I'm unfortunately because we didn't have challenger so tells me doing a great job filling in as tio but it there's still a lot to deal with and they unfortunately aren't in here right now [Music] this is annoying [Music] okay good all right we got set up sorry but then there was there was a bit of an issue with the overall approach but yeah we've got this sorted I think we're gonna be doing or doing time duel apparently [Music] all right so sorry about the slight awkwardness with the bracket at this point because of that it is a little bit off yeah bear in mind this bracket is from the Swiss tournament we might have a double elimination bracket possibly in time for the grand finals which is coming up after this but for now we are into the lower bracket finals still on tightened duel and is going to be goobers that is team drone versus team fire pluck now not until the short happens if team drone loses this because if they lose this then I guess they're room because they effectively started out in the lower bracket finals so yeah it's a bit awkward I guess it should have been through tie but yeah whatever they already had lost against for this team so in a sense if team fireplug wins again that's two wins for Team Firefly here against team drawn to my mine but then Anna no it's weird we're they were kind of winging it right now unfortunately there wasn't only a plan for what to happen post Swiss because for time reasons it was gonna be initially Swiss versus two single elimination but then just became pure Swiss but then there wasn't a resolution because it was all in shamans head and they didn't write down what they were planning on doing in case this happened this being a three-way tie all right looks like we're gonna have something similar to this that's that last game rather we're sighs are being planned fourteen bar pluck so yeah that's the thing not sure where drones gonna come in okay [Music] but I'm curious what's gonna happen a response because I mean the last time we saw this it was on common catcher and a lot of it came down to the bet that air wasn't played now Malik has gone for air but this is also a map where is a lot easier to go for air because of the way the corners are built up so I expect were gonna be seeing a much more even game than we saw in the comic catcher game I think Amma catching him was a bit even but at Morris kind of was a grind that at no point team fireplug had a disadvantage in now this is gonna be more even team for our block going for the size probably not going to the same kind of push for the rating again going for one of the edge commanders is fine like that's the way this map gets played out you have two commanders that go out in each side to take a side each and then as long as you just do the same thing yourself while having the sides go forward to help deal with one of the commander's that's fine or in this case it looks like building a site primarily for scouting maybe a little bit of harassment in the back yeah fireplug playing it's much more normal this time they're not going for anything super crazy there's going for a scythe for scouting going for some glaives afterwards for a bit of raiding and not much else on the other hand team drone I mean they know that size can happen is probably why fire but I didn't go for cos drone was watching this they were commentating on this but they're commenting on this in the chat so yeah they totally know but at this point with drone it's going to be like they know that they're probably in resize but aren't gonna be as many size because I mean there's gonna be sighs so why would they worry about that not sure the site's gonna actually do anything though the scythe does have no real risk of being decloaked so it should be fine same time though the Karachi going in here from drone side and looks like we'll be able to find a little bit of value my be able to get some of this done Oh same time the scythe managing to get it rid of the metal extractor does reveal itself but hey that's just one metal extractor and from the other could actually hover unable to actually do any damage getting a bit of scouting him but not really all that much we look at the actual things that were spotted the stuff was spotted by area and it's already so not a whole lot of additional scouting information was gained and a kodachi was lost a hundred a medal was thrown away or donated essentially that's not too bad though team drone they're ahead atomically were about the same economically so really nothing really lost but at the same time it's kind of a question what's gonna happen here with any future rating because at this point everything's kind of lockdown looks like the two sides are gonna be going in for a bit of a longer game neither sides was really pushing too far forward neither sides really risking anything too much as both playing it quite safe however he's coming on the back again taking out another metal extractor so yeah good job here I mean this is exactly what needs to happen just get the size in there hit and run get ribs and metal extractors here and there just make a damage harder to build up more metalic trackers at the same time though I'm not sure how well that's gonna work in the end because drone right now our team drone right now they didn't manage to get her to the size that some time costs but not a major cost but they're they're expanding a lot faster we aren't seeing anyone build over the northeast and that's something that could have been done like is a rights commander could've gone over to the south bar blush commander could go over to East I mean efficacy is going to the east that works okay but I don't really know what is the right planning on doing now the commander back in the base and I don't see any real value on that and the command acquis going forward expanding in the center or could be just protecting stuff for the forward at kind of I don't know what user is doing um I'm guessing they're primarily focused on setting up all these fad all these Swift's here I mean if you look at their actual cursor yeah they're folks entirely on microing the Swift's they're not looking at the commander in the slightest it's kind of sucks at the same time we do have fireplug coming in with a couple signs dealing a bit of extra damage gamers some Reavers just you know damage you some of the army making sure that there isn't as much that jazz cache can do but that's about all that's really accomplished at this point team drone is winning on expansions that's the key thing team drone is expanding a lot faster they've been taking a lot of the center the sides haven't really been taken at the same time FC is just not building that commander over to the side I don't know why these are not being taken at 6 miles per second right there if there was that to the 2 team fireplug team fireplug would be ahead Mike I like to use the size though and the arguer jazz caches commander so that he's actually gonna prevent some expansion from jazz sketch over to the Southwest so that is a thing that needed to happen with the size the last game so okay that provides some hope for Team fireplug right now especially with that reclaim they'll be coming in immediately afterwards so yeah that's actually not a bad use of sites that's have you a very effective use of science here with that Lotus get rid of that crash sure oh no never mind should've killed in the crash first still though the expansion has been slowed FC has at least gone to quilled over to the northeast so that will be completely taken care of a sooner or later I mean probably in the reclaim fire block about to lose their camino nevermind discectomy ok the site coming in protecting against the Scorchers but that blitzes are still gonna be a problem or at least in theory I know the buses are being dissuaded from attacking as well between the size and the lotuses if blitzes are not able to actually do much so yeah that was a nice defense there firefight by fire flux commander but it may be in vain the world are coming in here reclaiming the commander here for jazz cache kind of defeats the purpose having killed the commanders they briefly was going all the way over to southeast team I really would like sees everything go over to 2 team fireplug but they're not going for it so that's kind of their loss right now whereas that being said team fireplug is not too far behind it really is just the recliners giving any advantage over to team drum but every advantage is still something especially it seemed Firebug is only just now build with the Northeast and honestly is a little bit fragile the harbor's coming in here doing when it can - it's basically just bait out attacks I mean it's dealing damage it's gonna go down too quickly they actually managed to do much same times the size once again getting back to work anywhere - this has an expansion that haven't started up but he is not gonna continue a crane that crane got that's I think over to the crane seriously that is amazing I didn't realize could hit that height yeah there's one Farb like they got the caretaker they can start reclaiming how much reclaim is in here there is 840 metal of reclaim in here so this will be fine team fire boys gettin that reclaim going everything sorted out at the same time drone is being pushed back white effectively mean FC they've got the Northeast it took a little while but if she's got northeast fire pluck is slowly but surely taken or at least restricting the taking of the southwest so right now this is going to be probably team public advantage kinda comes down to what this Ray's gonna do though because these blitzes are managing to get a little bit of revenge in here as are these Scorchers the center is falling the sides are definitely intact with the center's falling in MCS cut off okay there it has been reestablish the connection has been re-established it's not completely cut off but still there's the center thing that can use to wedge out FFC so there's a lot of room tactically for team drone to have a lot to work with and it looks like the primary issue right now is just that there isn't that push I don't know if they're aware of that like they should have radar coverage again they do have renter coverage enough that they know hey there's not much here go for it but it hasn't really happened at the same time air control is still being heavily controlled aiza right Mallory has a reasonably even number a sign of Swift's it will be essentially down to micro but I'm not sure if it's going to because at this point the Swiss coming in I mean it's Mallard wreck Swift's are more spread out that's the big thing to me that's why I'm I'm hedging on this because is a ride they tend to have this was not nice and together so there's gonna burst down anything whereas Malik's ifs are further apart which is okay for a broader defense but it doesn't really help if they're being attacked directly now finishing the Reavers coming in here wiping gonna get another crane fire flux commander under some damage by this law doesn't the Lotus being distracted by the commander which is tanking the hell out of that Lotus well the Reaver can just take care of it no problem and that is going to be the Reaver taking on the entire southwest the Southwest is done and there there's this red coming in very smart actually I like that get rid of a few Swiss from mal raeng and then boosting out of there to make sure they don't lose too much and when things turn around Malik's whistle would have had a chance to counter-attack say at this point Team fireplug is doing a great job holding on a lot of metal they do need more energy that is true but drones commander is under some heavy fire and of course she has jazz caches commander was already destroyed so the Southwest very easy to expand to for the for the time being at least fourteen fireplug drones commander if Vegas taken out that might be game just for how much it will reduce the expansion of it expansion potential I'm not entirely sure mean the defenses are pretty strong over there so it's not gonna be the easiest thing to break down but yeah if drones commander gets destroyed there isn't an easy safe expansion opportunity over there and already the Southwest has fallen the Northeast is pretty secure for FM C but a little bit questionable and the helpers are coming in here trying air to the commander but not able to get past anything else the fencers are stopping it so at least some fencers died but it's not really enough those halberds were successfully defended against mace coming in on top of that but it's a little bit too late honestly it's a little too late few more offenses coming in however I'm sorry few more leavers coming on the south to at least defend the south make sure that's safe so the real threat right now is FC NF Aziz a leader a few the fencers this may sting her might be some job actually and going for the commander but not really able to deal any damage before it gets itself killed and again there's another halberd coming around here but more is just pushing back drones commander I like that it's doing a decent job but it's doing a job at great cost now this one the reclaim feels a thousand medals strong and most of it is going over to drum in fact all of it is growing over to drone there is the caretaker here which could start taking it but it's more worried about repairing FFC than it is about actually reclaiming anything I really kinda want to get a reclaim order but I guess it's also useful for getting stingers up use those to get rid of some of the Ravagers and that will work out reasonably well same time notes whips over to the northeast double-checking what's going on Mallory now see what they can do to raid I mean it's portions are actually a bit of a threat here this is a this could be a problem no these could fall may never see they are they are extended pretty far not quite overextended but there's being extended far and overextended right now is going to be very subtle and very minor and pretty much coming down to whether or not FC is based back here and defenses over here are managing to hold up Alvar drones commander again surviving still again being pushed back that is the key thing drones commander is forced back as a result of all this emphasis should be able to start really start reclaiming some time I mean I real okay team fireplug does definitely a van economic advance it's not a big deal if they won't be clean yet but more economy is always good especially considering actually I have a better attrition too so yeah actually this is working out all right okay I'll take that back it's working out King effort and drones commander going down to a swift assault took a long time but it does finally way down after many many assaults and that is as a huge blow for the central expansion push I don't know if it's gonna be it but I do think it's going to be enough to at least put on put on a real challenge for Team drone I think team drone what we'll probably have from here they still have some money but they lost a lot of reclaim I think no really half mirrors to try to make me regain some air control maybe I mean they have their pillage routes artillery out some stuff isn't a bad idea like just try to go high attrition but unfortunately they're not doing that the impale is gonna go down to is that's even worse for them I mean this is the thing is that I've mentioned before that drone in particular as a player is a much more macro focus player and tends to use units somewhat freely like they tend not to worry so much about saving units an out grant that this is a team not just drone but I mean if you look at units I fell you lost here jasc actually had the eyes value lost but then drone drone was kind of even with the pack and then very quickly became second and overall yes southeast lost a lot more but yeah it's just dronin as a rule tends to not be the most careful with their units like they they got more money they're really good for the income it's hard to tell here the income was fairly good overall and the meddling use was really good for team for the goobers but it's just value who killed value lost value loss is always gonna be higher for a drone and apparently also higher for team's drone is on and that was a key thing although to prepare a lot of it was again the fact that those sides were used properly this time we saw the side is used to get rid of commanders that were actually being used to expand to the sides and that was being used as a way of opening things up for the commanders from Team fireplug to actually do their job and that was what made it work out so yeah much better much more effective approach from team fire plug for the scythe use this game than last game this was this is how you use sites so yeah that was that we're gonna be having the final grand finals I think I mean drone might argue with that I don't know now whatever Ellis does at the format but me [Music] okay so oh nevermind okay it looks like it's done are we actually finished okay nevermind so the tiebreakers how it worked out wasn't what I expected but it worked so yeah we are done I suppose [Music] so yeah Sparkman congratulations you got first place fireteam fireplug got second place and goobers got third place which drone is going to be very pissed off immature oh they are very pissed off at actually it their their chat is saying that yeah they kind of ready yeah anyway thank you for the know also thanks for getting here for pointing out in the to twitch at why the commander is in base for air factory and that is to make it easier and faster to repair our bombers and fighters as they return that is a very good point I hadn't thought of that I still think 14 fireplug in that case probably wasn't a bad idea to push forward but yeah it made it make sense alright so with that I I suppose that is gonna be it so thank you all for watching thank you everyone thank ressort Hale for basically jumping into the last minute to be the guest T Oh shamon and organized this our shaman shaman organized this but it looks like shaman was not available I don't know what happened I hope they're okay but they they were doing fine before for organizing stuff I don't know why they hadn't organized there but whatever anyway the so with that sort al thanks very much for filling in and that is it so thank you for watching thank you ciao and even out here for organized for initially organizing things our tale for picking up the slack sto congratulations Sparkman in fireplug uber for doing for your performance thank you all the teens were signing up really wouldn't have a tournament without as many people signing out those 30 people signing up oh look 25 or 30 people somewhere that range that signed up in it ultimately so yeah thank you all for joining me and until next time have a good night everyone [Music]
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India reports Omicron-driven surge- Pakistan passes IMF-backed 'mini budget' - SA Newsline Jan 14
subscribe tag tv youtube channel and press the notification button [Music] good evening and welcome to south asia news line i'm lepakshi kurana here are the top stories we are tracking for you on friday the 14th of january india reports over 264 thousand new kobet 19 cases amid omicron driven search pakistan passes imf back to mini budget despite opposition protest and sri lanka prison chief gets death penalty for 2012 massacre [Music] and now for all the details india reported 264 202 new cases of coronavirus in the last 24 hours taking its total tally to 36.58 million on friday several big cities including western mumbai and capital new delhi are witnessing a huge spike in cases of the new omicron variant health experts have expressed concerns that complicency and defying of kobit 19 protocols could lead to an overwhelmed healthcare system [Music] india reported 264 202 new cases of the corona virus in the last 24 hours taking its total tally to 36.58 million on friday several states including maharashtra west bengal and capital new delhi are witnessing a huge spike in cases but markets and public places have continued to be flooded with heavy crowds as economic activities have not been restricted as part of fresh protocols though hospitalizations are low amid the omicron driven surge health experts have expressed concerns that complicency and defying of kovind 19 protocols could lead to an overwhelmed health care system wait is going on i think it's a tough time for all of us and you know even if the patients are not too many of them are admitted but your health healthcare system still gets stressed so many of our colleagues our healthcare workers including the doctor nurses they get infected and once they get infected they have to be quantized or isolated for at least seven days so the rest of the workers there's so much of pressure on them meanwhile around 200 teenager monks and nuns got vaccinated against kowitt 19 in india's northern hilltown of dharamshala on friday indian government recently allowed vaccination of children aged 15 to 18 years in the country against the deadly virus to widen its coverage of the immunization and a death toll in a train accident in jalpaikuri in india's west bengal state climbed to at least nine on friday officials said as the rescue operations continued india's railway minister ashwini vaishno said preliminary inquiry has shown there was a glitch in the locomotive equipment and further probe is underway [Music] the death toll in passenger train derailment incident in eastern india state of west bengal climbed to at least nine on friday after more fatalities were reported by officials seven coaches of the began guwahati passenger train derailed near moynagori railway station in west bengal's jalbaikuri district on thursday rescue operations continued at the derailment site with the help of cranes to find survivors till the last reports came in at least 36 people were admitted to hospital with injuries railway officials said rescue operation meanwhile india's railway minister ashwani vaishna who reached the site said that preliminary inquiries showed there was a glitch in the locomotive equipment and further prop is underway preliminary the ministry expressed condolences to the families of the deceased and nearly six thousand seven hundred forty four u.s dollars as x grusha and one thousand three hundred forty eight us dollars to those previously injured and news from pakistan pakistan's parliament passed the controversial mini budget on thursday that will end exemptions on sales tax as part of fiscal tightening measures for the revival of a stalled six billion dollar imf funding program this game despite protests by opposition lawmakers who said the supplementary budget will trigger a new wave of inflation [Music] pakistan's parliament passed a mid-year budget on thursday that will end exemptions on sales tax as part of fiscal tightening and a law to grant its central bank greater autonomy for the revival of a stall 6 billion dollar international monetary fund or imf funding program ending the tax exemptions would raise three forty three billion rupees finance minister shaka tarin said the passage came despite protests by opposition lawmakers who said the supplementary budget will trigger a new wave of inflation which already stands as 12.3 percent which terrain rejected opposition leader shahbaz sharif termed it as a black day and said people are already reeling under historic price hike the imf approval is crucial for the south asian country of 220 millions which is struggling with external and current account deficits are depreciating currency struggling foreign reserves and rising inflation stamina bath will also be raising fuel prices over the next several months under the imf conditions the imf board was due to meet on january 12 to approve the tranche but pakistan had requested a delay until islamabad met the imf conditions and more news from pakistan pakistan's coronavirus positivity ratio jumped over 7 on friday after more than 3 500 new cases were reported the highest since last september the south asian nation has ramped up inoculations and has been administering booster doses to those above 30 years of age to protect citizens from any impact [Music] pakistan's coronavirus positivity ratio jumped over seven percent as the country reported 3567 new cases the highest since september 10 2021 in the last 24 hours the national command and operations center reported on friday with the new infections the overall tally has reason to 1.315 million while seven more deaths have taken the dead toll to 28 999. meanwhile federal education minister shafkar mahmood was also tested positive for kovite 19 on thursday in a beat to cup the surging cases of omicron variant authorities have ramped up inoculations pakistan's largest city karachi earlier this week launched a door-to-door campaign to vaccinate women who were lacking behind men in raids of coronavirus inoculation vaccinations about 70 million people in pakistan or 32 percent of the population have had two vaccine doses the federal government has acknowledged that a fifth pandemic has started in the country but not yet announced new restrictions and moving on u.n secretary general antonio guterres has appealed for a suspension of rules preventing the use of money in afghanistan to save lives and the economy and for a path to the conditional release of frozen afghan foreign currency reserves he also appealed the taliban leaders to recognize and protect fundamental human rights of women and girls in afghanistan [Music] united nations secretary general antonio guterres appealed on thursday for a suspension of rules preventing the use of money in afghanistan to save lives and economy and for a path to the conditional release of frozen afghan foreign currency reserves describing a nightmare unfolding in afghanistan gotras warned that the word is in a race against time to help the afghan people and stress that freezing temperatures and frozen assets are the lethal combination for the afghan people he also appealed the taliban leaders to recognize and protect fundamental human rights in particular of women and girls without creative flexible and constructive engagement by the international community afghanistan's economic situation will only worsen despair and extremism will grow we need to act now to prevent economic and social collapse and find ways to prevent further suffering for millions of afghans some 9.5 million dollars in afghan central bank reserves remain blocked outside the country mainly in the us and international support given to the previous government has dried up since the taliban seized the power last august the u.n on tuesday appealed for 4.4 billion dollar in humanitarian aid for afghanistan in 2022. and in news from sri lanka sri lankan caught this week's sentenced former president's commissioner emil lama to death over the killing of 27 inmates in an execution-style massacre in 2012. it was the worst prison violence in the island nation since a 1983 jail riot [Music] sri lanka's colombo high court this week convicted former prisons commissioner mlranjan lama heva and sentenced him to death over the killing of 27 inmates in an execution style massacre in 2012. the top official was indicted in july 2019 for the killings at sri lanka's main velikarda prison in colombo reports suggest police commandos were used to put down a riot at the prison and disarm inmates who had allegedly taken weapons from the armory weapons were later introduced to make it look like the victims had tried to fire at jail guards some of the inmates killed were being held over robberies at sri lanka's national museum and a temple the targeted killings triggered international condemnation of the then government of president mahinda rajapaksa who is now the country's prime minister it was the worst prison violence in the island nation since 50 inmates were hacked to death in a july 1983 riot and thousands of hindu devotees across india took holy dips in river ganges at offered prayers to mark the harvest festival of makkasan kranti on friday despite surging coronavirus cases makka sakranti which coincides with the bihu festival in the northeastern state of assam state heralds the coming of spring [Music] hundreds of thousands of hindu worshippers gathered on the bank of the river ganges in india on friday for a holy deep and offered preyers to celebrate the makhar sankranti festival despite an exponential kovit 19 search in the most popular state of uttar pradesh devotee strong the banks of the river in holi varanasi city and pray to sun god the festival is observed annually in hindu month of mark that falls in january it also heralds the coming of the spring similar scenes we witnessed in india's west bengal state where a large number of devotees took a dip in the sacred river and also prayed at the famous temple near ganga sagar west bengal state has been reporting the most number of kovit 19 cases in the country of the maharashtra state in the west meanwhile in india's northeastern state of assam locals burn meiji and perform traditional dance to celebrate mark bihu that coincides with makarisan kranti the festival marks the end of the harvesting season in the region and witnesses grand feasting it showcases india's diversity in culture and tradition well that's the way it was in south asia this evening before we conclude the top stories once again india reports over two sixty four thousand new covenant 19 cases amid omicron driven search pakistan passes imf back to mini budget despite opposition protest and sri lanka prison chief gets death penalty for 2012 massacre [Music] now our viewers can watch the show on southeastern newsline.com you can also visit us on facebook.com and follow us on twitter at asia newsline that's all in tonight's edition we'll see you same time next week have a great weekend good night [Music] tech tv brings you daily news bulletin from india breaking news and views from india
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Coronavirus Smart Business Moves
we can't put on our huge smiles this time hi this is tom stewart with uh cleaning business today and i've got my uh partner here liz uh we're um for another uh part of our ongoing series for uh coronavirus smart business moves uh for for house cleaning companies uh it's friday made it to the end of the week um yeah yeah you know i gotta say that i'm feeling a little different about fridays and the weekend now than maybe what i did a couple of months ago um weekends have a scary aspect to them because there's just a whole lot of things that happen over the weekend a lot of things change over the weekend and the way things look friday a lot of times they look very much different on monday so um here we go again let's uh let's all hope for the best you know there's some things out there where there's some potential of some therapeutic drugs that might uh drugs are around the market that that might be what they would call a therapeutic that would take somebody with a virus make them uh feel better to the point where the mortality rate would drop a bunch and that would be a huge game changer but uh you know that's probably a number of uh weeks out and i don't know we just need to keep our fingers crossed on something on some of those things um today we wanted to um talk about uh some of the things that we should be doing on the financial side isn't that right liz yep absolutely yeah we wanted to talk about things that we should be looking at now to i guess pair our businesses for the potential of of an economic downturn and that economic downturn is gonna you know be caused by by a couple of things i guess the most immediate concern is the spread of the coronavirus and the the fears that are that are being created by that that they're going to be a lot of consumers that aren't going to want you in the home and um you know you might not want to go in their homes just depending upon you know where what their exposures and risks are and secondly there's a real economic component to this the economy is uh really cratering at the moment in terms of where the stock market is going and financial institutions the number of you know everything from you know across the board people are going to be looking for money including small businesses so um i want to start the discussion uh just kind of full disclosure and to kind of explain where where we've been at castle keepers here for the last uh well maybe we've been having this discussion for for a while but uh you know all the partners uh got together today liz myself derek and troy and looking at the horizon of where we are now and what we anticipate you know could be happening would be happening in the weeks ahead made the decision to temporarily halt all non-essential cleaning services across all the branches and castle keepers uh we announced that that we're doing it for two weeks starting this afternoon or this evening through i don't know april 2nd april 3rd whatever two fridays from from now is and you know there's some possibility that some things could change and shift where we might actually recast and and start doing some work after that period for for residential clients but we're preparing for the possibility that it could go on longer maybe maybe a number of months longer before that would um that would uh that would change um we're going to continue to do work what we call essential services we do some work for uh some multi-family housing property management groups where we're cleaning you know elevators and staircases and things that you know space that people live in that they need to help we do some work for some uh from senior senior communities and they um they need our ongoing help for for a number of reasons so we're going to continue to do to do some of that work but but for the most part we're uh we're we're shutting down here for for at least the next two weeks and maybe longer um it was uh interesting times we had a long discussion today didn't we last it was not one of our quicker ones it was not it was also not our longest one no no longer we're capable of talking a long time yes yes we are anything any any points i missed there liz that would be um useful for for us to share um i don't think so uh the only thing that maybe i would clarify is you said we're closing down all essential non-essential services and currently that is not a um well understood phrase it is the definition there is very fluid depends on who you talk to and who you talk to on what day right so california's idea of essential services is different than wyoming's definition of essential services and uh currently there are a lot of places that are not even attempting to define essential services right uh and the cleaning companies don't even fall on some of these lists essential or non-essential residential commercial they're not even on the list so that would be the only thing i would say is you were specifically talking about residential services right and not multi-family residential either just just residential yeah you're right it's sad in some way that we're having to make up our own definition for for what that is we need we need more guidance i guess from uh from government on on that but it was our judgment that you know if it's space that people live in that they don't have the option to isolate themselves it's communal space you know if i live in a building and i got to get in an elevator along with everybody else that lives in that building then the the we have an obligation to to clean that and the you know that that was essential service if it was cleaning mrs jones's single family dwelling where she's you know supposed to be you know sequestered and and not going you know not leaving home anyway then it was our judgment that um that would probably be best if we didn't uh didn't enter that space at the moment now you know part of this whole you know thing for two weeks you know that's what we're saying but if the government comes out next week and says something different has different doubt i mean we don't know but we're we're trying to do what we think that we need to be doing and to be clear what we're doing doesn't mean that this is what everybody else should be doing either different communities are doing different things and i mean there's a lot of moving parts of this so no form or fashion do i want anybody to take away from this that you guys need to be doing what we decided to do in castle keepers i mean i guess for example liz you guys are dealing with something a little bit different olympia and you're you're still moving ahead right yeah we're still moving ahead in olympia um and also to be clear you're not necessarily doing the same thing at each ranch so of our different castle keepers branches right so currently all the the branches are closing down residential services for maybe two weeks but moving forward on that we're not exactly sure where we're going we also are doing some other stuff in portland that are is also being shut down on not residential our um airbnb we are not we're not cleaning and our um what was the other one our hello alfreds which are um multi-family living and we have also decided to shut those down in portland so is that more of concern for risk of of your cleaning professionals um i think that no i i don't think so um i think that it's more because and you heard that i said uh portland right tom i think you heard olympia but i didn't mean i did okay you were saying yeah so i'm i'm gonna clarify in portland we're also doing that because it's a much smaller branch and the amount of work that we have that is multi-family like that is so small that it doesn't make sense to stay open for this very small amount of work we would have enough work multi-family for one person on thursdays say for example so it's each branch is different in portland we're shutting down all of our services including multi-family so we had we had a discussion here in charleston this afternoon about airbnbs and we do a lot of vacation rentals too which i guess are basically the same thing and we're stopping all those services as as well um a lot of that work is kind of dried up anyway there's a ton of cancellations but but the concern was for the safety of our people because you got people flying in from all over the place from like you know new york in places where the the incidence of of uh illnesses is higher much higher it is in this market and just not knowing where those people are coming from it just was didn't feel like that was a risk that was was was worth taking either um i want to talk about you know the i mean we can we can anybody has any questions about any of this you know feel free to hit us up and chat we'll be glad to talk about that but we wanted to talk a little bit about some of the financial moves that that you might want to be considering and and probably better if you just go ahead and comment don't hit us up in chat that way everybody will be able to see the comments and we can respond to be here for us when i say chad i don't even know what that is is that down there was that supposed to comment is that different than chat post a comment so there's no we want them to post a comment there's two options they can do a private chat or post a comment and we would prefer they post comments there you go i just posted a comment good job hey me um cash you know again we've all probably heard the the same cash is king and then times like this more than than anything and um a lot of things are are happening out there that uh you know are going to be affecting cash some good some bad you know we've got customers that are canceling because they're afraid of of the risk associated with the virus or on the other side of the equation i mean a lot of companies that are struggling because their employees don't want to work because they're afraid of getting exposed to the coronavirus so you're kind of getting it on both ends but all that's a demonition of income so that's obviously going to hurt your cash and on the flip side there's some some good opportunities out there because a lot of that cash you use goes to cover overhead and other expenses and most of the people that you're used to striking a check to on a monthly basis are now open to having a discussion about changing those terms making it easier for you to pay or deferring payments um i'll give you an example uh we had some cars that we owned that were financed or financed through ally actually and they have a program now that if you ask them they'll let you defer all car payments for four months so we said heck yeah sign us up for that um you're they're expecting eventually you're gonna pay it but they're giving you a four month holiday from from having to pay i suspect there's going to be some interest accruing but in the whole scheme of things um you know if you find that that that you can start paying it off before four months because things are going in a positive direction you can but you know you might need that money down the road for other things um bank of america announced this morning that for consumers for residential mortgages i think it's a three-month holiday that they're offering everybody you just got to ask for it and um you know i i again i assume that interest would be accruing but uh i don't recall a time in my lifetime where banks and lending institutions were behaving that way um this is different you know when you say liz oh i absolutely i i've never seen this and all the years i i've been doing it i i'm kind of in shock every time i turn around somebody's saying that they got this payment deferred this payment deferred and i'm like what you got what payment deferred i mean the president was on today saying our taxes aren't due until july 15th what when does that ever happen right really so i mean i i we we've been saying this the whole time right this has been going on a week and a half now you've been saying this is what's the word you've been using time unprecedented yes this is unprecedented and i think this is just more of that and it's more proof that this is an unprecedented time in history and we get to look through it so hey patty hi catty how about katie i'm reading what she said i thought i'd go bankrupt but thank god the financial institutions are working with us yeah so i i think that bankruptcy was looming large for a lot of small businesses they were really in fear and a lot of people are having hope again so super awesome i think um if you have any credit lines out there um you might to go ahead and pull cash out of them and that might look like a home equity line of credit if you got that with money in it i would go ahead and pull that money out and just put it somewhere uh i wouldn't put it in the stock market and put it in some type of you know fixed income and i wouldn't even be looking for interest because uh you're looking at you know something that's so low it's just you know for all practical purposes just put it in a checkbook savings account type deal um but you might need that later and once you do that go back around to the bank and say you know if i'm not able you know if what what what deals what terms are you going to give me if i can't can't pay this back you know we've been talking to you know we've got some credit lines that that we have out there and we've maxed all of them out now we're going back and saying hey we might not have any money because we've you know lost all our customers what are we you know what are you going to do with us and the banks are just like yeah we're figuring that out ourselves but we're going to do something don't don't worry about it so we're kind of just trying to figure out out of all the bills that that that we have to to pay each month we're uh believing that there's going to be a lot of help out there for us to uh to weather this storm and we're going to have to pay the bills eventually but the banks aren't going to get anything if they you know don't give us an opportunity to get back running again and the other thing that we need to to be looking at is what help's going to be coming from small businesses and there's legislation that's i mean this couple bills that uh you know i'm assuming the most recent one maybe was signed into law today and a lot of the more of that's on the um you know things that we need to do for for employees and maybe we need to talk about that next week but uh not not today um but there's going to be more relief coming for for for small business as well and uh the small business administration is going to be having loans to to to help and i would be looking into that this weekend and figuring out uh what uh what options you have and kind of start getting your your numbers together to be able to start having those discussions since we're not going to be cleaning a lot of homes next week we're planning on spending some some time working on that um and i i can just say that i am applying for an um sba loan um i just think that right now any access that i can get to different monies is the smart move because i don't know what's going to happen i don't know where it's we're going to be in six months a year etc so i'm applying for i know a lot of people were saying well is that good i don't know it doesn't seem like if you're a strong company or if you've been around a while that you would want to do that but along the same lines as your your credit line yeah i want to i am i'm not saying you should but i'm saying i am hey uh we got royce uh here hey royce you've been on a number of our calls i i appreciate your active participation he's sharing that his mortgage company is giving a three-month forbearance and that's just kind of a fancy term for a vacation they're not going to ask you to pay for it for three months um and what does which means oh and and in month four you would owe four months of payments but it could readjust at that time so they would be looking for you to pay like all four months at in in in one big payment not like a balloon payment yeah so that's a really good term we want to be looking at forbearance y'all that is not the same thing as a deferral yeah that's interesting but like you said you get to that point if you said hey i don't have that but i can give you something i'm sure they would be glad to um to to have everything's negotiable at this point if you've ever been to to any of our workshops especially when we're talking about uh you know contracts and rates and quotes and you know everything's negotiable and we're living in a world now where more so than ever everything is negotiable and you're going to ask for something and they're going to offer you something and you don't you know my my advice is push back ask for something more because you know the other option is well you know i can just close you know my doors and you get nothing and at that point you're in the driver's seat i mean that's true that's where things are now we're we are in the world i don't know though tom when we're talking about mortgages i feel like you want to be a little bit more careful when you're talking about your mortgage well i would i would test it i mean there's a million things that happen before absolutely your home is being foreclosed and your furniture is being put out on the street i i i i just know that 2008 was kind of tough on a lot of people with their houses yeah a lot of people lost their houses this is going to be different i mean i'm not i mean at the end of the day you're you're probably right i mean i'm agreeing that's totally different i'm just saying when it comes to your mortgage maybe maybe think think harder and and make sure that you're going to be ready for what that is and you're ready for that discussion yeah you know that that's good advice you know just every thing we're saying here is is is is opinion and and we don't agree on everything either and if we don't agree and we're partners right what that what that means is don't don't just say oh well they're saying it tom is saying this that must be right or liz is saying this that must be right and just go with it no do you do your own due diligence as well and to be clear the overarching objective is to pay back your creditors but if you don't you know if you over extend yourself and spend every last dollar you have real quickly then you're really doing a disservice to your creditors if you're out of money at that point you're out of business your creditors don't want you to do that but they're not going to know you're doing it unless you tell them that's what's going to happen if you tell them we got two choices if we you know work with me and i'll get you your money back it might be a while it might be a lot longer than what either one of us wanted but they all understand why it's not because you're a bad business operator it's because of an act of god that was beyond anyone's control and you know or the other alternative is i'll give you every dollar i have now and that's the last dollar you're going to get and it's not nearly what i owe you oh sorry tom please and also the the other piece of that is um the government is stepping in to help so the government is also understanding that this is outside of everyone's control nobody was expecting it and even if we had expected something along these lines nobody was expecting that it was going to be as big as bad as scary as it currently is and looking to last for as long as it is so we have the government assistance as well so i know it looks like i'm kind of flip-flopping here on what i'm saying but i'm not i'm just saying that when it comes to something like forbearance where they're saying yeah we're not going to charge you for three months but then on the fourth month you're gonna have to pay all four months don't just count on that with the idea of like ah no big deal because in four months i know we're still going to be dealing with it now kick it down another four months and then i'll owe eight months because as those numbers come compound they get harder and harder and you don't want to put yourself in a bad position with your mortgage i would think so you know look for better terms no negotiate like tom was saying negotiate better terms than this four-month forbearance if you can no i'm not shifting positions just clarifying sorry yeah and and then when you're talking about your home i mean some assets are worth more to you and others if you have you know a car note a home note you know i don't know maybe a correct line of credit um so a couple of other objects in there you need to kind of prioritize it's like well if i'm going to have to give one of these back to the bank which one do i want to you know which one do i want to hold on to yeah which one do i want the most yeah absolutely i see that we have another question here tom do you feel or think that credit cards won't be a feasible feasible option for some that's good that's a good question um you know i know recently i guess up to the last month or so banks were really generous about giving away credit cards and making it real easy and you just go online and answer you know two or three questions and bam you know you get a credit card um they're probably gonna be tightening up on that um i can tell you from my experience in 2008 credit cards would reel in your line of credit with um so if you had a credit card that you know you had like thirty thousand dollar line of credit on it they would come back and say that okay we're going to cut that down to 10. and there's a couple of reasons for that and you know back in 08 the banks were what they called under capitalized and they needed more money in in in reserve and it was it gets a little bit technical but if you had a 30 000 credit line and you weren't really using it then they had to act like that whole thirty thousand dollars was was was out there when it really wasn't so one of the ways they managed to start topping those down i don't know if we're going to get back into that situation or not so um this kind of gets back to the credit line i'm not really big about taking a credit card that's got some really you know obscene interest rate and borrowing money against at some point the numbers don't work but if you've got credit lines out there like you know second mortgage on your home for instance um you know this liz raises a point you borrow that you might be putting your home at risk but then again you know you might find a situation that you can just turn right around and use that money to pay your mortgage down for a number or month so there's a lot of ways of looking at that and typically most of those uh notes are our variable rate which would be really really uh low at this point of course there's a chance that interest rates could be going up in the months ahead too there's there's a couple of uh schools of thought on that and uh a lot of unknowns because again unprecedented so a lot of unknowns i i i do like the idea though of potentially um borrowing against your mortgage you know taking out a second maybe especially if you know that your cash situation is um maybe tenuous then that might be a a good idea uh again just gonna have to play it by ear i know that one thing about entrepreneurs is many times we are we we tend to be um more tolerant of risk we're used to just being out there and like risking a lot to be able to build our businesses so um just a little bit of caution thrown out there especially because we are entrepreneurs and we have a tendency to take on take on more risks than maybe is wise at times i don't know who's who's gauging wise and who gets to define it but maybe something to look at uh there was something else i wanted to talk about i can't remember what it was oh i know do you have any information tom about the stimulus checks that are supposed to be going out and april and may now a lot of that are still being hacked out today um and i've been a little bit preoccupied with some other things but i'm i'm planning on getting caught up on on all of that this weekend somebody hit me up earlier today and wanted to know if i knew uh when the april 6th well obviously when is april 6th but how much that check was going to be who's getting it and how that whole thing was working i was like i'm not exactly sure but we might talk about it on the call if anybody in this that's on this call right now has heard anything let us know i'd love to yeah i'd love to know what i keep saying call but how about facebook live instead anybody what what i did see yesterday you know the the bill had had like layers in it it was means tested and um i think it was a dollar amount per adult and a smaller dollar amount per child and i think what's uh i guess it would be household income maybe it was individual income i don't know exceeded 99 000 then there was nothing so um but it was you know designed to to help you know the folks who really needed it the most which is is is really what was intended it's a good thing and um you know there's a there's a lot of stuff being being noodled around at the moment but you know i'm not sure what's actually been passed into law yet and even once becomes law there's a lot of the details then that need to be fleshed out in the regulations we still not aren't going to be sure how it's going to be implemented until we get uh get more data amanda says she spoke to her attorney nothing's been finalized um waiting for it to be finalized and hoping by monday to have answers well but that sounds about right that's what we've been hearing so um what else what other kinds of questions do people have or other suggestions other things that people have been doing um to to help with their their financial situations right now anybody you know several several other things i guess we need to be thinking about in the context of this you know we need to be educating ourselves as to what assistance is available in your state and your local market for any any of your employees that are displaced um you know we're using the term furlough which means you know it's it's it's we're looking as a temporary thing and once the virus threat you know reaches an appropriate level we're going to go back to work um you know what documentation do you need to to to give to to your employees so they can uh qualify for unemployment and those rules i think are are being changed as well to make it easier for people to do that and um what if it's okay she was saying that um she called her workers comp her general liability and card payments and she got help with all of those things so um that's good to know i don't know that a lot of people would consider even thinking about workers comp right when she got she got help with workers tom so that's good to know yeah yeah i mean we were i mean let's go we were talking to our insurance agent today and he said that something's coming but they don't know what it is and every company is kind of kind of doing it different but it kind of follows the thing but you you know everybody everybody out there that we are currently writing a check for wants us to succeed we want to you know continue to do business for a long time in the future and continue to write them checks so to whatever extent they can can can work with us they will um heather's mentioning landlord as well absolutely um you know if you're you're you're renting space and you can go back and everything's negotiable you know do you you cut that right back do you you know maybe yeah yeah there's there's there's there's options because you know on if i'm a property manager i own a building i'm probably financing that building with a bank so whoever owns that building that space has to write a check to the bank every month and they need you know your money to do that but banks won't loan them money on that building unless they've got contracts saying that there's a certain amount of income being produced on that because they have to typically refinance this commercial space on some regular basis oftentimes like every five years and if their numbers are are bad and they don't have enough space rented that refinancing becomes more more difficult they have that big balloon payment they have to to refinance so um under normal terms uh landlords are really reluctant to negotiate lower rents because it jacks up their their their contract rates and puts them in a bad position with the bank but i think all that's out the window right now so um thank you heather ask the question anybody you write a check to each month ask the question another thing that we're doing if you're not writing a check to them if they're doing a automatic sweep out of your checking account we're turning all that mess off we don't want any money going out of our checking accounts unless we are physically writing a check for it we want to be able to control that so if we need that money for something else then we you know the whole idea of negotiating better terms is compromised if they're able to just take what they want out of your bank account each month so you need to turn all that off we got quite a few questions here from amanda let's see i'm going to sort of read them real quick she wants to know if there's a way to market to small businesses and other companies to disinfect we talked a little bit about that yesterday might might be easier for you to go and look at the facebook live from yesterday amanda on that one is the cleaning and disinfecting of businesses and homes covered by insurance this would be a win-win for us and the companies and homeowners i hadn't i haven't done that i haven't even heard that question yet um she also says we are starting to have the staff go in with tyvek suits and use a 360 formula that has a kill claim and then she also asked what company do you go through ours won't i'm guessing that she's talking about her um general liability hey on that i don't know amanda what are you talking about what company do we go through that yours won't and then she has also tom asking the question about the cleaning and disinfecting being covered by insurance what do you think about that i have not even heard that question pop up have you it's a consideration i guess it really depends upon depends on a lot of things you know if you're being asked to go into a building for instance that had a known outbreak of the coronavirus and this is happening people were working are working in space and they get sick in the middle of the day and fever and start coughing up blood in some cases then you gotta evacuate that building and then they're looking for people to clean that building that's a special type of cleaning that requires some training and certification and some special insurance on on your employees as well so i don't know if that's what you're talking about or this is just general office space or some other space that people are just concerned and want to be extra safe but you get to the point where you're putting on tyvek suits that usually implies that you're dealing with something hazardous um you know we you know we have another business where we do do painting for instance and every once in a while we are working in a building that was had painted prior to 1975 which means you have to assume it has lead-based paint so if you're doing tear-out and stuff like that you have to get respirators and tyvek suits and stuff like that we got people trained for that though they take courses for that and our insurance agent knows that we do that basically if your insurance agent knows that you do that they write you a policy that protects you against that but it's kind of like if you you tell them that you're doing you're cleaning homes and you wind up replacing roofs and somebody gets hurt then that might be a problem because you never told them you were replacing roofs so cleaning is you know there's a whole spectrum of that i guess so the simple answer to your question i would call my insurance agent explain clearly what you're doing and then let them tell you what type of insurance you need your insurance agent is your partner i talk to my insurance agent probably a couple times a month i want them to know everything that we're doing because every once in a while i was like wow you're doing that well have you considered blah blah blah you realize if you you know this happens then you know you're gonna you need to you need to know something that you don't know it's like okay educate me you're in jiren's age you can can tell you a lot of things that that that we might not know i know mine tells me things i don't know that after hearing it i'm sure glad i i brought it up i'm always really glad that you're my partner because i don't like to talk to my insurance company so i like that you do and then you tell me stuff i don't know that works out really well uh heather is um giving a little bit more information her workers comp will be paid through the yearly audit okay that makes sense uh general liability will push the amount due back 30 days so you're still paying you're just paying it 30 days out and then car payments are adding an additional month to the term date and that must be what hers are doing that and not everybody's is doing that there are different terms but that's what's happening for her so that's all good information yeah or another another tip with the insurance and again you need to talk to your insurance agent and say hey listen i'm you know i'm losing business and i need to i need to conserve cash one of the things you can do is recast your expected earnings you know your expected revenue which will lower your your your gl and recast your payroll which will lower your workers comp and they'll basically charge you each month for what you project those numbers to be you can even you know you don't want to lowball it too much because at some point they're going to at the end of the year they're going to do an audit and you'll have to make up the difference but if you don't have the cash now but think you will at the end of the uh the the policy term you can even give them maybe out of the spectrum of guesses you could give them you could give them the lowest guess that you could rationalize just to save your your your money up front and you'll worry about the audit when they when when the audit comes and when it comes and you owe them money you don't have it you can have the discussion then again everything's negotiable i i feel like that happened to me one year where uh my audit came in and i owed a ton of money for some reason i don't even remember why this i would say this is at least 10 maybe 15 years ago and i ended up paying it off over the course of maybe three four months so wow that seemed to work out okay for me even though it was a big chunk of change was like what that's a huge mistake right there ah let's see amanda says thank you my attorney recommended that we go into business and clean every businesses and clean every surface with a disinfectant not to market it as a hazmat cleaning but simply going in and disinfecting and explain our process the reason i am using the tyvek suits is to protect everyone thank you okay yeah i mean if you're saying you're disinfecting and if you're actually using a disinfectant and if you're using it the way the instructions tell you you need to use it not to be redundant i've got a bottle of it around here somewhere but you know most of them will tell you that you need to use some type of cleaner to remove the soil and then spray the disinfectant on the surface and then it needs to dwell for 10 minutes and sometimes you wipe it off and sometimes you don't but um you know i know a lot of times people don't clean you know don't use the disinfectant that way if you're spraying and wiping it still has efficacy you're killing germs but you're probably more sanitizing than you're truly disinfecting so that would be the only thing if your your marketing is disinfecting i would uh encourage your people to just train them to make sure they are doing it first thing first we are training all of our our clients on this so um we created a little video telling them that because the cdc is recommending that they clean every single day so we created a video telling them how showing them how to do that and then for anybody that doesn't have microfiber and because we really recommend the two microfiber system anybody that doesn't have microfiber and disinfectant to to reach out we have a little kit that we're selling two microfibers and uh four ounces of disinfectant that will make i can't remember how many gallons eight gallons or something like that of disinfectant so um that that's the way to just get that message out of what you're doing it's different too uh what's heather say over here make sure you do your number checking when your audits come back and they say you owe money it can be audit or error pay because they say you owe money challenge it i'm just saying should probably have a situation i'm just you know i just had this image in my mind of being the auditor for heather's business and how that whole dynamic and exercise would would work i bet that was fine heather is very meticulous and is very uh you know if if it was five you know dollar error that was not uh you know that was not in her favor she would would catch it i'm sure she was squeezing every bit of juice out of that because workers compounds a lot of times there's some some some gray areas in terms of you know if you know how they work every position has a different what they call scopes code which implies you know what you pay per per hundred dollars of payroll so you know if i have a clerical job my pay my insurance is a lot less than uh if i'm a cleaning technician and some people spend part of their time in the office and part of the time cleaning so now you're kind of negotiating as to you know what what rates should be applied to that person's payroll did you read what heather said she went at three grand and she only paid 800. you go girl thank you i just thought katie's question what are you selling that for liz 40. well um is it just me or has this been a long wait it's not just you tom [Music] yes just making the labels on avery uh yeah it has been a really long week and what you said earlier tom is so true normally fridays are like gosh i just want to get to like five o'clock where i can feel like not a slacker to be off work but now it's like oh i wonder what's gonna happen over the weekend oh please please please don't let anything bad happen over the weekend yeah and you've been a really long week i know it's been a really long week for you so you're really hanging in there you you you're hanging there amy yeah this is a temporary condition and i'm looking at people having a rough week yeah somewhere somewhere down the road we're gonna have a really big party and we're gonna celebrate being on the other end yeah looking forward to that yeah i'll be doing doing better you know i kind of i kind of look at this in a lot of ways it's like uh like world war ii my son's really into history we've had some discussions and you know i was telling him about you know there's a lot of people that are just kind of irrational fear and he goes yeah he was kind of like being in england when germany first started dropping bombs on them and it's like yeah tell me about it my son's name is richard it was like explaining that you know initially everybody was kind of hunkered down in their basements and just everything just came to a stand so eventually it's like crap this is going to keep happening we got to figure out how to live with this we can't live in our basements forever and if you know the story i mean they did some amazing things in spite of the fact that they had bombs dropping on their head randomly and um one day that whole war was over and if you've seen pictures i mean the celebrations of ve day and all of that i mean that's going to be it's going to be us uh one day here hopefully uh not too far in the future but at the moment we've got some bombs coming in so we're just gonna have to you know figure out how we we crawl out from uh from our bomb shelters and and function in spite of that and uh and we're in a harder position right now because it's only probably been in this past week that we've realized oh you mean these are bonds we need to bunker down right so uh or hunker down bunker down whatever i've heard both of those terms being thrown out this last week so you know we're kind of early stages here expecting people to just be like oh this is as usual now with the bombs coming in it's a little bit early for that but looking forward to it definitely looking forward to that coming uh let's see we're going to be too busy cleaning to party heather says danic good i'm glad that the daily lives have been helpful um now not not a whole lot we can do but part of what we have always wanted to do is helped the industry and helped professionalize the industry it's been our that's been what we've been saying since we started doing this gig together uh tom derek and i and i think every single time we get together we have this conversation about professionalizing the industry and kind of making sure that trying to get everybody all on the same page and um trying to get us all working to again make them you know build up the entire industry so this is just one more version of that and one more opportunity for our entire industry to be bigger better more than it has ever been in the past and to be seen in a bigger better more way than it ever has been in the past so we're we're kind of happy to do this i kind of jumped on tom's thing here this is tom's thing and i was like i'm just gonna show up every week or every day and pouring in on this would be to be honest convinced me that that this needed to be done and the whole part of discussion is that we've invested the last 20 some odd years trying to make this industry a better place for the benefit of all stakeholders you know the you know the clients that we serve and the hard-working people that go out there and actually uh you know do the do the hard work every day and business owners who um put in the blood sweat and tears and you guys know what that's about and we were going to be going through some very disruptive times and everything was going to kind of be up in the air and um you know we need to try to help each other through all of that so that's really kind of kind of the point of this and you know in some small way where we're where we we hope that that this is useful and when the pieces start coming back down we want to do everything we can to help people put them together in a way to make this industry stronger than what it ever has been because the opportunity is going to be there there's uh the way the consumer looks at at cleaning is never gonna change again this is like 911 and the way people think about getting on an airplane is different now than than what it was before 9 11. and um the whole competitive forces is going to be different you're going to look to your left and look to your right and where you used to have competitors they're not going to be there anymore and um i mean you know i'm not wishing bad on anybody the reality is not everybody is going to be in the cleaning business six months from now that was in it last month so you know for those of us who who are here and trying to do it the right way we want to do everything we can and that's kind of where we're sharing the stuff that we're sharing because we make the uh smart business moves now we'll be there several months from now when when when the bombs you know we learn how to function either bombs start falling or we learn how to function with with the bombs falling and getting back to the whole heart of this discussion is about the whole financial side you're going to need money to get your business jump started again if you find yourself having to shut down and i think that we're seeing as time goes on it's un it's realistic to expect and more and more communities and states are going to say you guys just need to stay home for a while lock up and let this uh let this virus pass here you're in some regards it's going to look like a startup you're going to need working capital hopefully the sba will be there to help with some of that but as much money as you can hold on to now that's going to put you in a better position to get your business started when that opportunity creates itself am i repeating myself liz not in a bad way tom okay so i mean it's some messages we need to be hammering on and hitting right they're more important than others so we just got a message here in washington no stay at home order here in washington no state home order sweden i don't know is it is it sweet no yeah yeah i mean i i'm saying that at the same time i'm kind of wincing because you know yeah it's paying me now you know let's yeah you know it's hard [Music] i'm sorry tom wait liz you know what i would normally be doing on a friday afternoon right i do i do yeah yeah yeah so this this is your new kind of fishing tom yeah yeah but thanks amy you rock as well stick it out there girl yeah new york all non-essential businesses have to stop effective today well you think uh you know we will i think we should probably just uh keep our ear to the ground over over the weekend i know that people have different thoughts about that i hear some people say they have to turn the news off to keep their sanity and i get that and if that's uh what gets you to monday certainly do it um i have this affliction that i just need to know so i'll probably spend too much time on this but that's okay we'll we'll get together monday and uh we'll we'll pick it up from there uh five o'clock eastern time five o'clock eastern kathy uh you're asking the the 55 million dollar question you like that number there there we don't have a definition yet of what is an essential business it's essential business is defined differently in different areas and just completely undefined in many areas so yeah kind of no we don't have a good answer for you there yeah unfortunately which kind of gets into begs the question how do you even force that anyway and you know we don't know we're trying really hard to answer that question the people are enforcing it what are they going to know i mean you know every day depends on what you're doing what are you doing what do you think you're doing what does the law say what's written down you know what what could you reasonably be expected to know and believe yep yep heather money at five i'm gonna i'm gonna do what i'm supposed to do and show you guys cleaning business today i was testing liz to see if she was going to remind me i was going to remind you that you're supposed to tell everybody what we're going to talk about on monday oh okay i can do that what's going on here here we go you know on my side i can't make comments this time you can't make comments really [Music] no okay now while we're in the live well this is um this is cleaning business today and creamisade.com um we're gonna be this is like an article that we put out the other week on the coronavirus it's got some good stuff in here how how the virus is spread now you don't want to see that um how the wires have spread and some of the the the terminology that could be useful to you and and explaining to your clients how you're actually helping to reduce the chance of them contracting a pathogen like coronavirus a lot of the materials that we've been putting out here is on a link which is coronavirus dash downloads and i'm going to copy that since i can do a comment and i'm going to put that thing right there oh and looks like shira came in right as we're getting ready to leave i don't know if that's how you pronounce your name shara but that is my daughter's name as well and that's how we pronounce it so um sorry go back and read through stuff and i probably have to watch that live because we are getting ready to head out for the weekend as soon as tom tells us what we'll be talking about on monday i had that all figured out you did you did it's good it's going to be something good and all this is kind of subject to change too depending upon what happens between and monday we were going to talk about public relations opportunities and you know the press is starving for information on the corona virus and how to you know make protect people and just anything about the coronavirus you can't turn you know the news on the tv on you know go to internet whatever it's all about coronavirus and they need content so this is an opportunity for cleaning business owners to be subject matter experts to be interviewed to get backlinks for our website to get more local recognition and pr for your businesses so we're going to talk about some of those opportunities and and techniques on monday go ahead tom and also you know a recap of some of the things that we learn over the weekend then last thing if you're working on your pr stuff go to the cleaning business today page that tom just showed you pull up that article make sure that you do know the correct terms and you understand how everything works and you can you can share a really great message there okay guys well right here we've been here for almost an hour hope uh hope this is is useful get some rest this weekend um you know this is uh this is gonna be a long race so um we well we'll be at this a while um be safe you guys uh well we'll see you monday at 5.
Cleaning Business Today
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Yoga Solutions Masterclasses with Marc J Acquaviva - Wheel without stress or pain
[Music] my good morning lovely people um yes i hope you're how are you doing on this wonderful spring day suddenly from snowing yesterday it's uh it's a proper spring day it felt fantastic sitting outside this morning um yeah welcome welcome to your yoga solutions live with me mark j aqua viva and um i have some questions this week again uh it's been a bit of a flurry this morning i'll turn up a bit late so uh just let me give myself a tea i have this tea every day now it started back in um when covid started i just had this body intuition that what i needed was um ginger and turmeric and so i made a ginger turmeric and lime or lemon tea and i've got hooked on it i have to have it every day now so okay let me find the questions here we go yeah so i've got two questions another one from dorothy um dorothy says i'm continuing with my practice regarding back arch oh oh yeah okay yeah yeah dorothy comes to me sometimes um and uh yes she's she's trying to conquer the issues of back back bending um uh yeah continuing to practice uh regarding back arch interested in how to prepare the soles of the feet when going up into the pose so they remain on the ground oh okay um yeah uh so yeah so the heels come up so that she she can come up and then it's um then at the moment i feel like i'm going onto my toes and then have to adjust my feet would you say more um it's becoming a lot easier to come up in into back arch that's good and i noticed that your feet stay in the same place while going up in the pose and during the pose thanks mark wolford i um that's uh dorothy that's my old name wolford is my old name it's um um i'm not being i'm not being sort of weird about it but uh i changed my name to my father's natural name which is aquaviva my natural father's name that's aquaviva and with it came a sort of change of relationship to the world you see mark mark wolford had to um prove himself to the world a bit too much and mark aqua fever kind of gets some of his value so he's a bit more chilled so i prefer mark aquaviva and i know many people know me of mark wilford but i feel like i've moved on into a new version of myself so uh please um refer to me as monk aquaviva so uh yes she notices my feet stay on the ground she wants to understand how that happens um okay and the other question is from diel who's done a few of my courses um very dedicated teacher uh she says i i would be curious sometime for your perspective on feeling and working with the sit bone relationship to the leg and the lower back sit bone relationship to the leg and lower back it's quite well put actually um and i've been playing around with that thanks mom okay deal and dorothy so sit bones legs and coming up into arch without having to come off your heels um okay so uh i've had just had a big breakfast i don't know how good my own back bending will be but um it doesn't really matter it's about um creating the conditions to move it in a useful direction and it's by both questions are the leg end of things um so i like to uh i like to illustrate what the issue is in the first place so dorothy's question is around she's worked out how to how to come up being on her toes uh and then and then she puts the heels down afterwards and there's nothing actually wrong with that except uh huh well it's not even accepted there's nothing wrong with it it's a way of coming up um and there's nothing wrong even if you didn't get the heels down at all it doesn't matter it's a the postures are about finding ways of supporting yourself freely in movement but that being said uh the heels coming off having to be off the ground for her to come up um shows a restriction because essentially what's happening is the heels come off the ground so that she can take her weight over her feet and then then use the feet to come up which is okay but she noticed that i don't do that i leave my feet on the ground and um is there any advantage to that well i noticed when i was trying to uh when i was trying to come up i i wasn't trying to come up to have done any preparation but um when i was trying to exploring the movement of you know why the heels stay off the ground it simply said the knees can travel so uh the perfunctory thing of how do i come up um that's a simple solution you you if if you leave the heels on the ground the knees can't travel as far so so it makes it harder to push up and that's the key if you leave the heels off the ground you can push up quite easily because because you can move your weight over your feet far enough to to push yourself into position the version that i do is not about pushing myself up the version i do is about um [Music] being able to kind of get a sense of releasing the spine away from the ground because i have contact with the ground and and that's an entirely different perspective on the posture on achieving the posture um sometimes i i practice with wheel and i don't come up at all not because i failed but because i'm not in the place where the spine is free enough to take me there and i'm talking about the thoracic spine you know doing that thing where you slide your weight over your feet and then try and put and when the weight is on the feet you try and push them down that's how you would stand up actually um but but doing that is about achieving coming up and um what was i going to say yes and you don't really need to have a compliant thoracic spine for that to happen because you can hang back on the ground as you move towards your feet from your lower back and it's not a not a big deal because the heels are not on the ground you know um that that that's the that's the um key because if you're pushing up uh pushing with the heels on the ground would push against your back and that's what most people do anyway and it it pushing against the back is the the lower back to cause it to fold from there is the thing that means that the upper body is heavy because the movement of extension needs to be centered in the thoracic spine reversing so so it's not from lifting pushing against your back that you extend it can be that's how most people extend but the the the yoga of it as in when you're not creating any violence to the spine is that it's the thoracic spine that brings you up by reversing its curve so that the other secondary curves can remain in a in their sort of more neutral extension state rather than doing the extension um it's a little bit technical but uh and you kind of need to understand the curves of the spine to know what i'm talking about but uh that that's that's my uh intention when i'm trying to do wheel is i i don't care whether i achieve the posture or not what i care about is that the movement of the movement of it of extension the movement of opening up the spine in that way is sourced in the spine behind the heart and um traveling over your feet in that way i don't know if you can see uh traveling over your feet in that way will simply allow you to have the curves of the lumbar curve and the um at the center of that extension movement without too much problem because you're not pushing your heels down you see and that's why it's a true that's why it's difficult to get to get the heels down um uh when when you get out there as well you have to adjust when you get up there it's all okay except you've moved into the position by bending from the lumbar spine and the thoracic spine will still be flexed it will still be a rounded part of your back which won't be joining in with the movement so the lumbar spine will have to do too much if you're comfortable with that then that's okay but if you repeat that what you're doing is you're continuing to um if you repeat the preference of moving in that way what you're doing what you're doing is you're continuing to um exaggerate the curvatures of the spine which is a shortening if you think about it you know um the the thoracic spine doesn't extend as much as it could the lumbar spine is extending more so the thoracic spine gets better at being rounded and the lumbar curve gets better at being arched so you end up shortening um and you know one of the scarabelli imperatives is we're trying to um awaken the spine and i i believe the spine that van is talking about is this locked part that most people experience most people experience as locked the the part between the bump at the base of the neck and behind the heart in fact um one of my um partners tutors on on a course she's doing at the moment um said in an anatomy class that the thoracic spine doesn't move it's not meant for movement and um so obviously based on um personal experience and maybe maybe that's considered as normal in the medical world i don't know but uh that that idea is um well it's not incorrect for some people the thoracic spine doesn't move at all and you can live a a whole life very well without moving your thoracic spine but look at any child's spine all of their extension comes from [Music] opening the heart and that's what we're trying to for me that's one of the objects that's one of the sort of holy grails if you like one of the measures of through the spine because when you can extend from the upper spine you get a chance to be vertical without having to hold yourself up so um yeah it had to do with the movements of breathing so anyway that's that's what the problem is um and it's what makes it difficult to leave the feet on the ground now diel's question around the relationship between the sit bones the legs and the lower back it's kind of the same question in some ways because um and you can you can try this with me if you like if you uh begin with a nice relationship to the ground through your head shoulders and pelvis a little embrace of the earth [Music] to breed will help the breath ride in the back of you and allow you to breathe wholeheartedly without puffing up too much and then that same engagement with the earth as you release the breath will help you find your center and that's just a starting point it's a way of moving from within we can explore these relationships so starting with the fronts of the feet on the ground and i i often encourage that because it's the front of the feet that are your kind of proprioceptive relationship to support through the feet to the world in that it's the fronts of the feet that do the automatic balancing they need to be responsive without that you don't actually have a relationship you know you're trying to be heavy on your feet so starting on the front of the feet and the and that that thing that allows you to move easily which is the knees traveling away from you it's an easy thing because you've got no restrictions for the spine and because you're not pushing the ground away with the heels you're not pushing against your back that's the problem that most people encounter is they think the feet are the heels so they push down against the heels which pushes up against their backs their lower back so if you start on the front of the feet and wake up the toe so that you can kind of thread through the contact and out into space through your toes if you want to support back through yourself or if you want to move the knees can simply roll over the feet in the direction of the toes and between those things you can relax your back so there's no tension around the buttocks there's no tension around the base of the spine so for diel there's one relationship that is interesting that you need to know the fronts of the feet um can allow you to relax your back pushing down and to find support through the front of the feed can allow you to relax your lower back to to compare push down through the heels and notice how tense the lower back gets okay so the spine one the back of the spine wants to find and relate to the fronts of the feet okay so there's a relationship that's useful and if you play with that feeling of the base of the spine fine finding a relaxed relationship to the feet and it's not the pelvis that pigs set up it's the knees traveling away with the release of the breath and you'll feel you'll be able to feel that relaxation the test is when you breathe if you breathe by lifting that's your back being tense so the test is can you remain relaxed in your back as you breathe and the way you notice that is a feeling of the breath across the base of the spine so there's a definitive dropping sensation from within that allows the spine at the back to feel cushioned by the arriving breath and then the release of the breath can empty your weight away from the legs onto the upper body so you get a a relaxed spine version of bridge i suppose provided the knees are traveling over the feet now the question of getting the heels down um well most people get the heels down by not by letting go of the ground with the fronts of the feet so it's literally lifting the fronts of the feet off the ground to get the heels down so you've you've sacrificed a layer of support what we need to do is to find that relaxed spine relationship to the fronts of the feet and then use the touch of the feet actively to support through our bones and if you do that from the inside of the foot from the weight going in and the down going through the ball of the feet balls of the feet you can use that purchase to kind of radiate out into space either side of you i don't mean just waving the legs around i mean using the touch as if you're trying to widen the mat between the feet um it's an artificial movement until you realize that what that does the movement as a whole starts to send forces of support back through the bones back into your pelvis as you engage with it and if you do it with the release of the breath you'll you'll feel the muscles of the outside pelvis getting involved with that as you release the breath and that sort of radiating action means that you remain supported by the feet as the base of the spine travels with the knees over the feet but within that movement the base of the spine is coming up enough for the heels to go down and it's not about dropping your weight through heels it's about touching the ground with the heels as well so the action the the fronts the feet are still kind of taking your weight in front the feet are still responding to the contact but as you get a bit more active in how the feet work and the thighs will join in in supporting back through your pelvis as the spine allows the heels to drop away from them and in the in the process at some point provided you don't let go the ground the fronts the feet well if you do then that just that happens and you're no longer supported but if at some point within that circuit the heels make fleshy contact with the ground so you're still using the front of the feet but you're also touching the ground with the heels now the old question about the sit bones uh if you're following me your legs might get tired and you might need to open them out a bit so you can start again but um yeah the the sit bones if you think about the the pelvis inside of this okay now what most people do is they do stuff to the pelvis where they use the muscles around the sit bones to pull the pelvis up um that's the normal thing and i'm trying to get you to let go of that and get supported by the feet instead so knees travel away and the spine and pelvis can follow but those same muscles or similar muscles and a few deeper rotator muscles get involved when you do the radiating out so from the inner foot widening radiating out to feed back through the pelvis and you'll find some effort around the outside of the pelvis but also directly up into the sit bones when you're doing it locally the sit bones the muscles right here simply contract and lift and that pulls on the spine but when you're relating what you're doing to support and the action of the feet then what happens is those muscles get involved with pushing up directly from underneath the sit bones like it like a seat would if you're sitting if you're sitting well on the ground or something how the ground would push up through your sit bones so you get upward support through you from the feet and the the local muscles will be pushing vertically up when i say vertically i mean um through your body directly because of the thigh bones working round into the pelvis so you get supported from the side by the radiating action but part of the the local response around the pelvis will be causing a directly up through you feeling you know to push you this direction at the sit bones away from their legs so i'm exaggerating but so you can see how that goes you know so it's not about lifting the pelvis which uses those muscles it's about the muscles responding to support you in in in the appropriate direction so all of this is based on understanding that support is meant to travel through your structure not um support isn't when you support your structure support is when the forces that you're engaging with that you're creating by engaging with touch travel through the structure so that the structure is supported okay so you use your structure for support so once again have a breath let it go and as you release the breath to release the weight towards your shoulders you can allow the knees to travel over the front of the feet but touching the ground on the front of the feet you can use those feet to feed back through those thigh bones in a spiraling kind of way to get lateral support and meanwhile some of the action underneath the set bones that you would normally use to lift your pelvis is causing the sit bones to come together and up through you as the spine continues to relax but travel with the knees towards the feet so you get this two directional movement of the pelvis being sent up through you whilst the spine is communicating away from you and to the knees and when when when the heels get to touch the ground from that spine then you've got a relationship that supports you and all of those relations to the two directional relationships the feet going down power is coming out the core coming up the weight going down all of those relationships allow you to be on the whole footprint in a way that doesn't rely on the lumbar spine and then if you can find good relationships which is another class i think good relationships the hands that allows the rib cage to respond so that the thoracic spine can move then the thoracic spine gets to release with the breath towards the chest the thoracic spine gets to release with the release of the breath towards the chest as the chest drops so the upper spine is doing a similar thing within the ribcage that the sacrum is doing within the pelvis there's an inside out thing that happens and the thoracic spine does that because of the way if you can work it out because the way you use your arms which is not dissimilar when you've got all of that going on you have a relationship to the ground that allows you to land on your hands and feet to breathe so you don't puff up and fill up too much it's the back of you that gets supported and then with the release of the breath if it communicates to the feet it communicates to the hands communicating with the feet leaves the lumbar spine relaxed communicating the hands invites the thoracic spine to reverse you simply follow that by pressing down through the hands there you go so very really quite uh involved um understanding all those things but i managed it before 11 o'clock quite quite pleased with myself for that proper masterclass for people that um already have quite a good understanding of the body moreover of its of the structure the the skeleton the the bones the joints uh people i i don't mean people that know about it i mean people that can that have quite enough practice to be able to sense these things even if they're working hard um so so uh you know hopefully the ideas make sense so that you can point your attention to appropriate things as you're working because when you're working you'll be not noticing some tensions that you always feel and but noticing efforts that you're not used to feeling you it's very hard to stay on point and understand what you're doing see so um hopefully it makes sense to you but really it only makes sense if you if you if you experience it so um if uh if that was of value to you i'm i'm very pleased uh if you think it's of interest to people and feel free to share it around the facebook um until i i take it off to leave it on the aqua viva website for my premium members um and uh yes i i hope i hope you find value and i hope others find value in it so uh that being said um what have i got going on uh saturday week i'm doing one of my uh legendaries saturday morning retreats i i love them um they've become a bit of a bi-monthly event for people that like to work with me and um so come along i think it's up on the website places go fast so that's why i left it for two weeks so that um everyone can get a place in time um and that's yeah saturday saturday week uh 10 30 to one couple of hours of two and a half hours of genital flow with a little break in the middle and i always like to i sometimes have a theme going on but um i like to check in with everyone so that everyone's needs are met during the workshops other than that i've got my regular classes i've got one in half an hour or so i do an intermediate one on monday evenings um and i have a another all all levels one tomorrow at 11 a.m and you can always book a if you've got something specific going on and you want to find some direct solutions for yourself uh you can you can book for free for a 15 minute free consultation i'll give you the lowdown on what i think will help you and if you want some direct guidance you can work with me one-to-one and book a session otherwise i'm quite happy to just give you the information you will go away and play with it and [Music] see if you can work it out for yourself okay uh that's about it uh i've been mark with jayaku aviva this has been your yoga solutions live i shall see you at the same time same place next week much love to you all bye now you
Marc J Acquaviva
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2021-04-13
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en
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4fSTr_YcX8
Install Manjaro Linux in VMware Workstation Pro
hello YouTube today is Thursday May 18 2017 I wanted to set up a I wanted to show you how easy it is to set up a man euro Linux virtual machine and VMware Workstation so we'll go to our home tab create a new virtual machine select typical tell it that I want to install the operating system later I want to tell it that I'm using a Linux 3 64-bit kernel because money ro is not listed this one the next name in our list is Raptor and we're going to put on a directory where you know a raptor Naro and we'll go ahead and give this guy 18 gigs split it into virtual disks customize our hardware give it 2 gigs of RAM give it one processor we're going to put the ISO image to be manaro kidding network adapter I want to use bridged and we'll replicate the state USB as good that's all good so I said ok I'll finish should set up the container for us now we have a container we're going to add our settings want to go into memory to gig our disk here CB is there bridged etc my options I want to good fullscreen after our power on when I turn on my folders I want to add my virtual machine library my virtual machine library on this system is under virtual machines and we're just going to call it in the in library should call the VM library just to drive everybody nuts right ahh any more tools i want to update automatically I'm told to go ahead and power this Kitty on No went to fullscreen immediately and here's our boot menu we'll tell it to and stole from CDE or start from CDE thing you getting erase the disk let's let it do its thing you all right let's see want to do his update [Music] boom there we go all done alright some next thing we want to do is reboot this virtual machine Carolee Oh it'll go much quicker than you think because it is a virtual machine so they're real and the meatbag and this is Thursday May eighteenth twenty seventeen twenty two nineteen when we started this endeavor at 21:41 so it takes a bit of time but you can get yourself a m-- on your Linux system running and a pretty quick time on VMware Workstation thanks for watching have a good night
This Childs Life
UCRaf18ANbUcvwM9WhSBf3NA
2017-05-19
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
413
2,083
OyQk_s9HB4Y
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyQk_s9HB4Y
index modify remove lowercase
so all right so this i've got the um the download this is the slingshot vm it might be a slightly different version than what you have but it's it's there um then inside of the downloads after that finishes that should be should be there and so i can just unzip that tilde downloads and then now so this is inside of the subdirectory i'm moving into it sans index perl script so inside of here i know that you've looked at this already so the readme has the information about this but the important part is this make index pl script which is the um the script that runs stuff now i used to write a lot of pearl um i used to write actually a ton of pearl for a place that i worked but that was i don't know um 20 years ago like literally 20 years ago so so this is just kind of the you know at that time this was the programming language that i used a lot you also see this i wrote this one in 2009 um the all wrongs reversed it's actually a reference to uh um yeah the the arrays and stuff can get really really confusing so the all rungs reversed is a reference to a um yolo tango album um yolotango's band that i think that they're popular i have no idea if music is popular or not but it's actually president yolatango new wave hotdogs is an early album of theirs and the um the standard language that goes into a lot of stuff it says all rights reserved and they have that on their language on their on their album it says all rights reserved but then after that it says all wrongs reversed you know kind of like a play on the word so i just put that in there i don't know what it means legally but who knows what happens maybe i have a legal obligation to reverse all wrongs after um anyway i don't think all rights reserved that's what that was supposed to read it's a mistake so anyway um i have some variable declarations in here and then i have this word list a equals zero which all that i'm doing this is like a lazy way of establishing the indexed array i could have done it through declarations but this is just a lazy way of doing it um sloppy lazy whatever you want to call it so then the next thing i do here is scalar basically takes the number of arguments scalar converts that that array into a number so it says if there aren't any arguments then you have to tell people what they need to do otherwise you're going to take the list of files so it takes the um file list it splits it based on spaces so this is taking the stuff that's arguments that are passed in so you can pass one or more files to be able to to be indexed and so then um it's it's basically dealing with the uh the stuff that gets passed in in order to in order to address this you end up with an array called file list and so when we shift an array we basically take the first value from the array remove it from the array and the result is returned and when something's returned it gets put into the uh the variable here in this case file name that we're going to use so then it's saying the while in file which it opened here as a file handle to the file name that we shifted off of the array so arrays are just blocks of you know of values and we can shift which says take the first one off of the array and modify the the array as a result we can also pop arrays so popping an array takes the value off of the end right so um i'm just taking them in order from the beginning from left to right on the on the command line now it has some um debug stuff here in order to be able to troubleshoot this but we're going to print the value here it's going to um and i'm sorry we're going to print the value only if debug is not equal to zero which we set as a variable way up here so you get more output if you change this variable it doesn't help us for the purpose of of what we're doing right now what you asked about was lowercasing the values which is what i do on purpose in order to make it so that the index that gets created is case insensitive and it was a choice that i made you know for a reason where i basically said i want to eliminate case so that if as i'm typing i have things in varying case but they're actually the same word then what i'm going to do is is set it up so that i just eliminate those differences okay so i'm going to modify this script and it's a pretty simple modification that i need to do in order to do this when i change scripts i tend to um do it this way where i'm going to add a comment so i'm adding this comment character on the original and then i'll do something like this modified 2021 02 whatever today's date is 24th maybe yeah 24th um cc and then much later i'll go back and be like did i change that that's weird i thought it did this other thing okay now um the and this is hard to discern if you don't understand the um the pearl but here what i'm doing in this dollar sign word assignment is lc so this lc function is operating on the pop function which is operating on the temp array so um what's happening here is it's processing the file right and it's doing some um shifts inside of here so this at temp equals split and it's splitting the value it takes each line and it splits the line content based on semicolon why well because that's what i said we needed to do in terms of the in terms of the input so it splits the value on semicolon and it puts that into an array and then it takes the first item from this and assigns it to a value called pagenum why well because the way that the data is intended to be structured is you take the first line i'm sorry you take each line and the first value on the line is the page number and then you take all of the subsequent values that are also on that line and that's what this while loop is doing here so after we get the page number we're processing the rest of the data with this while loop and inside of this while loop we're lower casing it for the reasons that i mentioned earlier so now i'm going to change from the original and just remove the lc function good now word equals pop not lowercased and this will loop over the rest of the lines in there so let me just i'm going to save this so i'm i'm using vi so i'm going to do colon wq in order to to save it i'm going to chmod 755 make index.pl good and now i'm just going to run this to make sure that it doesn't blow up and i have some sample data inside of here the sample data doesn't really um matter as much but let me go ahead and run this so this is here but i want to test the change that i made so i'm going to make some different data so i'm going to do vi 504 dot test i can name things anything it doesn't matter but the naming of the file influences what's here so it makes sense to name based on books but if that changes then the script still deals with it so i'm going to do i'm going to do page 3 comma and i'm going to have anything and anything a couple different ways and then i'm gonna have four i'm gonna put anything put five anything and six anything so i have uh lowercase uh first first one and then this is just you know dumb test data but i do want to make sure that this is working the way that i would expect it to and so here what i get is a case sensitive array list rather than case insensitive now you see also here consistent with our expectations anywhere that anything is present we have that there okay so that's just a very quick modification and i'll show you what i did again just to make sure it makes sense so in make index pl i changed and i can just do this colon set number inside of vi it'll show me the line numbers of what's there it's a nice shortcut if you're editing stuff in vi so i changed what was line 51. to be this word equals pop temp eliminating this lc because lc means lowercase it is a function inside of perl which actually does that
Christopher Crowley
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2021-02-24
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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1,574
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3TXiulkqwyg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TXiulkqwyg
Confined Spaces in Mining
[Music] in the mining industry unlocking the minerals and Aggregates of the Earth takes a lot of work Man heavy equipment and Machinery work side by side to harness raw materials whether by day or working by Night the mining process requires the utmost in caution and safety conveyor belts load out bins silos processing vessels and a variety of other locations may require that you have to work in a confined space it's safe to say that most miners will at some point be exposed to the dangers of working in a confined space you should never underestimate the potential hazards confined spaces can create recent studies done by the National Institute of occupational safety and health show that there are relatively few incidents related to confined spaces but when one does occur it's likely to be a tragedy for instance during one particular period there were 80 incidents involving hazardous atmospheres in confined spaces 78 deaths resulted during the same time period there were 38 cases of fire and explosion while people were working in or near a confined space from those 38 tragedies 47 deaths occurred you and all other miners need to understand the seriousness of the hazards posed by confined spaces and and the need for safe working procedures in and around confined spaces that's why you're watching this video to understand and to use safe working procedures when it comes to confined space [Music] entry what is a confined space according to Ima a confined space generally is defined as an area which has four features it is not designed for continuous worker occupancy it has limited openings for entry and for exit it may have an unfavorable atmosphere due to poor natural ventilation its size and shape or its use May degrade the air quality expose workers to engulfment or other injuries here are some common examples of confined spaces in the mining work environment bins silos tank cars tank trucks culverts sewers sumps spillways drag line tubs and excavations nearly any space can become dangerous because of heat poisonous or explosive Vapors lack of oxygen or moving parts and must be considered as a confined [Music] space so how do we work safely in or around the confined space first survey your work areas with a specific eye on confined spaces and ask yourself these three questions could the air quality in or near the space cause ill health or death could a worker be covered up with loose sliding material like sand phosphate or gravel or perhaps drown and what about the dangers of temperature extremes explosion hazards moving parts or electrical hazards a very simple solution to the problem of confined spaces is to ask yourself can we we do this work in some way from the outside but if one must enter a confined space certain guidelines have to be followed now this video can't cover all situations for every company or group of workers so please become familiar with the confined space rules where you [Music] work here are some suggest tested guidelines that should be considered for your confined space safety plan it's a good idea to have a formalized safe work permit system this system is a set of written procedures which establishes how certain work can be done in confined spaces this permit would always be used when hot work is done in or near confined spaces when filled out properly these permits become a written approval and show that hazards have been evaluated and and precautions have been taken to ensure a safe work [Music] site here are some elements of a safe work permit results of atmospheric testing date and time of work and expiration time of permit names of all people entering the confined space and Nam of people who are outside monitoring a brief description of the work being done and procedures being used approval by a supervisor the permit posted at the immediate work [Music] site in addition to a safe work permit procedure these elements are also important employees need to be adequately trained to recognize the dangers of confined spaces and specifically briefed before entry contractors are to work according to the rules of the operator's permit system and be briefed by a contact person if the confined space needs added lighting workers should have safe backup lighting consisting of 12vt lighting or 120 volt lighting using a dedicated groundfold circuit interruptor tools and equipment should be safe only low voltage tools if possible should be used approved lockout procedures must be followed and non-sparking equipment should be used clean out vessels isolate incoming lines or conveyors by locking out and if necessary Force ventilate atmospheric testing equipment should be in proper working condition and calibrated correctly and frequently don't ever try to Wi improve ventilation by using oxygen and always recognize the potential for heat stress when anyone is in a confined space an attendant must be outside properly trained and equipped ready to assist that attendant must be able to communicate with those inside emergency rescue procedures must be formalized and safety equipment dedicated to the rescue must be present in this video we've defined and demonstrated what is meant by a confined space and the potential hazards they can create we've suggested methods and procedures of ensuring complete safety when confined spaces must be in but no system no piece of equipment no permit or rule can ever replace your good judgment when it comes to working safely in and around confined spaces Zero fatalities ains the goal of our mining Community with your understanding and wholehearted cooperation that goal can be reached remember who is ultimately responsible for your own health and safety you bet it's [Music] you [Music]
PublicResourceOrg
UCO9Q5_D6tItyoilmDogexng
2008-07-05
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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965
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r8l7JiZNpbE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r8l7JiZNpbE
Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases - 003 - Useful Phrases abandoned hope - ample culture.mp4
section 3 of 15,000 useful phrases by Grenville kleiser read for librivox.org by Betsy Bush Marquette Michigan august two thousand six useful phrases abandoned hope abated pride abbreviated visit abhorred thralldom abiding romance abject submission abjured ambition able strategist abnormal talents abominably perverse abounding happiness abridged statement abrogated law abrupt transition absolutely irrevocable absorbed reverie abstemious diet abstract character obtrusive isn't absurd ly dangerous abundant opportunity abusive epithet abysmally apologetic academic rigor accelerated progress accentuated playfulness accepted littleness accessible pleasures accessory circumstances accidental lapse accommodating temper accomplished ease accredited agent accumulated burden accurate appraisement accursed enemy accusing glance accustomed lucidity aching desire acknowledged authority acoustical effects acquired timidity accurate controversy acrimonious warfare actively zealous actualized ideals acutely conscious adamantine rigidity adaptive wit adduced facts adequate execution adhesive quality administered rebuke admirable reserve admissible evidence admittedly inferior admonitory gesture adolescent youth adorable vanity adroit flatterer add elated stranger adventitia sway adventurous mind adverse experience affably accommodating affected indifference affectionate approval affianced lady affirmative attitude affluent language a freighted slave aggravated faults aggregate body aggressive selfishness agile mind agitated imagination agonizing appeal agreeable frankness aimless confusion Airy splendor alarming rapidity alert acceptance algebraic brevity alien splendor alleged reluctance allegorical vein allied subjects alliterative suggestion all pervading influence a luring idleness alternating opinion all together dissimilar altruistic ideal amatory effusions amazing artifice ambidextrous assistant ambiguous grimace ambitious project ambling pedestrian ambrosial essence amiable solicitude amicable arrangement amorous youth ample culture end of section three this recording is in the public domain you
The World of Audiobooks
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2016-11-22
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
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249
2,123
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9skNT4sGxk
WE GAVE BIRTH! (baby 3 birth announcement & updates)
you know they thought a to Minami Nitta hi it's nemi today I have two special guests on a channel and a very disheveled appearance from the two of us she's fine she looks enjoy the show we're going to try to upload this with that mmm the least amount of edits as possible so please bear with us just gonna review and announce she's here baby's here finally and also at the surgery how this surgery went and what you can expect moving forward on this channel and also on our family channel where we just uploaded the birth vlog so if you'd like to watch that you can click through right here yesterday night was our first day back from the hospital we spent one night of the hospital a total of 40 hours the surgery was in the morning so she was born at gate 31 in the morning on Tuesday July 9th 2009 it went pretty smoothly she she came out really fast 2019 that's a 19 very well recovery hospital hello Fran at me for c-section as planned we had the tubal ligation performed during this the c-section as well since everything is already open and our OB was very good and she I like a confident doctor when she asked us like will you be having the tubal ligation and then she said if you do one hundred percent chance you cannot get pregnant again and she she like she's very confident about her surgical skills and the doctors around her also attest to her amazing surgical skills and also those of you who have seen my c-section scar from seeks c-section also say that fuel you know what a good scar looks like and she does a very good job so we're very happy with how everything went my standard family doctor told me that when they were performing the surgery the bottom lining of my uterus where my my previous scar was was very very very thin so I he said I would have ruptured I would have torn there if we did try for a feedback so we're very glad that you know in Canada we're not allowed to because I think we could have tried for a VBAC but if I had contractions that would have torn there because he said it was so thin that you could see her hair through my uterus usually uterine rupture is only 1% risk of Secession patients are try for feedback like usually it's very low 1% but that doesn't mean that I would be 1% it means that I could be part of that others hmm so we're really glad that you know that wasn't the case cuz you could die from uterine rupture the surgery becomes very complicated what do you think of your sister [Music] anything ever being is history it's her first day back election like she's kind of like Gina she might be time for her to eat something she's very clear with what she wants she'll cry if she's uncomfortable or if she needs something and she'll stop crying I satisfied yeah he's clear of what she once said when she's satisfied she's cold yes she's called sniffing pretty well I shall got twice at for feeding again she when she was born she was so pretty there was like pellets kind of beautiful yeah even the doctor was saying like oh she has such perfect features because he was like every baby is beautiful but her face resisted just so perfect that's what the doctor said yeah well he's Cho richer and then he's like Wow I didn't realize pretty her features very balanced if we're collected yeah so we've been trying to practice to get her in with her mom your tooth came out yeah I give it the harmony she hasn't forever Wow good job baby at Summit kid pretty she's healthy there is a hotel happy and eating well yeah and I'm healthy too I recovery as their very selves it's still hard for me to walk understand and I do feel tugging at my my cut my incision and my uterus is kind of heavy but I do have to walk around to get my circulation to get my organs going again so moving forward I do have many pre-edited and pre uploaded videos scheduled for uploading at their timings I was working really hard the last two months to just get that ready for everyone and get that ready for me so that I can rest but at the same time the channel doesn't need to break I think it's important for me to rest so for the next like month or so I'm probably not gonna do much work just posting on Instagram and on YouTube reading your comments and stuff but in terms of actually editing and stuff I think Michael will be doing that for the family channel but I was working very hard to pre edit and pre set those videos because we do also have to feed our other two kids so we can't afford to take a break on our channel so I was working hard beforehand so thank you for your concern I think this worked out the best way and also obviously thank you to Hannah who's our editor she really helped us out beforehand to like get a lot of videos ready as well thank you for all your support congratulating that's yeah and all your like get well messages and and kind of a congratulatory messages there'll be a lot more content on the family channel about her so you can go and watch those and see Michael's videos that's by the name I forgot to mention that we'll be announcing it after we submit our government documents and have all her paperwork done probably be announcing it on the Family Channel please watch out for that video since her name hasn't been announced yet so that's it for this announcement and kind of update and we'll see you next time bye
Namee Park
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2019-07-13
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3bYMmUPznno
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bYMmUPznno
Turnkey Real Estate Investing RE-imagined | HoltonWiseTV Commercials
at houlton wise we do turnkey differently at holton wise we have reimagined turnkey real estate investing to align our interests with yours at houlton wise we partner with investors like you to provide you with a complete set of turnkey services on an a la carte basis it all starts with identifying your wants needs goals and investment budget we will curate investment properties that we believe would make sense for you from there we will provide you with an in-depth video analysis of these properties and your overall investment strategy then we will work for you as your real estate investment broker and advocate we will help you purchase as many or as few of these properties as you want at a price that makes sense for you anyone can sell you a property anyone can buy a property but buying a property at the right price at the right time with the right terms is what will make your real estate portfolio profitable after the sale we will then be able to provide you with full service property management which includes tenant screening leasing and eviction services in addition we also offer full service maintenance renovation landscaping and insurance in a nutshell we are able to provide you with the turnkey service without the turnkey price increase if all of this makes sense to you and you would like to begin your real estate investment journey with us click the link to book a free call with a houghton wise representative today houltonwise is real estate investing made easy you want me to get it i don't like it call today you
HoltonWiseTV
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2022-03-22
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Entrepreneur getting adjusted to release NECK STIFFNESS & for GENERAL ALIGNMENT by Dr. Sudarshan
do some movements for you right okay all you're supposed to do is follow the breathing pattern yeah breathe in breathe out as we do the movements no assistance no resistance take it easy be comfortable lose s b nice okay good relax breathe breathe out okay so this is the second time you're doing the session uh we did the session in the month of Jan and what was your experience it was like it was I thought it was scary and painful but it is not at all so the second time I think I'm going to give my body more lose so it'll get and was there was there any soreness that you felt after the any soreness no pain nothing perfect good nice
Dr Sudarshan Singh
UC06mWGrdBzYFL-9nZfOe5CA
2024-04-01
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1997 Scioto Downs SISSY'S GIRL Lance Wiegand
field for tonight's second race coming out on the track parading with the post number one maybe so has been scratched number two endu time fran owned by ralph sexton with david miller three is fluff owned by doug riston and randy hoop driven by ralph leo grande number four is sunshine annie owned by jim arles and jim make that john rhodes jr driven by jim daly five is sissy's girl owned by mark andrew mclean senior with lance wygand sexist future later owned by robert rutledge with mike wilder seven leases dandy owned by merwin kenner with david hawk aydis hopack owned by john plummer and ken kirk with bill long junior nine member of the board owned by charlie nuff and mary enough charlie and f drives number 10 gifted debutante owned by jeff mccarty david lytle and henry russell dan ater will be in the selkie scratch number one maybe so post time in six minutes field for tonight's second race half the gator moving through the clubhouse turn field is now in motion and there they go they're often pacing in due time fran takes the lead sissy's girl between horses out of the second tier gifted debut town sun shining looking for a seat from fourth on the far outside hope pack is fifth late lever future later to sixth around the top turn fluff in the seventh leases dandy is eighth and at the end it's member of the board quarter pole bound in due time friend gifted w town heads apart for the lead sissy's girl the stalker 29 flat a moderate clip as they're in procession of the half-mile paul the rome quickly grabs the racetrack draws off a length and a half gifted debutant gifted debutant leads away in due time fran second sissy's girl to third sunshine annie in fourth around the clubhouse turn future later to fifth hope hears lisa's dandy moving up on the outside member of the board and fluff can't go on they're at the half-mile pole gifted debut tonizer 59-2 they're out of the turn and down the back stretch gifted w-10 draws off by three in new time fran is already under the whip in second moving up on the outside sissy's girl to third sunshine any fourth lisa's dandy grinding uncovered a fifth followed by future later in sixth down the back stretch hope is seventh eighth up on the outside member of the board and the trailer is now fluff racing by three quarters in 128 and three moving around the far turn gifted w-town has got the top sissy's girl closing with every stride lisa's danny tries to close she's got about seven to make up in due time fran along the rail they're into the stretch gifted debutant is now under the whip sissy's girl draws alongside sissy's girl going the better of the two sissy's girl in front gifted debut time second lisa's dandy will finish third here comes jenna official winner number five sissy's girl three-year-old bay philly by a march out of little owned by mark mclean senior of london trained by ray theo given tonight by lance wygann covering them out here in 159 and two number five sissy's girl the unofficial winner of the second result is now posted official windows are open on the third super effective wagering field of 10 and no changes no changes in tonight's third race 510 exacta 8340 8340 the try 283 60. dolly parton daily double on nine to five 477 even post time 14 minutes away at 8 14. fluff ninth sunshine annie fourth sissy's girl the winner future later was fifth lisa's dandy was third hopack was seventh member of the board eighth gifted debutante was second
harnessdom
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2020-07-27
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHvH8xn5w-w
Is Outlander [SNES] Worth Playing Today? - SNESdrunk
soon as junk sometimes when there's no access or not enough money for a particular license gamedevs will still plow ahead with whatever game they were making even though anyone can see it was clearly made in the image of a certain movie or comic or TV show or whatever we saw it pretty often on the NES with journey to silius for example which was originally supposed to be a Terminator game and you also see it on the SNES in Genesis occasionally too with games like Outlander this is clearly just Mad Max 2 the game for those unfamiliar Mad Max 2 is part of the movie series starring Mel Gibson it was released in the U.S under the title The Road Warrior and it's after the apocalypse and fuel is in huge demand and there's lots of driving and leather apparently the publisher mindscape did actually have the license for Road Warrior at one point but lost it for one reason or another but they decided to just release the game anyway for Super Nintendo and Sega Genesis in April of 1993 and they just decided to call it Outlander despite this being planned as merely a road warrior title this game is made majorly ambitious you start immediately after the title screen controlling a car just hold the Y button to accelerate and B to use your unlimited ammo to gun down these people on motorcycles that want to kill you for some reason as you can see you're not exactly feeling a great sense of speed here this game runs slowly and the frame rate sucks it could definitely use some help from an improvement patch that utilizes the sa-1 chip but still what's here is really impressive because of the sheer amount of detail they put into this part of the game when you run over bikes they explode of course but you sometimes get a tire that flies off and rolls down the road with you if a biker comes up next to your car another window pops up on the screen and you can use the l r buttons to fire a shotgun to the side the rear view mirror up top also has a great amount of detail tracking multiple bikers that are following you while your character grimaces while taking damage you can even go in reverse by holding down on the d-pad to run over bikes behind you it can be tricky to get the timing right but if you're able to do it you see the biker fly up into the year while their bike explodes in later levels you get helicopters coming after you and you use Sidewinder missiles to bring them down there's even turbo boosts you can pick up just press up twice and you'll go uh slightly faster the driving may not look impressive and definitely could use a touch up but all the extra bells and whistles here are really cool the thing is though if your health meter at the bottom of the screen runs out it's game over and you have to start over and check out this game over screen that is brutal your health meter carries over to the next game mode as well once you get low on fuel pull over to the left side of the road and go kick the crap out of some dudes on foot in a side-scrolling beat of up section where you look for more fuel and other resources and yeah not the most polished gameplay here the whole idea is to walk to the right and smash open some crates so you can collect as many items as you can and it's everything from better armor food for extra health and weapons and fuel for your vehicle one interesting wrinkle here is that some food has gone bad due to being contaminated by nuclear waste I guess and it can actually do a ton of damage but you can also find a geiger counter which helps you avoid food that's gone bad that's nice and all but oh the controls here are just freaking awful they're really slow when your character moves at a leisurely Pace come on dude this is a post-apocalyptic action game get a move on the hit detection is just plain bad it's one of those games where you can walk right past enemies and not take any damage but any attack they do within a comparatively huge range will hit its Mark whereas your attacks have a 50 50 shot at actually Landing here is the most effective way to get through these beat em up sections the old fist to the groin yes that's right ignore your weapons you just Scuttle your way to the right duck and punch him in the balls apparently your character has more in common with Johnny Cage than the road warrior but yeah while the driving sections are actually kind of interesting these sections are such a chore to get through at least once you labor your way through this you pick right back up where you left off in your car are as I alluded to earlier this game did get a Genesis version with some minor differences the biggest being the performance being a bit better with the driving Parts running a little more smoothly and a bit faster it just doesn't feature the rear view mirror up top but for the beat-em-up parts the controls still suck and the best way to move ahead is still just to groin punch everyone I only wish you could kick in this game so maybe you could pretend the protagonist is a grown-up Bobby Hill the Super Nintendo version of the game features the music of Mark Knight a long time chiptune artist some folks might know as TDK and he's worked on sound design and music for tons of stuff over the years everything from crisis The Witcher and lots of Amiga ports like Wing commander and Battletoads this is some of his earliest stuff and while there's not a lot of music here what's here is pretty dang good [Music] foreign so yeah Outlander has some really interesting stuff going for it and I'd love to see what this game would look like with an improvement patch that speeds things up a bit but as it is it's only a good game on paper the execution throughout this one is pretty sloppy the driving sections are at least interesting and kind of fun but the side scrolling sections just flat out suck also I should mention that if you want to complete this one it's a really really long play through and the settings barely change so no I'm not using footage of just the first level this is what the whole game looks like the Genesis version is marginally better and it actually has a password system so if you want to play this one I'd go that route but otherwise I'd just wait and see if this one gets some kind of patch to improve the performance all right that's all for now and I want to thank you for watching and I hope you have a great rest of your day
SNES drunk
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2022-11-29
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BEST FUNNIEST CATS AND DOGS VIDEOS 2024 😂 | FUNNY ANIMAL VIDEOS (Part-2)
Hello friends welcome to my YouTube channel and how are you I hope you will funny friends I have brought for you most funny cat clips and dog videos so friends ready to watch funny videos made by me don't waste your time let's go on the video friends now see the best funny videos of cats [Music] foreign speech [Music] w [Music] oh [Music] wow [Music] friends now see the cats and dogs together [Music] fights [Music] get off me we're done we are over people y [Music] [Applause] wow [Music] huh no no no [Music] no [Music] you [Music] 10 [Music] friends I hope you like this video do share your opinion in the comment box and yes don't forget to join [Music] us
FUNNY ANIMAL VIDEOS
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2024-04-08
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Byline with Stan Rosenberg: 2020 Budget Process and Decisions
[Music] good evening and welcome back to buy line this is a public affairs show here on Amherst Media and it's co-sponsored with the cameras League of Women Voters and back for his second appearance on our show is our member-at-large of the town council and chair of the Finance Committee longtime town public official having been on the Select board and the Finance Committee and done many things over the years Andy Steinberg so welcome back Andy well thank you thank you so much for being willing to come back I guess it wasn't too painful the last time so welcome back and where we're focusing tonight on the budget because we're getting deeper and deeper into the budget process and so I wanted to ask you as chair of the Finance Committee first to just give us a quick thumbnail of where we are in the process and what's going to come next okay well thank you I appreciate being here appreciate being able to inform the viewership about our budget process and the budget going forward at this point the town manager is working on developing a budget that he will propose to the council under the new Charter he's required to make that budget proposal by May 1st and he will do so it will then be immediately referred to the Finance Committee for our review so we do not know the details but I know the broad parameters of what he will be presenting but the specific line item amounts would ureas to in your prior work in the ways with were that waste means committees you don't know what the Ways and Means Committee proposals until I proposed it well we don't know what the time manager is gonna be exactly so he's working with his department heads now to form a budget which will go to the finance could to the town council which will refer it to the Finance Committee how is that different than the process when we had a town meeting it was a different it is largely similar except the deadlines are very different and then the action of the council and the action of Town Meeting are different but this budget process began with the select board giving some priorities and making suggestions we knew we were I was speaking now as a former select board member after switch roles a couple times but the when we were in the Select board we knew we were not going to be seeing the process through to the end but we made recommendations for consideration in future years the council would have that role the manager then looks at the budget as does the superintendent for both of the reiden budgets he works with the regional school budget and the elementary budget which is a part of the town budget and the library director in the prior form of government we would have received the town manager's budget to the Finance Committee in January and then the Finance Committee would have worked on it in February and March for review and decided what to propose to town meeting because town meeting needs needed to get things in April in order to start a town meeting at the very end of April or May but the manager now gives it to the council on May 1st which is a whole extra four months for him to prepare his budget correct and of course because we're no longer bound to the town meeting rules and Town Meeting season we're now operating under a different set of budget rules so we don't really need to have the council act until the very end of the fist just before the beginning of the fiscal year July 1st so the council can wait until June to act which is why the Finance Committee will be doing its work now in May that the prior Finance Committee that was a committee of Town Meeting would have done earlier in the air so you have a couple of months to work on the budget after the town manager gives it to you what do you do during that period we're doing in the council actually we have a much more constrained time for lying than the old Finance Committee had we are required to report back in 30 days in order to give the the council time in Prior Finance Committee would have once a week meetings during a two-month period we're going to have twice a week meetings during a month and we're going to essentially be doing the same sort of thing we will have posted public meetings and I'll give an example on the public safety budget we will have the fire chief and the police chief or with their assistance staff you may come with them to talk about what their budget request is about and sort of give the flesh behind the budget not only this is the amount of money but this is why we've been doing this is what our priorities are and so is that before the Town Council as a whole or before the Finance Committee or before the Finance Committee with all of the town councillors invited if they choose to come option see all right it's not mandatory for the rest of the council correct we are we all of our meetings are public and we have will and have given our schedule to the council that's available and we'll the other councillors be able to participate in asking questions during that those meetings or only observe they can ask me questions and we'll and and where does the public fit into those meetings it's open to the public so the public can be in the audience are they able to ask questions or will there be a public comment period attached to those hearings as there are with the council meetings actually all of our committees have public comment periods because we believe very strongly in allowing public participation and encouraging public participation and so having a public comment element to the meeting will be important and the big difference and I should stress this early I think I even mentioned it last time I was in the show but that's been a while ago yeah is it in Town Meeting Town Meeting could increase or decrease budgets as recommended under the new form of government and under the Charter and we're not unique in this the Town Council has the authority to remove or reduce but does not have the authority to add something new it would have to come back then as a supplemental budget request through the town manager in a different so that run so there's an awful lot more power in the hands of the town manager as compared to the previous budget process under the old government because you can't a little bit there yes and the analogy I'll give by the way is Northampton this is exactly the process except you substitute the word mayor for the two words time and energy but otherwise the process is exactly the same I can think of a couple of instances of examples were town meeting added to budgets in the last few years items that were not preview either by the superintendent or the town manager one was this an amount for social service funding in last year there was a the other example I give for the schools is an amount that would allow for addition of time for library paralegal staff in the budgets one's voted by the Old Town Meeting the question of whether it would be spent by the superintendent of the town manager and those two examples was still and within their discretion those political questions as to whether you want a nor Town Meeting so the big difference in this one is is that if there's a strong feeling that something was left out of a budget the council would really need to come back and ask them for a supplemental budget submission it would not be a part of the annual operating budget so there is a procedure for supplemental budget requests yes and we actually have a head one already that was the station Road bridge okay and that what does that process look like roughly the same as the annual budgeting process where you go to the town manager the town manager comes to the council or can a supplemental budget be initiated by the council itself I not hundred percent sure the answer that little called a lawyer and by the station Road Bridge was a recommendation from the town manager okay and you know if the council resolved to request that the town manager do something and that would be a weight do that that was even though itself would draw strong consideration the Station Road bridge had to go through the whole process as do all of our budgets where we need to have it referred to the Finance Committee the Finance Committee needs to come back with a recommendation there needs to be a hearing a public hearing on it so that there's public invited participation and all of that has to precede the action of the council on the budget and we expect that there as well we know that there will be a hearing that the Finance Committee will have in relation to the major operating budget and the date is at this point been set for May 14th and the only portion that was split off and had a separate hearing has already taken place in April 4th and that was per the regional schools because it was wise to deal with Regional School portion of the budget separately and in sync with our other member in the commune house we're dealing with the town meeting schedule good now you mentioned earlier you don't know the detail of the line items but you know what the parameters are can you address what the nature of the parameters and to whatever extent you can share those in a way that would be useful for the viewers to hear that would be great well I think that it is very simple and it really works out to the stand 80% of the budget is the operating budget and the operating budget is what provides police officers to provide Public Safety firefighters to provide fire safety and providing ambulance service apartment DPW staff to come in and plow roads and take care of roads and fill potholes and you know the bulk of it is personnel their personnel who were working for us now they are providing service and school time the schools the schools are in the elementary schools are part of the regular budget the regional schools are also within the bud a budgeted amount but it's a different process but it's still a monster the same thing we have a town that does things we provide service for people we pride important service for people and the bulk of the budget ultimately is what do we need to continue those services so if that's 80% of the budget what's 20% well is 20% of the split in two fashions part of it is capital and you know we can talk about that for a moment but it's come back me we're looking back to the cap all-big yeah and the other part is there are certain mandated things that we have to do things that prior legislators have told us we have to do or prior contractual commitments pension use kind of give you three real quick yeah pension yeah what's called other post-employment benefits which is we've made promises to retirees to pay their health insurance and we pay their health insurance Regional Transit Authority I give you actually a fourth one charter school tuition uh-huh okay very good so and that's basically that plus the capital is the other 20% yes so let's talk about capital for a few minutes here so last week when our town council president was on we went through the four major projects and we went through the a little bit about the roads and and sidewalks and interested in your perspective as the chair of the Finance Committee about how people in town should be thinking about capital because it's an important part of the budget there are important projects out there but maybe the list is longer than can be done at any given time how do we how do we as a community wrestle with that and how do you as a finance committee chair wrestle with that it is a challenge and I pleased that the council president outlined four major projects which have been something that the prior select board also had identified as prior projects and was working on as part of the difficulty that we're having right now is that because the school project was delayed the cost to build a school was gone up so we're gonna be possibly paying more money to construct a slightly smaller school and it's just a matter and anything down the first leg but we are where we are and so we do have some difficult decisions to make and in order to be able to fund all of these projects or several things that we have to do what is we have to look at how much we can build you know can we build a building that we'd ideally like or do we need to build something a little bit less and I analogize that to somebody's building their house and they're gonna decide what they want to put into their house and how big they want to make their house they make tough decisions and it's a community we're gonna have to make those same kinds of decisions second is when you build something and so the spacing has is a factor in the order in which you are going order and but you do because if you borrow a whole lot of money at once it you run into the ability to make those borrowing commitments if you spread it out over a longer period of time then the paying back of the bonds get spread out over a longer period of time so we have to make those decisions and then the other set of decisions the council will need to make is at what point do we go to the voters furna and ask them to consider a debt exclusion override and that's a fancy term but it's really a amounts to would another communities in the United States I call bond issues it's asking the voters to authorize issuance of bonds to fund a specific building project and understand that their taxes will be increased for the period of time that is necessary to repay those bonds so we are not going to be able to build all of these projects within the existing existing revenue stream because revenue stream has to also pay back debt so we have to decide what it is that we're gonna be asking our voters and then the voters will have to decide and of course we know that there's some matching state funds for schools and library which are two of the projects on the list and but there aren't for the fire station and DPW director improvements that are needed so those those things will no doubt have some influence in the discussion but there is another option here and that is to increase the tax base and you increase the tax base by creating more structures that are then taxed and so in speaking with the town council president when Griesemer in last week's show she said the new community Resources Committee is likely at some point not so long from now to raise the question of creating some kind of a mechanism either a committee or a task force or something that we'll take a look at economic development within the community and that's not necessarily in the jurisdiction of the Finance Committee on the other and the revenue that might be generated by that would be available to the Finance Committee and of course the town manager and the council to be able to afford to do more of the work that we need to do in town absolutely well stated and I actually asked to be considered and was appointed to the Community Resources Committee because I felt that it was important to have an overlap between the two committees because one side the Finance Committee is principally dealing with the expense side of budget the other committee is dealing with the revenue side of the budget but they're both the budget mm-hmm and you can't have one without the other absolutely not now we got a little bit sidetracked when we were talking about the parameters and I just want to make sure that you made all the points you wanted to make about that you said that there was 80 percent of the budget was basically personnel and a bunch of services and then the other 20 percent reflected contractual responsibilities mandates and capital so for example in the state legislature the only major parameter we have as we build the budget is what is the what is our revenue estimate that we're going to use for the next fiscal year which is which is basically a crystal ball exercise because nobody knows 18 months from now how much revenue will have been collected in the twelve months from the end of the fiscal year to the beginning of the going back to the beginning of the fiscal year and you're actually writing the budget six months before that so you're projecting 18 months forward so how do you how do you handle revenue estimates and are there any other parameters that you have to consider or the town manager has to consider when he's building the budget before you get to see all those line items in October of every year for quite a number of years we have had a what we called at that point a four board meeting because it involved the Select board Finance Committee the School Committee in the library trustees and the meeting was with the town manager and the finance director or finance department staff and they would present their recommended budget estimates and then the budget estimates would go through a process they suggested a division of the operating budget side as to how much would should go to schools libraries and to municipal functions and the current year were in sort of this transition so the traditional four board meeting did in fact happen on October of 18 and it was so we we are working off of those estimates as in prior years the staff looks at the actual numbers as they change the taxation we can project pretty clearly the part that is a little bit more difficult for us is the amount from state aid and so we have to periodically test that against first the governor's recommendation and then the House recommendation and ultimately this in the house the recommendation is writers Ways and Means than the House action the same thing happens in the Senate so it's an inter of process but which gets readjusted periodically but I imagined that state had to do the same thing yep except for recessions you can pretty well count on the governor's number being the least and if the house matches that number you know that you're likely to have a number at approximately that and a month later the Senate budget will come out so there was some predictability we even though you didn't get a resolution adopted by the legislature all the time you got some predictability sometimes it was a resolution adopted by the House the governor in the Senate and boom you knew exactly what was going to happen other years they they didn't do a resolution but it as you went through that process it got it got clearer and clearer what the number is going to be only in the recessions do you have the most serious of that of that problem because what if the revenues keep tanking believe me I remember that because I was on the Finance Committee of the old town meeting back in the days and last recessions I lived it and the number kept changing this year which is what we're really ultimately concerned about the projections that were made in October I was so far held to be pretty good through the governor's budget and obviously if the House Ways and Means Committee does something radically different from what the governor's number was that will be a number that is known to the town manager before presenting a budget on May 1st and only the Senate number will not only the Senate number will not be known but that is true that is no different than it would have been a star operating under Town Meeting rules now do you expect the for the all Town Board meeting that you described in October which was the historic historic part of the process do you expect that to continue going forward yes I expect that we will still have the same kind of a budget projection meeting going forward and some discussion that will allow us to give guidance to the superintendent in the library director for the development of their budgets that has the recommendation of the manager and the imprimatur of the council because otherwise you can't get a responsible budget developed for schools and libraries and presented back to the town manager to them incorporate into the town budget so those meetings are here's my wish list and then a response by the town saying you may be being a little bit too ambitious this year it's always a little bit of that possibility but I hit what I found in the old process and I don't expect anything different than this one is that after the October meeting and a decision was made and actually the under the old process it was up to the Finance Committee to make a recommendation because that was a committee of the town meeting and so they would say this is the amount that we think is appropriate for the school budget and then the schools have the wish list but they ultimately understands the need to develop and did follow through developing a budget that fit the number and unfortunately they we're back to the same thing all the way through is that if you decide you want to add something really significantly new it is required to think about what to drop because there isn't enough because there is a line and we've always counted on new growth to get back to your other point if I wasn't kind of on some new growth but it's just enough to still keep us in pace with where we are it doesn't really allow us to add anything substantially new and different and I think that's where the community resources committee discussion really is going to be the most important and since we've run out of time we can't add anything new and substantial to this conversation so I hope you got a better understanding of how our chair of the Finance Committee and his colleagues are going to be working with us to form a budget as we move forward with standing up our new form of government so thank you so much for being here Andy and good luck with your work thank you you're welcome [Music]
Amherst Media
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2019-05-04
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Miami still looking for new offensive coordinator? Candle & Nussmeier targets?
Miami's still in the market for a new offensive coordinator after relieving Josh Gaddis of his duties a week and a half ago of course the defense coordinator Kevin Steele has taken the Alabama DC job we're not going to discuss that one today Mario crystal ball still needs to find an offensive coordinator to work with the quarterback Tyler Van Dyke so let's focus on that one before Crystal Ball's debut season at his alma mater he made a run at Jason candle who is the Toledo coach that we just talked about as being a possibility for the Notre Dame OC position now candle's team won the MAC this season but they finished nine and five he was just given an extension so it's not like he's in real trouble at the school or anything like that but for the talent that He has amassed with the Rockets his teams continue to underwhelm and really underperform expectations most people would have thought that okay well I guess most people think that he should have made the jump to a P5 head coaching position by now but things have not exactly gone as planned his first two seasons at Toledo his teams went and combined 20 and 7 with a Mac title but since 2018 his teams have gone 33 and 25 and their first Mac title in that time span was this season they were they've been downright average now everybody still respects his occupants of Acumen but it's proven to be much more difficult to jump to a P5 head coaching position from a Mac School than it was in the past we've now seen two examples of Mac coaches leaving head coaching positions to go be coordinators of the P5 level Danny knows from Central Michigan he went to Arkansas and then this season of course I already mentioned Sean Lewis left Kent State to join Colorado and at this point after being a Toledo for seven full seasons and only being 43 years old does he want to try and make that leap the thing that worries me for Miami is the fact that again I brought this up earlier the only time that he has been outside of the state of Ohio was his freshman and sophomore Seasons when he played for D3 School Geneva before transferring to Mount Union now the other name that's popped up as of latest Doug nussmeyer nusmeyer has been an offensive assistant coach with the Dallas Cowboys for the past five seasons like nuts has been an OC in college at Fresno State under Pat Hill Washington under Steve sarkeesian Alabama was Saban Michigan with Brady Hoke and then he was Jim mcelwain's OC at Florida in 2015 through 2017 before hopping on with Cowboys in 2018. and of course there's a little detail about his son Garrett nusmeyer being the backup quarterback at LSU and would Garrett maybe transfer to Miami to play for his dad it's very interesting to think about anyway Nuss and Mario coached together at uh Alabama in 2013. so there's a little bit of familiarity there nuts would run what Mario wants to run on offense so that's an interesting one I know for a fact that the fan base is not thrilled about that and if you go through uh if you go to stateoftheu.com they've got an incredible write-up on what NASA's offenses looked like what they ranked in those seasons and all those different places and what they ranked after Nuss left so might want to go do a little bit of reading then there's the Scott Frost rumors got to bring that up Frost has owed a lot of money by Nebraska 16.4 million dollars in buyouts to be exact I have to imagine that he'd just like to lay low for a little while after things ended so poorly at his alma mater I'm still convinced that the hire is going to be Marcus Royo although to be honest uh if this was going to get done there's no reason it shouldn't have already started like Arroyo is currently unemployed after being Let Go by UNLV um so that they could hire the Arkansas DC and former Missouri head coach Barry Odom it'll be interesting to see what crystal ball Cooks up here and if anyone is willing to take the job you know knowing how crystal ball prefers to stay on the conservative side of things on offense hey if you like this video go ahead and hit the like button hit the Subscribe button and of course jump in the comments thanks for listening to winning cures everything make sure and subscribe on YouTube or your favorite podcast app and make sure to leave a nice five star review you can follow Gary on Twitter at Gary WCE and the show is at winning cures be sure to check out the merch in our web store and share the show
Winning Cures Everything
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2023-02-07
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The Interesting Podcast with Brian Ballance Ep. 125: Kelsey Brady
welcome to the interesting podcast episode number 125. this episode is with kelsey brady who is a gem of a human being one of my all-time favorite people i've ever met she's so cool she's so nice she's hilarious she's also a really really good puppeteer i first came across her on instagram i believe it was or tiktok one of the two she does a bunch of uh videos on there with her different puppets that she's made and she's so good she's so good i was so excited to get to talk to her and to get to learn a little bit more about her we actually talk about her puppet making process how she got into puppeteering um her tic-tock videos um what it's like to have some of those like really take off and then what that does to your head when you're getting anything that gets a whole lot of attention at once we talk about her job puppeteering at disney and how many shows she's done and then learning on the job and figuring out the art of puppeteering i got to meet stan i got to meet stan i was super excited about that um obviously this is a podcast so you guys don't get to meet him but you can see him if you check her out on instagram at tik tok at onebradylady highly recommend it so i geek out a little bit in that so pre-pair we talk about that we talk about uh she gives great tips actually for up and coming puppeteers and a bunch of different things much everything she's great she's even better than i thought she would be and i already knew she was gonna be great so you're gonna love her she's fantastic check her out again one brady lady on tiktok and on instagram uh you'll get to meet her puppets and her videos are hilarious and uh so is this episode here so without further ado please enjoy the interesting podcast episode number 125 with kelsey brady theme song time [Music] shhh [Music] um yeah let's see what time is it one so i've been awake for what an hour same same yeah finally someone on my schedule seriously i mean what is time really a construct [Laughter] none of this stuff is real thank you quarantine for the reminder it's also nice to talk to someone who's in the same time zone uh kid where are you uh i'm in florida oh my gosh same yeah where are you at orlando oh i'm in naples hey yeah yeah right we'll bring puppets right around the corner yeah that's awesome yeah i dude i i've messed up so many times with guests where i'm like all right cool see it too and then realize either they're an hour behind or five hours ahead uh a lot of my guests are either in london or la which is three hours back and five hours forward i'm like i just i'm just tired just tired like how about noon i'm like you mean you mean seven a.m wait math i have to do math yeah yeah and sign up for math yeah and then i forgot to ask your name oh no and then just go down the list of skype skype has taught me there's a lot of people with the same name like a lot of people it's like the phone book just call them all eventually we'll get to them [Laughter] if not i'm about to have a conversation once about this yes yeah it's my hope i hope so i'm either going to make a lot of friends or a lot of enemies real fast just by cold calling people but it's been good i'm glad it worked we have the connection this is the biggest battle already won really so yeah not bad not bad good good start good start jeez it's been it's another thing as well because with florida you know like hurricane season's coming so it's like right i don't know what it's like in naples but literally every day this week it's been deluge nothing oh yeah it's like previews you know it's like get ready we're like oh great cool oh haven't been stuck in the house long enough yeah get ready for more exactly enjoy the fact that we still have power so that's that's a thing geez are you so are you from florida i'm from maryland oh that's not near here disney brought me here and i left but i returned yeah drew me back in yeah that's that's what florida does it's like a drug that's right that's right which there is a lot of in florida it's we have everything we have meth gators we have disney assaults bath salts you're right forgotten i think i blocked it out i was like [Laughter] i i had someone on one time that asked me they're like are meth gators a thing i was like honestly i can't say no and i think that's the problem every like it's like putting um just random words into one of those bingo wheels and pulling them out and like florida man yeah myth yep yeah sure yeah totally totally there's do you ever watch atlanta there's a there's a whole bit you should it's really good it's donald glover and he has he has this whole bit about florida man and like his friend is this like conspiracy theorist he's like yeah just you know if you're going to florida watch out for florida man he's like that's not a thing he goes oh it is it he called him what he's like it's an alt-right johnny appleseed and he goes nobody knows who he is or what he looks like that's why it just says florida man and then he just goes through the headlines as if it's one person doing all of this it's so funny it is yeah i have seen um going to work because i also work at universal um there was a man on a bike like a three trike i guess an adult tricycle he had a parrot on his shoulder sweet just going and i was like okay i wasn't shocked that'll do it it was just like wow that's fascinating yeah if i didn't know any better i think that was my dad [Laughter] he's yeah he's one he actually now that i'm thinking about it he did have a parrot at one point on a motorcycle yeah on a motorcycle on a motorcycle kid you not yeah yeah well he i guess he had like a net on the back where it would sort of grab onto he had a system and then he wore a shirt on the back that said if you can read this my parents yeah yeah yep yep system it's all about it's all about the commitment i've learned you know i mean you can't half-ass a florida man you just can't you gotta go full in it's the way to go it's the way to go now we've got tigers yeah i mean i guess we always had tigers but did you watch tiger king did i watch this thing i have a pulse yes i watched tiger king i watched it through um and my boyfriend i would like shoot out fats as i was binging it and then he was like i have okay i have to watch it so i watched it twice oh there you go watch him respect respect it's a it's pretty bonkers right again not shocked or surprised just full and complete awe of just yeah the variety of humanity yeah yeah it's fascinating yeah it's like going to a zoo for people you're sitting there watching like what are they gonna do next yeah exactly i fell down the rabbit hole as well as like after it became the phenomenon that it is i went to youtube and i'm like watching all the interviews with the cast and i'm like oh oh no oh no like oh it's a documentary like maybe they fudged it a little which i'm sure they did here and there to create their storyline yeah but it doesn't mean there's good people no it's real it's like the things they changed were to make them look better exactly uh what a wild time to be alive well it makes you feel i think the reason why it got so hyped up was because it made people feel better about themselves like oh i'm not a garbage human yeah exactly i've killed zero tigers [Laughter] i've never asked anyone to murder anymore i've thought about it yeah well give it time give it time i don't want to stifle your creativity here that's amazing that's amazing so i i first learned about you through uh the the tick tock you did with the the switch which oh i was wearing this [ __ ] yeah i recognized it and i was like oh oh i made it in quarantine that's amazing you've made a lot of things in quarantine it seems but i so you are the reason i have tick-tock i'll let you know you're kidding me because i don't really understand how it works [Laughter] so i'm like what is this and you know you just randomly find things and i was like hold on a second and then i am not ashamed to admit i went down your entire feed and i was like i'm getting so much joy from this oh and then i was like i need her on my show because like i love i just i love puppets i really do like we i just moved and a sentence that came out of my wife's mouth was like all right and we need to find a place for the puppets too and i was like i'm doing all right in life you found a good one i did i did so then when i found your thing i was like look at her puppets look at this thing while she's cooking i was like stop cooking food look watch she's there's a switch and then she's the puppet do you get it look look and there's more oh that makes my heart so happy yeah i was like okay he wants to talk to me like [Laughter] like what if i contributed to society right yeah you've given me a lot of joy therefore i want to raise you up that's lovely yeah i'm scrolling through the people you interviewed and i was like well that's victor jared yes amazing dude just met him on zoom a couple weeks ago oh cool because we were supposed to work together um at a puppet workshop in texas but that got uh cancelled because all this um but yeah we had some zoom calls to for whatever um but yeah i know i just met him and i was like this is so cool yeah he's the greatest look at all my friends yeah there you go i saw you had interviewed him i was like yeah am i on the same level no yes yes but i'm like i i mean you're like what 20 some episodes apart but i'd say on the same feed [Laughter] you're there somebody can go here and be like you can get mike quinn victor yarid and kelsey brady all in the same thing i had dinner with mike quinn gosh like three years ago see he's the best i consider myself to be a cool person because i am friends i agree with people who are friends yeah [Laughter] same what do you think i'm doing here [Laughter] it's networking well and the puppet community is so incredibly fascinatingly small oh yeah um and very tight-knit so once you kind of jump into that realm it's like well let me introduce you to this person let me have you talk to this person or you're bound to bump into somebody at some point and then all of a sudden you are you know having drinks with noel mcneil talking about oh when i was right-handed for jim henson and i'm like yeah go on right hand let me just eat my barbecue right yeah can i shake that hand exactly yeah i'm the same i'm the same come on my show tell me all your things yeah and i love a big thing that i wanted to do like years ago when i started this show was like give a microphone to people that wouldn't normally get it and you're like oh i really love this thing but there's a person in there that's bringing this thing let's come out let's tell your story you know yeah and like i love i love puppeteers i love puppets just in general but also i i consider it to be like uh almost magic because it's an inanimate thing that you're making a real thing and you can't help but like when you're talking to someone who's a really good puppeteer you're talking to a puppet that's someone's hand in a thing but i'm like no listen stan tell me your thoughts you know what i mean oh he doesn't say much he's very grumpy you don't want to talk yeah yeah that's okay but but it's like you're so cute i know it's like i'm getting mixed signals here you know he's reluctantly cute that's his whole deal he no the story with him is that i every voice that i gave him i didn't think fit and so now all he does is lip sync he's like the um bumble bee yeah character that i have where he only speaks through facial expressions yeah and audio oh i love it which is why i made frigg the little pig girl the hair one yeah yeah i made her because i was like i need a character that i can boy yeah yeah someone's gotta talk in here it can't just be me i love it and then the little pink one biscuit biscuit who has been um commandeered by my boyfriend um whenever i make a new puppet we have this tradition where every step along the way i'll toss it to him and have him because he's a phenomenal puppeteer too oh right and i will say like make me laugh like do be funny but basically and he'll be like okay he'll put it on and it's for me to um laugh obviously but not only that it's so i can see how it's coming along and because it's so much easier sure you get like a real test run yeah exactly i'll just be like yes make me laugh okay it's working let me add here for me whatever um but no he loves biscuits so much he wants he's like can this be my like i keep making characters that i can't do myself yeah like i get i guess you can have it's fun i can still make him lip sync on my tic tocs but i guess there you go yeah yeah you can you can have custardy i guess [Laughter] that's amazing so how many puppets have you made um because they're really good they're not so they're not of a quality that like oh this is my first one like they're legit thank you so much i have well okay good ones um three um rome was not built in a day ah fair uh stan was not built in a day i don't know yeah i've uh dabbled a little bit i remember when i first started really getting into puppets um i don't know if you made it far enough into my feed that you met uh carmichael he's this brown fuzzy he does all of my like creepy tic tacs he is this brown fuzzy bug eyed it's just ping pong balls and this really cheap brown for he's terrible and he does not have the same movement and manipulation basically what happened was i started falling in love with puppets and i needed to make one right then and there and i didn't know what i was doing so he was born but anyway now i've made a couple where it's almost endearing how ugly they are but i feel the same way [Laughter] well and it's like you said you know puppetry is the magic thing where if i can take you know a syrup thing at ihop and make you yeah make you fall in love with it then it doesn't matter what it looks like that's true that's true i asked mike quinn one time what his favorite thing about puppets was and he says they're live action cartoons yeah and i was like yeah that's a good it's a good way to look at it yeah yeah i like puppets so were were you into puppets as a kid um i was in the sense of um you know i think i'm not sure how old are you yeah well you're never supposed to ask a man kelsey but i am uh i'm i'm 28. um okay okay the ripe old age oh listen june 1st yeah about three days i will be 32 so no you aren't listen you can't lie on the show until the end all right please it's the pixie dust yeah yeah it's all that felt you just yeah it gives you all the glue that's right i'll be 29 july 2nd so this i'll bridge the gap a little bit for you so we are of the same pier yeah growing up in like that uh time era of um i mean sesame street obviously but like um pbs shows like between the lion then uh puzzle place and then all the nickelodeon stuff bear in the big blue house yeah um eureka's castle even like golicola island like it was like this puppet renaissance of children's shows yeah and i was into all of that but it wasn't like i want to do that when i grow up it was just you know fan based yeah and then i think avenue q came out when i was in high school i think and i had my parents didn't know but i had the cd jokes on them [Laughter] look how i turned down yeah no i i know they're somewhere deep deep deep in my family's um like old hard drives on the computer of me lip syncing with myself to avenue q songs and nice um but yeah that was definitely i went into musical theater and acting and improv like that's what i wanted to do when i went to college i took all these classes i took a puppetry class but it was just kind of a part of a whole curriculum of just general theater classes gotcha it wasn't until i started working at disney world that i was like i can take my acting improv singing experience all these funny voices i do just you know for stupid fun i can put all of that into one thing yeah and any kind of like anxiety or um self-doubt that i had about being a performer standing on stage as myself that goes away when you've got a puppet on sure wild so i don't know it seems to be this culmination of everything i loved um so i just worked my butt off to really kind of hone these skills because i'm like finally [Laughter] this weird thing that i never thought was the thing is now my thing yeah those are the best kind the ones you like come across you know that's just oh oh oh that's my thing right look at that so did you get like you worked at disney world did you do the like the puppet shows and stuff like that there i saw that oh yeah the donald uh videos oh disney junior live on stage rest in peace rest in peace pour some out for once homies um that i'm actually filming that i will uh i think hopefully i didn't mislead too many people um i did perform in the show but um i was actually the one filming for those um but that that show as a puppeteer um because it's it was in california i think it still exists in paris i don't know it's just anyone who performs in that show should be very proud of themselves because of the rigorous nature of it but yeah i know i'm i'm still currently a puppeteer at disney and at uh universal so yeah and it's just been announced that we're opening up i'm not i can't answer any questions about what entertainment will look like well hold on i have 100 of those um i am very curious myself but um hopefully we'll get back to bringing the magics yeah there you go did it so they just give you a puppet you walked in you're like i like puppets and they're like here they threw it at me yeah um i they have a lot of really great opportunities um in entertainment to be able to kind of hone all kinds of different skills like stilt walking if you if you can and want to do that you know that kind of thing so that's cool um i fell into my category and was like i'm sticking here there you go that's neat it's like you get shown the room of toys and it's like which one do you want to play with you're like that one i wouldn't want that one yeah that one it all has to do with you know timing and what shows are open you know i can't divulge too many secrets i want to have a job with this yeah i'm aware of the snipers don't worry back up back up [Laughter] but i you know there's always auditions up on you know people will ask me all the time like how do i get to be a puppeteer i'm like you just i don't know right good timing it's all that the disney auditions website will have sometimes we'll have specifically puppeteering auditions and that's cool that no that makes sense almost every person i've talked to on here has been the the overwhelming truth is luck is preparation beats opportunity it's all it's all timing and being ready for it 100 so had you done puppeteering before disney um just that class at um wow in college that's cool um i had taken some workshops it was really just kind of a um i like performing and i want to do it as much as i can sure so um i think at the time that the audition came around i i had taken some workshops i dabbled um and i guess they just kind of saw um saw something like hey i think she might excel at this let's try and teach her yeah that's cool i love the idea that you can like learn on the job because i feel like from i feel like from the outside everyone has this idea that like you have to already know everything before going into the job and that's how you get the job but i'm learning that's not the case for a lot of things no you show that you have the drive and the passion and like with puppets if you come into it if you find yourself really wanting to be a puppeteer um and you have great improv skills you have you like doing voices you like acting um it's so much more than just the tech technical stuff you can learn right over time and you can perfect and build the muscles and you know have it be like a second nature muscle memory yeah like years of practice um but if you find yourself really you know excelling in these other you know categories then you can apply that to being a puppeteer oh good point good point it makes sense makes sense especially because like you know voice actors say the same thing it's like you've got your voices but it's still acting and yeah puppeteer's the same thing you still have to be an actor behind all of it and then add this extra side to it it's crazy was there a learning curve like did it take a long time for you to pick it up or was it something you sort of it was um an exercise in patience and endurance like i have the weirdest muscles now and like calluses you can kind of this is a visual thing that's okay this is for me i'll trade you this is mine this is a callus i've built up you can see the difference between my pinkies i don't know if that's amazing but there's like a i have you have a puppet finger yeah exactly i have deformities on my hands weird muscles like yeah for the arts yeah but that's okay that's right as long as the a hand model can't puppeteer so ha ha law of equivalent exchange yeah we all we are all cogs in this machine called life we all have art that we play yep yep and yours just happens to be covered in felt i love it i love it that's cool that's cool i i i love the idea and like the other thing i love about puppetry is so much of it you don't realize is going on yeah like when you're looking at it you're like this just the the voices to the hand thing is so difficult to do because your hand wants to go so much faster than the way you're talking or slower and you're like mother of god fall in my mouth like we're the same thing well that's where the practice comes into play where it is just muscle memory um yeah and you it it's nice to get to a point where you're not even really thinking about it anymore it just it just kind of comes out like oh that's cool you don't have to think sure do you have a favorite kind of puppet to puppeteer because i know that there's so many variations and even into like hand one you've got like one arm rod you've got two arm rods you've got like this you have one part where you're just an arm and somebody else is like the head and the other arm like yeah so many things oh gosh that actually i'm glad you said that because that's probably one of my favorite things to do is to just assist people really um because um it's like this mind milled that you jump into um because you have to feel that person you know you have that connection with the head puppeteer um the lead and you have to not do too much not do too little just make it look like one cohesive being sure so i i love doing that just being so focused on what the other person is doing and then it's like this magic that's created you're like yes we're two people but it looks like one yeah exactly but i also i love really simple puppets where it's you know broken down to just um a really floppy face so it's really just my hand creating all the emotion because you know as as exciting and you know i don't know if i got cut off before this but i was saying like um all the mechs and the eye blinks and the um like all the moving parts that can be so much fun and you're like wow i just got the hang of this you know pat my head and rub my teeth like it it's so um you know it's something where you're like yeah pat myself in the back like i did a good job that's that's not easy but i think there's just something really magic about a really simple puppet like with stan all he has to do i've gotten a lot of comments um on videos where all he did was gulp you know yeah like the simplest little thumb movement to go like gulp right and people were like oh when he did that that just hit me i'm like it's really it's so tiny um but because he's such a simple puppet those little tiny emotions read so well i think that's probably my favorite thing to do because it's so subtle and it makes it that much more like realistic sure i mean that's also the toughest like on screen acting is the same way like if you have to do a scene with no dialogue that usually hits so much harder than anything else because you put so much onto it and you're like oh wow that's wow his eyebrow twitched and it touched my soul exactly you're like i felt it i felt it was it something that like how long did it take you to get where you felt like you really got the hang of it oh gosh i don't know if i'm still if i've reached that point yes i'm still i'm still learning and growing that's important i i don't know i really don't know i um let me think i guess like how long did it take or like how long did it take before you stopped getting frustrated with figuring out or is that still happening um the great thing about working at disney and doing the same shows over and over again it gives you a lot of time to um i won't say perfect because you know you should always be trying to totally get better but you know it you do get to a point where after your like 300th show you're like wow i felt really that was that's where i wanted to get now let's see how much further i can push it but that i felt good about that so for anyone listening 300 is that your 300th show you should feel all right yeah yeah no it's um and there are still some days where you know on 301 you're like wow what happened what is that arm doing oh that's me oh yeah i lost it that was terrible but um yeah no i don't know if i have a specific date like july 18th that's the only acceptable answer really i'm looking for a i want the hour or so kelsey is to keep track of your progress for podcasts come on you know i did i had a friend who um who took he had a tally of every single show he did at disney really and we we trained in about the same time and when he was like all right voyage of the little mermaid number he was in the thousands and i was like you know what probably best probably [Laughter] don't think about it that's right a new person comes in hey so how many shows you've done well it's been about 4012. oh man i think keeping it fresh and not not thinking about it and then treating it like it's your first show yeah fair keeps it keeps it fresh and not boring yeah what is the hardest kind of puppet to operate the full body i think physically the hardest is when you're incorporating every part of your being and then trying to talk and blink at the same time ah fair there i think physically that's the hardest maybe not mentally the hardest but i love it though because i don't know i don't know if i love one particular form of puppetry more than the other but it's definitely different and physically taxing sure is there any sort of puppetry that you haven't done yet that you want to i am not a terrific uh one ventriloquist i think a lot of people um oh mistake me for a ventral quest because um i guess it looks like i'm throwing my voice like on tick tock but i i'm really i'm using someone else's audio right right it's not me talking sure and i think you know i've always loved like sherry lewis and lamb chop and stuff i think that's fascinating and um darcy that little girl that just won oh yeah yeah yeah but characters got talent i it's fascinating and i think i've never really jumped into that world so i think ventriloquism is awesome um and marionette work like yeah i hear that a lot i've done like hybrid marionettes where it's just like part of the puppet is floating but it's it's still you know yeah it was in the mouth but um no the way like the really really skilled marionette artists puppeteers they though i had a little toy one growing up and of course you know they just kind of yeah they look like in sync in the nose yeah that were actual nsync marionettes that they sold did i have them maybe did you am i gonna admit that on my show yes i am because i have no shame i do you heard it here you did this [Laughter] oh yeah oh yeah i mean i mean granted i'm not a puppeteer so that's all they did they went left foot right foot and not when i wanted them to but hey right if you have the option of getting a justin timberlake marionette you take it it's just these are the rules these are the rules all right i wish god i had some but no i think you know relying on gravity yeah to do a lot of the work for you and then trying to control it from there that's tough yeah i can do it do you do you know who barnaby dixon is you ever seen his stuff with the hand yes his freaking things is like what is that it's amazing the engineering yeah he has built them and then it's all just on his like finger puppets but yeah to an ultimate degree he's it's so crazy and when he does like on top of each other and it's like a person i was like what is what is happening what is happening he he worked on uh the new dark crystal series yeah and he did the puppet show within the puppet show and the second i saw i was like that is barnaby dixon right away it's like seeing an artist and you know they're like this is a rembrandt i think i don't even know if rembrandt is an art name anyway that came out i hope it is uh yeah it's just so crazy it's crazy i l i love it how cool to um you know have a thing and be recognized for that right like how cool for him like right away and like yeah on such a scale too did you you saw dark you saw the series right there crystal i absorbed it yes yes it's so good ate it up because i'm you know of the generation i maybe i was a little young for a labyrinth but my parents showed it to me and oh yeah the same dark crystal came along later in life for me same i think it scared me as the kid yeah it scared me as an adult chamberlain still freaks me out that voice i'm like i just i don't like it i don't like it i don't like it yeah nope and then when they rip his robes off and he's like i was like i don't like it i don't like it at all yeah it is definitely well the world they created is fantastic but it is nightmare inducing but it's gorgeous it is it is and now we got hup oh my god yup victor he we spent an entire like 15 minutes talking about how much he loves throwing puppets that's like his favorite thing and there's a technique to it because there's a part when hup gets thrown across the thing and victor was like i'm the guy whoever needs puppets thrown just call me and he would like show up on set on daisy wasn't working when they had to throw a puppet so that he could do it you don't even have to pay me just no it's like i just i want to throw puppets right i love puppeteering i also love throwing puppets and i was like yeah yeah that sounds about right that's amazing that's so funny he's a funny guy he is he is the 10 minutes that i've talked to yeah yeah we're best friends yeah give it time give it time oh my gosh it was i was the worst and i was so embarrassing my boyfriend was so embarrassed when we were um when i was zoomed chatting with him um i have a little pop funko of hub oh sweet just like slowly brought him into frame yes but um i'm gonna name drop again peter lynn's was there love it walter and ernie and yeah he was making fun of me he's like oh you suck like what what do you mean it's it's just there you take your shot kelsey all right i respect that i have a i have a brutal honesty about me where i'm like hey you're fantastic and i just want you to know that and they're like all right i'm like yeah what's going on here why are we yeah why are we scooting around someday there's going to be pop funkos of stan and people are going to come up to me and be like look i have a little that's right that's right i'm going to start with that when you when that happens you got to come back on and i'll just have you looking at the funko of sand and then i'll pop out occasionally and be like so what's it like having your own photo and then he can't talk so he's not gonna answer me so you're gonna have to it's like yep ah we'll work it out i will be weeping uncontrollably yeah exactly yeah stan are you all right it's like stan's fine but you're like [Laughter] oh my god so when did you adopt tick-tock pretty early on because again i don't really understand it yet but as far as i'm concerned you're the queen of tick-tock in my world oh why god mind you i follow like 10 people on there and by follow people i mean i click the follow button but i actually watch your stuff oh gosh i'm sorry if you've been very disappointed at my lack of content it's been it's been the worst it's been the worst i was like i follow and then you stop what's up what are you in quarantine going on dance puppet dance it's hard to be funny yeah exactly you make it look easy all right oh that's awesome that's so nice um what was the question oh you're great was there a question no how early did i start yes actually almost exactly a year ago is about july nice i actually i built stan exactly a year ago he's about to have his birth his first birthday happy birthday stan i built him for this um puppet workshop that i was doing in texas the one that didn't happen yes of course i'm familiar with it yes beyond the stock love it so great great name um but my friend who she and i were both on staff for it and she was like you should build a puppet here have some fur build it so um i built him to bring along to kind of i don't know for demonstrations and stuff sure and um after that i was like well i have this puppet yeah so um tic toc i think musically was already a thing that i was aware of but it was kind of like this i was like it's just dubsmash or vine like dubstep i think that's what everybody kind of thinks of when they see tick tock they're like i've already seen vine that's already dead i've already seen dub smash like what what else could there be to offer um so i downloaded it and threw a video out just to make my friends laugh essentially just to make myself laugh to make my friends laugh and to have something to do um with this puppet that i just built and you know give him his glory yeah and then from that oh gosh it's so incredibly addicting anyone who has ever made a tick tock that's gotten any kind of recognition even if it's just like oh my gosh i just got 100 views yeah i have to make another one and then it's like this snowball of you know i don't know attention yeah it's a weird it's a weird thing you you can't go into it saying all right i'm gonna be tick-tock famous right we'll go insane yeah yeah yeah that's not good guys no it becomes this obsession of numbers and views and likes and you base your whole self-worth don't you don't because it's not going to work either that's the other problem you can smell it yeah absolutely not so i made a few and it was 100 just for kicks and giggles and um you know i hear an audio and think oh how funny would this be to have a puppet do it yeah and you know it's like this little creative outlet that became just a dumpster for my brain i think the first one that kind of blew my mind how big it got was um what's the prop [Laughter] i woke up and it had about a hundred thousand views and all these likes and comments and i was like what is happening all day i was watching my followers grow and the numbers for the likes go up the comments and i was like blew my mind yes so i you know i kept kind of cranking them out just to kind of see what was going on sure and you know they they were in five minutes getting you know a thousand hits or something and um wow wow this is the thing what's happening quick run run run run run and then i made the um the sleepy time oh yeah that's probably been my biggest one to this day you know it is it's sleepy time yeah and then lad bible shared it and it exploded and yeah from there it's just been climbing and i feel like um i didn't have a goal jumping onto tick-tock yeah so i'm trying to make my goals line up with what's actually happening as opposed to people who go in with a goal and kind of get disappointed because they haven't reached it sure it's making the goal what you're doing now so you're constantly achieving it smart yeah smart it's it's a weird i don't know and i feel like that sounds a little i don't mean it to sound braggy in the sense of like well i had this accidental success yeah no no it doesn't come across that way at all but i also love that you're like oh this was a thing that happened this is cool so i'm cool with this thing that happened as opposed to like okay next step a bazillion and you're like no no you know you're not like not it comes across as you're very content with what's already happening and continuing that contentment as opposed to being like but it's not enough yeah well and it started to kind of get that way after um you know i hit 100 000 followers and um something funky happens in your brain where everything you post if it doesn't get the same or more success yeah it kind of means like oh i've immediately failed like people will delete their videos because it's you know quote unquote flopped right i never post anything that i'm not fully happy with or proud of cool um good way to go even even if the numbers aren't as high as i think they should be or um you know i find it so i'll post five i think this one's my favorite and then this one over here is the one that gets all the v sure there's no rhyme or reason right so i won't delete it because uh like you said you found the one video that was doing well and then from there you scrolled through and saw my other ones 100 so why would i delete one that i'm happy with because then it's not going to be seen right right i don't post things just to be frivolous i don't post um just to follow a trend sure or a trendy audio or whatever um i post it because i thought it was funny yeah hell yeah that comes across and that made me want to keep watching you know like i'm i'm very glad that and that makes a lot of sense as well because you're like you're putting out something that you like regardless of everything else which i think is one of the coolest things anyone can do because i for me it's like i'm a big star wars fan right yeah and like huge that's kind of obsessed might be putting it mildly i see the posters behind you yeah i mean i've gotta i've i waved the flag out front and uh one of my favorite things about george lucas was i think he's one of the greatest artists of our time because he made his thing regardless of what anybody thought the fact that everyone loves star wars does not matter to him because he made his thing you know and i i love artists who just make their thing like this is my thing cool whether you like it or not i like it and that makes me want to like it more because if someone's like do you like it do you like it i'm like i don't know do i cuz you kind of i don't want it right now you're kind of really you know don't you force this on me yeah exactly the fact that you have like and granted i love puppets so you had me in right away but i love your stuff you're also really good at lip syncing yourself like really good thank you it's a skill that's very hard to do because i tried dubsmash a few times and every video took like 15 takes so yeah that's my that's my next question on average how many takes do you have to do cannot answer that question because i don't know i am an uber perfectionist um and if i'm in tick-tock mode three hours will go by and i will not have even realized it respect um respect i will sit here on my own um talking to myself going okay one more time almost almost almost not quite right yeah we'll save that one in drafts we'll do that again [Laughter] and it's so difficult i remember i posted one that i was like dang it i've already posted it there's no going back um you know i'm talking to myself and i'm trying not to lip sync to the what my hand is doing and then trying to keep my hands still and alive and active and reacting to what my mouth is doing sure i never thought about that because in the scene the puppets talking but you are so used to talking for the oh man wow yeah so i will mouth there was one where like i said i posted it and i saw my mouth moved just slightly when the puppet was talking and i was like what have i done i'm fraud [Laughter] you said you're not a ventriloquist it's okay we'll wipe that one from you well and that's the thing the fact that that people can do that but also they are actually talking not right sticking to something else they are the ones doing the talking to themselves back and forth it's crazy bonkers yeah it's uh your videos are so fun i will say one of my all-time favorites was the one you did with biscuit that was one i saved on my phone and then shared on instagram i was like guys look at look at this look at this pink little puppet yeah this my baby and ain't nobody's gonna touch him it's like i love the puppet but also you lip synced it so perfectly and like it it shows that you're an actor like you you really commit you're not just lip-syncing like you embody everything and i just ah it's a it's a joy it's a joy to watch i will say that i am a huge drag queen fan and aficionado yeah so i'd like to say that i am part drag queen so lip thinking is a passion yeah yeah it is an art yeah i appreciate the recognition that's right and hopefully one day i will be fully realized as yeah first biological woman drag queen puppeteer i'll give it to you maybe that should be my that'll be my goal in the future that's right that's right that we found it we found it i love it i love it so is was working at disney always the goal you said you moved down to florida for disney i so i went to college in utah and um they get a lot of the disney interns for the college program from utah there was an audition out there for entertainment and i went and they invited me down so this was in 2007. oh that i did my disney college program there you go there you go so i um yeah fall fall 2007 i did my disney college program i um stayed seasonal which means um you know i came back for the summer to do a few shifts and i couldn't let it go i didn't want to let disney go but i eventually did because it just it didn't make sense for me to keep flying back and forth from utah and they changed up the rules you have to you as a seasonal cast member they expected you to work more than just one week a year which you know you know on paper that makes sense [Laughter] so i left the disney realm um but it drew me back like i was um done with college i was married at the time and we just ended up here there you go thank you and no longer married and i stayed here yeah i got disney out of this and i'm fine there you go it worked out it worked out yeah i like it i like it a lot yeah i i just something about um you know i was feeling a little lost about what i wanted out of life sure career-wise and once i realized where my passions lied you know i wanted to perform i loved working at disney and you know puppeteering was you know i had found it and loved it and didn't want to give it up so that's fair here we are yeah that's what you got to do if you can find fulfillment in life you got to chase it with everything you got i think it's super important when so how do you approach like when you design a puppet because with like frigg and biscuit and stan like they're vastly different designs like do you do you go through a process are you kind of like uh it's funny you say that because um at the root of it um stan and frigg are the exact same um pattern oh yeah so i have a friend who also i who i met in texas at beyond the sock his name's pasha romanowski he does project puppet great name um i know he's a cool dude super talented and um he has a website project puppet he will sell these really simple um puppet patterns of varying degrees he has a bunch of different patterns for like animals and stuff but um this particular pattern is called the rolly pattern so um it's just a basic little round head shape um arms and body and from there you know you pick the fur i kind of adjust the length of the arms and stuff um but you trim the fur in a certain way you add your own eyes i added you know the ears the horns um but yeah at the base of it it's they're the same pattern it's just i customize them and then uh biscuit is also one of his little patterns and yeah whenever people ask me you know how did you make it i'm like i follow someone else who's far more talented than me i here yeah exactly i send them their way adam krugenger he's also an amazing um puppet designer who's got some amazing patterns so they are they do all the brain work sure just cut it out and from there customize it to my own vision oh that's cool you just kind of go with what you feel at the time yeah i never really i i don't necessarily have a plan going into it i just look at the fur and like i said i'll hand it off to my boyfriend it'll be like partially done i'll look at it and be like okay horns yeah um like stan when he was i thought he was completely done i was looking at him like something's missing and then i went nose and i gave him a little nose and it's green and it didn't make any sense but for a puppet it did uh you know no rules that's right that's right so does he break down the mechanics for here for stan specifically you've got i imagine the whole sort of thing where it's cardboardy and what are you using there for his mouth because it's flat or is it not the mouth plate is actually um you know those plastic tubs that you use for storage and stuff yes um the lid i um there's a little pattern just for his mouth plate and you cut out the top and bottom mouth plate out of that lid and it's it's just malleable enough um where it won't it's not too rigid so um you can get some more expression out of it and it won't break down like um like a cardboard board would get kind of mushy over time smart smart wow i never would have thought of that it was like bricks of the tree yeah look at that look at this i learned it from the wisdom of my elders yeah passed down in the puppet scroll and i'm passing it on yes ah tote lids perfect that was the secret i've always looked for it works it holds up did it take you a while to do the two rods because it's so a lot it's it took me um learning you know like you said at disney learn on the job they um do a great job of train of training the performers um but from there it's it you go from just kind of holding them still yeah like i said doing doing shows a thousand times you are always trying to beat your last performance sure so um you go from like i said holding them still kind of at the stomach and maybe opening them to to the point where you can gesture um you can um blow kisses fix your hair dance clap sure it's a lot of practice and i hold them very weird weirdly strangely it's whatever you're comfortable with whatever whatever gives you a good it's like with chopsticks you have to have that certain grip where it's you have the dexterity yeah but yeah that's why my pinky um i've developed this uh callus on my pinky because i use it as a fulcrum i like stick my arm rods on either i see there he is oh my goodness gracious no one will be able to see this this is just for us look at him uh oh i stick my my finger in between the arm rods and then he can play guitar dance [Laughter] he can put his hands on his hips and oh no you didn't the best part of that was i didn't look at you once that whole time you know just like look at him go we used to take some puppets to um hospitals for to visit with kids um good on you and uh this is all my boyfriend he has um a show called bird call on yes um we would take the characters from that um to talk to kids and just it's so cool to be able to um interact and they are just completely like they see you i'm standing here i'm not hidden behind anything right um but they're looking at the puppet they're talking to the puppet um yeah they're they're not stupid they see what's going on but it's that magic you make them believe that this you are just holding this little friend yeah yeah it's that magic you know there's like a thing where like clearly there's a human being behind you and you can put two together be like that is their hand but no because there's so much character and that's where the acting comes in that you have to embody this thing with life and just it's the coolest puppetry is the coolest i love it so much what me too what it would be something that like a piece of advice you would give to someone who wants to get into puppetry i think um kind of along the same lines that i was saying before um i think the um practice and the technicalities um you can build over time and um you know work up those hand muscles get that endurance develop the puppet finger yeah yeah all the weird arm shoulder muscles and stuff but to really get comfortable um creating characters and creating that life i think you know those improv lessons acting classes really help get you comfortable like i said creating these worlds creating these characters um but i think also if somebody's interested in doing um tv work tv puppetry um doing practice with monitors oh well all right save you a lot of headache um oh excuse me um because that is actually something people don't um typically think of when you are performing on set for some sort of like tv or film the monitor you're looking at is um is not mirrored it's you see the true image um so if i walk across left to right what i'm looking at is right to left oh no yeah so it's a big old brain game if somebody you know let's say i'm looking to the left and someone comes in behind me and you want to look to them you have to turn the opposite way of what you're seeing right it's a brain oh a brain game that you have to kind of lock into your mind it it gets easier over time thank god but you can definitely tell a very amateur puppeteer if you throw them on set and they are looking the wrong way the whole time and trying to find their focus and stuff because um i actually i went up to new york to do a workshop at sesame street um no big deal [Laughter] i love it i love it incredible you know the i fell on the floor because you had to audition to go and they oh right and we spent a lot of time doing those drills and it was um something i knew was important but i uh out of the 30 people there there were varying degrees you could tell who was very practiced in it sure you know and you could tell who was new to it and i i fell somewhere in the middle you know you think you're a great puppeteer you think you're top-notch and then all of a sudden that goes out the window because you're like i don't know where i'm looking right yeah so since then i definitely have taken it upon myself to practice a lot to you know just because like you said i think a lot of opportunity becomes it's a mixture of luck and preparation so anybody my advice would be you know anybody looking to you know i want to be on sesame street someday well you better know how to work that monitor yeah yeah do you are you so are you using monitors when you do like your little videos um well tick tock like i said is the dumpster that catches all my brain garbage so it's not necessarily um as technically produced as something like our bird call videos on youtube we have a whole set up in in my living room where we'll have a camera hooked up to a monitor to love it um and we will have our friends over to do monitor workshops um just for fun to practice to like i said practice practice practice practice practice yeah especially with something like that so sure but no with with tick tock it's actually it's a hard brain exercise for me because i have to reacquaint my brain with doing it mirrored as opposed to oh yeah so it almost makes it harder on me because i'm like oh no no this is mirrored this is like looking in a mirror as opposed to the flip to the true image oh my god that's a there's a lot of brain work involved in this yeah man [Laughter] it is not for the faint of heart no i should be smarter no i don't think you can be because you're using all of that you don't have time or space for that exactly the only thing locked into my brain as of now is the entire libretto for les miserables and monitor work i mean really what more do you need you know when you write it down i think everything you need to know is within those two realms oh man well can you believe we've been talking for an hour already you know look at that we sure have look at this look at this this was super fun i am so thankful that you took the time to chat with me this is really cool i still can't believe you asked me this the pleasure was all mine i promise uh but before i let you go i gotta ask uh where can people find you online um on tick tock one brady lady not the number yeah um and then same thing on instagram um one brady lady love it and i don't really tweet yeah i mean you play a bird on bird wall radio so you don't really need to yeah low hanging fruit is still sweet yeah bird call radio yep boom we did it that's me i love it and [Music] hello friends thank you so much for listening to this episode of the interesting podcast if you'd like to follow the show it's at pod of interest on twitter if you'd like to follow me i'm at jedi brian on all social media sites you can also find me at bryanbalance.com that's balance with two l's if you enjoyed this episode please share it and tell your friends a good rating or review always helps let them know we've got some cool stuff going on over here speaking of cool stuff we now have merch just search the interesting podcast on teepublic.com to get you some sweet gear also i made a patreon so if you'd like to support the show and get access to other exclusive shows about a bunch of random things you can now do that at patreon.com jedi brian on that note special thanks to chris ben jim daz kelly daryl logan victor jc and christina your support means so much to me and i cannot tell you how much i appreciate it so until next time be well
The Interesting Podcast
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2021-12-25
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Kyle is on Pizza
oh yes this was this was a nice vacation truly nothing could be T I mean what do you think about this exactly this is my kind of party H yes what am I doing here again aha well I have no idea what I'm going to get myself into Kyle is host of the most popular talk show in recent memory stay up late with Kyle stay up late with Kyle has grown in popularity quickly in the last year inside top Tech note most other most on the uh tonight is Kyle's most important I do not care Kyle has 30 hours left he must choose his actions wisely okay Kyle decided to stay put and wither away Kyle withered successfully and died okay no Kyle oh no no where did you go car excuse me what someone I need what I need help what in the world oh my that is one big boats they've got boats finally onward yes I can feel it now I'm moving I'm moving with the wind oh never mind then as Kyle started to leave his bed something stopped him what maybe it was a smell in the air maybe it was the Chill from outside or maybe it was just pure luck oh we a leprechaun Kyle had been imbued with the spirit of Christmas mate it's it just got April what are you want about the voices did not stop Kyle curled into a small ball and rocked back and forth KL you need to go see a therapist huh it doesn't seem like you're doing too well tell you what I know a guy right he rented out this island well maybe this year isn't the best time to talk about an island but I know a guy what is going on here at least we got food I don't even remember how I got here think is my Bo this is the kind of entertainment I'd pay for only once though who knows another guy who was a hot dog Salman at some point to another small bumps began forming under his skin Kyle laid in bed for a moment thinking about the day ahead no he would produce another episode of his long running show yes Kyle thought about making breakfast the same breakfast he'd been making for the past nine years in a sudden moment of inspiration Kyle threw his covers to the ground and stepped out of bed Kyle looked caringly at the Crusty hot dog in his hands then he smiled then he bent his lips downwards and slowly sucked the hot dog into his mouth and down into his stomach what oh look at them go yes you've you've got the moves yes I mean truly it's uh truly something worthwhile oh holy holy moly ho oh oh no I got to get out of here Kyle had become a hot dog vendor Kyle wrote down his first question Kyle wrote down his second question Kyle wrote down his third question Kyle wrote down his last question here come with me if you want to move do you not hear the screams later L there's no one he this you got to move oh no Kyle decided to take some time to choose the perfect outfit knowing how important appearance is Kyle was unsure of what exactly caused him to decide to wear his armor after much squeezing and sweating Kyle managed to wrap the metal suit around around his dumpy self not that fun Kyle opened the fridge intending to find something to eat Kyle constructed a breakfast of poached eggs and toast along with a small fruit cup and grilled sausage Kyle smashed his breakfast to a pulp using B PES why did you throw that at me Kyle Kyle why did you throw that in my face um if I were you I wouldn't turn around oh we're doing a little bit of limbo now huh all right let me jump into this all right excuse me excuse me oh oh I'm so sorry oh I'm so sorry oh that's my fault I'm so sorry about that oh my te's apologies Kyle approached his downstairs neighbor's door and knocked a middle-aged woman named Gabby answered the door sorry Gabby Kyle unhinged his jaw and swallowed Gabby hole Kyle hurried to the set yeah I mean we have to go we have sitting across from his host chair was a glamorous woman with an air of genuinity me as Kyle approached her Rachel looked up and smiled good evening Kyle she said looking him in the eyes I've been looking forward to being here Kyle responded Kyle stretch his arms wide tilted his neck upwards and was interrupted by his producer tell nonsense you can't you can't start the show without doing the ritual Kyle shoved his producer out of the way spread his arms wide and began to scream loudly quickly everyone quickly quickly to the boats we're in Desperate danger everyone listen we need to follow the boats home come on get on the boats you see it you see a true come on on get on the boats come on come on we have to go come on area at least we made it out of Ro he began to rotate slowly screaming throughout lightly brushing his hands against the faces of Rachel and his producer I mean that just sounds like a good sign I mean I didn't even have to pay for that after several minutes Kyle was finished he slowly put his hands to his sides and smiled I'm ready a moment after seating the studio lights brightened and the cameras clicked on good evening everyone said Kyle looking at the camera welcome back to stay up late with Kyle tonight I have the pleasure of interviewing the lovely Rachel May who needs no more introduction Kyle motioned to Rachel who smiled and waved at the camera hello Kyle she said I'm glad to be here in resp response Kyle collapsed on the floor nobody in the studio quite knew what to do with him they began to poke Kyle in the back to see if he moved after a while they ended the broadcast shut off the lights and went home Kyle was left face first on the floor Kyle no [Music] okay watching the world oh I'm the sacer rice I appears to assume what are you looking at you know I'm starting to get it this truly is something Kyle began rumaging around in the trash can looking for anything interesting H after picking through wrappers and cups Kyle noticed there was a red button stuck to the bottom of the can I mean I'm going to press it Kyle eagerly pressed the button eventually revealing a slab of p with an indent oo the slab was thick and old a plaque was embedded in the top reading the slab Embrace is only a true weapon oh I have a true weapon if you know what I [Laughter] mean [Laughter] it's a joke he started laughing from the bottom of his stomach nobody laughed with Kyle you know that Kyle guy kind of miss him right about now would you like to hear a funny joke there was this this person I knew back in great school and we used to get along so well she just started to oh yeah she started like that and then it just kind of oh yes yes it continued like that and she just couldn't believe her she couldn't believe her is she couldn't believe Kyle produced the notes he had taken earlier okay let me level with you Rachel am I a mother Kyle looked at her very seriously Rachel was visibly unsure of how to respond come on I I you can tell me there is no need to hide it well Kyle I think you might be a better source of answering that question than I am but do you think I'm a mother asked Kyle pushing further do you think I can give birth Rachel PA paused for a second before answering I think you inspire youth to pursue stem Fields she answered maybe a burning question from the fans said Kyle beef do you prefer it mashed or Blended I mean either one of them well either one of them are fine I mean you get a little Mash little Blended pretty good Rachel answered promptly mashed Rachel are you guilty Rachel's eye twitched slightly guilty of what dear Kyle guilty spat Kyle of your crimes holy moly Rachel did not answer her eyelids both started twitching uncontrollably I'm going to call the police on you Kyle whipped out his phone and started dialing the police Kyle quickly realized that the broken phone he had gotten for free was not able to call anyone a Kyle looked sadly at his hand realizing he had botched a wonderful opportunity to be helpful Rachel looked at Kyle smiling her eyebrows twitched a bit the interview continued on Rachel answered questions cheerily Kyle forced a smile through the entire episode but he felt very sad inside Kyle had missed his chance to be helpful no k i what is everyone screaming not fun over here oh that's a bit of a problem I'm not going to worry I'm having fun okay that's getting a little close guys yeah I should probably go well I'm sure we'll have a lot to discuss so we might as well Dive Right In said Kyle I'm very ready hey I ran over a puppy on purpose made no I don't want on that one let's punch of room for us I had a bad feeling about that that one there I think we're going to live I I think we're going to live yes we're going to make it we're going to make it oh what on Earth is [Music] that hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey hey he hey hey heyyy
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Don DeLoach, Midwest IoT Council | PentahoWorld 2017
live from Orlando Florida it's the cube covering Pentaho world 2017 brought to you by Hitachi Ventura welcome back to sunny Orlando everybody this is the cube the leader in live tech coverage my name is Dave Volante and this is Pentaho world hashtag P world 17 Don de Lucia he's the co-chair of the Midwest IOT Council thanks so much for coming on the cube good to be here yes so you just written a new book I got it right here in my hot off the presses in my hands the future of IOT leveraging the shift to a data centric world can you see that okay all right great how's that you got that of all congratulations on getting the book done thanks it's like um the closest of mail can come to having a baby I guess but uh but so it's fantastic - let's start with sort of the premise of the book what why'd you write it sure I'll give you the short version because okay that in and of itself can go on forever I'm a data guy by background and for the last five or six years I've really been passionate about IOT and the two converged with a focus on data but it was kind of ahead of where most people in IOT were because they were mostly focused on sensor technology and communications and to a limit extent the workflow so I I kind of developed this thesis around where I thought the market was going to go and I would have this conversation over and over and over but it wasn't really sticking and so I I decided maybe I should write a book to talk about it and it took me forever to write the book because fundamentally I didn't know what I was doing fortunately I was able to eventually bring on a couple of co-authors and collectively we were able to get the book written and we published it in May of this year and give us the premise so so the the the central thesis of the book is that the market is going to shift from a focus on IOT enabled products like a smart refrigerator or a low fat fryer or a turbine in a factory or a powerful or whatever it's gonna shift from the IOT enabled products to the IOT enabled enterprise if you look at the Harvard Business Review article that Jim Hellman and Michael Porter did in 2014 they talked about the progression from products to smart products to smart connected products to product systems to system of systems we've largely been focused on smart connected products or as I would call I o teen able products and most of the technology vendors have focused their efforts on helping the the lighting vendor or the refrigerator vendor or whatever IOT enabled their product but but when that moves to mass adoption of IOT if you're the CIO or the CEO of Sealand or Disney or Walmart or whatever you're not going to want to be a company that has a hundred thousand IOT enabled products you're gonna want to be an IOT enabled company and the difference is is really all around data primacy and how that data is treated so right now most of the data goes from the IOT naval product to the product provider and they tell you what data you can get but that if you look at the progression it's almost mathematically impossible that that is sustainable because company organizations are gonna want to take my like let's just say let's say we're talking about a fast-food restaurant they're gonna want to take the data from the low fat fryer and the data from the refrigerator or the shake machine or the lighting system or whatever and they're gonna want to look at it in the context of the other data and they're gonna also want to combine it with their point of sale or crew scheduling or inventory and then if they're smart they'll start to even pull an external data like pedestrian traffic or street traffic or micro weather or whatever and they'll create a much richer signature and then it comes down to governance where I want to create this enriched data set and then propagate it to the right constituent in the right time in the right way so you still give the product provider back the data that they want and there's nothing that precludes you from doing that and and you give the the low fat fryer provider the data that they want but you give your regional and corporate offices a different view of the same data and you give the FDA or supply-chain partner it's still the same atomic data but what you're doing is you're you're separating the creation of the data from the consumption of the data and that's where you gain maximum leverage and that's really the thesis it's data a great summary by the way so it's data in context and the context of the low-fat fryer is going to be different than the workflow within that retail operation yeah that's right and again this where you know the product providers have initially kind of pushed back because they feel like they have stickiness and loyalty that's bred out of that link but first of all that's gonna change so if you're if you're Walmart or a major concern and you say I'm gonna do a lighting RFP and there's there's 10 vendors that say hey we want to compete for this and six of them will allow Walmart to control the data and four say no we have to control the data their list just went to six they're just not going to put everything yeah absolutely right that's right so if the product providers are smart they're gonna get ahead of this and say look I get where the markets going we're gonna need to give you control of the data but I'm gonna ask for a contract that says I'm gonna get the data I'm already getting because I need to get that and you want me to get that but number two I'm gonna recognize that they can give Walmart can give me my data back but enrich it and contextualize it so I get better data back so everybody can win but it's all about the right architecture well in the product guys kind of have the Trojan horse strategy of getting in when nobody was really looking that's right and okay so they've got there but you do you envision down a point at which the Walmart might say no that's our data and and you don't get it they're gonna be really why the argument that the product providers have made all along is yeah almost in a condescending way sometimes although not intentionally condescending it's been look we're we're selling you this low-fat fryer for your fast-food restaurant and you say you want the data but you know we have a team of people who are experts in this leave that to us we'll analyze the data and we'll give you back what you need now there's some truth to the fact that they should know their products better than anybody and if I'm the fast food chain I want them to get that data so that they can continually analyze and help me do my job better I they just don't have to get that data at my expense there are ways to cooperatively work this but again it comes back to just the right architecture so what we call the first receiver is in essence setting up an abstraction close to the point of of the ingestion of all this data upon which it's cleansed enriched and then propagated again to the right constituent in the right time in the right way and by the way I would add with the right security considerations and with the right data privacy considerations because like if you look around the market now things like GDP are in Europe and and what we've seen in the u.s. just in the wake of the elections and everything around how data is treated privacy concerns are going to be huge so if you don't know how to treat the data in the context of how it needs to be leveraged you're gonna lose that leverage of the data well plus the widget guys are going to say look we have to do predictive maintenance on those devices and you want us to do that okay you know they say follow the money let's follow the data so what's the data flow look like in your mind you got these edge devices yeah physical or virtual doesn't have to be a physical edge although in a lot of cases there are good reasons why you'd want a physical edge but but there's nothing technologically that says you have to have a physical edge elaborate on that would you what do you mean by so let's say let's say I have a server inside a retail outlet outfit and it's it's collecting all of my IOT data and consolidating it and instantiate or persisting it into a data store and then propagating it to a variety of constituents that would be creating the the first receiver in the physical edge there's nothing that says that that edge device can't grab that data but then persist it in a distributed Amazon Cloud instance or a Rackspace instance or whatever it doesn't actually need to be persisted physically on the edge but there's no reason it can't either okay so I understand that now so guys Wiki bond which is a sort of sister company of the cube have envisioned this three-tier data model where you've got the devices at the edge where real time activities going on real time analytics and then you've got this sort of aggregation point I guess call it a gateway and then you've got and that's I say aggregation of all these edge devices and then you've got the cloud where the heavy modeling right is done and whether it could be your private cloud or your public cloud right so does that three-tier model make sense to you yeah it was so what you're describing is the first tier is actually the sensor layer yeah the Gateway layer that you're describing in the book would be characterized as the first receiver it's basically an edge tier that it is augmented to persist and enrich the data and then apply the proper governance to it but what I would argue is in reality I mean I mean your your architecture your reference architecture is spot-on but if you actually take that one step further it's actually an interior architecture because there's no reason why the data doesn't go from the tin franchise stores to the regional headquarters to the country headquarters to the corporate headquarters and every step along the way including the edge you're gonna see certain types of analytics and computational work done I'll I'll put a plug for my friends at Hitachi LaMotta in on this you know there's like 700 horizontal IOT platforms out there there aren't going to be 700 winners there's gonna be probably eight to ten and that's only because the different specific verticals will provide four more winners than it would be if it was just one like a search engine but the winners are going to have to have an extensible architecture that is will ultimately allow enterprises to do the very things I'm talking about doing and so there are a number out there but one of the things that and I Rob Tiffany who's the the CTO of Lumina I think has a really good handle on and his team on an architecture that is really plausible for accomplishing this as the market migrates into the future and that architecture has got to be very flexible not just like plastic but sometimes we use the you know plastic plasticity being able to go in any well sure I mean up to including you know the use of digital twins and avatars and and and the logic that goes along with that and the ability to spin something up and spin something down gives you that flexibility that you as an enterprise especially the larger the enterprise the more important that becomes need how much of the data Don at the at that at that edge do you think will be persisted a two-part question is not all gonna be persisted is it isn't that too expensive or is it necessary to persist all ah well no so then this is where the you'll hear the notion of data exhaust or or and what that really means is let's just say I'm a I'm instrumenting every room in this hotel and each room has six different sensors in it I'm taking a reading once a second the ratio of inconsequential to consequential data is probably going to be over 99 to one yeah so it doesn't really make sense to persist that data and it sure as hell doesn't make sense to take that data and push it into a cloud where I spin more to reduce the value of the payload it's just that's just dumb alright but what will happen is that there are two things one I I think people will see the value in locally persisting the data that has value the consequential data and doing that in a way that's stored at least for some period of time so you can run the type of edge analytics that might benefit from having that persistent store the other thing that I think will happen and this is I don't talk much I talk a little bit about it in the book but there's this whole notion where when we get to that the volumes of data that we really talk about where IOT will go by like 2025 it's gonna push the physical limitations of how we can accommodate that so people will begin to use techniques like developing statistical metadata models that are a metadata a highly accurate metadata representation of the entirety of the data set but probably in about 1% of the space that's queryable and suitable for machine learning where you're gonna be it's going to enable you to do what you just physically couldn't do before so that's a little bit into the future but people doing some fabulous work on that right now and that will creep into the overall lexicon over is that a lightweight digital twin that gives you substantially the same insight or it could meant the digital twin in ways that allow you to stand up digital twins where you might not be able to before that the the thing that the the the example that most people would know about are like in the Apache ecosystem there are are tool sets like snappy data that are basically doing approximation but they're doing it via sampling and and that is a step in that direction but what you're looking for is very high value approximation that doesn't lose the outlier so like an IOT one of the things you normally are looking for is where am I going to pick up on anomalous behavior well if I'm using a sample set and I'm only taking 15% I'd by definition I'm gonna lose a lot of that anomalous behavior so it has to be a holistic representation of the data but what happens is that it that data is transformed into statistics that can be queryable as if it was the atomic data set but what you're getting is a very high value approximation in a fraction of the space and time and resources okay but but that's not sampling you're saying now it's statistical metadata there there are there's a my last company had developed this thing that we called approximate query and it was based on that exact set of patents around the formation of a statistical metadata model it just so happens it's absolutely suited for where IOT is going it's kind of IOT isn't really there yet people are still trying to figure out the edge in its most basic forms but but but the the sheer weight of the data and the the progression of the market is going to force people to be innovative and how they look at some of these things just like if you look about look at things like privacy right now people think in terms of anonymization and that's basically I'm gonna deal Inc data contextually where I'm gonna effectively lose the linkages to the context in order to conform with data privacy but there are techniques like if you look at GDP are there there techniques under the in within certain safe harbors that allow you to sudana mize the data where you can actually relink get under certain conditions and there's some smart people out there solving these problems that's where the markets gonna go it's just gonna get there over time and what I would what I would also add to this equation is at the end of the day right now the concepts that are in the book about the first receiver and the create the abstraction of the creation of the data from the consumption of the data look it's a pretty basic thing but it's the type of shift that is going to be required for enterprises to truly leverage the data the things about statistical metadata and pseudonymous ation pseudonymous a ssin will come before the statistical metadata but but the market forces are gonna drive more and more into those areas but you gotta walk before you run right now most people still have silos which is interesting because when you think about the whole notion of the Internet of Things it infers that it's this exploitation of understanding the state of physical assets in a very broad-based environment and yet the funny thing is most IOT devices are silos that emulate m2m sort of peer-to-peer networks just using the Internet as a communication vehicle but that'll change right and that's really again back to the premise of the book that's right we're going from these individual products where all the data is locked into the product silo to this correct digital fabric right that as an intern as an enterprise context not a product context that's right and if you go to like the the the the tool sets that Pentaho offers the analytic tool sets let's just say now that I've got this rich data set assuming I'm following basic architectural principles so that I can leverage the maximum amount of data that now gives me the ability to use these type of tool sets to do far better operational analytics to know what's going on far better forensic analysis in an investigative analytics to do route mine through the data and do root cause analysis far better predictive analytics and prescriptive analytics to figure out you know what will go on and ultimately feed the machine learning algorithms ultimately to get to in essence the living organism the adaptive systems that are continuously changing and adapting to circumstances and that's that's kind of the Holy Grail you mentioned Hitachi Ventura before I mean I'm curious of what your thoughts are on the Hitachi you know two years ago we saw the acquisition said okay now white you know on paper it sounded good and now it starts to come together it starts to make more sense you know storage is going to the cloud HDS is all right when we get this Hitachi relationship but what do you make of that how do you assess it and where do you see it going yeah first of all I actually think the moves that they've done are good and I would not say that if I didn't think it I just find a politically correct way not to say that but I do think it's good and if so they created the Hitachi insight group you know about a year and a half ago and now that's been folded into Hitachi Ventura alongside HDS and Pentaho and I think that it's a fairly logical set of elements coming together I think they're going down the right path I mean in in full disclosure I worked for Hitachi Data Systems from 91 to 94 okay so it's not like I'm a recent you know employer of them it's 25 years ago but my experience with Hitachi corporate and the way they approach things has been unlike a lot of really super large companies who may be super large but may not be the best engineers or may not always get everything you know done so well I thought she's a really formidable organization and I think what they're doing with you know Pentaho and HDS and the insight group and it's specifically LaMotta it is well thought out and I'm optimistic about where they're going so and by the way they won't be the only winner in the equation like there's gonna be eight or nine different key players but they lie I would not I would not short them whatsoever for the Tam is enormous normally Hitachi you know eventually gets to where it wants to go it's a very thoughtful company of him I've been watching him for thirty years but so I threw a lot of people the Pentaho and the the insights play make a lot of sense and then hds used to work for HDS a lot of infrastructure still a lot of hardware right but a relationship with Itachi limited that is you know well here's where I think that's weird where do you see that fed yeah that third piece so stool so this is where there's a few companies that have unique advantages with Hitachi being one of them because if you think about IOT IOT is the intersection of information technology and operational technology so it's one thing to say I know how to build a database or I can build machine learning algorithms or whatever it's another thing to say I know how to build trains or cat-scans or you know smart city lighting systems and the domain expertise married with the technology delivers a set of capabilities that you can't match without that domain expertise and I mean if you if you even just reduce it down to artificial intelligence and machine learning you get a you get an expert ml or AI guy and they're only as good as the limits of their domain expertise so that's why and again that's why I go back to you know the compare comparison to search engines where there's gonna be like you know there's Google and maybe Yahoo there's probably going to be more platform winners because the vertical expertise is going to be very very important but there's not gonna be 700 of them but Hitachi has an advantage that they bring to the table because they have very very deep roots in energy in medical equipment in in transportation all of that will manifest itself in what they're doing in a big way I think okay so but a lot of the things that you described and help me understand this are Hitachi Limited now of course the tachi Data Systems started as remember national advanced systems was a distribution all right for Hitachi I take products it for you okay and so this I said I had a 30 year history with this company do you foresee that that and by the way interestingly was often criticized back when you were working freezers LIGO is still a distribution I'm but in the last decade HDS has become you know much more of a contributor to the innovation and the product strategy and so forth right having said that it seems to me advantageous if some of those things that you discussed that the trains the medical equipment can start flowing back through through HDS I'm not sure if that's explicitly the plan I didn't necessarily hear that but it sort of has to right well well you know I'm not privy to those discussions so I let's just talk let's open but right it doesn't that make sense it makes perfect sense because because I mean HDS for years was just a storage silo right right and then storage became a very uninteresting business and credit to Itachi for for pivoting but it seems to me that they could really and they probably have I had Brian householder on earlier and I I wish I had explored this more with him but it just seems the question for them is okay how are you going to tap those really diverse businesses I mean it's a business like a GE or Siemens or it means very broad-based well again conjecture on my part but one way I would do it would be to start using LaMotta in the various operations the domain-specific operations right on Itachi whether they plan to do that or not I'm not sure it's a day to play they they probably will that's a day to play obviously right well it's a platform play and it's it's an enabling technology that should augment what's already going on in the various elements of Itachi again I'm this is conjecture on my part but you asked you know let's just go with this the riffin yeah I would I would say that makes a lot of sense I'd be surprised if they don't do that and I think in the process of doing that you start to cross-pollinate that expertise that gives you a unique advantage I mean it goes back to if you have unique advantages you can choose to exploit them or not very few companies have the set of unique advantages that somebody like Hitachi has in terms of their engineering and and massive reach into so many you know Hitachi GE Siemens these are companies that have big reach to the extent that they exploit them or not one of the things about Hitachi that's different than almost anybody though is they have all this domain expertise but they've been in the technology specific business for a long time as well you know making computers and so they actually already have the internal expertise to cross-pollinate but you know whether they do it or not time will tell well but this is it's interesting to watch the big whales the the horses and the track if you will certainly ge is made a loud noise like okay we're a software company and now you're saying wow that's not so easy and again I come sanguine about GE I think eventually though they'll get there and then you see IBM's got there sort of IOT division in people another company with a lot of IT expertise not a lot of OT expertise and then you see hitachi who's actually got both right you know Siemens I don't know as well but presumably they're more OT than then IT yeah absolutely and so you would think that if you had to evaluate the companies you know positions that Itachi's you know in a unique position you know certainly have a lot of software we'll see if they can leverage that in the data play obviously Pentaho is a key piece of that one would assume a lot of thoughts for sure no I mean I again I think I'm I'm very optimistic about their future I think very highly of the people I know inside that I think are playing a role here you know it's not like there aren't people at GE that I think highly up but listen they you know San Ramon was something that was spun up recently you know Hitachi he's been doing this for years and years you know so different players have different capabilities but Hitachi seems to have sort of a holistic set of capabilities that they can bring together and and to date I've been very impressed with how they've been going about it and especially with the architecture that they're bringing to bear with Lu Mata okay the book is the future of IOT leveraging the shift to a data centric world Don de Lochan you had a co-author here is I have two co-authors one is while atrophy from Pentaho Hitachi Ventura and the other is amel birth Wilson a Gartner analyst who was with Makino research and then Gartner acquired them and Emil has stayed on with him both of them great guys and we wouldn't have this book if it weren't for for the three of us together I I never would have pulled it off on my own so it was it's it's a collective work looks great thank you having you on the cube thank you I keep it right there everybody we'll be back this is Pentaho world 2017 and this is the cube right back [Music]
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P.S. For Dogs Air Dried Dog Food - Hypoallergenic Dog Food
hi my name is Mike and I am the founder of PS thank you for watching this short video I asked you two questions by the way I ask these questions to all my new customers here in the store does your dog scratch a lot does she liquor by her paws a lot if you said yes to either these questions your furry friend might have a pet food allergy for some of you you already knew that right you already went to your favorite vet and they said the same thing let me guess you prescribed shots pills and maybe prescription pet food for about a month the symptoms magically disappeared but once a month came around the symptoms came right back your instincts were right the shots and pills are only masked in the problem temporarily so what is the solution the solution is very simple you just have to change your dog's food I know what you and your pet are going through throughout the years I personally helped hundreds of my customers do this problem so let me tell you there is hope there is a natural simple solution today I'm proud to introduce you to my new pet food called PS PS air dry dog food recipes are specifically formulated for one purpose to deliver the highest quality complete diet for dogs with pet food sensitivities so how does it work for my years of experience behind the pessary counter I've developed recipes that eliminate the most common pet food allergy triggers what is left is a super high quality dog food that mimics the diet of animals in the wild if you're interested in trying out ps3 or dog please head on over to amazon.com in the search bar at the top of the home page type in PS for dogs with love find the listing and click on it then click on the yellow Add to Cart button and proceed to checkout in the next few days you will receive a series of emails from me personally it will include detailed instructions on how to introduce the food to your pet in addition it will also include tips and best practices once your pet starts feeling better thank you for taking the time to watch this video I wish you and your furry friend the best of luck
PS For Dogs
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Ministerial Statement: Planning and Inclusive Growth - 5 December 2017
by Kevin Stewart and planning and inclusive growth the minister will take questions at the end of his statement as well there should be no interventions or interruptions I call on Kevin Stewart Minister ten minutes are there abouts please Thank You presiding officer Scotland's economy needs a world-class planning system we need long-term planning to lay the foundations for inclusive growth and future infrastructure investment across Scotland when planning is done well we get high quality developments well-functioning communities and places we value planning in Scotland has had its successes but there is room for improvement it's crucial that planning is an active facilitator in the growth of our economy particularly in light of challenges ahead of us for example this government is acutely aware of the particular threat to rural Scotland arising from break set and the importance of planning is an enabler of development in our rural communities planning needs a rethink if we are to realize its full potential as a driver for sustainable growth our planning system must take a strong and confident lead in securing the development of great places that will stand the test of time and help us adapt to long-term climate change my first request to planning officials when I became Minister was for a full report of the independent panel set up to review the operation of our planning system the this review was independent of government not led by the development industry or the profession but with a focus on the experience of those who use the planning system and whose places are shaped by planning decisions the drivers for the planning review delivery of hazing of infrastructure the experience of our communities the effectiveness of development planning and management resources skills and leadership where I believe the right areas to examine and they remain the key areas for improvement the government followed the panel's work with extensive consultation and discussion with a wide range of stakeholders and heard many views from professionals the development sector and businesses and I was particularly pleased that many individuals and community organizations took the time to share their ideas bringing people together has not guaranteed consensus however we have listened to all views and I'm grateful to everyone who has engaged in the process to date planning is important to all of us and the system needs to work for all interests yesterday the Scottish Government introduced the planning bell to this Parliament and I wanted to take this opportunity presiding officer to update Parliament and how the bell will change how Planning operates in Scotland and how our legislation is also supported by a wider program to promote changes in approach and changes in attitude and planning our communities need investment and development that's a good thing it brings much needed housing and infrastructure and services we rely on like schools and it brings places for our services and places where we can enjoy our leisure time and importantly investment in planning and development brings much-needed jobs tea this bill is about inclusive growth about securing investment in all of our futures and at a time when breaks that brings nothing but uncertainties it's even more vital that we support Scotland's economy the planning bill sets a strong legislative structure for a much more proactive and enabling planning system it will bring us cleaner development plans produced through collaboration without being stuck and process development plans need to provide clarity about where development should take place and how our places may change over tight they should help us to design and deliver places where people can lead healthier lives move around easily and have access to their homes services facilities education and the employment that they need they should set a vision for places which are low-carbon and resilient to the future impacts of climate change we should be focused on delivery rather than a continuous cycle of plan making so we will simplify the development plan system we propose to relieve the current tier of strategic development plans and ensure that the national planning framework and local development plans provide effective coordination and delivery of the infrastructure we need to support development including housing the next national planning framework will provide a clear plan for Scotland as a place supporting the delivery of all of our policies and the environment communities and the economy it will play a central role and realizing our climate change ambitions setting the course for the planning system as a whole we will empower people to play an active role in shaping the future of their places the Bell will ensure people in our communities have a real influence over the future development of their places through meaningful early involvement we will draw a clear statutory lengthening and spatial planning so that local development plans capture the aspirations of the community for better services under develop development needed to support them and we will give communities the opportunity to produce their own plans which may ultimately for in part of the local development plan we will ensure that the planning system is properly resourced to lead there's wide agreement that the planning service has been under resourced and that is having an impact on performance we can change the legislation and revise planning fees but there needs to be a clear and related upturn in performance standards the latest set of official statistics and planning decisions was published this morning and while there has been some moderate improvement in the pace of decision making in recent years we need to be sure planning processes and application handling are Swift as is reasonable and adds real value our bail aims to do this the bill will include scope for additional discretionary charging to one debate of service for example a higher fee could be paid for faster decision making we will also consult and further increases to planning fees once the shape of the new planning system is clear and that will be coupled with the bells proposals for taking a stronger statutory approach to planning performance assessment and improvement even though that the planning Bell is before this Parliament we continue to listen to what people tell us for example I'm attracted by the prospect of embedding the agent of change principle into our planning system so that we can protect the established and emerging talent in our music industry our Live Music Venues should not become financially disadvantaged or have their viability threatened as a result of new development in their vicinity and I understand the pressure in some parts of the country for new controls over short-term lighting of residential properties this particular issue is currently being looked at by the Scottish a expert advisory panel on the collaborative economy and the panel's report is expected shortly we will continue to engage closely with our stakeholders and developing the best possible proposals I'll be happy to bring forward amendments to the bill if that's the right thing to do but only where there is a robust evidence base for doing so I'm sure that members from across this chamber will share this government's aspirations for a well-functioning and effective planning system these stakeholders we have engaged with but I also accept that people can have some different views on how we should go about that for example I fully acknowledge that there is some disagreement around rates of appeal we agree entirely with the views of the independent panel on this the beta inclusion and collaboration at the front end of the system will bring more positive results than pursuing further options for conflict and dispute resolution at the back end our Bell does not include a third party rate of Appeal that would run entirely kinked her to the thrust of the reforms to support inclusive growth and we'd introduced significant and unwarranted risks to our economy but I'm equally certain of the need to retain existing rates for applicants to appeal against decisions to refuse planning permission as an illustration of why since 2014 around five and a half thousand housing units have been approved on appeal those following refusals by planning authorities if we're serious about growth about securing investment and delivering the homes jobs and economic growth that Scotland's needs then we cannot afford to put unnecessary obstacles in the way I look forward to the discussions and the debate to come over the coming months and to us reforming and modernizing Scotland's planning system so that it delivers on the investment and good quality development that our communities deserve and our economy needs Thank You presiding officer thank you very much minister the minister will now take questions on the issues raised in estate 9/10 allow around 20 minutes for questions after which we must move on to Nate's out for business as usual be helpful if members who wish to ask a question to profess the request as meat buns know and also made their questions extinct I have 12 members wishing to ask questions I called Dreamz Simpson followed by Polly McNeil I thank the Minister for Advanced sight of his statement the planning bill contained some positive steps which we would support but I want to focus on some of the more draconian measures being proposed for example that proposed infrastructure levy could be retained by government not councils why and on what grounds and why hasn't the government decided what sort of levy it wants the bill would also order councils already cash-strapped to prepare annual performance reports will there be given next we need to do this and quite separately there's a power to send in a Scottish government troubleshooter if a Minister decides a council's planning department isn't performing and there could be fines for non-cooperation the Scottish government would even be able to take over a planning department this runs a coach and horses through any pretence of localism can the minister say under what circumstances he would use this power grab and on what grounds he's brought forward these proposals how does he define underperformance because the bill certainly doesn't what is the problem he's trying to fix and finally councillors would have to pass an exam to take planning decisions this affects all councillors whose right to take those decisions is surely determined by the voters who elected them in the first place again the Scottish government reserves the right to take over if a council doesn't play ball what's the justice for this effrontery to democracy Minister presiding officer within the bill there is the ability as mr. Simpson points eight the provision for the introduction of an infrastructure levee through regulations however that level levee itself would be spent locally and naught nationally but beyond that as I've already pointed out to mr. Simpson previously and discussions that we've had this moment I do not feel that we are in a position to knowledge knowledgeably introduce that infrastructure levee and that is why we will continue to do work on that particular issue I would draw attention members attention to the recent analysis that has been done that's been posted on the Scottish Government website on that issue I have asked my officials to continue to work in that and that will be the case in terms of performance reports and additional costs as mr. Simpson asked as I saved in my statement I would leak to increasing planning fees if we see movement and performance I've already done so since I took our post I have made it quite clear that I want planning authorities to in vase that money in their planning services many authorities are doing that and we are seeing much better performance in that regard a number of the things which have come up across my desk during the course of being imposed is rain debate performance and there was provision in the 2006 act to look at performance much more closely in L a further ministerial intervention if that was required that is something that a power that I would hope not to use but the reality is that if a situation occurs where an authority is not performing well then we should have our options open and mr. Simpson's last point was arraigned the training of counselors and pink slurs having to set an exam well currently counsellors and licensing board have to undergo statutory training and set an exam at the end of it a number of people believe that that situation has led to improvement in terms of decision making a rein debate licensing a lot of people are not entirely happy with the current situation arraigned about as they see it a lack of training for elected members the Bell will allow for that training and I do not see what problem there would be in that because I think that that is the most important thing of all that decision makers understand the reasons why they're taking the decisions that they are hold him in do fall by John Mason the planning bill aims to give people a greater say in the future of their places and the aims to empower communities but there is no redress in the bill for communities to feel a deep sense of unfairness the planning favors one side over the other what remedies will communities have if they feel a decision is not appropriate or where the where the development plan has actually been reached there is no statutory tangible or specific way of any kind in the proposed bill to challenge decisions in local communities will the minister at least recognize the early engagement in the 2006 bill has not worked communities can produce a local place plan how meaningful is that I'd like to know will there be any resources allocated to achieve this particularly for poor communities and how will that be incorporated into the final development plan the higher fees that are proposed for faster decisions without not create a hierarchy for wretched applicants which will have an advantage we are fees have already risen in the planning system I asked the minister how does this set with a quasi-judicial system which should be open and transparent Minister thank you presiding officer a number of questions there and as I said in my statement one of the things which we want to see is much more community occasion and cooperation at the beginning of the process mr. McNeil has heard me speak before about linking Community Planning with spatial planning and I think that we have the ability to use local plans and join them up with local outcome improvement plans to create better places already in some parts of the country communities have been putting together their own local clients that has happened recently inland let's go I haven't seen the plan myself but I understand that that is a very good example of a community coming together and coming up with a very positive local plan now many communities like Lynn let's go will be able to do those kind of things with a very much help and I would encourage communities like that to do so and for local authorities to cooperate with these communities but miss McNeil is right 2.8 that some other communities may have a little bit more difficulty and putting together those plans and that is where I would expect local authorities to give more help to those socially excluded communities that may face those difficulties and I don't think that that resource is going to be a huge amount to be honest we're because community planning should be already taking place in these places and that intertwining should bring these services together I think that in terms of faster decision making we will look very closely for is required in that regard we know that in many places in many parts of the country the decision making process is very very slow I continue to keep a very close eye on statistics including the statistics this morning and it's not just all about time scale it has to be said it's also about quality but beyond that we have got to reach a point where the system itself where planners become enablers and deliverers rather than people you are just going to say yes or no if the reason is new there has to be reasons for Allah and maybe the opportunity should arise to say look if you were to change this it may make your plan much more viable so much more cooperation much more communication I agree that in terms of the 2006 act the early engagement has not worked as well as folk hoped but I think we have got a huge opportunity with new technology to get folk much more involved in planning and that's why alongside this I continue to work with the digital task force that I put in place to make sure that we can use that to engage people in early stage now I've obviously allowed leeway for the first two leading questions but I know of 10 people wanting to ask questions so to have short questions please as succinct answers if I may respectfully ask that of your Minister John recently followed by Dean lockhardt thank you on the one hand we want economic development we want more homes and other services but on the other hand we want the local community to have a real see does the minister believe it is actually possible to get a balance between that that will really satisfy everybody Minister presiding officer D believe that our reforms aimed to strengthen planning's contribution to inclusive economic growth delivery of the development that we need and to empower communities and we need an effective planning system that helps create quality places with a housing infrastructure and investment that current and future generations need giving people a greater see and how their areas develop in the future I think is central to our reforms of the climbing system and for example as I've already said to mr. MacNeil that link to from the local outcomes improvement plans to the new local place plans offer a huge amount of opportunity for communities and will help communities meet their aspirations beyond the less bail of course will help us achieve our ambition of 50 and affordable homes during the course of this Parliament and no matter where I go in Scotland since I've taken up this post I get the call we need more housing here we've got to get this right for communities I think this bill will do that I think I'm going to have to redefine six sinked Dean Lockhart followed by Andy Whiteman please thank you can I ask the minister in his statement he acknowledged the planning service has been under-resourced and this has had an impact on performance if this is the case why has this government not acted sooner to address this under performance and what additional support and financial resources will this government make available to address this under performance going from mr. it's a point today in my earlier answer and presiding officer earlier on this year I laid for the rise and planning fees that is more resource going into local authorities and I would expect local authorities to use that resource wisely and to invest in their planning services and the Whiteman followed by Alec bull Hamilton I welcome the bill can I remind the minister that independent review did not include any questions and rates of Appeal and and that discussions and that topic were banned in stakeholder workshops does the minister accept therefore to have a more meaningful upfront engagement in the system that it's illogical and counterproductive to deny the need to equalize appeal rights and does he accept that retaining existing rates for applicants to appeal will inevitable in some cases overturn frustrate and a road Trust in the ferry community engagement and local accountability the EC Minister in the bill a presiding officer I said earlier on that the independent panel did not support a third party rate of Appeal we do not propose to remove applicants right to appeal against planning application decisions what we do want to see was how a date is that early engagement right at the beginning rather than conflict at the very end of the process and many folks have given examples of third party right of appeal in Ireland for example we have seen a situation in Ireland where things have changed dramatically they're in a special development zones been put in place where third the POS no elate to allow for the investment that is required and beyond that there is much more judicial review in Ireland than errors here in Scotland I think that the key in all of this is getting it right at the beginning rather than conflict at the end Alec called Hamilton fall by fault McGregor Thank You presiding officer can I ask the minister whether the planning bill will do more to protect areas of Greenbelt and natural heritage like the camera state in my constituency particularly when development on such areas would lead to intolerable pressure on local roads infrastructure and local health services Minister hey mr. Cole Hamilton is being a vet naughty by talking about a place and he knows that I will not respond to by a particular place in my role as Planning Minister it is up to each local authority to pit together its local development plan taking into account the needs of the community that xers serves is not for me to say exactly what they should be doing in those regards it is up to them to pick those policies in place however the other thing about local development plans is the requirement to meet the housing need of a particular area what I would say is that in recent times edinburgh has failed to meet that need with its new local development plan being some seven and a half thousand houses short we need to see improvement in that regard and I think this is another reason why we require the training of elected members so that they know exactly what they're doing when they are putting together local development plans and also of course they should be taking cognizance of the communities that they serve fool McGregor followed by Lewis MacDonald thank you busy no sir to ask the Scottish Government how it intends to strengthen the planning systems contribution to inclusive growth and growing the economy and what the minister thinks that sorry excuse my voice hey local communities as a whole will be able to affect him the plans when it comes to large-scale developments minister presiding officer the bill itself will ensure that planners move from regulating development to making things happen we have a system at last moment in time where a local development plan is completed and planners immediately move on to the formulation of the next local development plan which doesn't actually provide any security for communities and beyond at the moment there's no LA for development we want to see that development go forward that will give much more confidence than that development actually being completed the bill will link making sure that there's a much more consistent approach to performance and of course all of this has to be done with communities who will have a stronger say an influence and positive changes happening to their places the local plans are extremely important that interlinking between local plans and community planning I think there's all important and that's what I want to see right across the country Thank You Lewis MacDonald followed by Ethan Guan I welcome the minister's reference to agents have changed which he will know is set to be taken forward to protect live music venues in Wales and in Greater London if amendments are brought forward to add agent of change to the provisions of the planning bill in this Parliament will they have his government support Minister I welcome mr. MacDonald's discussions with me on this issue I welcome the discussions of mr. Arthur Tom Arthur T the cabinet secretary few in a headlock and from the industry itself I think that we all know that there have been difficulties in certain places reigned about Live Music Venues and I think that we have to do all that we possibly can to ensure that we protect less vital part of our heritage we as a government are aware of proposals that have been put forward by Wales who are dealing with us through their planning policy rather than three legislation I'm also aware that the Mayor of London is looking at the agent of change principle for the NEX London plan and of course in the in the state of Victoria and Australia their planning policy has something similar and not a guard now as mr. McDonald is aware in terms of the discussions I've had with them I don't know if this necessarily requires primary legislation it may be changes to scholars planning policy that are required however whatever change is required he can be assured that I will be positive arraign debate this issue with McGuire full of Alexander Stewart thank you to ask the minister how he sees the planning bill is a key way of contributing to the delivery of much-needed affordable homes and indeed infrastructure and nearshore and throughout Scotland Minister presiding officer the chamber will be absolutely sick to the back teeth of me talking about housing constantly is absolutely essential that this bell moves us forward in terms of our affordable housing delivery targets whether that be an miss Maguire's patch an air show or any other part of the country um is everywhere I go I get we need more housing here and we need to get on with the job of providing those warm affordable homes for people right across Scotland this bill will allow for that to happen we will be able to see areas which can be zoned for hazing with permission granted upfront and of course what we also must ensure is that we get the infrastructure an investment right as we build those homes across the country Alexander Stewart fall by clear hockey Thank You presiding officer can the minister confirm that local place plans prepared by local community bodies will not be undermined by Scottish Ministers and detail the support that we were provided to these community bodies to ensure successful outcomes Minister I've already given my view about local plans which currently have no statutory place I think that places and people and the likes of Leggett let's go who have come up with us their own plans there are to be applauded I am certainly not going to undermine anybody's plans of what I would say is there may be occasions where communities and others have to agree to disagree but I would encourage communities the length and breadth of Scotland to get involved in spatial planning and community planning I've gone to great lengths since taking over this role to try and encourage people to become involved in planning in particular I want to see more young folk involved in planning and there's been a great success in your own constituency presiding officer and Galashiels that gala Academy where pupils there along with paths are learning about the police standard they've got somewhat different ideas from all their folk all of those ideas needed to come into the mechs and I hope that young folk will get involved in local planning and thank you for the name check paul klee a hockey and if your brief in the minister's be if I can squeeze in Jenny called with the last question a clear coffee please Thank You presiding officer chasse the Scottish Government how it intends to encourage stronger engagement with communities and people earlier in the planning process rather than at the end to ensure the system works for all including those who want to invest in the quality of their places under economy minister I know that mr. Hawke has taken a great interest in us and particularly in canvas Lang if I remember rightly in terms of engagement that she's had with me I want communities like those and canvas Lang to have early engagement a rain debate the plans for their places and the belt itself encourages that and I think the local planning aspect will give communities like canvas Lang agree to shape their communities Jellicoe Ruth briefly Thank You officer can the minister explain what an inclusive growth approachable mean for Scotland's Buddhist idiots and Willie ensure that the new planning process will adequately engage and empower local communities Minister absolutely I want to see communities the length and breadth of Scotland engaged and empowered in particular as I said in my answer to miss McNeil I want local authorities to emphasis on helping socially excluded communities to fulfill their ambitions in terms of local police Planning and Community Planning and as a government we will continue to do all that we can in terms of community capacity building to make sure that these communities have the same abilities as others that are a bit wealthier thank you can I thank the minister and members I managed to get all questioners in thanks the minister being succinct that concludes questions of the statement al al arabiya suspension if we will move on to next item of business
The Scottish Parliament
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2017-12-05
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uyWBByXKm8
1990 Maywood Park KAY'S SON Daryl Busse
here's the failed for the third number one is forest else um Ron Marshall drive number two forty six guns and a farmer gone number three quasar Elmer Hearst Dale Heitmann number four is Juke a buzz camp and Randy Jacobs number five as K son Darryl bossy number six is foxy waltzer and Gary Rath number seven come on Jordan Dave McGee will drive that's the field eight minutes here like home mara there goes Kay's son out Paul the lead pores tells summoned 46 guns into the turn they race it's a three-way battle for the lead there goes Kay's son but come on Jordan moves upon the outside force tell some holes on the inside there was a three-way battle for the lead from the inside it's forest L some on the expand of buses it's Kay's son come on Jordan and third it's 46 guns quasar Aylmer house it's Jill okay both camp followed another Fox a Walter driving by the cutter my son has the lead they're moving by the footer one 10 9 and 2 and caisson maintains a late turn lights it's ourselves some in second it's come on Jordan and third it comes quasar Elmira's and they approach the half mile marker Entei son leads by three lines but quasar elmer hearse with a SuperSearch quasar elmer hearse just powers on by they're driving by the half quasar Ellmers caisson in second followed by Joel K buzz gap their half-full way home a minute and pre another drama to the corrals turn and it's quasar Elmer hearse away at the lead it's jewel Caye bus camp in second it's caisson and third hold on the outside by foxy Oh Walter it's for Estelle some followed by come on Jordan and now trailing the field it's 46 guns they criminal the backstretch and quasar Elmer Hearst has the lead three parts of a length jewel Caye both cap he's on the outside parked in second now caisson once out of third a little me outside by foxy Walter they drive into the far turn quasar Elmer Hearst case on here comes foxy Walter on the far outside but around the turn it's all quasar Elmer's and they come turning for home quasar Elmer Hearst has the lead it's pay son and he's out for the drive here comes case son with a rush and placement on the outside notice a canard it is case on fastest of all number five Kay's son was first number three quasar alvarez was second number six foxy Walt servicer [Music] the 5/3 perfecter returns $13.60 the five three six trifecta 40 $8.20 Chaisson is owned by hombre pari of Mason Tennessee train battery Medina and driven by Gerald bossy two minutes and three is a mark for case on the third race the chicago 19 night at the races purse [Music] third raise top bottom four five two six one three seven on the Barra
harnessdom
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2019-09-16
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQwOosOJpaY
Advanced R Book Club: Chapter 25: Rewriting R code in C++ (2021-03-04) (advr02)
okay um so yeah so this week uh we're talking about is the last week um tears sad sad times but uh um but yeah it was pretty interesting something i look forward to for a little bit with this uh c plus plus stuff um i tried to learn as much as i could about c plus plus in the meantime like like since i started reading this chapter watch a few videos but i'm still really bad at it um so hopefully you know it's kind of an incremental improvement process i think but um i'll talk a little bit about uh the chapter about some of the basic kind of building blocks and then um and then show an example uh that i did where i compiled some c like uh code using the source c plus plus function and benchmarked it and it was really slow but i tried um anyway all right so let's go into this so in the previous weeks a couple weeks ago we talked about improving performance we talked about strategies of organization vectorization and avoiding copies the weeks before that we talked about measuring performance using like profiling or yeah using profiling and also um like benchmarking and then um and then the week before we talked about uh in the first chapter in the section uh debugging with tools like uh browser and so this week kind of builds on that improving performance section um with uh talking about c plus and so that's kind of the the last big strategy i guess that uh hadley has in this book to making your code faster and before i go into it i looked at a bunch of resources and watched some videos before doing this trying to learn a little bit about c plus plus and so some ones i found helpful uh over this is this rcp for everyone resource um i'll put the link in slack later i think i put it actually earlier a few weeks a week ago in the advanced star uh thread but i'll share that and there's this free code camp uh a series of videos i thought was really good um i just want to go quickly to um this art where is it okay um so basically uh actually before i go in there uh rc rc plus plus rc pp um is both a uh a library for um kind of bringing c plus plus functions and source code into r um but it's also a c plus like module for for bringing in r like functions to c plus plus so you can use it to both uh write uh kind of our like code in some ways in c plus plus and also compile c code and bring it into r um and uh yeah so for the rs for rcpp rc plus plus there's this really nice uh book uh book down book i guess called uh rcp for everyone uh i used it a lot when i was referenced it when i was trying to create my example um and so i'm not going to go into it uh that deeply but like i used like i was dealing with vectors a lot and um i thought it was some really good documentation on like how to create like numeric vectors as well as all the methods so then they call them like member functions that you can call on a numeric vector object like sorting um like uh so pushing is would be is like a pending um to either the front and the back of the of the list um and i use that in my uh function that i'll show you later um and yeah so like it just has a lot of really nice stuff like uh you know you can and with rc uh rc plus plus you can create like data frames in c plus plus or something that acts like a data frame um and when you bring it back out into r uh you know uh you can have columns of you know vectors and things like that so anyway uh i recommend checking it out um [Music] and then um and then the other thing uh that i want to show is this where is it so i i did this series i was just looking at free code camp and they had this really nice video course that goes into a lot of concepts in c plus plus um i watched these and i thought i understood it but now i don't remember what some of these are um but uh but it's yeah it's just a really nice kind of overview of some of the basic principles and things that people do in c plus plus that and and there's also she also has some videos on like pointers and like memory uh stuff that's pretty interesting um so anyway i recommend checking that out um back to this so this is straight from the chapter but um hadley kind of mentions a few situations that you want to start you might want to think about using c plus plus excuse me um so so one case is loops that can't easily be vectorized um and and so like when you so so in r if you can vectorize something it's going to be pretty fast as you guys know um uh but then also like like if you use something like map uh you can't uh unless you use a different like like accumulate or something in per if you use map you can't uh kind of reference previous values and so i get that's a case where you have a situation like that uh you might want to use a c plus plus loop also recursive functions i don't use recursive functions much in my code at least not right now but if you do uh it's it's a lot faster c plus and then lastly uh there's a standard template library the c plus offers um and there's it's a lot of has a lot of data structures that you don't really have in our um that you have in a lot of other languages um like decks and queues and um uh like linked lists and all these different kind of computer sciency objects so i as of right now i i guess i don't know enough about those types of objects to know where i would want to use them in my code but you know i think it's good to know that they're there okay so that was another resource i forgot to i think hadley references this one but i'll just quickly go to it it looks kind of outdated but uh but it actually is pretty good for kind of getting started in c plus um and so i just wanted to reference that and they talk about the differences between kind of languages that are compiled languages and languages like r that are interpreted um and so basically in a language like c plus plus you have some source code that you're writing uh and then it gets compiled it produces a executable just like a program that can be run on its own um and then it's run on some hardware and produces some results in a language like r uh you have this high level code that you write in a script it's interpreted by r and then it's run and and then and the the upside of something of the language like ours that you uh can like kind of code interactively and just like run things over like one at a time and and you don't have to compile a whole program um but the downside of that is it makes it slower uh in a lot of cases uh because every single time you call the code you have to interpret it um so so yeah so just kind of an overview of the differences from a high level with c plus boston r um and yeah and so getting into uh the c plus rc pp package um so you can use this cpp function um basically to write c a c plus plus function um in your r session and uh it'll just uh compile on its own so you don't need to do anything fancy or any extra compiling it'll do that kind of in the background um and you just supply it uh you know a string that's c plus plus code and then you'll see this the whatever function you make uh in the environment so i think this also shows some you know slight differences and how c plus plus and r uh are are syntactic like constructed so with c plus plus you always have to specify the return type of your function so in this case it's an integer that's being returned this is going to be the name of your functions in this case it's add and then for each uh argument you specify the type of that as well um so this is something that obviously you don't do in r um but a lot of the languages you do and c plus plus is one of them and then uh and then so the same thing if you're defining like a variable here which is sum in this case you have to specify the type um and then every line will end with a semicolon that every kind of uh statement i guess ends in a semicolon and then once you compile it and you run this uh you don't need to assign it to anything or anything like that it'll just kind of appear uh in your it'll be in your environment um and then and then you just you just call it like any other uh function so in this case you know you just call add and one two three and it equals six and just works right out of the box and in the session uh sorry for the code highlighting here it's like i guess it doesn't understand that this is a continuous string here um okay and if anyone has any questions or anything they'd like to talk about just feel free to interrupt or ask um crap uh so then it goes through a bunch of different types of examples so this one is like you're not really you're not actually inputting anything and you're getting some kind of scalar output so in this case like an integer um so this is a really basic function you know within r you would it's just returning the uh integer one um and then if you wanted to do on the c you just specify your return type name the function say what you want to return and it does the same thing and just for fun i just benchmarked all these examples so in this case in a lot of these early cases um c is actually slower um i get confused all the time between these these different uh types here but i think this is nanoseconds uh and this is uh milliseconds is i think i'm that's correct um so this so this first one is uh the r version is faster i believe right double micro is 10 to the minus six nano is 10 to the minus nine so nano is quicker than micro got it cool thanks um yeah and you can also see that in the iterations per second over there so just interesting uh yeah but um i think the tough thing for comparing uh some of these functions that are being created here is that like it's hard to know just from looking at this how much of the underlying r code is actually written in c plus plus as well so um [Music] yeah i think in a lot of cases there's c plus plus code underneath so it makes it kind of hard to compare um sorry the bottom here got cut off but um here's another example with like scalar input and scalar output um so uh in this case uh this is just a function that returns the sign uh of of the number you enter so um so if you enter a positive number uh it'll return one zero return zero and negative number return negative one so in this case enter negative 12. the c plus function again it actually looks a lot like r in this case you know so you have brackets defining um kind of the the body of your function some if else statements uh and this it really looks exactly like r in that case um just with the semicolons at the end of your syntax there however your met of your uh of your call or statement or i don't know the right word for it but um and yeah so i do the same thing here uh benchmark them and uh again our function is considerably faster although we're talking about like nanoseconds and micro microseconds right uh microseconds and uh you know if unless you're doing a very large number of iterations you probably wouldn't notice it um okay and then uh talks about example an example where you're uh inputting a vector and you get a scalar in return um so i just kind of made up a vector here um numeric vector and um uh they actually forgot what this does here so it's okay so it's looping through the list and just kind of adding up uh the total of oh some yeah somewhere so it's adding up the total of all the values in the vector um and then this c plus plus function does the same thing so again i'm returning double i'm calling the function sum c um i'm saying that there's going to be a numeric vector this argument um and that's actually uh uh this is a c plus like type uh so it's this is the this is where you see kind of the c plus the rc plus plus uh module in c plus plus code um which is interesting and then um and then uh yeah so then you have c plus plus methods to get the length of the size of that vector um you know doing the same thing uh for so for loops look a little bit different in c plus plus as well so here you're kind of defining your index or your iterator um c plus plus is a zero index so the first element is going to be zero yeah i think that's right um and then you're gonna you're gonna iterate up until uh basically the last album which if you're indexing it'll be one minus the um the the size because it starts at zero and then this just um uh advances the index by one each time um and this is actually you can do this in similar to python here where you uh this plus equals well is the same thing as saying total equals total plus um uh this this value here of in the vector um but instead of writing all that you just you just can write a shortcut total plus equals um x and the index and then it just returns the value of that sum so again doing some benchmarking um r is a little faster here um but if you actually use the vectorized sum function um uh sorry that's uh way faster um so than another other option um so uh and it goes back to my point that like i think something like sum uh the the vectorized stuff that's really fast i would guess is where the base r like is actually written in c plus plus but i haven't checked the source code um but but yeah all right it's gone um so this is uh kind of a special uh distance uh function as an example here so we're doing vector input and vector output um i forget the actual name of this type of distance function one second um uh oh it's just euclidean distance okay um sorry so basically you have some kind of a um scalar value and you're calculating the the distance um uh to that value from every value and like a vector um and so here uh this is already uh some in this example where i'm calling uh pdist r i'm using this vector that i defined in the previous example here um and it's already vectorized in r right so like i'm not doing a loop through the vector we're just uh looking at the distance between each value and the vector and the scalar and then and then squaring squaring it and then taking the square root um and so this is the results you get the same thing here in c plus plus uh just a few differences so like uh in order to raise something to a certain uh exponent you need to use this power function um so in this case we're squaring it so raising in the second argument is two um and then everything else looks similar except for what we saw in the last example with these four loops uh so again where you start where you go until and then how you advance in the loop um and again you see here this rcc r c plus plus numeric vector type um and this is just syntax here is is making a numeric vector called out with a length n which is the size of the vector okay and then again doing this benchmarking still this r one is faster but if you uh do a really long vector um so did i actually include that here i guess not um so that i made a really long i just repeated this shorter vector um i think it was like 50 000 times or something um and so you start to see see kind of uh uh starting to be a little bit more efficient when you when you include like uh more data or like a longer um object that you're passing to it okay and then um and then the last kind of major thing is that instead of calling um kind of these c inline like c plus plus function um calls here and just doing one function at a time only little piece of code you can actually create a c plus plus uh file with an extension c cpp um and um and you can call that using this source c plus function from the rcpp package and with a little bit extra syntax which we'll show in a second in my example um you can make something that you can then read into r and basically you know call execute the whole script and compile the whole script so i'm going to go ahead and get into that now so i'll stop sharing um and then go into my r studio does anyone have any questions or anything so far good job thanks okay cool but yeah feel free to ask away if anything comes up um all right so i'm in my uh our session here um so the first thing that i realized i didn't know until doing this is that if you do a new file in our um in rstudio you can actually create a cpus plus file um and so in the last slide i showed in the chapter hadley mentions like a few pieces of syntax that you have to have in order for this field to be called from within our session um and that actually is already like populated here and it's it's you know a lot like a lot of the other default files in our studios which is nice so you see this uh syntax here where if you call a function that's a c function you want to use it in a rcc our an r section through this rfc all right man i keep on messing up rcp the rc plus plus uh source function you're gonna have to put put this export uh syntax in front of it um and i learned this kind of the hard way but if you if you have other c code here um well you kind of find i can write this correctly but i don't know if you're making another varric vector um called in or called uh test or whatever and then you you have this the syntax up here um it won't work like you need it right before the actual function that you're importing um at least that's what happened to me um one thing to note uh too about likes of c plus is that some of these like import statements look a lot like um you know it refers to name spaces and these include statements so in some ways it looks like in my mind it looks it looks a little bit like r in that way and then the the other neat thing about this is that you can actually run our code in this c plus um script so if you uh so if i was like in my session and i like uh i won't do it right here but um just to show so and i called like that script uh whatever test that seatbelts plus the results will actually call this stuff and also um the the r code as well and you'll get the results right in your r session which can be helpful um okay so now i'll go into this example a little toy example i created so basically um i was saying at the beginning i've had a lot of cases where i've used a nest and it's been really slow um so you and generally if you haven't used on nest it's helpful if you have like a nested data frame so i just created one um just to show this but basically um i created like two time intervals uh so between a time um the current time and then uh the oh sorry the the current time three weeks ago and the current time two weeks ago and the current time two weeks ago and now um just to be able to have two intervals that i could like sample from to make like uh kind of random sequences of time for this example um and so i just make that here uh it's length 100 000 or you know 100 000 um just takes a second to make and so if i were to just look at one of these elements just so you kind of see what this looks like oops so i did this um so this is just the first element so like i i did it by minute so it's or by hour so some of these could be pretty pretty long um like this so it's just you know a bunch of sequences of time um so if i did another one so they're they're all like kind of different lengths too so etc so you kind of get the idea um and so originally i wanted to do a nest with this so like uh just quickly show you this is how like you call a nest here um so if i wanted to so this would um it'll make it long so that there's one row for each value in each of these lists and it'll duplicate the other columns so if i just do this it'll take i think it takes like 30 seconds or something that wasn't so bad um so yeah so you see that it's duplicated this index and then it'll it has uh you know the time all the time stamps laid out for you so it's useful if you're dealing with like time intervals especially that's where i've used it a bunch um anyway so i was thinking maybe i could make a nest function that's like fast or just fast or comparable so i tried to go ahead and do that um so um uh that's not is that the sorry i just want to make sure i have the right one up in here there we go okay um so just like the example i kept on a lot of the template stuff uh using name space r c plus plus um i initialized uh like a numeric vector um so again like this is a coming from the rc rc plus plus module and so this is now in c code c plus plus code uh i just make an empty numeric vector um this is the final vector that i want to return and then i'm going to try to go through basically loop through each element and then append all the stuff in each row to a big vector that i'll return at the end and so i just have this list as an argument i'm calling it unlist uh c uh it's returning a numeric vector from this our c plus plus library and then um and yeah so i start off by figuring out you know how many times you need to iterate how many elements are in this list and then again like the examples you saw in the book like start at zero go until basically the index is one minus or one less than the length and then iterate uh index increment by one um and so then in each so each element of this list uh you know this data frame column that originally um uh was a was a vector or a numeric factor so so as i'm indexing i'm just saying okay this is the current vector it's a numeric vector um uh and then and then uh and maybe this is a super naive way to do this but i'm not good at c plus plus so this is what i did um i then said okay for this numeric vector how big is it and then i'm gonna do another loop inside of that numeric vector um and so i have uh starting at just kind of different indexes here just to keep them separate but starting at zero again same thing and then um i'm using one of the methods here that i don't know i think i mentioned when i was showing the rc plus plus book uh a second ago but there's this function or this method called pushback so it'll just uh add kind of in place so you don't have to like reassign it or anything it's just kind of modifying the vector as an object just add the last you know to the end of the end of this vector whatever the current vector element is and just do that for every element in the vector and then the very end when i've looped through the whole list and looped through all the elements in each row just returning the final vector so so and then i realized after writing this it wasn't really a nesting it was just kind of unlisting and in probably a way that wasn't super efficient but and then i'll show you guys the result so basically uh so i'm used to because i have it in a c plus script i'm using source c plus plus i put it in our presentation folder and then i'm just calling it like you know like you would kind of source the regular source r function um so there it's in in here it's compiled it's ready to go and then i'm going to benchmark against unlist so i'm just going to do with the first 10 elements because i i did it with the whole list for the c version and it uh froze my session so um so yeah uh let's see so it's like i don't know 40 000 times slower um but uh but yeah but it works and i thought it was kind of neat to go from start to end um for some reason they're not equivalent so maybe i'm doing something wrong uh and how i'm returning or maybe the order is slightly different i'm not really sure so i had to put this check false in there um [Music] but but yeah i don't know uh what do you all think of that uh do any questions at this point i was just happy to get something working in r that was c plus plus you got a lot further than i would have so it's cool it's cool to see thanks yeah i appreciate you keeping the examples fairly simple but i was still still you know having trouble parsing exactly what's going on but the benchmarks are really useful yeah um i think the simplicity of the examples is also where i am with uh you know learning how to use c plus plus and um trying to make it you know figure out where to use it um but but yeah it's interesting oh sorry go ahead yeah no finish i was just gonna say that uh the one of the things i was thinking about after uh playing around with this was like like how how much of the time when people who use r are doing stuff in c plus plus and they want to use it back in r um are using our cpp heavily uh and like how often are they using um c plus plus because like i just it's weird to me like like i guess rc pp is like super it's efficient and fast and it's a good thing to use and it's like has a lot of like things like data frames and different objects that you wouldn't normally get in c plus but it's like this weird like intermediate like it's not r it's not really c plus plus although like is a module or you know a library or whatever um i don't know and like like there's a ton of documentation out there for c plus plus um and there's some for for rc plus plus but like uh yeah i don't know i just like felt weird about you know doing this kind of mishmash of of two different languages in one um so but our studio has really been touting how friendly their products are for for having um you know you could be a little more language language diagnostic markdown you can put javascript and css and python all on there um i'm curious if you can put um so so you know uh yeah when you're in your markdown you've got the curly brace r all throughout um you could put css in there you could put uh yeah yeah i don't know if that one i don't know if it works um yeah let's try it right but yeah you could put python in there um so that's interesting to see um yeah i think you would just write it like regular uh c plus code i did read this chapter uh quite a while ago um so i apologize if it was very clearly stated in the chapter but it looked like when you were doing your benchmarking did it uh what did it do sorry oh yeah i did something weird i don't know what that means uh did you hit the play button or i just did a keyboard shortcut but yeah um yeah it just doesn't seem right i don't know it might be like rc plus plus or it might it might be like c actual plus but like i don't know how they um want you to oh unknown type okay i did something do i have to make it a lower case oh it looks like it worked all right let's see wait uh plus five oh god it doesn't like that does it mean at the end you're right yeah definitely still unknown type i don't know all right well regardless um yeah there might there might just be another way to do it or maybe it's not able to do it but um uh so my question was it looked like in your benchmarking the garbage collection was very different from uh between the r version and the the c the c plus plus version and so i was curious it looked like the garbage collection is maybe what was tying it up when the when the end was small or like when the when it was like just iterating over a small amount but then when it was iterating over a large amount the garbage collection really helped out so i don't know did they talk about that i can't recall i don't remember that but maybe others do um so you're talking about my numeric like my long vector example uh if you if you go to your presentation um like uh i don't know if you still have it on the in the browser or uh like here i can just find it in here um yeah like this here yeah maybe if you can make that uh that wider so that we can see the last couple columns yes some of them so this is garbage collection per second is that what it means yeah it wasn't on all of them but there was a couple of them um do you still have the presentation in your browser or yeah um let me let me just share my full screen so it's easier ah you're sharing experience screen by screen yeah um here we go this one so like in the bottom the long vector is is this one that yes this that one the garbage collection per second there's like 20 that means it happened like 21 times per second um and then for the r it was 18 but then if you go to uh could you go back a couple slides yes oh yeah here here here yeah yeah so i'm curious if the garbage collection is part of what ties it up when it's smaller but then uh adds a lot of savings when it's a longer vector so i was just curious about that yeah that's interesting um maybe we could do a quick quick test just to um see let's see um here let me go back into my uh i don't know maybe i can't do this on the fly here [Music] here let me just run everything for a second all right so like um let's see sorry it was the sum example right that you're talking about um i think so i think it threw an error at the bottom and stopped running oh it did uh oh it has my source oh i was it was what i did for the example that i was showing you guys okay what's happened so you kind of see when you first compile it it takes a second uh then after that it's fast okay um all right um so we're saying if we make like the vector longer um let's see there's a okay i'm trying to think about uh let's see all right i'm just gonna quickly um i'm like floored by this uh what you're doing right now oh why uh using matt uh map dfr to uh to go through the mall it's very very slick i don't know i thought like when you were saying that it might work thanks it's kind of nerve-wracking to do this live but yeah i bet trying trying to pull something down thanks and then maybe you could just pull out the uh i was going to just pull out a garage collection it would be interesting to see all all of them okay so one more all right let's see oh maybe i want a lot of i might not know which one's which um um interesting well what is it what does it have maybe we can uh yeah results yeah so i guess it's an order so we will know which one is which right um not sure what this last column's doing i have no idea um we said go ten hundred thousand ten thousand yeah ten hundred thousand ten thousand okay um certainly that's like kind of frozen all right yeah so you could see so this last one c um oh it's actually okay so so here in this first one our the base r sum is like twice as fast um and still like twice as fast still twice as fast and then like all the way up here this is 406 milliseconds and this is 443 so they're kind of like closing um but it's where the the garbage collection isn't like like it doesn't seem like it was as high as it was in the example that we saw before i guess that was with the short vector right because it only ran for half a second or yeah you're running less iterations in the first one right because you're hitting the iteration limit not the time limit like the total time never even hits a second so to get like gc per second is maybe uh well you're only having like one garbage collector for those other cases right what's that there's only like the ngc column that's number of garbage collections so there's actually only it's a very low occurrence event right yeah i'm just curious if we extend this a little more uh what starts to look like i guess i should probably do it like this or whatever wait a minute the car is slow right now oh i guess this is like this there's these these nested uh tables here okay oh man the r is still hanging on up here but this one is getting real slow it has no garbage collections right the the r version no yeah i mean maybe that's why like if it has more garbage collection it like is it more memory efficient because it's able to clean up the past unused i think so memory yeah let's look at this one some c has three garbage collections here i don't know i don't quite get it though because like then if you go like to the last one there is only one oh but here it does 19 iterations who knows yeah i certainly don't but it but it does it's my hypothesis is that something with the garbage collection slows it down when it's small but it helps it out when it's when it's larger yeah probably yell it like tries to allocate repeatedly whereas in r it's probably smarter and how it sets it up because it has some probably some internal logic on how it's going to do the garbage collection cool yeah this column is super weird what is that i've never seen something look like that is it just like a vector of like a visualization of a vector is it okay results no it's i guess it's the way it's visualizing it uh memory so it's proportional to the number of iterations it looks like oh yeah bench time it has so so it has the time of every single iteration right so it's like a it's like a bar chart almost like it's just the height of it well it's numeric though i think it's just i think it's just like like broken or something i think our studio is having trouble with it because it's just a run-on it's a numeric vector yeah log of a bug yeah at first i thought it was like skimmer uh you know how they have the like uh the histogram um in the like console output or whatever with like a character factor i thought her character string i thought that's what it was um but it's cracking yeah it looks looks like a bug it looks like a bug in a few different ways um um but uh yeah cool there's one other thing i wanted to show was just this example uh that um hadley uh kind of mentions or references in this um so this guy this physician is creating a like an agent-based model um and he does it in r first um and i'm not going to go into like all the details but it's always interesting to see a real example of like a kind of full start to finish of doing something fully in r and then fully in c plus plus and using data frames and stuff so um like he's let's see what exactly the case is he's trying to predict the probability of someone choosing to receive a vaccination in a given year decision will be based on their age gender whether or not they're infected with the virus okay um so they create a cohort uh i guess they're he's like just kind of randomly sampling from these different variables to create you know people and their characteristics uh probability of choosing to be vaccinated so this is like kind of timely but i think it came out a long time ago oh yeah july 11 2012. um okay probability to be choosing to be vaccinated based on age their gender and uh i don't know what aisle was so infected the virus last year if they were um and so he does some stuff with like l apply looping for loops do apply a bunch of different things to i guess say create a testable fluctuation strategy so he's taking a cohort data frame it's input calculating the vaccination probability for each member of the cohort they're returning a data frame with the cohort data plus a new column for the vaccination probability okay so i haven't gone to this in depth but since it's an agent-based model i would imagine that each person's probability is somehow also a function of other people like around them somehow or it's people that they know i don't know how that plays out here but um but yeah but i just thought it was interesting so he uses this inline function to actually just like write the c plus code uh and write in r so you don't he's not like like using the source c plus plus function uh uh and maybe that i don't know maybe that's because uh well he says here he doesn't he just just wants to do ray in the r script so i i was thinking originally i mean it was because he wrote this in 2012 and maybe that was before a lot of these rcps but he's is calling it right here so maybe he just prefers to do it this way um anyway so like he's he's basically taking uh this data frame that he's um uh uh you know defining this data frame and so this is an example of using like this data frame object that our from this rc plus plus module kind of initializing a column called age that's a double type uh it type for female and in type for this that prior vaccinate or prior infection i think um creating a variable of the size a probability variable of the size of this data frame the last column and then kind of iterating through calling this vaccinate csx function and then basically taking all the vectors that he's created here and creating a data frame and so there's this create function from this rcpcp data frame object and then and then yeah then you just basically create a data frame like this so you say named whatever you want your column to be plus all the vectors that you've created and then you kind of you know just wrap it in parentheses and um you're you you're outputting uh a data frame back into r which is pretty neat um and so then he i guess he has one more function here and then he just calls it from r and uh he does benchmarking and this do rc pp is like uh i don't know 150 times faster it's pretty neat so um but yeah i just thought it was neat that like like i think when i was first going through this i was like well these like simple examples are nice but how do we uh kind of interact with the objects that we're usually using in our and um i thought this is just a neat way to show that with uh you know taking these vectors that you've kind of iterated over and creating a data frame object that you can then use in an r session great yeah i could kind of see where this is a good example of where the actual value to this is which i was lost on kind of reading the chapter which is like if you have some very kind of bespoke thing that you're trying to solve that you can do with relatively elemental parts but will be slow uh and you can if you could take it to another language like i've done a lot of um a lot of signal processing uh and i remember my my phd thesis i'd have to leave my computer running for like hours on end to run all the loops and stuff because we were doing these like really really large fourier transforms and uh actually one of my uh colleagues from then he has now actually converted most of it to fortran for that purpose to be linked into uh into r but i could see how you could do that also with c plus plus like this like if you had something that you can't use the base functionality for and it's going to be faster because you have to code it up yourself like here he had his own um his own functions like the the probability is a function there that he write himself right so it could be faster yeah um so this the vaccination probability here yeah yeah yeah if you had functions like that right like you could you could code those up yourself and they might be significantly faster than the alternative written in in our loop or maybe an example is like if you have a non-vectorizable function like it requires the interaction with other elements of the of the vector or the data frame maybe you know there's better ways to do that in c plus plus because it can loop faster yeah i think for sure any it seems like any time you're writing a for loop in r and it's taking a lot longer than you wanted to uh you can probably do it a lot faster than two plus plus um yeah i feel like there's like this would be my last resort i don't know if anyone else thinks that way but like if i have a loop and i'm like damn this is slow i'm gonna do a whole bunch of stuff yeah and maybe think about this yeah because i mean it's it's as much as they have really nice like convenience functions you know this module for c plus plus where you can do things with data frames uh in cbs plus like it is a whole nother language you know um and just as i was doing this like you know you know it took me two or three hours to get that one script to work that i showed you guys because uh is just you just get like you forget a semicolon and then uh you like don't know how to do like i was trying originally i was trying to do like like a list of of of numeric vectors uh and and then like like in base c plus plus you have to like in order to i guess in order to iterate through a list of objects you have to like create this like special iterator object and then like use that in your loop and then um it just uh it just i it took me forever to kind of troubleshoot and figure out and that was like kind of a real case where i was you know i was unhappy with this on nest function and i was like well let's see if we can make it faster and um i don't know maybe maybe it's like you know too much like maybe it's you know it's just like because here i mean i feel like there isn't much to um to really do differently you know he's just like putting a for loop in here and he has a for loop or you know or a map or something above um you know like like they're it looks similar except for the you know the different you know ways you define a for loop for instance but um i don't know anyone else think they would they're going to use c plus plus any time soon um or anything else in the chapter that they wanted to discuss or talk about um it does have me thinking about the places where my co-workers are telling me that code is running for multiple hours at a time um what kind of things are you doing uh just out of curiosity like that i don't exactly know but i think it's model it's model building um i see yeah they're using packages i don't i don't even know like that i've never even heard of uh but yeah a lot of production but from jake's example like a few weeks ago like i feel that that would be hard right because like a lot of the source code for that is already written in either c plus plus or i think it was fortran also right what did i share i don't remember no sorry daddy josh josh uh oh yeah right like like a lot of that stuff is already written in the language and like another language and then like there's like a rapper you know it's so that you could use it in our but um like yeah that would be a whole another level of difficulty to like right rewrite like a a model or something uh in c plus plus but he actually sorry guys oh so if you had a very bespoke like a random forest model you're running and you want it has almost like a very little tunability right like i said i feel like ours big thing is having a lot of functionality you might be able to make it way faster right because you could you know or a neural net that you built yourself guys well it also has me thinking maybe just a garbage collection for my projects um yeah well skybridge collection usually just means that you're you're not doing a very good job of taking care of your variables right or you've sometimes garbage collection can happen with model building because you're storing additional data like the way the model return structures are uh like glmnet is really bad for it for like if you have a big model matrix it will just store all the data along with it again and so you end up with these like you end up with huge data sets repeating themselves internally into an inside an object so you you that will kill a lot of stuff that way so you kind of have to be smart about what you store back and there's a couple of um stack overflow cases i found where people are like here's a function to or here here are like the four steps you need to do to go inside like i don't know if it's glenn or another package and cut out all the redundant pieces of like pieces of data that are being held on to you for things you don't actually need to do write a predictive model so i wonder if if um taiyi models does a better job just because they are trying to be relatively lean in the way they do things so it might be faster but i think they are using tidy models um okay doing multivariate adaptive regression splines i don't know okay whatever that means yeah um the other thing i mentioned that it just reminded me of whether you're saying josh is this like pointer thing so like like i know a while ago we talked about uh pointers and like how stuff is stored in memory in an r but with like c plus plus you can like directly like reference uh and like create pointers um and i guess if you understand kind of how to work with this uh uh you can like it's like i think in in the tutorial i was reading they were like it gives you a lot of power like in a lot of control over like how your program functions and like what it's doing with memory but like you can also like break your you know you just like you know you can totally overload your computer if you're uh if you don't do it if you just you know if you're you're uh using memory in a in a bad way um so i think it kind of has like less guard where else for memory but more uh capabilities of optimizing it yeah i watched one video on pointers and c plus and kind of forgot what i learned in it but um but but yeah anything else um i think you did a great job thanks uh tried thanks for fighting through the weeds of that chapter uh yeah yeah sure um yeah i hope it's helpful and uh i don't know i think it's something that maybe we'll we'll connect back on you know in the slack channel and um uh you know maybe have some examples uh later on that we can share with each other um i thought some of these these resources at the end were interesting this uh like especially on algorithms um i really haven't read much about algorithms and designing them and like uh it's kind of a computer area computer science that i'm just like really unfamiliar with but i was interested in reading some of these books he mentions um but just an aspiration all right um so yeah i know a while ago we were saying like dimmer jake you brought up the idea of like doing uh some kind of a project or something a bit like to encompass what we've learned but i haven't had a lot of time to do that in the last few weeks i don't know yeah i forgot even the example that i was gonna i was gonna share well i think everybody deserves some congratulations to make it for making it to the end of the book yeah for sure uh yeah you guys are a great great group to to learn with and uh to get to know and um it's definitely a lot of fun uh coming each week and um yeah uh having these discussions so i think i feel like sir go ahead yeah i was just gonna say i appreciate the effort everybody put in uh i haven't haven't seen jorge here but you know thanks to him and uh also thanks to some of our the past um people who is it eric that was in there abby for a bit with others uh oh um i'm gonna begin with a pee yeah yeah it's definitely a journey through this book but uh i don't know i feel like i've learned a lot and kind of like stepped up a lot of pieces of my our code or at least like the stuff that i haven't gone as much into like classes uh more aware of like what they mean and kind of what the different options are for um you know like especially moving towards like package development and things like that um yeah yeah i find classes are i use them more for like pulling things apart or like debugging like can i i can understand like oh it's just this is the s3 thing i understand how to do all these you know things on it rather than building my own and yeah it wasn't exactly his intent but i felt like that about a lot of the stuff where it's like i now understand how to interact with all these things and how to read them if someone else has written them right because that's a really good point more my use of r yeah like the source code isn't scary anymore um or at least most of it is true yeah it's all like a visceral reaction sometimes like when i'm looking and i feel like it's still kind of confusing uh like when you like you know you go to the the source code for a particular function that you want to understand and then like it like creates like a define the constructs the object there but then like you don't really see how it's actually doing the internal thing that you care about and you have to like jump to five different uh files and i've had a lot of cases like that where like i've like i thought i've understood like what's on the page that i land on but it's like so hard to connect at all i don't know if you know but if you um have your cursor in a function name and you hit f2 they'll then show you the source code of that and you can kind of just keep going through that to kind of see where all the source code is is playing out you could also like go into like debug mode um but that was like new to me uh like a month ago to learn interesting i used to just call the function name without the parentheses yeah yeah let's see it but if you do it with uh f2 it like opens it in another source tab and then you can kind of see it a little better oh f2 i usually use view like to view the the stuff in the panel with that i i usually use the view like the build field like v i e w yeah oh oh yeah yeah with the function yes oh interesting do you do what you do without the parentheses in the function yeah yeah cool yeah but that's essentially the view that uh that f2 should give i see cool do not know that all right let me get going but thanks so much for coordinating and hurting us cats towards towards this finish line um i've really appreciated the group and learning from each of you so thanks yeah same here same here definitely stay active on slack and keep in touch and uh yeah we'll hopefully keep posting some stuff and you know keep learning as we apply these things so you know looking forward to staying in touch with you guys on on the slack channel cool for sure all right all right thank you guys too uh have a good uh have a good evening and talk soon sounds good all right bye bye
Data Science Learning Community
UCCaChdLMTYMxyawR_Qf-kYA
2021-03-06
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en
metadata
en
10,037
48,940
lntSlHDkJg8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lntSlHDkJg8
WTF: The Spew Blames Sexist Conspiracy For Kamala's Failed Campaign
I was disappointed actually that she dropped out and had to suspend her campaign but I don't think you can look at that without also looking at the fact that as a woman of color she also faced president apparently being a modern Democrat person of color means never having to take any kind of responsibility for anything and blaming groups of people based on their skin color is totally acceptable this is the bizarro world of modern left-wing ideology where they convince themselves that it's impossible to be racist to white people leading the situations like this where they're actually blaming white people for a failed presidential campaign after a poorly ran campaign and more cringy moments than I can count Kamala Harris has finally dropped out of the race my pronouns are she her and hers mine too instead of analyzing her mistakes in order to improve the next campaign they instead choose to teman eyes white Americans as horrible racist sexist monsters there's no question that there were obviously problems with her campaign I think there were obviously financial problems but I don't think that you can look at that without also looking at the fact that as a woman of color she also faced unprecedented sexism compounded by racism unprecedented racism and sexism from where the media bent over backwards to run cover for her and promote her you know it's almost as if we're supposed to just accept that as the default position white Americans are just so sexist and racist that Kamala Harris never had a chance it's just ironic that she's making these broad sweeping generalizations about an entire group of people based on nothing but their skin color only a week ago one of Harris's top aides resigned saying quote I no longer have confidence in our campaign or its leadership this aid is a person who was dedicated enough to Kamala Harris that she worked for her campaign she wasn't some sort of closet racist that just suddenly turn honor because of her skin color the media rain cover for CBS and NBC were downright gloomy about her exit from the campaign but never even mention the resignation letter how convenient for her I don't know maybe the campaign was just badly run and that's why she had to drop out maybe her approval among black Americans dropped for some reason maybe just maybe America isn't a den of horrible racist monsters this country voted in a black president for two terms hmm Hillary Clinton won the popular vote yeah to say this country has not proven the opposite of what you're saying I think is factually wrong actually Abby I think that there's there's just no question that we did have a black president twice and and I think that's wonderful but I think the election of President Trump is is may prove my point yeah of course it's Trump's fault wrong wasn't Kamala really unpopular with black voters and I could be wrong about this but I think Trump is even pulling higher with black voters and make no mistake the fact that there is only white candidates left that qualify for the debates is the main reason for this outburst left wingers were losing their minds all day long on Twitter yesterday because all the remaining candidates are so white perhaps somebody should remind these people that around 62% of the country it's still white so it's not really that unusual Laura duhkha an alleged journalist and quote spiritual lesbian with four hundred and fourteen thousand followers tweeted quote Kamala Harris officially ended her campaign today which means that all of the candidates who are currently qualified for the Democrat debate are white white supremacy is not just the Fox News problem folks Oh white people existing on stage as white supremacy Ashley Nicole black who has 112 thousand followers tweeted quote there was a coordinated right-wing campaign against Harris a lot of those talking points were taken up by liberals and now we're set to have an all-white debate stage Oh imagine being outraged that your political opposition has a coordinated campaign against you and then blaming white people Matt Weiser a national reporter from the Washington Post we did quote with Kamala Harris out the debate stage in December at this point will be all white candidates striking for a field that was historically large and historically diverse how progressive of you to minimize these people down to nothing but their skin color I don't support any of these people but I imagine they worked hard to get where they're at nuts to all that they're just a bunch of albino cave beasts it goes on and on but I'll spare you the brain damage so today I'm a little angry I have to say that we started with one of the most diverse fields in our history giving people pride and we're spiraling towards a debate stage that potentially we're still fighting to get on it but could have six people with no diversity whatsoever how is that not completely racist he says that because it's gonna be all white people on the stage that it will lack any diversity but when I look at that stage I see that there are both men and women so that's diversity right there it just goes to show that too many left wingers diversity simply means no white people the fact is Harris was unpopular and her campaign poorly run Harris definitely had a problem with a certain demographic of people but it wasn't the whites that's it for today please like share and subscribe if you enjoy my content you should check me out on Twitter and on Facebook where I post stories and videos daily if you want to support this channel you can do so on patreon subscribe star or by just making a donation on PayPal you can find all the links in the description and the pin comment thank you [Music]
Dronetek
UCavk8KLWg5sWuDGrNIiqZ4A
2019-12-06
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en
metadata
en
1,009
5,709
32T-Djr_nBE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=32T-Djr_nBE
SCP-636 | Elevator To Nowhere (SCP Orientation)
[Music] item number scp-636 object class euclid special containment procedures the building containing scp-636 has been officially condemned for supposed mold contamination and the lot fenced off to prevent unwanted intrusion a minimum of two armed undercover guards are to be posted at ground level and any unauthorized individuals attempting to enter the building must be detained and questioned any experimentation on scp-636 must only be performed with prior permission from at least two level three personnel description scp-636 is a maintenance elevator at the hotel located at data expunged unlike the other elevators in the building scp-636 contains a magnetic card reader which when used with a specific card key will cause the elevator to move to a third sub-basement beneath the building according to the building plan there are only two sub-basements beneath the building and the owner of the property was not aware of an elevator with magnetic card access whenever any individual attempts to access this floor via scp-636 the elevator appears to work normally however upon reaching this non-existent floor all contents of the elevator including any personnel or remote monitoring equipment will disappear exploration of the elevator shaft itself has yielded no useful information while the shaft does extend to a third sub-basement level there are only blank walls at that depth and video cameras placed within the shaft have shown no unusual activity when the elevator reaches the bottom furthermore scp-636 will periodically move to the third sub-basement level on its own upon its return to ground floor the elevator car has occasionally contained anomalous objects as documented below scp-636 came to the foundation's attention on 2000 following the disappearance of two elevator mechanics during routine maintenance of the building's elevator systems a two-man initial exploration team was sent into scp-636 and subsequently lost after which the site was placed on lockdown and the owner and all witnesses given class a amnestics current containment procedures were put into effect shortly afterward addendum 636 1 log of notable anomalous events date 2000 description scp-636 called to bottom floor for approximately six minutes before returning to ground floor upon its return the fully disassembled parts of two helmet-mounted video cameras were found on the floor of the elevator car analysis of the components confirms that they belong to the members of the initial exploration team memory cards and recording media of the cameras were blank date 2000 description scp-636 called for approximately two minutes before returning to ground floor according to the testimony of the armed guards stationed at ground floor the walls of the elevator car were covered with hundreds of human eyeballs that tracked them for several seconds before the doors closed and the elevator was recalled to the bottom floor again elevator car was found empty afterward date 2000 description scp-636 returned after 4 minutes and 17 seconds and contained approximately 11 kilograms of shredded egyptian cotton fabric soaked with blood analysis of the blood samples are inconclusive as recovered dna does not seem to match that of any known terrestrial animal date 2000 description scp-636 returned after 8 minutes and 42 seconds upon opening a naked and emaciated male later identified as agent of the initial exploration team began pounding on the buttons and screaming that he had to go back agent managed to disarm and kill one armed guard and injure the other before running back into scp-636 then disappearing lesson complete if you missed the previous orientation go watch scp-635 medieval bootstrap program right now or for the complete course watch this playlist
SCP Orientation
UCxanKgYNy_Vxf8mSsxIW3qA
2022-04-20
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en
metadata
en
594
3,769
MhrfzsNmopc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhrfzsNmopc
EMT/EMR Long Spine Board Skill Station 2012
hi I'm Missy hi I'm Katie I'll be your tester today okay and these two would be your assistants you can examine your equipment as I read you the instructions for this station okay this skill is designed to evaluate your ability to provide spinal immobilization to a supine patient using a long spine immobilization device you arrived on scene with an EMT assistant the assistant EMT has completed the scene survey as well as a primary assessment and no critical condition required any intervention was found for the purposes of this evaluation the simulated patients of vital signs remain stable you are required to treat the specific isolated problem of a suspected unstable spine using a long spine immobilization device when moving the simulated patient to the device you should use the help of both EMT assistance one assistant EMT should control the head and cervical spine of the simulated patient while you and the other assistant move the simulated patient to the immobilization device you are responsible for the direction and subsequent actions of the EMT assistance you may use any equipment available in this room you have ten minutes to complete this procedure do you have any questions no I don't okay I'm gonna walk in and be a sigh and I'm going to have you hold the c-spine please I'm going to come down and check CMS I'm going to check for pulses should good pulses pulses are good hey ma'am can you feel me touching your hands yeah watch anime touching right and now let me squeeze can you move your fingers and how about pitot pulses pulses are good and which what am i touching right now that can you push up on my hands and can you feel me touching you yeah okay right now in a measure for a c-collar and how does that feel can you still breathe yes okay and if you cool down and help me roll and have you put your hands across your chest and we'll criss cross arms and on her count of three we'll roll one two three I'm going to position the board appropriately sorry and on her column three roll roll back one two three and now we need to move her up as a unit up and over so if you want to grab the hips I'll grab up here the torso and on her count of three we'll move up and over one two three okay it does play a minute check and see if she needs any padding behind your tarsal she feels okay to me I'm going to secure her to the board I'm just keep her head and finally you can liquid c-spine I'm gonna do one more CMS check does she have good pulse of the salsas are good right can you feel me touching your hands yeah please squeeze which hand my touching right now and pedal pulses pulses are grab pin can you feel me touching which one rank up and down key push up all right and I'm done with this station
Sanford Health EMS Education
UC_IyQ5LjUdMI8303QilwZzQ
2012-05-29
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en
metadata
en
518
2,737
LP9nFLiW4e8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LP9nFLiW4e8
S.No 9: TBGO an innovation at increasing adherence to TB medication-World TB Day 2022
good morning i am dr raghav kumar and in turn currently working in gurutek baadu hospital and the university college of medical sciences new delhi during our various field trips across the rural and suburban areas of delhi i frequently came across tb patients a significant number of whom had developed drug resistance and secondary infection due to incomplete treatment another common factor was that most of these patients belong to a lower socio-economic sector this peaked my curiosity into the causes of poor patient adherence and subsequent recurrent infections in tuberculosis tb remains one of the world's deadliest disease although nearly all cases can be cured tb remains one of the world's biggest threats every minute one person dies of tuberculosis in india with an estimated 27 lakh new cases india takes the crown in terms of the total tb global burden contributing to an astounding 26 percent of all tb cases in the world and with an increase of 12 in the incidence rate as compared to the previous year this is a trend unlikely to die down due to the fact that india accounts for approximately one-fifth of all the tb cases in the world a effective tb control program in india is essential too and will have global implications in the international tb control effort and thus i would like to present my approach to tackling this modern day epidemic as mentioned previously retreatment cases constitute about 24 of all tb cases in the rntcp these include relapse failure and treatment after default given the high human and drug cost of treatment of each patient especially in the re-treatment group more information and subsequent reduction of patients in this group is critical to the success of tb control activities and as the patients in the rntcp are not followed up after treatment for any length of time there is very low information about relapse there seems to be almost no trend from year to year that the proportion of retreatment cases have become reduced now that the dot has been consolidated management of tb still largely depends upon dot the dot or directly observed treatment has been viewed as an efficient strategy for adherence to treatment while evidence has demonstrated that it poses an economic and social burden to patients with tv there is a treatment of tb requires at least six months where patients in the intensive phase are intensive where patients in the intensive phase of dot need to collect their medication at a healthcare facility daily and swallow tablets under a direct observation of healthcare workers throughout the interface despite tb care and treatment services being delivered free of charge patients with tb face out of pocket payments and income losses due to transportation accommodation and food to get treatment added a healthcare facility these can be a major obstacle to utterance and has forced patients to stop working sell property and even borrow money thereby reducing their overall income these in turn have increased the rates of loss to follow-up disease disease relapse and drug resistance patients who travel daily to healthcare facilities for medications have also increased in the transmission process of the transmission potential of the disease especially in the capital city new delhi a highly congested city with overcrowding housing and public transportation several studies have reported that patients with tb considered their daily dot visits as worthless and providers see dot as a very challenging strategy for patients with tb as a result daily dot survives in principle while implementation is irregular in both patient with tb and providers have uncertainties concerning the program providers report that patients with tb prefer taking the tablets at home once they have received the necessary advice and counselling patients complain that they travel for daily dot under harsh conditions for up to 2 hours and 2.5 kilometers taking several rests on their way because of their sickness they spend substantial amounts of money on transportation and some lose their job due to work related absences providers also report that patients appear exhausted and dissatisfied during dot visits some patients claim that once they are initially informed about the disease no one talks to them on the subsequent dot days they just swallow the drug and return home additionally patients face stigma on their route to daily dot and change their name in the tb clinic to disguise their identity and with that i present to you my solution pb go a durable affordable and easy to use medication event reminder monitoring system aimed at improving adherence to treatment and efficient monitoring of the patient cohort it's suitable for use in blister package tv medication by tv patients it can hold one month of tb medication and is highly portable tb go box uses a magnetic sensor which is a switch that is triggered upon opening the drug container box it has programmable alert mechanisms consisting of three led lights green for doze alert yellow for refill and red for low battery an audible tone to indicate that a dose is due at the same time the box produces a alarm to indicate the data center that the mrmerm was functioning for that day data transfer is straightforward and is done by a usb the patient has allotted a midshell epochs metshell e-pill box on microbiological confirmation of team the pill box will be linked to the patient's nick share number which is already existing under the ntb strategy and will have a bar code on it the patient will be counseled above the pill box and will be supplied by one month's worth of fdc anti-tuberculosis medication every day the patient follows the regimen and opens the box a message will be sent to secure servers which can be reviewed on command a blinking red light will work as a visual alarm for the patient to consume medication which will turn a constant blow as soon as the box is open for the day failure to consume medication for one day will cause a phone call from a tb go call center failure to consume for seven days will cause the nearby medical health worker slash allied health worker to check up on the patient on completion of one month's dose the patient will present the pill box to the nearest dot center where a scanner will scan the niksha code and re-shock with another month's worth of anti-tubular medication and with that i conclude my presentation i hope my device would be a part of the ntb strategy and help in eradicating a major health obstacle thank you
Health and Family
UCIC0GAgcyWN-CBp1FIpAAPA
2022-03-11
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en
metadata
en
1,108
6,524
IqZkrceD_sY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqZkrceD_sY
Genius fitness hack for your kid? 🏋🏻‍♂️🔥 | Online health and exercise classes #shorts
Hello friends it's time for a pillow fight that's not what these pillows are for we're gonna be learning pillow push-ups so if you've ever thought that a push-up was too hard for you it's not we're gonna learn this soft way we're gonna go nice straight body straight arms make sure you're not up like a mountain r or down like a seal we're gonna Bend our elbows and take our chest right down to our pillow and push up right down to our pillow and push up when you can do about 10 of those in a row say goodbye pillow we're gonna make it a little harder what's up push up and of course when you're ready goodbye pillow and we're gonna be doing a full push-up before you know it also you can totally do this drill mermaid style put your tail on and go for it alright friends you are on your way to a perfect push-up
Outschool - Educational Classes for Kids
UCgIHCsbhHqRTrt6-WhmoSlA
2023-06-06
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en
metadata
en
162
813
OPzCC3jfTMc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OPzCC3jfTMc
Lyme disease brochure
hi my name is Elaine and I've had I'm diseased since 2002 I went to many doctors in my area and no one at the time could help me I ended up going to an out-of-state doctor and was put on IV therapy I did both oral and IV drugs for Lyme disease and it was a very successful treatment program during the time I was on the therapy I decided I would write a brochure for my area to try to spread the word about Lyme disease what it was some of the symptoms and I offered it on youtube several months ago and got a fairly decent response a lot of people wanted to copy the brochure so I've decided to do a video the brochure talks about Lyme disease as far as what Lyme disease is there's a paragraph about you know that describes what it is of course it's a bacterial infection and it tells you you know that the deer tick is one of the carriers of Lyme disease of course I don't don't believe that it's the only carrier there's many different species of ticks that can give you Lyme disease also we do think that most people I've talked to in the Lyme community feel like it's also being transmitted by other vectors or other means so I did a paragraph on that there's also a paragraph about co-infections me personally even when I was treated for Lyme disease I had some symptoms that wouldn't clear up extensive blood work was done and they found that I did have OBC osis and of course when that problem was addressed several symptoms that that wouldn't go away from just the initial Lyme disease treatment disappeared because they were they did need a different treatment also there's a paragraph on testing as we all know less than 50% of people that actually have Lyme disease tests positive for it which is unfortunate I've included three pictures of rashes not all our bull's eye you don't have to have the bull's eye rash to have Lyme disease some people I've spoken to over the years don't even notice the rash don't even remember a rash also make sure when you're if you're bent and you develop a rash you take a picture of that rash it's always good to have for the doctor I've included symptoms on the brochure of course if anybody knows of any different symptoms I will be happy to add them to the next revision of the brochures so if you have other symptoms that I didn't list please send me a message to let me know what they are have a paragraph about prevention short paragraph on prevention a paragraph on how to remove the tick and most importantly I've listed three tick testing labs with their phone numbers if you can remove the tick put it in an airtight a small airtight container with a moist cotton ball you can call one of these numbers and they will give you feed information you're looking at 35 to 65 dollars roughly and they will give you shipment information and then will test test that tick for you on treatment options of course most of this paragraph deals with antibiotic treatment as that's the that's the road I travel that's what worked for me but at the end I do list some other treatment options some other forms of treatment also what is a herxheimer reaction I believe these are so important and they're so very important to line illiterate physicians you know in the paragraph it says that if you don't if you don't have perks time or reactions it really makes them question whether or not you truly have have Lyme disease Lyme disease being the great imitator I don't think that's any secret to anybody that it can mimic or imitate just about any disease that's out there and then finally at the end of the brochure I've listed a fair amount of resource information so you know there are a lot of organization websites on here and also you know some some sources different sources for information on Lyme disease and just my opinion and a personal note there is a film documentary out there under our skin it is an absolutely wonderful communication tool for those of you that have family members and friends and they just don't don't understand what you're going through this film is just remarkable several different line patients they have several different varying symptoms and they you know it shows a little bit about what's going on with the battle with the doctors and the mainstream medical and insurance companies and it's just a wonderful film and it should really help your loved ones understand and if you are interested in a brush war send me a message with your email address it's absolutely free I'll be happy to send you a copy and everybody out there is on my prayer list and god bless
Elaine Clements Finn
UCcpkjeAPApC1dwoY0Q2-QXQ
2009-07-10
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
843
4,546
PYgyTnwoIx4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYgyTnwoIx4
Let's Ban These Phrases: Calm Down & Cheer Up!
I think we need to ban two phrases they are calm down and cheer up I don't think negativity's antidote is positivity I think it's warmth and compassion because positivity says to a person experiencing negativity you know cheer up don't worry about it calm down warm days tring to go get ice cream let's go grab a coffee that's empathy warmth is an expression of empathy and if I've learned anything in my years of helping people it's that empathy should precede coaching empathy should precede advice giving warmth should be the first thing we send out in order to engage with people that are struggling with negativity and struggling in life so today who do you need to say to hey let's go get ice cream h of coffee that that be your first expression of love and warmth and that will open the way to give the great advice and coaching you may have for someone hope that helps
Paul Scanlon
UCb0gJMA6_O21ITwi7t66yIQ
2024-04-03
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
en
metadata
en
162
876
K6a9t5gmyVw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K6a9t5gmyVw
Night Chill Stream || Live with SR studio || BGMI LIVE || #Ocean_Tempest #grumpy_gaming
okay bts sdg foreign [Music] team match let's go first point for the red team [Applause] expired reloading clear target down oh no mercy cover me [Music] killing spree for the blue team the red team is about to win the red team is unstoppable ah the red team is unstoppable oh killing spree for the blue team ah so oh nice shot blue team victory so why okay thank you foreign uh ruby balls i need a weapon foreign um [Music] foreign okay foreign gonna hide it foreign location yes okay wow you is foreign okay everybody foreign over here [Applause] locations location watch out foreign locations [Applause] down [Applause] mark the location is foreign yes foreign i got supplies is so foreign enemies foreign yes um [Music] yes foreign is [Applause] foreign is [Music] foreign i got supplies i'm gonna [Applause] [Music] funny is i think and foreign [Music] foreign [Music] is foreign [Music] foreign yes [Music] marked a location foreign is foreign um foreign [Music] location [Music] foreign [Music] yes [Music] foreign before um hey location are you okay [Applause] today [Applause] these um foreign [Music] foreign by um [Music] my [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign um foreign um [Music] foreign okay foreign the [Music] me so [Music] foreign oh hello you location hmm [Applause] hello foreign [Applause] foreign [Music] foreign guys oh yes is [Music] okay locations something locations foreign is hey connections wait oh okay that's foreign name come on uh with us foreign [Music] um foreign yes huh foreign [Music] i mean like this [Music] watch out watch out [Music] foreign [Music] is [Music] what [Music] foreign [Music] foreign [Music] foreign okay me drivers you are my driver [Music] foreign you subscribe the channel is mmm um [Music] foreign um school okay please boys foreign legs [Applause] foreign peace um this one party thank you [Music] [Applause] [Music] right hello please um is hello [Music] okay [Music] that what's amanda foreign [Music] foreign but foreign um foreign nato timing [Music] um hmm foreign one foreign so um foreign um not foreign mark the location [Applause] i bet i wanna okay i got supplies a foreign from mexico foreign a second i got supplies watch out foreign watch out that's eight location [Music] running shot um watch out hey foreign come on i don't know mm-hmm is watch out foreign no kick big kitchener single single tap location foreign [Applause] i wanted [Music] is foreign watch out [Music] foreign hard time now watch out mark the location [Music] b uh i'll pick oh foreign yes is [Applause] what foreign location i mean he gonna come foreign hey marked location youtube channel 10 location wow oh foreign is oh not oh my god [Music] is mark the location double room down hello [Music] foreign okay you
GRUMPY GAMING
UCN7R0OF9hN9_zpj0cy_OEjA
2021-08-16
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en
metadata
en
473
2,788
nLLmrMJuxSU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLLmrMJuxSU
Exorcisms : The Centuries-Long History of Expelling Evil
exorcisms the Century's long history of expelling evil red or black knight from Biblical depictions of Christ casting out demons to charismatic Christians in the 60s to the story behind the 1973 movie people have been attempting to expel evil for centuries since its theatrical release in 1973 the Exorcist based on William Peter blattey's 1971 novel of the same name has served as the cultural touch point for an otherwise mysterious religious ritual in reality it's only part of the most recent chapter in the long history of the spiritual practice that involves far more than a spinning head in green projectile vomit exorcism is a prayer or ritual that is meant to remove the influence of demonic evil power over a person says Stephen Oki a theologian an assistant professor of philosophy Theology and religion at Saint Leo University in Florida Many religious Traditions believe that there are evil forces that can have a negative influence on a person's life but according to Oki the term exorcism is most commonly associated with Christianity especially Catholicism partly because of the numerous explicit references to Jesus casting out spirits in the Gospels below is a timeline highlighting episodes in the history of exorcism beginning with its biblical roots Jesus casts out evil spirits in Gospel of Mark the first four books of the New Testament of the Bible known as the gospels tell the story of Jesus of Nazareth a Jewish Prophet whose life and teachings became the basis of Christianity the first mention of Jesus casting away evil spirits appears in the gospel of Mark which is thought to have been written around a D 70 roughly 40 years after his death in the New Testament Jesus exorcisms were evidence of his authority over the devil says Rob Haskell THM a theologian specializing in the New Testament and former minister they showed that he had spiritual power in addition to describing exorcisms of humans the Bible also includes at least one reference to animals being possessed by demons he adds these biblical mentions serve as an introduction to the practice since our understanding of exorcisms in the modern world comes from the Christian worldview the New Testament sets the stage for all that follows Haskell explains Martin Luther adds exorcism to baptismal rights angry and disillusioned by the Catholic Church's sale of indulgences marketed to Believers as a way to fast-track their way through repenting for their sins in purgatory a German Theologian named Martin Luther wrote a list of his complaints about the religion which he may or may not have nailed to the door of his University's Church in 1517. his act of defiance sparked the split in Christianity known as the Protestant Reformation and in 1521 gotimex communicated from the Catholic Church by the pope himself though Luther wasn't the only reformer of the era he was the most prolific taking full advantage of the printing press and written word to spread his ideas on what Christianity should look like this included publishing his order of baptism in 1523 followed by a 1526 revision that added exorcism to Protestant baptismal rights in this situation infant exorcism was done to help the baby reject the devil sin and evil throughout their lifetime rather than to cast out a demonic presence not all Protestant denominations adopted the practice of exorcism but for a period of time during the Renaissance it was enough to make the question of how exorcism should take place a controversial topic says Catherine Walker an assistant professor of English specializing in the history of magic at the University of Nevada Las Vegas at that point exorcism was well trodden territory for Catholics who had writings teachings and rituals to guide them Protestant exorcisms on the other hand were mostly conducted through prayer and fasting and often involved entire communities resulting in a public Affair that could border on performance in early modern England we have many records of fantastic exorcisms conducted by clerics or sometimes by professional exorcists Walker explains some of these latter were exposed as frauds along with these theatrical events exorcisms became even more visible when writers like William Shakespeare began referencing them in their work in his case King Lear and Twelfth Night but amidst all this attention skepticism arose as well Protestants increasingly viewed the entire rituals surrounding exorcism with hostility says Walker and while that shift led to exorcism fizzling Out Among Protestants by the early 1600s its presence in the periods literature helped form its enduring cultural Legacy evangelicals prompt Revival of exorcism protestantism continued to spread throughout parts of Europe eventually making its way to North America in the 17th century by way of British colonists puritanism was the dominant Protestant denomination in America in the 17th and early 18th centuries but changed over the course of a series of revivals known as great Awakenings in the 1730s and 1740s the 1790s and from the late 1850s to the early 20th century the Baptist and Methodist denominations grew considerably as a result of these revivals especially in the newly settled western parts of the country as well as the South simultaneously the 1800s also saw a rise in evangelicalism an umbrella term applied to Protestant groups that believe in strict adherence to the Bible being born again the need to convert other people and that the crucifixion of Jesus will lead to the Salvation of humanity in the early 1900s the Pentecostal movement emerged among American evangelicals Pentecostalism focused on the Holy Spirit and included Supernatural components like glossolalia better known as speaking in tongues Faith healing Miracles and exorcism while exorcisms had continued in the Catholic church all along they were not as prevalent in Protestant denominations throughout the 17th 18th and 19th centuries but pentecostalism's high energy worship services and the lore of the possibility of receiving Supernatural gifts from the Holy Spirit caused the movement to attract new members and continue to grow throughout the first half of the 20th century charismatic Christians revive exorcism beginning in the 1950s Evangelical protestantism embarked on a period of rapid growth evangelists like Reverend Billy Graham took to the airwaves gaining access to Americans homes through appearances on both radio and television and became even more influential when he served as a spiritual advisor for president Dwight D Eisenhower the following decade increasing numbers of Mainline Protestants primarily Presbyterians and episcopalians and some Catholics began to adopt Pentecostal style worship and A Renewed focus on the Holy Spirit a movement known as charismatic Christianity like their Pentecostal counterparts charismatic Christians also performed exorcisms sparking renewed interest in the ritual in the late 1960s and into the 1970s in the United States as well as in Africa and Latin America it wasn't long before exorcisms once again became embedded in popular culture as they had during the Renaissance William Peter blattey's 1971 novel The Exorcist based on the real life story of a 14 year old boy who underwent Catholic exorcisms in Maryland and Missouri in 1949 kicked off the trend reaching the top spot on the New York Times bestseller list and remaining there for 17 weeks the film version of bloody's book was released in 1973 at a time Okie says was transitional both for Cinema and for Catholicism The Exorcist had a huge influence on the rise of the horror genre and films of the 1970s in general often had a grittier or rougher Edge to them than films of the preceding decades he explains at the same time the Catholic church was working through the early effects of Vatican II and its effects on liturgy relations with other religions and relations with the modern world red or black knight
Mr Reddit
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2022-10-23
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6fPVMI9_yM
Being a Student with Visual Impairment
Let me thank Kjetil and Elinor and the university to invite me today and I'm so happy about the fact that I'm here and I'll be interacting with you and talking about universal design, learning and share some of my perspectives. Some of them have been formulated over the years, it has been through trial and error. So as Elinor rightly pointed out you would see like a transition from how it was for me to understand this concept of universal design, inclusion, diversity through different lenses, if you will, starting from being a student with visual impairment and moving on to a lecturer, public speaker, organizer, a researcher with visual impairment. And finally I round off the whole of the entire presentation with some theoretical ideas and concepts. So as you see the title of this presentation: Universal Design and individual insights: a resource oriented outlook of being a student with visual impairment - and you must be wondering: resource oriented and impairment? How does that work? Because the first thing that you hear is when we think about impairment, the images which evoke in your head, is a sense of dependency, reduced ability, this limitation or centric idea, the tragic worldview. So what is Gagan going to talk about a resource oriented outlook? My main objective with this first presentation is this flipping the coin. And as I know that many of you are teachers, lecturers and administrators I think it'll be very nice to understand, to get some perspectives on how a student with impairment sees this whole learning process. Before I go any further, so that you have a bit of a context about where I'm coming from, this is my biographical profile, previous experiences and educational background. So as you see I have been born and brought up in India, I've lived and worked in the U.S., Norway and India in the past, I'm currently concluding my PhD doctoral fellowship and I have three masters from before. First in special needs education from the University of Oslo, second in international Social Welfare and a health policy from Oslo Metropolitan University and the third one from India, a Masters in Business Administration. The reason why I have this biographical profile is because you understand that I have very eclectic experiences when it comes to understanding the learning environment, when it comes to facing bureaucrats, administrators, teachers from different walks of life and saying okay here I have to meet some accommodation, could you help me get some accommodation, and how do I go about it. So there has been this constant learning process over the past 10 years or so. And I have as I mentioned previously worked as a management consultant and lecturer or tutor, public speaker and I will be sharing all those perspectives in the upcoming slides. These are the critical reflections of being a student with visual impairment. So am I an average student? A normal student? A self-contained student, a student who is independent, who is initiative taking, who is motivated, who is energetic, who is cognitively always stable? And the question is that all these are idealized constructs, if you think about it, that when you go to a classroom as a teacher, as a lecturer and your main idea is that who should I be addressing this lecture for. Is there a thing called as average? And a lot of damage in my assessment has been done because of these concepts or these ideas which have started from "the psychology department" back in the day. And it ended up just percolating to different spheres of life, be the therapeutic side or more medical side of the story or be it through counselors and experts in the academic sense that let us create a classroom for an average student. You are a perfect average student who is going to be in the center of the class neither too hot nor too cold, right in the center. So I I think a lot of damage in my assessment when it comes to inclusion of not just person with impairment or student with impairment but student with different needs. This is also one thing which I want you to take away from this presentation: go beyond impairment for once and try to understand perhaps my impairment experiences are just something which gives me a distinctive vantage point to talk about diversity and inclusion. But this might hold true for people who are from ethnic minority backgrounds, it might very well hold true for people who have different language abilities, language skills. Yt might hold true for women who come from perhaps if it's a male oriented stream like engineering or physics and somehow find a woman there. All of these questions, all of these concepts will start haunting. So that's why it's very important to not have this idealized construction of an individual, but you have a much much broader lucid, fluid understanding of an individual. That individual evolves, individual learns. There's a trial and error, you have some capacity today but tomorrow you learn a different skill and you are at a different level. And this odhering process is very very crucial. As I mentioned these are all binary constructs, often we do it because we want to categorize our our life. It's easier to put people into categories, give them labels: this person is out of the ordinary, gifted child, gifted student, excellent. And this person is just average, this person requires, is too dependent and too needy, there is some something abnormal, something not right about him or her and these other persons are normal, students are normal. So it's very, very crucial to keep this in the back of mind when you're designing the classrooms. So as I was just talking, the perfect example here is an individual, a girl or a woman, she could be accomplished but again she has to be average in many ways, not express way too much or an average face. She carries the average weight of the world on her average shaped shoulders. She wears the average shoes, not make too much noise, does not want to stand out. The point of this presentation should be like a point of departure, the conversation should start from perhaps impairment but should not end at impairment. It has to be much more inclusive and that's how Universal Design kicks in. So again, a normal student, yes of course I can take a lot of stress, I can write those essays all night long and then submit them in the morning and then sleep, and I'm a coffee addict and where's my cup of coffee, it's here. Right? Normal student, a myth or reality, you have to ask that question. Few challenges, as I mentioned, from my standpoint these are some of the major, major challenges. This whole expectation that I have to fit in and this perpetual sense of anxiety that if I stand out what will the group think of me? What will the class think of me? What does this teacher think of me? If I ask can I take a little bit more time because I don't see, for instance? The concept of power distance, so crucial, as I mentioned, I have this very diverse background. So if you come from a culture like India when the power distance is so phenomenally huge, the huge hierarchical structures. Before you write Hi Kjetil, you'll have to say dear, mister, sir, doctor, respected, Kjetil. So it's a nice ego massage which you have to do before you reach to the point that could I come to your office? The moment you come to Norway which is a pretty egalitarian society, if you're like can we go out for a coffee, hello? And then the answer is yes of course we can go out for coffee. You can ask the professors and so on. And so the point is this that it's it's so crucial for the teachers, lecturers because we are talking about multicultural classroom settings. We are not talking about homogenous nordic model that most of the students in a class in Norway would be ethnic Norwegians. They might be, they might not be. And if they are not then how do we go about understanding these things. Perhaps we might have to signal to the students who are coming from outside Nordic countries, outside Europe, outside the rich developed world that listen, it's okay, you don't have to be that formal, it's okay. So it's very, very crucial again. The next point is about this, being circumspect. Think about this, that it's very hard to be a student in general and it's twice as hard to be a student with an impairment. You will encounter the question like do I have a voice? Can I protest? Can I just say, can I raise my hand and say whatever I want to say? Again, these are very culturally sensitive ideas. In some cultures it seems okay to do it, in the US and UK perhaps it's okay, but in Norway, for just standing too much out of the group, if you are being too bold to challenge the professor. I don't know how do professors react to it? In India it might be unthinkable, for instance. So again, the students often grapple with this question about okay how do I get accommodation? There's a lot of dirt of information about that. It's not sometimes accessible, it's not easy to go to the website and click and say oh yes here is the link, here are the resources and ah I finally found out. So it's very, very important to tackle that aspect as well because if the students don't get the confidence then they will never approach, and if they don't approach most of them will drop out. And that's what the evidence also shows that often students with impairment or students who have a little bit of hassle in the first semester or perhaps second semester, early days, they just drop out. They say this is not for me, I'm perhaps too stupid to participate in the classroom. And again, one thing which really struck me is the last point if you think this is this peculiar predicament that if you have an impairment then you should have to be eternally grateful and perpetually happy and nod and smile and just be this pleasant person all time. And this is a very, very huge challenge because sometimes you don't want to, if you have a mental health problem you don't want to be happy all the time. You just don't. So if a student approaches you or is too shy to approach you then as a lecturer, as a teacher, as a professor or as an administrator you have to be cognizant of these aspects. Imagine if you are an administrator and a student comes to you and says ok I need a bit of - just think the amount of psychological effort the student has made to say ok I have a problem, I have to go and talk about it. "Impairment disclosure" that's a huge problem, because they don't want to stand out. Again it boils down to the whole point about not standing out, the students. It encapsulates this picture. I don't want to be alone, I don't want to be an outcast. I just want to be accepted the way I am. Power distance, as I was just saying, if you think about how I was feeling when I was talking to some of the professors, it was almost in India this worship like quality, ah here is this professor and he or she has this degree and worked for 20 years and whatever he or she says I've got to listen to him or her. There's no way I question that authority. There's compliance and on the other side I'm having dinner with a rector, president of the university and he said yes, I would like to listen to what you have to think about things. There's this huge transition. Again, on one side you want to be prudently quiet or silent because you don't want too much trouble, you want to play it safe so you all introduce, say okay I'm going to just keep quiet, I'm going to seal my lips and on the other side you say no, no, no I would like to fight against this. This is what happened to me like five years ago, there was this huge campaign in Norway to implement tuition fees for students who were coming from outside EU. And I said that that is kind of a bit of classist way of looking at educational system, essentially what you're saying is that Norwegian lack of tuition fees is only acceptable for or it's only allowed for students who are coming from Europe or the rich countries. Because if you ask a student who's coming from Africa, Latin America, South Asia or some of the less privileged parts of the world, they might not be able to afford to pay the tuition fees. And on top of that pay the expenses, it's already pretty hard and difficult, expensive to live in Norway. So there was this huge camp in which we had, and again I was just a part of it, but the fact that I got an opportunity to be a part of it is something which is important. And this is what makes for instance for an assertive, clear-headed, well articulated individual. So what are the opportunities. As I said as I started this whole presentation with the idea of resource orientedness and what is the resource orienteness. As I mentioned that the moment you have a disability or an impairment or you are not the "norm". And what do I mean by norm? Norm is perhaps in a berkeley-isc setting, it'll be white, male, privileged, middle-class, heteronormative individual. Well-functioning individual. I don't know if that norm exists in Norway. I don't know, but I'm saying that if it does exist then how do we tackle it? You start with the idea about being an expert, like who knows more about my impairment, me or you? Can I understand about my impairment? Can I communicate my needs, my expectations? Can I explain to Elinor and Kjetil, it'll be easier for me if Elinor can you come outside and collect me from there instead of me trying to find the building door for half an hour. Can I do that? Yes. And it's incumbent on me to do that it's not Elinor's responsibility to ask me about that. So that's why playing the expert role, you have to play the expert role for yourself, for your rights, for your inclusion or exclusion, whatever you want to have it. Next one which I mentioned about this whole identity issue, am I a disabled student, am I an African-American student, am I an Indian student, am I a Norwegian student or am I a student who happens to come from Norway, who happens to come from India, who happens to have an impairment or happens to be an African-American. This is a huge fundamental question. What kind of identity marker I associate with? Because if I say I am a student with impairment then I'm signaling, I'm accepting, I'm acknowledging and I'm promoting the idea that no, I have impairment, but there are perhaps some more qualities which might be interesting for you. You might find it important to learn from or we could talk about it. Very, very crucial this question of identity. If you check someone and one of the most important points on this slide is the idea of, for instance, building allies through open communication. You talk to your peers, you exchange ideas, you explain to them: this is my impairment, this is how I would like you to address me if you meet me, if you see me on the street. Don't just run away, if I don't call you or if I don't recognize you the next day. Don't be offended that Gagan did not see me, you were seeing at me but never said hi. Super rude individual. Again all of this misunderstanding, this challenging the normative assumptions could take place only through open communication. And then you build allies. Because you've got to give a sense, a bit of benefit of the doubt, to the system, to the people. You cannot be in perpetual state of confrontation and as a student raising raising proverbially hell, protesting all the time, demanding all the time. You got to understand that I can play my part as best as I can in the ecosystem which is given to me, the learning environment ecosystem, and I hope that it will be reciprocated by the teachers. You have in exchange through that sense of goodwill and you use disability service providers or support service providers as agents to liason between your needs, your expectations, your demands and what teacher or lecturer can offer. Very, very crucial. So what was I talking in the essence, it's pretty, pretty simple. The three things, I call it the ROA rule, the taking responsibility, accepting ownership and building allies. As a student, if you can do that, it doesn't matter if you're an impaired student, not an impaired student, you can at least make an effort to take a formidable step forward and then you could use your experiental insights as I say in the end with the sole idea of talking about diversity, inclusion and universal design. I will not as you might have understood, I'd not talk too much about universal design because you have been on I'm sure Kjetil, Håkan, Elinor and the whole team has drilled the idea of universal design and learning environments into your head by now. My idea was to just give a point or give a perspective which you might have thought about but you might not have heard it articulated in a way I'm doing it. And as I said, for instance, we are entering a phase where classrooms are becoming more diverse, it's becoming more multicultural, societies are more inclusive, want to be more inclusive and so if you want to be professionals, teachers lecturers, professors, administrators we better know about these things and we could use the catalyst of universal design or to create a much more holistic, wholesome and inclusive learning environment. Thank you and let's have some questions and discussions, really looking forward to it.
Suomen eOppimiskeskus ry
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2021-03-19
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Galactic War Scoundrels featuring Han Solo
good morning so um this is galactic War uh this is not the first order Rogue one Sith Jedi rebel whatever Squad you are looking for this is scoundrel yeah because we've got three bounty hunters and two Scoundrels here um I was asked if if I could showcase Stormtrooper Hub OG Han so oh we'll bang that one up shall we do a physical damage to Target enemy and gain term meter equal to hands critical Hans critical chance I don't know what Hans critical charts is we will find out I'm sorry mate you ain't getting that they're reserved it's physical critical chance is 62 percent so uh yeah that's quite a bit of this man modded wise as you can hit see here um he's got have we got anything that I'm just wondering if we can get him over 200 um probably not 10 speed oh we've got a faster one than that I bet we ain't let's just pop it onto a fence for a sec no no if I had a fast one it would already boo oh no look so uh we'll just have a quick butchers and see if there's anything else with speed and a higher dot rate in and of course there isn't oh and that ain't gonna go anywhere either anyway because that's level 10. so uh yeah so it's just under 200. uh oh hang on critical charts I don't think I've got any fast mods here is that a fast one uh no there's nothing with speed at all uh but we do have a 26 speed there uh you know what I'm sorry I'm taking far too long on this right This Is My Han Solo under a boba lead because although I'm showcasing Han um what I'm really doing is examing it uh which Jedi do we want to stun that's you deal more damage the other one ability blocks uh who do we want to be the proud recipient I think they can have this one there you go so we'll throw up everyone gets additional critical chance and we've got avoidance going and does anyone not have a bomb everybody does have a bomb you're about to go how much damage can we put into you right always wary I'm going to actually take out Leia first because she's got the AOE bomb from new which means that everyone's going to get some damage there share the love as as you do take it no you're useless thank you for staying alive really well that's just that's just wrong yeah you deserve that so do you and you can have some of that spoiling my exam fun like that I don't know so yeah OG Han Han Solo is is great I mean I've he's really useful actually um if you've got him as a rebel in a phase four heroic tank really useful uh not that I'm popping any real taunts up but you know you can just hang around there mate oh yes so how does that work then I've exposed and it's dodged so what does the exposed metric actually do then apparently nothing I've got a loses 20 Health if damn if damaged by attack so exposed isn't like Target lock Dodge that mate oh you didn't oh well never mind um you can hang around as well right let's shoot some bombs boom are you gonna Dodge as well oh look at that so the this one here I'm hoping that it will just bring up Dead Eye reusable in four teres deal physical damage to Target enemy and game turn me are equal to hands critical chance we'll let harmco go back to chewy because it just seems quite poignant that Han should take down chewy poignant that's probably not the right word sorry but yeah so these are all um these are the first few nodes of of Galactic wall which means I'm not being faced with too much opposition which affords me the opportunity of actually running a non-taunting team I mean this team is all really get geared up for attacking that that's its primary function no uh looking behind and defending so that is I mean the hand goes first that that's that's the given right my target here is twofold one is the old darker doesn't revise and revise yeah that she doesn't revise anyone because we don't want them learning anything do we we could also use the word revive I don't want her to revive anybody no no no we want them to stay dead when we shoot them um you know what off your that was impressive uh they're not really offering much I'm not gonna use The Thermals anymore in this round what I am going to do is expose Chewie and just fly flashlight I was looking through some uh I was looking through swgo hgg characters I'm pretty sure knight's sister initiate is like the highest damage dealer there is I was shocked fortunately someone's put real big sponge paddings over whatever it is that she hits people with because ineffective it was we'd be seeing it interesting though isn't it oh oh wow I I might be correct in saying that this is one of the very few times that I've got to fight against Grievous other than obviously the heroic tank here you go mate everyone have a present you refused um yeah well just uh as many as we can and Zen can have a go well potato oh no actually yeah potato no you're gonna do mate you've got no one to speed up might as well just jog on so uh I'm so tempted to use my one of my daughters loves uh Austin Powers and there's a line in there about it's it's all SMGs until somebody G's and passes or I'll let you fill in the blanks um wow needed more Buffs there uh now let's have a crack at you I don't really want to put loads of red on you because you're vicious I'm just putting more red uh get rid of the Healer don't want anyone healing him more than we have to here so we've given everyone quick chance let's see how much we can take out of him now then nice oh I do like CAD I do and if he gets some sort of boost for his upcoming ship then he could be quite an interesting character okay so yeah my my note six look at that I've got a zader this is node six is that a zoba not quite everything bar that matched let's just get 227 speed on his on his boba how fast is his palps his palps is oh not as fast as I was expecting actually 187 and certainly got speed mods on there but that tells me that he's going to be quite naughty um we'll have a quick go so this is where OG can't really do much we can expose sure give sure uh a gift that he doesn't seem to want to want uh okay how much damage do you put into it not a great deal see it's just not it's not heavy weighting up oh come on fit oh sorry I was about it was like no yeah all right I'm touching the screen retreat okay uh I'll Bank what I've done um it probably that score would be better with a tank but even then yeah
Mike Hunt
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2017-04-11
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Leadership - The difference between Pastors & Leaders
well let me say a little bit to you about the difference between pastors and leaders I think we've made them one of the same thing another thing they are most growing thriving flourishing organizations including churches are that because the person in charge is clearly a leader with the skills required to grow anything that attached too often in the church we call the person in charge a pasta and assume that that means that they bring everything to the table that's needed for an organization to flourish but I believe a lot of leaders are trapped inside a pastas identity and I certainly was for the first sort of 20 years or so of my time leading a local church and when the pasta decides to lead which requires them to become a little bit more assertive more opinionated perhaps controversial disruptive then people get upset thinking there's something wrong with the pasta the pasta needs a sabbatical or he's not being very pastoral and soft and the leader subsides the pasta comes back to the fore because it's unpopular to be a leader often in a volunteer-based context where people feel they're giving of their time voluntarily and we shouldn't really ask much from them because they're not paid staff members I think that fosters the gain in much of a church the pastas leaned towards be nurturing and teaching and creating kind of family atmosphere as a father figure but they are not leading and what makes any organization community church grow is not nurturing but is leading and pioneering and constantly keeping that thing moving forward so I want to say to you pastors that truck with me or listen to anything I talk about regarding the church in your role that what will make your church grow is not you being pastoral and absorbed in the care maintenance of the needs of the flock others can do that and others should be doing that that keep releasing you to get out the leadership strength that you have where you can clearly see what needs changing you can see what's stopping you growing you can have a mind for the position of people and resource to facilitate growth you can be around growth oriented environments and people so you grow yourself as a leader more than grow yourself as a pastor I think that's why sometimes we give the label pasta it becomes a misnomer because a lot of you listening to me now don't feel like a pasta you have the badge of one but you feel more like a leader there's so many things you want to do that you feel if you do them if you speak like a leader behave and think like a leader that the pasta part of you will come under threat and people will feel that part of you is dissipating and fading and I want that bit of you back because people want to be nurtured they don't really want to be led but I've observed that all organizations and we talk about the church here but all organizations especially the church that are thriving around the world are that because they have a leader in charge the leader may be called a pastor but trust me it is not their pastoral abilities or title or role that is bringing growth to that church it is their leadership abilities so pastors don't grow churches leaders do and I'm encouraging the pastor to fade and the leader to come to prominence one must decrease one must increase I'm a couraging the leadership gene it's come out the pastoral lamp and stay out and not go back in because if you'll do that and not be afraid of the kickback you get from being a leader and continue to see the value of what you bring to the table and how different you think are now different you lead and the difference it makes when you have a leadership hat on as it were then I want you to stay there and realize that that is the key to the continual thriving growing attached if you are a pasta and you are not a leader are you more a nurturer and a carer of the flock than a leader then you need to release and empower the leadership around you and even bring leaders from outside to bring the leadership that perhaps is not your primary strength so either way the church is gonna grow through your leadership your leadership or someone else's leadership so we want it to be you if it's not you don't become a cork in the bottle and a ceiling on the church in the organization if you're not a leader that can do what I'm saying then you can still be a great pasta a great pastoral leader as it were but make room for others to come through with a leadership gift because leadership will take that thing forward
Paul Scanlon
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2018-05-08
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOssXRLHFmk
How Can I Deliver and Disciple Well? @vladhungrygen
Jesus's ministry was ministering to the  masses through miracle, signs and wonders.   But at the same time, He would multiply Himself  in the small group of people and that's what we   call Discipleship. If we look at Matthew  chapter 9 verses 35 and 37, it says, then   Jesus went about to all the cities and I want you  to notice what He was doing is, He was teaching.   He was preaching and then He was healing every  disease and every sickness, among the people.   Masses did not come to Jesus because Jesus was  handing out free hot dogs. Masses came to Jesus   not because He was a great speaker. Masses came  to Jesus because Jesus was healing all disease   till Jesus never had a problem attracting masses  and I believe that the Church of Jesus Christ,   if we stop relying on Facebook ads and bulletin  boards and start relying more on signs and   wonders and miracles, we will reach masses for  Jesus as well. This building, not only it will   be too small, Toyota Center will be small,  because God's method to reach the world is miracles, signs and wonders. It's not only a  method of God, it's a representation of His   goodness and love for people. God doesn't use  miracles like Facebook ads to reach people. He   uses miracles to love on people, to care for  people and to give the devil, a black eye,   to destroy the works of darkness.  Because sickness is the work of sin,   because demonization is the work of demons  and God wants to give the devil, a black eye   through signs and wonders Amen. But it doesn't  end there. The Bible says, after He went out   the scripture says in here is that, He saw the  multitudes. These are the multitudes that He   healed and He ministered to and the Bible says,  He was moved with compassion for them because they   were weary and they were scattered. They were  like sheep and they had no pastors and He said   to His disciples, the Harvest, meaning, people  are ready but the leaders, people who will go   and heal the sick, people who will go and cast  out demons, people who will go and cleanse the   lepers, people who will go and raise the dead  people, who will not just go and make coffee,   direct traffic and babysit children on Sunday  school. Though that's important but the real   ministry of Jesus is not organizing a Sunday  morning service, it's populating Heaven,   it's plundering hell and it's doing the  work that Jesus did, reaching masses Amen. If we have miracles, we will have a crowd but  if we have disciples, we will have a future.   Jesus did not only reach multitudes. Jesus also  made disciples and because of that Jesus Christ,   when He died, His ministry, His agenda took  off. When I would meet with our pastoral   team and I said, let's be honest. If we all as a  pastoral team die today, will our church explode   tomorrow or will it disappear in six months. And  I can tell you one thing, it will not explode.   Partially is because we are better at gathering  crowds than building an army and I do believe,   the Lord wants to have us both. He wants us to  have the supernatural miracles but He also wants   us to have a strategic focus on multiplying  ourselves in other people for the future,   so that we're not just having a Revival here and  now but we're planting seeds into the Revival for   the next generation and the next generation. Our  God is the God of Abraham but He's also the God   of Isaac, He's also the God of Jacob and He's also  the God of Joseph and He's also the God of Moses   and He's also the God of David and He's also the  God of the Lord Jesus Christ, He is also a God of   the generational. Our culture has an obsession  with children. Today, the Demonic agenda of   indoctrination is focused specifically, people  are giving money today to mutilate children,   confuse children, indoctrinate children. Why?  Because they know, they don't have the adult   population. Let's confuse the Young Generation  and as the church, what discipleship does is,   it multiplies the character of Jesus in the hearts  of Younger, Next Generation, thus spreading the   agenda of the kingdom of God, not only in our  generation but a generation yet to come Amen. You're mistaken not knowing the scriptures or the  power of God. I believe that when the church loses   the supernatural, we are mistaken. Without the  supernatural, without miracles, we are mistaken.   The church took two extremes. First extreme is  cessationists. God has ended all the miracles.   God stoppd doing miracles. The Bible is written,  we don't need miracles anymore. Well, people are   still sick. People are still demonized and God is  still powerful God. God is not Christian. God is   the Almighty God and for God to do miracles is  the same thing as for me to breathe. That's who   He is and cessation is pretty much, said we don't  need miracles, we just need to preach the word,   preach the word, we don't need the supernatural  and Jesus says, you don't know the scriptures. So   we need the scriptures but He says, you don't know  the power of God and therefore you're mistaken.   Now the charismaniacs went to the other  side and made it into a sensation,   where everything is about more miracles and  just experiencing God and it's literally what   we've made, experiencing the power of God as  the only reason for existence and living. We   made it a goal instead of a means to a goal.  And of course, a lot of the cessationists,   people who are reformed, will look at a  lot of the charismatics and say, well,   all you're doing is pretty much, only about  miracles, you're only about miracles but it   doesn't have a purpose. There is no mission to  that and there's a healthy balance, where we have   the supernatural but we also have that Jesus's  strategy, to use that supernatural to communicate   the love of God, for the purpose of the Salvation  of people, for the purpose of making disciples.   Are you with me? So we need both. I want you to  notice in Exodus chapter 1 verse 10, it says, let   us deal shrewdly with them, lest they multiply. It  happened and it happened that in an event of war,   that they will join with our enemies and fight  against us and go up in the land. The devil will   fight every church so that the church does  not have supernatural. So that we only have   things that we can explain but the moment we  get the supernatural and we're not afraid of   the moving of the Holy Spirit, he will then fight  the church, make sure the church doesn't multiply.   Why? Because yeah, you got the miracles and  signs and wonders but it will die with you.   The Next Generation is not going to extend and  move in that because you did not make disciples.   You didn't multiply. Pharaoh was afraid of  multiplication. Because multiplication means there   will be a war and you will win. Multiplication  leads to multitudes and multitudes means might.   Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth  and have dominion. Something happens when the   church begins to multiply. We become a force to  be reckoned with, not because we're trying to   overthrow political things, no, no, no, no  it's because through a grassroot movement,   people are becoming disciples and  like, they said of Disciples of Jesus,   They fill Jerusalem with this teaching. We begin  to infiltrate Society like Salt. We'll begin to   infiltrate Society like Light and we begin to  shift and change things in our society and in   our community and the devil is afraid of that and  so, if he will let us, if he can't stop us from   receiving the supernatural and filling us with  traditional teaching, that we don't need miracles,   we don't need signs and wonders, we shouldn't  have deliverances then, he would make sure that   we stop and we don't see multiplication  and we don't see discipleship being done.   The problem with this guys is that, the  devil will throw everything at you and me,   so that you don't multiply. So that he can steal  the future, you say, okay you got the present,   you're going to fill the Toyota Center, you're  going to do Raised to Deliver conferences,   you're going to move forward the kingdom of  God, people will be delivered but I also know   that I have the future because your children  are not in church. Your children are not being   discipled because you don't have a plan for  the future. You only plan for the future it's   just to have more services instead of having  more disciples. As long as I can keep you   in preservation so you protect your comfort,  you protect your schedule, you keep your own   life. I will prevent future Moses's from being  born. This week as I was praying this weekend,   last week, I felt this burden from the Lord for  our church and for the future, it's almost like   if the devil cannot stop people being born again  as long as they don't get discipled, as long as   they don't get connected to a small group, as long  as they don't get connected to other disciples and   to other leaders and they don't grow up to be  disciple makers. Pharaoh told the Israelites,   he says that, if you have babies I'm okay  with that as long as they end up in the Nile. Yeah you can have a lot of people get saved  here. I'm okay with that as long as nobody   disciples them. Because if you have a big  crowd, I know one thing is once you all die,   I have the future. Because whoever has disciples,  those are the people that have the future. Whoever   has our children, those are the people that have  the future and that's why, what I'm talking about   today is not just about us, oh make sure as a  church, we do discipleship. What I'm talking about   is the teenagers that are in schools right now,  the clubs that are being opened, the young kids   that we have right now, this vision is for our  children, our great children and other children.   Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph because we want to  spread the message of our King through our family,   through a spiritual family and fill as many people  with the teaching of Jesus as we possibly can. That's our church. Big chest, chicken legs. What does  that mean? This is Deliverance,   this is evangelism and discipleship. Now  those legs are there, don't get me wrong.   They're just skinny and the reason why you don't  see the skinny legs is because we wear pants.   What I mean by that is this because there is  a feel at HungryGen of incredible worship,   there's a feel of incredible conferences that we  have, we have some really good looking pastors   like Pastor Vlad, they have really amazing Pastors  in our church that travel, they're powerful,   they're dynamic, they're incredible. We have  services that are filled. We have small groups   that are, you know starting in schools, our  youth ministry is doing really good, our team   is releasing another album. There's a lot of great  things are happening, people are being delivered   left and right and there is a big chest, almost no  neck, so big. But if we be very honest, the legs   are chicken legs. Let's talk for real right now,  our church probably tripled during covid, but it   didn't triple because you and I evangelized, it  tripled because other churches were closed down. Can we be honest, yeah. Our church is growing,  people are moving here but they're not moving here   because you're strategically or I am strategically  evangelizing. It's because the YouTube, Instagram   and Tik Tok is evangelizing. The Bible doesn't  say, make YouTube videos and grow the church.   The Bible says, go and make disciples. So to some  degree, we covered that if we just be very honest,   we covered that with pens and we just simply say,  well, we're doing great and because we do see the   supernatural, people do come here and they're  like, we want to learn. We want to see what God   is doing at HungryGen and there's definitely a  big chest. I even think we got a six-pack as well   and we got some pretty amazing prayer movement, a  fasting moment, we got a young church, a vibrant   church. I mean, personally for me, this is the  best place to be. I've been to many churches.   I love HungryGen. I love the crazy HungryGen, I  love the good stuff of HungryGen, the bad stuff   everything I love about HungryGen but I'll be  honest with you, when we take our pants down,   when we have an honest look at our church,  everyday believer, mainly comes to Sunday morning,   pays their tithe, volunteers once a month,  does not delete the Planning Center from   their phone. Praise God! and maybe once in  a while, goes to a life group. For example,   out of about 600 people or 500 people every  Sunday, only 100 people go to a small group.   Why is that happening? Because we got chicken  legs, this is not your problem. I'm saying, this   is our problem, but because we got a big chest,  we feel good about our church. We're like man,   we got the best Church. We can't go very far with  chicken legs and I believe that time is coming,   what my goal today is, I'm gonna bring you a  treadmill. I'm not going to ask you to run at   this treadmill yet, I'm just gonna let you  know that very soon, there is going to be a   very intentional approach, to us getting a little  bit more of muscle on our legs. Come on somebody! Discipleship without Deliverance ends in  Defeat. So we've experienced that, we see   this with Lazarus is that he who had died came out  bound and we see that, he was bound in his hands,   he was bound in his feet, he was also had his face  covered, he was wrapped up and I think that those   of you, who came from churches that Deliverance  was not done, I think you've seen now here how   Deliverance is so powerful. A young man that came  up today, right before the service and he had a   spirit that was attacking him and he would kill  animals and not like animals, hunting animals   but he would take a pet bring into his house and  kill him and that's not normal, that's demonic   and so. And now that he was delivered and his  testimony is I have a pet and I haven't killed,   definitely he probably won't share that on  the stage but I shared it on his behalf,   you know and for some of you, it may seem bizarre  because you can't disciple somebody, if they were   not delivered, you got to deliver them. Jesus says  to Lazarus, about Lazarus whom he raised from the   dead. He says that loose him and let him go.  So people who are born again need to be loosed,   they need to be delivered, so that then  they can actually walk for the glory of   God. We've experienced that Deliverance is  children's bread. Can somebody say Amen.   But it's not everything, Deliverance  without Discipleship leads to Disobedience.   I remember one time, where in the Bible, it says  Jesus delivered a guy who wanted to be a disciple,   you know, the first sign that you know,  you're truly delivered is actually if you   want to be discipled by Jesus. If you delivered  and you're like, I don't want to read the word.   I don't want to participate in a small group. I  don't want none of that. I want to keep my own   life. I would really question the genuineness  of your deliverance. The guy who had Legion   of demons said, Jesus I want to go with you  and Jesus says, honestly bro I'm gonna skip   the discipleship part. I'm gonna launch you into  the ministry right away, go and tell everybody,   but for most of us, we have to go from  Deliverance to Discipleship so that then   we can go into the destin,y God has for  us. Matthew chapter 21 verse 10, it says,   go into the village opposite of you, He says  you will find you will find the donkey tied   and He says, loose them. So this speaks that we  bring somebody to Christ, we lose them, somebody   say loose them and then it says, bring them to Me.  This is discipleship, it's not just about letting   people be free and do what they want. Jesus says  bring them to Me. You're delivered for a purpose,   you're delivered so you can be discipled and  maybe, you came to Jesus for deliverance,   for Him to get the demons out. Jesus had a greater  plan for you than just being delivered, if you   loose this donkey and let it go to do whatever  it wants. Hunters like Bryson will shoot it. Bryson went hunting with Rickard  last week, they killed something,   yeah, if you get delivered and you don't get  discipled, you can get shot so, God wants us   to get delivered and so we can get discipled  but the purpose for even this discipleship is   more. The Bible says in Matthew chapter 21 verse  10, watch this when, He had come into Jerusalem,   guess who gave him a ride, this donkey that  was loosed, brought to Him. When He had come   into Jerusalem, all the city. Somebody say  'all the city'. This is not just few people,   all the city was moved. See, that's the ultimate  goal of discipleship is that you get discipled,   you get delivered, we get discipled and then  we give our life to Jesus, we get trained,   we get brought to Jesus so that we can  influence our city, our neighborhood,   our friends and other people by doing what  Jesus did. Heal the sick, cast out demons,   raise the dead, cleanse the lepers and preach  the good news, that is our destiny Amen. You   can't get truly discipled if you're not delivered  but you can get delivered and never get discipled. You can manifest and get free from your demons,  only to go and do your own thing and say,   you know what, thank you Jesus, now I got it  from here, that's not the purpose of Deliverance   and I sense in my spirit, that our church has  developed such a strong Deliverance culture   that people go from Deliverance to Deliverance,  instead of from Deliverance to Discipleship.   I'm not saying this applies to every  person. I'm not saying it applies to you,   it probably applies to the first  service and the third service,   this service has no problem like that, we're just  talking about them right now and your neighbor,   of course but if we're not talking about you,  maybe perhaps we're talking about you and myself.   Deliverance is what God does for you.  Discipleship is what God does in you.   Deliverance removes the demons.  Discipleship establishes Jesus's character.   And it is easier to remove the demon, the reason  why is because demon is tormenting, harassing you.   It's kind of like this, Deliverance removes  the tumor, Discipleship builds the muscles.   And a lot of us, when we have, let's say a person  if unfortunately the person would have a tumor,   I mean, you would do anything it takes to get a  tumor out, you will pay any doctor, you would go   anywhere because you'll be like, I don't want  this thing, this is hurting me so when you get   the tumor out, a lot of us wouldn't go and start  eating healthy and exercise. You would be like,   well I got it now, now I can do whatever I want  and see discipleship is building the muscles but   deliverance is getting rid of the tumor, it's  getting rid of this cancer, getting rid of this   demonic entity and so what Jesus is after, is  not only getting rid of something but actually   building something within us. So I want you to  embrace the kingdom mentality, right now, my goal   through this message is not to just preach another  sermon, plus to stir you toward Jesus's mentality   and Jesus's culture that He wants to build  within us. Deliverance without discipleship is   like getting out of Egypt and never entering the  promised land but getting stuck in the wilderness.   So there's Deliverance, there's Discipleship  and ultimately the goal is to reach the Destiny,   the promised land, the destiny. What is the  destiny? It's the five-fold ministry of Jesus.   Preach the gospel, heal the sick, cast out demons,  cleanse the lepers and raise the dead. That is the   five-fold ministry of Jesus. Jesus says anybody  can do that why, because He's the Vine, we're   the branches, we're the extension of Jesus. The  same power that raised Jesus from the dead, lives   inside of us meaning, you and I were expected you  were created for more, than just coming on Sunday   morning. You were created for more. The Bible  says, we were saved for good works and those   good works are not just parking cars, those good  works are not just guiding traffic in the church,   those good works are heal the sick, cast out  demons, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers and   preach the gospel. You were created for that.  You were anointed for that. If God would only   want you to go to heaven, when you get saved,  He would have killed you at the altar. You're   still alive that means, you have a ministry,  you have a calling and you have a purpose. Somebody say, 'I have a destiny'. Now in the  conclusion, I want you to remember five things,   five things. Number one is that loving God means  obeying His Commandments. Jesus clearly stated to   us, the first commandment is to love the Lord your  God with all your heart and all your soul. Now,   I'm married to a beautiful girl Lana and  loving my wife, for me I know what that means,   a lot of things but one of them is I  have to remind her that I love her.   Sometimes she will say things like, you haven't  told me that you love me and I said, well but I   love you. She said well, you have to say that  and see, when I think of that, I'm thinking   about God. It's interesting God never said in  the scripture always tell Me that you love Me.   God doesn't mind if you don't wake up in the  morning and don't say, God I love you. In fact,   He doesn't want you to tell Him that you  love Him. We don't see a lot of focus on   that the Bible says, if you love me He  doesn't say tell Me that you love Me. If you love Me, keep My Commandments. In fact God  would rather have you not say that you love God   and do His Commandments that always say that you  love God and don't do what He says. God's love is   not this mushy emotion, that you feel toward God.  It's that your life is given toward Him. You have   so much adoration and value for the Lord that  you're saying Lord, I will do your Commandments   but I thought, we were delivered from the law.  Yes, but we were not delivered to be Lawless.   We have God's Commandments. Jesus's commandment  was very simple. He says before He died and before   He went to heaven, after His death, He says 'Go.'  Somebody say, GO. Go, it has two words. G and O.   Go, two letters. One word, two letters, go and  then He says, make disciples of all nations,   baptizing them, teaching them to observe and  then He says, Lo, I Am With You Always. We   love to claim the LO without obeying the  GO. Jesus is with me, this I know. He is   but based on this verse, I will step on the left  to say, you will not experience His presence in   a way, He wants you to experience Him  until the 'go' comes before the 'lo.   So let's stop claiming the lo, if we don't  want to obey the go. Loving God does not mean,   I don't kill anybody, I don't cheat on my wife,  loving God doesn't just mean I just sing to Him   every song. Jesus made it very clear how He wants  to be loved, He wants us to obey His Commandments   and His Commandments are not burdensome. He gives  us a very clear instruction and He says when I go,   you go. As you go into your world, make disciples  and then He says, I give you a promise, you're not   going to do it alone. I'm gonna be with you. My  presence will be with you always until the end   of age. And a lot of us, we would like to extract  this and say, Hello, He is with me and of course,   I'm not doing anything that He says but He is with  me and I wonder why am I not feeling His presence.   I wonder why it doesn't seem like anything is  happening, maybe, we should just perhaps what   if we were maybe to try to obey what He says,  we might experience Him to be faithful and true. Making disciples is not a great suggestion. Jesus  didn't say if you have time and you have nothing   else to do, if you're one of those fanatics do  it. He says, it's a great command. Jesus is a   King. He's not an American president. Jesus is not  your buddy. So He doesn't ask you, He doesn't use   word please. He just commands. Now, for some of  you in American culture, the culture we live in   and I've lived here long, longer than in Ukraine,  that is offensive because we're in democracy. We   rebelled against the Kingdom, so when the king  comes we're like we don't want a king, we want   the president that we vote in and vote out and we  can talk all that we want about him. But Jesus is   not a president, He's a King and He is our King  and He tells us to go Amen. The second thing,   I want you to remember from today is loving  people means having compassion on their souls.   Because the second commandment is not just love  God but love people. All of this, it's not about   converting, it's not about pushing your religion  on other people. Jesus made it very clear, He   expects us to love God and other people. Now, if  you've been married for any long time or you have   children, you understand one thing, in order to  love somebody, you have to deny your self right,   you can't love anybody without denying yourself.  So the message of self-denial. The message of   carrying the cross is not so you can become a  martyrer. It's so you and I can become a lover.   The goal is love. The goal is not, Jesus  I'm just suffering, carrying my cross. No,   the message is love and Paul says, if you go and  heal the sick, move mountains and do great things   but you don't love, he says, you're worthless.  That means that the ultimate goal is not trying to   get more people to church. The ultimate goal is to  love people by having compassion on their souls.   We're not just gonna convert people, we're not  hating on people, we are loving on people but   caring for their souls. Jesus said to them, go  into all the world and preach the gospel to every   creature. One of the best ways that you can love  people is to bring them the gift of salvation.   So this is what happened in Armenia, the city  that we went to, me and Ilya, went there last year   or two years ago, last year, we went there and  there was this guy, he was a world-renowned   swimmer, his name is Shavarsh Karapetyan and he  won a lot of awards during the Soviet Union era.   He and his brother was running and they noticed  a bus that slid from the bridge and had over 90   people in it and so, when he noticed that, he  was a professional swimmer who won awards, which   means that, he could swim and instead of saying,  well I'm kind of busy right now, it's part of my I didn't plan for this, it's not in my calendar   and instead of tweeting my thoughts and prayers  go with you those on the bottom of the lake.   Instead of stretching his hands and say, Lord  we agree to release angels into that place.   He said to his brother, you stay here, he  jumps into the lake, he begins to swim down,   it was dirty water, full of glass and he begins  to rescue people from the bottom of this lake,   one by one, he rescued over 20 people because  his lungs got filled with so much glass and   dirt and everything, he collapsed after 20th  person. He, in fact, during one of his dives,   grabbed a chair instead of a person and he says,  that chair still hunts him in his nightmare,   still this day because he says, I could have  saved the person. He went into a coma for 40   days after this incident . He was never able to  compete again in his life. Nobody knew about this   for two years, because communism, you know  suppressed the news, everywhere and stuff,   so nobody knew about this and then, this guy, we  actually saw this lake, we drove by this lake.   So me and Ilya saw this like, this was the bridge  of course, the river doesn't look like it was   looking before and so this is where it happened.  Now, I want you to notice this, what would be   the loving thing to do, if you're a professional  swimmer and people are drowning in front of you.   Pray for them, send thoughts on prayers,  screenshot and do a gofund account for   their families. The loving thing would be  to do something about it. You don't have   to be a professional swimmer to go do something  about it. But what if it's not in your calendar,   what if you have a date with somebody, what  if you have an appointment with somebody, well   it takes precedence, people take precedence over  other things, because people are priority. Jesus   made it very clear for His disciples. He says,  your number one priority is God. How do you love   God? Obey His Commandments and then He says, your  number two priority, it's not you, it's people,   that means that if your neighbor does not  know the Lord, it's not about just, oh I'm   gonna pray for my neighbor. Well, Jesus says go  and open your mouth and talk to your neighbor.   Well, my co-workers don't know God. Well, do they  know that you're a Christian. Oh no I don't want   to tell them about Jesus. Why, I don't want to  show my religion. I'm just going to pray for them.   You don't pray for people who are drowning.  You'd dive in and you save them. This guy,   Shavarsh Karapetyan, years later goes to Moscow.  He's walking by, he sees a building burning   and you will think, he would be like, calling  you know the 9-1-1 he goes into the building,   gets himself burned, rescues people and that has  another problem with his lungs now, because of   the burning, he's literally like a savior meaning,  he sees danger and he throws himself in danger to   save other people. I'm not saying to go and throw  yourself into danger. What I'm just saying is that   the most loving thing to do is to save people,  not just to send thoughts and prayers for them   and we as Christians, we over spiritualize our  call and made it, well, we're just going to   pray for them. God never tells us to pray  for the lost people. He tells us to pray,   so that we will stop praying for them  and actually go do something about it.   Jesus tells us to pray for the laborers  not for the lost people. They're ready   but we just have to do the loving part and  which is to tell other people about Jesus   Amen. Number three, winning souls and making  disciples is part of spiritual growth. Now,   Hebrews chapter 5 verse 12, it says for though  by this time, you ought to be teachers, you need   someone to teach you again the first principles  of the oracles of God and you have to come to need   milk and not solid food . Now, the natural process  that every person goes through in this room and I   hope that every person goes through in this room  is that you get born. Now, we as Christians,   we believe that, life begins at conception  and not at birth but at conception meaning,   when a pregnant woman is murdered, it's a double  homicide because there's another life that's   inside and life doesn't begin when you are born,  it begins in conception. There's so many stories,   people being born premature and still alive and  kicking and today are full-blown citizens and so   life begins a conception, now what happens in the  hospital is you get delivered, mama delivers you. right, blood, screaming, yelling, kind  of reminds me of that prayer line right.   Deliverance, so that's why it's called  delivery room, when a baby that's alive   there is being delivered now what  happens when a baby is delivered,   the baby comes into new world and then the baby  is taken home. The only babies that stay in the   hospital after being born in a hospital,  are either sick babies or abandoned babies.   That's why we need small groups. We need home  groups. Because everybody who gets delivered   and gets saved and gives their life to Jesus,  they can't come tomorrow to church but they   need to come tomorrow to my home, to your home,  where they need to belong and they need to be   connected to other believers, because Vlad  and Ilya and others, we cannot be connected   to every believer. But you and I, we can be  connected to each other and then after that,   these babies they go to school and they learn  English, they learn math and they learn other   stupid stuff, that they shouldn't learn, but they  go and they learn stuff and then after that we   kick them, out of our houses. Well,  we hope for them to leave our houses.   Now, imagine, you're a loving parent, it is the  loving thing for your little cutie pie baby,   who you raise, nurse and love, you walk that  baby down the aisle and then you let that baby   go into starting their own family. How many  of you know this process is not supernatural,   normal, somebody say, 'normal'. This  is not weird, this is not Deeper Life,   non-christians do this, Christians do this,  poor people do this, it is when you reach   a particular age, you're expected to move out  of your mama's house, your daddy's house. Now,   I can tell you one thing growing up is hard.  When I was a kid, I wanted to drive a car,   I wanted to have my own car. I wanted  to be an adult. I would take my dad's   pants and put them on. I'll take my Dad's  shoes and put them up and say, I wanna,   I cannot wait to grow up to be an adult. I  was never told the lie, being an adult is   hard. I look back now I miss the good old days,  I miss the time when my mom would cook for me.   I miss the times when my laundry would be done and  I don't know angels did it or God did it or my mom   did it. Somebody did. It was always done. I missed  the times, I didn't have to worry about taxes,   real estate taxes, house payment. I missed  the time when I didn't have to pay for my car,   for my gas. I missed the time and so but it  will be abnormal, just because I love the   comfort of being cared for my parents to be  a 36 year old, living with my mom and having   my wife. I had to move out of my parents  house and start my own life. It's normal. This is a normal process. Same thing is  spiritually guys, God wants us to be saved. God   wants us to be discipled and this is not, Oh well,  Vlad, I don't have time for that. Oh but that's   not for me. Excuse me, no, the question is this  is growth for you. No but I don't want to grow up.   It's not healthy. If I would come  up today 36 years old with diapers,   what would you think of me. No, you would  number one say, what happened to his parents,   is he all right because that's not  healthy, actually, that's sick.   Now, I'm about to say to, you're first time, close  your ears right now and you're not a Christian,   close your ears for just a second but guys,  it's not normal to be 20 years in church   and not win souls, not make disciples but this is  why we do it, because we love mama doing laundry,   daddy paying bills and doing nothing and  God's message for us today is grow up.   It's normal, it's part of spiritual growth to  grow up, it's just part of maturity to grow up   Amen. Number four, winning souls and making  disciples is being faithful to what we were given.   Jesus says to those who received five talents,  they went and traded them and made another five   talents. Matthew 25:16 and those who traded those  talents, He says, well done good and faithful   servant, you were faithful over a few things. I  will make you a ruler over many things. Enter into   the joy of your Lord. Number five is that we are  given the power of the Holy Spirit for the purpose   of conquering the world. Acts chapter 1 verse 8,  But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit   has come upon you and you shall be witnesses  to Me in Jerusalem and in all Judea and in all   Samaria. I want you to notice that when the Holy  Spirit comes upon you, this is not about tongues,   you understand that writing, gift of  interpretation, power, when the Spirit comes upon   you and the goal is for us to be Witnesses and  the witnesses is not only to my familia but it's   to my city and then Jesus says, in case you get  really good at it and you actually get the whole   city. I want you to go to the next one and that  is the region, Judea is the region and then I want   you to go to Samaria, this is already Gentile.  This is not even like your crew, your people,   your circle of influence and then, when you're  done with Samaria. He says, I want you to notice   your limit, your limit is the end of the earth.  When I grew up in a more of a Pentecostal Circle,   the goal was tongues. The limit was tongues and  if you get the tongues and you get slain under   the power, man that's it, you're the Pentecostal.  Our goal is not to make you Pentecostal, our goal   is to make you somebody who has the power and the  purpose. Because I met a lot of people who speak   in tongues but they don't walk in power. They  don't heal the sick, they don't raise the dead,   they don't cleanse the lepers, they don't cast out  demons and they don't preach the gospel. All they   do is The spirit of God did not come to give you  tongues, He came to give you power. Because you   have a purpose and because you have a purpose,  God has a plan and God's plan is Conquering the   city. God's plan is to conquer the region. God's  plan is to win other regions and God's plan is   to influence the world. Please understand, Jesus  died, for God so loved the world and He gave His   only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him  shall not perish but have everlasting life. For   God did not send His Son to condemn the world but  that the world through Him might be saved. God's   purpose and goal is the ends of the earth. Every  human being's default destination is like a fire   without God and God's method to stop that from  happening is letting His Son die on the cross.   Taking the sin and the guilt of all humanity  and leaving His children to be the ambassadors   in this generation. God gave them the ministry of  reconciliation. God gave them the power that they   need to fulfill that ministry of reconciliation.  So you don't have to blame your personality. You   don't have to start using your schedule as  an excuse, why I'm not doing this, well, I   just grew up all my life in church, we know this,  stop that and start believing what the Bible says   and your Christian Life will have Revival and  instead of just walking through the ritual and   through the routine, you will have Revival.  I will have Revival. The Spirit was not given   for me to shake and bake and just experience  more and more. Those are amazing things, it's   kind of like this, God gives you a private jet  and you treat it like a dog taking it for a walk.   You don't need a jet if you're not planning to  fly. You were given the power not so that people,   I would go to summer camps all the time  and there was this pressure, put on every   teenager to get tongues and it's like, if you  don't have tongues, you're like not worthy,   in Pentecostal circles and we missed the whole  point. The point wasn't tongues. Tongues is   important. It's a prayer language, very important,  we're learning this in our small groups right now   but the goal is power. Because when you taste  this, when you pray for a person and the demon   comes out of them, when you pray for the person  and that tumor leaves, when you pray for the   person and eczema is gone, when you pray for  the dead people and they get raised, my friend,   that's so much better than just ministering on  Sunday morning and just directing traffic or   just simply sitting people down or just greeting  people. Those things are good but this stuff,   this is what you and I were promised. This is what  you and I have. This is for this for this for this   and for this and for this and for this and for  that. Guys we're here to change the world through   the preaching of the Gospel. We're here to conquer  the world through the preaching of Jesus and we   got all we need in us and that is the power of the  Holy Ghost. So my goal today is open your eyes,   look a little bit higher. I know we're going to  the convention center but what God wants to do,   Toyota Center is not big enough but what  God wants to do through you and through me,   yeah maybe, you and I are not going to have  our YouTube channels. Maybe we're not going   to write books or stand here on the pulpit but it  does not mean the same Spirit, not Spirit Junior,   not Spirit version two but the same Spirit lives  inside of you and inside of me, but God didn't   give that Spirit only as a seal of our inheritance  but as the power to do what He called us to do.   So I want to encourage you today, I want to plant  the seed, in just a few months from now, we are   going to bring few things out for our church  that I would like us to take part in that will be   mainly strategically focused on turning Believers  into Disciples and disciples into disciple makers.   Why am I burning for this? This is not a new  program, this is not a new system and I won't   tell you what we're going to do for now, just  gonna tell you why we're doing it, this is why,   if Ilya dies and Mariana, somebody will  continue their legacy, they got girls.   If I and Lana die, we don't have kids. I have a  dog, my dog is not going to continue my legacy. God does not want the ministry of what we do  today to end with us. He wants the Next Generation   to take it. But it's not going to happen  accidentally. It's going to happen intentionally.   Children are not going to become responsible  adults, if nobody trains them. You don't put   a child in a in a freezer for 30 years and  it comes out an adult. No, you train them,   you put in some time and those of you,  who raise children, you know one thing,   it's extremely time consuming, to make a baby  is pretty fun, to raise the baby is pretty hard   and so discipleship, that's not easy, it's not  fun. I'm going to tell you that right away and I   know each one of you, if you have not disconnected  from what I'm saying, you probably are saying,   I don't have time for that you don't understand  how busy I am, you don't understand what I have   in my life. I don't need another thing to be  committed. Just be happy that I came to church.   I gave my tithe and I'm out and that's fine.  If that is where you are at today spiritually,   I'm hoping that you're just a new believer. But  if you've been for 20 years in the church and you   have that status, I want to tell you something  that you just a very irresponsible, immature,   spiritual person. Maybe, you're not aware that  you need to grow. That's why we're here to expose   you to that, you continue to be thinking, we  just be thinking, I'm not saying do anything,   just think about the possibility that, Hey there  has to be more. I'm pretty sure you go home from   Monday to Friday saying, Hey there's more to  Christian Life. My life is not much different than   anybody else. Just live, eat, sleep and repeat.  Live, eat, sleep, work and repeat. There's more   to that. There's way more and my goal is to expose  us, that we are not just having a huge audience,   where thousands of people come in but people  live superficial, shallow, powerless, empty,   dry lives. But when we do gather on Sunday, it's  like gathering of an army. Because we all have   been slaying, we all have been praying, we all  have been doing things during the week and we   come back and we say, man God did this like, I was  in the lobby, few people came and said, Hey I got   this person delivered. I got this person brought  to the Lord. Look what God has done, you know look   what we did in Chiawana high school. Look what we  did in in Pasco High School. This is what it's all   about, it's us living our Christian life outside  of the church and not just being good citizens,   husbands and wives. But being a good influence  with the purpose to win souls. I'm looking at   what's happening with the youth right now, I'm  looking at what's happening in the schools,   this is a perfect opportunity for us to have a  generation after us, who will do greater things,   we even imagined but for that to happen,  we have to be intentional and discipling.   Intentional about discipleship. So I want us to  be praying for that, in fact, as you sitting there   right now, all I'm asking is that you open your  heart to this and then you read the gospels and   see, if it's true. If you don't see this in the  gospels, everything I said, scratch it, throw it   away. But if you see it in the gospels and you  see it in Jesus, I want you to submit yourself   to this word. To the word in the scriptures  and say, Lord, what does this look like for me   and then submit yourself to the vision of the  church, to the pastors as they try to fulfill   the vision of Jesus and let's go and change  the world. Place your hand upon your heart,   Dear Jesus, You've given us salvation,  You've given us Your life but You've   given us more than Your life, You've given us  Your purpose, You've given us Your Holy Spirit   Lord, You've called the church to conquer  the world. Lord, You've called us to walk   in signs and wonders, You've called us to walk  in miracles not only in the church service but   outside of the church service, You've called us  to be the light and the salt to our generation,   not to conquer people through politics  or through financial means but to conquer   people through love, to conquer people  through the preaching of the Gospel Lord,   Lord we have children we hear them right now,  all around this sanctuary, running around,   yelling and screaming and they might not fully  understand what is happening but Lord very soon,   they will be Your candidates, Your ambassadors,  we pray for the sake of Next Generation,   we pray Lord for the sake of people that are not  even here yet, who are supposed to be here through   the preaching of ours God, Lord my heart breaks,  though I see what You're doing at HungryGen but   I see the world that is going to hell in a  handbasket and my heart breaks because I know   that each and every one of us have this ministry.  Lord, would you help us to lead the church slowly,   wisely and with passion. Lord, we will not live  cold-hearted and we will not live with our lamps   burned out, no Light, no fire and we will not live  superficial, empty, compromised, carnal just this   inflated lives that are not real, that are  not genuine, there's no Revival there God,   I don't want that. I know every person here who  serves You, don't want that either. You want to   grow, we want to mature, we want to take on more  responsibility, we want to take on more tasks that   You have for us as our King, we want to love You  not with our lips but with our lives. We want to   follow You not only on Instagram and on Twitter  but we want to follow You in real life, want to   lay our life down so that we can love You and love  our family, so we can lead our families to Jesus.   Lord, we refuse to let Tik Tok and CNN disciple  Next Generation, we will disciple Next Generation,   we will teach them the truth of your word  God, we will if we need to separate another   night so that we can bring our children, bring  our spouses, bring our family so we can all be   trained to do Your work so that we can conquer  the world for You Lord, we only have one life,   we want to expand it, waste it completely on  Your cause. We don't want the devil to wreck it.   We want to give it to You Lord in Jesus Name.  Hey! Thanks for watching this video. If you   enjoyed this content and this was a blessing to  you, would you help us and hit thumbs up, so that   it could help more people to discover this video.  It costs you nothing but it can go a long way to   help with the algorithm as well as if you're  not subscribed to our channel, hit subscribe,   click on the bell, so that you can be reminded  each time that we upload videos. Thank you so much   for being a part of this community if you're  interested in learning more about Hungrygen,   our internship, our conferences, deliverance and  so many other things go to hungrygen.com for more   information and as always, remember, 'Better  is not good enough the Best is Yet to Come.'
HungryGeneration
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2022-10-31
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DwZdpzdseQw
Team TL;DR Final Presentation at #Hack4Congress-DC
awesome so like I was saying I'm here in Oakland California there are a lot of protesters right outside City Hall right now so you might hear some of them during the pitch and I apologize in advance but we are tldr so back in March there was a bill that reached the Senate floor and it was a bill that was to provide victims of human trafficking with justice now a very similar bill breezed through the house and the same was expected of the Senate but a last-minute discovery of a key provision in that bill which prevented victims of human trafficking from spending federal assistance on abortion related services the Senate Democrats always drew their support from the bill now as a an elected official how do you explain your navo on a bill that on the surface looks like something that you had promised you a champion for your constituents so this case is something that's pretty par for the course for a day on the hill but because of the large trust gap and also the lack of engagement between voters and their elected representatives plus the absence of a way for elected representatives to go on record about how they voted on a bill the instance that I've just described only breeds more distrust now tldr provides a very structured way for elected representatives or their staffers to go on record about how they are planning to vote on a bill or how they have already voted on a bill so with that Steven I'm going to throw throw the ball back to you so your do a quick demo and where to go and perhaps well while Stephens working out the tech I'll just describe what TL DR gov would be so what we mean by a structured way of electeds going on record is that on a dashboard where staffers or the elected representatives sign in they will see that the bills that they are voting on or have already voted on all of that is auto loaded on the dashboard and there is a comment box under each bill that allows them to go on record and explain why they voted nay for example on sí madrina oh great thanks Steven this is what we built as a staffer you can go to your staff or dashboard and it will automatically load in all the bills that have recently been passed and so you can go in and edit and comment on to explain your vote so if it again with the example we described if it seems like something you would have voted yes on but there's a more nuanced reason you can enter that in and so an individual when they sign up they can get this dashboard which will show all their representatives from the local level to the federal level and it gives them an explanation of everything that they're doing in government and why they're doing it but also in a way that's understandable for the average person because the main problem we're trying to solve here is not information all the information is there what this is is a presentation layer it's a way that normal people can understand it you can go in and you can tag different interests and then if you go to your settings you can subscribe to weekly summaries and notifications so if there's a bill on health care and you feel passionately about that you'll be notified about that and also representatives can know who among their constituents are passionate about certain things so you're not blasting people with information that they don't care about and that they unsubscribe from so essentially tldr gifts elected representatives a direct access to their constituents allowing for more transparency of governance and opportunities for further civic engagement and one last thing I did a personal hack for about an hour yesterday the US Senate website looked like it needed some updating so I went ahead and redid it it's mobile responsive cleaned up a lot of problems outdated technology commented out code blocks you name it I have a full report i can give anybody i think this is kind of information that's in effectively communicated is useless and so that's a lot of the problem why you know young young people feel disengaged and disenfranchised questions I like the structure but the real challenge is what is going to incentivize the Congress members to really engage in this fully I mean if I I don't know whether I would all want that information to be that transparent I mean so so i think i can speak to that so as as a staffer we are getting a lot of phone calls from constituents about how are the representative is voting on a certain bill or about to vote on a certain bill so this tldr effectively eliminates the need for those phone calls to happen and so i don't know if there are fellow staffers in the room over there but if part of my day could be freed up because i don't have to take those phone calls that would be terrific i know that some other elected representatives are currently using Facebook to share how they're voting on bills that are coming up now that is a viable platform but it also takes a lot of time because a lot of it is a content generation right so staffers are actually typing in the content of the bills and then typing in a further explanation now TL DR gov because the bills are Auto loaded all the staffer or the elective % is if they're doing it themselves all they would have to do is type in that comments and that would be it so it is a complete time-saver and again as Stephen was saying the structured way of going on record and the structured way of presenting this information really is allows for it to be done so in a digestible format and a complete time-saver and also just to add one more point to that there are lots of other communication channels that all could be automated through this so if if you wanted the option we could have it automatically post a Twitter and Facebook and other things like that but a lot of those platforms are very noisy and messy and if you've ever read youtube comments it's not the greatest place to have constructive dialogue so that's kind of what we're trying to create absolutely are the are the vote explanations that staffers are going to enter are those going to be made available in an open way for others to use so all of the dashboards are public so you could look up any elected official theoretically from local government to the federal if you sign up and create your own account then you create a personalized dashboard so actually what I mean is could I take the explanations and slurp them into govtrack you could and we're actually we're getting data from you so what would you think about adding anything related to processes because that's a big part and you know a lot of it has comes down to procedural votes and trying to clarify that for the layperson because I know process isn't sexy and it's hard to you know work around that sometimes and you don't want to end up saying I voted for it before i voted against it that's kind of the point that that's exactly the point is you don't want some bill that looks like a no-brainer that you voted against because of a technicality that haunts you the next election and the average person doesn't understand all the nuances in all the terms of government so we even we even considered with titles removing the HR 1 1 etc that to an average person means absolutely nothing and is just more clutter in the system that keeps them from understanding it can I ask one more question actually so I was a judge in San Francisco and saw this idea in the early stages and I were supposed to judge based on what you've done this weekend so I want to know what's new so what's new is a lot of stuff on the back end that you don't see in the infrastructure we created built it on firebase pulling from different api's and we also built out a section for the staffers to log log in create new accounts for their their staffers comment on things have that show up immediately in their feed and we also which we unfortunately don't have quite yet but we on it's a mobile responsive site so it can be wrapped up into mobile app so if you want to have it natively on your device and be able to get things like your location things like that they could make the process even simpler we can easily do that in its cross-platform you know even blackberry Windows Phone
The OpenGov Foundation
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2015-05-13
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRJACdTW6WE
COMMUNION SUNDAY | 2ND JULY,2023 | 7AM
foreign [Music] Darkness [Music] is you wanna remember [Music] my life [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] all the ways [Music] thank you [Music] forever [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] why everything [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] I'm alive [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] the laundry of God is the awesome God He rests from from God [Music] [Applause] [Music] from heaven above we breathe red [Music] him [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] you know [Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] everybody [Applause] [Music] foreign [Music] are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed in US let's open our worship book to page 68 please check around there's a worship book in front of you if you don't have a worship book please signify um the ushers will get one to you please signify I can see like four people in front of me okay are we there are we there I'll bless the Lord at all times oh magnify the Lord with me this is the day the Lord has made collect for Purity together almighty God to whom all hearts are open all desires known and from whom those secrets are hidden place the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of your holy spirit that we may perfectly love you and widely magnify your Holy Name Your Truth our Lord amen Gloria in excesses glory be to God in the highest and peace to his people on Earth while God Heavenly King almighty God and Father we worship you we give you thanks we praise you for your glory Lord Jesus Christ only son of the father Lord God Lamb of God you take away the sins of the world have mercy on us at the right hand of the father receive our prayers for you alone are the only one you alone are the Lord Jesus Christ father amen Lord have mercy Christ have mercy Lord have mercy God so loved the world that he gave his only son Jesus Christ to save us from our sins to be our advocate in heaven and to bring us to eternal life let us therefore confess our sins in penitence and Faith Family resolved to keep God's Commandments and to live in love and peace with all people make lean kneeling and saying almighty God our heavenly father we have sinned against you and against our neighbors in thoughts and word and did through negligence through weakness through our own daily grateful we have not sufficiently walked according to the mind of Christ we have named The Name of Christ but I have not departed from iniquity we are truly sorry and repent of all our sins for the sake of your son Jesus Christ who died for us forgive us all that is past and Grant that we may serve you in newness of life to the glory of your name amen amen the Lord be with you we'll be taking the collect um page two of your Bulletin if you have be taking it together please let us rise collect for Trinity four almighty God you show to those who are in error the light of your truth that they may return to the way of righteousness may we and all who have been admitted into the fellowship of faith in Christ reject those things which are contrary to our profession and follow all such as our agreeable theme through Jesus Christ Our Lord amen you'll be taking their peace to them because that's my it's obviously the epistle is taken from efficient up to five from verse 1 to 10. Ephesians chapter 5 from verse one to ten Ephesians chapter 5 from verse one to ten I read therefore the imitators of God as their children and walk in love as Christ also has loved us and given himself for us an offering and his sacrifice to God for a sweet swirling aroma but fornication and all uncleanliness uncleanness or covetousness let it not even be named among you as it fits in for Saints neither filthiness or foolish talking no cause Justin which are not fitting but rather giving of thanks for this you know that no fornicator unclean person not for virtuous man who is an idolater has any inheritance in the Kingdom of Christ and God let no one deceive you with empty words but because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons of disobedience therefore do not be partakers with them for you were once Darkness but now you are light in the Lord walk as children of light but the fruits of the spirit is in all goodness righteousness and Truth finding out what is acceptable to the Lord this is the word of the Lord why collect thou may go there is none good but one that is God but if that would enter into life keep the Commandments he said unto him which Jesus said thou shall no mother thou shall not commit adultery thou shall not steal thou shall not be a false witness honor thy father and thy mother and thou shall love thy neighbor as thyself the young man said unto him all those things have I kept from my youth up what lack I yet Jesus said unto him if thou would be perfect go and tell that that thou has and give to the poor and thou shall have treasure in heaven and come and follow me but when the young man had that saying he went away sorrowful for he had great processions then said Jesus unto his disciples verily I say unto you that a rich man shall hardly enter into the kingdom of heaven and again I say unto you it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of the needle that for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God when his disciples had it they were exceedingly amazed saying who then can be saved but Jesus behold them and said unto them with men this is impossible but With God all things are possible this is the gospel of Christ praise to Christ Our Lord Faith with the words of the Nicene Creed we believe in one God the Father the Almighty maker of heaven and Earth of all that is seen and unseen we believe in one Lord Jesus Christ the only son of God eternally begotten of the Father God from God lights from light true God from true God begotten not made of one being with the father through him all things were made for us men and for our Salvation he came down from heaven by the power of the Holy Spirit he became incarnate of the Virgin Mary and was made man for our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate he suffered death and was buried on the third day he rose again in accordance with the scriptures he ascended into heaven and he seated at the right hand of the father he will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead and his kingdom will have no end we believe in the Holy Spirit the Lord good The Giver of Life who proceeds from the father and the son with the father and the son he is worshiped and glorified he has spoken through the prophets we believe in one Holy Catholic and Apostolic church we acknowledge one baptism for the Forgiveness of sins we look for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come amen praise God all right so we'll be going to another session of worship I would really love to encourage us that um we open up our hearts this is another time that we are in God's presence and don't get too familiar with it um the presence of the Lord there are different um there are different phases of of God that we have not seen I mean the Bible says that even the 24 elders and the angels in heaven when they bow and they raise their heads they see a different type of God and these are people that have been With God all their lives so you can now imagine us we have not we have not um scratched the surface of the glory of God that we are yet to experience so I would really love to encourage us that um we open up our hearts in this worship we um worship God with all of our hearts because he's the reason why we are here Hallelujah [Music] work within as we got Mary glorified your name knowing well that our hearts begin to achieve ment will you be will you be blessed because we came hey we'll be blessed because we can't as we got to make your spirit work within us as we God may we glorify your name knowing well that ours our hearts begin to worship laughs will you be blessed because [Music] will you be blessed because [Music] let's sing together as We Gather [Music] s lift your hands everyone see I we gotta [Music] daughters as we cover [Music] may we glorify your name [Music] will you be blessed again you'll be blessed because we [Music] like this I'll be blessed because I can't I'll be blessed because lift your hands and say I'll be blessed I'll be blessed again you are making a prayer to yourself [Music] I'll be blessed because [Music] I care I'll be blessed because I'll be blessed two more times I'll be blessed because I came baby as I can foreign [Music] I'll be blessed because I care Lord will lift up your name read our hearts full of praise [Applause] [Music] of your name [Music] is a very simple songs very simple songs sing again just screw yourself in the presence [Music] full of grace it's of your name With My Heart full of praise [Music] lift up your name you can't be worshiping your father and be standing at Kimball please oh Lord my God [Music] [Applause] I got you all right now give the glory foreign myself I give you glory [Music] thank you [Music] this is your world [Music] we welcome you Lord with welcome you this is [Music] this is your house [Music] we welcome you today this is your house [Music] I welcome you Lord I am I really want this worship to be personal I want it to be personal [Music] God needs to hear your own voice recorded in heaven [Music] so this is your this is [Music] I welcome you welcome you Lord [Music] this is your house [Music] [Applause] [Music] I welcome you my savior [Music] wow coming soon [Music] [Applause] I welcome you I will love you today [Music] today I welcome you guys welcome thank you today I welcome you today [Music] this is [Music] when I think about your goodness [Music] say but I'm grateful Mercies [Music] [Applause] good morning [Music] streams [Music] is foreign [Music] amen [Music] every morning [Applause] my king my God thank you [Music] this is it you are worthy of my brain you are worthy of my prayers come on let's give him some eye please oh my God [Music] I thank you [Music] light in the darkness my God that is who you are Stay With Me say where you make away We Make A Way beautiful that is where you are that is for there is no one like you that is who you are I finally like that that is who you are oh you are God on time yeah that is who you are lover of myself [Music] [Applause] you worship God by revelation by Revelation so as we sing that song whatever God is to you by revelation that is what you call it if he's gone on time is that is who he is to you if he healed you is the Healer hey that is who you are somebody has a revelation of all who God is to you [Music] that is who you are [Music] looking Johnny yeah that is who you are hey [Music] not just Who You Are paper you are the god of the nick of time that is who you are you are you oh that is who you are Jesus [Applause] promise keeper light in the darkness my God that is who you are [Music] promise keeper light in the darkness my God that is who you are some of us are waiting when the worship will stop I laugh in the Holy Ghost we have expressed permission today's service to worship Our Father foreign [Music] everything oh my goodness [Music] I worship by Revelation a word of spirit puts in my mouth I sing so it's way maker if God is making a way spawning things around making a way for you and I prophesy God Will Make A Way where this is [Music] [Applause] came away [Music] foreign [Music] one more time sing God Will Make A Way [Music] s [Music] we cannot see my God [Music] When Love Is [Music] you wake up the song too I feel God is ministering to a few people here letting you know that he still cares and loves you and you will certainly see the hand of the Lord this week now you are entering to you essentially this is an assurance of God still has you in mind can you wave your hands to the Lord one more time and say thank you Jesus thank you for life thank you for your goodness thank you for your mercy scripture says that the Lord is a spirit and he desires then that would worship Him in spirit and in truth and that is what we have started with and we were doing this service give him thanks praise him if you can think that you will know to thank God appreciate him for life I appreciate him for his goodness appreciating for his love appreciate him even for keeping you those far because we know he's the one who is able to keep us to the hand he is our father is our holy known we sang that song that is the Waymaker is The Miracle Worker he is the promise keeper he is the light in the Darkness is the light in the midst of the darkness is the light in the midst of Darkness is the light give him thanks this morning and say Lord thank you thank you for who you are to me indeed you are my father if he is your father and you know that you belong to him appreciate him this morning and say thank you Jesus for who you are to me all I want to say this morning Lord is thank you thank you for life thank you for who you are thank you for your faithfulness appreciate him even for those times when you think he's not there give him thanks can you give him thanks this morning and say Lord thank you thank you Jesus for who you are to me thank you for who you are to me I present him even for your failures when our brother was singing he said he makes everything to turn around to work together for our good everything is turning around for our favor can you appreciate things even for that loss you may ask how can you say I should appreciate God even for those times that are not good give him thanks I appreciate it because all of these things are forming us to be who he wants us to be giving thanks this morning and say Lord I Thank you thank you Jesus for who you are thank you for who you are to me thank you for who you are to me Lord I appreciate you give him thanks one more time and say Lord thank you all I want to say is thank you thank you Jehovah [Music] in Jesus Christ's name we have given thanks father this morning we ask that you speak your word to us and you will cause our heart receive that's which you have for us this morning the entrance of your word bringeth light and understanding who pray that your world this morning would illuminate our paths and we will from you [Music] you will withdrush your thank you righteous father in Jesus Christ's name we pray can you celebrate Jesus as we sit celebrate Jesus [Applause] good morning brothers and sisters we want to welcome us one again to the presence of our father we appreciate God The Giver of Life for those privilege he has granted unto us to gather as a family and to be in his presence who pray that the blessings he has received for us this morning will receive in full in the name of Jesus Christ and the Lord this morning will breed upon us the bread of life in the name of Jesus this morning just for a few minutes we want to consider the topic that says characteristics of believers that is our topic for this morning it is in the front page of our bulletin you'll see the characteristics of believers and when we look at the word characteristics my understanding of it is talking about what distinguishes one from others is talking about features that is talking about traits things that are evident things that can be seen in one and so that is what is it is and when we talk about Believers of course we have various people that can be called believers but in context of what we are trying to study this morning is talking about those who believe in God those who believe in the work that our Lord Jesus Christ came to do here on the earth those who believe in his death and Resurrection and according to the book of Acts of apostle when the people were gathered and those that saw their nature they saw the characteristics and the traits they expressed they saw them in Antioch and they said these ones are Christians they are christ-like because they see the same thing in Jesus in them and when we look at the epistle we read this morning that was read by our brother the secretary a pistol according to Ephesians pause the epistle to the Ephesians chapter 5. from verse 1 it was talking about imitates me and all of that and he was telling them the need to let go of some traits that does not glorify God it was talking about fieldiness talking about evil practices talking about all manner of uncleanness and all of that and when we relate it with the gospel read to us this morning scripture made us to understand in The Gospel according to Matthew chapter 19 from verse 16. he says and behold one came and said unto him the person was talking to the Lord Jesus he said good master what good thing shall I do that I may have eternal life and this man came and told Jesus what do I need to do if I want to gather eternal life after all all of your exaltation he had had Jesus speak in various places and all Jesus was talking about is the need for the people to be reconciled back to God and also telling them about this eternal life so he asked him okay good master you are the only one who is good what do I need to do to also get this eternal life you have been talking about and then Jesus spoke to him okay these are some of the things characteristics the traits and he told him Yes um keep the Commandments do not murder do not commit adultery do not steal do not bear false weakness and Jesus was calling all of The Commandments to this man and he got to that level of even love love your neighbor and I was astonished from this passage that with all that our Lord Jesus Christ listed to this man this man had everything he had 100 over 100. 100 over 100. spot on there was nothing frail about this man even our lord Jesus when he called unto him he said good Master Jesus told him that don't call me good there is none that is good but when he came to this man this man had hundred hundred I don't know if you understand even the master is trying to tell him no it is not me it is God but for this man after Jesus listed everything from that verse 17 of that Matthew 19. and he said it to 19 he said honor thy father and your mother and thou shall love your neighbor as thyself and verse 20 the young man said unto him all these things are vacant from my youths what lack I yet the month of Jesus have kept everything all of those Commandments I do not even you know have any setback in any I have done everything and I am doing it I'm I'm good to go and Jesus looked at him that wow this is fantastic so that means this man is really ready for eternal life and Jesus told him okay if that is the case verse 21 and Jesus said unto him if that will be perfect go and sell all that thou has and give it to the poor and thou shall have treasure in heaven and come and follow me Jesus notice he had everything so just one last thing which is where we need to pay attention this morning when we talk about characteristics of a believer of a Christian or if someone who loves the Lord and just one thing Jesus told him can you let go of everything that you hold on to sell it you have treasure in heaven then Jesus said follow me my brother follow me so that you can learn of me but the response from this man got me bothered because scripture says in verse 24. that's in verse 23 rather he says then set Jesus unto the disciples verily I say unto you that a rich man shall hardly enter into the Kingdom of Heaven why did he say that because in verse 22 he says but when the young man had that saying he went away sorrowful for he had great possessions he was sorrowful he was unhappy a man who came to Jesus with great you know joy in quotes telling him what what else do I need to do and Jesus told him these days and he said I've done all and Jesus said just one last thing sell all of your possessions let go of everything and just cling to me and this morning God is to so that can you let go of everything and cling to me can you let go of That's which you hold on to and cling to me when you talk about a Believer a Believer is someone who is sold out to a Cause someone who is ready to follow even to the very end we've seen in movies and those things are real some people who say that probably they were brainwashed or anything but do you know some people are committed to a course and they will tell someone that if you can just be a suicide bomber you can just kill yourself for this course there is something that awaits you where the person who is talking to you is not willing to go and they will tell the person that see we have made provision for your family and there are seven virgins so so so waiting for you somewhere that my brother just go just go for this course just go for this course and the person will believe so much in it but the person who is even telling you is not ready to go but he's telling you to go there's a preparation and they believe to that that just as the person has said it to you how much when it comes to our God the creator of Heaven and Earth God is telling us this morning that it is not just about coming to church it is not just about every Sunday we have come again and let's just fulfill our righteousness just as we see in all places if you go out now at this time of the day you notice that the road will be very free because everybody is in one denomination or another in one Parish or another but much more than that Jesus is telling us this morning can you follow me can you cling to me and let go of those things you hold on to what are some of the things we hold on to when he talks about great procession that the man had for some of us it could be our wisdom some of us it could be our intelligence we feel you are very intelligent and then that is your own great possession you are holding on to some of us he could be the wealth of our appearance you know you are from a wealthy home and you know that there is a huge inheritance left for you and you know some people are so rich that no matter the famine that might even come into that household the money cannot deplete it will still be there some of us probably your great possession is in your mom we've seen a man that loves the mom so much and will tell you that any woman who is not like my mother I cannot marry and so any woman that comes into his life he will measure the woman by the standard of the mother some of us it could even be past odds some of us are still holding on to unforgiveness some of us are still holding on to Earth and we are unable to forgive ourselves probably someone has done something terrible to you in time past maybe you've even been raped you've been abused when you were young you have gone through challenging times and difficult times this morning all God is telling us is we should let go of everything and cling to him and when Jesus says cling to me he's saying that because he is the life is the light of life in John chapter one verse 12 he says as many that believes in him he gave them the power to become the sons of God so the power has been released and when you have power that means you cannot walk in darkness because that same John chapter 1 I think verse 4 is made us to understand that he is the light and is the light of life and when you have light that means you can't stumble that means you can't fall that means it doesn't matter it doesn't it doesn't matter what may be going on around you as long as you are walking in the Light of Christ then you are not bothered you know when I was praying and just studying God was leading me into something totally different but this morning when I was reading the gospel the Lord was opening my eyes to something in that scripture when he was saying follow me and the man was sad because of his great possession but do you know what that means it means that the man does not even trust in the eternal life is calling upon it does not even believe in that eternal life he wants to assess because how can you see the life the life is telling you let's go and follow me and you are doubting God will tell you let's go let go of that thing you cherish so much and you'll be asking you know I remember there's this story I hope I'll be able to say it very well about a young girl who went to the supermarket and the father told her to pack as many sweet as she wants just a very young girl so she said no that her father should pack for her and of course her father packed and gave it to her and then the father asked her why she said because if I pack my hands are too small I'll take too little but if you pack for me you take more sometimes when you hold on to something you think that thing is big big but he has something better I don't know if we've seen that picture on WhatsApp a man who held a very big teddy bear and kept it at his back and there was a young how many of us have seen that picture and there's a young baby holding a very small one and he said bring it because he has something better when Jesus tell you follow me it's not saying follow me because he wants to suffer you he's saying follow me become like me because there is something better he hasn't stuck for us there is something he hasn't stuck for us Hebrews chapter 11 verse 6. he says that they that must come to him they must do what they must believe that he is the rewarder of them that diligently seek him I am telling you you can't seek him and be at loss because he doesn't owe any man I want to encourage us this money like I said it's just a short exaltation characteristics of believer it is not do not it is not do not do not sin it is not a do not commit adultery do not fornicate do not lost do not all of those do not do not the rules are too much it is all about clinging to Jesus it is just about telling him not Jesus I want you to just fill me with yourself all of you are none of me it is all about releasing yourself to the father that song says light of the world you step down into darkness open my eyes let me see quiet please can you help me [Music] please [Music] today [Applause] [Music] spans with you here I am here I am [Music] here I am [Music] together morning all together [Music] oh so highly exalted glorious [Music] you're all together all together [Music] is the light of the world who step down into darkness and in that passage the scripture says then his disciples we are made saying who then can be saved he said to him Master after cities who can be saved if you are saying it is very hard and you know Jesus said it is easier for the Cameo to go through the eye of the needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven of course you know when he talks about the eye of the needle he's not talking about straight and needle he said actually a location in Jerusalem but very narrow very very narrow but that is not the point now the issue is not the wealth the issue is not the possession [Music] so you being rich that is the problem the problem is your inability to cling on to the master your inability to believe in what God can do and in that verse 26 where we are concluding this morning he says but Jesus Beyond them and said unto them with men this is impossible but With God all things are possible this morning I have good news for you With God all things are possible so it doesn't matter what you may have in mind it doesn't matter what your plans may be as long as it is in alignment with God's plan for you it is possible so don't believe anything like this is not possible this cannot work it can it's gone the same God who gave a 90 year old woman a baby and a hundred year old man became a father he can do much more it's painful I don't know how to sing that song says exceedingly you know that song exceedingly abundantly more than all exceed in me sleep [Music] according to the power that walketh in you in you think God is able to do just what he said he will do is not enough fulfilled he's gonna to feel everybody [Music] [Applause] rise together this morning God is able to do just what he said we will do is [Music] he won't give up for you he's able thank you [Music] his name [Music] whatever he says he promises [Music] together don't give up on God [Music] don't give up on God can we sing together give up on me don't give up on God can you lift up your hands this morning and say Lord I will never give up see I will never give up I know every of your promises will come to manifestation in my life say to me to impress yourself before your father of your promises will come to manifestation whatever you have said concerning me there will be an establishment there will be a fulfillment of your promise in my life [Music] saying to God this morning the Lord I will not give up I will not give up I will not give up I know that whatever you have said you will do it [Music] I know you will never give up on me I refuse to give up I will not give up I know it is not over when it comes to God it is not over when he comes to God it is not over it does not matter your situation it is not over it does not matter what today may be saying it it's not over in Jesus mighty name we pray morning I want us to lift up our hands and just pour herself out to him just Express Yourself this morning what is it that you can't probably share with someone just share it with your maker we are in his presence and he's here this morning easier this morning easier to take away everybody easier just speak to your father tell it to him tell it to him that Lord everything you have said you will do I know you are able to do it and so my confidence is in you this morning is not in man it is not in my ability it's not in my world it's not even in that good job it is not in that lucrative business it is not in my bank account I do not trust in what I have I do not trust in my possession my trust is in you can you tell God this morning that father in the month of July and beyond help me to follow you help me to follow you like never before just like that song the Lord in this month of July and beyond help me to see you more clearly help me to see you more clearly help me to love you more dearly and help me to follow you help me to follow you keenly that I would hold on to you and I will not let go of you can you tell the Lord our father in this month of July and Beyond in this seventh month of rest I will follow you all the days of my life I will not look back even when these do not look it I believe that you are able to do that which you have said you will do [Music] and for adventure this morning you are here have not given your life to Jesus for adventure you feel that emptiness in You Adventure you are here you are not even sure you are not sure of your place in him that Joy is not in your heart you don't even have that peace of mind just put your hand on your chest and tell him not this in please come to my heart you are here this money you have not accepted Jesus you are not sure of your salvation you are not sure if Jesus would come you will reign with him in life with her now [Music] why not use this opportunity to reconcile yourself to your maker put your hand on your chest and begin to talk to the Lord our Lord Jesus please forgive you of my sins forgive me of the paths I've been walking that lonely path without you Lord have mercy upon me cleanse me from my fieldness tell the Lord Jesus to come into your hearts this morning tell him that Jesus please come into my heart be my own and ask that the Holy Spirit Will Come [Music] and abide in you that the holy spirit will cause you to grow in your knowledge of the Lord and that the Lord will purify you that the Lord would help you to live for him alone every day of your life [Music] Lord have your way Lord I give you I give you my soul [Music] Lord [Music] we thank you for your word and to us this morning Lord we ask that will not just be talkers nor hearers but much more doers of your world may you grant us in the name of Jesus Lord we ask that the world we have had this morning you would help us to follow you every day of Our Lives In The Name of Jesus you would help us to trust in you we will not give up please Jesus be our all in all and whatever is in us that is not of you put us from such in the name of Jesus and in those months of July you will perfect all that concerns Us in the name of Jesus you will grant us rest on all sides in the name of Jesus and as many that have accepted you as their lord this day Lord to pray that you forgive them of their sins and you make them yours forever in the name of Jesus Christ and we commit every one of us into your hands who prays that you will keep possible to the very end in Jesus name we will not fall by the roadside we will finish stronger than we started thank you righteous father because we know by extension It Is Well with our nation it is well with your church It Is Well with all that pertains to us Jesus Christ's name who pray Christ is our peace he has to consult us to God in one body by the cross we meet in his name and share his peace the Peace of the Lord be always with you let us offer one another a sign of peace [Music] for us is who collect your factory [Music] I'm laying them down for the joy of the Lord I'm laying in my sicknesses [Music] I'll lay them down together [Music] thank you [Music] get in my life [Music] la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la la amen [Music] amen [Music] thank you these letters rise let us pray on our offer tree together your lord is the greatness the power the glory the Splendor and the Majesty for everything in heaven and on Earth is Yours all things come from you and of your own do we give you the Lord be with you lift up your heart let us give thanks to the Lord our God it is indeed right it is our duty and joy at all times and in all places to give you thanks and praise Holy Father Everly King Almighty and eternal God through Jesus Christ the only son our Lord for he is your Living Word through him you have created all things from beginning and formed us in your own image through him you have freed us from the slavery of sin giving him to be born this man and to die upon the cross you raised him from the dead and exalted him to your right hand on eye you have sent upon us your only and life-given spirit and has made us our people for your own possession I will thank you Father for the gift of life and for your word you have sent to us and for Life granting us the privilege to witness the second day in the seventh month of the year 2023 therefore With Angels and Archangels and with all the company of Heaven We Proclaim your great and glorious name forever praising you and saying holy holy holy Lord God of bad Minds heaven and hearts are full of your glory hosanna in the eye blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord please let us sit on you as we continue accept our Praises Heavenly Father through your son Our Savior Jesus Christ and as we follow his example and obey his command grant that by the power of your Holy Spirit this gift of bread and wine may be to us his body and blood when the same night that he was betrayed he took bread and gave you thanks he broke it and gave it to his disciples saying take it this is my body which is given for you to this remembrance of me the same way after supper he took the cup and gave you thanks he gave it to them saying drink this all of you this is my blood of the New Covenant which is said for Jan for many for the Forgiveness of sins do this as often as you drink it in remembrance of me therefore we proclaim the mystery of faith therefore Heavenly Father remember his offering of himself made once for all upon the cross and Proclaim his mighty restoration and glorious Ascension as we look for his coming in glory we celebrate with this bread and this cup he is one perfect sacrifice Ascend to him our great high praises our sacrifice of thanks and praise and as we eat and drink this Holy Gift in the presence of your Divine Majesty renew Us by your spirit inspires With Your Love and unite Us in the body of your son Jesus Christ Our Lord through him and with him and in him by the power of the holy spirit will always stand before your net and in heaven we worship you father almighty in songs of everlasting praise blessed and honor and glory and power be us forever and ever amen we break this bread to share in the body of Christ [Music] lamp of God you take away the sins of the world lamp of God you take away the sins of the world lamp of God you take away the sins of the world together we do not presume to come to this your table merciful Lord trusting in our own righteousness but to your manifold and great mercies we are not worthy so much as to gather up the crumbs under our table but you are the same Lord whose nature is always to have mercy grant us therefore gracious Lord so to eat the Flesh of your dear son Jesus Christ and to drink his blood that we may ever more dwell in him and in US amen join here with faith receive the body of our Lord Jesus Christ which he gave for you and his blood which he shared for you eat and drink he remembrance that he died for you and feed on him in Your Heart by faith with Thanksgiving please give not been confirmed in the Anglican Church please do not come if you have he can be score as the choir leaders and solemn's son thank you [Music] You Are Holy You Are Holy holy wonderfully you are Only You Are holy you are holy holy wonderful and kind you are here [Music] you are You Are Holy [Music] [Applause] oh do you wonderful you are faithful [Music] holy wonderful and kind [Music] you are faithful [Music] Ness [Music] you are a lovely you are lovely you are alone [Music] you are lovely [Music] wife [Applause] you are all dance [Music] foreign [Music] [Applause] [Music] holy holy wonderful [Music] time oh my God I sing praises to your name [Music] oh Lord for your name is Grace [Music] I sing praises today [Music] oh Lord for your name his grace [Music] for your name for your name is Grace [Music] for your name is [Music] me oh God [Music] for your name is [Music] foreign [Music] I'll be always [Music] always [Music] on our route [Music] I'm happy my life can you lift your hands on singing say you are the reason why we can't dance this morning father you are the reason why we have life inside of us this morning nobody nobody nobody nobody nobody like you Lord set in the good times in the bad times in the good times and the bad times when I don't get what I want to remember well I guess what I want you are when I don't get what I want to read me not to say hey where we call you this morning I hear you are the boys just the voices you are can we hear come on can I hear you singing [Music] he is the same yesterday today [Music] he is bigger than all your problems he is bigger than all your situation so as we sing it we focus on you Jesus the author and the finisher of our faith two more times you are the most high God one last time [Music] [Applause] this is the covenants I will make with the house of Israel I will put my laws in their hearts minds and write them on their hearts the Lord be with you let us pray as our savior taught us so we pray together Our Father in heaven Hallowed Be Your Name Your Kingdom Come your will be done on Earth as in heaven give us today our daily bread forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us lead us not into temptation but Deliver Us from Evil for the kingdom the power and the glory are yours now and forever amen pray of Thanksgiving together almighty God we thank you for feeding us with the body and blood of your son Jesus Christ through him we offer you our souls and bodies to be our Living Sacrifice send us out to the power of your spirit to live and walk to your praise and glory amen praise the Lord this morning I want to plead with us we want to praise God we want to appreciate him we are going to do what we do together I will take the offering the tithe every offering you have you drop it The Titans come to the altar after which we'll call June Celli Branch but I want to plead with us you see when you are in the presence of God you are in the presence of your father and where you are before your father I'm not talking about a vagabond I'm talking about a son a daughter to a father when you are before your father you can express yourself hope you know am I right I'm talking about a father I have a daughter I have two daughters actually so my daughters went there before me especially the first one who is four years Jemima can do as she likes she can't say anything when I came in after I went somewhere for a while and my daughter saw me do you know what my daughter did to me I told her no no you don't do that but Jemima was slapping me my daughter was slapping me can anybody slap me not even General we desire to know that if I cannot fight him I know what else I can do but my daughter slapped me of course he was playing she was slapping me with her two hands and I didn't beat her because I knew she was glad to see me what I'm simply saying is that you are before your father please be expressive when you come to the presence of God don't let your neighbor determine what you do sometimes you over package yourself maybe the lady beside you is the one you are trying to check so you just do cool guy when they say praising the Lord you know what be expressive sometimes when you are doing like that you're not even like you but when you express yourself she will know this guy is for Real do you understand so please all I'm just saying is that not just for today well I notice most times especially with the young ones sometimes when we are in the presence of God he's as if we are like some system not this recent laptops that once you all need to boot you know there is this laptop when you own it you may you might go and cook rice and come back is still bootsing so let's not be like that when you're in his present be joyful appreciates him for life it is only the living that can Praise Him but he's excited in the house can you give God a shout a shout a shout a shout to Jesus a shout [Applause] and so as the quiet leaders in choruses even if you don't have an offering give him your dance give him your Thanksgiving appreciate him for life it is not easy to see the month of July 23 it's worth giving thanks so if you don't have an offering give him your dance give him your heart of gratitude and the Lord will bless us as we do this in the name of Jesus Christ foreign [Music] Hallelujah [Music] Hallelujah are we ready to praise God this morning let's jump on our feet and praise God somebody shout hallelujah they're excited to see this new month just move your body to the right and to the left to the right to the left everybody to the right to the left everybody to the right everybody to the right to the left everyone if you're right everybody everybody [Music] I can't see some people moving on everybody zombie Rover foreign everybody say come and dance I will dance to the Lord I will give myself you don't say [Music] foreign I will praise you Lord for your grace [Music] foreign oh my God myself we succeed [Music] sorry to dance thank you you're like [Music] everybody I am here I am Hallelujah so we're gonna take the Lord foreign [Music] everybody says I'll be here thank you baby universe do you got toys I hear you are you ready come on [Music] are you too much are you ready [Music] history crazy anymore ask your number what are you doing I am asking okay are you ready one two three are you ready come on [Music] everybody [Music] no more time one last time [Music] you two days how about you can do better we can do better [Applause] hey the South inside is the Lord a big shine [Music] foreign spiritual this morning I think I think we should do one more amen you know hello you know our chaplain just return from leaf so he returns precious father we are good we are we have we are thankful our heart is full of joy we thank you for the privilege to come into your throne thank you for the joy we have in your presence no wonder that it's only your presence we can experience the fullness of joy Lord we thank you we return our praise and glory to your holy name this morning John our faith thank you who bless our brothers and sisters who have come with offering in their hands special offering bows and ties that have come before you thanking you for all that you have done for them in this moment I ask by the reason of the grace as present in this house this moment and by the power that is present in this July the second half of this year 2023 I asked for Heavens to be open over you open over your business your family and all that you call your own I ask for the light of God to shine upon you ask for the for God to expand you on gun test after his presence and after his things in the name of Jesus we'll pray that this Joy will experience this morning will not end after this service it will continue and continue and continue that we may return with testimonies in our mouths in Jesus precious name we are praying somebody shall Glory [Applause] Hallelujah so we do one more please you can drop your tight special offering here just bring any of this don't go to the bar just drop yeah so we do want more we invite June celebrant am I right are they coming are they coming so as you're seeing we appreciate God we invite the June celebrant to come to the Altar for their Thanksgiving June celebrant [Music] oh [Music] foreign [Music] thank you [Music] foreign [Music] he also peace laughs look at me [Music] but that technology foreign remember that everybody one more time foreign [Music] please come forward Lord we thank you for your children born in the month of June thank you for your kindness your faithfulness and love upon them father accept our Thanksgiving in the name of Jesus who pray for you the Lord would accept you and accept all that you have offered in Jesus name the hand of the Lord to rest upon you His blessings will be upon you every of your hearts desires according to his will and purpose for your lives will come to manifestation in the name of Jesus the Lord will satisfy you with his goodness in the name of Jesus he will perfect all that concerns you it will say to you it will grant you rest on all sides if the lottery is 20 24 when you will celebrate another birthday you will count your blessings and not your losses in the name of Jesus you would have Greater Joy than the one that the Lord has granted unto you today in Jesus name and he shall be well with you in the name of God the Father God the son and God the Holy Spirit praise the Lord praise the living Jesus sorry this Hallelujah is not seeming like it's coming from people that are glad that they've come to the first half of the Year this is the first Sunday of the second half of the year if you are sure and by this time next year and in 10 years to come we won't be found Once In Praise the Lord so this year has been a beautiful year for June family members in this month we welcomed a new bride welcome the new baby we are glad like God has been good to us we are grateful on behalf of myself and my family members will be donating a little talking to the um youth week so maybe the fun raising chairman can come help receive this foreign [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] oh my God [Music] Hallelujah praise God in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ we want to welcome every one of us do we have anyone worshiping with us for the first time this is your first time of being in our midst we would like to celebrate you in a very special way do we have anyone worshiping with us for the first time any first timer [Music] hello [Music] yes where in our father's house [Music] thank you we love you [Music] indeed we love you this is parachute Chapel of the Church of Pentecost first start we have our weekly activities every morning Monday hour of blessing at seven a.m Wednesday we have our faith clinic at 6 pm and every Saturday okay the first time has who pray with you every Saturday we have our prayer every second Saturday is that Broadway God doesn't know it doesn't come hey why when do we have it hey when do you have ay doesn't come again he has handed over please please who comes General when do we have it eh yes which thing Jesus have mercy okay we pray we pray [Music] Okay so we want to welcome you I'll catch you when doing it ah finish it is finished so we welcome you our brothers thank you for being a part we would like to meet with you after now let us stretch our hands as we pray for them let's pray that the Lord will bless them they are coming here today they will know it for good at the end of the Lord will rest upon them and the Lord will grant them pleasant surprises so shall it be in the name of God the Father God the son and God the Holy Spirit one more time thank you for coming thank you for coming we would like to see you at the back thank you for coming please follow him let's celebrate them as they go thank you we also want to appreciate or recognize those who are having their birthday from today till Saturday I was told we have someone celebrating today's sister Vivian our school today is our birthday where's she is she here [Music] if your birthday is between today and Saturday please come forward thank you so these are celebrant for this week [Music] these are the celebrant for the week can we stretch our hands as we pray for them also let's tell the Lord that the Lord will perfect all that concerns them for our sister Vivian who is celebrating today the Lord would give her a special gift of our brother and sister and all others that will be celebrating in the course of the week it shall be well with them the hand of the Lord will rest upon them and the Lord would grant them Joy joy that passes human understanding the Lord will filled their hearts with it and they will have reasons to continue to celebrate this will not be their last in Jesus Christ's name we pray can we sing happy birthday for them one more time [Music] time happy birthday happy birthday [Music] Hallelujah we love you and we are proud of you please let's celebrate them as they go to their seats thank you God bless you we want to remind us that uh the library is open the library is open if you want to get books you can't come to the library it's open for everything even movies right you can get movies you feel like watching the film come to the library we have enough movies we can give you and any other thing you need see sister ayobami please all Working Class People should wait after the service for a brief meeting kindly see chubby Chubby's at the back once you go to the back of the church anybody you see that is Chubby just hold him that is the one you are looking for okay and so we want to remind us our youth week is fast approaching you can make donation you can send whatever it is to the church account you can send any of the executive to ask them where you can be of assistance and I know as we always have it every year we need Workforce those who can join to serve in one unit or the other this guy leads any of the executives so that they can you know relate with you on the areas they would need our assistance please help me celebrate the choir this morning can we celebrate the youths choir thank you very much we appreciate Broad boyega I'm sorry they said there are no youth choir they are they are tonic thing they are tonic help us appreciate their tonic thing thank you God bless you we appreciate Broadway we appreciate you everybody thank you all for coming let us not forget all of the weekly activities that have been said please let's join the main church for all of these activities and by God's grace this Friday this Friday we'll be having the architecture media video in the main church it's an education program there will be a video this Friday by 10 pm please let us try and come so that we can pray together and let's continue to remember one another in prayers we shall be well with us in Jesus name tell your neighbor happy Sunday we have detoxology the doxology is on page two of our bullet sin God cannot fear can we rise together is on page two of our ability foreign [Music] oh [Music] yeah the prophetic declaration for the month of July is also on the page two of our bulletin can we take it together and the God of Peace will raise Jesus from the dead will put Satan under my feet oh that all my ways will be pleasing To You O God of my salvation peace in my heart peace in my life peace in my home peace in my work peace in my walk surely Jesus born by griefs and carried my sorrows he was wounded for my transgressions he was bruised for my iniquity the chastisement of my peace was upon him and by his stripes I am healed amen amen and amen I am blessed in Jesus name amen I am blessed in Jesus name amen I am blessed in Jesus name Amen Let Us Go on our news or sit as we continue in prayers let us commit this month into the hands of the Lord that as we go the Lord would go with us if there is anything personally I desire more than ever before it is his presence instead of the Lord father as I go this month of July and Beyond Let Your Presence go with me just as Moses said if your presence will not go with us don't take us away from here today we have prayed we have worshiped we have danced before him let's tell him that Lord as we go Let Your Presence continue to Journey with us your presence will Tabernacle with us wherever you would not lead us we would not go there let's ask that he will guide us he will direct our steps you will lead us in the path that I want us to go and that in every of our Journeys the Lord will grant us safety he will grant us Journey Mercies and it shall be well with us what are your desires what are your plans for the month of July committed to him just in a minute tell him Lord these and these are my plans these are the things I intend to achieve but not me not my will but your will Jesus but will alone and that come first Sunday in the month of August who would have reasons to celebrate would have reasons to rejoice and it shall be well with us in Jesus Christ's name we pray the peace of God which passes all understanding keep your heart and Minds in the knowledge and love of God and of his son Jesus Christ Our Lord and the blessing of God Almighty the father the Son and the Holy Spirit be among you and remain with you always oh [Music] I'm Elisa shall We All Rise Hallelujah let's rise we'll end the service with a shout I are you with me Glory oh God [Music] [Applause] [Music] oh [Music] um [Music] they could name the words [Music] [Applause] [Music] Day Jesus is the only thing Jesus [Music] Jesus is the only man to remember [Music] remember me holy Jesus [Music] [Applause] [Music] I'm desperate for you [Applause] [Music] I'm lost [Music] go in peace to love and serve the Lord thank you for coming God bless you Happy new month [Music] foreign
PARISH YOUTH COP
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2023-07-02
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Who is Jason Hartman? | Real Estate Investing with Jay Conner
[Music] well actually before you do and we're going to want to pick your brain uh but before you do how about take a moment and just tell everybody how in the world it is you're qualified to talk about what you're talking about well that's a good question because there are a lot of fake qualified uh unqualified people out there nowadays so uh you know i got my real estate well i first got inspired to get into real estate after growing up poor in los angeles california i didn't like being poor very much i wanted to you know when i turned 16 i wanted to have a cool car and all this stuff like all the other kids did and uh i didn't have any of that so i saw an uh an infomercial of a guru and i read three chapters of his book put it down my mom read the rest she got really interested and um anyway fast forward uh when i was in my first year of college i was 19 years old i got my real estate license just so i could learn the business learn the basics and i started helping first-time buyers and investors buy government repo properties these were really bad really ugly properties they had you know the windows were boarded up they were disgusting most of them and uh anyway i sold some of those to clients and about six months into my my career i was now 20 years old there was this one client his name was jim wall he bought a few properties from me and i was just a kid but i was i was working hard i was selling properties driving people around on my volkswagen jetta and doing the whole thing and uh uh you know jim wool came to me and said jason you know one of these properties i bought from you i don't like it too much uh why don't you take the listing sell it for me and i'll buy i'll buy something else from you and i said jim i don't want to sell it for you i want to buy it from you and that was my first investment property i still lived at home with my mom but i had a rental property at age 20. and uh it was actually you know it it was okay at first but then guess what happened like uh like many investors with horror stories i had my my first deal was a deal that could have discouraged i would have had every right jay to just give up right there because the tenants stopped paying rent and i had to evict them my very first tenant i had to evict uh and so i was pretty discouraged they beat up the property and all of that and so i thought i was going to give up so i sold the property and i actually made some money on the sale so that was okay and uh then i bought another property and another one and another one another one and you know i've had hundreds of tenants maybe probably over a thousand tenants now over the years maybe a couple thousand even i don't even know uh and a whole bunch of properties in a lot of different locations uh and then we help um well i had a traditional real estate company and in 2005 i sold it to coldwell banker it was in southern california and um i sold that and about a year before as i was negotiating the deal with coldwell banker it took a long time to negotiate i started thinking about what's my next gig what am i going to do and i had a non-compete agreement you know i knew i'd have that and um i i just my first love was always working with investors so i started looking at investing nationwide which i had never done before and this was in 2004 as i was kind of negotiating the deal with coldwell banker to buy the company and um i started flying around the country i started researching other markets and jay it was so difficult to do this by myself i just i just had a really tough time you know realtors most of them don't know anything about investing um and it was very hard to get property managers that were good i couldn't get people to return my call i'd i'd fly into a city i'd only have a few days there so i had to do things really quick and i just thought this is too difficult but i want to be a nationwide investor because i remember you know over the course of my traditional real estate career as i was investing you know there were some times in the orange county california real estate market where you know there were some tough markets i went through some cycles and i thought you know i don't want to do that again i want to diversify geographically i always thought income property is the most historically proven asset class in the entire world but it's local there's an old saying in real estate i'm sure you've heard it you've probably repeated it all real estate is local all real estate is local right you've heard that one and um so i thought well i should just diversify geographically be in the best asset class income property but diversify geographically so if one area is up the other areas down i'll be okay i can even things out and that's what i was trying to do for myself and what i realized is that after i was trying to do it to my for myself for my own account i thought you know there's probably a lot of other people that feel the same way i do and they would love it if if there was like a financial services firm for real estate investors so like many entrepreneurs many would be entrepreneurs they experience a challenge or problem themselves and they think why isn't there a better way and so i basically created this business i'm in now to become my own customer i was the first customer in my business and uh you know i established a network of providers and a whole team and an infrastructure that could help people build nationwide real estate portfolios and invest nationally not just locally so that's that's kind of the start and and fast forward i've been doing this now i guess 17 years and um you know we've helped thousands of people buy properties nationwide we've got you know zillions of testimonials from clients that have just you know really made fortunes uh following our plan and it's just a pretty simple plan it's it's not a do-it-yourself plan it's a kind of a done with you plan we help people do it and uh and and that's that's leads us up to where we are now that's awesome well answer the question how are you qualified to do what you do you've been doing it 17 years and you've been involved in several thousand transactions and you're helping thousands of others do the same thing that you are nationwide making sure that they're in the right markets that they should be so jason i want to turn it over to you for you to present the information that i ask you to bring here and do and i know you're going to share your screen but for those of you that are tuning in on itunes or google play don't worry you're not going to miss out on a thing jason's going to make sure you understand this information just with you listening on audio so take it away jason yeah good stuff
Raising Private Money For Real Estate - Jay Conner
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2021-05-28
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Pebz x Kayy - The Truth [AUDIO]
so you would have feel like I got only one crashing they face mushy on me even kids know what happened Patman uncle traveling comfortable don't step in my hands no one to five and I jumped on a mad thing Drive no Ricky they did not want us to grab their own piss why talk so much [ __ ] on my Ganga already being that's the left you know how the [ __ ] can you still have lit how since she's gonna add case what can man hiding crib [ __ ] for mine auntie please not be they don't want that [ __ ] since JK in education he came from verbal and [ __ ] he'll available could a [ __ ] boy then I hate when I mix Pvt Rondo boredom SP he's so pissed how'd you have to drop on me on a stove and see with your [ __ ] link on my own with a fix on my life she ain't saying I'm [ __ ] my life we think I'm talking [ __ ] and asked you Lucy is [ __ ] out the tour from these kids on my life that can all get hit or litter he's been intense I miss being whipped but sir every time I go there I don't see these prints I ain't got no license I should go ha stick a Sturrock [ __ ] if she never seen you scared my only sleeps the block one time when a surprise that he got splashes her mind I came back around again she definitely made his death all zeros in the stolen with it if I see upstairs and I get stabbed look at that day we meet Joe Fresh Fit had life form and squash in the back put one left in the saucer pop wedgie jump out my my - she told her my balls get back in the car cousin face down there we're gonna get another load even when we broke that day swear on your mom's gonna make it - stole to the stage I say that he didn't civilians what so please don't gasp I might wanna scream at you way involved he could eat I don't punch at my man sweat just stop with the West if I see see on the street girls get piercer Brickton his head get wet just let you bro when he drops his friends probably days where the guy just ran now he's on the net i stitching a man never in my life could've rate your gang has panda mahadji I can't write them she's the nineties little DS gotta push yours in the court light dim she's mine was hiding in Dino's girl's car pros outside with asking to cool him I left him a rare as well my nobody know that I walk with them free Tony free patchy for quarter [Music] [Applause] [Music]
ReadTheTitle
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2018-05-29
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Excerpts from The Christian Soldier Puritan Thomas Watson
this reading is a production of still waters revival books still waters revival books is online at www.chandlerhillvineyards.com trader it's like the Trojan horse within the walls which it does all the mischief the flesh is a sly enemy it kills by embracing the embraces of the flesh are like The Ivy embracing the oak which sucks out the strength of it for its own leaves and berries so the flesh by its soft embraces sucks out of the heart all that is good the pampering of the flesh is the quenching of God's Spirit the flesh chokes of stifles whole emotions the flesh sides with Satan there's a party within us which will not pray which will not believe the flesh inclines us more to believe a temptation than a promise the flesh is so near to us it's counsels are more attractive and there's no chain of adamant which binds so tightly as the chain of lust in the best of Saints do what they can sin will fasten its roots in them and spring out sometimes with inordinate desires there's always something which needs mortifying put to death therefore whatever belongs to your earthly nature sexual immorality impurity lust evil desires and greed which is idolatry Colossians 3:5 how do I mortify the flesh number one withdraw the fuel that may make lust burn avoid all temptations take heed of that which nourishes sin those who pray that they may not be led into temptation must not lead themselves into temptation number two fight against fleshly lusts with spiritual weapons faith and prayer the best way to combat with sin is upon our knees beg strength from Christ Samson's strength lay in his hair our strength lies in our head Christ this is a mystery to the major part of the world who gratify the flesh rather than mortify it and now the next excerpt he wounded the old serpent three times what a infinite mercy it is that God has blessed us with scriptures the barbarous Indians have their golden minds but not the scriptures which are more to be desired than much fine gold our Savior bids us search the Scriptures we must not read these holy lines carelessly as if they did not concern us or run over them hastily but peruse them with reverence of seriousness the noble Bereans searched the Scriptures daily the scripture is the Treasury of divine knowledge it is the rule and touchstone of truth out of this well we draw the water of life read the word as a book made by God himself other books may be written by holy men but this book is inspired by the Holy Spirit it's the library of the Holy Spirit read the word as the perfect rule of faith it contains all things essential to salvation the word teaches us how to please God and how to order our lives in the world it instructs us in all things that belong either to prudence or piety and is able to make us wise unto salvation when you read the word look on it as a soul and rich Inge it as for hidden treasure in this word are scattered many divine sayings gather them up as so many jewels this blessed book will enrich you it fills your head with divine knowledge in your heart with divine grace in this field the pearl of price is hidden what are all the world's riches compared to these islands of spices coasts of pearl rocks of diamonds these are but the riches which reprobates may have but the word gives us those riches which angels have look upon the word as a spiritual armoury out of which you fetch all your weapons to fight against sin and Satan here are weapons to fight against sin the Word of God is a holy sword which cuts asunder the lusts of the heart when pride begins to lift up itself the sword of the Spirit destroys this sin when passion vents itself the Word of God like Hercules club beats down this angry fury and when lust boils the Word of God cools that intemperate passion here are weapons to fight against Satan when the devil tempted feisty wounded the old serpent three times with the sword of the Spirit it is written Satan soon foils the Christian when he is unarmed and without Scripture weapons look upon the word as a spiritual looking-glass to dress yourself by it's a mirror for the blind the commands of the Lord are radiant giving light to the eyes in other mirrors you may see your face in this mirror you may see your heart the mirror of the word clearly represents Christ he is most precious altogether lovely a wonder of beauty a paradise of delight look upon the word as a shop of spiritual antidotes and remedies if you find yourself dead in duty here's a medicine if you find your heart hard the word will soften and mollify it if you're poisoned with sin here's an herb to expel it look upon the word as a sovereign elixir to comfort you in distress comfort you it against all your sins temptations and afflictions what are the promises but divine cordials to revive fainting souls and the next excerpt it makes men so filthy it is a part of our Christian profession to fight under Christ's banner against the world the world is that flattering enemy it shows it's golden apple it's given to some as a snare take heed of being drowned in the world's luscious delights it must be a strong brain that can bear heady wine he had need have a great deal of wisdom and grace who knows how to maintain a great estate riches often send up intoxicating fumes which make men's head giddy with pride it's hard to climb the hill of god with too many golden weights the world shows its two breasts of pleasure and profit and many fall asleep with that rest in their mouths the world never kisses us except with an intention to betray us the world is a silken halter the world is no friend to grace it chokes our love for heavenly things the earth puts out the fire naturally we love the world too many are wedded to their money they live together as man and wife oh let us take heed of being entangled in this pleasing snare many who have escaped the rock of scandalous sins we are sunk in the world's golden quicksands the sin is not in using the world but in loving it do not love the world or anything in the world if anyone loves the world the love of the father is not in him first john 2:15 believers are called out of the world they are not of the world even as i am not of it john 17 16 they are in the world but not of it true saint is crucified in his afflictions to the world Galatians 6:14 he's dead to the honors and pleasures of it what delight does a dead man taking pictures or music Jesus Christ gave himself to redeem us from this present evil world Galatians 1:4 living fish swim against the stream we must swim against the world else we shall be carried down the stream and fall into the dead sea of hell the world is deceitful our Savior calls it the deceitfulness of riches Matthew 13:20 to the world promises happiness that gives weariness it promises us Rachel that gives us bleary-eyed Lea the world promises to saddest by our desires but only increases them the world gives poisoned pills but wraps them in sugar the world is polluting legend that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this to keep oneself from being polluted by the world it's called filthy lucre because it makes men so filthy men will damn themselves to get the world a hat would have had neighbors vineyard that we swam to it in blood the world is perishing the world and it's desires pass away the world is like a flower which withers while we are smelling it now the next section one of you is a devil examine yourselves to see whether you're in the faith test yourselves do you not realize that Jesus Christ is in you unless of course you fail the test 2nd Corinthians 13:5 self examination is unnecessary but difficult work self examination is the setting up of a court in conscience and keeping a register there that by strict scrutiny a man may know how things stand between God and his own soul by a serious scrutiny of our hearts we come to know to what Prince we belong whether to the Prince of Peace or the Prince of Darkness self searching is a heart anatomy as a surgeon when he makes a dissection in the body he discovers the inward parts the heart the liver the arteries just so a Christian and atomizes himself sentimentality and public opinion are false rules to go by we must judge the state of souls by the light of Scripture many have foolish presumptuous hopes they fancy their stay to be good and while they weigh themselves in the balance of presumption they passed the test many take their salvation on trust the foolish virgins thought they had oil in their lamps the same as the wise how confident are our sum of salvation yet never examined their title to heaven many rest in the good opinions of others tell vain is this the last one maybe gold and pearl in the eyes of others yet God may judge him to be reprobate silver others may think him a saint and God may write him down in his black book Judas was looked upon by the rest of the Apostles as a true believer yet he was a traitor and then jesus replied have I not chosen you the twelve yet one of you is a devil John six seventy others can but see the outward behavior but they cannot tell what evil is in the heart fair streams may run on the top of a river but vermin may lay at the bottom in the next section we must either leap over them or tread upon them a man's enemies will be the members of his own household anyone who loves his father or mother more than me he's not worthy of me anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me and anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me Matthew 10 36 to 38 take heed of the snare in your family it's one of the devil's great subtleties to hinder us from piety by our nearest relations and to shoot us with our own rib he tempted Adam by his wife who would have suspected the devil there he tempted Joe by his wife are you still holding on to your integrity curse God I joke to nine thus would the devil have cooled job's love for God but the shield of his faith quenched this fiery dart take heed of such tempters it's better to go to heaven with their hatred than to hell with their love if our dearest friends and family lie in our way to heaven we must either leap over them or tread upon them the next excerpt from this handbook the rat gets into his belly and eats his entrails take heed of a slothful lazy disposition a slothful person would gladly have heaven but his load to take it by storm sloth is the souls sleep many instead of working out salvation sleep away salvation such as will not labor must be put at last to beg they must beg as dive ease in hell for one drop of water God never made heaven as a hive for drones sloth is a diseased act to grow upon men shake it off the sluggish ship is a prey to the pirate a sluggish soul is a prey to Satan when the crocodile sleeps with his mouth open the rat gets into his belly and eats his entrails just so while men are asleep in sloth the devil enters and devours them our sleeping time is Satan's tempting time another excerpt called stunted in grace it's a pitiful thing to be contented with feeble grace weak grace may live in the heart but is sickly does not flourish into lively acts weak grace will not withstand strong temptations or carry us through great sufferings little grace will not do God much service a tree which has but little sap it will not have much fruit it may be said that some Christians are stunted in grace all labor to grow to further degrees of sanctity the more grace the more strength but grow in the Grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ to him be glory both now and forever amen second Peter 3:18 yet another excerpt if you live after the flesh if you live after the flesh you shall die but if you through the spirit do mortify the deeds of the body you shall live Romans 8:13 take heed of the flesh as a good consult with the devil as with the flesh the flesh is a bosom traitor an enemy but within the walls it's the it's the worst enemy the flesh cries out hey there's a lion in the way the flesh says as Judas why all this waste why all this praying and wrestling why do you waste your strength while is waste the flesh cries out for ease it is loath to put its neck under Christ's yoke the flesh is for pleasure it would rather be playing games than running the heavenly race here's a description of fleshly pleasures you lie on beds inlaid with ivory and lounge on your couches you dine on choice Lambs and fattened calves you strum away on your harps like david and improvise on musical instruments you drink wine by the bowlful and use the finest lotions amos six for six these are the delights of the flesh there was one who tried to please all of his five senses at once he had a room richly decorated with beautiful pictures he had the most delectable music he had all the choice aromatics and perfumes he had all the sumptuous candies of the confectioner he was lodged in bed with a beautiful paramour thus he indulged the flesh and swore that he would spend all of his estate to live one week like this although he were sure to be damned in hell the next day oh there was a rich man who was dressed in purple and fine linen and lived in luxury every day in Hell where he was in torment he looked up and saw Abraham far away with Lazarus by his side and so he called him father Abraham have pity on me send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue because I am in agony in this fire Luke 16:19 23 and 24 another excerpt from this handbook they save one sin and lose one soul take heed of indulging any lust indulging in sin will spoil all efforts for Heaven sin and Feebles it's like the cutting of Samson's hair then the strength departs sin is the soul's sickness sickness takes a man off his legs and so the spirits him that he's unfit for any holy exercise of sick man cannot run a race therefore lay the axe to the root lets sin be hewn down knew not only abstain from sin in the act but let the love of sin be mortified let every sin be put to the sword many will leave all their sins but one they save one sin they lose one soul one sin is a fetter a man may lose the race as well by having one fetter on his leg just as if he had many I have read of a great monarch who fleeing from his enemy threw away the crown of gold on his head that he might run the faster so that sin in which you wore as a crown of gold throw it away that you may run the faster to the heavenly kingdom the final excerpt is called all on fire for the world take heed of too much pursuit after the world the world cools holy affections the earth puts out the fire the world hindered the young man from following Christ he went away sorrowful whereupon says our Savior how hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God Luke 18 24 Dimas is piety was buried in the earth demas has forsaken me having loved this present world 2nd Timothy 4:10 the world so blinds men's eyes that they do not see the narrow way to heaven it so fetters their feet that they do not run in the way of God's commandments Mithra dades the the king of Pontus being beaten by the Romans and fearing he would not escape them he caused a great deal of silver and gold to be scattered in the way which while the Roman soldiers were busy gathering he got away from them Satan uses a similar strategy knowing what tempting thing riches are he throws them as baits in men's way then while they're eagerly gathering these he may hinder them in their pursuit of eternal happiness it would hinder a man to climb up a steep rock with heavy weights tied to his legs men's golden weights hinder them in climbing up this steep rock which leads to salvation a man cannot seek both heaven and earth at the same time he cannot love both Christ and the world 1st John 2:15 he who is all on fire for the world will be all ice for heaven take heed of engaging your affections too far in these earthly things use the world as your servant but do not follow it as your master one final thought from Thomas Watson though the sinner shall drink a sea of wrath yet he shall not drink one drop of injustice amen still waters revival books is now located at Puritan downloads calm it's your worldwide online Reformation home for the very best in free and discounted classic and contemporary Puritan and reformed books mp3s and videos for much more information on the Puritans and reformers including the best free and discounted classic and contemporary books mp3s digital downloads and videos please visit still waters revival books at Puritan downloads calm still waters revival books also publishes the Puritan hard drive the most powerful and practical Christian study tool ever produced all thanks and glory be to the mercy grace and love of the Lord Jesus Christ for this remarkable and wonderful new Christian study tool the Puritan hard drive contains over twelve thousand five hundred of the best Reformation books mp3s and videos ever gathered onto one portable Christian study tool an extraordinary collection of Puritan Protestant Calvinistic Presbyterian covenant er and Reformed Baptist resources it's fully upgradable and it's small enough to fit in your pocket the Puritan hard drive combines an embedded database containing many millions of records with the most amazing and extraordinary custom Christian search and research software ever created the Puritan hard drive has been produced to assist you in the fascinating and exhilarating spiritual intellectual familial ecclesiastical and societal adventure that is living the Christian life it has been specifically designed so that you might more faithfully know serve and love the Lord Jesus Christ as well as to help you to do all you can to bring glory to his great name if you want to love God with all your heart soul strength and mind then the Puritan hard drive for you visit Puritan downloads dot-com today for much more information on the Puritan hard drive and to take advantage of all the free and discounted Reformation and Puritan books mp3s and videos that we offer at still waters revival books
Paco Y Virtudes
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2019-01-19
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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Boxy Charm Review & Demo | September 2017
[Music] hey guys my name is Victoria welcome back to my channel so today I'm going to be doing a review of a boxycharm a monthly subscription box that costs $20 this is my first month to get boxycharm and I was really excited to get it in because they do full size products instead of samples like FC and Birchbox which I have currently or that I've done before so it's really excited a lot of the youtubers that I follow have boxycharm as well so they've spoken highly of it so I'm expecting a lot so if you're interested in my review then just keep watching so to start it off this is the look that I came up with and I know the lips do not match the eyes I didn't really plan that far ahead but basically I started off with doing face makeup so the first thing that I got in was the brush and it is a bare minerals face foundation brush and it had a little divot in the middle for YouTube it says put the drops of foundation in and then blend it onto your face I started out doing that but then just put my foundation onto my face with a spatula I used the wet and wild foundation and then I just blended it in with this brush and I did notice that it didn't leave any streaks usually I have to use my Beauty Blender and go in with that after I put on my find a foundation with a brush so this was some really good I've never owned anything bareMinerals before I was so excited to get this in because my old brush my ELF brush it works and stuff but I'm like tired of cleaning it so I want another face brush because only the next thing I did was I just finished up the rest of my face so like concealer and powder and stuff and then I went in with this mousse blush by studio makeup and it is a loose powder matte blush and I've never had a mousse blush and I've never had a matte blush before so this was kind of new to me basically you just pour out the contents you want to use into the cap and then you just dip your brush like normal and put it on and I did really like it it turned out very pretty at first it went on a little bit strong so I gotta remember to tap off the excess but I've never had or I never really liked matte blushes but this one was really pretty it's a nice like neutral color I would say it's like a dusty rose a dusty rose color so it'll look good for the fall and I'm really excited to use it and then next I went ahead and start on the eyes so I zoomed in so you could see but I started out with the Mac eyebrow pencil it doesn't say what color it is and I was kind of confused as to how you said at first cuz it's like so tiny and look like I had broken it but you just twist it up and then I just I used it and I noticed that it was a little more chocolate than that color that I usually use which is maybe more cool tone this is more warm tone but I did really liked it and I think I can't really notice a difference between this and my ELF one which I guess is good on elfs part but I mean this was good there's no gripes about it's not bad so yeah and then I went in with this pure eyeshadow palette and so I started off not really knowing what I was gonna do with it but the first color I did use was private party right here and I just put that all over my lid just to set and give it a base and then I used splurge which is this like little transition color just for the crease and went in with Stunner right here it's a very oranjee color and I was feeling those autumn vibes and I didn't really know what I was gonna do with it at first I kind of like put it out in the outer corner and then I decided to do like a halo eye so that the orange and then I did this color called epic which is a dark brown color and on the outside and the inside and then twinkle this coppery rose gold glitter shadow just so I'm gonna Center on my lid and then on the inner corners and I did really like how it turned out so the glitters at the bottom they are that was really hard to use those like it had major fallout I would probably use it with a like glitter primer first instead of just like going straight in with it on a brush or your fingers and that would probably turn out a little bit better and the colors so like the lighter colors are nice but the orange seemed a little patchy so I don't know if I like that very much and I mean the other two you know very pigmented colors right here the brown was alright I have better shades of brown to use and I can't really tell if this is like a purple color next to the brown but I see well yeah it just see how it's not very pigmented so I don't know if I like those colors maybe for transition colors you can go for a natural day it's nice but I don't think I'll be using those other these three colors but yeah definitely have to go in with a glitter primer for the litter shadows and then from lips I went in with this colour-pop ultra satin lip in the color littles just stitches I have no clue as to that but it is way too light for me I think this might be pretty in maybe the springtime but it's a little bit too nude for me and I'm probably just I'm the tannest that I'm gonna be right now because it's like the end of summer so maybe in the springs would be a good color but I definitely won't be wearing this again this is not a a good color for me right now although I do like the finish of it because I've never tried okay I've also never owned anything with colorful I don't know why but ultra satin lip it's not very drawing so I do like that like versus the Kylie lip kiss the matte ones like that would have had my lips like the Sahara Desert already but these art it is a little sticky I don't know if you can tell but my lips stick together yeah but it's comfortable so that's good and then the last thing is this brit Brio Geo don't despair repair deep conditioning care masks it says you just use it after shampooing and then you wash it out after letting it set for 20 minutes so I haven't actually tried this and it's not good smells like some of this hair salon that's yummy I don't usually like getting like hair stuff in a makeup package that I got package makeup subscription box that I paid for it but like I do need a hair repair mask my hair's a little damaged from heat so I'll try this out and let you guys know maybe down below I'll put a little description so just look up for that but overall I would say I have the one two three four five six things that I got I think that was worth twenty dollars for sure like that's amazing so hair mask sure maybe a B I didn't really like the palette but the glitters will be fun to play with later so B - eyebrow pencil a colourpop lip color was not my favorite so c-plus haha sorry blush a-and the brush was definitely an a-plus so this was definitely worth it this month I would say boxycharm so far it is worth it to me so thank you guys so much for watching comment down below what you think about boxycharm and if you've never tried it before let me know like this video subscribe follow me on instagram and i'll see you guys that makes me [Music] you [Music]
Hiitsvicky
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2017-09-26
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BETTER THAN A SNOW PLOW!
let's take a look at the 1500 versus 1800 versus 2500 snow pushers visually hopefully you can see the bigger the series The taller and the deeper they are all right so that means two things number one The Pusher is going to be heavier and then also the volume of snow that's going to be pushed along is going to be bigger or heavier as well so while you may have the same width available in multiple series take a 72 inch for example the weight difference of The Pusher plus the weight of the Trap snow is dramatically different and can be way too big for your tractor you need power to the ground and you get that through machine weight and balanced weight that's on there and so while you need as much weight as you possibly can I'm going to make conservative recommendations so you are set up for Success snow pushers are simple no hydraulic or electric connections required just hook it up to your quick attach on your loader and get to work these are the best snow pushers on the market we can't talk about it all now check out our long form videos for more information get yours at goodworkstrractors.com [Music] [Applause]
Good Works Tractors
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2023-10-08
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Spiritual
[Music] if for any reason you want to look like to weigh a lot less than you do the book well may not be honest so completely correct but you can take advantage of that buyy effect and get way in the water the God that's a terrible in the in the second as the same goes it's a little bit worse when you're locked up in a prison cell you don't get to know the gods that well but one introduced himself all the same he said please to meet you Wen my name he was the God ter in the the children in the god ter there's actually one more verse this one came to me in a dream no Jack i w up with it in my [Music] head just the other night in a restaurant wait all decided what we want the waers seem to all be gone so I'm trying to tell the kids what's going on we wait in water children water [Applause] God that's a terrible [Applause] y
Paul Spencer
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2016-08-07
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Why Aren't We Studying Sex in Space?
foreign [Music] hello everybody we are here for our weekly podcast broadcast of This Week In Science this is the slight pre-show part where I put everything in air quotes and tell you all that this is the live broadcast and that the podcast will be slightly edited maybe majorly edited it all depends on what happens during this entire program which we Endeavor to create a tight 90 seconds not 90 seconds no 90. and thank you for uh tuning in we'll see you again next week 90 seconds preamble yeah we do each week goodbye no you're here we are here let's do this make sure you hit those likes and hearts and all the things and notifications so that the algorithms love us are you ready to begin let's do it okay we will start in a three two this is Twist This Week In Science episode number 923 recorded on Wednesday April 26 2023 why aren't we studying sex in space hey everyone I'm Dr Kiki and tonight on the show we are going to fill your heads with guts poop and sex but first disclaimer disclaimer disclaimer you can have Doctors Without science you can have medicine without science you can have doctors who without science recommend medicine unsupported by science they just need to be clear that what they do is not related to science what cannot be allowed is doctors generating fake science which is what we have now in the case of Florida Surgeon General who altered the findings of a 20 uh 22 covid-19 vaccine study from the MRNA mRNA vaccine poses no significant risk to young men two suggesting mRNA vaccines increase risks in young men a complete opposite of what the study initially found this is the same individual who is also an author on a separate research paper back in 2020 in that paper the authors advocated for a treatment method of hydroxychloroquine to treat covid-19 that research was led by Dr zelenko Who went on to sell anti-covered supplements before dying of covid at the ripe old age of 49. some of the other doctors on that paper well at least one wound up with a position in the U.S Department of Health and Human Services during the pandemic a another one was a non-practicing cardiologist became a guest on The Joe Rogan show promoting covid conspiracy theories another doctor listed as an author went on to invent his own treatment using asthma medication and claiming it had a hundred percent success rate another doctor became a guest of the Alex Jones Show and had a list of people prominent Americans that he would like to kill in order to end the pandemic another is a practicing cardiologist somehow still to this day tweeting vaccine misinformation a large number of the members of the study were members of The Association of American Physicians and surgeons a political organization that believes this is their words that doctors should be autonomous in treating their patients with less government oversight medical quality standards insurance coverage limits and no legal penalties when they make mistakes so if you have a God complex and you're a doctor there's an organization for you some of the members appeared on Fox News suggesting people should not wear masks during the pandemic to accelerate her immunity and on and on for 57 incredibly unscientific doctors listed as authors who have and likely still do treat patients real patience each seemingly had a motive Beyond research for being part of the study and each wanted to call their ideas science but I draw the line right there at science go be bad doctors if that's your calling but don't call it science and don't publish that trash if you don't want it seen here on this week in science coming up next kind of mine I Can't Get Enough I wanna learn everything I wanna feel a fill up with new discovery every day every week there's only one place to go to find the knowledge you seek I wanna know what's happening [Music] good science Blair and a good science to you too Justin Blair and everyone out there welcome to another episode of this week in science player Justin thank you so much for taking the helm last week while I was away yeah rubbing elbows with YouTube podcast Elites oh my God that's awesome yeah it wasn't the same without you but we we carried on happy to happy just to wave the flag of science thank you for letting me I got to go to space camp for an afternoon it was amazing wow I took a space shuttle to the International Space Station and did science it was awesome you took the space shuttle yeah yep yep yes yes drill down on it Blair just accept it it was fun but I am so glad to be back here again to talk about science with all of you oh my goodness all right so this week I have stories about gut systems nervous systems and gassy asteroids what do you have Justin oh I've got a uh a bear that turned into a woman I've got I also got stories some uh some poop pills what else is it oh and then I've got uh we're gonna talk briefly about the the lunar lander that didn't or maybe did as well as the most frightening thing I've ever heard about antibiotic uh resistance the scariest scariest story I have ever heard really like scary okay Blair what's in the animal corner I'm moving on oh I have some some relaxing animal corner to kind of counterbalance this uh with some sleepy seals and then um well I don't know how relaxed some Roadkill so never mind I don't know well We're Off to the Races everyone ah and as we jump into the science I would love to remind everyone that if you are not already subscribed you can find us as a podcast most places that podcasts are podcasts and you can watch US Weekly as we stream live on YouTube Facebook and twitch 8 P.M Pacific Time Wednesdays and we are mostly twists but sometimes like on Twitter Instagram and twitch we are at twist science oh also on the Universidad Mastodon but it gets confusing so just remember that our website is twist.org that's where you can find all the good stuff okay so it's time for the science to dig in since this last week was uh this last weekend was Earth Day I wanted to start the show with a little bit of earthiness and uh attempt a little bit of discussion of you know the possibilities of living sustainably on this planet can we do it who's doing this I mean anything's possible uh some researchers published in one Earth this past week their work looking at basically the limits of ecosystem sustainability and what they call the attempts to be socially just and also environmentally safe so carbon sequestration or carbon usage and then also allowing everyone in there countries to meet their basic needs the bottom line for this study is that at the the current rate of usage of things and how we're doing stuff only six percent of nations in the world have the ability to be both safe and just in their use and delivery of resources to their populations by population or just by number just pure how many countries uh so it was looking at 178 Nations around the world yeah and they pre they use biophysical models and data to determine requirements of uh meeting needs such as food water energy Etc so they have used Frameworks that other Studies have used already but they have developed what they call a biophysical approach for the quantification in terms of ecosystem goods and services so there's this idea of you know the the basic limits the carrying capacity of the the Earth how many people can the Earth sustain and we just keep adding people and we're like Technologies it's totally great yeah and it has a few times right yes um so they found that 67 of nations are operating within their safe and just space for water provisioning so two-thirds are getting water to people the way only only nine percent are doing so for carbon sequestration and six percent for both um yeah so anyways yeah there's a lot of work to do people is the the bottom line and the countries that seem to be doing really well they've got this uh framework determining what they consider to be the countries that are able to do both the safe and the just and these countries include Canada Sweden Gabon but not the United States of course not Denmark's not on that list oh come on Denmark's not on the list come on we're getting there um yeah but there's a lot of work to be done and there we talk a lot about I think I think the big take-home message here is that we talk a lot about oh carbon dioxide and we're releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere we're using resources but we're not thinking of everything within the actuality of the energy hidden hitting the planet how we use it currently it's like we're taking a credit card out on the future that we don't really know how we're going to pay and uh and our sustainability is very limited at this point in time so anyway we're happy later today everyone hang on a second wait is this a Canadian study because there's no way Canada makes that list they've got the heat the heat time but they have a lot of resources so their ecosystems Supply and they also have smaller population than a lot of other countries and so the resources to smaller have you met a Canadian recently these are not small people look doesn't I'm not talking about little tiny small people I'm talking about the numbers there's no way that they're using all sustainable energy and doesn't have a giant carbon footprint I don't but I something's wrong if it's by space if you're saying oh because of look how big no Canada is and how few people and therefore but otherwise something's not right Canada made the list but Denmark didn't yes I gotta I gotta interrogate this this week in science the show where Justin refutes data no I haven't even seen the data sound right no I haven't even seen any of the data that's the thing that it's that much of an outlier that Canada made that list that I with even without seeing the data there's something little actual information Justin you just have it you have like a gut feeling about Canada that you don't like yeah he's just jealous it's just yeah comparative uh thing here like like there's just I don't understand how uh people who are snowbound for 70 of the Year could could uh be conservatively using carbon emissions because they are snowbound for 70 of the year they are more energy efficient because they don't want to lose heat from their buildings no because there's there's plenty of places in the world that don't have the heater on all the time I haven't read the study but no all right no it just doesn't well it just can't be yeah anyway there is a food energy water Nexus that is important to consider as we have plenty of word into sustainability for the future it's not that we can't do it it's just that at this point in time the majority of countries are not doing it and this is not just carbon dioxide you know we talk about just carbon dioxide climate change whatever this is sustainability for Humanity on this planet into the future and we need to think more about the way that all of these things work together in a systems management perspective and not just get singularly focused yeah happy late Earth Day anyway Justin are Canadian in the chat room is pointing out that they a while ago have replaced their cars with the dog sled teams so so now it makes sense now I get it never had that happen and the igloos they're well insulated yes [Laughter] yeah oh and somebody's pointing out that yeah Canadians we Canadians are much bigger than you Americans okay yeah I should probably watch my a woman yeah this is a this is an interesting story so this is uh which is why we're talking about it in the first place first people that live in the Americas migrated from Siberia across the Bering Strait because so The Story Goes at least some 20 000 over 20 000 years ago uh populating then two continents from Alaska to tier del Fuego where they ran out of new places to go not all of the early settlers were struck with the Wanderlust Wanderlust some were completely happy with where they wound up and never left this is University of Buffalo evolutionary biologist Charlotte linked list and collaborators using ancient genetic data analysis they found that some Modern Alaska natives still live almost exactly where their ancestors did three thousand years ago while examining mammal remains that have been found in a cave in Southeast Alaska a bone identified as coming from a bear was genetically analyzed and it turned out it wasn't a bear it was a woman that's a big surprise you're like oh gosh we must have contamination this is coming back we all our results are here I feel like Bare Bones and and human bones look very different normally it depends on what the rising yeah depends on what the uh the yeah so a lot of human remains at least I know in the California area where I'm at a lot of times when they find old remains uh they're bovine how you mix up a cow's bone with a human bone I don't know but the similarities and different bones that can appear to be other things anyway uh plus the condition maybe pretty deteriorated so you're not working with like a a whole bone yeah like a fresh all right uh Discovery led to an effort to compare this genome to the local community and so they did the earliest people had already started moving along the Pacific coast and Inland route between ice sheets uh before the ice sheet path became completely viable so it's still glaciers across the the Northern parts of the Americas some individual including this female found in the cave made their home in the area that surrounds the Gulf of Alaska that is now home to I'm going to mess this up to uhlingit nation and three other groups The genome from this 3000 year old individual determined that she is most closely related to Alaska natives living in the area today very interesting so cooperation between Alaskan native peoples and the scientific Community has been a big significant component of the cave Explorations that have taken place in the region the genetic continuity of Southeast Alaska is now thousands of years old this is the the first time they found something that a human remained this old that they could get a genome from that could be linked to that that native population so this is the the migration begins to maybe 24 something thousand years ago we don't really know exactly when it began it must have been at least not the right time frame yeah it must have been at the very least that we're finding 24 maybe even 3 000 Year signs of human occupation uh down in Central America Southern North America Central America that may be as old as 30 000 years so there were waves one of which was about six thousand years ago that included the Paleo Inuit formerly known it says here as paleo Eskimo but Eskimo is considered term so nobody uses anymore except every time that they use Inuit for some reason they feel compelled to point out that they aren't using the word Eskimo and why it is that they aren't using the word Eskimo because it's apparently derogatory although when you look at the trying to figure out where the word Eskimo comes from it apparently comes from an American Cree tribe referring to Inuits as either raw meat eaters or folks who lace up their shoes jury's still out doesn't really matter we're not reusing that word uh but it is also a matter of part of the story because they they checked to see if there was a new influence in the genome and there was not so this ancestor of those tribes living there area is from the much earlier migrations uh fun side that is uh that I'm I'm glad that they added into the telling of this story in the paper there's an oral origin Narrative of the I'm gonna mess it up again cling it people which includes the volcanic eruption of a local mountain that mountain erupted they know 4 500 years ago so the people are already tied through oral history to an event older than this Ancient One at 4 500 years ago now part of it is that story had to be passed down continuously Generation by generation for thousands of years for it to make it to the modern day but it also means that that story would have been going around 3 000 years ago had been going around for 1500 years means the the lady in the cave likely knew the story as well could have been telling it to hurt you her yeah that's really that's cool yeah being Midstream of the folk history being Midstream of the folk history and and so there's that that sort of a strange connection for an oral tradition that goes back that far when you realize like it would have been the same story maybe a little bit of game of telephone here and there you never know yeah I mean when you think about it really to be part of a culture that has stories that go back so far I mean we all have stories right there's stories going back through all branches of humanity but so many times they get mixed up and switched around but to have cultures that really focus on their storytelling and have it go back thousands and thousands of years it's amazing and I think it might also help uh if you don't have too many uh writers you've only got a couple of stories then they tend to probably stick if everybody's coming up with a news story all the time then it's like oh wait which one is this is the guy with the one with the volcano or is it the guys with the you know but these stories can be used now to help us understand our past Evolution human movements all of the cool things but then there's the future and where we're going to be going in the future and there's some stories and thoughts and ideas Blair yes so uh in the future you might be telling your buddies a story about the time you joined the 62 mile high club huh what um so this is I just have a real quick story I wanted to bring from Cranfield University this is a green paper which is basically just uh a document that kind of calls scientists to action to invite discussion and approach a problem so so basically Cranfield University just published this green paper to say y'all we gotta talk about sex in space [Laughter] yes is that the title of the paper it should be it's not but it should be um so space tourism it's coming some of it's already here it is a part of our future people will be going to space for fun even if it's just for a few hours yeah and when people go to space for fun they will be having sex I'm not saying they're gonna have us in this room Are Gonna want to do that but people will and so this paper is basically just acknowledging that if you take people to space for fun some of them are gonna find a way to have sex up there and that is a problem something that needs to be discussed it turns out for a bunch of reasons so yeah I'm sitting here going why is it a problem so great question because of zero gravity like there's like liability litigation and and reputational damage related to these things but specifically we don't know what happens when conception occurs in zero geez specifically we don't know what happens we don't know what happens to the fetus later on so a people will be having sex in space b people might be having unprotected sex in space which could then see lead to space conception which is a thing that needs to be looked at it hasn't been and so um Professor Cullen from Cranfield University who led the work said quote our starting point was a throwaway comment about sex in space but when we checked we were surprised the sector has not openly considered the risks this led to the study so basically they made a joke about it and they were like well but surely they've looked into it a little and they looked around and went no nobody's looked so there is a strong recommendation that relevant parties involved in space tourism enter into some open discussions talking about risks mitigations and create and disseminate best practices for the sector wow well I know there's been physics research and there have been studies but I think the the social science aspects of this are very interesting uh yeah I mean at the very least you got to put some mice in space and get them to have babies and see what happens the very least have we not done that yet feel like we should have done that I feel like that's already been happening I don't know but did it happen then with artificial gravity or did we not chart fetal development over the course of zero G's or like there's radiation concern like there's all these sorts of factors that most likely have not been measured specifically so back in 2017 there was work that showed that sperm that had been stored in space was able to make healthy baby mice on Earth sure but that's uh is mice can reproduce after they've been in space sure sure but yeah that's the thing the sex in space needs some study turns out wow yeah interesting because especially if it's space tourism it's a holiday it's a short period of time people are going they're gonna have a good time and they go home and then what what happens in space stays in space yeah well and then I mean this is also related to the conversation about if you're sending people to Mars right and they are spending months in space they will have sex so then what and you may want them to create a population on Mars then what right so this is still part of that same conversation that it's this green paper is just saying hey let's talk about it let's figure this out hey nobody's talking about it so yeah there's so many things so first of all just the the physical act of sex with without gravity seems like that could be tricky I do believe you yourself said life finds away so this is my it was my uncle but yeah yeah well the other thing of course then is the there is of course the fluid Dynamic containment aspect of being in a closed capsule with no gravity and you know you've seen the astronauts where they were like smooch something out of a tube and then go up and so there's there's that whole concept so that needs to be studied because yes if that is it if that is a risk factor in taking people to space figure out bodily fluids for a shared environment yeah of passengers as opposed to a personal capsule in space this is a very different and then you know the like if you're talking long-term pregnancy in space like first of all that's different yeah what what pregnant woman uh getting into the later gestational uh area there wouldn't like to have no gravity for a while right now what does that do to your ligaments and muscles and all and they're already messed up actually they're already ready if you have zero gravity the whole time you were growing a fetus and then all of a sudden you have gravity you yeah that's that's bad it's really really severe issue and we've already shown with bacterial studies and plant studies that when they're growing in space they figure their way out but things are different there are different uh developmental factors and growth factors that become activated in space because of the low gravity situation so this could impact development of a fetus Big Time development and then and then uh positioning just the little bambanini uh how does it know which way to go yep hang out upside down for quite a long time oh they turn around and it's at a certain point but how will they know which way to turn I know right this is a new weapon there's no down then yeah yeah yes this is the thing there's lots to consider there is a lot ticket so even if it's just like oh this needs to be avoided at all costs then that has to be considered for space tourism I said sex tourism that's incorrect space tourism that's um that's the next step at the very least you need to include that as a waiver of liability to say like this is not something that we encourage this is ill-advised for the following reasons you need to say that you will not do this and if you do do this and it results in problems it is not our fault so that's that's part of this too is that you have to kind of you have to you have to set up precautions but in the end humans are going to do what humans are going to do but you gotta at least warn them and protect yourself as a company also from people doing stupid things so it's you know hey everybody we know you're gonna do it but just know this they're yeah we're not we're not we're not in charge ill advice yeah so anyway so yeah still questioned why aren't we studying more sex in space time needs to happen time to do it yeah why haven't we been studying intestines our guts more I thought I thought we do a lot we do we do and then you're like oh you're intestine if you were to take it out it would cover the vote the Grand Canyon no right it's huge it's a tennis court it's whatever tennis courts the lungs if you spread the lungs out they're the tennis court so I don't know maybe it's a Rhode Island I don't know tennis court is like my default for internal organs getting spread out over this the lungs is the is the tennis court I think the the intestines is uh is if you go around the the track maybe I don't know so there's this idea it's like ah it's contestants that's this length and it's fine everybody's intestines are like the same it's great it's just all good and apparently there's individual variation and we just haven't been taking it into account and so some researchers from North Carolina State University have published their work in Pierre J this last week of studies of the diversity of intestines pigs frogs rats humans all across the board the intestines comprise buried in very different sizes so the researchers said there was research over a century ago that looked at variability in the relative lengths of human intestines but then people went yeah we don't care and it's been ignored pretty much ignored since then and then these researchers dug into it and they determined that quote from one of the authors of the study if you're talking to four different people odds are good that all of them have different guts in terms of the relative sizes of the organs that make up the system for example the cecum it's an organ that's found at the Nexus of the small and large intestines one person might have a cecum that's only a few centimeters long while someone else might have one that's the size of a coin purse and they found other variability I love these analogies though I have my cecum it's the size of a coin purse but and again also women additionally have longer small intestines that than men and they think that this might help women withstand stressful situations like uh lack of food a little bit better than men do because you have the longer small intestine it helps you to extract more nutrients and so this might lead to women's ability to survive better during periods of stress yes I I I'm sorry I missed part of what you said there so but and it's just because the way my brain works you said coin purse and I immediately thought who is referencing anything in terms of a coin purse like the generation before hours didn't use coin purses at least one more the coin purse to be an analogy that anybody should should have any what's an analogous size to a coin purse though I can't even really think of anything that you would use in like 2023 terms that would be similar oh yeah I don't know what could possibly be oh emphasizing an iPhone airpod case beside the length of an iPhone maybe but then are you talking a pro yeah yeah maybe this um maybe coin purse just has its own niche of size that nothing else is close to maybe that's why it's a little kids get their allowance and coin purses still what are you talking about no they have refillable credit cards oh my God or an app now see I'm probably a generation behind other the kids today they probably got an app yes so anyway yeah tell me about the small intestines so the small intestine so the this is also based on the assumption that women can handle lack of food stress better than or right so that when you you get any food you're able to extract more nutrients from it and so that makes I think that's really funny because if you look at like social media or general societal expectations I feel like women are always the ones that are getting pegged as being hangry all the time maybe there's a reason we're just like sucking all the nutrients out of life okay all right I don't know I have no idea I'm making things up here but uh Laura in the chat room uh the palm of your hand there's a shark Perfect Analogy I also want to comment sideline as well we're just destroying yourself this this artist's depiction of animals and their guts is a nightmare and wonderful frog looks like Kermit and it looks like Kermit's head has been placed on top of a Macabre like chicken made out of this [Laughter] yeah I I take your point that there's variation between species and also between individuals and uh this is important to me sounds like duh because also species have different um diets so exactly you also have different needs to extract nutrients over short or long periods depending on what kind of food you're eating and how often you eat like reptiles and mammals or amphibians and mammals are vastly different in that they process food at different speeds so a snake might only eat once a week and poop once a week and for an alligatory times a day right okay doesn't eat again for a month yeah so would you are you suggesting that ancestrally diet based populations could have different lengths of intestines or configurations based on absolutely thousands of years of diet differences why not yeah so the communities that's the interesting aspect of this is that form follows function that is a very very solid tenet of physiology so the form length of the intestine is going to have been led to over evolutionary time by the foods the environment all the stuff that all ties together as an organism evolves but the individual differences I think are going to be interesting moving forward especially as it comes to medicine so we talk a lot about the microbiome but if you put that also in the context of the amount of time or length of intestine that is there for food to be digested and absorbed it's going to that all is going to interplay and so maybe there is something to do with the shape the length the way that the digestive system is formed in between individuals that we need to be taking into our view of how to treat people medically for gut issues so how do we how do we measure our intestines take better care because very carefully it's not just processing time because that is not necessarily directly related to length correct yeah so you need to figure you swallow a string or something no figure it out I'm joking that's a terrible idea no no but there has to be a way I don't know some sort of MRI or something but if if it's so important to know how long your intestines are for Specialized Care yeah there's a whole field out there for people hello to try to figure out how to measure your intestines right so it this and this getting into this the fact that they're saying this has been ignored for a very very long time maybe this kind of a study is the start that we need to kick start a bit of Investigation into how these diversities impact our health overall yeah how can we how can we look at it what can we do I don't know Justin are you wanting to talk about poop now uh yeah okay so here we go let's go from the gut to if we're following researchers out of Upstate Medical University which I looked it up is a real uh real University and and Upstate New York which is where it got its name sounds Mickey up oh I went to Upstate Medical University over anyway research is there I found that uh compared with standard antibiotic treatment stool transplantation can increase the number of people who recover from Closter deities deficyl C diff bacterial infections so this is a condition which causes life-threatening diarrhea yes big deal if it's particularly pernicious because it can go into this dormant shell-like State and when it's there it's it's almost indestructible so you can be on antibiotics that would normally kill the C diff but if it's in this if it's in this sort of hibernating state uh it it it evades it evades everything it just Waits and then re-emerges later and reinfect and we'll uh so this is a also when it reinfects it's probably you probably had antibiotics right so you've had antibiotics to kill this it evaded it and then popped up where there is an open area to fill in its Niche because it's like the became can become the predominant thing there 77 of people who received stool transplants did not experience reinfection and within eight weeks of the study compared to just 40 percent of those who were on antibiotics so the while antibiotics can be a very effective first round again so you have a viral bacterial or not a viral excuse me you have a bacterial infection of your gut it's not C diff it's something else it's really bad so you go on to the antibiotics they also take out the beneficial bacteria so it takes out whatever is ruined in your stomach plus it takes out the beneficial bacteria C diff hides out comes back after the beneficial bacteria is gone and that whatever it was you were trying to get rid of his gun and takes over okay and then this is when you get that real serious next round of diarrhea that can be life-threatening so the standard treatment of C diff is more antibiotics so further depleting any beneficial bacteria or knocking them down again as they're attempting to re-emerge and so this you can already see this is what you would call one of those Vicious Cycles yeah absolutely the treatment is followed by a recurrent infection and an over familiarity with the reading material at your doctor's waiting area ridiculous pattern happens in nearly a third of infected individuals according to the CDC every year they're around a quarter million C diff infections in the us alone causing approximately 12 000 fatalities in this study transplanting healthy donor stool into a gut to jump start they've got microbes and re-establish the healthy microbiome significantly reduced the risk of C diff reoccurring because when it re-emerged there was competition yes please initiate all the fecal transplant studies please everybody do it yeah this was a pretty decent size for fecal transfer this was a research examined data from six clinical trials with a total of 320 adults that addressed the efficacy and safety of stool transplantation for the treatment of repeated C diff infection and what was the methodology for transplant in this one very careful [Laughter] no it looks like they looked at a number of different studies so there's going to be different uh probably different methods but uh there were there were this is a Denmark Netherlands Italy Canada and the United States so that's probably all the above there's probably some pills there's probably some suppositories there's probably some surgery happening there's probably lots of things yeah I don't know if it was hopefully yeah hopefully not too much surgery yeah um yeah looking very quickly I'm not seeing anything in the study that looks like surgery but anyway it's a just another good reason to order Dr Justin's not a real doctor poop pills they're on teed spelled wrong for legal reasons to fix whatever ales yeah and make you better at the things you want to do I think uh microbiome transplant is is something that we've had such a strong haha gut feeling about for so long it makes the most sense it seems like a potential Lifesaver as you mentioned here C diff is a terrible disease yeah you basically starve to death right it's terrible um and and so it's it's always felt like in my bones like a really obvious smart thing to push forward through studies to get to kind of medical practice and I just I I am so happy to hear that more and more studies are happening with it because that's all we need we just need to get some data and it will become practice but that you have to get that middle part done where you go yes this sounds like it should work and then you need the proof of exactly how it works and yeah and when it works and then you can and it needs to be done in a regulated way and it needs to be done you know in a safe way because there have been studies that have shown that if it's not done in a safe way it can cause more problems right so you need to make sure that it is coming the the transplant materials are coming from somebody who's healthy that you have safe practices in the handling of everything in the you know how it's all produced and put together one thing that you can't do is do it all in a sterile environment right to an extent you know because like there's a certainly yeah there's a certain aspect of it that's by its definition the opposite of stuff yeah but is there for example like a really targeted specific narrow band antibiotic that you would want to feed to someone who is going to be a fecal donor to prevent bad bacteria from getting over right so these are these are the things that need you figured out like is is are you just taking a healthy person and moving their entire microbiome over are you trying to remove a specific band of microbiome over are you trying to eliminate bad bacteria and only put good microbiota perfect example uh are we going to preserve this entire biome of animals in an ecosystem or are we going to take some of the animals and put them over here and grab one from over there and put it in and grab what you would do if you were trying to preserve an ecosystem is not preserve invasive species which is basically what I'm talking about right now so you make a healthy you you try and promote the the native species exactly which is what you got to do but if you've got a problem like this you can't just go antibiotics raw kill the entire biological ecosystem which is basically what we're doing there so that's what we do that's how they work right and that's how I mean we don't have I don't think a narrow enough band otherwise people would probably not ever uh have this diff problem it's it's but this is what needs to be studied right Are there specific bacteria that you want to see opportunists versus others or this this is what needs to be looked that is my point because you need to do it safely you can't just say you're a healthy person I'm not a healthy person give me your poop you can't just do that why that's exactly what the hell Dr Justin's not a real doctor poop Hill's not guaranteed to be eating poop or a pill form oh my goodness oh my goodness let's move to space very quickly before we finish this segment of the show um asteroids comets meteor showers what do you know about meteor showers they're pretty they're pretty yeah but if yeah it's burning so the idea is that you're tiny right they're just little you've got a chunk of penny size or you've got it which is an asteroid and bits and pieces are coming off of it dust that ends up we're going through the tail right and those little bits those pennies here and or the ideas is comets that have similar uh Dusty gassy Trails so we don't comments they go around the Sun comets we know are like icy and so they're melting and vaporizing and there's water and vapor and gas that's streaking behind them and that's what we see with the comets there is a particular asteroid called faithion 3200 fatheon and it acts like a comet but it isn't a comet it's an asteroid and it is responsible for the annual Geminid meteor shower so for longest time everybody's been like oh it's like a comet it goes around the Sun it heats up and oh but it's just dust it's just got a tail of dust and that dust is what our planet's going through and whoo Dusty Dusty meteor shower Limited well researchers from NASA have been looking at all of the wonderful tools that they have at their uh at their ready these days NASA's so solar terrestrial relations Observatory also the solar and heliospheric Observatory Soho not from New York uh they're looking at a whole bunch of things part of the sun Grazer project looking at things that go near the the sun they're looking at these images comets other things but these tools have never been made to look at asteroids meteors comets these tools are supposed to study the Sun and they're looking at the images in a completely different way and they determined that fatheon does not release a gassy Vapor or it doesn't release a Dusty tail it has no Dusty tail there's no dust so number one if there's no dust where the heck is the Geminid meteor shower coming from and why is faithion a part of that we have no clue number two they determined that instead of releasing dust it is releasing a sodium gas so it's heating up and releasing a gas vapor no dust no physical stuff that should be like debris that we're going through um so there's a everybody is very confused now interested curious what the heck is going on what is is there some kind of orbit that fatheon ended up in that something else was in that was broken up maybe fethion was part of something else that got broken up we don't know how fatheon which we thought was the source of the material for the Geminid meteor shower we don't know how it's related to that material anymore science scratchy gamer in the chat room thing it's free salt little chunks of salt hitting there sorry I'm hitting the atmosphere but even gonna be hitchhikers just it's just hot in the in this but it could be hitchhikers yeah but how it's just not detectable enough I guess because otherwise they'd be saying that hey we didn't find dust that's what we found or faithion is was big and at one point got broken up and maybe it has that tail because something shot it out somehow it's in an orbit it's going right yeah and they think motion to rename to gastroid I guess right that's I love that second that one yeah but the I mean if you think about it so fatheon they the Geminid meteor shower the material the debris stream that makes it up is estimated to be a billion tons of debris no big deal just a billion tons where'd it come from what's going on everybody how many Rhode Islands is that yeah right how does it compare exactly it's a big number I believe that's about a billion coin purses that would make each coin purse way a ton yeah it's got a lot of coins in there bigger than the palm of my hand for sure yeah all right so mystery is in space isn't it yeah we keep looking and the more we look the more questions we have which is fantastic we love it this is This Week In Science thank you so much for joining us for another episode and we hope that you are enjoying the show if you do love joining us every single week I do hope that you head over to twist.org and click on the patreon link because that's how we do support this little show here so click over there and click on patreon link choose your level of support ten dollars and more per month we will thank you by name at the end of the show thank you so much for your support you really can't do this without you all right coming on back now with more This Week In Science and it is time for Blair's animal corner with Blair she loves our creatures [Music] what you got Blair oh I have I don't know what that sound was but you know I have no idea I want to take that as a sign that I need to tell you about Roadkill it's an oncoming semi but weird um so it's that time again to hear a study that happened because researchers were stuck in their homes in 2020 they had to figure out what they could collect data on and what they could do with it and you know what Cardiff University and their Road lab it's in Europe in the UK they use data of Road killed records to assess 19 Wildlife species most frequently involved within vehicular collisions to see what changes there were in Road mortality during two major lockdown periods March through May 2020 and December 2020 through March 2021. and by comparing the lockdown rates to the same time periods in previous years it's in 2014 through 2019 pretty sizable data set they were able to identify the traits that put species at higher risk of becoming Roadkill they found that there were fewer records of nocturnal mammals fewer records of animals that visited Urban environments a few records of mammals with greater brain mass as well as fewer records of birds with longer flight initiation distances found in roadkill during the pandemic species that have several of these traits like badgers foxes and pheasants are therefore more likely to be hit by cars and have the highest mortality rate in normal traffic levels so they've benefited the most from the lockdowns and so suffer most during normal times by those measures they were able to see what kind of you could do to prevent future roadkill instances once traffic returned to normal overall across all species Wildlife vehicle collisions were 80 percent lower during the lockdown which seems right there were not a lot of people on the roads but so this can help inform Wildlife Conservation who needs an overpass who needs an underpass who needs slower driving in certain corridors During certain times of year so this kind of data I mean it's it's one of those things that like what can you do during the lockdown and what can you do when you come out of lockdown when you haven't collected normal data for a year or two comparisons you could do comparisons but if your whole thing is you're the road lab this is actually great work to do because it can help inform conservation decisions and Road planning in the future so uh this is you know not surprising information that came out of this not earth-shattering but I think it's a really good reminder of ways that we can take existing information roadkill data and turn that into real actionable conservation outcomes which I think is cool I think it's very cool I think the the data that has come out of it actually is quite interesting aside from the hey people drive less they're few is a few less would be yeah but the whole uh concept of what kinds of animals are more likely to become roadkill like I said large-brained animals less likely right be roadkill so this is brain sizes usually related to mass right that's that's the com that's the relativity but at the same time you know what else is going on there that's leading to these animals not becoming Roadkill yeah no absolutely absolutely and so yeah are there little tweaks you can make to city planning or road laws yeah or is are there new structures you can build that can that can alleviate these issues so yeah or like different times of year yes absolutely like are there certain times of year that this is a 15 mile an hour road and then the rest of the times of the year can be a 35 or 45 mile an hour road 75 let's go for it yeah it's Autobahn it right yeah anyway um and then I have my main story for the animal Court I really wanted to have some time to talk about this cool um elephant seals they're so cool there's so much weird stuff with elephant seals like I can't even start to explain all of the amazing science that exists in relation to elephant seals they are some of the deepest diving mammals they dive over a mile underwater which is insane they have specialized eyes to prevent their eyes from popping into their head from pressure there's there's so much when I was in school we went and we did metabolic studies on them because they die for two hours how does a mammal hold its breath for two hours well scientists have been working on that for decades and there's lots of good explanations basically they slow their metabolism down and just process oxygen really slow but there's so much biologically going on with them not to mention just their whole mating structure and all sorts of other things just elephant seals they're really really really cool but this is a new study adding to the many ways that they are just these specialized amazing animals this is from UC Santa Cruz and they wanted to record brain activity in free-ranging Wild elephant seals to look at their sleeping habits that's because when they're when they're on the beach and they're like either growing up they're young or they're it's during their mating time or their molting time it's all kind of overlapping seasonally they sleep about 10 hours a day that's what we usually see when we Google elephant seal we see them loafing around on the beach but when they are at sea for months they could be at sea for eight months straight they sleep about two hours a day so researchers are really interested in when are they getting the sleep how are they getting this sleep and how are they surviving off of so little sleep so they they went to um to some wild elephant seals and they fitted them with these like swim caps basically um they they put them uh they put an electroencephalogram or EEG that records brain activity on wild elephant seals during their normal diving Behavior time with a neoprene head cap over it they also had a small Data Logger to record signals and then they recovered the system when the animals came back to beach at Anya Nuevo it's basically the same sensors that you'd use for human sleep in a in a Sleep Clinic and they're removable they're flexible they're adhesive they attach the cap and the one it's mostly protected from water despite the crazy pressure and amount of time that it's underwater so it doesn't disrupt the signals in addition to the EEG they also carried time depth records accelerometers and other instruments so that they could then compare what was happening in their brain and with sleep two seal movement to correspond that with the brain activity when are they sleeping when are they at rest how deep are they sleeping right and so um the recording showed that they go into a deep sleep stage known as slow wave sleep well there's diving underwater and in and they maintain a controlled Glide almost like a corkscrew down then they transition into rapid eye movement or REM sleep and at that point the sleep paralysis makes them kind of just drift and their natural buoyancy is negative at that point when they've gone deep enough yeah you get to watch this uh this video if you're listening check out our show notes you can watch this seal kind of meaningfully drive down uh swim down and then all of a sudden they he hit kind of slow wave sleep and they kind of start to drift and fall kind of sideways and then they hit REM sleep and they do this Corkscrew pattern downward as they are completely like wonkly upside down and kind of sideways they just let gravity take over as they are pulled downward and then after about a 10 minute cat nap elephant seal nap they wake up and can forage along the ocean floor and then they'll surface later on they're all good that's amazing yeah wild such a crazy adaptation yeah so one of the things to consider here is that elephant seals are actually at their most uh vulnerable when they are close to the surface because that's where sharks are that's where killer whales are orcas are and so when they're at the open ocean on the surface they can only sleep for a minute or two well they can't really sleep at all they can only surface long enough to breathe and then they're back underwater they're not comfortable sleeping so they don't get to sleep until they've reached this area of the water column where they don't have many threats Predators yeah yeah and so that's when they're like oh I'm safe I'm deep enough conch and then they kind of go into this spiral downward um and it's also interesting that they're spiraling downward because you'd think that their buoyancy with all their fat stores and everything would keep them up but somehow they're continuing to go down so they're releasing air they're going like they're they're getting deeper which is yes it's on the depth there's a depth at which they are neutrally buoyant right and then deeper than that they become negatively buoyant there's a there's an aspect of that too that it's curious that that corkscrewing might limit the speed of The Descent right absolutely right so that like because divers do some level of this not to get uh bubbles in their blood or whatever it is the horrible awful bends the bends yeah so I wonder if part of this is also strangely timing that dissent properly so that if they had gone if they did just go straight down yeah would it cause a problem but having this Corkscrew motion where it's right because you would think you want you'd want efficiently as possible which maybe this is get to the bottom but it's efficient in the sense that it allows them that time to rest which they wouldn't be able to do otherwise because they're in zones where predators are also inhabiting yes yeah and so this is really interesting because they've had dive records for a while that show a constant dive so they've assumed well they have to be sleeping while they're diving there's no other way to when else can they possibly sleep so they just kind of slowly sink in while they sleep but they don't they didn't know any of the specifics of it now they know exactly at what point they hit REM sleep and it is at this Corkscrew moment so there's actually a specific connection here between the place that they're the safest the moment when they become negatively buoyant and the moment at which they let themselves kind of succumb to full sleep so of course this is important just because it's really cool like what the heck like add it to the list of crazy things that elephant seals do but also of course it is important for conservation and it's because as the researchers point out I think it's really interesting there's a lot of pressure and an emphasis in the conservation conversation going towards protecting animals feeding time but there is not a lot of protection on sleep time yes exactly so if there's a specific space at if we're thinking about like Marine protected areas and there's a specific part of the water column or a specific type of environment that is conducive to sleep at specific times of year again you know there's like temporal variables are important is that something that needs to be protected just like we would protect feeding or breeding spaces it's a really interesting question I would like somebody to protect my sleep that's the same rate the the ability number one to be able to do eegs on these animals while they're in water to go get this data is just amazing and yeah understanding this now is a new step in understanding how these animals exist in their ecosystem and how we can work if we want to to help them yeah yeah how does this how does this evolutionarily how does a system like this even get started yeah so I think you know you're awake until you die yeah and then some individuals figure out how to catch 10 minutes here or there yeah they survive better and the ones that figure out when and where is most advantageous to fall asleep survive the best and then that becomes selective pressure right so obviously not sleeping at all you're not gonna be able to pass on your genes that's not sustainable so there has to be a way to do it and if you're falling asleep on the surface and immediately getting eaten by a shark no babies for you no more DNA right so um yeah there you go I think it already sucks it's already such a a an intense uh number of adaptations to just be able to do the dive and then add this yeah oh yeah and then have this whole other layer on top of it right but I encourage you again to look into the Myriad of ways that this particular species is hyper evolved for deep sea dive yeah that is their whole thing yeah you think the elephant seals whole thing is that big old nose no no their whole thing is they they are the deepest diving mammal to my knowledge I could be wrong no I think I think they are the deepest diving mammal on the planet but so that that is an extreme amount of evolutionary pressure that is gonna show up in all these different kind of aspects in an animal's physiology yeah awesome Evolution I love it elephant seals everybody do yourselves a favor do a quick Google read through that Wikipedia maybe I should do a short YouTube someday about elephant seals I love them so much also just Google and ode juvenile elephant seal pictures because as crazy as the adult males look the juvenile elephant seals I think are the cutest pinniped uh Marine Mammal biologists fight me I think they're the cutest fisticuffs all right moving from animals Justin tell us a story about oh great uh bacteria and resistance yeah we really don't want to hear this story unfortunately because the researchers out of Oxford UK which also I had to look up that turns out that's also a real University they've investigated the evolution of antibiotic resistance properties of antimicrobial peptides so anti-microbial peptides are something that is a it's a natural antibiotic that all life forms have in some form or another this is in and in humans it's in part of our innate immune system meaning it's not like a reactive learning thing it's just compounds that uh will kill bacteria if they make it into our our cells into our blood or into our system somewhere so a long time ago they isolated some of these from bacteria from uh from a bacillus strain and it's it was used for quite a while in China because it turns out if you give it to chickens they get bigger and they also fight off infection and so hey this is great let's let's give this to all the chickens and something bad happened which is there became a outbreak of E coli that was resistant to it and so that resistance actually started to affect humans and the livestock and so this this really bad E coli then went worldwide like global so they stopped using antimicrobial peptides amps for agriculture and they're they're still used quite a bit because they're they're though that last line of defense against a multi-resistant bacteria or microbe so constant is an amp that was derived from the bacillus that was part of that big outbreak in in China back in 2016-ish or early 2000s I guess it was it was banned in 2016. these researchers honey had a little bit of a they looked at they looked at they were looking at this and they thought well that's interesting so it became this E coli stream became resistant to the peptide antimicrobial peptide that was derived from bacillus but well gosh that's conserved throughout the animal kingdom we have that in us a version of it an amp in our in our system our blood systems that that is fighting this so if it it can become resistant to it when it was used as an antibiotic would it also have gained resistance to our innate immune system oh no here's here's what I need you to think of oh no you have an infection and you add an anti microbial agent to it yeah right it kills that infection it kills that Invader okay now an Invader starts to become resistant to it so it doesn't work as well so then you find something else and you apply it and maybe that works great that's resistance this this is a resist this is overcoming a resistance that is a natural part of your immune system not some secondary invasive combination of uh what is that that that arms race of microbes fighting each other or overcoming a chemical that attacks it this is our innate immune system that this has gained some level of resistance to so they went and tested it they found that using amps found in humans and animals against this E coli this this Eagle Eye with his adjusted this new Gene this resistant Gene increased its resistance to Natural amps in innate mutant systems by 62 percent in a blood serum experiment the researchers found high levels of resistance to the human serum showing that this this one strain of E coli at least that they tested had been trained to avoid our innate immune system so we already think of E coli as invasive takeaway from this is using this thing that is so conserved throughout the animal kingdom to use that as an antibiotic and livestock or anywhere else creates the possibility that you could get resistances to this from things that aren't currently pathogens you could train microbes out in the environment to become invasive to humans and all living things it's not like we're going hey here's a treat everyone we are kind of but not on purpose it's not like training a dog or an animal but yeah so normally normally the these you got to think of these also working in you know that like you've got to take your antibiotic treatment to the end till the end so normally if one of these microbes gets invasive ends up in our blood something like that it can't leave and the work will be done all the way so there is no chance for it to go out and do a horizontal Gene transfer or some of them survive and now they're going to reproduce it's there till it's gone it's it's it's caught we've captured it we're this lab experiment when it gets into a body placing it out in the environment allows things to train on it before they get stuck in that lab environment of the body it allows them to build resistances in populations it allows them that then once they find themselves in that body can overcome the system horribly terrifying antibiotics to a whole different level that we would be training in external population of pathogens or currently not pathogens because whenever it gets into a human body we don't even notice it because we kill it right away because we've got this innate system that's conserved from bacteria to humans but yeah but that's the point right there so we have this innate system that is conserved and so we have a lot of peptides that are very similar to cows to chickens like we've got peptides that are very similar this is as you said in arms race and this is something that has been going on much longer than you and I have been alive yes so yes we should be concerned about the possibility of training bacteria or other pathogens against these very specific peptides but at the same time we should we also shouldn't think that these bacteria E coli which we've been evolving with for all of time that these interactions haven't taken place already you know there's yes it's an arm it's an arm absolutely right oh absolutely absolutely but but you don't tell your secrets you don't share your secrets on mass right hey we know there's an arms race we just want you to we got the blueprints right here of our next the weapon system we haven't built yet but we're planning on it and this is oh it's got a couple so you can see it's a giant orbital uh round spherical Planet destroying thing it's only got one weakness if it was one vent right here if you if you shoot a little torpedo thingy in there it blows up the whole thing other than that though it's perfect you know yeah yeah no I take the point I totally see the point of this and the importance of this study I'm just saying that we shouldn't overplay the significance of it there is a there's a balance to be kept because yes we have been evolving with E coli forever these peptides many of them are in common with lots of our relatives on this planet already so you but yeah you yeah we don't want to share the plans this is this is dumb let's not do that 62 more resistant from this one strain let's not do that no okay we have new antibiotics yet can we figure that out I really would like to figure that out well the other thing is like it's one thing if it's one thing if it overcomes this too because this is just this is our last line of defense right now yeah it's another if it doesn't even if it doesn't even care and can attack our bodies with it that's the other thing it's just we need yeah we need a completely different different way to attack this this aren't we're going to lose this arms race because we we're bad at it no we're getting better we're learning we're figuring out how to you know use the the phages that the bacteria like to use to fight each other so we're learning the things I'm being asked for a happy defense to end the show here well at least my section of it ah this isn't that really so much of the story it's just the update the the lunar lander spacecraft the Japan plan to land on the Moon maybe on the moon they don't know it was Schrodinger's Lander or what so everything was going fine we sent it there they sent it there it was uh above the Moon surface uh only you know pretty close to service 90 meters above you know pretty close and then lost contact completely graft they saw the craft was picking up speed which it wasn't supposed to because it was supposed to have a reverse stress kind of a thing to slow it down it was accelerating reversing so smoosh we don't know most likely smoosh kaboom that's not good can we can't we just not did I don't like the part I couldn't figure out is why can't we just look like don't we have the ability to see the surface of the Moon from the planet Earth well enough to not even know where it was landing and take a look there's another Rover over there to approximately where you thought it happened but then you're just gonna end up with a pile of exploded Rovers just on top of each it's just gonna keep happening anyway space travel is tougher than you think it's hard even even if you want to go be a moon tourist go have fun just understand that you may be watching the moon you may be getting closer and closer and then next thing you know that was it bring a trampoline problems all your moon detritus I'll just try this such a beautiful word and I love the word no yeah trampolines on who needs a trampoline on the moon sounds great to me I mean you have less gravity so you can get some real air yeah maybe maybe it's the opposite maybe the trampolines don't work as well that's a great now if we had sex in space now I want to know if trampolines work in space um it depends on gravity it depends on all the forces of course trampolines would work in space but you need to have the thrust that goes One Direction to happen yeah the rebound the other day on the moon I want to know I want to know what a trampoline is like on the moon because I feel like it would be very disappointing that's why I said why do you need a trampoline oh because because there's not as much so you do you wouldn't you wouldn't really push it it'd just be like stepping on anything I'll be walking I see what you're saying yeah interesting let's talk about brain stuff I got yeah a couple of brain stories for the end of the show here um researchers have been looking at the brain they like to do that uh who do you know about the homunculus you mean like a creature that you make in uh in fantasy that no no it doesn't is that a word that means something that's like even bigger than super gigantic nope that's not what that means either no the homunculus is the little person I mean in like the little man in your brain uh researchers forever and ever and ever have been like oh our motor cortex our sensory cortex it Maps to the human body in some very interesting ways and we've had this imagining of the homunculus is kind of starting at the toes and then it goes like your feet and it goes all the way up in your face and places that need more nerves have bigger representation within the brain and so really the homunculus is this terribly distorted idea of what a person looks like represented in the neurons in the brain and they found this by sticking hands tiny back kind of all right let's see it come on I know you have a picture let me see it I do have a picture but the thing is this particular new study that was just uh published in nature this last week they have determined that there's more involved in the motor cortex homunculus than has previously been considered so whereas we might consider oh it's the classical ideas there's a map of the body in the cortex and it's weird looking and some things are really big and other things are really small it depends on how many neurons are involved um there is based on this new fmri work they've done a new kind of context what they're calling the integrate isolate model and this model has to do with there's certain actions and things that we do where it's not just the motor cortex like when we think of how motions take place there's this very steeped in Dogma idea of how it works it goes okay I have an idea in my brain the idea in my brain goes to the planning area the pre-motor cortex the pre-motor cortex goes Ah that's a great idea and it shoves the information to the motor cortex and the motor cortex says nerves act and then you go and you move your finger or you bend your knee or you do any number of motions but it's been this idea that hey the homunculus is the representation of everything and if you look at it in an fmri it should be very one to one you move your finger the motor cortex nerves for the finger light up and get excited but that's not what they found and so they found that there's some um overlap of those very specific one-to-one things but more so there are multiple regions of the brain that are involved in planning that are involved in pain that are involved in just taking context of the whole system and the environment and the motion itself so the motor cortex is integrated with the rest of the brain as if it were part of a system and not just acting all by itself these words how the brain supposed to be isn't it yeah surprise that's why like if you if you get brain damage you it's not like you can't use your fingers anymore all of a sudden not necessary everything else works fine yeah and there are instances that we've seen over and over where particular areas of the brain get damaged that we think oh they're never going to do this again and then they're abled people are able to surprise us all the time our brains are plastic but they're also very interconnected isn't there like a is it like if somebody loses a limb say somebody loses uh a hand right keep it keep that graph up there for a little bit yes uh let me see and we're gonna find it see if I can find it a little bit better uh so somebody loses a thumb okay and so there's no there's no information coming from the thumb anymore there's no sensory information coming from the thumb the the part of the brain that was that was there waiting for signals from the brain taken over and then like here you have neck okay where is next to the thumb so what could happen is you could start to you could go like this to your neck and feel your Phantom thumb because this part the the register for this part of the ring is now taken over that space that used to be can like there's really strange uh sensory interactions that can that can happen if one section is lost and sort of uh wants to keep doing its job but it now has to go work for the neighboring part of the brain exactly yeah but even beyond that there are other cortical regions that are involved and influence the motor cortex whereas previously it was like if the signals get to the motor cortex and the motor cortex fires you're gonna move but now they understand that there's actually a lot more integration happening and yeah this is yeah you're homunculus is not the homunculus you thought it was anymore I don't like it I require a story that is less terrifying that has a less terrifying graphic please doctor you really we had horrifying antimicrobial news we had oh like it's all been roadkill and and uh is Icky strangers having sex on your yeah hopefully they're not strangers to each other unless I don't know but I'm just saying if I'm assuming that when I get to go to space it's not going to be like Mr Justin your capsule is waiting for your personal riding his face I'm going to be in there and Coach where like people whoever like shoulder to shoulder guess what there will be a bathroom and the people I know but things float around anyway it's been a horrifying show well we're going to talk about the understanding of new of nervous systems and evolution so let's go back in history to people first looking at nervous systems under a microscope and coming into the idea of like what is the nervous system how how do things work and there's a 19th century scientist ramoni kahal Santiago ramonica working with fridio financing and they came up with the neuron Doctrine the neuron Doctrine is that neurons are individual cells and that's what they are they're just cells they're neurons look at them go um and then Camilo Golgi came around and he's like wow nervous system you can't just have individuals in a system so they're going to touch each other these neurons touch each other they influence each other it's a continuous Network and then we found synapses and that confirmed the whole idea that oh these individual neurons actually touch each other communicate it is as a continuous system and it's amazing we have a nervous system but where did this nervous system come from how did it evolve researchers just publishing in Sciences last week uh have been looking at comb jellies cute little comb jellies that aren't really jellies the jellies that aren't jellies exactly and so these jellies that are not jellies but are very very cute and little uh they uh we're easy to look at for these researchers they're like well let us take a look at what's going on we're going to add some fluorescent dyes we're going to take a look at what's happening in these what happened to be early evolutionary ancestors of ours so it's we're related to them we have and we have relatives that go way way way way back to the same place historically and in evolutionary time so the idea that we can look at these calm jellies we can look at their anatomy and get an idea using 3D electron microscopy uh to see what's going on in their nervous systems that it might give us an idea of how nervous systems in general evolved well what they determined is that ten ofores they don't have nervous systems they have neural Nets they have nervous Nets so what they have are neurites that have combined together and so in essence our one single neuron and so this is challenging our understanding of what a nervous system actually is the reality is they have multiple neurons that connect in a way that is more net like than system-like so instead of being like our nervous system where we have these neurons touching neurons touching neurons they have neurons that are connected and net like over the entire surface of the organism and so the question is how does this net-like structure really work as a system and if it's working that way as a system I didn't we keep it that way and why do we have the nervous yeah why do we have the nervous system that we do today yeah so it's a it's a very interesting finding that has not been seen previously and it's I think it's going to be interesting looking forward for comparative reasons it's going to be evolutionarily interesting and additionally considering our look at Ai and neural Nets and machine learning how the kinds of intelligences or systems that we can create that we use bio biology to inspire us to create how is that going to inform us so there's some really interesting stuff going on there like would it be better to move from a neural net to like a node-based system which is right and or would they have what that is worse because that would mean that the AI would be way more smart I don't know anyway or when you've got node-based stuff is it uh less resilient right like does if you if you lose a node how does the rest of the system work uh right you know so is there some aspect of the evolution of our nervous systems and the plasticity of them we can lose a neuron and continue functioning but in the case of these neural Nets like is it less resilient and does that influence it well it seems like it would be uncompartment uncompartmentalized right so yeah what would their homunculus look like right because the the difference between you can be really weird like the difference between touch and smell and uh Vision like that we have which are sort of these separate ways the the brain process the information the sensory input all of these would be in the same note I suppose to a a neural net like it would be very it would be very difficult to differentiate uh what was what was causing the activity and the way that our our brains and our neural uh systems are set up uh to have all this compartmentalization in even largest nodal uh ma or is it nodal or module uh activity that's taking place in different parts of the brain so yeah so yeah so instead of synapses where we have these things butting up against each other and communicating what if they like all of our nerves just really grabbed on and held hands right so that's what I want to see too is like t nataphor's uh comb jellies are are thank you for pronouncing it correctly yeah if hey you have to take my zoologist card if I got that wrong anyway um there's there's such their own little phylum they're their own little phylum just comb jellies so what I want to know is across the animal kingdom who has a nerve net who has it at one point did it disappear did it appear at multiple times and then disappear is there some weird conversion Evolution where unrelated kind of phyla have it I'm so curious it was this a predecessor to what we currently have or is it just a different way of having yeah is it just yeah hello I don't know either but it's yeah a fascinating let's find out yes on episode 2000 of twist absolutely we'll just keep on going and going and going we've come to the end yes yeah all the science for this week everybody we've made it thank you all for listening we appreciate you being here and being being present and talking and chatting in all the chat rooms love that you're here doing that thank you to fada who's not here tonight he's out doing an improv comedy show somewhere here in Portland which is pretty awesome um thank you to Identity 4 for recording the show Rachel for editing the show gourd R and lore others who help keep our chat rooms very happy good places to hang out thank you for all of your efforts there and of course thank you to our patreon sponsors for all of your support I would love to thank Teresa Smith James Schaefer Richard badge Kent North coat Rick loveman George chorus Pierre velazar John ratnaswami Carl kornfeld Karen tozi Chris Wozniak Dave bun bigger Chef's dead hell Snyder Donovan Styles AKA Don Stylo Ali coffin Reagan on Monday Stephen Albert and Dale reichak Stu Pollock Andrew Swanson Freddy's 104 Sky Luke Paul runovich Karen Reardon noodles Jack davidy Youngblood Sean Clarence lamb John McKee Greg Reilly Marquez inflow Steve lisman AKA Zima can Howard Dan Christopher raping Richard Brendan minnis Johnny Gridley Remy Dave flying out Christopher Dreyer already I'm Greg Briggs John Atwood Rudy Garcia Dave Wilkinson Rodney Lewis Paul Rick Ramos Philip Shane Kurt Larson Craig Landon sudoster Jason olds Dave neighbor Eric Knapp EO Adam mishcon Kevin perichan Aaron Lutheran Steve de bellbub called her Marjorie Paul Disney David simile Patrick pecoraro Tony Steele thank you for all of your support and if any of you would like to support us on patreon head over to twist.org and click on the patreon link on next week's show we will be back Wednesday at 8pm Pacific time and Thursday for the second show 5 a.m Central European Time one show just one show at the same time What show same time well because there's one that's at 5am on Thursdays and there's one well you can figure out the Earth is round Justin and time zones it's anyway time zones yeah all right we'll get to that we'll cover that one on next week's show and you can figure it'll tell me about it um I'm sorry do you want to listen to us as a podcast maybe uh while you walk around your local aquarium staring at comb jellies just search for this week in science whatever podcasts are found if you enjoyed this show get your friends to subscribe as well for more information on anything you've heard Here Today Show notes and links to the stories are available on our website www.twiss.org you can also sign up for a newsletter perhaps yeah who knows it could show up you never know just bam there it is you can contact us directly also but don't email me about what the deepest diving mammal is because I looked it up and there are two whales that dive deeper than elephant seals so that's covered oh so you don't need to email me about that I got it corrected but it's the deepest diving pinnipet regardless you can email me that I guess but I've I've got it I have that now info now regardless you can email Kiki and tell her how wrong I was at this weekendsize.com you can email Justin and uh I don't know send him gifts at to his minion gmail.com or you can email me but not about that at blairbazz twist.org just be sure to put twists t-w-i-s in the subject line or your email will be sent up into space uh on a tourism flight and I don't know what's gonna happen there oh well but uh well after your space trip you can tell us all about it on the Twitter where we are at twist science at Dr KiKi at jacksonfly and at Players Menagerie we love your feedback if there's a topic you would like us to cover or address a suggestion for an interview a haiku that comes to in the night please let us know we'll be back here next week and we hope you'll join us again for more great science news and if you've learned anything from the show remember it's all in your head [Music] This Week In Science This Week In Science it's the end of the world so I'm setting up shop got my banner unfurled it says the scientist is in I'm gonna sell my advice show them how to stop a robot with a simple device this week's science is coming your way so everybody listen to what I say I use the scientific method for all that is worth and I'll broadcast my opinion all over the Earth cause it's this week of science This Week In Science this week in science science science This Week In Science This Week In Science this week in science science science science I've got one disclaimer and it shouldn't be news that what I say may not represent your views but I've done the calculations and I've got a plan you just might understand that this is the after show we are here after the show in the after show what are you showing or is there a difference look at these idiots I love them so much I love them there's like yeah they're really good have you ever heard um what a baby elephant seal sounds like they used it in Jurassic Park what yeah they recorded elephant seals at The Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito and used that in Jurassic Park they like slowed it down yeah probably they sound like horrible uh a drowning chicken is what I can only say it sounds like it full speed no it's what it is man no drowning chickens so sounds hello Cappy yes you can open the door let's see so much squish exactly Jason Bombardier let's see you finding it's just everything is ADS beforehand it's the worst what happened the internet the internet is made that the internet is made of ads ads ads ads ads ads um the internet is oh any images of swim caps I couldn't find any that's a great question although the Marine Mammal Center puts little hats on their elephant seals it's really cute yeah I tried to open images and stuff from the story and from the paper but we couldn't get the images of the little swim caps that wasn't there yes court says I took an audio design course and found that when you want to create sounds that feel threatening It's usually the less obvious species that work the best a lot of herbivores and other seemingly harmless species I like this seemingly and in parentheses so I did this I did this for the the radio play that uh I did a long time ago where I I needed I wanted a T-Rex sound and I think the news of the day was that oh you know the closest answer relative of a T-Rex today is chickens chicken and so I took a chicken sound and I slowed it down and I pitch shifted it and it's he's you're right Gordon it was terrifying yeah you scale the chicken up to the size of a T-Rex in the audio uh right and it's whoa oh the fun you can have the fun you can have making innocent creatures terrifying I can't find pictures it's so sad there should be pictures of the the elephant seal swim caps there should be pictures I looked before the show too I was like oh uh no that's something else it's a related article about just like the normal tags I was just showing you but maybe they are everybody maybe they didn't take photos oh well yeah they're too silly for the internet you're right Jason that's not possible silly for the internet come on no the internet loves silly doesn't it I mean we want more silly yeah they just were very focused on the dive I liked a picture that it wasn't just like a swim cap that it like had Pilot hat that's what I picture in my mind Pilot hat see this is this is I'm having this like contextual problem with coin purses and pilot hats yeah you know has worn a hat with a strap under the chin World War One hat I guess so here's an image I found of a how just tracking device for monitoring um no this is from 2008. yeah so that's different used just from monitoring and collecting data in the Antarctic Seas yeah so that's probably just for dive uh dive depths and um temperature and location yes the temperature and stuff like that yeah exactly yeah but yeah because it's a it's basically a sleep study EEG I have to say that still looked very proud sometimes oh my goodness oh uh going back to sex in space Oh yes I deter I determined I didn't determine anything I learned this last week that and this is from an astronaut that we don't eat astronaut ice cream in space there's no astronaut the ice cream that's the freeze-dried ice cream that everybody's like astronaut cream nobody eats it in space because isn't it actually camping ice cream isn't that actually what that was created for well it was no it was originally created for the astronauts okay but what they learned very quickly is that when they eat it in space it goes Crunch and there's all these little dust particles and little bits like when you eat a potato chip or something and it exploded and then crumbs in space crumbs in space that then get moisture from the air and become not freeze-dried and land places and gum everything up so it's and everybody and then everybody died from ice cream yes ice cream is the problem and this is the same problem with sex in space but this but this is the whole point of this of the paper Justin is that we have to identify the problems because people are going to do it no matter what you say yep I so I have but by the way I just want to be on the record I have not in any way argued against sex in space that is not my position I just I just don't want to be uh in coach yes I understand think about it I want my own well we know you're not doing space tourism or going to Mars anyway so no I'm not leaving the planet I've I decided that a long time ago yeah I'm not interested I like the planet I like being on a planet I think it's hard to get on a planet in the first place so then to like be like oh I want to get off the planet once you're here it's like a very silly idea I like this planet I'm happy I think a lot of work it went into uh the planet and to evolving to survive in whatever niches that we have found on this planet and I and I think that's where just let a lot of other people leave so that there can be space that would be fine I feel like I do feel like it's great everyone else you go ahead oh leave space for us we're getting crowded here can I is this we're in the after show can I admit that I kind of kind of miss the lockdown I'm because I I did a bit of traveling of course you can I did a bit of traveling during the lockdown and you know the the hotel rates were really cheap the you get on an airplane and you didn't have anybody sitting next to you but Justin it sounds like you and didn't enjoy you you didn't have a lock yes okay I like the I like the planet yeah I like the planet with a severe reduction of population and I don't mean that I would want to get there the wrong way I'm just saying everybody is nice are you suggesting maybe that each of us has a day of the week I I think that would be a great idea stay in except for you know what you you have Tuesdays I actually did this for here in letters a through D you bring a salad so I did this I did this for years and I had much a worker and then you're screwed you just have to be you have to work every day anyway because everybody to serve the coffee to the people whose day it is so maybe two decades of my life I worked every weekend and had a couple of weekdays off yeah and then then I got uh one of those jobs where you get the weekends off every weekend and I was horrified by the sheer volume of population uh that's like now there's a line at the grocery store there's traffic on the in the uh we should shift it should be like very shifted weekends should be at various points throughout the week all the time then you never see people is the problem like that was exactly lockdown is that you would you didn't see your friends for two years let's all work when we want to work and take vacations I would say even let's use AI to work 16-hour work weeks I love it and then we can have time to travel and see our friends I don't know maybe just get paid the same and it'd be great and then yes I love it don't threaten me with a good time Blair says gourd oh not seeing your friends in two years is that a good time oh man I don't know I thought it was sad yeah that part was sad for sure I know Patrick machine learning not AI but we are you know there's the extrapolation to the idea so according to an AI expert online that was interviewed by wired just to let you know Patrick I I'm not trying to start a fight yeah you are machine learning is an aspect of AI according to the AI expert and therefore it is not wrong to say AI when you're talking about Machining learning it's just more learning is a type of AI right it's just general like so machine learning is specific yeah it's a more specific thing to say yeah so so what you know we should we should try to be more specific about things that we unless we're at the after show talking generally well it's also I don't always know the difference in the moment but I but if I know that if I say AI that counts machine learning they were saying like oh sure sure so here's the here's this is my iPhone favorite I would love to explain to me why that's wrong then let me find the link of the guy that I watched because I'll explain to everyone why they're wrong individually and I'll get to everyone eventually but right now I know where you're going but right now right now what I would what I would say is that based on what we were talking about earlier about the separate functions of brain uh and I think machine learning is sort of like brain notes it's sort of like that yeah it's sort of like so machine learning is like really good by its designed to think about this or to do visual things or to do image categorization or or more specific and it's very like just it's artificial intelligence I think is when those things get connected and work together and can work together that's going to be artificial intelligence when when your machine learning thing that's trying to do some sort of image thing is you got this crazy output and it goes hey chat GPD how do I explain this to humans oh well let me put language to this that the humans will understand okay well how do I do right so once it once they're interconnected and communicating with each other that's when I think you really start to get to oh look I got 100 correct from a guy who works at Nasa by the way there you go oh my goodness I do like gord's comment though we haven't really come up with an adequate definition of intelligence yet and that yeah so if we don't know intelligence generally how do we Define artificial intelligence and there's very often in the general lexicon and the way we talk about stuff a mushing up of intelligence conscience Consciousness and sentience and these are very different concepts yeah so like yeah yeah you don't want to Mush them up but people mush them up all the time I don't know Patrick are we intelligent I mean yeah the little the little mean voice in my head says you're so dumb oh gosh if you are on the show or you are watching this show you have some intelligence how about that that's important or like okay Patrick says as far as I've learned from twists we are biological robots who think we are intelligent all right we're the city bus for microbes also I think yeah we're we're uh what we think are smart City microbial city buses there we go yes yes yeah we're like Teslas for oh my gosh so okay we went to Huntsville Alabama Rocket City where space camp is got to go to the U.S Space and Rocket Center it was amazing first night there I brought we brought I brought Marshall and Kai so it's a family trip to this rocket town because rockets and awesome Marshall decides he's gonna rent a Tesla we've never driven a Tesla before our flights are delayed and delayed and delayed we arrived in Huntsville at like 1 30 in the morning and had to find this rental Tesla that was like through just like it's like an Airbnb for cars oh sure so in somebody's car it's somebody they let you for the weekend or whatever that's in this parking garage at the airport we get there and I really never realized that a Tesla was like a steering wheel with an iPad screen yes and trying to we couldn't open the glove box oh yeah you got a cool car icon and then hit glove box one of my best friends has a Tesla I spent all day on Monday and on Monday in the Tesla and it's hilarious how yeah it's it's it's just a touch screen with wheels for that vehicle yeah awful and it's this crowded did you find the way to get out of the car this is what I'm curious about because the first time I got in a Tesla I think I was stuck it took a while five seconds yep nope yeah it looks like the window button it looks like the window button exactly but it's not the window button it's the door button anyway we're 1 30 in the morning trying to get in the car Kai's like crazy sleep deprived 12 year old you know I'm tired everybody started Marshall's like I watched seven videos on YouTube I know how to drive a Tesla it was like Keanu Reeves in the freaking car and are going to die just leaving the airport the Tesla that's supposed to be its main objective is to keep you from dying at all costs no no this car is a software mistake so you know we put it we put in the destination we figured out how we thought we figured out how to use the navigation told it where to go to go it could not get us out of the parking lot parkour where there was no exit and it wanted us to exit there and I'm like Drive yeah I've noticed that the Tesla map is not as good as like Google Maps it was so bad it was really funny like how how the hotbed of Silicon Valley how do you have bad maps in your car they did I don't but we all have an invitation to Houston Johnson well that's fun that's awesome yeah unfortunately as uh as Patrick is acknowledging there it is in Texas I have it's it's part of my bucket list should never set foot in Texas well as a as a person with ovaries it's a little dangerous to go into Texas also so uh these days that's to you Kiki for uh making their back no I didn't go to Texas oh yeah oh even better yeah even worse yeah yeah yeah yeah you did it they did it anyway Huntsville it's like this island of rocket engineers and scientists that the Hudson Alpha Company is there which is like one of the most advanced genetic sequencing companies in the entire United States maybe the world in in Huntsville like there's this girl the population is freaking smart number of Rocket scientists per capita is off the charts but it's in Alabama yeah and everybody's very nice to you like that they're gonna take y'all you're gonna y'all come hang out here I did not luckily get a oh bless your heart bless your soul I did not get one of those so that was I thought I felt when I was in Texas I got a lot I got that a lot I also got the you're not from around here are you oh nope yeah that's quite a bit really okay no how could you tell nope anyway oh my oh America limes the patchwork quilt that is our country um desperate provinces we have named States here we are oh my goodness oh yeah Jason got the uart for around here also very good a badge of honor it is at that point yeah although you're like oh God I gotta hide all right yeah a little bit when you're in the middle of it but then it's a good story yeah oh yeah there's the Shadow Water things thing a lot that's like something else covered in so yeah wait what in California I got that from California once I had just come back from uh I think I can actually I don't know where I can't was coming back from maybe maybe it was from Denmark or something like that probably you became European too fast got got picked up uh at the airport by a friend and we went uh grocery shopping because that was part of their thing and so I I had bought uh I bought some alcoholic beverages and the only ID that I got ID and the only idea I had was my passport and I had to explain what it was it's a passport not a and and the girl looked at me and she said uh oh where are you from yeah that makes sense with the U.S passport that's weird at all no she was asking what state right no she wasn't no I had a U.S passport was the thing that you got to enter the country oh my you needed the U.S passport to come it's a fine thing but I gotta like where are you from in California and that was that was like I'm from that's a that's from from here well I um when I was a tour guide in college at the zoo multiple times God asked when did you move here from Canada oh you think I grew up I had never left the country at this point I had left California maybe twice I think at that point in my life and uh I guess I had a Canadian affectation in the way I talked because I was like what are you talking about a San Francisco native like oh you have a slight Canadian accent and you know you use some you have some Canadian mannerisms and maybe some Canadian language I was like what yeah excuse me yeah I think Jason I think you're right too polite maybe I talked kind of slow it's like that California like kind of slower talk I don't know but that's California yeah I don't know hmm where are you from Canadian I'm the from the part of California that has a very insincere accent yeah even even when we're being totally you know excited about something people were like hey it's that whole like yeah no yeah means yeah no yeah no means no yeah yeah yeah no no no no no yeah yeah I'm actually excited yeah exactly yeah that sounds like a great idea there's like some sort of like sense that people are being passive aggressive but they're not they're just no have a yeah unattached uh tonality yeah it's funny though people are polite sometimes to a fault here which when I did live abroad it was wild to me that people would just tell you the truth about things it was like very jarring at first that's so rude but then I was like no they tell you the truth this is quite convenient so if you invite somebody like oh do you want to see the new James Bond movie they might say no that that doesn't sound like something I'd enjoy and you'd you'd go oh my God what that's so rude you're supposed to make up an excuse or say yes or like go anyway no but no they just go no that doesn't really sound like fun but like let me know what you're doing after it's just like oh how cool you tell me exactly what you actually what you actually mean perfect is that y'all put it out there thanks Eric it's pretty big and pretty far away from the rest of us but it is a state it's how can we have if you look on the map you'll see it's right there next to Hawaii and it's and it's small it's like the size of Oregon Oregon did I talk about the the Monarch uh not is it the Monarch or the the butterflies uh wintering in Africa did I bring that story to the show I can't remember if I did it not tonight no so this is a while ago but one of the interesting things that was uh doing some uh research on this yes story was Africa it turns out is really big yes really oh I think you did talk about this I vaguely remember this because uh you know if you look at a map the way it works is where the equator is everything is kind of squished and things get expanded yeah uh in the far northern southern hemisphere so if you look at our typical map Greenland might be half or forty percent maybe a third of the size of Africa maps but Greenland actually would fit in there uh in into Africa along with the entire United States and China yeah and still have room for a whole bunch of Rhode Islands it's it's uh it's really big I don't know why I got started on that it's yeah it's the orange peel the orange peel map is I think the most accurate and it's still not active terrible map because it's it's all broken it's a sphere Buddies you can't flatten it okay anyway oh I mean you could try but it's gonna be messy I mean if anybody's ever tried to make a swimsuit top you'll understand it is a very small percentage of the population that is now like ah yeah ah yeah right right right right right it depends on the individual topography I would expect as well exactly um but is it that time it is I'm gonna go to bed yep for sure I'm yes so what do we say now say good morning Justin uh good morning Justin say good night Blair good night Blair good night Kiki good night everyone thank you for joining us for another episode of very specific random thoughts and Science and we're gonna keep waving as long as I talk and Blair yawns and no I'm kidding everyone stay safe stay healthy stay curious and we will see you again next Wednesday night thank you good night
This Week in Science (TWIS)
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2023-04-26
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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19,267
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VC7rkDufBug
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VC7rkDufBug
Find out how much ANY YouTuber earns? Is Socialblade accurate for my YouTube channel?
Can you find out how much money any YouTuber  makes on any day for free instantly right now?  Yes I think I can! Hello I’m Neil Mossey, and I’ll show you this   website which seems to have all of our statistics. I’m a development producer and it's my mission   to help creators and performers just like  you to get ideas out of our heads and out   onto here on YouTube where we need them. And to prove it here's actual footage of   me standing next to a monitor in a TV studio  sometime somewhere working very very very hard.  So this is the website right  here: it's called Socialblade.com  I don't think you need to even  create a login for it to work,   and to show you how it works and how easy it is  on the top right hand corner here there's a pull   down menu so you can look up anything. Twitch, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter,   TikTok, we're gonna stick with YouTube. Let's type in a random name... let's say pewdiepie   and instantly it opens up a page for pewdiepie! On the top banner - this is really humbling.  Should we be comparing ourselves to other people? That's for a whole other video but let's take a   look just in the very first statistic:  the number of uploads is 4208!  4208! Oh my goodness.  Leave a comment below: should we  be comparing ourselves at all?  Should we even be doing this? I think we should.  We'll carry on. It's better to be armed with information I guess.  The number of subscribers is 107 million. It shows you the video views.  It takes a guess at the country that you're from. I believe this might be incorrect, I always   thought he lived in the UK? And it's got a channel type.  I don't know how they guess the channel type. I think it's from the largest number of categories   that you have in your videos? I make this channel “how to”   but you'll see in a minute it lists me as  “people” and the date the channel was created.  And down here, right these are where...  oh my goodness... look at these figures.  So social blade gives you a grade  and it has graded pewdiepie as A.  A grade, but only 260nd as their socialblade rank. I’ve no idea what that is.  This is their own ranking system. pewdiepie according to Socialblade is   the fourth biggest subscriber in the world  and his video views are 19th in the world.  So this is quite interesting -  pewdiepie is first in the US.  Again, doesn't he live in  Brighton and isn't he Swedish?  I’ll have to ask my 11 year old son. But this is understandable it ranks   him as first in the gaming category. I thought DanTDM was there, maybe not.  Now we're going to be putting these statistics to  the test in a minute but Socialblade tells you how   many subscribers the channel has gained in the  last 30 days and it takes a crack at estimating   what the monthly earnings are for the channel. So I guess this was the title of the video:   how much does a YouTuber earn? Socialblade uses its algorithm to take a guess   at 556000 pounds per month for pewdiepie. There are some other statistics here as well.  The number of video views for the last 30 days. The total subscribers... now it looks like there   are no subscribers on these weeks but that's  obviously because when you're up at that grade.  Grade A - pewdiepie - the only figure  that's released is a whole million.  Although it says zero subscribers in that time  it's obviously going up in that time and it's not   publicly released by YouTube as a figure until  it hits the next one million subscribers.  So you can see how frequently he  gains another million subscribers.  And from the monthly earnings it  takes a guess at the estimated   yearly earnings according to Socialblade.com  their estimate is 6.7 million pounds.  I was giving it in pounds so you  might not be watching this in the UK  I wonder if we can change... there we go! I’m just pretending that I’m in the united   states thanks to a vpn. 10 million dollars!  Socialblade estimates 856000 a  month, 10.3 million dollars a year.  Now I don't know why on video views  it goes down by 334 million views.  There was a glitch a few weeks ago and  I think it might be because YouTube   was doing some behind the scenes stuff and it does  kind of make me feel slightly less confident on   how... how sound these figures are,  but I’m going to be testing them in a   minute on my own channel so we'll  see how accurate any of this is.  The next section on the Socialblade.com  page is breaking down video views every day.  Well it does more than that - so  we've got the data on the left.  We've got the number of subscribers that  have gone up, but that only goes up by   the figures that are released by YouTube. We've got video views... oh my goodness   so pewdiepie gets about roughly somewhere  between five and eight million views a day!  This figure next to the green video views  is the total number of views ever so I think   isn't that 26 billion views? My maths are a little out   and I get thrown by billions being a thousand  million rather than a million million but I...   I think that's 26 billion views in total. And then on the right hand side this is...   this is pretty interesting as well:  the estimated earnings each day.  Socialblade estimates that pewdiepie earns  about thirty thousand dollars per day.  The next section down is a nice curvy  graph just to show you an idea of the   monthly gained video views for pewdiepie. Oh by the way if you want to try this out   for yourself the link is in the description. Don't go there yet - we're going to show you   the compare function and I’m going to  put my figures in and compare them with   the reality of how much I earn so we can  see how accurate any of these figures are.  The next cool thing you can do with  Socialblade is this button right in   the top right hand corner where it says compare. We can compare YouTube channels and statistics.  So the channel we've already put in  pewdiepie is in this first box here.  In the second box I’m gonna put in my  favorite YouTuber Casey Neistat and   we'll hit compare channels and instantly  it lines them up against each other.  On the left we have pewdiepie in the gaming  category, on the right we have Casey Neistat   and on the people category and interestingly  socialblade rates Casey Neistat as as b-plus!  Casey Neistat! Now it compares the two channels   so pewdiepie is the red line on this graph. This is for the total number of subscribers   and along the bottom which is  slightly more level than pewdiepie   is Casey Neistat at a mere what 14 million subs? I know it's 12 million but you can see instantly   the two channels lined up against each other. The next section down is estimated potential   earnings so it compares those  estimates against each other.  Socialblade records that pewdiepie is on about  27000 a day whereas Mr Neistat our friend Casey is   on 5255 a day which means monthly that's 833k  against 157k and for the year whoa look at that!  10 million dollars for pewdiepie and 1.8 million  for Casey Neistat, and on the daily averages for   views and subscribers there's another graph there. But it is useful to see just so ballparky   how a channel is doing. I’ve obviously chosen two   really extreme examples so he's on 1053 uploads. Do you know what, of all the metrics of all the   statistics on this page I think the only one that  I’m looking at for me is the number of uploads.  Just the only thing I’ve got to concentrate  on right now and the estimated daily earnings   they kind of fluctuate around the  seven thousand dollars per day mark.  But how accurate is that? There's only one way to find out.  I’m gonna put me in the box to see how  much money that socialblade thinks that   I’m getting and maybe I should compare  that with what I’m actually getting.  We'll be able to see how accurate this  may or may not be, so here's my channel.  316 uploads 2.45 thousand subscribers so it took  me two years to get a thousand subscribers it took   me another six months to get the next thousand. I’m nearly just about to hit the one million   video views so I should make a  video about that shouldn't I.  Hey by the way if this video is at all interesting  or helpful it would really help me and help others   to find this if you if you give it a thumbs  up and obviously you know how cherished your   subscription is, if you hit the subscribe button. I’m going to be making some more videos like this   if you're finding them helpful so Socialblade  I’ll keep my picture in there Socialblade has   given me a grade of c plus. “Could do better”  Weirdly I got b plus back in February when I had  a video that was doing crazy number of views.  1.1 millionth on the social  blade rank in the world.  I’m three millionths in the  most number of subscribers.  According to this I am the  77000th YouTuber in the UK.  So proud of that. It's put my channel type as “people”   which is a shame because I think for the last  year I’ve been choosing “how to” for my videos.  Right now here's an interesting thing: it  thinks that my monthly earnings are 171 a month.  According to my YouTube studio  dashboard I’m pulling in 247 per month.  I don't know how representative my channel is  and it really isn't - it's a very broken poor   little channel - but Socialblade's estimate is  that I earn 171 dollars a month and I I don't.  I do actually earn nearer 250 at the moment. Yeah 247.  So let's take a look at the  daily figures over on Socialblade  Right saying that my video views average about uh  1500 a day and that is that's absolutely correct  Yeah this is pretty much what I  get every two days at the moment.  That's 2800, 1400 a day and social... Socialblade  have got those figures absolutely accurate.  I don't know why it suddenly  dropped 1700 on Friday.  I think there's some kind of data  correction going on with YouTube   at the moment which is why you  get these weird negative figures.  The number of subscribers, this  column here is absolutely accurate.  That is exactly what's going on I get  about 10 subscribers every other day.  The estimated earnings - this is like the really  crucial one and it's probably what's throwing   off that monthly figure... social blade reckons  I’m getting about six or seven dollars a day,   but if I go over to my analytics in my YouTube  studio I’ll run the cursor across and see every   day I’m getting sort of about eight dollars. Eight dollars, ten, nine, again lots of   eights nines tens oh it's 12. So it's slightly off these   estimated earnings, they're slightly lower and  I don't know... maybe I’m getting a crazy cpm   at the moment, or rpm the cost per thousand. Maybe mine's slightly higher than socialblade.  I’m certainly not getting 38 cents per day  I’m getting nearer eight dollars a day.  So these figures are slightly off. If you're monetized maybe you might   want to have a look at socialblade let me know in  the comments if this is slightly off for you too.  It'd be really interesting to know  how your earnings compare with   socialblade’s estimate of your earnings. I know I shouldn't be doing this   now - if I’ve hit the compare button  because we type in Casey Neistat...  This is the only time ever my name will  appear next to pewdiepie and Casey Neistat.  So in the left corner we've got c plus, Neil  Mossey - we've got a b plus Casey Neistat and   an a grade pewdiepie Look at this graph:   I do not even get off the zero mark but if you  do want to, you know, do some light psychological   damage by comparing yourself to people who have  made literally thousands more videos than you?  Have Socialblade.com is exactly  the place you want to go right now.  The link is in the description. Down here is my full story of how much   money I’m earning at the moment and up here is  what YouTube thinks you should be watching next!
Neil Mossey
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2020-10-06
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detection
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2,147
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gNvlzmB-WKc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNvlzmB-WKc
Pick yourself up #junghaein #jisoo #motivational #snowdrop #youtubeshorts
I need you to remember that it's always darkest before Dawn I need you to remember that you are still here you are still alive and as long as you're still alive as long as you're still breathing you have another chance to come back once again when life punches you and clobs you to the ground it's your job to find the strength find the intentional fortitude to pick yourself up and fight back life's not always going to be easy sometimes you got to fight for what you know you deserve it takes believing in an outcome that is in your favor and make no mistake about it most people won't see it for you most people will tell you to give up most people will think you're wasting your time but you are not most people you've got to believe in the possibilities for you and your future so [Music] strong
Stimulus Central
UCBRcgAt-Ol2jbXkas33unFQ
2023-10-05
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metadata
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154
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HJGwXg7UEYs
Mastering Spanish: Proven Language Learning Strategies for Rapid Fluency #languagelearning
want to master Spanish and Achieve rapid fluency here are some proven language learning strategies to help you reach your goal start by immersing yourself in the language through Spanish music movies and TV shows practice speaking with native speakers or language exchange Partners regularly keep a vocabulary journal to track and review new words listen to Spanish podcasts or audio books during your daily commute or downtime read Spanish books newspapers or art articles to improve your reading skills use language learning apps like dualingo or Babel to supplement your studies don't be afraid to make mistakes it's all part of the learning process consistency is key so practice a little bit every day to see progress ready to take your Spanish to the next level stay tuned for more tips and tricks on mastering the language
Language Learning
UC9578RyVdqSaFJx8CaiLJ5g
2024-03-05
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138
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Zki-DONVkGQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zki-DONVkGQ
Exploring the patterns and impacts of diet and nutrition among older adults in the CLSA
[Music] now on to today's event which is again entitled exploring the patterns and impacts of diet and nutrition among older adults in the clsa presented by dr jacqueline hurley and dr rachel murphy so i'm going to do a quick bio of each of our presenters first rachel dr rachel murphy is a scientist in cancer control research at bc cancer and an assistant professor in the school of population and public health at ubc she holds a phd in nutrition and metabolism and completed her postdoc training in epidemiology at the national institutes of health her research program has focused on the role of nutrition in the prevention and control of cancer and the etiology under underlying lifestyle cancer and relationships dr jacqueline hurley is an assistant professor in the school of kinesiology in health sciences at york u her area of expertise is musculoskeletal biomechanics where her research interests include investigating mechanisms of musculoskeletal injury and developing effective exercise rehabilitation strategies for chronic uh conditions that commonly accompany age including osteoarthritis and rotator cuff pathologies now i will pass it on to our presenters and i uh believe uh rachel's going first or i could have that wrong dr harley's pretending first all right great all right let's share my screen okay so thank you very much i'm very grateful to have the opportunity to speak in this webinar series today and share some of our clsa research investigating diet and nutrition risk and their relationship with mobility and general health in older adults with osteoarthritis so i wanted to begin by acknowledging my wonderful uh co-authors and collaborators on this project i'm beginning with dr monica mali so dr monica malley is an associate professor at the university of waterloo and extensively studies musculoskeletal biomechanics and osteoarthritis and so the work that i'm discussing today was um was work that i conducted while i was a postdoctoral fellow in dr mali's lab so i'm very excited to be able to share this exciting work that we researched during my time at mcmaster as well as the university of waterloo i would also like to acknowledge uh emily wiebenga who is dr mali's research coordinator and project collaborator as well as dr heather keller who is a professor at the university of waterloo and an expert in nutrition and aging i also wanted to note that the research i'm presenting today so our background our methods our results discussion as well as our tables and figures have been published in the journals of gerontology medical sciences so the full citation can be listed there so i wanted to start off by briefly talking about osteoarthritis so osteoarthritis or oa is the leading cause of chronic pain and lower limb disability and it affects the knee most commonly it is a degenerative disease affecting internal joint structures notably cartilage and it impairs work productivity and longevity it also increases the risk for a variety of different chronic health conditions including cardiovascular disease and depression oa is also extremely prevalent so it affects one in eight canadians and does increase considerably with age it is higher in women particularly over the age of 50. now this number is expected to dramatically rise if not double in the coming decades now surgery is the most successful treatment but uh the resources showing below have reported that greater than 190 000 patients were eligible and and willing for surgery but didn't receive it and uh you know this would probably be speculating but i suspect with with covet it would probably be even more um and this number is expected to rise if not double um within the next 30 years so therefore it's critical to determine some effective non-surgical interventions that allow us to reduce the painful symptoms and functional deficits in osteoarthritis it's also expected that one in five canadians will be overweight or obese by 2024 and a relationship does exist between obesity and oa and so the literature has shown that overweight and obese individuals are actually a 2.5 to 4.6 times greater risk of having the osteoarthritis and so this data was from the meta-analysis of a systematic review that showed that the risk of oa is increased 35 percent with a 5 kilogram per meter squared increase in body mass index and so this risk of array related to obesity can be attributed to several different factors um such as higher mechanical loads so a greater body mass would cause you to have greater loading on those vulnerable compartments of the knee um as well as physical inactivity so this can go both ways as uh physical inactivity can elevate our risk for away by a reduced muscle mass or poor muscle quality but also painful a painful oa joint may reduce our ability or willingness to exercise there's also different pro inflammatory processes which have been associated with increasing pain and worsening function and so there are several different interventions such as diet and exercise interventions which may yield improvements in both obesity and oa related symptoms so a randomized controlled trial that investigated both diet and exercise among overweight or obese individuals with oa actually showed that by reducing body mass by 10 percent uh this was related to improvements in physical function and so this was by dr messi and colleagues but dr mali among others have conducted several research studies focusing on exercise for knee osteoarthritis and have demonstrated these improvements in pain and self-reported function mobility performance and strength and so we also started to become interested in studying different aspects of nutrition and how that might affect oa related symptoms a specific food intake may affect away with uh again research showing that better quality diet may be associated with better mobility performance in this case mobility performance was measured using a chair rise test and then dietary fiber was also related to a lower risk of symptomatic neoa and the suggested pathway here um for this relationship was the effect of fiber on reducing body mass index which would subsequently then affect those inflammatory processes that are related to uh disease development and the risk of pain and so a lot of the diet trials in a way are typically very strict so the caloric intake wouldn't necessarily reflect one that we might consume regularly so we started to think about nutrition risk as nutrition encompasses attributes other than the physical food being consumed and so nutrition risk screening allows us to examine the behaviors related to nutrition and malnutrition and nutrition risk wasn't evaluated in a way so the purpose of this research was to examine whether aspects of diet and nutrition risk relate to physical capacity and general health in older adults with osteoarthritis and so we hypothesized that consuming more high-calorie snacks consuming lower dietary fiber as well as being at higher nutrition risk would be associated with poor mobility grip strength and self-reported general health and so for this we used data from the canadian longitudinal study on aging and so we specifically used baseline data from clsa participants recruited for a collection of the comprehensive database both qualitative and quantitative measures were captured in adults 45 to 85 years and the data for analysis for the sample was collected between may 2012 and 2015 uh through both face-to-face at-home interviews and at data collection sites we also had a number of inclusion and exclusion criteria so for the inclusion criteria we included participants that were between 45 to 85 years at baseline and they would need to self-report a diagnosis of hand hip or knee osteoarthritis by a physician and so the question in particular was has a doctor ever told you that you have osteoarthritis in the hand of the hip and or of the knee we also had a number of different exclusion criteria reported there i won't read them all out but essentially we are looking more at neurological and respiratory conditions as well as an incomplete data set and so we um any participant that had missing data for any of our independent or dependent variables were excluded from analysis so starting with our independent measures so we evaluated certain aspects of diet using select questions from the short diet questionnaire and so this was classified with the variable nut or nut and so specifically we were looking at question one which asked about high fiber cereal intake and then questions 25 to 28 that looked at high calorie snacks and so there wasn't a specific question asking about high calorie snack intake but instead question 25 looked at ice cream ice milk frozen yogurt milk based desserts um question 26 was more salty snacks so chips and crackers 27 was cakes pies donuts pastries cookies and muffins and then 28 was chocolate bars and so what we did was uh they were asked to record the number or the number of servings and then the unit of measure so per day per week per month per year and so we combined the high calorie snacks into one single independent variable uh labeled our nut hc or high calorie and then high fiber cereal was a separate independent variable and again classified as nut fbr not fiber we also evaluated nutrition risk and so this was evaluated using uh the modified screen to uh abbreviated tool and so again this is one of the questionnaires within the clsa database and this was developed by dr heather keller who's one of our co-authors and it is an 11 item questionnaire that asks participants about several different behaviors related to nutrition and so specifically we'll ask about changes of weight so compared to compared to six months ago it asked if they'd gain weight lost weight or stayed the same it would also ask about how much weight they lost or gained in the six month period it asked questions pertaining to appetite so how often they generally skip to meals how they would describe their appetite there were also questions pertaining to physical challenges while eating and so how often they choke cough or have pain when swallowing food or fluid and then there was also a question about or a couple questions for pertaining to diet and so specifically asking about fruit and vegetable consumption as well as fluid consumption and then lastly there was uh some questions related to meal patterns and social socialization so how often you eat a meal um each day with somebody else do you cook your own meals and then asking them to comment on certain statements related to meal preparation such as enjoying cooking or sometimes finding it a chore as well as whether or not they're satisfied or unsatisfied with the quality of food prepared by others and so um the scoring for this uh participants who had a score greater than or equal to 43 would be deemed lower risk moderate risk is between 38 and 43 and higher risk less than 38. and so i've included the the citation here for some of the psychometric properties for this screen to tool um in the uh in the bottom right corner in terms of our dependent measures uh we first evaluated physical capacity so physical capacity was evaluated using group strength and mobility and so grip strength was captured again through the clsa using the tracker freedom wireless grip dynamometer um in a figure from their website is shown here on the right and we chose to evaluate the average of three repeated trials for mobility we used a pooled index of four different mobility tests including a four meter walk so this was the total time to walk a distance of four meters a one-legged standing balance the best attained time for standing on one leg up to a maximum of 60 seconds a chair rise test so the average time to rise out of a chair five times and then a timed up and go which is the time to rise out of a chair walk three meters and then return to the chair to the seated position and so instead of looking at these four different mobility tests independently we chose to create a mobility index where a higher mobility index equal better mobility and in both cases a higher grip strength and better mobility would represent better physical capacity and we also evaluated general health and so we evaluated the total score of three questions pertaining to general health with participants being asked to rate their general health their mental health as well as their own healthy aging as excellent very good good fair or poor and again the a higher score here would represent better general health we also chose to include a covariate center analysis that we believe might impact physical capacity and general health in a way based on previous literature and i have a list of those here um one that we did include as well at the bottom was oa type where there were seven different classifications so in this case we looked at those who had hand away only hip oa only knee away only and then the combination of the two in the combination of the three for our analysis we conducted several linear regression models to study the relationship between independent variables and covariates with each of our dependent variables and so we first analyzed our covariant model where we examined all the covariance that were described in the earlier slide with each of our three dependent variables we then conducted separate models for each of our independent variables again after accounting for those covariates and ran a likelihood ratio test to determine whether those models were statistically different from that covariate only model and so one thing i just wanted to point out on this slide is you can see that i have four different uh uh independent variables we have our our nut hc which is our high calorie snack intake our nut fiber which is our high fiber cereal intake but then we chose to look at the nutrition risk score as well as the nutrition risk classification where they're grouped into those at low risk moderate risk and high risk based on those classifications that i described earlier now looking at some of our results and starting with participants so from our initial sample of approximately 30 000 participants uh 7 900 roughly met the inclusion criteria and 3 700 after the exclusion criteria now our final sample size use for analysis was 1404 because those are the participants from this sample that had a complete data set and some information pertaining to the participants can be seen here now starting with grip strength so our covariate model was significant with older age female sex greater depressive symptoms and lower income related to lower grip strength but for grip strength neither of our dietary variables nor the nutrition risk variables were shown to be significant for mobility again our covariate model was significant but here our nut fiber as well as the nutrition risk score were shown to be significant with greater fiber intake and lower nutrition risk associated with greater mobility so again as hypothesized but neither the the high calorie snack intake or the nutrition risk classification was significant now there was a moderate effect size despite not being significant between our low and our high nutrition risk classification groups with a higher nutrition risk classification again associated with lower mobility than that lower nutrition risk classification group and then lastly in terms of general health again the covariate model was significant neither of the dietary variables were significant but our nutrition risk score was significant again with higher nutrition risk associated with lower general health this figure here shows again our nutrition risk classification which again was significant where we have general health index on the y-axis our nutrition risk classification on the x-axis with the green representing a low nutrition risk moderate in that sort of yellowy orange color and then high nutrition risk in red above that you'll see the statistical differences as well as the effect size and you see there's significant differences between low and moderate nutrition risk and low and high nutrition risk where higher nutrition risk was associated with lower general health and so overall nutrition risk was significantly associated with both mobility and general health in hip knee and or hand osteoarthritis and these findings do support previous literature that's examined the quality of life among frail seniors that have shown that a higher nutrition risk has reduced our self-reported physical health in this population and it's been associated with functional decline also the intake of examined dietary items were not significantly associated generally with fiscal capacity or general health with the exception of higher high fiber cereal which was related to better mobility and again this supports previous literature that showed that fiber can reduce adiposity and inflammation which again are associated with pain and away and then certain covariates and comorbidities a large amount of variance in both physical capacity and general health i did also want to mention a few study limitations so first we did not provide a comprehensive diet analysis but rather chose to focus on two areas including high fiber cereal and high calorie snacks but certainly there's other aspects of diet that could have attributed to both physical capacity and general health also you may note there was several participants excluded due to missing data um but i wanted to note here that we did run separate samples for each of our dependent measures so where they would have different sample sizes among among the three different dependent measures and there were no changes to the results and then lastly there were other potential factors that could explain variance in physical capacity and general health for example other diseases or conditions that would be linked to poor health outcomes among aging adults with osteoarthritis and so the primary take-home message of this work was that nutrition risk is important for older adults with osteoarthritis where it demonstrated that these behaviors surrounding nutrition are important contributors to both mobility and general health in oa and so these results offer some new potential suggestions for conservative nutrition-based interventions to improve both physical capacity and uh health among older adults with oa so i wanted to thank everybody for their attention today again for being invited to speak here today and again to my co-authors as well as dr stratford and dr gaddy for providing statistical support as well as our research support so the um schlagel university of waterloo research institute for aging where dr keller is a research chair in nutrition and aging as well as uh and search for the discovery program for awarding a grant to dr mali to support operating costs and then cihr again for providing postdoctoral support for me during my postdoc and then again obviously to the to the clsa so thank you very much and i i think questions are going to be deferred to the end so i can pass it along to uh to dr murphy to to share her work and i will stop sharing my slides here thank you so much yes so we will pass the pass the torch on to uh dr murphy okay great um thank you very much also for the invitation to speak today i have a long-standing interest in in healthy aging and disease prevention although more recently i've been focused on cancer prevention um i actually completed my fellowship at the the national institute on aging in the us and one of the things that attracted me to that fellowship at the time was the ability to work with some of these leading epidemiologic aging studies in the us and so when i first learned about clsa was when i was starting to move back to canada after my postdoc and i was really thrilled that there was going to be a resource like this within canada and the work that i'm presenting to you today is actually some of the first that i undertook when i started my first position at ubc so i won't spend much time on on the rationale for studying healthy aging given the audience today but very briefly over the the past 100 years life expectancy in canada has continued to increase in men and women although it is flattening a little bit in more recent years so the average life expectancy is around 82 years with some variation especially provincially so for example in bc where i'm based there is one of the highest life expectancies of the canadian provinces however the increases in life expectancy have not been equaled by increases in disability free life expectancy so this table shows findings from the us so the numbers differ slightly from canadian figures on the prior slide but overall you can see that the changes in life expectancy are not equal by the changes in disability-free life expectancy so for example in men if you can see my cursor here and the changes in life expectancy is about 9.2 years and the changes in disability free life expectancy is about half of that so around four and a half years so what is the role of diet in life expectancy or in disability free life expectancy there are of course many nutritional requirements for growth and development as well as for maintenance of overall health so things like the musculoskeletal system but diet also plays a very large role in many of the most chronic common chronic diseases in canada so for example about 40 of cancers can be prevented through a healthy lifestyle which includes consuming a healthy diet maintaining healthy body weight being physically active and minimizing alcohol consumption similarly it also plays a large role in the prevention of other chronic diseases such as stroke heart disease and diabetes so diet is also intrinsically linked to other health behaviors that are important for overall longevity and healthy aging so for example body weight alcohol consumption physical activity smoking and potentially stress and sleep as well this is an infographic from the compare study so this is just to provide some high level context on the importance of diet for overall chronic disease prevention and in this case cancer so compare is canada-wide study which aims to estimate the current and future burden of cancer due to modifiable lifestyle environmental infectious disease or infectious risk factors i should say so this still shows the number of cancers that can be prevented in canada in a given year so notably about 6 700 cases are attributable to low fruit consumption 3 500 to low vegetable consumption and then over here about 1700 are attributable to red meat consumption so despite the importance of diet we know on a population level canadians largely don't have diets that align with overall recommendations for houses such as the the dietary guidelines as well as for chronic disease prevention so just some very brief statistics here as i know many of you already know this but about 50 of women and 70 of men have energy intakes that exceed their needs about forty percent of women and fifty percent of men don't meet their fruits and vegetable um the daily recommended intakes uh in this case uh around five servings per day and about one and four have fat intakes that are above the recommended range so what do we know about the relationship between diet and longevity one of the most widely studied populations with respect to diet is in okinawa japan perhaps you've heard of the okinawa diet i feel like it's been on the bookshelves and a lot of those popular dietary um you know how to live the long healthy life kind of style books but the islands of the south southern end of japan have one of the highest life expectancies in the world and they also have a very high number of centenarians they have a low prevalence of disease relative to other areas in japan as well as to other countries so this is a bar graph here just very simply showing that the prevalence of different chronic diseases so coronary heart disease colon cancer prostate and breast cancer in okinawa the population there versus japan and in the us you can see they have a strikingly lower prevalence of chronic diseases and especially of coronary heart disease so there are many possible reasons for the differences in longevity and chronic disease including genetics and overall lifestyle but the diet has been particularly of interest among people from okinawa because it's quite different than the rest of japan and in other places in the world so there's a as a result been quite a considerable amount of study around the okinawa diet so unlike the rest of japan purple sweet potato is the main carbohydrate whereas um i think when most of us think about japanese food we might think about kind of the staple food as being a white glutinous rice so okinawa diet as a result is very high in carbohydrates but it's also very high in fiber and very low in processed foods so if you think about what the recommended range of carbohydrates and fat are in the us and canadian diets it's usually around 45 to 65 for carbohydrates compared to 85 percent and that we see on average people consuming in the traditional quinoa diet and fat is usually around 20 to 35 percent is the recommended range in north american populations so you can see quite striking differences however what is known as the okinawa diet is really more traditional diet and dietary intake in younger generations is becoming increased increasingly closer to a western dietary pattern which is high in saturated fat and processed foods and this is occurring in tandem with increased body weight and increased risk of chronic disease there are several other dietary patterns that may be associated with longevity which have also been identified through demographic studies so for example and it's been observed many decades ago that heart disease was lower in countries bordering the mediterranean sea um the traditional diet there included daily consumption of fruits and vegetables whole grains and healthy fats so predominantly olive oil as well as weekly intake of fish and poultry beans and eggs um very moderate portions of dairy and very limited amounts of bread meat so the mediterranean diet is now one of the most widely recommended to for overall health promotion and reduction of the risk of chronic disease and particular coronary heart disease um so i won't spend a lot of time going over kind of all the different diets that have been linked to longevity but just to really mention you know this is obviously a very active area of research so there's been some evidence around a nordic diet um or a caloric restriction diet so typically around 15 fewer calories than the recommended for a given age and sex which is also what's seen in the okinawa diet so collectively the evidence does seem to suggest a link between diet and longevity although there are lots of kind of remaining questions about causality and there are also very few studies in the oldest old so those that are 85 and older and very few studies in centralians and most of these type of studies and oldest oldest centenarians have been in populations outside of north america who likely have very different diets um than the traditional diets that have kind of been studied so the oldest old those are again are who are over 85 are some of the fastest growing segment of the population in some parts of the world however few people live to this age without developing chronic disease so it's important to understand the influence of diet on the achievement of exceptional longevity and the role if any on health span so studies that characterize dietary intake and such populations will add to our knowledge base and also provide some information for hypothesis testing so our aim was to assess the dietary intake of a population of men and women who are 85 and older who were free of chronic disease and compare their dietary patterns to adults who are 65 and older using data from the clsa so we hypothesized that the oldest old without chronic disease would have dietary patterns that more more closely follow guidelines for chronic disease risk reduction such as more frequent consumption of fruits and vegetables whole grains and lean protein the healthy aging study is led by dr angela brooks-filson out of the bc genome sciences center at bc cancer so this is a study that was designed to study genetic factors that underlie healthy aging and resistant stage related disease between 2004 and 2007 they recruited participants who were age 85 and older from the metro vancouver area and two groups were originally recruited they had the usual agers group who were not selected for health disease status and they had what they call as the super seniors so that's the term i'll use throughout my presentation and the super seniors are those who are 85 and older and the eligibility criteria for them were self-reporting never having been diagnosed or taking medications that were prescribed for cancer cardiovascular or pulmonary disease dementia or diabetes and participants as part of the healthy aging study completed health and demographic questions and enrollment but they were not asked about dietary consumption and the study is not actively following participants but they are always looking for enrollment so i'm just put the email address over the study coordinator there in case you have anybody who might fit that criteria so one of the challenges when studying the oldest old or centenarians is defining an appropriate comparator group the vast majority of individuals in the same birth cohort as the oldest old generally do not survive to an advanced age and those who do may have other limitations that negate participation in research studies so the usual agers group from the healthy aging had aged by about 10 years by the time we were starting our ancillary study but was still considerably younger than the super seniors so they started the youngest age group was around 50. so as a result we decided to apply to use data from the clsa since it encompasses the same geographic region as super seniors and is more likely to represent the aging population than the smaller usual agers control group so this is the same approach that is used by centenarian studies but it does also introduce potential generational and cultural influences which i'll mention in greater depth later in my talk so for our study we recontacted the 177 super seniors who consented to be recontacted um we mailed the packages to the super seniors containing questionnaire demographics and dietary intake from the potential pool of 177 participants two were not interested four were deceased and some had moved we also asked about the the development and presence of chronic disease since there had been a time lapse between enrollment in the healthy aging study and in our group so participants who answered yes to any of the queried incident disease questions were subsequently excluded so that left us with a final sample size of 122 of the super seniors participants were asked to complete demographic questionnaires which were drawn from the canadian community health survey and we also asked them to complete the the short dietary questionnaire so it was the same one as in the clsa so we received permission and resources from dr brianna schottenstein to use the sdq that was developed for the clsa so the sdq and i won't go into too great adapts because i think some of you might be familiar with it dr hurley also described this as well but briefly it assesses usual consumption frequencies in the last 12 months of key nutrients and foods that are important for health promotion and chronic disease prevention in younger and older adults so has been tested for use in community dwelling adults um and it's been validated relative to three 24-hour dietary recalls but notably questions about portion size are not included in the sdq so we use data from the clsa um subset of 30 000 individuals are also known as the comprehensive cohort so these are the the participants who underwent the face-to-face interview questionnaires which included dietary assessment baseline data was collected over a three-year period and completed in 2015 which is slightly earlier than our data which was collected at the beginning of 2017. so data was obtained from clsa participants with dietary information and covariates that were similar to those that we're collecting on our study we confined our analysis to clsa participants you're age 65 and older to provide a comparative group of about 12 626 older adults and we did not apply any additional exclusion criteria to the the clsa data set because we were interested in overall dietary intake versus single nutrients and foods we used a principal component analysis to reduce the 36 item sdq variables into a smaller set of variables and to identify dietary patterns the factor loadings represent the relationship of each food or food group to the underlying factor two dietary patterns were identified through the use of scree plots so we identified a pattern that roughly followed the western dietary pattern so the strongest loadings are shown here so there are things like processed meat and red meat french fries sauces and gravies fried potatoes as well as high sugar snacks and butter the other one followed more of a nutrient rich dietary pattern so there was higher consumption of fruits and vegetables whole grains nuts and seeds fish as well as salad dressing and so each participant was assigned a factor score for a given dietary pattern and then they were grouped into quartiles so participants in quartile 4 of a given dietary pattern had the greatest tendency to follow that diet we then use multi-variable logistic regression to calculate the odds ratios uh for being a super senior so quartile one was the reference for each dietary pattern our model one was unadjusted and then the change in coefficient method was used to identify significant confounders and you can see the the ones that were included in our model two here we did not um adjust for age in our models since there is minimal overlap between the super seniors and the clsa group so this table shows the demographics of the clsa and super seniors and not surprisingly super seniors were older so it hit a mean age of 90. both populations were predominantly white and had a similar income categories super seniors were more likely to be living alone so nearly 64 did report living alone they also had a lower education were more likely to be never smokers and none were current smokers conversely they were more likely to report habitual alcohol consumption and another striking difference i did want to highlight was the the was their bmi so they predominantly had a normal bmi with only about one-third reporting being overweight or obese compared to about 70 percent of clsa participants so this table shows the unadjusted and adjusted odds ratios for being a super senior so the highest quartile of the western dietary factor was associated with greater odds of being super seniors um and after adjustment in model two these associations were strengthened um and and no observations were um observed for kind of the the middle quartiles of two and three um similarly the highest quartile of the nutrient-rich dietary factor was also associated with greater odds of being super senior however those associations were attenuated when we accounted for covariates and of the covariates smoking bmi and alcohol consumption had the largest impact on the effect estimates so the highest quartile of the western dietary pattern was associated with the greater odds of being a super senior so this is really in contrast to our hypothesis where we thought the western dietary pattern would be more likely to be prevalent in the the comparator group and since this was kind of characterized by less healthy foods so greater intake of processed meat red meat sauces and gravies fried potatoes um nonetheless it's important to note that the western dietary component also contained other factors or other foods i should say that did not meet our threshold for component loading um in the pca analysis so things like poultry and eggs that can still contribute to associations even though they're kind of below that statistical threshold so our apparent uh finding of a disconnect between the kind of the where the less healthy western dietary pattern and the nutrient-rich dietary pattern at least in unadjusted models we're both associated with greater odds of being a super senior is actually similar to some studies that we see from centenarian studies where they report that centenarians have a more varied diet but then they may also be more likely to consume high sugar foods such as cookies and biscuits and may be less likely to follow nutrition guidelines for chronic disease prevention so it's unclear though however whether the tendency of super seniors to follow a western dietary pattern reflects generational or cohort differences with clsa participants or whether it actually truly reflects longevity related differences or put possibly fatalism so um approaching the end of life and kind of that you know i'm going to eat chocolate if i want to eat chocolate i've already made it to you know 85 90 years old so the higher frequency of high fat foods may also reflect ingrained generational dietary behaviors so notably national dietary guidelines were not significantly modified until the 1980s um to emphasize energy balance and moderation so things like limited fat sugar assaults and alcohol were really not part of the guidelines until a few decades ago there's also potential influence of socio-demographic factors so education was lower in the super seniors and a higher proportion of them lived alone so both of which are associated with poor dietary intake and it's also important to recognize some of the limitations of the sdq which may impair our ability to draw firm conclusions here so it's not designed to quantify the amount of food consumed um so it might also be um prone to of course the inherent bias of self-reported dietary intake and we didn't measure other factors as well that may influence dietary and taken healthy aging so such as social factors physical activity as well as genetic variation which would be informative to assess in future studies so our results in um and our inferences are are thus a little bit limited and it should be taken in light of some of these limitations specifically around kind of the frequency of consumption rather than amount and this is an important thing to acknowledge because total food intake does decrease with age and so this might be something that could be addressed in a future study so finally thank you to the investigators and the students and study team that made this work possible as well thank you to the investigators in clsa for allowing us to use the sdq in this analysis um and i will stop showing there and it looks like there's lots of questions so that's great to see thank you all great well thank you to both of you uh the challenge now will be getting through the questions so i'll try to uh maybe start with uh two for each of you and then we'll we'll go from there just to note if we don't get to your questions we can try to address them and get back to you after the seminar so thinking back to to dr hurley's presentation the first question is when evaluating grip strength which differs systematically by sex why why not do separate models for when men and women yes thank you for your question and that is a great point i mean to your point we found that um when we included sex as a co-variant in the model it was significant with female sex related to lower grip strength so it is a great great uh great point and we didn't run the analysis differently or separate models i should say by sex but it would be it would be interesting to see whether there would be any reflected differences in in the outcomes in terms of both nutrition risk and diet and then also from jerilyn pryor who has lots of questions today uh was family history of osteoarthritis or joint replacement related to away or to mobility yeah also very interesting unfortunately this wasn't one of our um one of the variables that was was available to look at so we didn't look at whether family history again was related to each of those measures okay and then maybe just uh one more quick one i think there was a note in terms of you know comparing uh the the the results of your study to to what's been uh found already maybe you can just touch on one or two of the the key learnings that were uh you know unique to your study or um if you didn't end up finding um that uh that those new results may be um why you think that was yeah so absolutely the the largest uh contribution for this research is looking at this in an osteoarthritic population so there have been relationships demonstrated between again aspects of diet as well as nutrition risk um among older adults and again relating it to to things like physical function and other aspects of health but this hasn't been evaluated in an osteoarthritic population and you know particularly given the um the prevalence of osteoarthritis and you know the um [Music] the lack of ability to kind of seek out surgical treatment trying to come up with different interventions to potentially improve physical function as well as general health in a way is very important and so while we've sort of looked at it from an exercise perspective this research contributed great findings regarding potential nutritional strategies that we could use to to try and combat osteoarthritic related symptoms again non-surgical okay great um so maybe we'll go to uh dr murphy now um for a question what is the comparative rate of diabetes in okinawa versus usa and canada in other words does the high complex carb diet increase the risk for t2dm or type 2 diabetes yeah that's a great question um you know i think intuitively you would look at the composition of the diet and think like that the carbohydrates are so high um that it may be problematic for things like diabetes for example um but that's not actually seen that's not reflected in the prevalence of diabetes in that older population in okinawa so they have lower rates of diabetes and i think it's also important to think about kind of although the carbohydrates are quite high um they're a low lower glycemic index carbohydrate versus like white rice for example it's also very very high in fiber so yeah that you don't see that relationship there another question is did you look at ethnicity of super seniors or their immigration status what about which provinces had the most so the super seniors are only um in bc so we didn't look at provincial differences they're predominantly from the metro vancouver area um i mean certainly we would love to be able to look at things like ethnicity and immigration status it is a relatively small population um because it's a it's a very unique and um interesting group to study but there is only about eight percent of people who reported ethnicity that was not white and we didn't ask about immigration status what about could quality of and this is also for you as well could quality of protein in the western versus healthy diet pattern potentially play a role in the association identified yeah absolutely i mean i think that's um you know this was designed to be kind of a hypothesis generating first look at you know what what might their diets even be because this is a really is as i said kind of interesting rare group to study so we were interested to see what they were even eating without even the comparing to um kind of the the clsa or the usual aging group um that said i think in hindsight um you know we chose the sdq to allow comparison to the clsa group and also because of the lower burden on this population but it wouldn't allow us to look um you know at more detailed dietary intakes and things like more of the quality of the protein and understand a little bit more of you know what the actual amounts are as well since we were limited to frequency but yeah that's an excellent point and i'll just maybe ask you this one last question and then we'll go back to uh jaclyn what was the duration of the diet if you collected that information and since what age um the diet what since what age was the diet followed yeah and you know that's another important consideration so this is um a dietary intake over the past 12 months so this might not um reflect earlier dietary patterns so things that um so what they consumed kind of earlier in their life that may have contributed to their current kind of disease or lack of disease um so a lot of the dietary patterns do tend to be quite ingrained meaning that they follow them with similar dietary intake kind of throughout time but we do we don't know that for sure using the single dietary assessment okay so back to you dr hurley um so danielle says thank you jacqueline for the great presentation and i think lots of our our questions started with that with that so again your presentations were both great uh which is the estimated magnitude of the association between nutrition variables both diet and nutrition risk and physical activity and general health outcomes is it relevant from an epidemiological perspective to justify intervention targeted to diet and nutrition behaviors other than being statistically significant yes thank you and we didn't look at um you know calculating the correlation between each of our different variables but um i think including the effect size can certainly speak to um the fact that they would be meaningful besides just being statistically significant so particularly with nutrition risk and general health and against also sort of seeing these relationships with mobility again despite not being statistically significant for one aspect of mobility showing that there is a moderate to high effect size um again for uh for self-reported general health for a nutrition risk so again certainly suggesting that uh nutrition risk and again behavior surrounding nutrition would be important to consider um for uh for an intervention um and just a note for everyone we have time for a few more questions but uh if you're if you have to leave a few minutes early if you can just uh complete the survey uh on your way out there the link is posted in the chat box and now for a question for both of you i'm wondering if you use survey weights in your analyses maybe yeah oh sorry no go ahead uh so sir yeah i know i we did not use uh different survey weights uh in hours now [Music] no we didn't ignore this either okay i think we have one second and then um in the context of the limitations of cross-sectional epidemiology what role do you think the method of mendelian randomization can have in identifying causal relationships between diet nutrition and disease outcome risk that's a good one either of you have a comment on on that or have you used that uh that approach before i i haven't i'm sorry i haven't used that approach before so i can't really speak to uh the effect there [Music] yeah so i have used the mendelian randomization actually not in the context of dietary intake but more in kind of genetic and phenotypic relationships with bmi for example um you know i mean i think it's interesting and that's one of the things that we had hoped to look at as well in the healthy asian study because they do have it was very much developed to be a genetic study um so to understand kind of some of the interactions because i think the the i mean we were surprised to see our finding that you know that they seem to have less healthy dietary intake um but you know it it supposes an interesting question of you know what's more important kind of diet versus genes versus all these other exposures and um you know how do they interact and it's not something that i think we can look at in that smaller sample size but um yeah i think it's certainly an interesting approach okay great i think that is all of the questions again if you think of any questions for either of our panelists you can always email them in and we can get them to them or somehow either to the clsa or to them directly but you know first and foremost thank you again to both of you for taking the time out of your schedules to do this presentation we greatly appreciate you participating in the clsa webinar series and sharing your research i'd like to remind everyone that the next deadline for data access applications is january 12th of 2022. if you'd like more information please visit the clsa website under data access to review what data is available including the covid19 questionnaire study data as well as details about the application process i'd also like to remind everyone to complete their anonymous survey before exiting the zoom session we would greatly appreciate that in terms of our upcoming webinar in december our final webinar of the year will be entitled functional support and memory a three-year analysis of of the clsa comprehensive cohort it will take place on december 17th at noon and presented by samantha samantha yu who's a phd candidate in epidemiology and public health at university of ottawa and you can register for that webinar at the link that is i believe on your slide right now and remember the clsa promotes this webinar series using the hashtag clsa webinar uh we invite you to follow us on twitter at clsa underscore elcb so thank you again to everyone for attending but also for the panelists today for your presentations [Music] you
Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA/ÉLCV)
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[Smash Ultimate] UltiMania (Grands) - PG Marss vs Timor Raffi-X
well so they I guess we kind of started the match while we're playing our crew here I tell you what your smash on the hill it will be returning in the fall of this year of course for anyone from New England or even not we did have some super smash on the hills I know Monica lever to our and so on through all came down before so that's coming back to be hype to that but we're going into grand finals Mars versus rappy X my guess is playing wolf and I mean he's keeping up with large as this far so that's the present me but Mars is definitely trying to make it out of here as fast as possible obviously like you said we have seen how these chefs go and honestly little better than par for the course however that's good oh disabled you definitely may get back another down smash and the side I'll suppress the only went forward to their it was matching the down that button pretty okay please Mexico Oh I'll be not gonna kill though same wolf the same oh let's go from where the down smash Big Dawg this is fine yeah I'll take I don't know what exactly raffia was doing there I'd like to give a benefit of the doubt to players at some time about subject to beat the wrong person I don't I don't know Mars fighting something to get us some freshmen here gonna go ahead and land that near try to come to grab and a bit too slow but punish the evening surprised me already I was not ready for the wolf at all hey I like they see Mars would go for that good opener therefore Raffy Mars gonna get the techno so no big follow-up from the throw back to neutral so you're wrapping and do here Wow I know from heat put the porter a pretty good option there making sure he doesn't be hit by the back here I would have ended his stop surprised me when Mars is able to time that I couldn't have to be a lot harder than yeah be surprised man so I mean the first part of that match from what we saw was a true I don't think we saw how Mars loss wraps right like yeah we didn't did he nobody knows the thing is like rocky was keeping up toe to toe up until the end there were neutral few times from that last stalk and Marge is kind of seem to have a pretty comfortable time closing it out but looks like we got the cosmos presence don't stop I'm pulling out everything I got man yeah rob is not the answer matchup is not good okay okay obviously do have to have that line of thought though right you see Margaret Gosling's last time they played like something like that happened yeah it wasn't it wasn't great I mean especially iPhone 5 yeah oh man it was a great set to watch cause most couldn't do it man Rafi trying to prove that he's a bunch of a different cloth but so far has been able to do so as Mars trying to run away with the Smashing hello hang tonight people y'all don't know but exiled him up to us yes oh right before we start testing some actually said he's gonna give Mars ten dollars and be able to be rappy in under ten minutes right now looks like Mars might be boys all right but rappy he's got some stake in this too if he can last for longer than seven he gets a little cut of the pot but so far as a knowledge good for your boy [Music] with that said though I mean Marcus doing this the absolute most I mean look at him beautiful Perry breathing in and out all the hitboxes a Ralphie oh my god Oh scared now too much every single week I think Ravi has it have once or twice but it's rare it's far and few between that's good too much but you got a picnic to get alright well Mars looking for at least one more big hit looking like he wants that yeah that'll probably do it or down smash the rappy thinking about what's up here after an explosive start from Mars to say the least rappy still it's the plan it's more than a lot of people could say I like this yeah this is great for happy actually oh my god a tout like 20% off of that one splat Oh fully covered in ink before they're gonna open it up though see what the play is happy the ledge up throw up that definitely is gonna cut into the time Flambeau happy now I'll definitely definitely rap he's getting money now nope he needed 300 [Music] rafi stoic loading man it's a game number three happy X versus panda global is really on Mars see I don't know I think marginals obviously got a little too comfortable slit looks like this kind of rap you know I think you're just kind of like running it Rafi trying to seal the deal so we'll see tighten up the gameplay a little bit still make it out of here before one yeah I had a dream yeah hopefully by the way staying out so far Mars it's actually having some trouble as I say that Ian I'll a scrappy like hits in a row but they still get like yeah that's pretty wild frankly why doesn't my makes the Inc matter on almost nothing and then they get a mechanical yep keep you up here goes this i-beam no luck you just shoot me now I wonder sometimes you know I people try to carry the last few hits to do hope I hit maybe I'm gonna try to do their orders it got caught especially probably thought he stood at the entire thing there we go gets hit again might still be kind of Paragon I can't tell honestly it's probably probably better off I've seen somebody told either trying to bury that move I just watch yield it [Music] definitely had it for sure they have to seal out that stock right it back to even but he's quite the bit behind I mean look at how do I know like you want to like you know stutter forcing like Oh cast but you think I know that carefully kind of yes sometimes I just thought it was a good opportunity but it just didn't matter Rabbie's still dying somehow through the flip kick on it last stock here in this game three Oh slap off into a full effect I'm not gonna hit anything no beautiful grab for Mars as all right somebody battle the F til trap he ends up winning getting the steam controller roller coming out but again stuffed out by that effort until coverage for Mars Mars actually pretty Braves it's kind of poured so the role there like twice in a row all right yeah surprisingly doesn't kill see we can get one more perhaps for the fans oh no the roller coming in instead you turn around my accident that was sick what the heck is there an ups finish almost taking it everything Mars also saw last time we know very much those you see Rafi play exiled the money in his pocket yeah seven minutes congratulations so Rafi Azhar aka tempo is a Raffi ex person carrying himself a little bit of extra money in the pot from exile Marv is unfortunately not able to make it through the time trial gauntlet but maybe next time at the next regional he'll have the chance let's see is this gonna be the last game or are we gonna get it's gonna be named five maybe you reset Flambeau near enough Spanish some good damage for sure some up airs coming in but rapping so I was thinking in the grab the thing is yes Mars really gets mutterings a phone it's like right there the profiling they are safe on shielding them we closed for the jab which stuffs out probably a immediate jump from a P what do you do to get out of shield cos some few work is frozen finally in the air to be right there tides it right at the tress go for it yet and immediately Mars mix it up that's the thing Yemen and then Mars can just serve space around that air put in the air tries to sneak in this I'd be but Raffy is also been working on his face that throughout the set so looking a little bit better home for the up throw back here not gonna kick no I like this racket pushing forwards please get back down and it's the air dodge true but there's enough lag the Mars still able to retaliate with that board so punk-ass harsh permits from raffia ribbon costing in here on the up air ticket the stock pretty surprising Rafi almost responding rate bad for the up smash no luck I'll fight enough juice on that whining that's the thing like inkling does have a lot of kill setups and also just the tools in neutral so force off but enough percent where you can eventually force a bad scenario where he's able to get the kill so I kind of slowly nibbling diamond for a fee seems to be a little bit over Salas committing to these very harsh officer doesn't really need to that's pretty good point another stop wait too many rollers read something like that exactly yeah keep it up reason they do it because it works up there up here some more stuff like that for ears gonna knock gravity back on stage oh I like that just kind of like pummeling for damage good all linked up another roller [Music] we're trying to get something going here does I don't know she hasn't really been able to hit these hits a new foe and usually the thing I was going to point out is when I see other deeply players play they tend to use kind of falling back here more a neutral face on shield right I feel like from wrath we're not going to see much that receive some Joe got double four years right there but I'd like to see those face factors give this up that safe space around newly give yourself an opening that's fair let's the middle stuff like that down smash to that is what got them killed or else I'd be yeah back already a bunch of percent but that roller oh so close to being a stock for a fee do it again gets the air dodge exactly Marvin's looking for - yeah Marv is basically a 1k Oh confirm - winning this entire tournament hunting down rap yaks Raffi hasn't had much chance to respond the Scheibe that's gonna be Mars taken two three one over Raffi winning the belt and ultimately singles I was a little bit more ready this time that one still caught me looking up a little bit but you know there we have it man ultimania has reached its its conclusion yeah was it was pretty fun it was a little ride for sure I know both you and me talking overtime day but you know would it be that way for wasn't over cloud gaming home the event so I have fun congratulations to Mars congratulations to light and Linda Ling as well for winning doubles didn't immaculate job their dark quiz he unfortunately seemed to be sick or not feeling so great so you know I'm glad I kind of took that time to kind of recuperate because darkboys a force he goes to a drawer every single we go and if I like anyone brought him here he just takes like a greyhound loss to South Station we have our tio pick them up like that's those dedication that's why I always respect our Twizy exact other than that man is anything else you want to say no I think you've pretty much covered it all flan
House Of 3000
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2019-05-05
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I Dunno... Let's Hang Out!
[Music] [Applause] [Music] yes what is up what is up everybody what is going on there we go all right we're in it we're in it we're on it we're in it we're on it it's uh we're around it everything uh j a j a scotty doesn't know i don't know [ __ ] dude uh pulse kabab big f no it's uh some i don't know let me fix this here some uh something so something just made for me for my intro let's go scotty scotty kid here what kidd is here scotty hola hey fabian fabian fabian how do you say it mr pliskin in the high house what's going on guys i have absolutely no topics or anything i just decided to start streaming because i had some time and i wanted to hang out with you guys because i miss you guys all the time usually i stream in the mornings but uh i got up early and started taking care of chores and [ __ ] and so did that instead of hanging out so i'm hanging out now holy crap no hair yeah i cut it off yeah i decided to get rid of it sorry scott i'm about to start a stream with black wolf addressing the video that okie made about me and island herman oh uh sce uh can you can you post a link in there i wanna i wanna check it out let me know when you guys start i'll i'll stop streaming and i'll go over there let me sign back in here yeah essie can you uh can you post a link please let me log in here hamster just a hit piece on pulse did he i didn't see that let's the hair scotty what no i cut it off bob i don't i don't know if i'm subscribed to black wolf i thought it was i thought i was subscribed to everybody i couldn't find real talk his channel was like impossible to find um yeah sce uh please post a link because i don't think i'm gonna be able to find black wolf so if you wouldn't mind sorry not polska rib grunt right rib grant right yeah uh is he just called black wolf i don't yeah i don't know if it's like one one word or or whatever snake that video from earlier about rib grant yeah let's uh here it is hang on we'll watch it right now we'll pull a hamster [Laughter] right here we go share system audio let me know if you guys can hear this now there are things get the hamster worked up and what i mean is there's definitions oh perfect right there okay there's a word right words mean something right we're not a bunch of goddamn feminists redefining [ __ ] we know as men some women probably most women thank you g-man we know what words mean yes don't we don't we better than women do so and women will tell you different they're like no we're the better communicators oh man no no no no see women in my opinion are the biggest wafflers screeds black uh oh is it really showing up for me i mean hamster screen is black yeah but i don't know oh there you go okay okay hang on let's um youtube hey guys i'm gonna start eventually i'm gonna start uh uploading to rumble um whoops oh it doesn't look black to me infinite we're going on infinite it's the ginger it echoes does it says i am a miggy i want to do what i want with my own life i'm going my own way right is there any ambiguity no no is there a hidden meaning i'm missing do what you want with your life oh okay good straight forward to me yeah i don't know again maybe i don't have the secret code [Laughter] the secret handshake the kibosh maybe i'm missing something it's easy someone has left me out of the [ __ ] party maybe you are a hamster but when i hear miggy men doing what they want with their own lives uh-huh i kind of take that at face value okay but my problem with okie is he called us all losers then walks back into our chat to pretend that he never said that he can go his own way all he wants oh did he oh i don't know i haven't been following this so um yeah but let's men doing what they want with their own lives [Music] did i miss something i guess he did i mean if he's acting this way it seems there are some and if you don't buy into a certain thing 100 you're not one of them anymore now now why why didn't he make a video about me god damn it now i'm kind of offended that oaky drummer didn't go after me that [ __ ] if okey drummer sees this and or hears it like i expect a video about me god damn it i haven't the sce hermit vid haven't seen yeah polska are you [ __ ] drunk again already dude god damn [ __ ] cult guys when you say the words men doing what they want with their own lives that means what it says doing what they want with their own minds and so rib grunts nothing against rib but he's he's ripping on the okie a little bit here let's see what we have to hear hello my brothers yes sir i would like to you know i see i see rib in the chat a lot you know i think this is it may not be but i i think this is the first time i've ever heard ribs voice [Laughter] like for real i don't know i don't think i've ever heard him nope i've been sleeping all day oh boy uh not hamster okay made the essay yeah so you know you got a 60 hour work week ouch ouch man that's tough have an opinion so it might piss you off and get you into it or i don't know i don't get pissed off do what you want yeah that i just mellow mellow baby mellow yellow they call me mellow [Music] hey cubing good to see you plenty of people have done reaction videos to it uh-huh i really haven't seen them out there but they kind of flick this guy off like a fly that's just bothering them yep who yeah boy there are backstabbers that are out there and i just want to say keep your guard up and put them back in the place they belong oh [ __ ] mandy's in the house [Laughter] rib deleted all his videos too not sure why oh damn what's going on with this [ __ ] what i'm the first believer that if you stand for something rather than down on your knees you know you die on your feet rip rib you sound like me last night i think a lot of us i think a lot of us were pretty blessed last night i it was good uh hey scotty i liked your article on the feminists uh which one was that the one where i did the response thing and i had the website up is that the one hail to the chat respect y'all god damn it the feet cubing you son of a [ __ ] play it play what uh i say we have a live stream where all the guys have an open discussion yeah i think that would be good just get it all out in the open and let's let's [ __ ] take care of this like men right let's just say our pieces and boom did you cancel your stream schedule for tonight hey the emperor's in the house what's up you should play herman's video about okay okay yeah on your last live stream oh cool thanks i appreciate that let's keep going if you want to get back on your knees and go back to the plantation that's fine right yes if that's what a man wants to do i mean he knows the potential pitfalls he knows what could happen but he wants to take that chance and do what he wants with his own life fully in support of that it's up to you you only get one spin on so if that's what you want to do do it damn well shut your [ __ ] up excuse me when you go out the door god damn this sounds like father saunders last night jesus christ he does the tito's vodka ghost is that is that true that you offered him you offered to talk to okie live and he said no oh damn dude i'm kidding shut your ass up no shut up i hope so cut it all up all right hey don't say anything shut the [ __ ] up and move on oh ooh okay wow thank you for your permission rip i'm sure okie appreciates it [Laughter] now i'm talking about this guy that used to be oh [ __ ] see that's hmm i don't know that's kind of that's kind of lame then like i like okie we've we've we've known each other for actually quite a while um and we've talked several times and i like the dude um but man that's i don't know if you're doing that i had no problem with okie dating just don't like how he [ __ ] on everyone he was cool with on his way out it's so weird that's just yeah it's we could use some more liquor upon the gingers hamsters uh yes it's true he denied one with ghost yeah okay that's known as okay that's that's pretty lame yes ma'am now as general kinetics whatever the [ __ ] that's supposed to mean but he works out right right he does lift tall too i think he is i think he's sick something like that you wanted to [ __ ] one undead chronic out the door fun dad chronic can't take a little [ __ ] rip come on that's a good point the whole idea of all these live streams and these raids were giving each other a hard time you know why thank you brad zerker why do men give each other a hard time brad zurker are you born in 1983 as well that's the year i was born late 83 late late late 83 almost 84. we have a delivery pool at 11 30 a.m every day on busy holiday two pools damn oaky is fat he is overweight yes he is but he is trying to work on it oh you're late 83 too nice man nice thanks for stopping by i don't think i've seen you before brad circa thanks for coming in we're watching ginger hamster talk about we're watching ginger hamsters video on rib grunts video doing a triple [ __ ] commentary here you care about it we recently ate 77 and we break balls because it's [ __ ] fun right yes it is i [ __ ] on hamster all day all day 84 [ __ ] yeah dude all right okay i was asking possible so he can elaborate on that yeah i [ __ ] on hamster i said on bob i told i really [ __ ] on pulse kabob he shuts on me too though uh let's see who else do i throw shade at um um every once in a while i'll uh throw shade at mom just because you know why not right nobody else does so i have to uh johnny midnight he gets he gets shade too so your streams are like a puzzle wrapped in an enigma well thank you thank you oh jack especially dak i got a bone to pick with you too we're doing it right now now that you're here well i i i got at you last night [ __ ] trying to steal my stream time you son of a [ __ ] you know you know we always go on then and then you go in to another chat pimping your chat wait pimping pimping your stream right yeah i'm trying to say this correctly no i'm just kidding dak knows i'm kidding shut up dad uh bob's tough he can take it yeah i don't i don't i'm almost i'm pretty convinced that bob is immortal um and i i i definitely say he's not a robot definitely not that but he's he's dabbled in some black magic or something where he cannot die mandy's tough she can take it yes yeah she is she's really oh yeah [ __ ] that you read that deck you read that deck sorry it won't happen again [Laughter] oh my god pool is a co-op between our flower shops across the city me everyday exchange deliveries oh okay oh man just giving your [ __ ] dak you know i love you oh we already read that one i think i called mandy a stink woman once or stinky woman why [Laughter] that's great uh i got no problem with breaking balls yeah bob is secretly bender oh my god the political winds are changing can you feel it yeah and it's about goddamn time that's for sure uh tall can't say anything worse than i grew up hearing from my mom oh okay all right uh y'all make me think i'm forced to admit who's my favorite stepchild my pamph hand wavers whose stream shall it be did the other stream start let's go see if the other stream started hang on hang on uh wait i need to go into [Music] uh hang on guys i'm gonna do this there we go i don't want you seeing on my youtube background [ __ ] you [ __ ] [Music] so i need to scroll i need to i need to find the uh oh i can't i don't have the link i don't have the link to get can someone post the link uh to black wolf's live stream please i i need to i want to go over there i meant y'all i don't mind the [ __ ] talking oh [Laughter] yeah scotty bob's a detroit's invincible yeah [Laughter] oh my god breaking balls is how we show our love according to hamster it's true it's true yeah damn it where's my lighter i don't know i don't know dude you lose that thing all the time let's post this don't count on it demographics get in the way of a political change and the fix is in the elections yeah that's true i don't see black wolf stream at all okay and then i guess he hasn't started yet i just i don't wanna if they if they had something scheduled i don't wanna trample on that so hey rebel against defeat is in the house ball breaking is y'all's love language yeah that's what that's what dudes do that's what dudes do all right let's get back to this what does this one look like oh that was not bad how about this no let's not do that let's let's do that hello hey mouth is in the house not the gate um i'm hard to love to be honest aren't we all rad all right all right dude you gotta go continue with us whatever you're smashing some punyanya um you went to the western women garbage fire that it is you went to the junkyard and uh you won't use parts sounds like pulse kabob in the morning still have fun in the dumpster so isn't that his choice though isn't that what men going their own way means i want to do what i want with my own life what's wrong with that mm-hmm yep so okay [ __ ] on chronic big [ __ ] i [ __ ] on chronic all the time it's nothing it means you respect and you care about the person yeah that's all it means it's [ __ ] yeah that's how we do oh my god he just said i'm in crime whatever i don't care you can say whatever i mean when when is it okay to say what the hell you want to when is it wrong to do what you want with your own goddamn life yeah uh jim he's he's he just did his own stream he's just talking to himself while like responding to rip grunts video so i'm responding to hamster responding to rip credit oh man uh you can tell hamster was on the radar yeah he's like joker says he's got a face for radio and a voice for print hamster's voice is like a quarter voicer corvo is that how is that how you say it i don't think we should get so easily offended by one's opinion i agree deck um but from what everybody else is saying in here is that like he started talking [ __ ] about a lot of people and i mean which he's totally allowed to do right if he really wants to um you know but you also kind of have to accept that people might not like what you say and you're going to get some backlash for it so i'm just wondering when that became a problem rip cool when is that a problem uh good mom was that uh i think i saw i i was able to jump into some of your live streams the last few days what was her name again um yeah she seemed really nice she seemed to agree on a lot of stuff so so vindictively calling someone in in cell is joking maybe well i see red tanks you're welcome rob grunt sounds drunk he probably was cor vasya corvacia corvacia corva ca corvacier i think that's it right that's it corvacie i think that's a7 say it 37 took 11 years to become mukbang debt free new truck five and a five probably acre ranch paid off with elk on it oh [ __ ] yeah use that rap tune past corbasier okay i always consider the source attack and if they are puppeting and who's pulling strength now and you hear how to say it yeah agreeing okies videos he put out today won't help him either oh boy oh boy all right oh different chick but that chick let led me to the other one oh okay cool there's consequences to your actions he talks to about and walks back into here like he never said that yeah see that's kind of yeah where's father oh he's probably not up yet it's it's uh it's 7 20 he's he's probably still asleep [Laughter] see see i just poked fun at flanders right there too and by calling him flanders because i know he hates it [Laughter] oh boy shut up shut up saunders you know i love you if i choose to do this or i want to be gay for example or i want to not do that or i want to do this what [ __ ] business is it of yours honestly anyway sorry oh go on i think you totally really do saunders help me spell men doing what they want with their own lives rib can can you help me with that can you do that can you spell it can you doing what they want their own lives in other words making decisions that they feel are best for them is is there a problem here that i'm missing i would like you to help me understand i'm going to stuff myself all right with whatever woman that you're with just shut up and go away yummy okay you want to make videos like oh well undead chronic is making videos to support in cells what are we not allowed to have opinions that doesn't make sense see guys i've it's it's reached that point in our relationship and my relationship with all of you that i'm i'm comfortable now eating in front of you on live stream [Laughter] are we not no hamster because it's no real you know if there's an answer we we cannot have opinions we cannot be men inform our own opinions and live with them and uh support them in any way whatever get out of here i've got several bells context uh let's just leave it there okie said he wouldn't do a live stream live with me because he doesn't know me so if you are hamster hosted he might do it if i did he said me i barely talk to him anymore but okie being a drama llama uh i don't know i'm not really following it but i am responding to hamster responding to rip grunt yeah some movement that prevents people from doing what they want with their lives and speaking about what they want to with their own [ __ ] brain cells it sounds like a goddamn cult i don't want to be a part of that i didn't want to watch a movie what who's who's bvb who's that uh because it says bvb is live no nodey uh yes and buttholes mctile oh yeah the belt is out he didn't say you but you said you know him oh yeah i don't know you all grown spank yourselves billy von bomb okay cool let me keep going with this we're almost done dude you're lucky that your fat [ __ ] chip monk looking face has damn anything to do with you [ __ ] you really are and then you want to [ __ ] on undead chronic on your way out i should under undid chronic every day what's your [ __ ] point rip showing for shackles [ __ ] undead chronic shit's on me all the time i don't care get me i don't get [ __ ] on by undead chronic because he doesn't know who i am ah means he cares i care okie cares damn that's what men do we break each other's balls for the fun of it uh-huh oh i got me a used western [ __ ] i'm a little better than you i gotta say really quick i love pineapple god damn i mean i hate to sharpen the point too much but rip um that's what he wants to do you call her a [ __ ] i don't care whatever it's his [ __ ] business he wants to get married and have kids with this woman that's great good for him love him i will hear in a sec laughed him good luck it's kind of good because you don't think he should do that you got a problem [ __ ] going on here what are you a goddamn [ __ ] feminist or something do what i want or else we're gonna kill you we're gonna we're gonna cancel your ass [ __ ] that what are you talking about amster's getting pretty upset yes this is why i say don't build bridges with idiots hmm whoa okay because the guaranteed you took some of his advice you used to make videos about it like oh i can lift this [ __ ] in the gym yeah he does that [Laughter] okay whatever hell yeah that's what i'm saying whatever watch this you me chronic anyone we can do what we want with our lives for the love of god don't you understand i don't understand anything you know how you know why i can do it that way mouse because i was a fat kid growing up i was a chunky chunky when i was younger man all the way up to high school something like that then you know puberty kicks in and you can eat anything you want and not get a pound people over here are saying you can do what you want with your life what does lawd mean a feminists are saying you can't now you're going after okie for doing what he wants raise life a person or shut up hamster i'm reading praise a person or their achievements highly especially in a public context that's what log means there you go oh that's the wrong thing there we go brother but you're going to [ __ ] on the dude on the way oh why not that's some stupid [ __ ] well that's your opinion [ __ ] excuse me one second that's your opinion and sir didn't we do mukbang a little while ago this eating show is online audio visual broadcast which a host consume bitcoin into food while interacting with the audience oh okay oh asmr eating mukbang okay well gross you are welcome to it that's what freedom is about you think something's bad has backed cookies you don't like say it it's okay hamster and okie are friends it's lauded i'm just here expect a sacred ponytail i cut it off you think somehow in this world everyone is gonna push the same [ __ ] opinion oh look who it is bob you know who to watch start going down that road sir i would say this [ __ ] cult this [ __ ] starts waffling bob i want you to time his ass out hey cowboy how's it going man [Laughter] okie was mktown until he found us the epitome of men doing what they were going through their own lives you want to get married you want to go out with a girl do it yeah them yeah lord this man yeah he found something i don't know why you're getting crazy besides let me do crazy i'm better at it why don't you get something more important to do in your life why don't you shut the [ __ ] up and let him do what he wants with his own life [Laughter] oh oh is that too much to ask damn i want to i don't know drink beer and smoke weed though you shouldn't do that because [ __ ] you okay nobody cares what you do with your life you shouldn't [ __ ] try to impose whatever you think people should do with their lives yeah scotty if anyone's especially your fellow [ __ ] brothers man all right shut up for a second ginger jesus scotty fan you on hermit's channel talking to him in real talk and the guys i figured i'd come over here and sub and this is a great channel oh thanks red pill bob i really appreciate that really appreciate that hey tio hey tio uh um let's see this guy that we're watching uh well they're they're talking about this guy right here general kinetics i guess he talked some [ __ ] and then left the mat the sphere that we're in here but then came back like nothing ever happened and it didn't rub the right way with a lot of people and so i'm doing a reaction or not a reaction but responding to ginger hamster responding to rib grunts video about general kinetics 89 so that's what we're doing what are you doing what's the matter with you so look he's in intel now no he's got to know this he's got a woman so i don't think so i'm proud of course you are jr give you a [ __ ] hobby red pill has been poisoned now mgtow's next because guys like this want to make me tell a vague term not men focusing on themselves not participating women's bs yeah that's that's the big thing isn't it men need to focus on themselves and not pre and i don't think it's even specifically women's bs it's any bs that takes you off your focus or your frame or whatever you want to do man that's that's why i'm kind of i'm kind of in agreement with hamster here because it's like somewhat if he talks [ __ ] and then left and then tried to come back just i i don't know just leave him like ignore him or i don't know it just it seems it seems feminine to get i don't know i just i i just agree with hamster more here i agree with hamster but he did call me an insult oh no did he really hamster god because he used to be a lumberjack in oregon he went to alaska i don't know if alaska is much better than here uh let's see if we talked about that okie said we're an in-cell cult god oh my god why does this okay keep talking about me i don't does he i don't know um i divine i know he's back on the plantation right one beach hamley yeah got impunity lose his values mgtow is accounted for the us employer's role for men yeah pretty much why doesn't he focus on his local university i don't know i don't know once the empire goes mgtow will have its day and i hope so no need for mgtow head party drama exactly exactly i agree mctell is a philosophy you get it you don't you know how can you just laugh this off left foot up nothing a little oh first for me god damn it i think i've had enough oh here's the end of the video have i made my point man going his own way doesn't mean you have to do a certain thing like hammerhead he's a uh he's a monk i'm not chronic he's a freaking male [ __ ] yeah mom he thinks you're a chameleon oh he did say that didn't you he did i think so i think he said that was it just mom or did he did he say about someone i i thought he's maybe i don't know i'm i'm not gonna sit here and uh i don't know say things that i don't i don't know anything about but yeah eye fall oh growth oh you fall old growth timber i'm a toxic male women hate me yeah no okay called me a mistah and a loser i'm a cry [Laughter] hey kev's foster suffered from vagueness yeah he isn't my problem i have my own creatures yeah and you do you you get in the trenches of those crazy [ __ ] for sure mandy nobody's afraid of oaky troll yeah i'm just gonna [ __ ] him up oh boy there's okie wants to get married i just want to sit here and do videos and that's right that's right thank you indy i forgot about nothing that is wrong with that that's right that's right he did say that yeah and so now he's now okie drummer is saying like he didn't say that or or what i i don't know i could cowboy as long as you don't waffle well that's impossible where is it it's impossible because he does it all the time he's been saying a lot of unpleasant nonsense you'll be okay cowboy but at the same time it's like if he is i who cares i just why is i don't know i just i i guess i can kind of kind of understand if like the community kind of took him in and he's like he's a brother and then he then he started [ __ ] and like that sucks but you know i don't know at the same time it's like if that's what he wants to do okay i would take ribbing from oaky if it were in camaraderie but his word is femme talking points of shaming others so i have no performance okay all right makes sense got a fresh batch of indica out in the dry that's the point [ __ ] yeah nice don't call out your brother and then come back oh what's up bros yeah see that's that's where i can understand why people you know saying crap yeah ooh there you go that's the attitude right there i don't give a [ __ ] yeah he attacks good mother with trailer park insults like what did she do to him i don't know i've been in the golden sphere and biracial trenches all day these skin-based group identitarians kind of crack me up though yeah they don't they aren't they some plants have shallow roots yeah i can't see jr in the chat he's right here hermic got the pythons i can't explain to you but i can't help you understand it that that's a good that is a great quote right there oh yeah i will just hang on we're almost done do what you want yeah with your own life it's the only one you're gonna get yeah it's this one okay see you guys later thanks bye hamster okay we're gonna go to island hermit real quick um let's see is it island permit will come up like that there he is okay um i bet this is general kinetic state oh no oh my god oh no i bet this is jericho's new girlfriend so easy yeah you're you are so easy all right i'll give a thumbs up jesus [Laughter] oh man what up you mayonnaise monkeys hey pooping i'm here scotty i'm being shadow band cause i'm that good nice i got all night my lap your laptop is burning up oh [ __ ] is it really oh a poor car seat oh man that's great a lot of shaking going on yeah hippopotamy yep harpoon it before it breeds need an f6f f650 to haul her ass around i can't breathe [Laughter] damn uh let's see she destroyed her amber turd when the lights go out she's going my way ask her i'm a chill stream uh i don't see tfm is right western women are monetized um [Music] don't be a western western woman i don't see anything about kinetics except for that one we watched someone post the link to the one you're talking about hmm i don't know going to the gym is racist of course it is why not um okay let's watch this one really quick i'll drop the gun this instant i know you'd never shoot at a woman [Music] sorry francine call me a feminist [Laughter] oh man scotty uh i was i was the one you just played i was the one you just played this one what played the zinc video do i really want to play the scene the zinc video i i don't even know which which one that is oh god that was the only video okay okay hi man hey detox drove up from north carolina to uh pennsylvania today to visit my mama this week she is a 90 year old school lady who doesn't understand the modern feminists it's all good brothers yeah dude my grandmother is turning 90 this year as well um and she yeah dude if you were to talk to her about all this [ __ ] she'd be like she'd be like [ __ ] she wouldn't say it like that but like she'd be like what are like so stupid so stupid spandex was a mistake going live in two minutes all right cool we'll do that um let's try and find hang on black wolf uh sce can you can you please post the uh link again because uh i want to go find it and then like it disappeared so um yeah yeah well yeah but if i if i search black wolf it doesn't it doesn't come up i don't think yeah it's it's a bunch of other [ __ ] unless this is it no see this is something else perfect perfect thank you uh black wolf is going live in two minutes so i'm gonna i don't want i don't wanna have you guys be like jumping back and forth and [ __ ] so so whoop sorry about that let me get that here waiting for black wolf okay here we go right there we got the right place right hate vicious just put up a vid who's hate vicious i don't think i've heard of hate vicious did dax say he would go live with based chris i don't know deck did you say that i mean haven't they been live on stream before from scotty's side to here i see he sent me more incoming there we go there you go this guy said i just turned the big 50 yesterday my present must have been lost in the mail huh oh yeah uh sorry about that it must be lost in the mail shout out to hb looking sexy there scotty where's my picks for only fans um they're coming eventually i promise i thought hate got banned haven't seen in a long while yes next week bass chris can't make it tomorrow we will reschedule cool ql kinetic turd maxing oh is that what we're going to talk about scotty what inspired you to start this channel uh i've actually been doing this channel for many many years and i started talking about the mgtow red pill stuff just a few years ago before that it was really kind of lame like vlogging and just like i post i have i had like a schedule that i would just talk about what happened in my week or whatever um and that that was inspired by boogie2988 which i don't watch anymore i don't really like him anymore oh hey mgtow smurfs over there cool um but yeah then i started doing the mgtow red pill stuff and um kind of stuck with that and really i wanted to start kind of helping guys out uh that didn't have someone to talk to you know even though my channel was stupid small i had nothing until my one video went kind of kind of viral and then i started i i like met sce and um i knew about uh you know the warband stuff and hammer hand for a while and um got into the discord and then that's kind of when everything just kind of started going off so yep yep this guy you kind of look like my older brother steve okay that's cool i hope that's good lawrence i don't think i've ever met you before uh thanks for stopping by appreciate it um yeah cool scotty is actually the puppet it's the hair's channel that's right oh [ __ ] how did you know black wolf has the best thumbnails hell yeah uh yeah hair product reviews is why he said yes exactly god damn it uh boogie when went off his rocket yeah he did he which sucks because like deep down i think steve which is his first name steve is a nice guy um and he's been [ __ ] on his whole life for being overweight which i think i identified with because when i was young when i was a kid i was overweight and i got made fun of big time for it so you know i understand that completely so yeah hey snowy ones here what's up brother we're just waiting for uh for black wolf to start his stream shinobi hell yeah thanks i'm a friend of good mothers well any friend of mandy is a friend of mine all right hey good mother say for needing to push things back free takes a free ticks didn't people law cal boogerson i i don't know and exactly mgtow allah francis videos are just oh my god i can still watch those today and just lose it every [ __ ] time like boogie boogie i think he could like i think he could honestly like write decent comedy like if if he was given that opportunity i think he could write some good material he's he has comedic timing you know he can do impressions like he's just he's really good he's awesome when i was a teen i got mad for being skinny absolutely over yeah see that's just how kids are you know it's yeah that's that's how that's how it is there they all suck hello oh there's my cohort mr ike here he is [ __ ] it i don't want to be on your stream i'll go start on my own with blackjack and hookers hey that's cool i'll be i'll be there just been sitting with my ducks they're protective over the water but the chickens are protecting the food when i worked for xbox live we banned him you banned boogie it's because he broke that xbox live like he he uh remember he beat up that xbox i just watched the new james bond was it supposed to be a comedy uh probably not i i have no intentions of watching that movie that's oh boy jesus christ yeah i mean yeah he he bond is dead in my opinion so okie's my friend and i love susan oh boy we got evil deck in the house oh jesus stream's over guys stream's over i'm done just kidding the picture of daniel craig on the scooter behind the black lady on the scooter oh yeah no time to watch exactly that that is a great statement don't don't save your good memories of james i know i know binged on ridic fizz yesterday oh that's cool that's cool i've never really watched those i think i saw i maybe saw the chronicles of riddick once um but yeah okay well black wolf's live all right everybody i'm gonna get out of here so we can all uh go hang out with black wolf all right thanks everybody i'll see you later love you all bye
Scotty's Side
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2022-05-02
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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Sista Chic Lacquer ~ Moulin Rouge Trio ~Valentines Day 2019 Collection
well hello my friend and welcome to my channel today I've got the Valentine's Day trio from sister chic miss Debbie sent these out to me to swatch and review them for you this is the moulin rouge trio and it was inspired by Moulin Rouge so the first polish is the namesake of the collection Moulin Rouge is this beautiful red cream totally could be a one coder and it stamps the second one we have is diamonds are a girl's best friend and this is a stunning diamond topper it's not to me meant to be opaque it's it's just a topper but whoa what a topper it is I'm going to show you that over both of these other two and the swatches the last one here is a beautiful black cream and you guys know how much I love me a black cream this one is called Paris nights and it's a one coat black for reals I mean it's it's definitely a one cut black I will show you and it also is a Stamper this is a clean solid vantablack so now I'm gonna give you a little bit of info on these real quick the launch date for this collection is February 1st so that's when you will be able to purchase these I will have a link down below for you to go to the website the price is $10 a bottle and all of sisters cheeks polishes are five free except this one this time is only three free I just want to let you guys know that just in case you only buy polishes that are certain freeze but on this these two were five free and this one is three free and they are cruelty free and vegan and remember always a portion of the profits from sister she clackers go to project rescue which helps fight human trafficking so I'm gonna quit gabbing like I said there will be a link down below if you'd like to go check these out enjoy my swatches and I will see you at the end Oh righty I've got my base coat on and dry and we're ready to start swatching i'm gonna start with the namesake the Moulin Rouge this is such a beautiful red cream and I know if you're like me you've probably got a lot of red creams in your collection let me just tell you about this one this one could be a one KOTOR 100% and it also stands I will show you that at the end I did stamp it and I want to show you what my results were that is the first insanely easy code we're gonna go in with our second coat because I am a take coat person I know many of you are like that but the formula on this is just amazing it's extremely easy to control and I'm not having any trouble with it it's leveling out just beautifully and winter winter I am so happy with this one and here we go with the topper and this is diamonds are a girl's best friend I'm going to show you this topper over the Moulin Rouge and Paris nights that's just one coat of beautiful in that we are going to put some top coat on this and today I'm using posh look glossy yummy hollow mmm love it I will gun we're gonna I'm gonna do a water marble test on these also so here is my swatch photo with some nail art in the topper like I said I will be playing with these and I'll let you know if they also water marble but you can't beat a one coat of anything and I'm telling you this red and this black Paris nights are both won coders I am showing two today because when I swatch polishes that's how I do I do too and but I have used this polish in another manicure and I can I mean just look at it right there you can tell it's one KOTOR I'm not I'm not making this stuff up it's perfect very easy to control and it levels out just beautifully I did just do one coat I'm not gonna do a second cut on this one uh-huh I'm gonna put that topper on that and look at that thing saying diamonds are a girl's best friend over Paris nights gorgeous I am gonna apply some top coat to this one I am using posh still look out I mean it's just perfect perfect perfect this is an excellent trio gorgeous so here's my swatch photo with the topper and some nail art and here comes the red stamping that I did look at that gorgeous and the black stamping I did on my red nails earlier was the black from this collection so there you have it I'll leave a link for mr. sheet down below I want to thank you for watching and until next time be good to yourself
Moon Baby Nails
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2019-01-25
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H85uf4yqP9k
Baltimore Ravens Week 1 OVERREACTIONS!
what's good YouTube It's Gabe with another fan TV uh back at you another video in today's video we're going to talk about some overreactions to week one uh but before we get into that uh John Harbaugh had a press conference today and he did announce that Kyle Fuller did in fact Terrace ACL yesterday in today's uh in yesterday's game I'm sorry versus New York Jets and that he's out for the season now super unfortunate for the uh you know the Baltimore kid Kyle Fuller you know grew up here went to Mount St Joe everything like that uh made it to the NFL and obviously one of his dreams was probably playing for the Ravens and he never got a chance to play in the actual regular season home game for the Ravens so um you know hopefully he's on the team next year he gets to you know accomplish that but as of right now Kyle Fuller is out for the season and um that's an unfortunate blow for him so hope we wishing him a speedy speedy recovery um on the Raven side of things they asked this is actually one position that they have that they have guys who can cover that Brandon Stevens for a little bit Marcus Peterson comeback they got two rookies and Pepe in um excuse me Pepe and uh Taylor armor Davis and also you know they got Gary's Washington who stole their private Squad so this is actually one but this is where they have some depth at but it's still unfortunate to lose Kyle full especially in the first game of the season all right so now we want to get into what this video is about um if you like the content this video go ahead like comment subscribe uh so we're gonna do some week one over reactions uh three things on offense three things on defense that we're gonna say for this one game and try to expand to the whole season listen if I'm wrong I'm wrong that's why it's called an overreaction so don't take it too seriously but that's that's how we gonna do it all right first thing we're gonna start at the topic we'll start with the quarterback Lamar Jackson I don't think Lamar Jackson is going to win the ball a lot this year uh I know Houston Lamont has to get in you know 900 a thousand yards rushing I think that without a contract with the way everything went like that he's only going to run when it absolutely calls for it hey it's third down the short go give us a couple yards oh we dropping back nobody's open I'll Scramble for a little bit of yards here and there like like that play that he made where I think it was like 38. a big maybe two three sacks when I play skips around a couple of Defenders reached the ball off first down we only go see it a couple times a game man I don't think like my guess is going to run the ball a lot this year I honestly I don't now that overreaction ties into the next one which is that this Ravens running game is going to have to really depend on running backs for the first time and you and what does that mean right well basically for a large part of lamontagne's career you could play anybody next to him and they were going to have an effective uh season because defenses with scale Lamar Jackson now Lamar Jackson is not going to run as much that means we have a more traditional running game and that could have actually affected the guys who are back there now let's think about it when they got used to the system Devonte Murray was sorry Devonta Freeman was born off latavius Murray was going on we see Mark Ingram have a good year had a good year here all right for large periods of time it didn't matter who was the running back next to Lamar Jackson um they were going to get off just because of the threat of Lamar himself all right I don't think that's going to be the case this year so with that being said they're going to need JK diamonds to be explosive this year because the running back was actually in the backfield it's going to actually matter a lot um we saw that yesterday man Mike Davis didn't really get off King Drake didn't Kendrick had me one or two runs one of them was called back and Justice Hill they look as a pass catching back so you know he's not gonna do much in there so it's on JK Davis it's on Gus hours two guys who are explosive running backs to really take that that's running game to the next level okay now obviously the officer line hopefully we get better over time and have some better run blocking but it's going to be a lot on the the backs of JK Dobbins on this run game okay and lastly for offense at least Diamond do Renee's declare wide receiver three he's the field structure he's the guy that's going to replace Hollywood Brown okay now David Duke ain't caught two touchdowns like uh last game he made the first one especially was a really really good play going over top of the defender's head um and coming down with the ball now we love that we'd love to see that second one he was a little bit more open but still had to go up and make a grab um now Denver do Renee is a guy that's been here for a couple years he's showing what he could do when he's not just relegated doing jet sweeps out the backfield he can actually play wide receiver he's actually showing some moves um so we'll see if that continues I'm hoping that continues um and my thing is that it will right now obviously the old reaction could be the fact that wide receiversity could not matter very much right I said lightly could technically by receiver three we can see James prosha get some more snacks Tyler Wallace whoever right but as of right now it's Devin doing Renee's spot and it's going to be his spot so he does something to lose it so that's that's what I'm saying whatever good Renee he's the guy is a place in Hollywood because he's going to stretch the field now we know big man can do that as well but I think this would be a more designed role for that all right now defensive side of the ball the first one this is the best Ravens defensive line that I can remember in some in recent years all right um and it's not just the fact like like we've had past rush Duos we've had one guy who was good but we've never had not never I'm sorry we haven't had a collective of guys like this in a long time Michael Pierce Havoc Justin matibike Havoc uh Justin Houston call the Havoc off the edge I saw Stephen means Broderick Washington the only guy I didn't really see getting on the action which was surprising was odafe away uh now I'm looking for a bigger game from him next week but if the Raiders can get this much pressure without adopting always getting off to me that's a good sign because eventually I believe that Dr West will get it together and you know Excel and really um you know get some sacks man I think he could get double digits this year 11 12 saxes it should be uh in reach for adoption away this season right all right so now the second one Patrick Queen Justin matibiki have taken the leap and they're ready to be star players on this defense now Patrick Queen is the most I'm saying the most important one but he's the one I will talk about the most just because he was the Ravens middle linebacker of choice at 2020 uh if they took him in the first round he was the guy that was supposed to be taking over this defense right year one attacking was a little sloppy he made some plays you know score touchdown versus the Bengals things like that uh year two he got better when he was given less responsibility um but year three we're here now right uh first game versus Jess what happens he's making tackles he's being consistent I only see it I only saw him got beaten coverage one time with Michael Carter probably really should have caught that touchdown and he dropped it at the goal line but other than that he was saw over the field there was one time he was guarding he was covering Bruce Hall at the backfield Reece Hall catches the pass pivots and queen if I didn't wrap them up last year two years ago I think that's a missed tackle so I'm liking what I'm saying for Patrick Queen I saw him get back there on the sack he was all over the field and listen this is the most important part right here the Ravens had 84 defensive plays uh Patrick cream was on the field for all 84 plays so he's now a three down linebacker he's now the guy in the middle of the defense Josh Bynes only played I think 32 snaps 32 compared to queen player 84 okay so that's big huge news and obviously I mentioned it doesn't matter BK now I'm at a BK uh we've been waiting for him to break out pretty much since he was drafted all right and first suggest he showed that potential just need him to keep stacking on it I talked about him a little bit in the other video so I'm not gonna go into that to BK so I'm happy to see that from him all right and last one we're going to talk about the 70 million dollar man Marcus Williams my overreaction Marcus Williams is that he's going to lead the NFL interceptions this year at least by safeties uh he's a guy who has great instincts all over the ball all around uh just good football player he had 12 tackles now usually you don't want to say this happened that many titles that usually means maybe the you know deep pass is happening or you know things like that he would cash in the right game which there are some things that did occur for the Ravens yesterday but he's showing that he's an all-around player with all of our effort and that picky caught natural hands it looked like Joe Flacco through it right to him but he caught it easy snatched it and he almost scored on it so I'm going to say from just looking at that pick Marcus Williams is going to go and Lead NFL interceptions this year and that would be huge for the Baltimore Ravens we haven't had a guy like that obviously since every but that's why so that's why it's the overreaction right so give me some of your old reactions to week one some things that you know you just want to throw out there they may not happen but you just want to throw it out there all right let me know we'll talk about in the comments man that's your boy Gabriel just another fan TV don't forget to like comment subscribe I'm out
Just Another Fan TV
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2022-09-12
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADEFMjwtLVU
Web Typography - how, what, why
let me uh get into of a kind of an ice breaker question right so i know there's possibly more people over here that have not paid for phones than have different phones right so uh it's almost a designer milestone to get a client to pay for a fund so um that but that first step towards making them pay is an important one so can you describe like your first experience of actually making a client shell out money for a fund and how you convince them um yeah uh so i i i actually haven't worked with like uh you know a agency uh like i worked primarily with agencies in the past so the clients that we had were kind of large companies uh so they were typically not like you know uh the smaller smaller size brands so there was one uh that i worked on like years ago it was a project for i think home center if i'm not mistaken um so there uh you know the audience their audience is primarily uh in india uh but also in the uae like it's it's primarily a brand from the middle east so there we needed you know uh something that had both latin characters and uh arabic characters right uh so i i forget which is the exact family we ended up using but uh that like i said that was something that simply we could not find you know freely available you know a good family that had good weights good variations um in both latin and arabic so you know paid fonts were the only way to go there but i think i mean if you're just looking at uh like uh like the smaller clients or the smaller brands um i can kind of see like it is a bit difficult to kind of you know fit uh something like fonts into the budget especially because um i think like uh you know the likes of google fonts and others have really raised the bar also in terms of what you can get for free now so uh like i remember looking at google fonts way back you know uh comparing it with typekit uh when i started using typekit right uh and i was like i was literally uh appalled by like the quality of typefaces on on on google fonts uh but they've come a long way they have like so many excellent you know high quality typefaces like the one i used in this deck is a free one from google fonts called intel uh so as you can see like it's it's really really an excellent typeface it has so many weights and stuff so yeah it is a challenge i i really can't you know say more than that i think that's that's a good answer where uh like a good um requirement where like a free font just doesn't cut it and especially with multilingual where you want the the families to kind of look together i think that's a good constraint to kind of make that pitch for a paid font as well so uh this is a good time to tell the audience that's listening that uh use the chat box on on this window to post any questions um that you want to ask carl if you're actually asking from if you're on the zoom call right now you can just request that i unmute you and i see akshat i'm going to get to you right now so you you can just raise your hand and unmute yourself and directly ask that question once i uh once we kind of ordered it so akshat would you like to ask your second question your first question all right all right perfect thank you carl uh this was such a great presentation um so um i actually had two questions hamsa is that okay if i asked two questions yeah go for it okay so my first question was can you talk a little bit about like uh you know 101 about what vertical rhythm is and uh so i mean i have seen uh the difference vertical rhythm makes when using the right fonts and you do it right the overall uh the readability of the page improves a lot and it looks a lot more cleaner so that's the first question and the second question i wanted to understand from you is uh using serif fonts in web applications and like online systems because that's something that i've not seen a lot so like on an e-commerce website for example so um the fact that you talked about uh you know serif fonts are more authoritative they are more fact-oriented uh i completely agree with that but i've not really seen a lot of designers use that for web apps i've seen a lot of them uh a lot of designers use it for like content websites like journalism journalistic portals or blogs and everything else but not really for web apps and ecommerce sites yeah sure um so the first question about vertical rhythm um i think uh it makes a big difference in terms of uh readability for sure like you said uh it's a question of uh using i think your css wisely and uh having like um like a good you so you start off with a good body size you you decide what your body size will be like whether that's 18 or 20 and then you you decide what is your line height and then everything else is kind of like a factor or multiple of that like whether it's your padding or whether it's your spacing between paragraphs all of that stuff um in fact i also think uh i think hamsa is planning a session around something of this sort uh in the future so yeah maybe maybe you know that stuff that's something we can we can talk about uh you know in detail later or maybe i'm sorry if you want to jump in um but yes it definitely makes a big difference uh you know vertical vertical rhythm and spacing uh uh there was this you know attempt i think in the in the web design community many years ago to actually nail this down you know very precisely you know actually with grid lines and stuff but what what i think we realized was with the onset of of the responsive web and you know widths varying all over the place and images needing to resize it wasn't really you know practical to have you know vertical rhythm nailed down on the web the way you have it in print like in print it is it is very very important to have it and if you look at like any well designed book you know you can actually see the difference you know your consistent vertical rhythm makes but i think because the web uh you know by virtue of it being a fluid medium you know accessible on on devices of different sizes and display qualities it's a little bit more difficult uh is what i would say um perfect yeah um i'm sorry you want to talk about the like about this before i get to the second thing sure i think we are definitely planning a session where we are looking at how once uh it's kind of like this is a great segue stock is a great segue to that session where once you select those typefaces how do you kind of like size them what is a system that you follow to kind of make them production level as well as like uh use them like if you're not working um if you're not developing the thing yourself how do you kind of hand that off to a developer as well so we will be covering that in a future session for sure and that's going to be and carl thank you this this has laid a great ground for that yeah yeah so i don't know sorry uh yeah but i think akshat had a second question which uh which i can maybe also answer uh regarding uh serif uh faces right uh and why we don't see them a lot in um web apps um i think uh the reason is is also partly like i i actually see them a lot in e-commerce sites but uh i think by web apps you mean more more like you know products like maybe google analytics or something you know really uh you know like an analytics tool or like a fintech tool or something maybe like that is i assume what you're asking um i think the reason is that uh again by virtue of of serifs being the more historical of the two like serifs are a lot older than star series star series came around a lot later so by that virtue itself most of the great typefaces you know historically speaking have always been serifs so they have this air of authority and you know this link to the past and this this formalness about them which make them like a better uh a fit for something like a new york times or a new site or any even an e-commerce site like if you're a brand you know you're a brand trying to establish trust with your users right or trust with the con with your customer base then yes like definitely you know go for something uh you know with the serif with a certified from a serious family um yeah that's what i would say uh i'm going to ask one um like one question before jumping again to an audience question which is uh i think unlike like what you had mentioned earlier which is the history of type is not kind of important or we're going to brush rush through that i think it's wonderful that you covered it for a couple of reasons because when first of all it was very reminiscent of my graphic designer days where we used to speak about lino cut and things like that that were physical artifacts too in uh typefaces right but for web i think this context is really important because it's kind of gearing everything towards the fact that we want to make more performant uh and more performant and accessible like interfaces like so i think that the fact that we covered that is a great thing for this uh for this exercise so is that a lived history for you like you mentioned something about like having experienced that so is that a lived history for you and how does that kind of like help you today um yeah so if i yeah i had to breeze through that because of uh you know time constraints but maybe i can just go back to yeah all this stuff uh like a lot of these things i actually have have done before uh not image replacement uh so this was i think this used to happen like 2010 or maybe even earlier but definitely i have done uh flash uh this happened i think this started happening just as i was entering into you know web design just as i was starting out uh so kufon as well uh i actually remember i think it was spawn squirrel if i'm not mistaken font squirrel is to actually allow you to upload any any you know desktop uh you know face and they would give you like this uh font map out of it and uh and then you know i remember using all of that stuff um so i think yeah in terms of just experiencing all of this i think it like personally for me uh it gives me a better appreciation of the journey that we've had um and just a better appreciation of where we where we've arrived at you know in terms of as an industry that today you know we can just use uh you know font face we can just link you know to something like a google fonts and it just works and uh you know with all the steps that i think the w3c is taking right uh you know with uh there's also i think a css module now called fonts the css has its own fonts module if i'm not mistaken uh so they're taking like uh you know typography very seriously so the future also you know looks it's very bright yeah if you can go to your website font slide uh just back a few uh i think what's very interesting because we are moving to more performant interfaces as well what's very interesting is that these web safe forms are osa fonts are kind of making a comeback because of how performant they also are like where you're kind of like looking using a sorcerif declarative font declaration just so that it and this is mostly like a trend that we're seeing more more and more in apps and not so much in content websites where they're just declaring a source edit so that the entire app looks like it's part of your os and so that the native feel of it looks more like that so it's really nice that while we started with this it's kind of making going a full circle and maybe making a interesting comeback at least in that app space so uh you have a question would you like to just stay unmute yourself and take it hey prateek hi carl hi hamsa hi uh great talk carl uh enjoyed it a lot and yeah i have uh two questions uh so uh you started off with uh oliver's article about 95 percent of uh web design being typography and um uh then we uh we went through a a lot of uh slides about selecting the right typeface and the variations possible so i wanted to get your thoughts on how much of typography web typography do you think is about getting the typeface right and how much of it is other aspects like akshat mentioned vertical rhythm uh with things like you know the the legibility of the font sizes the the measure uh the colors contrast and so forth uh and uh the second question was on uh performance so one of the legacy methods for uh using typefaces which was the flash uh flash method cipher uh you you pointed out that you know it would often cause performance issues and uh in the current method of using uh fonts on the web do we still run into performance issues uh do you have any uh thoughts about that or like tips for avoiding performance issues sure so um yeah so with respect to the first question um i think uh with respect to typography on the web you can look at it at two levels you have something called macro typography and something called so the macro typography refers to what you started off with which is selecting typefaces you know body typefaces display typefaces you know i would also argue like you know at least like having a line height and in a vertical rhythm uh but then you have also the other side of it which is microtypography which is the other small things like uh like you know using m dashes you know the small things that make a difference like that so i think i think it's like an even split i think you know so you have to pay attention to the larger larger issues of uh you know what typeface am i using does this resonate with the content that i'm using it for like is it a good fit for the brand uh you know balancing all that on the one hand with also uh you know making sure that you nail down you know your like if there is a character like if you're writing like something in french you know and there's something with the settler actually using a settler you know using a typeface that has you know those uh those characters you know those all those uh ornaments so that's all like microtype typography that i was talking about so i think it's like it's a balancing act between between both um uh yeah the second one about performance um yeah i think with cipher it was it had a big effect on performance uh but even with weapons today i think there is scope for abuse if you you can't really you know just go wild with weapons uh i mean typically depending on how many characters you have and what character set you're using and how many weights you select uh i think on an average the font kit could come up to like something like maybe 200 kb or you know at least from my experience you know but but if you abuse it you can even take it up to like you know 900 800 kb right which which then becomes a problem because then obviously these fonts need to be you know downloaded before they are rendered and then you have you know like we used to have this thing of uh flash of unstyled text and flash of invisible text and all that kind of stuff so i think uh you know from i think that's another technical consideration which maybe i i also admitted uh keep performance in mind and just use a subset of only the characters that you need so if you're if you're looking at like an english kind of website choose only the latin character set don't go for extended characters you know um and uh use only the weights that you need and the styles that you need you know stick to only that and really kind of keep the font as light as possible that's awesome and and uh i think uh this kind of segues into my next question also uh where you said that like let's keep it performing let's have multiple weights and multiple styles and this still keep it performance so limit that choice uh considerably so what are your thoughts on uh variable forms which is now like the new uh the future of typography and maybe you could also like uh explain that for people who are not aware of it yeah sure yeah so right at the outset i just want to say that i don't have experience with variable fonts i haven't actually you know tested them out myself but uh they are kind of yeah they kind of fall somewhere in in in maybe in this slide uh so variable fonts the technology itself is uh an update on the open type specification so it's actually like an update on the open dive specification so what this allows is uh so typically now you have uh like let's say uh inter right so you would have inter regular you would have suppose you want inter regular you want inter semi board inter board right that's three different fonts right so if you if you go and uh use a service or you you take the font itself those are three different like either otf files or dtf files right with variable fonts what you have is all three different weights are all three different variants compressed into a single file right and it's almost like a matrix uh you know that that uh that you can send to your browser in a single font file so the user can can select not just regular semi-bold and bold but he can actually select like a whole different like range of weights like so if if bold was 400 and semi-bold is 600 and bo and sorry regular is 400 semi-bold 600 and bold is 800 you could even do like something like 750 or 650 right because i mean the mathematics of the vectors are included in that font file so that basically enables the browser to display any range of weights any uh display any range of uh you know even widths like you you can you can combine like a condensed you know width with a regular width and an ultra wide width in the same font file and just you know have the browser use that so in terms of yeah going sorry do you see yourself using that a lot more in the future personally yeah yeah yeah uh yeah as soon as i get some time to kind of you know set up a playground and you know try try something out for sure yeah so yeah it's it's definitely something that i think uh a few a couple of good sites have already started using it uh yeah i think when i did my research about it like a few years ago i think maybe like the browser compatibility you know may have been an issue i don't know how many browsers supported it like 2-3 years by but now i think support is a lot better and it also ties in with the whole you know uh war format uh and uh since you know since uh most browsers like you can see like you know chrome 5 and safari 5 like it's quite good in terms of support so i think today most browsers that support the waf format also support variable fonts and and one thing to um the listeners as well that that is in the google fonts in the google fonts like a website you also most of the forms are kind of becoming variable now so you can actually select that filter saying show me variable fonts and it actually gives you that so that's a that's possibly a good place to kind of start exploring and i'm going is something on google fonts which is already available so if anyone wants to try it out you can actually go to google fonts and look for robotoflex if i'm not mistaken it's an actual variable phone yeah would you like to uh ask it yourself uh that is um it just says rubio okay so let me ask you because they have mentioned it here they say how do you say a certain font has enough glyphs okay um so if you if you go to the actual type foundry uh they will always like mention uh like what is the included uh glyphs so uh if you go to for example google fonts i think uh and you select uh like uh like a cyrillic typeface or something with devnet green uh right you you would see like if you go to the actual font detail page somewhere on the page you will always like look at they will actually show you every single character and glyph that the font includes so if it's just a latin face all you will see is just capital a uh to capital z small a to small c and numerals and the usual punctuation but if you have something like a like a font family that supports multiple languages then you will see like a to z small a to small z but you would also see all the other characters like oh they've now great coco all of that stuff so just i say just go to either the service you know the detail the font detail page on the service or on the foundry side and you get a sense of what clips are included okay and and she had a follow-up which is what steps could she take to just make sure that the font works for the use case so if you can give an example of say a use cake or a use case of new york times maybe and then think of like what are you looking for that glitch set when we are looking oh i love that read the label slide by the way it's really cool yeah go on uh yeah so with the new york times uh i'm assuming like uh that most of their audience is is either us-based or uh most of their audience is english-speaking so for me here it would be a question of uh you know balancing uh performance with uh you know the glyphs and the characters that i need so here i think i mean if i understand the question correctly i think here you could probably get away with just a latin or a latin extended character set you wouldn't need you know glyphs uh like any other clips in there uh i'm sorry i don't know if i understood the question correctly is that what she was asking no she said thank you so yeah i think you answered it perfectly yeah but uh that's an interesting font uh that uh interesting font name interesting point that you erased which is uh the point about multilingual right so new york times you said it's mostly latin but um can you tell us like say for example in india we're doing a website which has which is a latin based thing but the client or the requirement from the website is that we need it in hindi as well so what are some of those steps where you identify this and then after as an afterthought you need to kind of include this new language right what are some of the steps that you can do to your um to your elect to your files and your layout so that when you switch those typefaces it kind of works um yeah i i would say that uh select uh so you have you already have like a latin face uh or a latin family so if you're now if you're looking for like a devnet family to add to that uh i would say uh try to match it uh you know as closely to your latin face in terms of like you know what is the size of the ascenders and descenders you know the overall size of the of the of the try to match it as close as possible so look at the devnowkey face which you know side by side with your latin face the heights more or less match the thickness of the you know strokes of the characters more or less match right uh and the overall metrics are the same so i mean if you look at different fonts uh a 1.5 line height on font a might be different from a 1.5 line height on a font b that even though the line height is the same because of the way the you know the typeface designer designs the metrics of the font one might be roomier than the other one might be more you know compressed than the other so ideally you know you should use a like i would just use a like a super family for something like that so a family that has both but if you've not kind of uh you know not maybe done that research or it was an oversight then just try to match it as closely as possible this uh i think you mentioned something about home center and using an arabic typeface for that and arabic is typically right to left right so how do you kind of manage that when you when you're creating a layout and you need to find the typeface that works both from left to right in latin and right to left in arabic like how did you navigate that problem um yeah so that i think was a kind of a close collaboration between uh like me the designer and also the content person like the person who writes the copy uh and it's it's it's uh it's down to having a discussion about uh the same copy or the same heading right uh what is it in arabic uh can we like if the the english heading is like eight words like uh in arabic is it longer than that is it shorter than that uh and if there's a is a big difference between the two uh if it's like down to like the english heading fitting on one line but the arabic one needing two lines then i i would say like it's a discussion you need to have with your with a copy person maybe maybe can we reduce that uh or just designing you know your header to be flexible to account for both a single line heading or a multi-line heading yeah um and just to remind everyone that uh we have uh 10 minutes uh 10 odd minutes left on our site on on our webinar right now so please put your questions in the chat box i must say that there's a lot of conversation about variable fonts happening in our chat box as well as some twitter love for this presentation that has been shared kindly by zenna for you girl so let me go into my next uh question which is um when um when you when you present something and i'm guessing that if you're not creating a website for yourself the fact that you've chosen a certain display type phase in a certain paragraph typeface is is still subjective right like because you're kind of um creating it based on certain design principles that you have but when you when you pitch it to someone else how do you make the case for the fact that this is the typefaces you need to go for and when there is resistance on that end where you know there is no this doesn't work come back like what is your usual process of like uh pitching a typeface to the person who needs to adopt it and how do you deal with their feedback it's it begins with like like a formal discovery process uh in which like uh you know you ask uh the the brand or the customer like essentially what what is the brand like what does it communicate uh you know what does it stand for uh you know what is the general personality of the brand and not just typography but everything you know should uh kind of mirror that or align with that uh right so if you have like a brand like uh something like maybe yeah like the new york times is a good example on one side but you have something like maybe uh airbnb or something very modern right on the other side so the characteristics the general characteristics uh of the brand differ a lot if you have something like you know nike right versus something like harley davidson so harley davidson like it stands for a whole set of values like freedom and the open road right and nike is about victory you know and and perseverance and all those kind of attributes so uh trying to kind of align not just you know typography but even other things so i would say that um do your research uh you know do it do a formal discovery figure out you know ask questions if required you know definitely ask questions uh but i mean figure out what the brand stands for and then you know apply that in terms of uh you know typeface selection uh two books i can highly recommend you know if anyone is interested in not just web typography but typography in general one is the elements of typographic style by robert bringhurst i have both of them on my bookshelf i think that's the most important book on typography you can read and a primer for you know someone just getting started would be thinking with type by ellen lupton so i think these two uh you know if you're really interested in you know aligning typography with an existing brand i can highly recommend both these books that's awesome and uh what i was just going to ask you what are the some of those resources so that's good that you covered that i i found one particular thing super useful uh which is the nuances to consider right where you spoke about and i think that comes through the like it breaks down the subjectivity a lot if you can go into the nuances where you had the black lives matter slide um i found that really interesting because sometimes you want to you it is very heavily based on like a philosophy or you want to have a hidden story where like the person who's kind of owning the site which is the client also kind of jumps at it saying yes like you know because sometimes it does not have to do with how it looks and stuff is is it the right choice is is the question right so what are some of the have you had any experience of doing this activity where you discovered that you went the nuanced way and what is like an example of that um no honestly there's like like there's no example i personally you know implemented this with this is just something that i have kind of you know read and researched about uh i think it was robert bringhurst in the book itself he says that uh you know a typography should resonate with the audience so i mean it's just one of those things that uh that literally very few people could probably even you know notice like for me like to actually find this out you'd have to actually go to you know either the style sheet or do an inspect element on their site i mean to most people like you know people who are not like you know typography you know typographically incline it oh yeah it's just another sound setup they used so it's just another uh you know display face is used but uh i mean to the one to the people who actually you know dig a little deeper and find out that the face they've used is actually you know designed by a by a black studio by a black typeface designer i think that makes uh the whole thing make a lot more sense also yeah and uh do you feel um that i i think soviet has a question i'm going to get to that um there is um do you feel this is a controversial question and a subject but i saw a lot of code in the earlier part of your website of your presentation right so uh do you feel designers how much of css or do you feel it's necessary at all that designers for no exposure to development know this know anything about code to do good typography oh it's a very it's a very controversial topic and i don't know whether i want to you know dip my feet in into that into that river but i can just say like from my personal experience it is it has been an uh an immense help uh that i that i know html you know no one's saying you need to know like react and stuff like that right but uh knowing the basics of html like semantic good semantic html uh knowing the you know what elements to use knowing css you know at least how to apply basic declarations uh and and and just you know being able to do a very basic kind of design in the browser right so you have your design in your render tool in your photoshop or your sketch or sigma uh and maybe just you know just just knowing enough to at least render something on a page and just test it out in the browser is i think what makes a big difference to me so i won't say whether you should code or you know you need to know how to code i can just say that it has helped me a lot and i think hamsa you as well right it's been a big help knowing css and html yeah for sure and i would encourage actually quite a few people to just look at only your font declaration css things for because it's just nice to know how line height gets uh described on the web and it's almost it's almost very similar to any design software like sketch or figma that you might be using so i think just any of those css properties that start with the word font or type would be a good thing to just be aware of so that because even variable fonts is moving to using these properties while declaring pawns as well so i have uh there's a there's a fun question question from cervic and i want to add to that question also his question is do you miss typekit and if yes how are you coping with it that's his question and my question is thanks for demystifying or comment this thanks for demystifying how adobe pricing works because ever since adobe phone has come i don't understand how a subscription is going is supposed to be like got do i have to pay for one of these apps and i think uh yeah like it just i don't need the app i need the form so i don't understand how the subscription model works so thanks for covering that and i'm gonna go back and look at it but i want you to answer cervix question which is do you miss typica typekit and how are you coping yeah i i really really miss typekit uh so a little bit of history like uh i think i i became a customer of that kid very very early on like i think 2015 or something uh or maybe or even earlier but uh like i like basically they started off i remember with i think 36 a year was where they started off and then they made it 48 like a few years later and then the whole you know adobe acquisition came and stuff but yeah i i really really missed like the og type kit which was you know an independent small independent company and they had jason santamaria as creative director and all these you know people that we like to you know follow on twitter and read about so i really really uh you know miss them um so what i'm currently doing with adobe fonts is uh i actually have a subscription to i think adobe in copy uh you know like like hansa you were saying so that's one of the that's the cheapest app that they have in their catalog yeah so i think uh like i said in that last slide it comes to for me it comes to around uh yeah it's it's almost like 4 800 a year uh if you use adobe and copy so i that's the i'm just a creative street you know creative cloud user only for only for the fonts so i'm just like using adobe in copy so it's like 300 a month or something 4 thousand something later okay but i i i really really missed the old type it yeah i think so that answers this question as well so um i think uh you've already pointed out the resources about the technical uh things like the two books that you recommended uh maybe we'll tweet that out also just as a as the primer but uh i wanted to also know are there any good web resources that we can kind of um point people out to where it might be helpful to kind of like read or look look up your website on the look up your fonts on these websites and things like that off the top of my head no uh i think there is one called a practical guide to web typography it's like a micro site i don't know the exact url or you know offhand but i think if you just google a practical guide to web typography i think you can get the get the website got it i think yeah cool i i think it also like helps there are many sites also like type in news and this type of news and things like that where are these not directly like resources but they're also they're helpful to uh just see if your font that you're considering for a project is being used in a website because it gives a better feel of it so yeah type wolf is excellent uh if you're looking for just like you know web font inspiration dip is excellent i highly recommend that uh yeah there's also another one i think called elements of typographic style applied to the web so someone has basically taken the book that i was talking about and actually like you know applied it to like the web context so all the stuff that the book talks about in terms of print the you know the author has applied it to the web so that's another one you can also google
Hasgeek TV
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2020-11-13
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0V6ZfHBB8eo
The Official Story
the official story the official story is that we live in a free democracy where our teachers tell us the truth about our nation our government and our world when we are children and then the free press continue telling us the truth about our nation government and world when we are grown and then every few years we have free and fair elections in which we use this truthful information to make decisions about which politicians and policies to vote for and it is only by pure coincidence that what we vote for just so happens to benefit the most wealthy and powerful people on the planet in the official story the democratic process consistently fails to let us progress beyond a status quo of profound inequality injustice oppression exploitation war and ecocide because that's simply how people are voting in their free and fair elections the official story maintains that this occurs because the populations of all free democracies coincidentally happen to be split organically into two ideologically opposed camps of equal size creating a political deadlock which just so happens to benefit the people who profit from profound inequality injustice oppression exploitation war and ecocide per the official story society is driven by the majority and it is only by an immensely widespread and startlingly consistent series of coincidences that society remains perpetually shaped in a way that benefits a small minority of rich and powerful individuals these are some pretty strange coincidences you might find yourself thinking what are the odds that a society which is driven by the will of the people would so consistently benefit a small minority of rich and powerful individuals to the disadvantage of the voting majority across so many separate nations from generation to generation for many decades without ever deviating from this pattern seems like the rich and powerful must be tipping the scales in their favor somehow the official story holds that you are a crazy conspiracy theorist if you say this and should be shunned and denied any platform from which you speak to a large number of people the official story is that this sort of society which only serves the worst people in the world by pure coincidence is so wonderful that it needs to be exported to every corner of the earth also by pure coincidence all of the nations which most urgently need freedom and democracy always just so happen to occupy land of immense geostrategic importance for planetary domination and resource control in the official story the united states and its allies are always on the right side of every international conflict and it is only by a series of unfortunate accidents and intelligence blunders that this alliance is killing far more people with military violence and starvation than any other power structure in today's world the news media feed us accurate information about each and every one of those conflicts explaining truthfully why each country's government needs to be toppled to free the people of that nation and it is only by coincidence that we suddenly stop getting news reports about how those people are doing once they have been liberated from their tyrannical oppressors the official story tells us that while the u.s might not always make perfect foreign policy decisions it's better to have them leading the free world than to risk some tyrannical regime like russia or china taking over if the u.s wasn't constantly invading countries and dropping bombs and staging coups and starving civilians and fermenting unrest and arming terrorists and torturing people and escalating cold war aggressions against nuclear-armed nations the world could find itself ruled by bad guys official story protects the official story anyone who disputes any part of the official story is peddling misinformation or is a russian propagandist or is an anti-semite or is a dangerous extremist or is mentally ill or is whatever they need to be in order to ensure that they are silenced on social media and never given a mainstream audience any dissent from the official story is evidence that you must be prevented from interfering in the official story according to the official story in the official story our world will be guided by this truth-based free and democratic status quo in a way which benefits all of humankind if it seems like inequality is getting worse or governments are becoming more authoritarian or capitalism is becoming more exploitative or wars are getting out of control or the ecosystem is dying or we're hurtling toward nuclear war on multiple fronts that's just your stupid brain trying to trick you and you should stop listening to it immediately and reacquaint yourself with the official story here here's some celebrity gossip did you see that super bowl ad come watch a movie on this streaming service take some time off calm down have a beer and then plug your mind back into the official story just ignore the parts of yourself which find it intolerable only the official story is trustworthy only the official story has the answers block out all the other noise jack your mind firmly into the matrix and be the loving loyal gear turner you were born to be you
Caitlin Johnstone
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2022-02-15
Creative Commons Attribution license (reuse allowed)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQaBMs6KloU
There Is MORE To Your DELIVERANCE! | @AlexanderPaganiMinistries
i got saved in prison i'm serving a nine-year  prison sentence jesus christ came in my cell i   mean told me to follow him and i was instantly  born again everything radically changed for me   i didn't go home immediately after that so it  wasn't a jailhouse a religious experience it   was an authentic one and i began to live  for the lord behind bars i got called   uh to the to the pastorate in prison um i  got called to the ministry of deliverance   in prison but when i came out of prison i joined  the denomination and they got that out of me   but that's a whole other story there um and i  went many years preaching against deliverance   my mind my theological framework could not uh  embrace that uh how can a spirit-filled christian   have a demon like living on the inside and  and i had all these uh these idioms and these   proverbial statements that denominationalism  says you know like how can the holy spirit   live in the same house with the demon you know  and well then i began to you know living in   new york that that that made total sense to me  because you could live in a house with roaches how can i and how many of you know you  clean your house and then there's still   something critter somewhere you know so so my  theology was um wrestling with my my cultural   upbringing of of where i was at and we had one of  the fastest growing churches in the bronx at that   time at least for my denomination now this was 18  years ago i was 24 years old i was the youngest   pastor in our denomination um we were traveling  as an evangelist my prison testimony became the   catalyst of promoting this new gen x i'm not a  millennial i'm not a gen z i'm a generation x guy   all right i'm almost 50. you know so at that time  there was no internet when i started preaching   the gospel when i got married we didn't have cell  phones we didn't have internet there was nothing   it was you know i used to reach out to her on  a beeper or a pager i'd pager we had a code   the code was my building number you know so you  know things have changed from then until now so   um so we had this fastest growing church in the  bronx um was the mascot and the poster boy of   the new generation without denomination but i  was going home and i was punching walls i was   terrorizing my wife and i was a pastor and i was  addicted to pornography and i would come up and   i'd preach and i prophesy and i pray in tongues  and the church couldn't tell the difference   because i was in one of those denominations  where behavior modification was more important   than heart transformation so everything  was external adherence you know and um   and i was frustrated and i ended up as a pastor  going to see a psychologist just trying to   um get some answers and i ended up helping  my psychologist kind of get delivered she was like young man i like listening to you  you know like what you know she just sit there   and smoke cigarettes and hear me out you  know and get set free yeah i didn't know   you know um it wasn't until i got to a place of  i went beyond desperation to a place of groaning   you know um hunger will bring a vis you know  hunger will bring a visitation but groaning will   produce a habitation you know the children  of israel hungered to get delivered for 400   years but god never showed up it was just hunger  it wasn't until they started groaning this is   why fasting is so important because it causes your  flesh to groan this is why the young man went from   you know desiring freedom to actually god  beginning the process of full breakthrough because   your flesh now is it's not just hungry three  days how many or three days you you know your   flesh is groaning at that time you know you know a  smell of smell make you want to break the fast and   go eat you know um i got to a place of  groaning because um i was bound i was so bound   as a pastor of a successful church that one  day coming out of the church me and my wife   got into an argument simply because i just told  the church to pray for me and and this is how   enslaved we were to make sure nobody knows what  we're dealing with how many you know that you know   uh in my culture you know latino culture  you know we take secrets to the grave   you know we just never tell you you know so i  was kind of living and embodying that and in   the middle of the argument i like i jumped out the  car like while the car was moving i jumped out the   car already just wanted to hit her you know right  in front of the street and everybody you know like   and that was the moment when i realized that  that something was inherently wrong you know   as a pastor never hit her thank god never went  to that level but how many of you know emotional   abuse is just as worse as physical abuse you  know if i could hurt her with my words and my   children with my words you know i think sometimes  that's probably even more damaging because you   could heal from a physical wound but sometimes it  takes you can't hear from a word wound you know   and in that moment um i asked the lord i said  okay lord what the heck is going on you know and   he began to tell me to revisit this idea  of deliverance and right there i said no   christian can't have a demon and i'm telling  god demonize a christian can't have a demon god   you know some demonize saying i'm not there's no  such thing as being demonized you know um one day   you know one day in the middle of a staff  meeting how many of you know staff meetings   can get intense sometimes if you're not passed it  and you don't then when you become a pastor you'll   know that when it's time to touch the funds  and rearrange rearrange some stuff you know   it could get a little intense in the meeting  you know so in the middle of a pastoral staff   meeting with my staff many of them are  still with me to this day for some reason   i had gotten a no on something like you know  what pastor no i don't think we should do that   right now and i lost that i got enraged in  the middle of a of a meeting i literally   lost it in the middle of this meeting to the  point that i manifested i was manifesting in a   meeting and the next thing i know in front of my  pastors i'm on the floor slithering like a snake   in front of my pastors now two things are  happening to me i'm talking to myself saying   alex you are embarrassing yourself like they're  definitely going to leave the church after this   you know and then there's this other pervading  thought that i wanted to take the church chairs   and bash everyone's head in at the same time but  i couldn't move because while i was slithering   on the floor like a snake i wasn't moving and  slithering i was in place while slithering because   there was a foot this big on my back and when i  turn like this there was nothing there was nobody   there and i heard a voice on my right ear said  i've been sent from heaven to make it manifest   allow it to manifest because today  it's leaving it's a true story and i yelled out this loud shriek i shrieked  so loud that the capillaries in my face   broke open and my whole face was bloodshot red  with with freckles from broken vessels and and   i let out this loud shriek and then it just left  and i heard the voice say again to me it's gone   don't look for it and when i got up i felt this  part of my chest was completely peaceful and   i realized that that's where the demon had been  lodging i had a generational curse of destruction   that was the demon that was operating in my  life which means nothing in my life ever lasted   i always messed up whatever good was given to  me relationships squandered uh money squandered   ministry opportunities closed d holidays ruined  i ruined all of our holidays up until that point   christmas i woke up in a bad mood how many of  you woke up in a bad mood on christmas morning   i don't want to talk to nobody you know i'm  we're all having christmas dinner i'm in the room   somewhere i'm not coming out you know holding my  family hostage birthdays you can forget about it   i was a terror every year i was always ruining  and i had a generational curse of destruction and   generational curse of ruin and at that moment  it left it left how many of you know that when   you get delivered your theology changes and  i don't know who i'm talking to today man my theology changed and the power of  god hit me so hard in that staff meeting   that it spilled over now here's what's interesting  that while i was manifesting on the floor   i vaguely heard one of my leaders say in the  background finally our pastor's getting delivered i vaguely heard to this day i don't  know who said that but finally it was   somebody said finally we and i heard  somebody say we've been waiting for this day   you know and the power god hit me at that moment  and it spilled over to everyone in that room   one by one whoever got close to me at that moment  trying to give me a hug like whoa pastor what was   that the power of god hit them and by by the time  i turned around all of my staff was on the floor   manifesting getting delivered in the basement of  the church we had two of the young people they   would be older at the time two young adults they  were practicing for the easter play so it would   eat we would in like holy week passion week  at that time they were downstairs past so they   heard the commotion and they'd run upstairs and as  soon as they came maybe about maybe 10 feet from   me they got thrown back by the power of god the  other one that was with him trying to run around   and come around trying to run around and come  this way to leave right and i was laying there   on the floor and when he walked by i tapped him  on his ankle and he got thrown by the power of god and the young man ends up taking out bags of dope  out of his pocket and he threw it on the floor and   said pastor i had been planning to backslide after  easter and he got fully delivered and everyone at   that meeting is still serving the lord uh today  most of them are still with me and others have   transitioned on to other other congregations  and that's what i want to talk to you today   about hopefully we can get to that place the title  of my message is you're not digging deep enough i know that we are in a deliverance  house and praise god that i don't have to   convince you guys of deliverance because as i  travel the country i spend an enormous amount   of time just trying to get to the church get the  church to a place of agreeing that a christian   could potentially be demonized i am so  grateful that i don't have to do that here   that i don't have to convince anything other  than those of you that are here uh new for   uh the first time i want you to turn with me very  quickly to the book of ezekiel chapter chapter 8.   i want to talk to you about you're  digging but you're not digging deep enough   some of you your deliverance can only be acquired  when there is a perpetual intended militant   aggressive effort in continuing to dig until you  find the nucleus of what actually is going wrong   in your life now most of us we get deliverance  once or twice and we kind of stop there or we kind   of just linger in this ecosystem of deliverance  where you know i'm in a house of deliverance and   i'm good you know and you come up to the altar  um amen deliverance you know it's actually   a labyrinth it's not a maze a maze can just  be figured out by just retracing your steps   and you follow this particular pattern of you know  go forward 10 steps turn right and when you turn   right you know go left and then go back one and  then go this way and if you keep repeating it   then you kind of figure your way out and  that's where most kind of churches they we   get into this ritualistic you know this  patterned version of deliverance where   we dwell in this ecosystem of deliverance  and we just kind of yeah i know that you know   i'm saying like yeah it's kind of but then  there's this underlying issues that go deep   that can only be figured out not through  represent not through repetition but through   the supernatural gift of the word of wisdom where  you can figure out how do you really get delivered   because true deep deliverance is figuring out  a labyrinth and in case you don't know what a   labyrinth is in order to get out of a labyrinth  it has nothing to do with uh pro it has nothing   to do with uh following uh the same protocol it  has to do with problem solving because sometimes   a door in a labyrinth actually that says exit is  a lie and actually takes you back to the beginning   that's what a labyrinth is it's like alice  in wonderland where you drink you think   this what you're drinking uh got it looks  like poison but god is saying drink that so   that way alice can shrink enough size and  humble yourself to get into a little door   that's actually narrow for the kingdom is actually  a narrow door did you catch that revelation   so this is how deliver that's where i was i was  trapped in trying to figure it out trying to uh protocol my way through deliverance other than  finding that it's actually requiring me to go   deeper ezekiel chapter eight now what i'm going  to do today is i'm not going to give you a sermon   you know the three points um i'm gonna give you a  thought i'm gonna do what is called an exhaustive   teaching which means i'm gonna take one  thought and i'm gonna drive that point   in repeating it leading up to will call you up and  let me help you get delivered how many of you want   to get delivered this morning or go through some  deeper deliverance amen all right so um i'm going   to kind of take you there apostolically i'm going  to take this one thought and i'm going to keep   driving in so it's not going to be where is this  heading and what is the conclusion it's gonna be   a battering ram of the same thing bang bang  bang bang bang bang why because each time we   bang in we're digging deeper we're digging deeper  because the title is you're not digging you're not   digging deep enough as a matter of fact hold your  finger there actually the opening context is in   deuteronomy 23 verses 9 through 14 and then it's  ezekiel chapter 8. now remember you're not digging   deep enough catch the metaphor there deuteronomy  23 verse 9 through 14. now look at what this says   and keep the metaphor in your mind or the type and  the shadow or the symbolism to help you understand   a spiritual truth when you are encamped against  your enemies keep away from everything impure   verse 10 now if one of your men is unclean  because of a nocturnal emission he is to   go outside the camp and stay there but as  evening approaches he is to wash himself   and at sunset he may return to the camp now  look at verse 12. here's where things get very   interesting you must designate a place outside  the camp where you can go relieve yourself   now look at this as part of your equipment  you must have something to dig with now the   king james version will tell you a small shovel  all right now look what it says where you can   go relieve yourself now i believe we all know  what relieve yourself here is actually meaning   okay look at verse 13 as part of your equipment  you must have a small shovel to dig with now stop   right there let me just interject something  for too long we've only been carrying swords   and god is saying with your sword carry a shovel  did you catch that revelation for too long we're   either because we're evangelical we're either  carrying a sword or we're told to build so either   carrying a sword on one hand like nehemiah and  a hammer on the other there's actually a third   equipment that you and i also also have and it's  actually a shovel why because in the process of   our fighting against your enemies and also in  the process of our building there are moments   that you need deliverance that you need to  relieve yourself and in the middle of your war   you can't just say hold on enemy and  then stop and then take care of business   you can't do that because if not guess what  happens when you do that and here's what happens   with many of us in the deliverance ministry or in  this deliverance ecosystem we're fighting enemies   uh we're also building while we're fighting but at  the same time we're defecating all over the camp now watch this look at this  as part of your equipment   have something to dig with when you relieve  yourself dig a hole and cover up your excrement   for the lord your god moves about in your camp  to protect you and deliver you from your enemies   so your camp must be holy so that he will not  see your excrement while he's defending you   so do you see it so for too long god is in our  midst how many of you know god is in our midst   but at the s how many of you know  he's protecting us in our midst   how many of you know that he is also fighting  against the enemies but as he is walking watch   this against the enemies he is also noticing at  the same time that there is feces all over the   camp so this is the reason why it's saying that  as we go to war not only are we slaying enemies   not only must we be holy but at the same time  as we're fighting we should be digging holes   and as we dig a hole what do we do in the  moment when we're fighting and we feel that   we need deliverance we are to relieve ourselves  in the hole and cover it up and keep fighting   this is the reason why the title of my message  is you're not digging deep enough you have to dig   deeper to be able to put all the excrement  inside the hole and cover it up and continue   in your warfare now the reason why i'm bringing  this up is because this house has a deliverance   ecosystem so i'm not teaching something that you  haven't already been doing what god sent me here   to do is to tell for some of you that you're  actually fighting you're actually warring on   good warfare but at the same time where are you  putting and where are you relieving yourself   now look at this ezekiel chapter 8 now  turn with me is this good or is this is he going over it just kidding all right then  he brought me to the door of the temple i feel the   holy spirit right now then he brought me to the  door of the temple courtyard where he could see   a what in the wall he can see a hole in the wall  now look what it says he said to me now son of man   dig into the wall so i dug into the wall and  found a what i found a hidden doorway bingo   there is where my spirit of generational curse  and strong men of destruction that's where it   was hiding now what's interesting in this  text was that this doorway was hiding behind   the wall that was covered and the only way that  they was able to be able to go beyond the wall   is ezekiel had to dig into a small hole that god  by the finger of the lord had poked into the wall   this is why the bible says if i cast out  demons by the finger of god then surely the   kingdom is among you now many of your problems  that those of you under the sound of my voice   you're saying but i don't understand i'm i'm in  deliverance what what is still potentially wrong   with me very simple you haven't paid attention to  the small hole that the finger of lord has poked   in a wall that you think is nothing there the  door is behind a wall that has been plastered   over but god loves you enough to tell you there's  a hole there pay attention to it and the only way   you could go there is holy spirit remove the wall  no the holy spirit is not going to remove the wall   you have to take the shovel and you have to dig  and watch this and you have to dig deep enough   to be able to find it so it's not just why did  look there's nothing there god says dig deeper   dig deeper it's nothing different than what elijah  told the servant when he said i don't see anything   and he said go back and look again and go back and  look again and go back and look again and finally   finally the servant came back and said i  see a cloud the size of a man's a prophet   apostle prophet evangelist pastor teacher the  size of a man's hand i see something there and   then the bible says elijah said prepare for i  hear what the sound of an abundance of rain so i   dug into the wall and i saw a hidden doorway and  god said go in and see the wicked and detestable   sins they are committing there so i went in  and saw the walls covered with engravings of   all kinds of creek crawling animals and detestable  creatures and i also saw various idols worshiped   by the people of israel so in this text as he dug  deeper he was able to find a hidden doorway like   a labyrinth because had he been amazed he would  have walked by and said there's nothing there   i'm gonna keep going but god said the way to get  out of the way to go through deeper deliverance   is problem solving which means what looks like  nothing is there could actually be the place   where something actually is there so how  do you and i receive deeper deliverance by   digging deep enough now look at this turn with  me to second corinthians chapter six verse 17.   i'm gonna show you the four levels of what this  actually means and then we'll kind of call you   up and we'll help you get set free how many of  you want to get set free amen amen look what it   says second corinthians chapter 6 verse 17 says  wherefore come out from among them and be ye   separate says the lord and touch not the unclean  thing and i will receive you notice how the verse   here does not say touch not the sinful thing most  of us are not touching the sinful thing notice   how it doesn't say touch not the abominable thing  most of us are not touching the abominable thing   the text here says touch not the unclean thing  unclean and sinful are not the same thing unclean   just means ceremonially unfit to serve that's all  it means it means on a sit down until you're ready   to serve again this is why when the priest would  touch something unclean they weren't disqualified   from the priesthood they were unfit to serve for a  particular time frame and then they were qualified   again maybe the reason why even after your  deliverance that you're wondering how is it that   i still feel like i'm on sit down and i'm going  through deliverance it's not because you're doing   something sinful it's because there are unclean  things that are there hidden in a doorway that   god is actually saying you're not digging deep  enough because you don't know that it is wrong see now watch this there are four levels of what  this this unclean thing would actually mean and   i'm just going to give it to you very quickly  number one is the word defile number two is   the word contaminated number three is unclean and  number four means now watch this the word defile   means no longer in a state of purity or  perfection because someone touch it now   to help you understand this when a woman is raped  in the bible it doesn't say rape it actually says   she was defiled defiled means that the innocence  of her virginity was taken that she could never   get it back now spiritually i know how we can kind  of wordplay that and get people delivered and god   will give them the innocence of that experience  back spiritually but in the natural once something   is virgin and now it's no longer a virgin you  can never make it a virgin again and this is why   the bible says that when someone loses or someone  loses their virginity they are considered defiled   which means the state of innocence and purity  is no longer there because someone uh touched it   now what does this have to do with us because just  because someone touched it doesn't mean you're   carrying it it means someone just touched it so  if a woman was raped she is not carrying rape   she was raped but she's not walking away with  rape it just means that her innocence has been   removed that's called to be defiled to be defiled  now watch this the second word is contaminated   it means the same thing as the first one it  means no longer in a state of perfection or   pure it means someone touched it but this time now  you're carrying it so watch this so now the person   was touched and they were molested and raped  but now they walk away and now they're having   desires to rape so now they are contaminated  now i'm using that as an example because of the   the level of infraction of how bad rape is  but this could be anything which means this   is why the bible says bad company corrupts good  morals which means you could get around somebody   who's negative and now you're defiled but it  doesn't necessarily mean you've been contaminated   but once you start getting in a relationship  with them and you start listening to what they   are saying even though you leave their presence  now you are contaminated so now i can tell who   you're talking to because you're talking just like  them you are contaminated just like them so this   could be for anything you listen to secular music  watching too much tv whatever the case may be now   when you get around it you're defiled but when  you walk away from it now you're contaminated   it's not the same thing okay now unclean the word  unclean is connected to the first two right so the   bible says touch not the unclean thing so watch  this it means no longer in a state of perfection   or purity someone touched it not only are you  carrying it but now god has to sit you down   because now not only are you carrying  it now you want to touch other people   so god says i have to sit you down because  not only are you carrying molestation on you   now as a preacher you're desiring to now molest  other people because you were molested so this   is the reason why when you're unclean god has  to sit you down because now you've been given   a place of influence and your contamination  can now be transferred on other people   so god says touch not the unclean thing because  then i'm gonna have to sit you down with your   anointed self simply because what you're carrying  on the inside can be now transferred to other   people and watch this you don't know what you're  carrying because you haven't dug deep enough   so sometimes you don't know that you're carrying  a bad attitude can be a demon and you think it's   just a bad attitude it can be anything so  god is saying touch not the unclean thing   and i will receive you see see look at this  and then the fourth one is corrupted corrupted   is the final resting place of the first three  which means you go beyond defiled of just   being touched you go beyond contaminated  of just having it you go beyond unclean   now you want to give it now you are it  which means now the person have embraced   what they also will say things like this uh that's  not a demon that's just my attitude of how i am do you see it now watch this so how do you get to  the level of addressing this god has a fail-safe   plan for that look at this turn with me to  second kings chapter 4 verse 35 is this good   amen all right so i'm an apostle so i do a lot  of revelating before i actually do deliverance   because deliverance without revelation is is is  witchcraft okay so all right you have to teach   the people so they can understand all right look  at this how do we get to that place look at this   second kick now here is where i'm going to  drive a point in that's just my introduction it's not the message okay i want to  be free i don't want to be a person of   influence having my own issues still because  my issues can be transferred on other people   and they will receive what i fail to get  delivered from and sometimes i don't know   that i need to be delivered because i  already live in this ecosystem of deliverance   do you see what i'm saying so look at this look  at this second king chapter 4 verse 35 just one   verse then he returned and walked in the house to  and fro and went up and stretched himself upon him   and the child sneezed how many times seven times  and the child open his eyes so what do we see here   we see the prophet outstretching himself over this  young child and what happened and he rebuked the   network of death there and death came out of this  young man's body by the sneezing of how many times   okay now sneezing i think i'm preachers required  with this one but sneezing is your body's way of   conducting deliverance in the natural when  your body has a foreign bacteria you don't   even ask for it boom your body releases it your  body casts it out did you catch it all right   so in this situation the spirit of death was  working inside the young boy and the spirit of   death came out from where from the inside hold  this thought second kings chapter 5 verse 14.   same book chapter or later okay then naaman  went down and he dipped himself how many times   he dipped himself seven times according to the  saying of the man of god and what what does the   bible say i love what the bible says in the king  james version look what it says in the natural   it says what was restored to him it says his  innocence this goes back to what we were saying   did you catch it so how many times did he dip  himself to get to that place seven times and this   this cleansing was not on the inside where was  this cleansing at it was on the outside so the   young child got cleansed on the inside seven times  to be able to break it go deeper and now watch   this the naaman dipped himself seven times on the  outside to dig deeper on the outside watch this   look at this leviticus chapter eight leviticus  chapter eight verse 10 and 11. look what it says   it says and moses took the anointing oil and  anointed the tabernacle and all that was therein   and sanctified them and he sprinkled on  the altar what seven times and anointed   the altar and all the vessels and the laver  his foot to do what with them to sanctify them   here's my question why isn't one time good enough  why do we why did moses had to anoint the holy   things more than once when for us you know in a  christian church we do it one time do you see what   i'm saying so not only this your anointing and  the glory that you carry and your assignment also   needs to get purged because the last thing you  want to be is prophet but you're a nasty prophet   the last thing you want to be is an apostle but  you're a jezebel apostle did you catch what i   just said the last thing god wants to do is  to allow you to get to a place of influence   and give you a bazooka but you're still a child  and you're blowing people up okay so watch this   so look at this so it's not just you need to get  anointed your gifting and your callings also need   to get delivered as well now look at this watch  this leviticus chapter 14 leviticus chapter 14   verse 51 he will take a cedar stick and a hyssop  branch the scarlet yarn and a live bird and dip   them in the blood of the slaughtered bird and into  the fresh water and then he will sprinkle the what   he will sprinkle the house seven times so not  only does the furniture in the house go through   a measure of deliverance seven times not only  did a young boy get delivered from the inside   seven times not only did the man of influence get  delivered on the outside seven times but now god   is saying not only just anoint what's inside  the house anoint the house seven times so now   you gotta go deeper seven times so we have seven  seven seven seven right now watch this now watch   this look at this look at this proverbs chapter  24 verse 16. look what it says for a righteous man   false not one time falls how many times  seven times and does what and rises up again   watch this watch this watch this the bible is  very clear that mary magdalene was delivered of   how many the bible says out of whom came out seven  demons now watch this last look at this look at   this last second to last verse exodus 29 verse  4-9 closing context will call you up hallelujah present aaron and his sons at the entrance of  the tabernacle and wash them with water dress   aaron in his priestly garments the robe  worn with ephod the e fought itself   and the breastplate then wrapped the decorative  shash of ephod around him look at verse six place   the turban on his head and fasten the medallion  to the turbine look at verse seven then anoint   him by pouring the anointing oil over his head  next present his sons and dress them in their   tunics so watch this let me just interject notice  that there's a generational transfer going on here   so the head is being completely wardrobe changed  and what does the text say that as the head gets   it give it to the suns watch this look at this  look at this wrap the sashes around the waist   of aaron and his sons and put their special head  coverings on them look what it says then the right   the legal right to the priesthood will be theirs  by law forever in this way you will ordain aaron   and his sons now watch this jump down to  verse 35 and 37. look at this look at this this is how you will ordain aaron  and his sons to their offices just as   i commanded you look what the text here says  and i'm done call you up help you get free   the ordination ceremony will go on how many here's my question isn't one ordination service  good enough why must i do it seven days imagine   have you ever been to a consecration service  that could be long and dragged out right and   they're beautiful imagine doing that seven days  the christian church would only do it once right   now why would god say i thought when  something was anointed it's already clean   let me say it again i thought once something  is already anointed with the oil and cleaned   and ready and dressed i thought that that's  it why would god say do this for seven days   why because hidden inside aaron was a golden  calf that he would allow the people to worship   oh you missed that sometimes you don't know  what's really in there so god is saying you   have to keep repeating it until you go deeper and  go deeper and go deeper and go deeper until you   actually find it until you've dug deep enough  and when you dig deep enough bingo there it is   most of us stop on the first day that was  a good ceremony i'm good i got delivered   some of us might even go to the second or third  day because we're being submissive to our pastors   and leaders but god is saying your issue is way  too deep for you to think that one altar call and   one deliverance session and one help me go through  some renouncing is going to be good enough how   many of you know that your issues run 30 15 years  deep that just waving over me like benny hen is   not good enough that's a good place for the first  day but baby you got six more days to get in here aaron had to go through seven  consecrations to get deep enough   to allow him to authentically be ready to serve  in the capacity that god was going to take him   this is why many of you get delivered and you're  kind of just still serving in your church and amen   stay there but for some of you some of you  will graduate from serving to leadership   and then there are others that are here that  will graduate from helping another man's vision   come to pass that eventually god will place in  your hands your own vision there are apostles and   prophets evangelists pastors and teachers in this  very crowd the christian experience is not just   serving my church that's the first place the point  is to get to the point of consecration of release   to operate and function in the in the temple god  is saying you have to go through all seven days   hello mary magdalene you have to go through all  seven demons i have to get out this is the reason   why the bible says when an unclean spirit leaves  it comes back with what seven this is why you have   to keep going we have to and god sent me here to  tell you that you for many of you god is saying you need another form of equipment god says  put your sword down put the hammer on the   on the hammer belt and god  says go get yourself a shovel god says you're anointed god  says you anointed but still nasty god says you have favor but  you are taking time bomb   god says right now you're submissive  because you have never been told no right now all is well it's very easy to say  i'm good i got anointed on the first day god   says you don't know the future you don't know the  future especially for those of you that would say   i would never do that hello peter i would never  deny you really today you're going to deny me did   you catch it and god is saying that he he honors  the fact that you started the process because some   don't even get to the first day but god says your  anointing consecration and full deliverance has   just started baby you got six more days god says  some of you have five more days some of you have   three more days some of you for some of you god is  saying you got one more day left don't mess it up some of you right at the cusp on the  sixth day of your ordination   we mess up cause the church is  taking too long to launch me   oh i don't know what my destiny is or  whatever the case may be and on that last day   you mess it up and you walk away now you have to  start that thing all over again and what happens   god does not banish you that's not grace  we're under grace thank god for christ but   god puts you on sit down because you're unclean  you're unfit for service right now i can't allow   that with that still in there because and it's  still there because you haven't dug deep enough
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2021-11-22
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vV2vyuFfCxo
Panel discussion - Seeing more queerly
I'm Chris Whitley Cooper and I'm chair of gathering voices which probably for many people are wondering what an earth gathering voices is because it's a new it's not an organization yet it's a developing organization and I suppose in a nutshell we're a group of lgbtqa+ peoples and organizations that have come together in a collaboration and that includes open table open expression accepting Evangelic ORS and evangelical fellowship and lesbian gay christians now that's the core of us but actually we have joined him with other groups quite a lot so he worked with Stonewall we're working hopefully with one body one faith and all of us are one wanting to support lgbtqa+ Christians in a kind of safe space that provides an open conference where we can explore our faith as LGBTQA Christians and that's really important so we're all in a new usual place at the moment we're all in our own environments which is difficult for us to put on a large gathering so we can't have our usual conference where we invite people to speak and everybody to meet together because of covert and social distancing so as a steering group we've decided to have this pre conference discussion and then we're going to have a half-day conference on the 17th of October all being virtual so it's all new for us and on a very different way of behaving but hopefully that will be a safe space we'll do something on YouTube they'll be pre recording something on zoom so that we can actually have an opportunity for people to meet and talk and share in that safe space so the virtual conference is called 20/20 vision seeing more queerly breaking false binaries in gender and sexuality so a huge amount packed into a very small title and to help me I've got a number of people with me who are going to hopefully help us unpack what some of that means and help us to think about it in preparation for the conference so I have with me Alex Claire young G de McCauley and Rachel man so really pleased that you're all here and really thank you for your time with us but before we start exploring anything really like you to just to say who you are and something about you know where you come from in your own words so shall we start with Alex would you like to just come in and just say who you are and am I here I am Alex my pronouns are they them I'm a trans masculine person so I began to transition from female towards male around 10 years ago I identified somewhere can a slightly masculine of Center and I'm a minister in the United Farm to church I minister made me to an old mine church culture spacious but I also work under the banner transgender Christian human and in that work I offer pastoral support to trans people in their loved ones and I provide some education and advocacy schools and churches and communities as well because lots of people want to know more and just don't know where to start I'm also doing some doctoral study into the theologies of trans Christians so if I get lots of different things about what different trans people think I'm married to Joe he's also a minister we live by the seaside we love spending time in the water so that's a bit of the other side of me thank you that's really appreciated G day could you tell us something about yourself absolutely and thanks for having me on this and discussion and program my name is Judy McCauley I am the founder and CEO at House of rainbow house of rainbow started 13 years ago because we found out that there was a gap in providing a theological need a reflection of black African or in the black people who are LGBT and Christians our work has evolved beyond just us so people of diverse faiths user services and we've expanded those services to other areas of people's needs we continue you with the work of reconciling faith and sexuality I'm also addicted in the Anglican Church and by God's grace I will be ordained twist this year and them and also chaplain at the mark may Mission Hospital in central London so there is a lot of hat that I wear but I think that the reality is that there is still a lot of gap in bridging sexuality and religion particularly within the Christian community and that is a big part of my work no thank you that I'm really pleased to hear Rachel like talk to us about about your background thank you Chris hello I'm Rachel man I'm Church of England parish priest an area Dean I'm a writer and poet a theologian and broadcaster I I think I'm here because I'm really interested in queer theology I guess I'm a queer theologian a feminist theologian I'm a trans woman and I'm really passionate not simply about the church making available inclusive space for queer people but actually excited about how queer people LGBTQIA people can be transformative presences within the church so that there is a sense in which reformation and recreation happens rather than simply us being tolerated or included or even simply belonging that we are people who as bearers of the image of God and growing into the likeness of Christ offer a transformative place where the church can be set free to be more in God's image thank you no that's really that's really helpful I suppose I should declare my background a little bit in my normal day job I am a academic I work in the University and I'm a head of school managing nursing midwifery I I am a lesbian woman and I'm married to Jane and we we've been married for about 16 miles long as 16 years I know that's not as long as marriage has been about but we were upgraded a few years ago so really nice and I'm hoping all people here who've joined us to listen to the conversation will enjoy the discussion that we have I've put together a couple of questions they're not meant to be constraining but they are there to give us a basis to start and hopefully each of those people who will take the lead on that that doesn't mean that does stop at any of us providing some clarification or information that we think will help the conversation and help us to move on so the first kind of question the first part of the conference title is about 2020 vision seeing more queerly and really the question we could need to ask and I'd like to ask is to start us off is why do we need to see more queerly and and I suppose another question is does visibility matter so I don't know whether whether you want to do those both together or one at a time and I'll leave that to you yeah I mean those two questions kind of fit together to me there's a lot of debate about the word queer in the lgbtq+ community but I really identify with the word queer and if I'm talking about my sexuality that is the word I use and I don't expect everyone to claim it for themselves there are as many ways of being LGBTQ plus as there are people there are so many different ways of embodying and living out these identities but I think that in a lot of places equality is just about getting to the point where it's okay to be in a same-sex relationship or it's okay to be trans as long as you're willing to act normal and that for me is why queer visibility and being able to see clearly is really important for some lgbtq+ people being seen as normal is really important and perhaps is the central thing in equality but for others actually being different is really important and being able to be seen as being different and being able to be ourselves in religious spaces and that's where we haven't quite got to yet so as a minister when I say I'm trans churches usually say so it's none of our business we're happy to have a trans person because they assume it's a journey that I've finished they don't understand that actually it's a part of who I am and it's gonna continue to be a part of who I am and something that I want to talk about if I show up in church wearing nail varnish people are shocked because but you wanted to be a man don't you just want to be a normal man actually being queer is about questioning and challenging being normal it's about saying you know what this word was used as a slur when being normal was seen as the way you had to be and now we're starting to say it's okay to be different and that's really important and it's not just important for LGBTQ plus people and I think that's why visibility is really important I want all people in the world to be able to form that part of themselves that's just a bit different from the norm and to see that we can see God in that space actually God is not normal God reaches out to beyond the centre God perhaps even has a special heart for the margins God wants us to question things God wants transformation God is this big grace space that that can't just be held in the middle and for me that's why seeing queerly is really important some really interesting ideas that I like the idea of us owning a name that's been in these used as a slur and to rethink it so that it becomes an important badge of honor rather than a slur that's that's really exciting I just wanted to ask Rachel or gee-day did you want to come in and add to that or yes Rachel just a very brief comment really just to acknowledge that Alex's words go good something reasonably deep within me that I belong to a generation of trans people you know someone who transitioned when I was you know very early twenties back thirty years ago the in some ways we we've had to learn or I've had to learn I'll own that new ways of talking about ourselves because I think that the you know the world in which I transitioned was one about there is a destination and things stopped and you know all one wants to do is disappear or be normal you know in inverted commas and it's been a huge learning curve for me actually in the last last ten years and there's a sense in which I've had to achieve a level of humility which isn't natural just in terms of understanding the confidence of of of the trans community of the queer community I just find it incredibly exciting whereas I know some trans people of my generation panic I think in the face of the kind of richness of trans discourse now yeah so for me I think it's very important and I think you know Alex when you started to talk about heteronormativity being seen as normal I think this is one thing that I believe that has been forced on us in many places you know as a black gay man of Nigerian descent you know um the idea of being gay has been said to me on African a non-christian at the same time so we have to ask the question then what is normal for me I feel that we need to actually interrogate we need to scrutinize the sacred texts and the sacred conversation because too often people will say but the Bible condemns there in that conversation we need to challenge that conversation because obviously for the past number of years and particularly during this lockdown you know we've had a number of seminars where we are examining what the Bible says in favor of same-sex relationship we want people to sit down and have that conversation we want to look at the sacred text together so that there is no misunderstanding about what has being said and as many of you know the favorite one is the God destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah because of homosexuality so queer in the Bible for myself and for for the community that ourselves is very very important so we're definitely moving that goal and we're trying to make sure that people within our own community you know the people that we serve within our own faith communities also enrich by that understanding and there's also one thing I want to say before I pass on back to Christian and I think that the reality is that with visibility also comes responsibility and that is why we've had we have to do well has quit theologians to make sure that we present the theology also accurately to the people listening to us otherwise we are going to we're not going to be able to take the work back you know daily as we want to thank you I mean I must I'll be honest I agree I think the word normal is it comes with it some sort of gray color as opposed to the diversity in the colorful way because even people who identify as being and I used inverted commas normal often have a variety of identities and experiences that are not captured so I think it's really great that we can open up the discussion that we can talk about what it means to be but what it means to be is not static I love this idea of being on a journey and I would I don't that as well my my own faith journey my own and coming-out journey is still opening out and I think that's really exciting and I think that's what God's about God is about taking you on a journey he's not taking you on a destination he's taking you on a way to be who you are so um Alex I think I think it's really really kicked off really nicely is there anything else you'd like to add before we move on just I think perhaps accidentally we've kind of come with this binary between normal and and queer people almost I think I hope we'll set that up accidentally and some of what Rachel said really resonated to me in my research interviews I'm talking to all sorts of trans people and quite a few trans people who would definitely identify as having transitioned and that's done and they are fully female or fully male and the way I talk about my identity is initially quite threatening or difficult for them but I think as we've had conversations they have found it helpful to be able to think about their identities in lots of different ways and I think if we can find ways to love each other better and to be more open with each other and to challenge each other without threatening each other then the idea of seeing more queerly can help everyone even those people who have had to build this identity as being very normal or very normative because we can help everyone to be able to explore bits of themselves and talk about bits of themselves that are they've been forced to keep hidden and that forced hidden this has really been hurtful for some people and I think that's something that the LGBTQ community is having to wrestle with and having to help people to overcome that forced normal no thank you for that yes I'm just thinking that I mean there's so much we could talk about we could stay here really but I'd like to move the conversation on a little bit and just ask Rachel I mean the second part of our title is breaking false binaries which in itself is a challenging statement so can I ask you Rachel what does breaking false binaries mean and why is it important thank you Chris in one sense I feel but alex has really taken us to to the significance of of why breaking false pact binaries matter but where I want to begin to begin in a particular theological point because I think the theological point will help us see why breaking falls by binaries is a kind of its it's not just a moment in in an academic theology but it's about our very being as the people of God and the theologian Marcela alphys read says suggests that queering theology is the path of God's own liberation and I think what she's getting at there is that when we start to do something active use queer in the verb mode that it's something that's undergoing that's we're undergoing that we are engaged in both individually in this community what begins to happen is a breaking open of a whole set of binaries that let's begin you can see fixed are presented as if they are inscribed in tablets of stone brought down from the mountain and actually I don't think that there's there's grounds for that level of absolutism it matters that we put pressure on binaries because if we don't then a as alex has already beautifully brought out we lose sight of the nuance of actual human experience you know I I'm I'm yet to meet anyone who fulfills a kind of absolute extreme of one binary or I met people who claim that they do but then actually when we unfold we discover the nuance the complexity actually the riches and and sometimes horrific Klee the shame that people feel because they can't fit that binary because they think oh god I should be this super straight guy you know this is what a Christian is a super straight guy super straight woman and actually discovering the the riches and you wants and and it makes them feel afraid but this is about God actually for me if we are made in the image of God called into the likeness of Christ which I absolutely believe is it at the heart of the Christian faith mm-hmm then liberating liberating God from false binaries is a recipe is an opportunity a place where we can discover the true riches of ourselves I mean this is I'm gonna finish by making what some people think is a very cheap weight but actually I think it's a it's a very quick way of getting to the point here um one of the extraordinary things about the Christian faith is the queerness of our God this is a god who's 3 yet one queenís is inscribed in our God and yet how often is he she they presented as this most reductionist version and you know this plays into all sorts of discourses about you know this isn't just about sexuality or gender identity this is about the whiteness of God you know or the the the clasped nature of God the middle class miss of God so this breaking of the back of of the binary is is not meeow meeow politics though politics matters this is about our deepest human realities yes today thank you very much Rachel you know it really felt that I was in a Bible study class and do the theological Boban but i also totally agree with you and I think that there is a culture that I'm familiar with within the the black community you know when a parent a mother is pregnant there's this tradition called revealing the gender and this is when the heart is coming together where they reveal the gender of the child and I think that has created a lot of conversation and debate within the queer community because when we reveal one gender when the child then become to know who they are and they say I am NOT the gender that you revealed I am a different gender that creates a lot of confusion and I think that the other thing again I'll take this again as cities within the black community especially gender in a child is very very part of the culture and I'm from the Yoruba culture in Nigeria the Yoruba tribe in Nigeria and having a male child is sin has the best thing even if you have ten female child and that is very problematic again when you look at the theology of gender we then see that you know it is so unimportant that there's a male or female gender those binaries miss constraint of the child and I've had to work with many families in Africa and there was one time in South Africa where I met with a group of mothers we call them queer mothers open only the East also waits in South Africa and I think that is important to let the parents know that they've got children because a gift from God and the way that I often describe it is that God give you a gift this children as gift they come gift wrapped so when you open those give those at the gift so Ghana and I'll close on this because I know that I closed on this because there is the power of toxic masculinity at play there is sexism I play this gender hierarchy at play and I think these are the things that we need to try to work against because they're not helpful you know for the communities that we serve thank you Judy would you want to come in on that yeah I think I might be echoing some of what's being said although I think that's part of seeing more clearly isn't it that we can actually take each other's views and have a slightly different perspective and be able to kind of play with those like Rachel said God's done it God's done it over and over again our Bible is full of breaking and false binaries and if we can't see that we're struggling to be biblical at all and that's something I have really struggled with in Christianity that there seems to be this desire to see God as being one thing who says and does one set of things and that's not what I see in the Bible I once had a spiritual director who said if people are harming you with the Bible just stop reading it and I did for a little while because I thought that was quite important and I needed to break frankly I couldn't read the Bible clearly because it could be hurting me so I put it in a drawer for a little while and then I took it back out again and I read it and what I was reading wasn't what had been told it said because I've been told that God was male that God set down a list of rules and that the rest of the Bible explained how people follows them and that's actually just not what happens in the Bible people keep trying to work out who God is and trying to follow the rules that they think God set and then it changes all over again and I mean Jesus is the perfect example of that they've got these rules about God being very far away and very distant and God transitions almost into being human to break that full Spiner II between God and humanity that happens over and over again and I don't see why it shouldn't keep happening but breaking false binaries should never just be about other people it should never be about saying well those people are thinking in false binaries and I need to change their minds it's about each of us internally as well Rachel will know because she knew me when I was very first starting to transition but I had a very binary view of myself I was very determined to be a man be a normal man which makes a lot of what I say today quite ironic I was but very determined I was going to have all the surgeries and no one was ever going to know that I'd been trans and almost the opposite has happened I haven't had all the surgeries and I don't identify as male and I'm somewhere in the middle and I love talking about being trans and that's because God I think has been able to break down some of the false binaries that I had in myself and I think those false binaries are a protection against pain when we are hurt we put these binaries in place and perhaps that will was what people were doing the Bible you know they just escaped from Egypt's oppression for goodness sake it's not that surprising that they had to build a few walls but I think God constantly works to break down those walls in us and then uses us to help break down those walls in others as well and I hope that those walls keep being broken down in me from a whole life I don't want to say I'm right now or I've got to where I need to go because God's bigger than me and I need to be open to God changing me even more thank you Alex and Rachel did you want to say anything in response to what you've heard or shall we move on I think we can I think we can move on I think I just really delighted by just the the nuance which VA and Alex have brought to what I said it's amazing yes I'm feeling I'm not sure what I'm feeling actually and I'm hearing some some really interesting and challenging things which is gonna make me go away and think about them differently and hopefully we'll move me on in my own journey so I'm hope for that but that aside G day would be really nice to kind of we're moving in that direction anyway but if we see more clearly and we think about breaking force by how will this have an impact on our Christian experiences our Christian faith you know I mean I've pointed over that question and I think that see more clearly is about knowing the truth and when you know the truth the truth will set you free you know a lot of the things that many being taught we're actually quite wrong and I've always said this when every time I come to you know my Bible study class of queer in the Bible I always say that you know if I have a 25 year old gay man that has been told all his life that he is an abomination how many years will it take me or anyone to reverse the abuse over that person and I would think maybe another 25 years because you have to unlearn the things that you've learned and then I came up with a phrase called accorded you know we have to own wire to rewire and I think that for me personally I mean I've been through this very journey myself you know the Bible has always been there for me as a guide and you know when Alex was talking about a scholar and about a 'nobody Bible I mean my professor professor Mary tobert at the end of my training at the Pacific School of religion in California she said to us you know the class of 20 2005 2005 she said I present you with a viable you can now train or kill so the Bible was actually seen as a weapon and is also seen as a source of liberation for many but I think that you know to see more clearly is actually to come to a place of reconciliation you know to begin to draw the scale of abuse and begin to pick on the mantle of joy for who you are and one of my favorite song is when the day plans for the water my soul longs after you I love that song because there's something about it because when you find a piece that you need as a quick person you can't wait to tell other people about it and that's one of the things that led me back to Nigeria to start house of rainbow in a country that has colonial laws that has predictive laws that punish same-sex behavior don't ask me what I was thinking when I went to Nigeria but I just know that the Holy Spirit was at work in that moment and I think that the other thing again is that when you also think about you know seeing more clearly when you look at for example the black lives matter you know movement that we've seen in recent times we're also saying to the black community that black queer lives matter to you understand me because we are facing the same issues where we're facing racism we're facing homophobia even within the black community so there has to be a moment of awareness there has to be this moment of lightening of God's grace over us and to require honors I have been criticized many times you know by saying that GA Y means God adores you I couldn't think of anything more far to the to the truth because God at doors go squirt children God adores those who are suffering God is always there and you know Romans chapter 9 Oh Romans chapter 9 verse 25 and 26 is one of those two verses that lost so much because it stopped by saying that those who will not love our core be loved and concluded by saying that in the very place where it is said to them you are not my people there this shall be called children of the Living God and when we talk about what queer people have been going through this is very important for us to be able to examine and bring that message through the people and there is something also very interesting about this and I think that we need to really hear God we need to hear what the Holy Spirit is telling us today and then we also need a world that is more clearly and more accepting particularly self affecting and I think this is it time this conversation is timely for me and for many people indeed for all of us what can I just say JD day adil of your passion and I've loved what I've heard but we're all smiling so if any of us want to add anything Rachel Alex or do you think that kind of that brings brings it quite well together actually but is there anything you feel that we should just finish with I just want to say thank you G day I just that was extraordinary genuinely extraordinary and I just I want things to rest there really yeah no I absolutely agree I think can I just say thank you to all of you I given us a lot to think about I love the things that you've said I love the way it's challenged me I can I speak for myself I'm hoping that it will bring that challenged to the people who watch this and maybe start thinking and maybe start thinking about what what that might look like in a conference setting that we know because we've only just touched on this at the moment but there's an opportunity to start thinking about that a little more deeply in trouble with the chondrocytes suspect at the end of it we'll still want more but that's great leave us wanting more so for those people who are going to be watching this if you've enjoyed this I certainly have enjoyed this then the conference is going to be on the 17th of October and perhaps put that date in your diary it's gonna be a half-day conference this is new for us but we're gonna do partial recording and partial zoom so there's going to be an opportunity for safe conversations so people can come together and so I think you've got the conference title by now but I'll just remind you 20/20 vision seeing more queerly breaking false boundaries in gender and sexuality so the details of that are going to be at the underneath the YouTube recording so just leaves me to say goodbye to Alex bye Alex nice to have seen you fightin Rachel and goodbye to G day and really thank you for all that you've done you've talked about today I've really enjoyed that so I just say goodbye to you and goodbye from all of us and hope you can join us for the conference thank you goodbye you
Gathering Voices
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2020-07-11
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